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House Flags, Plate of
Amoy, Descriptive and Statistical
Amoy Directory
Amoy Ladies' Directory
INDEX, DIRECTORY
Frontispiece
Kouang-tcheou-wan, Directory
3
1029
.995
Kowloon (Chinese), Descriptive
1021
..906
Gowloon (Chinese, Directory
1022
1002
Kowloon Streets Directory.
1188
Aunam, Descriptive
.1225
Labuan, Descriptive and Directory
.1505
Annan, Provinces Directory
.1220
Lappa, Descriptive and Directory
.1023
Antung, Descriptive
.703
Luigchow, Descriptive and Statistical
1034
Antung Directory
794
Lungchow Directory
..1034
Bangkok, Descriptive and Statistical
1259
Macão, Descriptive and Statistical
1189
Bangkok, Directory
1261
Macao Directory
1190
Batavia, Descriptive and Statistical
1422
Macao Ladies' Directory.
1200
Batavia Directory
.1424
Macassar, Descriptive
1441
Borneo, Descriptive and Statistical
1491
Macassar Directory
1442
Borneo, British North, Descriptive and Statistical
1496
Malacca, Descriptive and Statistical
.1342
Borneo, British North, Directory"
1497
Malacca Directory
1343
Borneo, British North, Esrates Directory
1503
Malay States (Federated), Descriptive
1368
Buitenzorg, Descriptive
.1423
Malay States (Federated) Directory
.1370
Cambodge, Descriptive and Statistical
1254
Manchurian Trade Centres
.791
Cambodge Directory
1255
Canton, Descriptive and Statistical Canton Directory
1007
Manila, Descriptive and Statistical Manila Directory
1449
.1450
..1010
Manile, Insurance Offices
.1479
Canton Ladies' Directory
..1019
Mengtsz, Descriptive and Statistical
1035
Cebu, Descriptive
1485
Menytsz Directory
1036
Cebu, Directory
.1486
Changsha, Descriptive.
974
Changsha, Directory.
.975
Missionaries in Japan, Protestant
Missionarie in China, Protestant
Missionaries (Protestant), alphabetical list of..
.688
1040
1772
Cheton, Descriptive and Statistical
BOD
Moji, Descriptive.
669
Cheloo, Directory
801
Moji Directory
.668
China, Descriptive and Statistical
724
Mukden, Descriptive
791
Chingwautoo, Descriptive
785
Mukden Directory
792
Chinkiang, Descriptive and Statistical
.945
Nagusuki, Descriptive and Statistical
671
Chinking Directory
.9+0
Nagasaki Directory.
.672
Cholon, Descriptive and Directory
.1253
Nanking, Descriptive.
918
Chungking, Descriptive and Statistical
.977
Nanking Directory
.949
Chungking Directory
..978
Naming, Descriptive and Directory
1,28
Cochin China, Descriptive
Corea, Descriptive and Statistical
Corean Ports, Descriptive and Directories
Daitotoi, Directory
1231 ..700
Naval Squadron, Austro-Hungarian
1519
Naval Squadron, British
1508
.711 to 728
Naval Squadron, Italian
1513
703
Naval Squadron, French
1513
Dairen, Descriptive
796
Naval Squadron, German
..1518
Dairen, Directory
797
Naval Squadron, Japanese...
1520
Far East, Map of
Facing Directory
Naval Squadron, Siamese
1520
Foochow, Descriptive and Statistical.
987
Naval Squadron, United States..
1354
Foochow, Directory
.959
Negri Sembilan, Descriptive and Statistical
1373
Foreign Residents, Alphabetical list of
1585
Negri Sembilan Directory
.1974
Formosa, Descriptive
700
Netherlands India, Descriptive and Statistical
1407
Formosa, Directory
.702
Netherlands India Directory
1413
Haiphong, Descriptive and Statistical
.1214
Newchwang, Descriptive and Statistical
756
Haiphong, Directory
.1215
Newchwang Directory
787
Hakodate, Descriptive and Statistical
.039
Ningpo, Descriptive and Statistical
093
Hakodate, Directory..
640
Ningpo Directory
.983
Hangchow, Descriptive and Statistical
.980
Osaki, Descriptive and Statistical..
042
Hangchow, Directory
.082
Osaka Directory
.642
Ilankow, Descriptive and Statistical
.956
Padang, Descriptive and Directory
1140
Hankow, Directory
.957 Pahang, Descriptive and Statistical
1371
Hanoi, Descriptive and Statistical
1204
Pahang Directory
1371
Hanoi, Directory.
1205
Pakhoi, Descriptive
1080
Harbin, Descriptive and Directory
794
Pakhoi Directory
.1031
Hothow, Descriptive and Statistical
1032
Peitaiho, Descriptive
785
Hoihow Directory
.1033
Peking, Descriptive and Statistical
.742
Hokow, Descriptive and Directory
1037
Peking Directory
747
Hongkong, Classified List of Trades, &c.
1165
Penang, Descriptive and Statistical
1346
Hongkong, Descriptive and Statistical
1090
Penang Directory
..1347
Hongkong Directory
1097
Perak, Descriptive and Statistical
1393
Hongkong, Insurance Offices
.1172
Perak Directory..
130+
Hongkong Ladies' Directory
1176
Philippines, Descriptive and Statistical
.1445
Hongkong, Peak Roads Directory
1187
Port Arthur, Descriptive
.795
Hongkong Streets Directory
1182
Quinuon, descriptive and Directory
1227
Hut, Descriptive and Directory
1226
Saigon, Descriptive and Statistical
1232
Ichang, Descriptive and Statistical.
.975
Saigon Directory
1293
Ichang Directory
.076
Samshui, Descriptive
1023
Indo-Chins, French, Descriptive
.1202
Sanshui Directory
.1024
Iloilo, Descriptive and Statistical
Iloilo Directory
1482
Santuno, Directory
Japan, Descriptive and Statistical
1491 Santuan, Descriptive
578 Sarawak, Descriptive and Statistical
.980
..987
.1492
Japan, Classified list of Trades & Professions
678
Sarawak Directory
..1493
Johore, Descriptive and Statistical
1365
Selangor, Descriptive and Statistical
1379
Johoro Directory
1366
Selangor Directory
.1380
Kelung, Descriptive and Statistical
702
Kelang Directory
Selangor Estates Directory
1300
702
Semarang, Descriptive and Directory
1437
Kewklang, Descriptive and Statistical
958
Seonl, Descriptive
.711
Kewkiang Directory..
054
Seoul Directory
712
Kiaochau, Descriptive and Statistical
810
Shanghai, Classified List of Trades, &c.
926
Kinochau, Directory
812 Shanghai, Descriptive and Statistical
$24
Kobe-Hyogo, Descriptive and Statistical
647
Shanghai Directory
.845
Kobe Hyogo Directory
Kobe (Hyogo), Insurances of
Kongnuon, Descriptive
Kongmoon, Directory
Kouazg-tcheou-wan, Descriptive
1.049
Shanghai, Insurance Offices
937
.666
Shanghai, Roads in the Settlements
941
1025
Shasi, Descriptive and Directory
..973
1026
1020
Shimawoski, Descriptive and Directory Siam, Descriptive and Statistical
069
..1253
INDEX
Singapore, Descriptive and Statistical
1286
Tientsin, Classified list of Trades & Professions
778
Singapore Directory
1290
Tientsin Insurance Offices..
.781
Singapore, Classifed List of Trades &c.
1334
Tokyo, Descriptive and Statistical
583
Singapore, Insurance Offices
1330
Tokyo Directory
584
Sooohow, Descriptive and Directory
.944
Tonkin, Descriptive
.1209
Soerabaia, Descriptive
1432
Tonkin, Provinces Directory
.1221
Soerabaia Directory
1433
Tsintau (Kiaochau), Descriptive.
.810
Steamers, Coasting and River
1521
Tsintau (Kinochau) Directory
812
Straits Settlements, Descriptive
1285
Tsinanfu, Descriptive..
821
Sumatra (Enst Coast), Descriptive..
.1443
Tsinanfu Directory
829
Sumatra (East Coast) Directory
.1444
Vladivostock, Descriptive
.570
Swatow, Descriptive and Statistica!
.1003
Vladivostock Directory
.571
Swatow Directory
1004
Wei-hai-wei, Descriptive
900
Swatow Ladies' Directory
.1007
We.-hai-wei Directory
.809
Bzemao, Descriptive
1038
Wenchow, Descriptive and Statistical
986
Szemao Directory
.1039
Winchow Directory
.980
Taipeh, Directory.
703
Whampoa, Descriptive and Statistical
1020
Takow and Tainan, Descriptive and Statistical
706
Whampoa Directory
.1021
Takow and Tainan Directory
707
Wuchow Descriptive and Statistical
.1020
Taku, Descriptive and Statistical
793
Wuchow Directory
1027
Taku Directory
.784
Wuhu, Descriptive and Statistical
_951
Darien (alny) Descriptive and Directory
.796
Tamsui, Descriptive and Statistical
702
Wuhu Directory
.852
Tamsui Directory
.709
Yochow, Descriptive
971
Tengrach, Descriptive
1087
Yochow Directory
.972
Tengyueh Directory
.1038
Yokohama, Descriptive and Statistical
812
Tientsin, Descriptive and Statistical
.753
Yokohama Directory
.013
Tientsin Directory
768
Yokohama, Insurance Officos
.434
TREATIES, CODES
AND GENERAL
Admiralty, Rules of Procedure in Supreme Court
.445
Advertisers, Index to
5
Agents
2
Qalendar and Chronology
.21-22
Calendar, Anglo-Chinese
10
Chair and Boat Hire, Hongkong
.508
Chamber of Commerce, Scale of Commissions, &c....566
Chinese Festivals
21
Chinese Imperial Postal Rates..
511
Ohinese Passenger Act:
.487
Great Britain, Chefoo Convention, Additional. Great Britain, Opium Convention, 1885 Great Britain, Chungking Agreement, 1890 Great Britain, Thibet-Sikkim Convention, 1890 Great Britain, Kowloon Extension, 1898. Great Britain, Weihalwei Convention, 1893 Great Britain, Commercial Treaty with China. Great Britain, Emigration Convention, 1904 Great Britain, Tibet Convention. Japan, Shunonoseki, 1895..
72
73
74
76
78
79
111
118
204
Consular Fees, Tables of
.378
Japan, Commercial, Peking, 1866
208
Court of Consuls at Shanghai, Bules of Procedure
473
Japan, Protocol, New Ports, Peking, 1898
212
Customs Tariff, China.
91
Japan, Regarding Manchuria, 1905
221
Customs Tariff, China, Exports
.100
Japan, Supplementary Treaty, 1903
.213
Customs Tariff, China, Exports, Rules
..108
Portugal, 1888
.191
Customs Tariff, China, Rules.
..109
Portugal 1904..
.100
Oustoms Notification re Tariff of Import Duty, 1801.104
Russia, St. Petersburg, 1881.
162
Customs Tariť, Japan.
251
Russia, Regulations for Land Trade
167
Customs Tariff, Corea.
236
United States of America, Tientsin, 1858
171
Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1890.
827
Harbour Regulations, Japan
502
Hongkong, Charter of the Calony
477
Hongkong, Constitution of Councils,
479
Hongkong, Legislative Council, Rules of..
432
United States of America, Additional, 1863 United States of America, Peking, 1880. United States of America, Immigration, 1894 United States of America, Commercial, 1903.. With Cores 1-
177
..179
...183
.184
Hongkong Pilots Ordinance
501
Great Britain, 1883
228
Hongkong Port Regulations
491
Great Britain, Trade Regulations
2:3
Hongkong Signal Stations
.610
Japan, Supplementary, 1876.
.243
Hongkong Stamp Duties
.562
Japan, Now Protocol, 1904
246
Hongkong Supreme Court Fees
.461
Japan, Protectorate Convention, 1905
245
Insurance, Japanese Ordinance
490
United States, 1882
239
Malay States Federation Agreement, 1896
.327
With Japan :-
Manila Invoice Charges
.505
Orders in Council, H.B.M., China and Corea
.339-376
China, Agreement China-Corean Boundary, 1909.203
China, Agreement Regarding Manchurian Quest-
Port Regulations for H.B.M. Consulates in China.
493
ions, 1900..
200
Postal Guide, Hongkong
.613
Great Britain, 1894
.247
Shanghai Mixed Court, Rules of the
474
Great Britain, 1900
.281
Siam, Foreign Jurisdiction, 1909
.300
Great Britain (Alliance) 1905.
.288
Sicawei Observatory
.510
Great Britain, Indian Convention, 1904
292
Signals, Fire, Storm, &c., Hongkong.
...509
United States, 1886, Extradition Treaty
.235
Statutory Rules and Orders, 1900
.377
Supreme and other Courts in China II.B.M., Rulesof 381-438
United States, 1908, respecting the Pacific. Russia, Treaty of Peace, 1905
296
.287
Supreme Court in China H. B.M., Fees..
439
Russia, Railway Convention, 1907
291
Treaty Porta, etc.,
323
With Siam :-
Treaties :-
Great Britain, 1856
.207
With China:-
Great Britain, Trade Regulations with.
.800
Final Protocol with Eleven Powers, 1901.
.2:3
Great Britain, Registration of Subjects
.302
France, Tientai 1, 1858..
59
Great Britain, 1909
308
France, a.cation of Peace, 1900
128-132
France, 1893
243
France, Tientsin, 1835..
.134
France, 1904
311
France, Trade Regins, for Tonkin Frontier, 1886 ..137
France, 1907
813
France, Convention, 1887
142
Japan, 1998
.317
France, Convention, 1895
144
Russia, 1899
.321
Germany, Tientsin, 1881.
140
Germany, Peking, 1880
153
Germany, Kiaochau Convention, 1809
.158
Germany, Railway and Mining Concession, 1898 ..160
Great Britain, Tientsin, 1858
59
Great Britain, Chefoo Convention, 1878
87
Great Britain and Germany, Relative to China, 19 10..160 Great Britain and France, Siamese Frontier, 1898 .321 Great Britain and Russia Railway Agreement, 1399....110 United States Consular Courts in China, Regulations. .470 United States Consular and Court Fees Weights and Measures, Money.....
.475
505-
PAGES 5-8
MISSING FROM
VOLUME
I
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS-Continued
PAGE
PAGE
SOAP MANUFACTURERS -
Pears, London STEAMSHIP LINEB :-
Eastern & Aus. 8.S. Co. Hamburg-Amerika Linie... Messageries Maritimes Nippon Yusen Kaisha Norddeutscher Lloyd
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
South Manchuria bailway Co. Tkyo Soko Kaisha...
Toyo Kisen Kaisha
STOREKEEPERS:-
A Kow, Amoy
Bismarck & Co., Hongkong
F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong
F. Schwarzkopf & Co., Tsingtau Meida-Ya
Nihon Shoyu Manuf. o...
TAILORS:-
On back cloth cover
Ab-Men & Hing Cheong Co., Hongkong 1875
TYPE FOUNDERS
..1879
35
Tokyo Tsukiji Type Foundry...
...1874
36
612
TIMBER (BENT), MERCHANTS :-
34
Hopton & Sons, London
...1865
37
38
TOBACCONISTS :-
612
Kruse & Co., Hongkong...
Front
...1877
42
+
...1188
810
48
50
Scheuer & Co.
..1870
H
Sing On, Hongkong...
.1875
TOOL FTEEL MANUFACTUREES:-
Seebohm and Dieckstahl, Ed....
...1854
5
SUGAR MERCHANTS:-
TOOLMAKERS AGENTS -
Arabold, Karberg
Hugo Fromm, Hamburg ...Inside front cover TRADE MARKS OF BRITISH MANU, 1853 & 1854 WIRE ROPE MANUFACTUREES:
Geo. Cradock & Co., Limited... WHARVES AND GODOWNS :----.
Tokyo Soko Kaisha, Kobe... WINES AND SPIRITS:-
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., China, Inside end
cover
Meida-Ya
WOOL AND COTTON MANUFACTURERS:-
E. Spinner & Co., Manchester and
44
...1188
Front
... 1534
+
612
48
Suzuki & Co., Kobe
.47
Bombay
...1864
+
++
Anglo-Chinese Calendar for
1910
BEING IX & X OF KING EDWARD VIL
I. of Hsuan-Tung, being Ki-yu, or the 46th Year of the Cycle, and II, of Hsuan-T'ung, being King-Sut, or the 47th Year of the Cycle
JANUARY
(31 Days)
戍庚大歲年二至酉已大歲年元統宣
FEBRUARY
(28 Days)
MARCH
APRIL
MAY
JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
(31 Days)
(30 Days)
(31 Days)
(30 Days)
(31 Days)
(31 Days)
(30 Days)
OCTOBER
(31 Days)
NOVEMBER
(30 Days)
DECEMBER
(31 Days)
DAYS
of the WERK
Sat.
S.
2
Moo.
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
25 S
Fri.
Sat.
S.
9
Mon. 10
DATK
11 & 12
BROOK
DATA
of the
WEEK
1 x 20 Tues.
21 Wed.
22 Thur.
DATE
19 & 1
SKOPIC
DATS
of the WREG
DATA
Moows
1 & 2
DAYS
of the WERK
DATE
KNOOK
DAYA
of the
WEEK
DATE
8 & 1
Mouss
DAYS
U
of the WERK
DATE
Mooxa
DAT
of the
WEEK
DATE
300**
5 & d
DATS
of the WERK
DATE
woo
DATO
1
22 Tues.
1
120 Fri.
1
II 22
23 Wed. 2
21 Sat.
2
S. 23'Mon.
122 Wed.
23 Thur.
1 Iv 24 Fri.
v 26 Mon.
I
of the WEEK
VI 20 Thur. 1 v 28 Sat.
DATE
7 & 8
DAYSH
of the
1EEK
DATE
8 & 9
SNOOK
DATA
of the
WERK
DATE
نا الا ان
RNOOI
DAYS
of the
WEEK
DATK
10 & 11
MOONS
17
25 Sat.
26 Tues,
2
27 Fri.
2
29
S.
2
28 Tues. 20 Wed,
2
**
24 Thur. 3
22
5.
3
24 Tues.
24 Fri.
26 s.
3
27 Wed.
3
28 Sat.
3
30 Mon.
3
x Thur.
1 x 30 Thur. 1 x 30
1 Fri 2.Sat.
x1 1
23 Fri,
25 Fri.
4
23 Mon.
4
25 Wed.
25 Sat.
4
27 Mon.
4
28, Thur.
4
29 S.
4 v
1 Tues.
24 Sat.
26 Sat.
24 Tues,
G
26 Thur.
04
S.
28 Tues.
5
20! Fri.
5
Mon.
5
2 Wed.
27
S.
25 Wed.
6
27 Fri.
27 Mon.
29 Wed.
30, Sat,
2 Tres.
26 Mon, oriTues.
28 Wed.
25 Mon.
20 Thur. 7
28 Sat.
28 Thes.
1 Tbur.
VI 1 S.
7
3 Wed.
3 Thur. 4 Fri.
2 Fri, 3.Sat.
4 5.
4
5. 4. Mon.
4 6
Tues.
5 Mon.
Wed.
8
29-Tues. 3
27 Fri.
20
S.
29 Wed. 8
T 2 Fri.
Mon. 8
4 Thur.
30 Wed.
9
28 Sat.
30 Mon.
9
I][
29 Thur. 10 K.T.
Tues. 11 x
1Fri.
11
1Thur. 10 2. Fri.
29 S. 10
1 Tues. 10)
2 Fri.
Thur 9 10
3 Sat.
3 Tues.
9
5 Fri,
11
Mon. 11
2 Wed. 11
3)Sat. 11
S. 10 Bron. 11
4 Wed. 10
6 Sat.
93 10
5]Sat.
S.
6 Tues.
7 Thur.
8
Wed.
3 Fri,
9
Mon. 10
8 Thur, 10
9 Sat,
10
Thur. 11
S. 11
Tues. 11
9 Fri.
11
10 5. 11
Wed. 12
2 Sat.
12
3 Sat.
12
2 Tues. 12.
3 Thur. 12
4 S. 12
6 Tues. 12
Fri. 12
8) Mon. |12
Wed. 12
10 Sat.
12
11 Mon. 12
11
Thur. 13
3 S. [13
S.
13
3. Wed. 13
4 Fri.
131
5 Mon. 13
Fri. 14
Mon. 14
5 Mon.
14
4 Thur. 14
5. Sat.
14
6 Tues.
14
Wed, 13 Thur. 14
7 Sat.
13
9 Tues, 13
10 Thur. 13
11
S.
13
12 Tues. 13
12
8 S.
14
10 Wed. 14
11 Fri,
14
12 Mon. 14
18 Wed. 14
13
Sat.
16
Tues, 15
0 Tues. 16
6' Fri.
15
S. 15
7 Wed. 15
9 Fri
15
Mon. 16
11 Thur. 15
12 Sat,
15
13. Tues, 16
14 Thur. 15
14
5. 18
Wed. 10
7 Wed. 16
Sat.
10
Mon. 16
8 Thur. 16
10 Sat.
16
101ues. 16
12 Fri.
16
13
S.
10
14 Wed, 16
15 Fri.
10
15
Mon. 17
Thur. 17
Thur. 17
S.
17
8 Tues. 17
9 Fri.
17
11 S.
17
11 Wed, 17
13 Sat.
17
14 Mon. 17
16, Thur. 17
16. Sat.
17
16
Tues. 18
8, Fri.
18
9'Fri, 18
8 Mon.
18
Wed. 19
10 Sat.
18
12 Mon.
18
12 Thur. 18
14 S.
18
16 Tues. 18
16 Fri.
18
17
5.
18
17
Wed. 19
9,3at..
10
10 Sat.
19
9 Tues. 19
10 Thur. 19
11
S.
19
19 Tues, 19
13] Fri.
19
16 Mon. 19
10 Wed. 19,
17/Sat.
19
18 Mon. 19
18
Thur. 20 Fri. Sal. 122 S. 28
17 5. 20
11 S.
20
10 Wed. 20
11 Fri.
1201
12 Mon. 20
14 Wed.
20
14]Sat.
20
10 Tues, 20.
17 Thur. 20
13 5.
20
10 Tues. 20
19
21
11Mon. 21
12.Tues. 22
12'Mon, 21 13 Tues, 22
11 Thur. 21
12 Sat.
21
13 Tues.
21;
15 Thur.
15
S.
21
17 Wed.
18 Fri.
[21]
19. Mon. 21
20 Wed. 21
20
13 Wed. 23
14 Wed, 23
Mon. 24 Tues. [25 Wed 26 Thur. 127 Fri. |23)
14 Thur. 24
16 Thur, 24
12'Fri, 22 19;Sat. 11 5.
L3 S.
22
14 Wed. 22
16 Fri.
10 Mon. 22
18 Thur.
19 Sat.
[221
20 Tues. 22
21 Thur. [22]
21
[23
14 Mon. 23
10 Thur
23
17 Sat,
23.
17 Tues. 23
19 Fri.
20
5.
20
21 Wed. 23.
22 Fri.
23
24
16 Tues. 24
18 Fri,
24
13 5.
124
18 Wed.
24
20 Sat.
24
21 Mon. 24
22 Thur. 24
23 Sat.
24
23
15 Fri. 16 Sat. 17 S.
25
16 Fri.
25
16 Mon, 25
18 Wed. 275
17 Sat.
25
19 Mon. 25
19 Thur. 25
21
5.
25
22 Tues.
125
23. Fri.
26
21 5. 25
24
28
17,Sat.
20
10 Thes. 20
17 Thur. 28
18 S. 201
20.Tues. 26
201 Fri.
26
22 Mon. 28
23 Wed. 26
24 Set.
20
25 Mon. 26
25
27
18 S.
27
17 Wed, 27
18 Fri,
27
19 Mon. 27
18 Mon. 29!
19 Mon. 29
18 Thur.
28,
19 Sat.
28
20 Tues. 28
21 Wed, 27 22 Thur, 28;
21 Sat.
23 Tues. 27
24 Thur. 27)
22 S.
28
24 Wed.
25 Fri.
281
Sat. 29
19
Tues, 29
19 Fri.
291
20 S.
29
21 Wed. 29.
S. 390 Mon. 31
20
21
Wed, 30! Thur. 31;
20 Sat. 21
30
21 Mon. 30
22 Thur. 30
Tues. 31
23
23 Fri. 99 24 Sat. 30 ..S. 31
23 Mon, 29
26 Thur.
26 Sat.
29
26 S. 197 26 Mon. 28 27 Tues. 29
20 Tues. 27 27 Wed, 28
20
23 Thur. 29
23
24 Tues. 30
26 Fri.
5.
90
96Wed. 31
Mon. 1
28 Wed. 30 29
29 Fri.
1301
Sat.
[31,
30
Chinese New Year's Day in 1911 falla on January 30th.
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
II
JANUARY-31 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1st
..7h, 05m.
5h. 49m.
1908
1909
15th........ .7h. 07m
5h. 58m.
Maximum
.66.8
64.1
Minimum
.58.1
57.6
Mean
.62.0
60.6
MOON'S PHASES
d.
h.
111.
BAROMETER, 1909.
Last Quarter
3
9
27
P.M.
Mean.....
.30.10
New Moon
11
7
51
P.M.
First Quarter 18
6
21
P.M.
Full Moon
25
7
51
!
P.M.
1908 2.640 inches
RAINFALL
1909
1.460 inches
DAYS OF DAYS OF
11 & 12
WEEK
MONTH
Moons
Sat.
1
20
Sun.
2
Mon.
3
Tues.
4
Wed.
5
Thur. 6
Frid.
Sat.
Sun.
9
→ 2=
Mon. 10 Tues. 11
Wed. 12
Thur.
13
Frid.
14
Sat. 15
Sun. 16
17
Mon.
7
Tues.
18
8
Wed.
1
19
Thur,
20
10
* * ** *** * *-
2*TO Ora
22
23
24
25
26
Frid. 21
11
22
12
13
Sat. Sun. 23 Mon. 24* 14
Tues. 25
15
Wed.❘ 26
16
Thur. 27
17
Frid.
28
18
Sat.
29
19
Sun 30
20
Mon. 31
21
21
27
28
29
= 2**
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTĖ
Kobe and Osaka opened, 1868. Overland Telegraph through Russia opened, 1879. Russians surrender Port Arthur to the Japanese, with 878 officers, 23,491 inen, 648 gung and vaat stores of ammunition, also battleships, 2 cruisers, 14 gunboats and destroyers, 10 steamers and 35 small vessels, 1005.
JET AFTER CHRISTMAS. First election by the Hongkong Chamber of Commerce of a
member of the Legislative Council, 1884. Evacuation of Shanghai completed, 1903. First election by the Hongkong Justices of the Peace of a member of the Legislative
Council, 1884.
Decree of Emperor Tao-kwang prohibiting trade with England, 1840.
Yeh captured, 1858.
EPIPHANY. Fearful fire at Tientsin, 1,400 famine refugees burnt to death, 1878. Forts at Chuenpi taken with great slaughter, 1841.
Ice one-fourth inch thick at Canton, 1852. British str. "Namchow sank off Cup Chi, near Swatow; about 850 lives lost, 1802, The French evacuated Chantaboon, 1905. 18T AFTER EPIPHANT. Murder of Mr. Holworthy at the Peak, ilongkong, 1860. Marriage
of the Mikado of Japan, 1860.
Murder of a Chinese Reformer in Gage Street, Hongkong, 1901,
Seamen's Church, West Point, opened, 1872. New Union Church, Hongkong, opened 1891. Two Americans and one Finn hanged in Hongkong gaol, 1905. FLE. The Governor of Hongkong issued an appeal for endowment fund of $1,250,000 for proposed Hongkong University, 1909.
Tung-chi, Emperor of China died, in the nineteenth year of his age, 1875. Ki-ying, Viceroy of Two Kwang, issues a proclamation intimating the intention to
open up Canton according to the Treaties, 1840.
Indo-China str. "Yik Sing" lost
Secretary of United States Legation murdered at Tokyo, 1871, Bread poisoning in Hongkong by Chinese baker, 1857.
at The Brothers, 1908.
2ND AFTER EFIFAST. Severe frost in Ilongkong, 1993.
to Peking, 1902.
The Tai-wo gate at the Palace, Peking, destroyed, 1889. Great Gunpowder explosion in Hongkong harbour, 1867.
Chinese Imperial Court returned
Elliot and Kisben treaty, ceding Hongkong, 1841. Sailors' Home at Hongkong formally
opened, 1863.
Attempt to set fire to the C. N. Co.'s steamer "Pekin" at Shanghai, 1891. Collision near Woosung between P. &0. steamer "Nepaul" and Chinese transport "Wan-nien-ching " latter sunk and eighty lives lost, 1887. Hongkong ceded to Great Britain 1841. Celebration of Hongkong's Jubilee, 1891.
Death of Queen Victoria, 191. The first Chinese Ambassadors arrived in London,
1877. Police Sergt. Mills shot dead by armed robbers at Yaumati, 1900,
P. & O. steamer "Niphon" lost off Ainoy, 1865. King Edward's Accession, 1902, 3RD AFTER Eephany.
Mathens Ricci, the Jesuit Missionary, enters Peking, 1601. U.S. corvette "Oneida "foet through collision with P. & 0. steamier "Bombay," near Yokohama, 1870. Decree announcing resignation of Emperor Kwang Hsu, 3000
Hongkong taken possession of, 1841. S. Paul's Church at Macao burnt, 1885. Terrific
fire at Tokyo; 10,000 houses destroyed and many lives lost, 1881.
Decree from Yung-ching forbidding, under pain of death, the propagation of the
Christian faith in China, 1783.
SEXAGESIMA. Lord Saltoun left China with 33,000,000 ransom money, 1916. British gun- bont patrol with drawn from West River, 1003. Big fire among flowerboats in Canton: 100 lives lost, 1909.
Onter forts of Weihaiwei captured by Japanese, 1894.
Commissioner
12
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
FEBRUARY-28 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1st
.7h. 04m.
6h. 10m.
1908
1909
15th
..6h. 56m
6h. 19m.
Maximum
..62.3 64.3
Minimum
.54.9 57.0
Mean
.58.3 60.4
MOON'S PHASES
d. h.
m.
BAROMETER, 1909
Last Quarter
2
7
27
P.M.
Mean.......
..30.11
New Moon
10
9
13
A.M.
First Quarter 17
2
32
A.M.
1908
RAINFALL
Full Moon
24
11
36
A.M.
2.820 inches
1909 1.660 inches
DAYS OF
DAYS OF 12 & 1
WEEK
MOSTH
MOONs
Tues.
1
22
Wed. Thur.
Frid.
Sat.
Sun.
ON ON THE 10 to
2
328 25
25
26
27
Mon. 7
28
Tues.
00
8
29
Wed.
9
30
Thur. 10 Frid.
11
Sat. 12
Sun.
13
OF 24
N.Y.
2
3
Mon. 14
5
Tues. 15
6
Wed. 16
7
Thur. 17
8
Frid. 18
9
Sat.
19
10
Sun.
20
11
Mon.
21
12
Tues. 22
Wed. 23
14
****
Thur. 24
15
Frid. 25
16
Sat
26
17
Sun.
27
18
Mon. 28
19
24
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTS
Inhabitants of Hongkong declared British subjects, 1841. The Additional Article to Chefoo Convention came into force, 1887. Mrs. Carew sentenced to death at Yokohama for the murder of her husband; sentence commuted to penal servitude, 1897, First meeting of International Commission on Opium at Shanghai, 1909.
The German Club at Hongkong opened, 1872. Weihaiwei citadel captured by Japanese,
1895,
Great robbery in the Central Bank, Hongkong, discovered, 1805. Agreement opening
West River signed, 1897.
Anti-foreign riot at Chinkiang, foreign houses burned and looted, 1889,
QUINQUAGESIMA The Spanish Envoy Halcon arrived at Macao to demand satisfaction from the Chinese for the burning of the Spanish brig "Bilbaino," 1840. Japan broke of diplomatic relations with Russia, 1904. Japanese str. "Tatsu Maru" seized by Chinese gunboats near Macaoffor alleged smuggling arms, 1908
Suez Canal adopted as the regular route for the Eastern Mails, 1888.
The Spanish fleet leaves the port of Cavite, by order of the Governor of Manila, for the purpose of taking Formosa, 1626. Hostilities between Russia and Japan begun by Russian gunboat of Chemulpo, 1904. Japanese made a successful torpedo attack at midnight on Russia's Port Arthur squadron, 1904.
"ASH WEDNESDAY. The "Henrietta Maria" was found drifting about in the Palawan Passage, captain, crew, and 250 coolies missing, 1857. Murder of Messrs. Kiddle and Sutherland at Mengka on Yunnan border, 1900. Naval fight at Port Arthur between Japanese and Russian fleets with disastrous consequences to the latter, 1904.
The Japanese constitution granting representative government proclaimed by
the Emperor in person at Tokyo, 1889.
FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT. Accession of the Emperor of Japan, 1867, Outbreak of convicts in Singapore Gaol, 1876, Surrender of Liukungtao Island forts and remainder of the Chinese fleet to the Japanese, 1895,
8. Valentine's Day. Tung Wa Hospital, Hongkong, opened by Sir R. G. MacDonnell,
1872. Ports of Hongkong and Tinghai declared free, 1841. The Chinese frigate "Yu-yuen"
and corvette Chin-cheng" sunk by the French in Sheipoo harbour, 1886. Insurgents evacuated Shanghai, 1865. Stewart scholarship at Central School, Hongkong,
founded, 1884. Alice Memorial Hospital, Hongkong, opened, 1887.
The U.8. paddle man-of-war "Aslitelot" wrecked ол the East Lammock
Rock, near Swatow, 1883. Lord Amherst's Embassy, returning from China, shipwrecked in the Java Sen
1817,
2ND SUNDAY IN LENT
Mr. A. R. Margary, of H.B.M.'s Consular Service, was murdered at Manwyne, Yunnan, by Chinese, 1875, Statue of Li Hong Chang unveiled at Shanghai, 1906. 13 The Emperor Tao-kwang died, 1850 (reigned 30 years). Massacre of missionaries at
Nauchang, 1906
JJ
Hostilities between England and China recommenced, 1841. Steamer * Queen
captured and burnt by pirates, 1857. First stone of the Hongkong City Hall laid, 1867.
Chusan evacuated by the British troops, 1841. Explosion of boiler of the str., "Yotsai
between Hongkong and Macao; six Europeans and thirteen Chinese killed and vessel destroyed, 1884.
Captain Di Costa and Lieut. Dwyer murdered at Wong-ma-kok, in Hongkong, 1849. Bogue Forts, Canton, destroyed by Sir Gordon Bremer, 1841. Hongkong police chop
burnt, 1884. Marriage of the Emperor Kwang Heu, 1889.
3RD SUDAY IN LENT. Treaty of peace between Japan and Corea signed at
Kokwa, 1870. Evacuationof Port Hamilton by the British forces, 1887
Capture of the Sulu capital by the Spaniards, 1876.
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
MARCH-31 DAYS
➡
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
Ist
.6h. 46m.
6h. 25m.
1908
1909
15th
.6h. 33m.
Ch. 31m.
Maximum
.65.9
67.6
Minimum
...57.50 60.8
Mean
.61.2 64.1
MOON'S PHASES
d.
h.
m
BAROMETER, 1909.
Last Quarter
3
52
P.M.
Mean...
.30.05
New Moon
11
8
12
P.M.
First Quarter
18
11
37
A MJ.
26
4
21
A.M.
1908 0.765 inches
RAINFALL
1909
2.345 inches
13
Full Moon
DAYS OF DAYS OF 1 and 2
****** ****
WEEK MONTH
Moons
Tues. 1
20
Wed. 2
21
Thur.
3
22
Frid.
23
Sat.
24
Sun.
25
Mon.
7
26
Tues.
:
Wed Thur. 10
9 28
29
Frid. 11
1
2
*
Sat. 12
Sun, 13
Mon. 14
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
15
16
* = * 2862 * * * *5988
27
K -
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTE
S. David's Day. Bombardment of the Chinhai forts by French men-of-war, 1885,
Twenty-six opiuni divans closed in Hongkong, 1909,
First Dutch Embassy left China, 1057.
Foreign Ministers received in audience by the Emperor at the Tsz Kuang Po, 1891. Emperor Kwang Hau assumes the government, 1889.
Expulsion of Chinese Custom Honse from Macao by Governor Amaral, 1849,
4TH SUNDAY IN LENT. Hostilities at Canton recommenced. Fort Napier taken by the
English, 1541.
Departure of Governor Sir J. P. Hennessy from Hongkong, 1882. Kongmoon opened to
Foreign trade.
Arrival in Hongkong of Prince Henry of Prussia, 1898. Russo-Chinese Manchurian
Convention signed, 1902.
Attack on Messi's. Farnham and Rohl at Shanghai, 1872.
Lin arrived in Canton, 1880. 19,000 Chinese troops attacked the English in Ningpo and -Chinhai and were repulsed with great slaughter, 1842. The Japanese army aller a sanguinary battle lasting several days occupied Moukden, and pursued the retreating Russians, whose losses in the battle were estimuted at -0,000, 1906.
Governor Sir R. G. MacDonnell arrived in Hongkong, 1866.
Imperial Commissioner Ki-chen, degraded by the Emperor, left Canton as a prisoner, 1841
Capture of Bacninh, by the French, 1894.
5TH SUNDAY IN LENT.
8,000 Chinese troops routed by the English at Tze-hi with great slaughter, 1842. New Law Courts at Yokohamia opened, 1890, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank at Peking burnt down, 1900.
Governor Sir H. Robinson left Hongkong for Ceylon, 1881.
Chinese Envy Ping and suite left Shanghai for Europe, 1806. Japanese Diet resolved to nationalise the railway. China released the Japanese str. "Tatsu Maru" at Cauton, 1908. S. Patrick's Day, Lord Macartney's Embassy left China, 1794. Severe earthquake in
Formosa, 1906.
Edict of Commissioner Lin to surrender all opfum in Canton, 1889. Chungking declared
open to foreign trade, 1891.
Frid.
18
Sat.
19
9
Governor Sir G. Bonham landed at Hongkong, 1848.
Sun.
20
10
Mon.
21
11
PALM SUNDAY. Wreck of the steamer "Nanzing," near Hongkong, 1891. British ship "Sarah," first free-trader, sailed from Whampoa, 1884.
Tues.
12
Wed.
13
13
Thur.
21
Frid.
25
15
Sat.
26
16
Great food at Foochow, 1974.
Newchwang placed under Russian martial law.
Sun. 27
17
Mon
28
18
Tues.
29
19
Wed.
30
20
Thur 31
21
14
Death, at Peking, of Sir Harry Parkes, H.B.M. Minister to China, 1835. Sir Robert Hart
left Peking for Home, 1968
Captain Elliot forced his way to Canton, 1839. Aguinaldo captured by the Americans
in the Philippines, 1901
First Section of Manila-Dagupan railway opened, 1591, Attempted assassination of
Li Hung chang at Shinonoseki, 1895,
GOOD FRIDAY. Captain Elliot demands passports for himself and all the British subjects
Imprisoned in Canton, 1899.
EASTER SUNDAY Death of the widow of the Emperor Tung-chi, 1973. Protocol
of Convention between China and Portugal signed at Lisbon, 1887, 20,289 chests of opium burned by Lin at Canton, 1830.
Seizure and occupation of the Pescadores by the French feet, 1885.
Arrival of Governor Sir George Bowen, G.C.ALG., 1883. Chinese Regiment at Weihaiwei disbanded. Cantonese resolved on a boycott of Japanese products which lasted through- out the year, 1908
Abolition of the coolie trade at Macao, 1874. Arrival of the Duke and Duchess of Con-
naught in Hongkong, 1890.
14
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
APRIL-30 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1st............6h. 18m.
6h. 37m.
1908 1909
15th...
..6h. 04m. 6h. 32m.
Maximum
.71.7 75.8
Minimum
.65.5
67.4
Mean
MOON'S PHASES
..68.5
71.1
1.
b.
Last Quarter
3
8
48
A.M.
New Noon
10
5
25
A.M.
First Quarter 16
10
04
P.M.
Full Moon
24
9
23
P.M.
.בנו
BAROMETER, 1909
Mean....
.29.95
1908 RAINFALL
1909
11.150 inches
2,455 inches
DAYE OF DAYS OF | 2 and 3
WEEK
MONTII MOONS
Frid.
Sat. Sun.
Mon.
囟3 4
Tues.
5
Wed.
6
Thur.
Frid.
Sat.
9
30
Sun.
10
Mon. 11
Tues.
12
22
t
23
24
25
26
2 343 2 7 8 28-**
27
28
29
cc
2=2*
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTS
The port of Hoihow, Hainan, opened, 1876. The ports of Pakhoi, Wenchow, Wuhu and Ichang opened, 1877. B. N. Borneo adopted the Straite Settlements currency, 1905. French Fing hoisted at Kwang-chan-wan, 1898. Belitios Reformatory opened at
Hongkong, 18 0
18T SUNDAY AFTER EASTER.
Protocol arranging the preliminaries of peace between France and Chins signed at Paris, 1885. The Tsarevitch and Prince George of Greece arrive in Hongkong, 1891. Bogue Forts destroyed by General D'Aguilar, 1847. Wheelbarrow Riot at Shanghai,
1897.
Convention between Sir John Francis Davis and the Viceroy Ki-ying for the admission
of Europeans into the city of Canton within two months, 1842.
Hongkong Mint opened, 1833. Indignation Meeting at Shanghai respecting Wheel
barrow Riot, 1997. Great powder explosion at Canton, 1903. Arrival of M. Paul Bert at Hanoi, 1888.
+
Terrific tornado in Canton; 2,000 houses destroyed and 10,000 lives lost, 1878.
2ND SUNDAY AFTER EASTER. 37,000 Christians butchered in Japan, 1788. Death at Peking of
Marquis Tseng, 1890,
Presentation of colours to Hongkong Regiment, 1895. Russian Bagship Petropaclovsk sunk by a mine off Port Arthur, nearly every man drowned including Adiniral Makaroff, 1904
Soldiers' Club opened at Honghong, 1900. Imperial Palace, Seoul, destroyed by fire, 1901
8. Francis Xavier left Goa For China, 1552.
British Flag hoisted at Taipohu, Kowloon New Territory, 1899. Governor Sir Arthur
Kennedy arrived in Hongkong, 1872. Junk Bay Flour mills, Hongkong, suspended operations, 1908.
3RD SUNDAY AFTER MASTER. Telegraph to Shanghai opened, 1871. Execution at Kowloon city of nineteen pirates (including "Namoa" pirates), 1801. Treaty of Peace between China and Japan signed at Shimonoseki, 1895.
Convention between China and Japan settling Corean differences signed ac Tientsin, 1885. The U. & O. steamer San Pablo" wrecked near Turnabout, 1888. One-fourth of the opium divans at Shanghai closed, 1908.
The "Sir Charles Forbes," the first steamer in China waters, arrived, 1830.
Tsarevitch arrived at Hankow, 1891.
Resignation of Shanghai Municipal Council, 1897.
The
East India Company ceased trade with China, 1834. Arrival of Governor J. Pope Hennessy in Hongkong, 1877. Opening of new commercial port of Hengehow near Macar, 1909.
8. George's Day.
4TH SUNDAY AFTER EASTER. Chinese Imperial Edict issued disranking Roman Catholic missionaries, 1908. Capture of the citadel at Hanoi, Tonkin, by the French forces, 1882 Departure of Sir William Marsh, acting Governor of Hongkong, 1887. Firet sod of the Shanghai-Nanking railway cut at Shanghai, 1905
Foundation stone of Queen's College, Hongkong, laid, 1884
Ratifications of Corean Treaty with England exchanged, 1884. Privy Council for Japan constituted by Imperial decree, 1888. Sir F. D. Lugard lays foundation store of Hongkong Seaman's Institute, 1900.
Battle of the Yan (basso-Japan War, Rusalans defented with great slaughter, 1900 Arrival of General Grant in Hongkong 187v.
Wed.
Thur.
14
Frid.
15
Sat.
16
* 59
Sun.
17
8
Mon.
Tues. 19 Wed. 20 Thur. 21
Frid.
* 2222
18
9
10
#1
12
13
Sat.
Sun.
Mon. 25
Tues. Wed.
Thur. 28
BAR SER
23
14
24
15
16
26
17
27
18
19
Frid.
29
20
Sat. 30 | 21
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
MAY-31 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1st....... ..5h. 52m.
6h. 48m.
1908 1909
15th...
..5h. 44m.
6h. 54m.
Maximum
.80.8
78.6
Minimum
.72.1
71.5
Mean....
...76.1
74.8
MOON'S PHASES
dl.
h.
m.
Last Quarter
2
9
30
P.M.
New Moon
9
1
33
P.M.
First Quarter 16
10
13
A.M.
Full Moon
24
1 39
P.M.
BAROMETER, 1909
Mean.....
.29.88
1903
RAINFALL
1909
11.35 inches
6.700 inches
DATS OF DAYS OF 3 & +
15
WERK
MONTH
Sun.
1
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Thur. Frid.
Sat.
Sun. Mon.
උපය (ථාක
Tues. 10
MOONS
CHRONOLOGY of Remarkable Events
22 ROGATION SCSDAY. First number of "Hongkong Gazette" published, 1841. Telegraphet communication established between Hongkong and the Philippines, 1880. Spanish fleie destroyed by U.S. fleet at Cavite, 1888. Eupreor Kwang Hsu buried, 1909. Katification at Tientsin of the Treaty between Portugal & China, 1888.
23
24
25
26
27
28
2 *** *** 2-**
29
Suspension of Oriental Bank, 1884.
Riot in French Concession at Shanghai, 1874. Roman Catholic Cathedral at Peking
inaugurated, 1884.
ASCENSION DAY. British troops evacuated Ningpo, 1842. Imperial Government ordered
steps to be taken at Hongkong to close opium divans, 1908. Attack on Mr. Wood at the British Legation at Tokyo, 1874. Departure of Governor Sir William Des Voeux from Hongkong, 1891.
SUNDAY AFTER ASCENSION. H.M.S. "Terrible" arrived at Hongkong from South Africa, 1900, New Town Hall at Tientsin opened, 1800. Waglan Lighthouse opened, 1893 Hougkong declared infected with plague, 1894, Colonel Gordon with the Imperial troops captured Chang-chow, the rebel city, 1804. Occupation of Port Hamilton by the British Squadron, 1885. Meeting of Chinese merchants at Shanghai instituted a boycott of American products as a protest against the Chinese Immigration Act, the movement eventually spreading extensively in China, 1906.
Attempted assassination of the Tsarevitch by a Japanese at Otsu, Japan, 1891, Execution
of fifteen purces (including leader of "Namon" pirates) at Kowloon, 1891.
East India Company's garden at Canton destroyed by the Mandarins, 1831.
A corporal of the British Legation murdered by Chinese soldiers at Peking, 1804. Anti-
foreign riot at Wuhu, 1891.
Arrival of Sir John Walsham, Bart., in Hongkong, on his way to Peking to assume
the functions of British Minister, 1886.
WHIT SUNDAY. Ratification at Peking of the amended Treaty between Russia and
China, 1881. Anti-foreign riot in the Hochow district, 1801. Kowloon wall city occupied, 1899,
PJ
Loss off Amoy of the Frerich war steamer "Izere, 1900. Arrival of General Grant in
Shanghai, 1879.
The city of Chapu taken by the British troops, 1942, Anti-foreign riot at Nanking, 1891, Disastrous surprise of a French sortie in Tonkin led by Commandant Riviere and death
of the latter, 1838. "Hongkong Daily Press" enlarged, 1900.
ASCENSION DAY. Forts at mouth of Peiho captured by British and French forcas, 1859.
The Canton Mint commenced striking silver coins, 1890.
Loss of M.M. str. "Menzaleh" while on her passage from Hongkong to Yokohama, 1857. Imperial Edict respecting anti-Christian literature, 1892, Ministers' Joint Note to Chinese Government on the Doxer agitation, 19",
Wed. 11
Thur.
12
Frid. 13
Sat.
14
&
Sun,
15
7
Mon. 16
Tues. 17
9
Wed. 18
10
Thur. 19
11
Frid.
20
12
Sat.
21
13
Sun.
22
14
Mon. 23
15
U.S. Legation at Tokyo burned down, 1863,
Tues. 24
16
Wed. 25
17
Thur. 26 Frid. 27
18
Death of Grand Secretary Wen-siang, 1876.
19
Sat. 28 Sun.
20
29
21
Mon.
30
22
Tues. 31
23
སྐྱེསྶ
TRINITY SUNDAY. Foreign factories at Canton pillaged, 1841.
EMPIRY DAY. Captain Elliot and all the British subjects left Canton for Macno, 1889.
British day holated at Weihaiwei, 1808.
The city of Canton invested by British troops, 1841. Anti-foreign riot at Nanking, 1801.
Formosa Republic declared, 1995.
Canton ransomed for $6,000,000,1841. Boxers buru station on Lu-Haa line, 1000, Bottle of Kinchan (Russo-Japan War); Japanese stormed Nanshan and captured 78 guns, 1904, Battle of the Japan Sea, Admiral Togo practically annihilates Admiral Roshdes vensky's fleet, 1005,
Queen's Statue, Hongkong, unveiled, 1896. Great rain storm in Hongkong, serious
damage, 1889. Anti-foreign riots in Szerhuen, 1895. 1ST AFTER TRINITY.
II. B. M. screw sloop Reynard" lost on mainder of crew of "Velocipede," 1851.
1858.
Typhoon at Ifongkong and Macao; loss of the
20-
the Pratas shoal in tryingto rescue Opening of the Peak Tramway, Hongkong,
"Poyang," with 100 Hves near Macao 1874.
16
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
JUNE-30 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1st..
.5h. 39m.
6h. 51m.
1908
1909
15th.
.5h. 39m.
6h. 07m.
Maxinum
.83.6
86.3
Minimum
.77.2
78.6
MOON'S PHASES
Mean
.80.2
81.8
d.
h.
m.
Last Quarter
BAROMETER, 1909
1 6
24
A.M.
New Moon
First Quarter 15
Full Moon
7
16
Mean......
29.79
P.M.
19
A.M.
21
12
A.M.
Last Quarter
30
0 39
P.M.
1908 15.245 inches
RAINFALL
1909
7.385 inches
DAYS OF DAYS OF
WEEK
MONTI
+ and 6 Moose
Wed.
1
2+
Thur. 2
25
Frid. 3
26
Sat.
4
27
Sun.
5
28
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
Fri. Sat.
10
Sun. 12
Mon.
13
****
6
29
7
8
9
3
Portuguese prohibited trading at Canton, 1640.
6
7
Tues. 14
8
Wed.
15
9
Thur. 16
10
Frid. 17
11
Sat.
18
12
Sun. 19
13
Mon, 20
14
Tues. 21
15
Wed. 22
16
Thur. 23
17
Frid.
24
18
Sat. 25
19
Sun. 26
20
Mon 27
21
Tues. 28
22
Wed. 29
Thur. 30
23
24
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTA
Attempt to blow up the Hongkong Hotel, 1878. New Opium Agreement between Hongkong and Cliina came into force, 1887. Anti-foreign riot at Tanyang, 1891 Canton-Samshui Railway completed
Hongkong connected with London by wire, 1971. Formal transfer of Formosa from
China to Japan, 1895. Revs. Norman and Robinson murdered, 1000.
Earthquake at Manila, killing more than 2,000 persons, 1863. Death of Sir Arthur Kennedy, 1883, Russell & Co. suspend payment, 1891. Kelung taken possession of by Japanese, 1995.
Treaty between France and Corea signed at Seoul, 1880. West River opened, 1897.
2ND AFTER TRINITY. Departure of the first O. & D. steamer from Hongkong to
San Francisco, 1875, Messrs. Argent and Green murdered in an anti-foreign riot at Wubsuel, 1891. Communication with Peking cut off, 1900,
Heavy rains in Hongkong, property to the value of $500,000 destroyed, and many
lives lost, 1864.
Attempted anti-foreign riot at Kiukiang, 1501. Hongkong-Cantou steamer "Powan
wrecked, 1908.
Destruction of Mission premises at Wusieh by anti-foreign mob, 1891.
EF
Suspension of New Oriental Bank, 1892. The P. & O. stenmier "Aden" wrecked off
Socotra, 78 lives lost, 1897
Typhoon at Formosa; loss of several vessels, 1876.
Peking, 1900.
Sup AFTER TRINITY. Opening of the first railway in Japan, 1572,
British steamer "Carisbrooke" fired into and captured by Chinese Customs cruiser, 1875. Imperial Edict condemning attacks on Foreigners, 1891. Baronvon Ketteler, German Minister, murdered in Peking, 1900.
Russo-Chinese Treaty, 1728. Battle of Telissa (Russo-Japan War) Russians defeated
with a loss of 7,000 men and 16 guns, 1901.
Tidal Wave, Japan, 28,000 lives lost, 1898. British barque "Cæsar" and Danish schooner "Carl" taken by pirates off Pedro Blanco, 1566, Hope Dock opened at Aberdeen 1567. Russian squadron sank Japanese transport "Hitachi," badly injured "Sado," 1904. Woosung taken, 1842.
First foreign-owned junk leaves Chungking, 1891. Capture of Taku Forts by Allies, 1900. Explosion of the "Union Star" at Shanghai, 17 persons killed and 10 wounded, 1862-
Disastrous inundation at Foochow, 2,000 lives lost, 1877.
4TH AFTER TRINITY. Shanghai occupied by British forces, 1842.
Macartney's embassy arrived in China, 1793. Attack on mission premises at Haiman
city. 181. Uuprecedented floods in the West River, 1908. Massacre at Tientsia, 1870.
Canton blockaded by English forces, 1840. Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee celebra-
tion, 1827.
Ki-ying visits Hongkong, 1843 Shock of Earthquake in Hongkong, 1874. French troops surprised by Chinese near Langson, 1884. Russian Baltic Fleet, after remaining six we ks in Tonkin waters, sailed from Kaaranh Bay northward, 1906, Assassination of M. Carnot, President of the French Republic, 1894. Treaty of Nanking
exchanged, 1843. Attack on British Legation at Tokyo, 1882.
5TH AFTER TRINITY. Treaty between England and Obina signed at Tientsin, 1858. Ad-
ditional Convention between France and China signed at Peking. 1387.
Treaty between France and China signed, 1858. Cortiscation of the str, "Prince Albert"
by the British Consul and Customs at Canton, 186
Agreement effected between Great Britain and the United States for reciprocal protection
of British and American Trade Marks in China, 1905.
The Foreign Ministers admitted to an audience of the Emperor of China at Peking, 1873,
Indian Mints closed to silver, 1893.
British expedition to China arrived, 1840, Opening of a section of the Shanghai and
Woosung Balway, 1970. Flooding of the Takastui enal tuinz), 1801.
Admiral Seymour starts for
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
JULY-31 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1st
.5h. 43m.
7h. 00m.
1908
1909
15th
.5h. 48m.
7h. 08m.
Maximum
.87.0
86.5
Minimum
.78.7
78.2
Mean
.82.3 $1.9
MOON'S PHASES
17
CHROXOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTS
25 |¦ Ilakodate, Kanagawa, and Nagasaki (Japan) opened to trade, 1857.
sionaries murdered at Sungpu, 1893.
Amoy forts and many junks destroyed by H.M.S. "Blode," 1840.
from the Hoongkiang arrived in Hongkong, 1873.
Two Swedish mis-
French Expedition
d.
h.
m.
BAROMETER, 1909
New Moon
17
6
20
A.M.
Mean
.29.77
First Quarter 14
4
24
P.M.
Full Moon
22
4
37
P.M.
1907
RAINFALL
1908
Last Quarter
29
5
34
P.M.
22.265 inches
12.825 inches
DAY OF DAY OF 5 and 6
WEEK MONTE
MOONS
Frid.
1
Sat.
2
Sun. 3
4
5
n orang = 2 *
AON-8 N NNNN
26
27
T
28
Mon.
Tues.
Wed. Thur.
Frid.
Sat. Sun.
9
10
Mon. 11
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
12
29
30
6
13
7
14
8
*27*** *
| 6TH AFTER TRINITY, Steamer "Don Juan) burnt at sea pear Philippines; 145 persons
perished, 1893. Hongkong low level electric tram service opened, 1904.
Déclaration American Independence, 1776. Telegraph cable laid between Hongkong
U. S. Pacific Cable opened to Manila.
And Macao, 1884.
Tinghai first taken, 1940. Attack on British Embassy at Tokyo, 1886. Duke of Con-
naught's Statue unveiled in Hongkong, 1902, Order of nobility instituted in Japun, 1884, Canton factories attacked by Chinese, 1846.
First Dutch embassy arrived at Tientsin, 1656.
Japanese occupy Sakhalin, 1905.
The Yangisze
7T! AFTER TRINITY. Portuguese fleet left Malacca for China, 1522.
blockaded by Britishfleet, 1840. First Bazaar by Chinese held at Hongkong in aid of relief of distress caused by West River floods, 1908
Engagement between the U. S. Naval Forces and the Ooreans; the Expedition leaves to
await instructions, 1871, Amherst's embassy arrived in China, 1816.
Foreign Inspectorate of Customis established in Shanghai, 1864. Suspension of Hongkong
Police Officers for accepting bribes, 1897.
First English ship reached China, 1835. French gunboats fired on by Siamese at Pak nam, 1903. Pirates attacked S. S. "Bainam" on West River, killing Rev. Dr. Mac- Donald and injuring several of the crew, 1906.
Statue of Paul Beau unveiled at Hanoi, 1890. Tientsin native city captured by Allies
1900. Chinese Imperial Edict declared bow & arrow obsoletearms, 1905,
Shimonoseki forts bombarded by the English, French, and American squadrons, 1874;
Eruption of Bandai-san volcano, Japan : 500 persons killed, 1888.
ST. SWITHER'S DAY. British trade with China re-opened, 1842, The King of Cambodia
arrived on a visit to Hongkong, 1872.
STU AFTER TRINITY, Ningpo Joss-house Riots, Shanghai; 15 killed and many wounded,
between Russia and China on Amur River, 1900.
Terrible earthquake at Manila, 1880. Additional Article to Chefoo Convention signed in
London, 1885. Li Hung-chang passed through Hongkong on bla way North, 1900.
Nanking captured by the Imperialists, 1864. Indo-China 8.8. "Hopsang" sunk by
Russians, Pechili Gulf, 1904.
Frid.
15
9
Sat.
16
10
Sun. 17
11
Mon.
18
12
Tues.
19
13
Wed.
20
14
Thur.
15
·
21
Wreck of the C. M. S. N. Co.'s str. "Pautah" on Shantang Promontory 1857, Yellow River burst its banks at Chang-kiu, Shangtung: great inundation 1889.
Typhoon
Frid.
16
22
in Hongkong, 1902.
Sat.
17
Armed attack on Japanese Legation at Seoul, Cores, and
DAL.C
23
Sun.
24
Mon.
19
25
Tues.
26
20
Wed.! 27
21
Thur. 28 Frid. 29
Sat. Sun, 31
30
* ****
22
23
24
25
18 | OTH AFTER TRINITY. British trade prohibited at Canton, 1834. Anglo-Chinese Burmah
Convention signed at Peking, 1886. Kowshing," British steamer, carrying Chinese troops, sunk by Japanese, with loss of about 1,000 lives, 1894. Defeat of British forces at Taku, Admiral Hopo wounded, 1850. First visit of Prince Chun, the Emperor's brother, to Hongkong, 1941. Japanese occupy Newchwang, 1904.
Great flood at Chefoo kills 1,900, 1903.
Canton opened to British trade, 1843. Terrific typhoon at Canton, Macao, Hongkong, and Whampoa; loss of life estimated at 40,000 persons, 1862. Disastrous typhoon at Hongkong, 1908
Nanking re-taken by Imperialists, 1864. Sir Matthew Nathan arrived Hongkong, 1904. German gunboat Iltis" wrecked off Shantung Promontory, all but eleven of the crew
perished, 1896. Outbreak of rebellion at Manila, 1896.
Severe typhoon at Macao, 1836.
10TH AFTER TRINITY. Hongkong low level electric tram service started, 1904
18
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
AUGUSP-31 DAYS
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
SUNRISE
SUNSET
1st.5h. 56m.
7h. 02m.
15th
..........6h. Olm. 6h 53m.
MOON'S PHASES
d. h.
ni
New Moon
5
2
37
P.M.
First Quarter 13 10
01
A.M.
Full Moon
21
3
14
A.M.
Last Quarter
27
10
33
P.M.
DAYS OF DAYS OF 6 and 7
1908
909
Maximum
Minimum
Mean
87.3
87.5
.....78.5
78.8
......82.1
82.8
BAROMETER, 19 9
Mean......
.29.78
1908
RAINFALL
1909
12.065 inches
8.340 inches
WEEK❘ MONTH
Moons
Mon.
1
26
Tues.
27
Wed.
28
Thur.
29
Frid.
Sat.
Sun. Mon. Tues.
Wed. 10 Thur.
11
Frid.
Sat.
Sun.
12
13
*** = * * *
9
14
10
Mon. 15
11
Tues. 16
12
Wed. 17
13
Thur.
18
14
Frid. 19
15
Sat. 20
16
Sun. 21
17
Mon. 22
18
Tues.
23
Wed.
24
20
Thur. 25
21
Frid.
20
22
Sat.
Sun. 28
27
23
24
Mon. 29
25
Tues. Wed.
31
27
ོཙཱངྒེསྶཕ$མཚའུ
30 26
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTS
Both China and Japan declare war, 1894. Kucheng massacre, 1895. Victims of massacre at Tientsin buried, 1870.
10TH AFTER TRINITY, British feet arrived before Nanking, 1842. First Chinese Bazaar
held at Cunton, 1908
Macartney's Embassy entered Peiho, 1796. Bombardment of Kelung by French, 1884.
Allied march on Péking starts, 1000. Li Hung Chong visited Queen Victoria, 1806.
Serious flood at Tientsin, 1871.
11TH AFTER TRINITY.
British Squadron arrived off the Peiho, 1840.
Assassination of Mr. Haber, German Consul, at Hakodate, 1874.
British troops landed at Nanking, 1842. King Edward VII's Coronation celebrated
at Hongkong, 1902.
Sir H. Pottinger arrived at Hongkong, 1841.
Destructive typhoon at Foochow, 1888. First public meeting of British merchants in Canton, called by Lord Napier, who
suggested the establishment of a Chamber of Commerce, 1834.
174 British prisoners executed in Formosa, 1842. Manila occupied by U.8. Troops,
15v8.
Tong-ur-ku takeu, 1800, House collapse, causing 43 deaths, in Cochrane Street, Hongkong, 1901. Japanese squadron sinks Russian oruiser Burik near Tsushima, 1904. 12T AFTER TRINITY,
ASSUMPTION B.V.M. Great fire on French Concession, Shanghai; 991 houses destroyed; loss Tls. 1,500,000, 1870. Total loss of the E. & A. steamer Gatterthun" near Sydney, 1585. Peking Legations rescued, 1900. Murder of Messrs. Bruce and Lewis at Chengehow, Honun, 1002. Prince and Princess Arisugawa entertained at Hongkong, 1904. British trade of Canton stopped by Ilong merchants, 1884. French Treaty with Siam
signed, 18550.
41
"Empress of India" sinks Chinese cruiser Wong Tai" in collision near Swatow, 1908. Lord Napier ordered by the Viceroy to leave Canton, 1834. Great fire in Hongkong,
1868. Indian troops lauded in Shanghai, 1000
First conference between Sir Henry Pottinger and Ki-ying on board the "Cornwallis,"
at Nanking, 1842. Taku forts taken by the Allied forces, 1860. 18th after TrNITY. Emperor Lien Fung died, 1861. Palace Revolution at Peking, Em-
press Dowager again assumes the Regency, 1898,
Governer Amaral (Macao) asenssinated, lsiv, Ma, Viceroy of Nanking, stabbed, 1870. Seizure of steamer "Spark" by pirates between Canton and Macao, 1874. Telegraph line to Peking opened, 1884.
Large meeting in Hongkong to protest against the military contribution, 1884.
Chinese fleet ut Pagoda Anchorage destroyed by French, 1884.
ST. BARTHOLOMEWS. Wreck of the U. N. Gols str. "Tientsin" near Swatow, 1887. Dis-
turbances at Amoy, Japanese landed marines, 1900.
British Chamber of Commerce established at Canton, 1834.
Britain and Japan signed, 1818,
Treaty between Great
British left Macão, 1830. British steamer "Dunearn" toundered in a typhoon of Goto
Islands, 1902
Amoy taken by the English, 296 guns captured, 1841.
ITU AFTRE TRINITT. Lord Amherst's Embassy left for Yuen-ming-yuen, 1516. Slavery
abolished in British possessions, 1833. Kimpai forta silenced by French, 1884. Treaty of Nanking signed, 1842.
*
Wreck of Futami Maru" off Cape Calavite, 1900.
Severe typhoon on coast of China, many lives lost, and much damage done to shipping
at Hongkong, Macao, and Whampon, 1848.
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
SEPTEMBER-30 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
Ist
....6h. 07in,
6h. 39m.
15th
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1908
1909
...6h. Olm. 6h. 25m.
MOON'S PHASES
Maximum
.85.7
87.0
Minimum
.77.3
78.5
Mean
80.9
82.2
d. h.
I,
BAROMETER, 1909
New Moon
4
2
06
A.M.
Mean...
29.78
First Quarter
12
4
11
A.M.
Full Moon
19
0
52
P M.
1908
RAINFALL
1909
Last Quarter
26
4
54
A.M
13.720 inches
8.505 inches
19
DAYS OF DAYS OF 7 and 8
WERK
MONTH
Thur.
1
Frid.
2
Sat. Sun.
Mon. Tues.
in to
4
56
8000
9
Wed.
7
Thur.
Frid.
Sat.
10
Sun
11
Mon.
12
Tues. 13
Wed. 14
Thur. 15
Frid
Sat.
MOONS
28
29
2 2 8-
30
GIA
4
5
TH10 40 K
6
00
8
9
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTS
Ma, Viceroy of Nanking, died of the wounds inflicted by an assassin, 1870. Foundation stone of Gap Rock lighthouse, near Hongkong, laid, 1890, Chinese Imperial Decree Published announcing a decision to grant Constitutional Government.
Arrival of the "Vega" at Yokohama after having discovered the North-East Passage, 1879. Kiaochau declared a free port, 1898. Japanese occupied Lioa-yang, capturing vast stores of ammunition and provisions, 1904.
Hongkong Plague proclamation revoked, 1894. Disastrous floods at Shanghai, 1904. 15TH AFTER TRINITY. Attack on the forts at Shimonoseki, Japan, by the allied fleets under
Admiral Kuper, 1×64. Death of Tso Taung-tang at Foochow, 1885. Anglo-Chinese Cona mercial Treaty signed, 1902.
H.R.H. Prince Alfred received by the Mikado of Japan, 1860.
Chinese Court left
Heianfu on the way to Peking, 1901. Assassination of Mr. McKinley, President of the U.S.A., 1901. Sir James Mackay's Treaty with China signed, 1902, Attack on Dr. Greig, near Kirin, by soldiers, 1891.
Great typhoon in Hongkong, 1867. III. Prince Teai Hsun visits Hongkong, 1909.
Sir Hercules Robinson assumed the government of Hongkong, 1859.
Riot by Chinese mob at Canton; great destruction of houses and property in Shameen, 1893. British gunbout "Wasp" left Singapore for Hongkong and seen no more, 1887.
16TH AFTER TRINITY. Publicmeeting of foreign residents at Yokohama to protest against proposed new Treaty with Japan 1890. Japanese flagship "Mikasa" foundered as the result of an explosion in Sasebo harbour, with a loss 599 men, 1905. Convention signed at Chefoo by Sir Thomas Wade and Li Hung-chang, 1876.
10 Public Meeting in Hongkong, with reference to the blockade of the port by the Chinese
Customs cruisers, 1874. Severe typhoon in Southern Japan, 1801.
* = ** *29 522 Z
***
Chinese transport "Waylee" driven whore on Pescadores; upwards of 370 lives lost, 1887.
Pingyang captured by the Japanese, 1894.
New Convention between.Germany and China ratified at Peking, 1881.
The battle of the Yalu, in which the Chinese were defeated by the Japanese, losing five
vessels, 1894.
Destruction by fire of the Temple of Heaven, Peking, 1880. Loss in Kii Channel, near 17TH AFTER TRINITY. Kobe, of the Turkish frigate "Ertogrul," with 667 lives, 1890. Allied Generalissimo, reached Hongkong, 1000. Typhoon at Hongkong the most disas
trous in the Colony's history, 1906. Riots at Kumchuk, Kwang tung, 1000.
11
12
16
13
17
14
Sun. 18
15
19
16
20
17
21
18
22
19
Count von Waldersee reached Shanghai, 1900. Typhoon at Swatow, 1891.
23
20
29 29 27** *
Mon
Tues. Wed.
Thur.
Frid.
Sat.
24
Sun 25
21
22
Mon. Tues. 27 Wed
26
23
24
29
25
Thur. 29
26
Fri.
30
27
U.S. brig "bra" taken by piratos, 1866. many thousands of lives lost, 1874. inaugurated 1904. H.M.S.
Terrific typhoon in Hongkong and Macao. Hongkong Volunteer Reserve Association
"Rattler" lost of Japan, 1868. Piratical attack on the German barque "Apenrade," near Macao, 1869, The Satsuma rebels in Japan routed with Great slaughter, their leader, Saigo, killed, and the insurrection suppressed 1877. Bomb thrown at Chinese Commissioners when about to leave Peking for Europe, 1905. 18TIT AFTER TRINITT, aring attack upon a Chinese shop in Wing Lok Street, Hongkong, by armed robbers, 1878. Arrival of Governor Sir Henry A. Blake in Hongkong, 1898. Jubilee of Dr. A. H. Graves' missionary labours at Canton celebrated, 1906. Lord Napier arrived at Macao dangerously ill, 1834.
Commissioner Lin degraded, 1810. Lord Kitchener in Hongkong, 1909.
Yellow River burst its banks in Honan; calamitous inundation, 1837. Death of Hon
Stewart, Colonial Secretary, ab Hongkong, 1889.
Michaelmas Day. Hurricane at Manila, causing immonse damage to shipping, 1865, 8. S. "Charterhonse" foundered in a typhoon of Hainan Head, 70 persons drowned.
1906.
All the Bogue forts destroyed by the British deel, 1841. 8. 9. "Hsiesho" sank after striking
a mine in Pechili Gulf, 1905,
20
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
OCTOBER-31 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1st.......
...8h. 18m.
6h. 10m.
1908 1909
15th............6h. lim.
5h. 57m.
Maximum..
.80.8 81,5
Minimum
.73.4 74.0
Mean
.76.8 77.8
MOON'S PHASES
l. h.
m.
New Moon
3 4
32
P.M.
First Quarter 11
9
40
P.M.
Full Moon
18
10
24
P.M.
Last Quarter 25
1
48
P.M.
BAROMETER, 1909
Mean......
...29.89
1908
RAINFALL
1909
5.440 inches
23.985 inches
DAYS OF DAYS OF 8 & 9
MONTH
Moons
28
-
1
23
WEEK
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
6
Fird.
7
Sat.
Sun.
Mon. 10
Tues. 11
9
Wed. 12
10
Thur. 13
11
Frid. 14
12
Sat.
15
13
Sun. 16
14
Mon. 17
15
Tues. 18
16
Wed. 19
17
Thur.
20
Frid.
18
21
29
Sat.
22
20
Sun.
23
21
Mon. 24
22
Tues.
25
23
Wed.
26
24
Thur.
27
23
Frid.
28
26
Sat.
29
27
Sun. 30
28
Mon.
31
29
* ****5887
CHRONOLOGY of RemarkABLE EVENTS
The Hongkong Daily Preys" startcil, 1857. Inauguration of Hongkong College of Medicine, 1887. Hyogo declared an open port, 1892. Gold Standard adopted in Japan, 1807, 10TH AFTER TRINITY. Confucius born, B.C. 562. Tamsui bombarded by French, 1884. Serious riot at Hongkong, 1884. Treaty between France and Siam signed at Bangkok..
1892. Withdrawal of British steamers from West River, 1940.
Attack on foreignera at Wenchow, 1884. Terrible fire at Amoy, 1902, Typhoon at
Hongkong, 1894,
French expedition left Cheloo for Corea, 1860. Arrival in Hongkong of Governor Sir William Des Voeux, 1887. Liu Kung-yi, Viceroy of the Liang-kiang, died at Nanking 1902,
Bongkong Government agreed to lend the Viceroy of Wuchang £1,100,000 to repurchase from an American syndicate the Canton-Hankow railway concession, 1905. H.R.H. Prince Alfred visited Peking, but not received by the Emperor, 1869. Great publio meeting at Hongkong to consider increase of crime in Colony, 1878. Chinese Court left Kaifengfu on its way to Peking, 1901.
Supplementary Treaty signed at the Bogue, 1848. French landing party at Tamsui repulsed, 1834. Death of Lady Robinson, wife of the Governor of Hongkong, 1894. Battle of Shaho Russo-Japanese War commenced, ended 25th in disastrous defeats of Russians; casualties 45,00 Russian; 15,879 Japanese, 1904.
20TH AFTER TRINITY. Shanghai captured, 1841. Chinhai taken, 1841. Official inspection of Tientsin-Kaiping Railway, 1888. Wreck off the Pescadores of the Norwegian str, "Normand," with loss of all on board except two, 1802. Shangbal-Woosung Railway placed under Chinese control, 1904.
Lord Napier died at Macao, 1834. Wreck of the Pescadores of the P. & O. str. "Bokhara,"
with loss of 125 lives, 1892.
The first Chinese merchant steamer (the "Meifoo") left Hongkong for London with
passengers to establish a Chinese firmi there, 1881. Revolt in the Philippines, 1872.
Ningpo occupied by British forces, 1941. First railway in Japan officially opened by the Mikado, 1872. Allies capture Paotingiu, 1900. Flora Templet" lost in the China Sea, with upwards of 800 coolies on board, 1859. Hankow burnt at her wharf, Hong- kong, 75 deck passengers perishing, 1906.
21ST AFTER TRINITY. Explosion on the Chinese trooper "Kungpai," loss of 500 lives, 1895- Khanghoa, in Corea, taken by the French, 1868.
St. John's Cathedral, Hongkong, dedicated, 1942. Daring piracy on board the British
str. "Greyhound," 1885. Tao Mu, Viceroy at Canton, died, 1902.
At a meeting of the Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, London and Chino, a scheme
of reconstruction was approved, 1892.
Great fire in Hongkong, 18569. Great typhoon at Formosa, 1881. Japanese Government
welcomed American Battleship Fleet, 1908
Terrific typhoon at Manila; enormous damage to property, 1882.
The Shanghai and Woosung railway closed by the Chinese Government, 1877. H.R.H. Prince Alfred arrived at Shanghai, 1860. Cosmopolitan Dock opened, 1875.
Death at saigon of M. Filippini, Governor of Cochin-China, 1887.
*
53 piratical vessels destroyed by Captains Hay and Wilcox, H.M. ships Columbine
and Fury," 1819.
22ND AFTER TRINITY.
Japanese cross the Yalu, 1894.
Treaty of Whampoa between France and China signed, 1844. Kabling recaptured by the Allies, 1982. Sir Claude Macdonald leaves Peking, succeeded by Sir E. Sutow, 1900. Chin-lien-cheng taken by the Japanese, 1891.
Serious earthquake in Central Japan, 7,500 persons killed, 1891. Attempted insurrection at Canton, 1895. Prince Adalbert of Prussia visited Hongkong, 1904. Masa.ore of four American Missionaries and a child at Lienchow, 1905. Prince Ito assasinated at Harbin, 1909.
Fenghuang taken by the Japanese, Battleship Fleet at Amoy, 1903.
Talienwan and Kinchow taken by
Portuguese frigate "D. Maria II." blown up at Maçao, 1860. 280 AFTER TRINITY. Great fire in Hongkong, 1886. 1994. Chinese Government welcomed American H.R.H. Prince Alfred arrived at Hongkong, 1889.
the Japanese, 1894,
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
NOVEMBER-30 DAYS
SUNRISE
SUNSET
1st............6h. 29m. 5h. 45m.
15th............6h. 37m. 5h. 39m.
MOON'S PHASES
d.
m.
New Moon
2
9
56
A.M.
First Quarter
10
1
29
P.M.
Full Moon
17
8
25
A.M.
Last Quarter
24
2
13
A.M.
DAYS OF DATS OF 9 and 10
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1908 1909
Maximum
.75.8 75.5
Minimum
.65.6 65.4
Mean
.70.2 70.4
BAROMETER, 1909
Mean.....
.30.07
1908
RAINFALL
0.145 inches
1909 0.065 inches
21
WERK
MONTH
Moons
Tues.
1
30
Wed.
I
Thur.
2
Frid.
Sat.
Sun.
5
CHRONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTS
The port of Quinhon, Annaan, opened to foreign trade, 1876. Death of Alexander I
Czar of Russia, 1894. Riotous disturbances at Hongkong connected with the boycott of Japanese goods, 1905.
Wreck of the U.S. cruiser "Charleston off North Luzon.
Great Britain commenced the first war with China by the Naval action of Chuen-pee
1839.
Hongkong Jockey Club formed, 1884.
Great fire at Macao, 500 houses burnt, 1834. Peking evacuated by the Allies, 1800. 20TH AFTER TRINITY. English and French Treaties promulgated in the "Peking Gazette,"
1880.
Mon.
7
6
Tues.
Death of Li Hung-chang, 1901.
Wed.
8
Thur.
10
Fri.
11
Sat.
12
Sun.
13
Mon.
14
Tues.
15
Wed.
16
Thur.
Frid.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
Frid. 25
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
22 * *** * * * * * * * * * *
10
11
12
13
* * *
9
14
15
17
16
18
17
19
18
20
19
21
20
22
21
23
22
24
23
24
26
25
27
26
28
27
29
28
30
29
The French repulsed in Corea, 1866. Celebration of Queen Victoria's Jubilee in Hongkong, 1887. Typhoon at Hongkong, 1900, H.M.S. "Sandpiper" and "Canton Oity "aunki Funeral of Empress-Dowager of China, 1909. Statue of Sir Arthur Kennedy unveiled in the Botanic Gardens, Hongkong, 1887. H.M.S. "Racehorse" wrecked off Chefoo in 1884. Death of M. Paul Bert, Resident General
of Annam and Tonkin, 1886. New Chinese Tariff came into force, 1901. Hongkong first lighted by gas, 1864. The Foreign Ministers had audience within
the Palace, Peking, 1804.
25T11 AFTER TRINITY. Earthquake at Shanghai, 1847. Macao Boundary Delimitation
Conference at Hongkong interrupted, 1909.
Convention signed between Russia and China, 1860. Celebration of Shanghai Jubilee, 1893. Germaus took possession of Kiaochau Bay, 1807. Death of the Chiuese Emperor Kwang Hsu, 1908.
H. M. gunboat "Gnat' lost on the Palawan, 1808. Destruction of the str. "Wah Yeung by fire in the Canton river; upwards of 400 lives lost, 1887. Opening of Canton-Fatshan Railway, 1.03. Death of the Chinese Empress Downger Tze Au, 1908. Shanghai opened to foreign commerce, 1843, Celebration of Shanghai Jubilee, 1898. Great fire in Hongkong, 1867. First section hanghai-Nanking railway to Naziang opened. Terrific gunpowder explosion at Amoy; upwards of 800 houses destroyed and
several hundred lives lost, 1887.
20TH AFTER TRINITY. Portuguese Custom House at Macao closed, 1845. Lord Elgin died,
1863.
Major Baldwin and Lieut. Bird, of H.M.'s 20th Regt., murdered in Japan, 1864. Port Arthur taken by the Japanese, 1804. Departure of Governor Sir Henry Blake from Hongkong, 1003; acting appointment of Hon, F. H. May.
E
Terrible boiler explosion on board the steamer **Yesso in Hongkong harbour,
86 lives lost, 1877.
Arrival of the Princes Albert Victor and George of Wales in the "Bacchante
Woosung, 1881.
at
Capture of Anping, Formosa, 1868. Treaty between Portugal and China signed, 1871,
Imperial Diet of Japan met for the first time, 1800.
T
Edict issued by the Viceroy of Canton forbidding trade with British ships, 1839. 187 IS ADVEST. M. Thiers accepts the apology of Ch'ung How, the Chinese Anibassador, for
the murder of the French at Tientsin (June 21st, 1870), 1871.
Foreign factories burnt at Canton, 1858. Great fire in Hongkong, 1867. Blake Pier
Hongkong, opened 1000,
JI
Murder of captain and four men of the British barque "Crofton, near Ku-lan, 1869. Opening of the Japanese Diet at Tokyo by the Emperor in person 1890.
S. Andrew's Day. S. Joseph's Church, Hongkong, consecrated 1872. The Japanese cruiser "Chishima Kan" sunk in collision with the P. & O. steamer "Raaven na" in the Iuloud Sea, 61 lives lust, 1892
22
THE CALENDAR FOR 1910
DECEMBER-31 DAYS
1st
SUNRISE
........6h. 48m.
SUNSET
5h. 35m.
15th............6h, 57m. 5h. 40m.
MOON'S PHASES
d. b.
mn.
New Moon
2
5
11
A.M.
First Quarter 10
3
05
A.M.
Full Moon
16
05
P.M.
Last Quarter
23
6
36
P.M.
BATH OF Days or 10 and 11:
HONGKONG TEMPERATURE
1908 1909
Maximum...
..67.9 68.0
Minimum
..59.5
58.9
Mean
.63.3 63.6
BAROMETER, 1909
Mean......
.30.17
1908
RAINFALL
4.285 inches
1909 0.000 inches
WEER
MORTH
MOONS
Thur.
1
30
Frid.
Sat.
W N
2
1
3
2
Sun.
3
Mon.
45
10 14 00 00
6
7
8
9
7
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
Frid.
Sat.
Sun.
11
10
Mon.
12
10 9
13
* * * 9 = 228
11
12
CURONOLOGY OF REMARKABLE EVENTS
8. Francis Xavier died on Sanchoan, 1552.
2ND IN ADVENT. First census of Hongkong taken, population 15,000, 1841.
Six foreigners killed at Wang-chuh-ki, 1847. Boochow re-taken by the Imperialista under General Gordon, 1863. The Japanese warship "Unebi-kan" left Singapore and not heard of again, 1886.
Confucius died, B.C. 450.
European factories at Canton destroyed by a mob, 1842.
Ningpo captured by the Taipings, 1961. Consecration of new Pei-tang Cathedral
Peking, 1888.
Piracy on board the Douglas str. "Namoa," five hours after leaving Hongkong. Captain Pocock and three others murdered and several seriously wounded, 189). Arrival in Hongkong of Governor Sir William Robinson, 1891,
3RD IN ADVENT. Indemnity paid by Prince of Satsuma, 1863. Admiral Bell, U.S.N.,
drowned at Osaka, 1867.
Imperial Decree stating that the Foreign Ministers at Peking are to be received in
audience every New Year, 1890.
French flag hauled down from the Consulate at Canton by Chinese, 1832, Firat
Reception of foreign ladies by the Empress Dowager of China, 1888,
All Roman Catholic Priests (not Portuguese) expelled from Macao, 1838.
The P. M. S. 8. Co.'s steamer "Japan" burnt, 1 European passenger, the cook, and 389 Chinese drowned, 1874. United States District Court for China opened at Shanghai 1905. Sir W. Des Voeux, formerly Governor of Hongkong, died, 1909.
4TH IN ADVENT. Sir Hugh Gough and the Eastern Expedition left China, 1842.
Arrival of Princes Albert Victor and George of Wales at Hongkong in the "Bacchante, 1991. Two cotton mille destroyed by fire at Osaka, 120 persons burnt to death, 1995.
Steam navigation first attempted, 1736.
Tues.
Wed.
14
13
Thur.
15
14
Frid.
Sat.
16
15
17
16
Sun.
18
17
Mon.
19
18
Tues.
20
19
Wed.
21
Thur.
22
Frid.
23
Sat.
24
Sun. 25
Mon.
26
Tues. 27
Wed.
28
Thur. 29 Frid. 30
Sat.
***** * 5 * 282
20
21
A72** * 8 5 888
22
23
British Consulate at Shanghai destroyed by fire, 1870.
24
Christmas Day. Great fire in Hongkong; 869 houses destroyed, immense destruction
of property, 1878.
25
26
Great fire at Tokyo, 11,000 houses destroyed, 263 lives lost, 1897. The N. C. Company
steamer Shanghai" destroyed by fire on the Yangtze, over 300 lives lost.
Dedication of Hongkong Masonic Hall, 1885.
27
Canton bombarded by Allied forces of Great Britain and France, 1857.
28
29
31
30
Two Mandarins arrived at Macao with secret orders to watch the movements of
Plenipotentiary Elliot, 1836.
CHINESE FESTIVALS AND OBSERVANCES IN 1910
1910. Ki-Yau Yr." Jan. XII. Moon.
21 30
11
20
Feb.
23
24
26
King-Sut
Year.
Great Cold.
23
He is said
Festival of Lu Pan, the patron saint of carpenters and masons.
to have been a contemporary of Confucius. Among the many stories related of his ingenuity, it is said that, on account of his father having been put to death by the men of Wu, he carved the effigy of one of the genii with one of its hands stretched towards Wu, when, in consequence, drought prevailed for three years. On being supplicated and presented with gifts from Wu, he cut off the hand, and rain immediately fell. On this day carpenters refuse to work,
Worship of the god of the hearth at nightfall.
The god of the hearth reports to heaven. Beginning of Spring
I. Moon.
Mar.
1
10
14
15
16
II. Moon.
1
2
il
13
15
19
April
99***ĝ=92ar *** ~ * **** 99998*,
24 1
May
27
III. Moon.
3
15
18
23
27
26
28
IV. Moon.
4
8
10
Chinese New Year's Day.
Fête day of the Spirits of the Ground, Beginning of Spring.
Feast of Lanterns, Fête of Shang-yuen, ruler of heaven.
Féte of Shen and Ts'ai, the two guardians of the door. Auspicious day for
praying for wealth and offspring, as well as for rain.
Fête day of the Supreme Judge in the Courts of Hades.
Mencius born, B.C. 371. Spring worship of the gods of the land and grain. Fête of the god of literature, worshipped by students. Vernal Equinox
Fête day of Hung-shing, god of the Canton river, powerful to preserve people
from drowning, and for sending rain in timos of drought. Birthday of Lao Tsze, founder of Tauism, B.C. 604.
Féte of Kwanyin, goddess of mercy.
Tsing-ming or Tomb Festival
Fête of Hiuen Tien Shang-ti, the supreme ruler of the Sombre heavens
and of Peh-te, Tauist god of the North Pole.
Fête of I-ling, a deified physician, and of the god of the Sombre Altar, wor-
shipped on behalf of sick children.
Fête of Heu Tu, the goddess worshipped behind graves; of the god of the
Central mountain, and of thethree brothers.
Fête of Tien Heu, Queen of Heaven, Holy mother goddess of sailors. Beginning of Summer.
Fête of Tsz Sun, goddess of progeny.
National Festival of Ts'ang Kieh, inventor of writing.
Fête of the Bodhisattva Mandjushri; worshipped on behalf of the dead. Fête of San Kai, ruler of heaven, of earth, and of hades; also a fête of Buddha. Fête of the dragon spirits of the ground.
Anniversary of the death of Confucius
11
14
17
20
Fête of Lu Sien, Tanist patriarch, worshipped by barbers. Fête of Kin Hwa, the Cantonese goddess of parturition. Fête of the goddess of the blind.
June
5
28
V. Moon.
7
1
11
5
22
17
19
22
9===
16
11
13
16
Féte of Yoh Wong, the Tanist god of medicine.
Fête of the god of the South Pole.
National fête day. Dragon boat festival and boat races. On this day the Cantonese frantically paddle about in long narrow boats much ornamen- ted. The festival is called Pa Lung Shun er Tiu Wat Uen, and is beld to commemorate the death of the Prince of Tsoo, who, neglecting the advice of his faithful Minister Wat Ten, drowned himself about B.C. 600. Summer Solstice.
National fète of Sheng Wang, the tutelary god of walled towns. National fête of Kwan Ti, god of war, and of his son General Kwan. Anniversary of the Formation of Heaven and Earth. Fête of Chang Tao-ling (A.D. 34), ancient head of the Tanist sect. His descendants still continue to claim the headship. It is said "the succession is perpetuated by the transmigration of the soul of each successor for Chang Tac-ling, on his
24
CHINESE FESTIVALS AND OBSERVANCES IN 1910
July VJ. Moon.
2
19
13
24
18
25
19
30
24
5
Aug.VII. Moon
9
11
22 *
1
19
15
18
24
20
26
22
28
Sept.
Sept.
स
24
29
VIII. Moon.
1
8
18
15
24
21
28
25
20
26
80
27
Oct.
IX. Moon.
3
11
9
18
11
17
15
PER
18
16
19
17
20
18
30
28
Nov. X. Moon.
4
8
16
7
15
Dec. XI. Moon.
5
7
23
业
6
22
decease, to the body of some youthful member of the family, whose heirship is supernaturally revealed as soon as the miracle is effected." Fête of Shakyamuni Buddha, the founder of Buddhism.
Slight Heat.
Fête of Lu Pan, the god of carpenters and masons. Great Heat.
Fête of the goddess of mercy.
Anniversary of Kwan Ti's ascent to heaven. Féte of Chuh Yung, the spirit
of fire; and of the god of thunder. First day of the seventh moon. During this moon is held the festival of all souls, when Buddhist and Tauist priests read masses to release souls from purgatory, scatter rice to feed starving ghosts, recite magic incantations accompanied by finger play imitating mystic Sanskrit characters which are supposed to comfort souls in purgatory, burn paper clothes for the benefit of the souls of the drowned, and visit family shrines to pray on behalf of the deceased members of the family. Exhibitions of groups of statuettes, dwarf plants, silk festoons, and ancestral tablets are com. bined with these ceremonies, which are enlivened by music and fireworks. Fête day of Lao Tszn, the founder of Tauism,
Beginning of Autumn.
Fête of the god of Ursa Major, worshipped by scholars, and of the seven
goddesses of the Pleiades, worshipped by women.
Fête of Chung Yuen, god of the element earth.
Fôte of the three gods of heaven, of earth, and of water, and of the five
attendant sacrificial spirits.
Fête of Chang Fi, A.D. 2211, A leader of the wars during the Three Kingdoms. He is said have been at first a butcher and wine seller, After many heroic exploits, he perished by the hand of an assassin. Fête of the god of wealth.
Fête of Hü Sün-ping, a Tauist eremite.
Fête of Ti Ts'ang-wang, the patron of departed spirits.
Fête of He Sun, a deified physician, worshipped by doctors, and of Kin
Kiah (god of the golden armour) worshipped by the literati. Fête of the gods of land and grain.
Descent of the star god of the northern measure, and fête of the god of the hearth. White Dew
National fête day. Worship of the moon, and Feast of Lanterns.
Autumnal Equinox.
Fête of the god of the Sun.
Cold Jew.
Fête of Confucius (born 551 B.C.), the founder of Chinese ethics and politics.
Descent of the Star gods of the northern and southern measures from
the 1st to the 9th day inclusive.
Fête of Kwan Ti, the god of war; kite-flying day. Fête of Tung, aruler in Hades Féte of Yen Hwai, the favourite disciple of Confucius.
National fête of Shu Hi (A.D. 1130-1200), the most eminent of the later Chinese philosophers whose commentaries on the Chinese classics have formed for centuries the recognized standard of orthodoxy.
Fête of the god of the loom.
Fêtes of the god of wealth; of Koh Hung, one of the most celebrated of Tauist
doctors and adepts in alchemy; and of the golden dragon king.
Fête of Tati Sheng, one of the reputed inventors of writing. Frost's Descent.
Fête day of Hwa Kwang, the god of fire, and Ma, a deified physician.
Fête of the three brothers San Mao.
Beginning of Winter.
Fêtes of Ha Yuen, the god of water; of the god of small-pox; and of the
god and goddess of the bedstead.
National fête of Confucius(born 551 B.C.), founder of Chinese ethics & politics. Fěte day of Yuh Hwang, the higher god of the Tauist pantheon. Winter Solstice.
PAGES 25 58
MISSING FROM
VOLUME
TREATIES, CODES, &c.
¿.
TREATIES WITH CHINA
GREAT BRITAIN
TIENTSIN TREATY, 1858
Katifications exchanged at Peking, 24th October, 1860.
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and His Majesty the Emperor of China, being desirous to put an end to the existing misunderstanding between the two countries and to place their relations on a more satisfactory footing in future, have resolved to proceed to a revision and improvement of the Treaties existing between them; and, for that purpose, have named as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:-
Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, the Right Honourable the Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, a Peer of the United Kingdom, and Knight of the Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle.
And His Majesty the Emperor of China, the High Commissioner Kweiliang, a Senior Chief Secretary of State, styled of the East Cabinet, Captain-General of the Plain White Banner of the Manchu Banner force, Superintendent-General of the Administration of Criminal Law; and Hwashana, one of His Imperial Majesty's Expositors of the Classics, Mauchu President of the Office for the Regulation of the Civil Establishment, Captain-General of the Bordered Blue Banner of the Chinese Banner Force, and Visitor of the Office of Interpretation:
Who after having communicated to each other their respective full powers and found them to be in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles:-
Art. I.-The Treaty of Peace and Amity between the two nations signed at Nanking on the twenty-ninth day of August, in the year eighteen hundred and forty- two, is hereby renewed and confirmed.
The supplementary Treaty and General Regulations of Trade having been amended and improved, and the substance of their provisions having been incor- porated in this Treaty, the said Supplementary Treaty and General Regulations of Trade are hereby abrogated.
Art. II. For the better preservation of harmony in future, Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain and His Majesty the Emperor of China mutually agree that, in accordance with the universal practice of great and friendly nations, Her Majesty the Queen may, if she sec fit, appoint Ambassadors, Ministers, or other Diplomatic Agents to the Court of Peking; and His Majesty the Emperor of China may, in like manner, if he see fit, appoint Ambassadors, Ministers, or other Diplomatic Agents to the Court of St. James.
Art. III.-His Majesty the Emperor of China hereby agrees that the Ambassador, Minister, or other Diplomatic Agent, so appointed by Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain, may reside, with his family and establishment, permanently at the capital, or may visit it occasionally at the option of the British Government. shall not be called upon to perform any ceremony derogatory to him as representing the Sovereign of an independent nation on a footing of equality with that of China.
60
TIENTSIN TREATY, 1859
On the other hand, he shall use the same forms of ceremony and respect to His Majesty the Emperor as are employed by the Ambassadors, Ministers, or Diplomatic Agents of Her Majesty towards the Sovereigns of independent and equal European
nations,
It is further agreed, that Her Majesty's Government may acquire at Peking a site for building, or may hire houses for the accommodation of Her Majesty's Mission, and the Chinese Government will assist it in so doing.
Her Majesty's Representative shall be at liberty to choose his own servants and attendants, who shall not be subject to any kind of molestation whatever.
Any person guilty of disrespect or violence to Her Majesty's Representative, or to any member of his family or establishment, in deed or word, shall be severely punished, Art. IV. It is further agreed that no obstacle or difficulty shall be made to the free movements of Her Majesty's Representative, and that he and the persons of his suite may come and go, and travel at their pleasure. He shall, moreover, have full liberty to send and receive his correspondence to and from any point on the sea-coast that he may select, and his letters and effects shall be held sacred and inviolable. He may employ, for their transmission, special couriers, who shall meet with the same protection and facilities for travelling as the persons employed in carrying despatches for the Imperial Government; and, generally, he shall enjoy the same privileges as are accorded to officers of the same rank by the usage and consent of Western nations. All expenses attending the Diplomatic Mission of Great Britain shall be borne by the British Government,
Art. V. His Majesty the Emperor of China agrees to nominate one of the Secretaries of State, or a President of one of the Boards, as the high officer with whom the Ambassador, Miuister, or other Diplomatic Agent of Her Majesty the Queen shall transact business, either personally or in writing, on a footing of perfect equality.
Art. VI. Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain agrees that the privileges hereby secured shall be enjoyed in her dominions by the Ambassador, Minister, or Diplomatic Agent of the Emperor of China, accredited to the Court of Her Majesty.
Art. VII. Her Majesty the Queen may appoint one or more Consuls in the dominions of the Emperor of China; and such Consul or Consuls shall be at liberty to reside in any of the open ports or cities of China as Her Majesty the Queen may consider most expedient for the interests of British commerce. They shall be treated with due respect by the Chinese authorities, and enjoy the same privileges and immunities as the Consular Officers of the most favoured nation.
Consuls and Vice-Consuls in charge shall rank with Intendants of Circuit; Vice- Consuls, Acting Vice-Consuls, and Interpreters, with Prefects. They shall have access to the official residences of these officers, and communicate with them, either personally or in writing, on a footing of equality, as the interests of the public service may require.
Art. VIII. The Christian religion, as professed by Protestants or Roman Catholics, inculcates the practice of virtue, and teaches man to do as he would be done by. Persons teaching it or professing it, therefore, shall alike be entitled to the protection of the Chinese authorities, nor shall any such, peaceably pursuing their calling and not offending against the laws, be persecuted or interfered with.
Art. IX. British subjects are hereby authorised to travel, for their pleasure or for purposes of trade, to all parts of the interior under passports which will be issued by their Consuls, and countersigned by the local authorities. These passports, if demanded, must be produced for examination in the localities passed through. If the passport be not irregular, the bearer will be allowed to proceed, and no opposition shall be offered to bis hiring persons, or hiring vessels for the carriage of his baggage or merchandise. If he be without a passport, or if he commit any offence against the law, he shall be handed over to the nearest Consul for punishment, but he must not be subjected to any ill-usage in excess of necessary restraint. No passport need be applied for by persons going on excursions from the ports open to trade to a distance not exceeding 100 li, and for a period not exceeding five days.
The provisions of this Article do not apply to crews of ships, for the due restraint of whom regulations will be drawn up by the Consul and the local authorities.
TIENTSIN TREATY, 1858
GI
To Nanking, and other cities, disturbed by persons in arms against the Govern- ment, no pass shall be given, until they shall have been recaptured.
Art. X-British merchant ships shall have authority to trade upon the Great River (Yangtsze). The Upper and Lower Valley of the river being, however, disturbed by outlaws, no port shall be for the present opened to trade, with the exception of Chinkiang, which shall be opened in a year from the date of the signing of this Treaty.
So soon as peace shall have been restored, British vessels shall also be admitted to trade at such ports as far as Hankow, not exceeding three in number, as the British Minister, after consultation with the Chinese Secretary of State, may determine sball be ports of entry and discharge.
Art. XI. In addition to the cities and towns of Canton, Amoy, Foochow, Ningpo, and Shanghai, opened by the Treaty of Nanking, it is agreed that British subjects may frequent the cities and ports of Newchwang, Tangchow (Chefoo), Taiwan (Formosa), Chao-chow (Swatow), and Kiung-chow (Hainan).
They are permitted to carry on trade with whomeover they please, and to proceed to and fro at pleasure with their vessels and merchandise.
They shall enjoy the same privileges, advantages, and immunities at the said towns and ports as they enjoy at the ports already open to trade, including the right of residence, buying or renting houses, of leasing land therein, and of building churches, hospitals, cemeteries.
Art. XII.-British subjects, whether at the ports or at other places, desiring to build or open houses, warehouses, churches, hospitals, or burial grounds, shall make their agreement for the land or buildings they require, at the rates prevailing among the people, equitably and without exaction on either side.
Art. XIII.-The Chinese Government will place no restrictions whatever upon the employment, by British subjects, of Chinese subjects in any lawful capacity.
Art. XIV. British subjects may hire whatever boats they please for the transport of goods or passengers, and the sum to be paid for such boats shall be settled between the parties themselves, without the interference of the Chinese Government. The number of these boats shall not be limited, nor shall a monopoly in respect either of the boats or of the porters or coolies engaged in carrying the goods be granted to any parties. If any smuggling takes place in them the offenders will, of course, be punished according to law.
Art. XV.-All questions in regard to rights, whether of property or person, arising between British subjects, shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the British authorities. Art. XVI. Chinese subjects who may be guilty of any criminal act towards British subjects shall be arrested and punished by the Chinese authorities according to the laws of China.
British subjects who inay commit any crime in China shall be tried and punished by the Consul, or other public functionary authorised thereto, according to the laws of Great Britain,
Justice shall be equitably and impartially administered on both sides.
Art. XVII-A British subject, having reason to complain of Chinese, must proceed to the Consulate and state his grievance. The Consul will inquire into the merits of the case, and do his utmost to arrange it amicably. In like manner, if a Chinese have reason to complain of a British subject, the Consul shall no less lister to his complaint, and endeavour to settle it in a friendly manner. If disputes take place of such a nature that the Consul cannot arrange them amicably, then he shall request the assistance of the Chinese authorities, that they may together examine into the merits of the case, and decide it equitably.
Art. XVIII.-The Chinese authorities shall at all times afford the fullest protection to the persons and property of British subjects, whenever these shall have been subjected to insult or violence. In all cases of incendiarism or robbery, the local authorities shall at once take the necessary steps for the recovery of the stolen property, the suppression of disorder, and the arrest of the guilty parties, whom they will punish according to law.
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Art. XIX. If any British merchant-vessel, while within Chinese waters, be plundered by robbers or pirates, it shall be the duty of the Chinese authorities to use every endeavour to capture and punish the said robbers or pirates and to recover the stolen property, that it may be handed over to the Consul for restoration to the owner.
Art. XX-If any British vessel be at any time wrecked or stranded on the coast of China, or be compelled to take refuge in any port within the dominions of the Emperor of China, the Chinese authorities, on being apprised of the fact, shall immediately adopt measures for its relief and security; the persons on board shall receive friendly treatment and shall be furnished, if necessary, with the means of conveyance to the nearest Consular station.
Art. XXI.-If criminals, subjects of China, shall take refuge in Hongkong or on board the British ships there, they shall, upon due requisition by the Chinese authorities, be searched for, and, on proof of their guilt, be delivered up.
In like manner, if Chinese offenders take refuge in the houses or on board the vessels of British subjects at the open ports, they shall not be harboured or concealed, but shall be delivered up, on due requisition by the Chinese authorities, addressed to the British Consul.
Art. XXII. Should any Chinese subject fail to discharge debts incurred to a British subject, or should he fraudulently abscond, the Chinese authorities will do their utmost to effect his arrest and enforce recovery of the debts. The British authorities. will likewise do their utmost to bring to justice any British subject fraudulently absconding or failing to discharge debts incurred by him to a Chinese subject.
Art. XXIII. Should natives of China who may repair to Hongkong to trade incur debts there, the recovery of such debts must be arranged for by the Englishı Court of Justice on the spot; but should the Chinese debtor abscond, and be known to have property real or personal within the Chinese territory, it shall be the duty of the Chinese authorities on application by, and in concert with, the British Consul, to do their utmost to see justice done between the parties.
Art. XXIV.-It is agreed that British subjects shall pay, on all merchandise imported or exported by them, the duties prescribed by the tariff; but in no case shall they be called upon to pay other or higher duties than are required of the subjects of any other foreign nation.
Art. XXV. Import duties shall be considered payable on the landing of the goods, and duties of export on the shipment of the same.
Art. XXVI. Whereas the tariff fixed by Article X. of the Treaty of Nanking, and which was estimated so as to impose on imports and exports a duty of about the rate of five per cent. ad valorem, has been found, by reason of the fall in value of various articles of merchandise therein enumerated, to impose a duty upon these considerably in excess of the rate originally assumed, as above, to be a fair rate, it is agreed that the said tariff shall be revised, and that as soon as the Treaty shall have been signed, application shall be made to the Emperor of China to depute a high officer of the Board of Revenue to meet, at Shanghai, officers to be deputed on behalf of the British Government, to consider its revision together, so that the tariff, as revised, may come into operation immediately after the ratification of this Treaty.
Art. XXVII. It is agreed that either of the high contracting parties to this Treaty may demand a further revision of the tariff, and of the Commercial Articles of this Treaty, at the end of ten years; but if no demand be made on either side within six mouths after the end of the first ten years, then the tariff shall remain in force for ten years more, reckoned from the end of the preceding ten years, and so it shall be at the end of each successive ten years.
Art. XXVIII-Whereas it was agreed in Article X. of the Treaty of Nauking that British imports, having paid the tariff duties, should be conveyed into the interior, free of all further charges, except a transit duty, the amount whereof was not to exceed a certain percentage on tariff value; and whereas, no accurate information having been furnished of the amount of such duty, British merchants have constantly complained that charges are suddenly and arbitrarily imposed by the provincial authorities as transit duties upon produce on its way to the foreign market, and ou
TIENTSIN TREATY, 1858
63
imports on their way into the interior, to the detriment of trade; it is agreed that within four months from the signing of this Treaty, at all ports now open to British trade, and within a similar period at all ports that may hereafter be opened, the authority appointed to superintend the collection of duties shall be obliged, upon application of the Consul, to declare the amount of dutios leviable on produce between the place of production and the port of shipment upon imports between the Consular port in question and the inland markets named by the Consul; and that a notification thereof shall be published in English and Chinese for general information.
But it shall be at the option of any British subject desiring to convey produce purchased inland to a port, or to convey imports from a port to an inland market, to clear his goods of all transit duties, by payment of a single charge. The amount of this charge shall be leviable on exports at the first barrier they may have to pass, or, on imports, at the port at which they are landed; and on payment thereof a certificate shall be issued, which shall exempt the goods from all further inland charges whatsoever.
It is further agreed that the amount of the charge shall be calculated, as nearly as possible, at the rate of two and a half per cent. ad valorem, and that it shall be fixed for each article at the conference to be held at Shanghai for the revision of the tariff.
It is distinctly understood that the payment of transit dues, by commutation or otherwise, shall in no way affect the tariff duties on imports or exports, which will continue to be levied separately and in full.
Art. XXIX.-British merchant vessels, of more than one hundred and fifty tons burden, shall be charged tonnage-dues at the rate of four mace per ton; if of one hundred and fifty tons and under, they shall be charged at the rate of one mace per ton.
Any vessel clearing from any of the open ports of China for any other of the open ports, or for Hongkong, shall be entitled, on application of the master, to a special certificate from the Customs, on exhibition of which she shall be exempted from all further payment of tonnage dues in any open ports of China, for a period of four months, to be reckoned from the port-clearance.
Art. XXX. The master of auy British merchant vessel may, within forty-eight hours after the arrival of his vessel, but not later, decide to depart without breaking bulk, in which case he will not be subject to pay tonnage-dues. But tonnage-dues shall be held due after the expiration of the said forty-eight hours. No other fees or charges upon entry or departure shall be levied.
Art. XXXI.-No tonnage-dues shall be payable on boats employed by British subjects in the conveyance of passengers, baggage, letters, articles of provision, or other articles not subject to duty, between any of the open ports. All cargo-boats, however, conveying merchandise subject to duty shall pay tonnage-dues once in six months, at the rate of four mace per register ton.
Art. XXXII. The Consuls and Superintendents of Customs shall consult together regarding the erection of beacons or lighthouses and the distribution of buoys and lightships, as occasion may demand.
Art. XXXIII. Duties shall be paid to the bankers authorised by the Chinese Government to receive the same in its behalf, either in sycee or in foreign money, according to the assay made at Canton on the thirteenth of July, one thousand eight hundred and forty-three.
Art. XXXIV. Sets of standard weights and measures, prepared according to the standard issued to the Canton Custom-house by the Board of Revenue, shall be delivered by the Superintendent of Customs to the Consul at each port to secure uniformity and prevent confusion.
Art. XXXV.-Auy British merchant vessel arriving at one of the open ports shall be at liberty to engage the services of a pilot to take her into port. In like manner, after she has discharged all legal dues and duties and is ready to take her departure, she shall be allowed to select a pilot to conduct her out of port.
Art. XXXVI. Whenever a British merchant vessel shall arrive off one of the open ports, the Superintendent of Customs shall depute one or more Customs officers to guard the ship. They shall either live in a boat of their own, or stay on board the ship, as may best suit their convenience. Their food and expenses shall be supplied
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them from the Custom-house, and they shall not be entitled to any fees whatever from the master or consignee. Should they violate this regulation, they shall be punished proportionately to the amount exacted.
Art. XXXVII. Within twenty-four hours after arrival, the ship's papers, bills of lading, etc., shall be lodged in the hands of the Consul, who will within a further period of twenty-four hours report to the Superintendent of Customs the name of the ship, her registered tonnage, and the nature of her cargo. If, owing to neglect on the part of the master, the above rule is not complied with within forty-eight hours after the ship's arrival, be shall be liable to a fine of fifty taels for every day's delay; the total amount of penalty, however, shall not exceed two hundred taels.
For
The master will be responsible for the correctness of the manifest, which shall contain a full and true account of the particulars of the cargo on board. presenting a false manifest, he will subject himself to a fine of five hundred taels; but he will be allowed to correct, within twenty-four hours after delivery of it to the customs officers, any mistake he may discover in his manifest without incurring this penalty.
Art. XXXVIII. After receiving from the Consul the report in due form, the Superintendent of Customs shall grant the vessel a permit to open hatches. If the master shall open hatches, and begin to discharge any goods without such permission, he shall be fined five hundred taels, and the goods discharged shall be confiscated wholly.
Art. XXXIX.-Any British merchant who has cargo to land or ship must apply to the Superintendent of Customs for a special permit. Cargo landed or shipped. without such permit will be liable to confiscation."
Art. XL-No transhipment from one vessel to another can be made without special permission, under pain of confiscation of the goods so transhipped.
-
Art. XLI. When all dues and duties shall have been paid, the Superintendent of Customs shall give a port-clearance, and the Consul shall then return the ship's papers, so that she may depart on her voyage.
Art. XLII. With respect to articles subject, according to the tariff, to an ad valorem duty, if the British merchant cannot agree with the Chinese officer in affixing its value, then each party shall call two or three merchants to look at the goods, and the highest price at which any of these merchants would be willing to purchase them shall be assumed as the value of the goods.
Art. XLIII. Duties shall be charged upon the net weight of each article, making a deduction for the tare, weight of congee, &c. To fix the tare of any articles,. such as tea, if the British merchant cannot agree with the Custom-house officer, then each party shall choose so many chests out of every hundred, which being first weighed in gross, shall afterwards be tared, and the average tare upon these chests shall be assumed as the tare upon the whole; and upon this principle shall the tare be fixed upon other goods and packages. If there should be any other points in dispute which cannot be settled, the British merchant may appeal to his Consul, who will communicate the particulars of the case to the Superintendent of Customs, that it may be equitably arranged. But the appeal must be made within twenty-four hours or it will not be attended to. While such points are still unsettled, the Superintendent of Customs shall postpone the insertion of the same in his books.
Art. XLIV. Upon all damaged goods a fair reduction of duty shall be allowed proportionate to their deterioration. If any disputes arise, they shall be settled in the manner pointed out in the clause of this Treaty having reference to articles which pay duty ad valorem.
Art. XLV. British merchants who may have imported merchandise into any of the open ports, and paid the duty thereon, if they desire to re-export the same, shall be entitled to make application to the Superintendent of Customs, who, in order to prevent fraud on the revenue, shall cause examination to be made by suitable officers, to see that the duties paid on such goods, as entered in the Custom-house books, correspond with the representation made, and that the goods remain with their original marks unchanged. He shall then make a memorandum of the port-clearance of the goods, and of the amount of duties paid, and deliver the same to the merchant, and shall also certify the facts to the officers of Customs of the other ports. All which
TIENTSIN TREATY, 1858
65
being done, on the arrival in port of the vessel in which the goods are laden, every- thing being found on examination there to correspond, she shall be permitted to break bulk, and land the said goods, without being subject to the payment of any additional duty thereon. But if, on such examination, the Superintendent of Customs shall detect any fraud on the revenue in the case, then the goods shall be subject to confiscation by the Chinese Government.
British merchauts desiring to re-export duty-paid imports to a foreigu country shall be entitled, on complying with the same conditions as in the case of re-exporta- tion to another port in China, to a drawback certificate, which shall be a valid tender to the Customs in payment of import or export duties.
Foreign grain brought into any port of China in a British ship, if no part thereof has been landed, may be re-exported without hindrance.
Art. XLVI-The Chinese authorities at each port shall adopt the means they may judge most proper to prevent the revenue suffering from fraud or smuggling.
Art. XLVIL.-British merchant-vessels are not entitled to resort to other than the ports of trade declared open by Treaty; they are not unlawfully to enter other ports in China, or to carry on clandestine trade along the coast thereof. Any vessel violating this provision shall, with her cargo, be subject to confiscation by the Chinese Government.
Art. XLVIII-If any British merchant-vessel be concerned in smuggling, the goods, whatever their value or nature, shall be subject to confiscation by the Chinese authorities, and the ship may be prohibited from trading further, and sent away as soon as her account shall have been adjusted and paid.
Art. XLIX. All penalties enforced, or confiscations made, under this Treaty shall belong and be appropriated to the public service of the Government of China.
Art. L.-All official communications addressed by the Diplomatic and Consular Agent of Her Majesty the Queen to the Chinese Authorities, shall, henceforth, be writ- ten in English. They will for the present be accompanied by a Chinese version, but it is understood that, in the event of there being any difference of meaning between the English and Chinese text, the English Government will hold the sense as expressed in the English text to be the correct sense. This provision is to apply to the Treaty now negotiated, the Chinese text of which has been carefully corrected by the English original.
Art. LI. It is agreed that henceforward the character "I" (barbarian) shall not be applied to the Government or subjects of Her Britannic Majesty in any Chinese official document issued by the Chinese authorities, either in the capital or in the provinces.
Art. LII.-British ships of war coming for no hostile purpose, or being engaged in the pursuit of pirates, shall be at liberty to visit all ports within the dominions of the Emperor of China, and shall receive every facility for the purchase of provisions, procuring water, and, if occasion require, for the making of repairs. The commanders of such ships shall hold intercourse with the Chinese authorities on terms of equality and courtesy.
Art. LIII. In consideration of the injury sustained by native and foreign commerce from the prevalence of piracy in the seas of China, the high contracting parties agree to concert measures for its suppression.
Art. LIV. The British Government and its subjects are hereby confirmed in all privileges, immunities, and advantages conferred on them by previous Treaties: and it is hereby expressly stipulated that the British Government and its subjects will be allowed free and equal participation in all privileges, immunities and advantages that may have been, or may be hereafter, granted by His Majesty the Emperor of China to the Government or subjects of any other nation.
Art. LV.-In evidence of her desire for the continuance of a friendly under- standing, Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain consents to include in a Separate Article, which shall be in every respect of equal validity with the Articles of this Treaty, the condition affecting indemnity for expenses incurred and losses sustained in the matter of the Canton question.
Art. LVI.-The ratifications of this Treaty, under the hand of Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, and of His Majesty the Emperor of China, respec- tively, shall be exchanged at Peking, within a year from this day of signature.
In token whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed and sealed this
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Treaty. Done at Tientsin, this twenty-sixth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-eight; corresponding with the Chinese date, the sixteenth day, fifth moon, of the eighth year of Hien Fungs
ELGIN AND KINCARDINE.
(L.S.)
SIGNATURE OF 1ST CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARY.
SIGNATURE OF 2ND CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARY..
Separate Article annexed to the Treaty concluded between Great Britain and China on the twenty-sixth day of June, in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty-eight.
It is hereby agreed that a sum of two millions of taels, on account of the losses sus- tained by British subjects through the misconduct of the Chinese authorities at Canton, and a further sum of two millions of taels on account of the Military expenses of the ex- pedition which Her Majesty the Queen has been compelled to send out for the purpose of obtaining redress, and of enforcing the observance of Treaty provisions, shall be paid to Her Majesty's Representatives in China by the authorities of the Kwangtung Province. The necessary arrangements with respect to the time and mode of effecting these payments shall be determined by Her Majesty's Representative, in concert with the Chinese authorities of Kwangtung.
When the above amounts shall have been discharged in full, the British forces will be withdrawn from the city of Canton. Done at Tientsin this twenty-sixth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-eight, corresponding with the Chinese date, the sixteenth day, fifth moon, of the eighth year of Hien Fung. (L.S.) ELGIN AND KINCARDINE.
SIGNATURE OF 1ST CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARY.
SIGNATURE OF 2ND CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARY,
AGREEMENT IN PURSUANCE OF ARTICLES XXVI. AND XXVIII. OF THE TREATY OF TIENTSIN *
SIGNED AT SHANGHAI, 8TH NOVEMBER, 1858
Whereas it was provided, by the Treaty of Tientsin, that a conference should be held at Shanghai between Officers deputed by the British Government on the one part and by the Chinese Government on the other part, for the purpose of determining the amount of tariff duties and transit dues to be henceforth levied, a conference has been held accordingly; and its proceedings having been submitted to the Right Honourable the Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, High Commissioner and Plenipotentiary of Her Majesty the Queen on the one part; and to Kweiliang, Hwashana, Ho Kwei-tsing, Ming-shen, and Twan Ching-slih, High Commissioners and Plenipotentiaries of His Imperial Majesty the Emperor, on the other part, these High Officers have agreed and determined upon the revised Tariff hereto appended, the rate of transit dues therewith declared, together with other Rules and Regulations for the better explana- tion of the Treaty aforesaid; and do hereby agree that the said Tariff and Rules- the latter being in ten Articles, thereto appended-shall be equally binding on the Governments and subjects to both countries with the Treaty itself.
In witness whereof they hereto affix their Seals and Signatures.
Done at Shanghai, in the province of Kiangsu, this eighth day of November, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and fifty-eight, being the third day of the tenth moon of the eighth year of the reign of Hien Fung.
(L.S.)
SEAL OF CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARIES.
ELGIN AND KINCARDINE.
SIGNATURES OF THE FIVE CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARIES.
*The Import Tariff has been superseded by one arranged in 1902.
THE CHEFOO CONVENTION, 1876
WITH ADDITIONAL ARTICLE THERETO FOR REGULATING THE
TRAFFIC IN OPIUM
Ratifications exchanged at London, 6th May, 1886
Agreement negotiated between Sir Thomas Wade, K.C.B., Her Britannic Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of China, and Li, Minister Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of China, Senior Grand Secretary, Governor-General of the Province of Chihli, of the First Class of the Third Order of Nobility.
The negotiation between the Ministers above named has its origin in a despatch received by Sir Thomas Wade, in the Spring of the present year, from the Earl of Derby, Principal Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, dated 1st January, 1876. This contained instructions regarding the disposal of three questions: first, a satis- factory settlement of the Yunnan affair; secondly, a faithful fulfilment of engagements of last year respecting intercourse between the high officers of the two Governments thirdly, the adoption of a uniform system in satisfaction of the understanding arrived at in the month of September, 1875 (8th moon of the 1st year of the reign Kwang Su), on the subject of rectification of conditions of trade. It is to this despatch that Sir Thomas Wade has referred himself in discussions on these questions with the Tsung-li Yamén, further reference to which is here omitted as superfluous. The conditions now agreed to between Sir Thomas Wade and the Grand Secretary are as
follows:-
SECTION I-Settlement of the Yunnan Case
1.-A Memorial is to be presented to the Throne, whether by the Tsung-li Yamen or by the Grand Secretary Li is immaterial, in the sense of the memorandum prepared by Sir Thomas Wade. Before presentation the Chinese text of the Memorial is to be shown to Sir Thomas Wade.
2. The Memorial having been presented to the Throne, and the Imperial Decree in reply received, the Tsung-li Yamen will communicate copies of the Memorial and Imperial decree of Sir Thomas Wade, together with copy of a letter from the Tsung-li Yamên to the Provincial Governments, instructing them to issue a proclama- tion that shall embody at length the above Memorial and Decree. Sir Thomas Wade will thereon reply to the effect that for two years to come officers will be sent by the British Minister to different places in the provinces to see that the proclamation is posted. On application from the British Minister or the Consul of any port instructed by him to make application, the high officers of the provinces will depute competent officers to accompany those so sent to the places which they go to observe.
3. In order to the framing of such regulations as will be needed for the conduct of the frontier trade between Burmah and Yunnan, the Memorial submitting the proposed settlement of the Yunnan affair will contain a request that an Imperial Decree be issued directing the Governor-General and Governor, whenever the British Government shall send officers to Yunnan, to select a competent officer of rank to confer with them and to conclude a satisfactory arrangement.
4. The British Government will be free for five years, from the 1st January next, being the 17th day of the 11th moon of the 2nd year of the reign of Kwang Su, to station officers at Ta-li Fu, or at some other suitable place in Yunnan, to observe the conditions of trade; to the end that they may have information upon which to
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THE CHEFOO CONVENTION, 1876
base the regulations of trade when these have to be discussed. For the consideration and adjustment of any matter affecting British officers or subjects, these officers will be free to address themselves to the authorities of the province. The opening of the trade may be proposed by the British Government as it may find best at any time within the term of five years, or upon expiry of the term of five years,
Passports having been obtained last year for a Mission from India into Yunnan,. it is open to the Viceroy of India to send such Mission at any time he may see fit.
5. The amount of indemnity to be paid on account of the families of the officers and others killed in Yünnan, on account of the expenses which the Yunnan case has occasioned, and on account of claims of British merchants arising out of the action of officers of the Chinese Government up to the commencement of the present year, Sir Thomas Wade takes upon himself to fix at two hundred thousand taels, payable on demand.
6. When the case is closed an Imperial letter will be written expressing regret for what has occurred in Yunnan. The Mission bearing the Imperial letter will proceed to England immediately. Sir Thomas Wade is to be informed of the constitution of this Mission for the information of this Government. The text of the Imperial letter is also to be communicated to Sir Thomas Wade by the Tsung-li Yamên.
SECTION II-Oficial Intercourse
Under this heading are included the conditions of intercourse between high officers in the capital and the provinces, and between Consular officers and Chinese officials at the ports; also the couduct of judicial proceedings in mixed cases.
1. In the Tsung-li Yamén's Memorial of the 28th September, 1875, the Prince of Kung and the Ministers stated that their object in presenting it had not been simply the transaction of business in which Chinese and Foreigners might be concerned; missious abroad and the question of diplomatic intercourse lay equally within their prayer.
To the prevention of further misunderstanding upon the subject of intercourse and correspondence, the present conditions of both having caused complaint in the capital and in the provinces, it is agreed that the Tsung-li Yamen shall address a circular to the Legations, inviting Foreign Representatives to consider with them a code of etiquette, to the end that foreign officials in China, whether at the ports or elsewhere, may be treated with the same regard as is shown them when serving abroad in other countries and as would be shown to Chinese agents so serving abroad. The fact that China is about to establish Missions and Consulates abroad renders an understanding on these points essential.
2.The British Treaty of 1858, Article XVI., lays down that "Chinese subjects who may be guilty of any criminal act towards British subjects shall be arrested and punished by Chinese authorities according to the laws of China.
"British subjects who may commit any crime in China shall be tried and punished by the Consul, or any other public functionary authorised thereto, according to the laws of Great Britain.
"Justice shall be equitably and impartially administered on both sides."
The words "functionary authorised thereto" are translated in the Chinese text "British Government."
In order to the fulfilment of its Treaty obligation, the British Government has established a Supreme Court at Shanghai, with a special code of rules, which it is now about to revise. The Chinese Government has established at Shanghai a Mixed Court; but the officer presiding over it, either from lack of power or dread of unpopularity, constantly fails to enforce his judgments.
It is now understood that the Tsung-li Yamen will write a circular to the Lega- tion, inviting Foreign Representatives at once to consider with the Tsung-li Yamen the measures needed for the more effective administration of justice at the Ports open to Trade.
THE CHEFOO CONVENTION, 1876
9
69
3. It is agreed that, whenever a crime is committed affecting the person or property of a British subject, whether in the interior or at the open ports, the British Minister shall be free to send officers to the spot to be present at the investigation.
To the prevention of misunderstanding on this point, Sir Thomas Wade will write a Note to the above effect, to which the Tsung-li Yamin will reply, affirming that this is the course of proceeding to be adhered to for the time to come.
It is further understood that so long as the laws of the two countries differ from each other, there can be but one principle to guide judicial proceedings in mixed cases in China, namely, that the case is tried by the official of the defendant's nationality; the official of the plaintiff's nationality merely attending to watch the proceedings in the interest of justice. If the officer so attending be dissatisfied with the proceedings, it will be in his power to protest against them in detail. The law administered will be the law of the nationality of the officer trying the case. This is the meaning of the words hui tung, indicating combined action in judicial proceedings, in Article XVI. of the Treaty of Tientsin; and this is the course to be respectively followed by the officers of either nationality.
SECTION III.-Trade
1. With reference to the area within which, according to the Treaties in force, lekin ought not to be collected on foreign goods at the open ports, Sir Thomas Wade agrees to move his Government to allow the ground rented by foreigners (the so-called Concessions) at the different ports, to be regarded as the area of exemption from lekin; and the Government of China will thereupon allow Ich'ang, in the province of Hu-pi; Wu-hu, in An-hui; Wen-chow, in Che-kiang; and Pei-hai (Pak-hoi), in Kwang-tung to be added to the number of ports open to trade and to become Consular stations. The British Government will, further, be free to send officers to reside at Chung-k'ing to watch the conditions of British trade in Szechuen; British merchants will not be allowed to reside at Chung-k'ing, or to open establish- ments or warehouses there, so long as no steamers have access to the port. When steamers have succeeded in ascending the river so far, further arrangements can be taken into consideration.
It is further proposed as a measure of compromise that at certain points on the shore of the Great River, namely, Tat'ung and Ngan-Ching in the province of An- hui; Ho-Kou, in Kiang-si; Wu-such, Lu-chi kou, and Sha-shih in Hu-Kwang, these being all places of trade in the interior, at which, as they are not open ports, foreign merchants are not legally authorised to land or ship goods, steamers shall be allowed to touch for the purpose of landing or shipping passengers or goods; but in all instances by means of native boats only, and subject to the regulations in force affecting native trade.
Produce accompanied by a half-duty certificate may be shipped at such points by the steamers, but may not be landed by them for sale. And at all such points, except in the case of imports accompanied by a transit duty certificate or exports similarly certificated, which will be severally passed free of lekin on exhibition of such certificates, lekin will be duly collected on all goods whatever by the native authorities. Foreign merchants will not be authorised to reside or open houses of business or warehouses at the places enumerated as ports of call.
2. At all ports open to trade, whether by earlier or later agreement at which no settlement area has been previously defined, it will be the duty of the British Consul, acting in concert with his colleagues, the Consuls of other Powers, to come to an understanding with the local authorities regarding the definition of the foreign settlement area.
3.-On Opium, Sir Thomas Wade will move his Government to sanction au arrangement different from that affecting other imports. British merchants, when opium is brought into port, will be obliged to have it taken cognisance of by the Customs, and deposited in bond, either in a warehouse or a receiving hulk, until such time as there is a sale for it. The importer will then pay the tariff duty upon it,
70
THE CHEFOO CONVENTION, 1876
and the purchasers the lekin, in order to the prevention of evasion of the Treaty. The amount of lekin to be collected will be decided by the different Provincial Govern- ments according to the circumstances of each.
4. The Chinese Government agree that Transit Duty Certificates shall be framed under one rule at all ports, no difference being made in the conditions set forth therein; and that, so far as imports are concerned, the nationality of the person possessing and carrying these is immaterial. Native produce carried from an inland centre to a port of shipment, if bond fide intended for shipment to a foreign port, may be, by treaty, certified by the British subject interested, and exempted by payment of the half duty from all charges demanded upon it en route. If produce be not the property of a British subject, or is being carried to a port not for exportation, it is not entitled to the exemption that would be secured it by the exhibition of a transit duty certificate. The British Minister is prepared to agree with the Tsung-li Yamên upon rules that will secure the Chinese Government against abuse of the privilege as affecting produce.
The words nei-ti (inland) in the clause of Article VII. of the Rules appended to the Tariff, regarding carriage of imports inland, and of native produce purchased inland, apply as much to places on the sea coasts and river shores, as to places in the interior not open to foreign trade; the Chinese Government having the right to make arrangements for the prevention of abuses thereat.
5.-Article XLV, of the Treaty of 1858 prescribed no limit to the term within which a drawback may be claimed upon duty-paid imports. The British Minister agrees to a term of three years, after expiry of which no drawback shall be claimed.
6. The foregoing stipulation, that certain ports are to be opened to foreign trade, and that landing and shipping of goods at six places on the Great River is to be sanctioned, shall be given effect to within six months after receipt of the Imperial Decree approving the memorial of the Grand Secretary Li. The date for giving effect to the stipulatious affecting exemption of imports from lekin taxation within the for- eign settlements and the collection of lekin upon opium by the Customs Inspectorate at the same time as the Tariff Duty upon it, will be fixed as soon as the British Gov- ernment has arrived at an understanding on the subject with other foreign Governments.
7. The Governor of Hongkong having long complained of the interference of the Canton Customs Revenue Cruisers with the junk trade of that Colony, the Chinese Government agrees to the appointment of a Commission, to consist of a British Consul, an officer of the Hongkong Government, and a Chinese official of equal rank, in order to the establishment of some system that shall enable the Chinese Government to protect its revenue without prejudice to the interests of the Colony,
SEPARATE ARTICLE
Her Majesty's Government haying it in contemplation to send a Mission of Exploration next year by way of Peking through Kan-su and Koko-Nor, or by way of Ssu-chuen, to Thibet, and thence to India, the Tsung-li Yamên, having due regard to the circumstances, will, when the time arrives, issue the necessary passports, and will address letters to the high provincial authorities and to the Resident in Thibet. If the Mission should not be sent by these routes, but should be proceeding across the Indian frontier to Thibet, the Tsung-li Yamên, on receipt of a communication to the above effect from the British Minister, will write to the Chinese Resident in Thibet, and the Resident, with due regard to the circumstances, will send officers to take duc care of the Mission; and passports for the Mission will be issued by the Tsung-li Yamén, that its passage be not obstructed.
Done at Chefoo, in the province of Shan-tung, this Thirteenth Day of September, in the year of Our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Seventy-six.
[L.S.]
THOMAS FRANCIS WADE.
[L.S.]
LI HUNG-CHANG.
THE CHEFOO CONVENTION, 1876
Additional Articles to the Agreement between Great Britain and China
Signed at Chefoo on the 13th September, 1876
F
SIGNED AT LONDON, 18TH JULY, 1885
71
The Governments of Great Britain and of China, considering that the arrange- ments proposed in Clauses 1 and 2 of Section III. of the Agreement between Great Britain and China, signed at Chefoo on the 13th September, 1876 (bereinafter referred to as the Chefoo Agreement "), in relation to the area within which lekin ought not to be collected on foreign goods at the open ports, and to the definition of the Foreign Settlement area, require further consideration; also that the terms of Clause 3 of the same section are not sufficiently explicit to serve as an efficient regula- tion for the traffic in opium, and recognizing the desirability of placing restrictions on the consumption of opium, have agreed to the present Additional Article.
1.-As regards the arrangements above referred to and proposed in Clauses 1 and 2 of Section III. of the Chefoo Agreement, it is agreed that they shall be reserved for further consideration between the two Governments.
2.In lieu of the arrangement respecting opium proposed in Clause 3 of Section II. of the Chefoo Agreement, it is agreed that foreign opium, when imported into China, shall be taken cognizance of by the Imperial Maritime Customs, and shall be deposited in bond, either in warehouses or receiving-hulks which have been approved of by the Customs, and that it shall not be removed thence until there shall have been paid to the Customs the Tariff duty of 30 taels per chest of 100 catties, and also a sum not exceeding 80 taels per like chest as lekin.
3. It is agreed that the aforesaid import and lekin duties having been paid, the owner shall be allowed to have the opium repacked in bond under the supervision of the Customs, and put into packages of such assorted sizes as he may select from such sizes as shall have been agreed upon by the Customs authorities and British Consul at the port of entry.
The Customs shall then, if required, issue gratuitously to the owner a transit cer- tificate for each such package, or one for any number of packages, at option of the owner.
Such certificates shall free the opiumi to which it applies from the imposition of any further tax or duty whilst in transport in the interior, provided that the package has not been opened, and that the Customs seals, marks, and numbers on the packages. have not been effaced or tampered with.
Such certificate shall have validity only in the hands of Chinese subjects, and shall not entitle foreigners to convey or accompany any opium in which they may be interested into the interior.
4. It is agreed that the Regulations under which the said certificates are to be issued shall be the same for all the ports, and that the form shall be as follows:
"Opium Transit Certificate.
"This is to certify that Tariff and lekin duties at the rate oftaels per chest of 100 catties have been paid on the opium marked and numbered as under; and that, in conformity with the Additional Article signed at London the 18th July, 1885, and appended to the Agreement between Great Britain and China signed at Chefoo the 13th September, 1876, and approved by the Imperial Decree printed on the back thereof, the production of this certificate will exempt the opium to which it refers, wherever it may be found, from the imposition of any further tax or duty whatever, provided that the packages are unbroken, and the Customs seals, marks, and numbers have not been effaced or tampered with.
**
Mark, X
"Port of entry,
"Date
No.
00 packages
"Signature of Commissioner of Customs."
5. The Chinese Government undertakes that when the packages shall have been opened at the place of consumption, the opium shall not be subjected to any tax or
72
THE CHEFOO CONVENTION, 1876
contribution, direct or indirect, other than or in excess of such tax or contribution as is or may hereafter be levied on native opium.
In the event of such tax or contribution being calculated ad valorem, the same rate, value for value, shall be assessed on foreign and native opium, and in ascertaining for this purpose the value of foreign opium the amount paid on it for lekin at the port of entry shall be deducted from its market value.
6.It is agreed that the present Additional Article shall be considered as forming part of the Chefoo Agreement, and that it shall have the same force and validity as if it were therein inserted word for word. It shall come into operation six months after its signature, provided the ratifications have then been exchanged, or if they have not, then on the date at which such exchange takes place.
7. The arrangement respecting opium contained in the present Additional Article shall remain binding for four years, after the expiration of which period either Government may at any time give twelve months' notice of its desire to determine it, and such notice being given, it shall terminate accordingly. It is, however, agreed that the Government of Great Britain shall bave the right to terminate the same at any time should the transit certificate be found not to confer on the opium complete exemption from all taxation whatsoever whilst being carried from the port of entry to the place of consumption in the interior. In the event of the termination of the present Additional Article the arrangement with regard to opium now in force and the regulations attached to the Treaty of Tientsin shall revive.
8. The High Contracting Parties may, by common consent, adopt any modifica- tions of the provisions of the present Additional Article which experience may show to be desirable.
9. It is understood that the Commission provided for in Clause 7 of Section III. of the Chefoo Agreement to inquire into the question of prevention of smuggling. into China from Hongkong shall be appointed as soon as possible.
10. The Chefoo Agreement, together with, and as modified by, the present Additional Article, shall be ratified, and the ratifications shall be exchanged at Loudon as soon as possible.
In witness whereof the Undersigned, duly authorized thereto by their respective Governments, have signed the present Additional Article, and have affixed thereto their seals.
Done at London, in quadruplicate (two in English and two in Chinese), this 18th day of July, 1885, being the seventh day of the sixth moon in the eleventh year of the reign of Kwang Hsu.
(L.S.) (L.S.)
SALISBURY. TSENG.
The Marquis Tseng to the Marquis of Salisbury.
Chinese Legation, London, 18th July, 1885.
My Lord-In reply to your Lordship's note of this date, I have the honour to state that the Imperial Government accept the following as the expression of the understanding which has been come to between the Governments of Great Britain and China in regard to the Additional Article to the Chefoo Agreement relative to opium, which has been signed this day:
1. It is understood that it shall be competent for Her Majesty's Government at once to withdraw from this new arrangement, and to revert to the system of taxation for opium at present in operation in China, in case the Chinese Government shall fail to bring the other Treaty Powers to comform to the provisions of the said Additional Article.
2. It is further understood that, in the event of the termination of the said Additional Article, the Chefoo Agreement, with the exception of Clause 3 of Section III., and with the modification stipulated in Clause 1 of the said Additional Article, nevertheless remain in force.
THE OPIUM CONVENTION
Memorandum of the basis of Agreement arrived at after discussion between Mr. James Russell, Puisne Judge of Hongkong; Sir Robert Hart, K.C.M.G., Inspector- General of Customs, and Shao Taotai, Joint Commissioners for China; and Mr. Byron Brenan, Her Majesty's Consul at Tientsin, in pursuance of Article 7, Section III. of the Agreement between Great Britain and China, signed at Chefoo on the 15th September, 1876, aud of Section 9 of the Additional Article to the said Agreement, signed at London on the 18th July, 1885.
Mr. Russell undertakes that the Government of Hongkong shall submit to the Legislative Council an Ordinance for the regulation of the trade of the Colony in Raw Opium subject to conditions hereinafter set forth aud providing :-
a. For the prohibition to the import and export of Opium in quantities less than 1 chest. † b. For rendering illegal the possession of Raw Opium, its custody or control in quan.
tities less than one chest, except by the Opium Farmer.
C.---
That all Opium arriving in the Colony be reported to the Harbour Master, and that no Opium shall be transhipped, landed, stored or moved from one store to another, or re- exported without a permit from the Harbour Master, and notice to the Opium Farmer. d. For the keeping by Importers, Exporters, and Godown Owners, in such form as
the Governor may require, books shewing the movements of Opium.
e. For taking stock of quantities in the stores, and search for deficiencies by the
Opium Farmer, and for furnishing to the Harbour Master returns of stocks. f-For amendment of Harbour Regulations, as to the night clearances of junks.
The conditions on which it is agreed to submit the Ordinance are
C. That China arranges with Macao for the adoption of equivalent measures. b. That the Hongkong Government shall be entitled to repeal the Ordinance if it
be found to be injurious to the Revenue or to the legitimate trade of the Colony. c. That an Office under the Foreign Inspectorate shall be established on Chinese Territory at a convenient spot on the Kowloon side for sale of Chinese Opium Duty Certificates, which shall be freely sold to all comers, and for such quantities of Opium as they may require.
d. That Opium accompanied by such certificates, at the rate of not more than Tls. 110 per picul, shall be free from all further imposts of every sort, and have all the benefits stipulated for by the Additional Article on behalf of Opium on which duty has been paid at one of the ports of China, and that it may be made up in sealed parcels at the option of the purchaser.
e. That junks trading between Chinese ports and Hongkong and their cargoes shall not be subject to any dues or duties in excess of those leviable on junks and their cargoes trading between Chinese ports and Macao, and that no dues whatsoever shall be demanded from junks coming to Hongkong from ports in China, or pro- ceeding from Hongkong to ports in China, over and above the dues paid or payable at the ports of clearance or destination.
-That the Officer of the Foreign Inspectorate, who will be responsible for the management of the Kowloon Office, shall investigate and settle any complaints made by the juuks trading with Hongkong against the Native Customs Revenue Stations or Cruisers in the neighbourhood, and that the Governor of Hongkong, if he deems it advisable, shall be entitled to send a Hongkong Officer to be present at and assist in the investigation and decisiou. If, however, they do not agree a reference may be made to the Authorities at Peking for joint decision.
Sir Robert Hart undertakes on behalf of himself and Shao Taotai (who was com- pelled by unavoidable circumstances to leave before the sittings of the Commission were terminated) that the Chinese Government shall agree to the above conditions.
The undersigned are of opinion that if these arrangements are fully carried out, a fairly satisfactory solution of the questions connected with the so-called "Hong- kong Blockade " will have been arrived at.
Signed in triplicate at Hongkong, this 11th day of September, 1886.
*See Ordinance 22 of 1887. †A modification allowing export in smalle, quantities than oneckest was subsequently agreed to.
THE CHUNGKING AGREEMENT, 1890
ADDITIONAL ARTICLE TO THE AGREEMENT BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND CHINA OF SEPTEMBER 13TH, 1876
Ratifications Exchanged at Peking, 18th January, 1891
The Governments of Great Britain and China, being desirous of settling in an amicable spirit the divergence of opinion which has arisen with respect to the First Clause of the Third Section of the Agreement concluded at Chefoo in 1876, which stipulates that "The British Government will be free to send officers to reside at Chungking to watch the conditions of British trade in Szechuan, that British mer- chants will not be allowed to reside at Chungking, or to open establishments or warehouses there, so long as uo steamers have access to the port, and that when steamers have succeeded in ascending the river so far, further arrangements can be taken into consideration," have agreed upon the following Additional Article:-
I. Chungking shall forthwith be declared open to trade on the same footing as any other Treaty port. British subjects shall be at liberty either to charter Chinese vessels or to provide vessels of the Chinese type for the traffic between Ichang and Chungking.
II.-Merchandise conveyed between Ichang and Chungking by the above class of vessels shall be placed on the same footing as merchandise carried by steamers between Shanghai and Ichang, and shall be dealt with in accordance with Treaty Tariff Rules, and the Yangtsze Regulations.
III-All regulations as to the papers and flags to be carried by vessels of the above description, as to the repackage of goods for the voyage beyond Ichang and as to the general procedure to be observed by those engaged in the traffic between Ichang and Chungking with a view to insuring convenience and security, shall be drawn up by the Superintendent of Customs at Ichang, the Taotai of the Ch'uan Tung Circuit, who is now stationed at Chungking, and the Commissioners of Customs in consultation with the British Consul, and shall be liable to any modifications that may hereafter prove to be desirable and may be agreed upon by common consent.
IV. Chartered junks shali pay port ducs at Ichang and Chungking in accord- ance with the Yaugtsze Regulations; vessels of Chinese type, if and when entitled to carry the British flag, shall pay tonnage dues in accordance with Treaty Regulations. It is obligatory on both chartered junks and also vessels of Chinese type, eveu when the latter may be entitled to carry the British flag, to take out at the Maritime Custom-house special papers and a special flag when intended to be employed by British subjects in the transport of goods between Ichang and Chungking, and without such papers and flag no vessels of either class shall be allowed the privileges and immunities granted under this Additional Article. Provided with special papers and flag, vessels of both classes shall be allowed to ply between the two ports, and they and their cargoes shall be dealt with in accordance with Treaty Rules and the Yangtsze Regulations. All other vessels shall be dealt with by the Native Customs. The special papers and flag issued by the Maritime Customs must alone be used by the particular vessel for which they were originally issued, and are not transferable from one vessel to another. The use of the British flag by vessels the property of Chinese is strictly. prohibited. Infringement of these Regulations will, in the first instance, render the offender liable to the penalties in force at the ports hitherto opened under Treaty, and should the offence be subsequently repeated, the vessel's special papers and flag will be withdrawn, and the vessel herself refused permission thenceforward to trade between Ichang and Chungking.
V. When once Chinese steamers carrying cargo run to Chungking, British steamers shall in like manner have access to the said port.
THE THIBET-SIKKIM CONVENTION, 1890
75
VI-It is agreed that the present Additional Article shall be considered as forming part of the Chefoo Agreement, and as having the same force and validity as if it were inserted therein word for word. It shall be ratified, and the ratifications exchanged at Peking, and it shall come into operation six mouths after its signature, provided the ratifications have then been exchanged, or if they have not, then ou the date at which such exchange takes place.
Done at Peking in triplicate (three in English and three in Chinese), this thirty-first day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety, being the eleventh day of the Second Intercalary Moon of the sixteenth year of Kuang Hsü.
(1.8.)
JOHN WALSHAM.
(L.S.)
SIGNATURE OF CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARY,
THE THIBET-SIKKIM CONVENTION, 1890
Ratified in London, 17th August, 1890
Art. I.-The boundary of Sikkim and Thibet shall be the crest of the mountain rauge separating the waters flowing into the Sikkim Teesta and its affluents from the waters flowing into the Thibetan Machu and northwards into other rivers of Thibet. The line commences at Mount Gipmochi on the Bhutan frontier, and follows the above-mentioned water-parting to the point where it meets Nepaul territory. Art. II. It is admitted that the British Government, whose protectorate over the Sikkim State is hereby recognised, has direct and exclusive control over the internal administration and foreign relations of that State, and except through and with the permission of the British Government neither the ruler of the State nor any
of its officers shall have official relations of any kind, formal or informal, with any other country.
Art. III. The Government of Great Britain and Ireland and the Government of China engage reciprocally to respect the boundary as defined in Article I. and to prevent acts of aggression from their respective sides of the frontier.
Art. IV. The question of providing increased facilities for trade across the Sikkim-Thibet frontier will hereafter be discussed with a view to a mutually satisfactory arrangement by the high contracting powers.
Art. V.-The question of pasturage on the Sikkim side of the frontier is reserved for further examination and future adjustment.
Art. VI. The high contracting powers reserve for discussion and arrangement the method in which official communications between the British authorities in India and the authorities in Thibet shall be conducted.
Art. VII. Two Joint Commissioners shall within six months from the ratifica- tion of this Convention be appointed, one by the British Government in India, the other by the Chinese Resident in Thibet. The said Commissiouers shall meet and discuss the questions which by the last three preceding articles have been reserved.
Art. VIII. The present Convention shall be ratified, and the ratifications shall be exchanged in London, as soon as possible after the date of the signature thereof.
THE BURMAH CONVENTION
SIGNED AT PEKING, 4TH FEBRUARY, 1897
In consideration of the Government of Great Britain consenting to waive its objections to the alienation by China, by the Convention with France of Juue 20th, 1895, of territory forming a portion of Kiang Hung, in derogation of the provision
76
THE BURMAH CONVENTION
of the Convention between Great Britain and China of March 1st, 1894, it has been agreed between the Governments of Great Britain and China that the following additions and alterations shall be made in the last named Convention, hereinafter referred to as the Original Convention.
(Articles I to XI. refer to the Burmah Frontier and trade across it between Burma and Yunnan.)
Art. XII. (Providing for the free navigation of the Irrawady by Chinese vessels). Add as follows: The Chinese Government agree hereafter to consider whether the conditions of trade justify the construction of railways in Yunnan, and in the event of their construction, agrees to connect them with the Burmese lines.
·
Art. XIII. Whereas by the Original Convention it was agreed that China might appoint a Consul in Burmah to reside at Raugoon, and that Great Britain might appoint a Cousul to reside at Manwyne, and that the Consuls of the two Governments should each within the territories of the other enjoy the same privileges and immunities as the Consuls of the most favoured nation, and further that in proportion as the commerce between Burmah and China increased, additional Consuls might be appointed by mutual consent to reside at such places in Burmah and Yunnan as the requirements of trade might seem to demand.
It has now been agreed that the Government of Great Britain may station a Consul at Momein or Shunting Fu as the Government of Great Britain may prefer, instead of at Manwyue as stipulated in the Original Convention, and also to station a Consul at Szumao.
British subjects and persons under British protection may establish themselves and trade at these places under the same conditions as at the Treaty Ports in China.
The Consuls appointed as above shall be on the same footing as regards correspondence and intercourse with Chinese officials as the British Consuls at the Treaty Ports.
Art. XIV. (Providing for issue of passports by the Consuls on each side of the frontier). Instead of Her Britannic Majesty's Consul at Manwyne" in the Original Convention read "Her Britannic Majesty's Consul at Shunning or Momein,'" in accordance with the change made in Article XIII.
*
Failing agreement as to the terms of revision the present arrangement shall remain in force.
SPECIAL ARTICLE.
Whereas on the twentieth day of January, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-six, the Tsung-li Yamén addressed an official despatch to Her Majesty's Chargé d'Affaires at Peking, imforming him that on the thirtieth day December, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five, they had submitted a Memorial respecting the opening of ports on the West River to foreign trade, and had received an Imperial Decree in approval of which they officially communicated a copy.
It has now been agreed that the following places, namely, Wuchów Fu in Kwangsi, and Samshui city and Bongkun Market in Kwangtung, shall be opened as Treaty Ports and Consular Stations with freedom of navigation for steamers between Samshui and Wuchow and Hongkong and Canton by a route from each of these latter places to be selected and notified in advance by the Maritime Customs, and that the following four places shall be established as ports of call for goods and passengers under the same regulations as the ports of call on the Yangtze River namely, Kongmoon, Kamchuk, Shiuhing and Takhing.
It is agreed that the present Agreement, together with the Special Article, shall come into force within four months of the date of signature, and that the ratifications thereof shall be exchanged at Peking as soon as possible.
In witness whereof the undersigned duly authorised thereto by their respective Governments have signed the present agreement.
KOWLOON EXTENSION AGREEMENT, 1898
77
Done at Peking in triplicate (three copies in English and three in Chinese), the fourth day of February in the Year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven.
(Sd.) CLAUDE M. MACDONALD.
(Hieroglyphic) LI HUNG-CHANG
(Seal) (Seal)
KOWLOON EXTENSION AGREEMENT, 1898
Whereas it has for many years past been recognised that an extension of Hong- kong territory is necessary for the proper defence and protection of the colony.
It has now been agreed between the Governments of Great Britain and China that the limits of British territory shall be enlarged under lease to the extent indicated generally on the annexed map.
The exact boundaries shall be hereafter fixed when proper surveys have been made by officials appointed by the two Governments. The term of this lease shall be ninety-nine years.
It is at the same time agreed that within the City of Kowloon the Chinese officials now stationed there shall continue to exercise jurisdiction, except so far as may be inconsistent with the military requirements for the defence of Hongkong. Within the remainder of the newly-leased territory Great Britain shall have sole jurisdiction. Chinese officials and people shall be allowed, as heretofore, to use the road from Kowloon to Hsinan,
It is further agreed that the existing landing-place near Kowloon city shall be reserved for the convenience of Chinese men-of-war, merchant aud passengers vessels, which may come and go and lie there at their pleasure; and for the convenience of movements of the officials and people within the city.
When, hereafter, China constructs a railway to the boundary of the Kowloon territory under British control, arrangements shall be discussed.
It is further understood that there will be no expropriation or expulsion of the inhabitants of the district included within the extension, and that if land is required for public offices, fortifications, or the like official purposes, it shall be bought at a fair price.
If cases of extradition of criminals occur they shall be dealt with in accordance with the existing treaties between Great Britain and China and the Hongkong Regulations.
+
The area leased by Great Britain includes the waters of Mirs Bay and Deep Bay, but it is agreed that Chinese vessels of war, whether neutral or otherwise, shall retain the right to use those waters.
This Convention shall come into force on the first day of July, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, being the thirteenth day of the fifth moon of the twenty-fourth year of Kwang Hsu. It shall be ratified by the Sovereigns of the two countries, and the ratifications shall be exchanged in London as soon as possible.
In witness whereof the undersigned, duly authorised thereto by their respective Governments; have signed the present agreement.
Done at Peking in quadruplicate (four copies in English and in Chinese) the ninth day of June, in the year of Our Lord eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, being the twenty-first day of the fourth moon of the twenty-fourth year of Kwang Hsu.
CLAUDE M. MACDONALD.
LI HUNG-CHANG,
Members of
HSU TING K'UEI, Tsung-li Yamên.
THE WEIHAIWEI CONVENTION, 1898
Ratifications exchanged in London, 5th October, 1898
In order to provide Great Britain with a suitable naval barbour in North China, and for the better protection of British commerce in the neighbouring seas, the Government of His Majesty the Emperor of China agrees to lease to the Government of Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, Weihaiwei, in the province of Shantung, and the adjacent waters for so long a period as Port Arthur shall remain in the occupation of Russia.
The territory leased shall comprise the island of Linkung and all other islands in the Bay of Weihaiwei, and a belt of land ten English miles wide along the entire coast line of the Bay of Weihaiwei. Within the above-mentioned territory leased Great Britain shall have sole jurisdiction.
Great Britain shall have, in addition, the right to erect fortifications, station troops, or take any other measures necessary for defensive purposes, at any points on or near the coast of the region east of the meridian 121 degrees 40 min. E. of Green- wich, and to acquire on equitable compensation within that territory such sites as may be necessary for water supply, communications, and hospitals. Within that zone Chinese administration will not be interfered with, but no troops other than Chinese or British shall be allowed therein.
It is also agreed that within the walled city of Weihaiwei Chinese officials shall continue to exercise jurisdiction, except so far as may be inconsistent with naval and military requirements for the defence of the territory leased.
It is further agreed that Chinese vessels of war, whether neutral or otherwise, shall retain the right to use the waters herein leased to Great Britain.
It is further understood that there will be no expropriation or explusion of the inhabitants of the territory herein specified, and that if land is required for forti- fications, public offices, or any official or public purpose, it shall be bought at a fair price.
This Convention shall come into force on signature. It shall be ratified by the Sovereigns of the two countries, and the ratifications shall be exchanged in London as soon as possible.
In witness whereof the undersigned, duly authorised thereto by their respective Governments, have signed the present agreement.
CLAUDE M. MACDONALD.
PRINCE CHING, Senior Member of the Tsung-li Yamen. GIAO SHOU HENG, President of Board of Punishments.
Done at Peking in quadruplicate (four copies in English and four in Chinese) the first day of July, in the year of Our Lord eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, being the thirteenth day of the fifth moon of the twenty-fourth year of Kuang Hsü.
SUPPLEMENTARY COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
SIGNED AT SHANGHAI, 5TH SEPTEMBER, 1902
Ratifications exchanged at Peking, 28th July, 1903.
His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India, and His Majesty the Em- peror of China, having resolved to enter into negotiations with a view to carrying out the provisions contained in Article XI. of the Final Protocol signed at Peking on the 7th of September, 1901, under which the Chinese Government agreed to negotiate the amendments deemed useful by the Foreign Governments to the Treaties of Commerce and Navigation and other subjects concerning commercial relations with the object of facilitating them, have for that purpose named as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to
say:-
His Majesty the King of Great Britain and Ireland, His Majesty's Special Com missioner, Sir James Lyle Mackay, Knight Commander of the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire, a member of the Council of the Secretary of State for India, etc.
And His Majesty the Emperor of China, the Imperial Commissioners Lü Hai-huan, President of the Board of Public Works, etc., and Sheng Hsuan-huai, Junior Guardian of the Heir Apparent, Senior Vice-President of the Board of Public Works, etc.
Who having communicated to each other their respective Full Powers, and found them to be in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles :-
Art. I.-Delay having occurred in the past in the issue of Drawback Certificates owing to the fact that those documents have to be dealt with by the Superintendent of Customs at a distance from the Customs Office, it is now agreed that Drawback Certificates shall hereafter in all cases be issued by the Imperial Maritime Customs within three weeks of the presentation to the Customs of the papers entitling the applicant to receive such Drawback Certificates.
These Certificates shall be valid tender to the Customs Authorities in payment of any duty upon goods imported or exported (transit dues excepted), or shall, in the case of Drawbacks on foreign goods re-exported abroad within three years from the date of importation, be payable in cash without deduction by the Customs Bank at the place where the import duty was paid.
But if, in connexion with any application for a Drawback Certificate, the Customs Authorities discover an attempt to defraud the revenue, the applicant shall be liable to a fine not exceeding five times the amount of the duty whereof he attempted to defraud the Customs, or to a confiscation of the goods.
Art. II.-China agrees to take the necessary steps to provide for a uniform national coinage which shall be legal tender in payment of all duties, taxes and other obligations throughout the Empire by British as well as Chinese subjects.
Art. III.-China agrees that the duties and lekin combined levied on goods carried by junks from Hongkong to the Treaty Ports in the Canton Province and vice versa, shall together not be less than the duties charged by the Imperial Maritime Customs on similar goods carried by steamer.
Art. IV. Whereas questions have arisen in the past concerning the right of Chinese subjects to invest money in non-Chinese enterprises and companies, and whereas it is a matter of common knowledge that large sums of Chinese capital are so invested, China hereby agrees to recognise the legality of all such investments past, present and future.
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THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
It being, moreover, of the utmost importance that all shareholders in a Joint Stock Company should stand on a footing of perfect equality as far as mutual obligations are concerned, China further agrees that Chinese subjects who have or may become shareholders in any British Joint Stock Company shall be held to have accepted, by the very act of becoming shareholders, the Charter of Incorporation or Memorandum and Articles of Association of such Company and regulations framed thereunder as interpreted by British Courts, and that Chinese Courts shall enforce compliance there- with by such Chinese shareholders, if a suit to that effect be entered, provided always that their liability shall not be other or greater than that of British shareholders in the same Company.
Similarly the British Government agree that British subjects investing in Chinese Companies shall be under the same obligations as the Chinese shareholders in such companies.
The foregoing shall not apply to cases which have already been before the Courts and been dismissed.
Art. V.-The Chinese Government undertakes to remove within the next two years the artificial obstructions to navigation in the Canton River. The Chinese Government also agree to improve the accommodation for shipping in the harbour of Canton and to take the necessary steps to maintain that improvement, such work to be carried out by the Imperial Maritime Customs and the cost thereof to be defrayed by a tax on goods landed and shipped by British and Chinese alike according to a scale to be arranged between the merchants and the Customs Authorities.
The Chinese Government are aware of the desirability of improving the naviga- bility by steamer of the waterway between Ichang and Chungking, but are also fully aware that such improvement might involve heavy expense and would affect the interests of the population of the provinces of Szechuen, Hunan, and Hupeh. It is, therefore, mutually agreed that until improvements can be carried out steamship owners shall be allowed, subject to approval by the Imperial Maritime Customs, to erect, at their own expense, appliances for hauling through the rapids. Such appliances shall be at the disposal of all vessels, both steamers and junks, subject to regulations to be drawn up by the Imperial Maritime Customs. These appliances shall not obstruct the waterway or interfere with the free passage of junks. Signal stations and channel marks where and when necessary shall be erected by the Imperial Maritime Customs. Should any practical scheme be presented for improv- ing the waterway and assisting navigation without injury to the local population or cost to the Chinese Government, it shall be considered by the latter in a friendly spirit.
Art. VI. The Chinese Government agree to make arrangements to give increased facilities at the open ports for bonding and for repacking merchandise in bond, and, on official representation being made by the British Authorities, to grant the privi leges of a bonded warehouse to any warehouse which, to the satisfaction of the Customs Authorities, affords the necessary security to the revenue.
Such warehouses will be subject to regulations, including a scale of fees according to commodities, distance from Custom-house and hours of working, to be drawn up by the Customs Authorities who will meet the convenience of merchants so far as is compatible with the protection of the revenue.
Art. VII. Inasmuch as the British Government affords protection to Chinese trade marks against infringement, imitation, or colourable imitation by British subjects, the Chinese Government undertake to afford protection to British trade marks against infringement, imitation, or colourable imitation by Chinese subjects.
The Chinese Government further undertake that the Superintendents of Northern and of Southern trade shall establish offices within their respective jurisdictions under control of the Imperial Maritime Customs where foreign trade marks may be registered on payment of a reasonable fee.
Art. VIII. Preamble. The Chinese Government, recognising that the system of levying lekin and other dues on goods at the place of production, in transit, and at
THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
81
destination, impedes the free circulation of commodities and injures the interests of trade, hereby undertake to discard completely those means of raising revenue with the limitation mentioned in Section 8.
The British Government, in return, consent to allow a surtax, in excess of the Tariff rates for the time being in force to be imposed on foreign goods imported by British subjects and a surtax in addition to the export duty on Chinese produce destined for export abroad or coastwise.
It is clearly understood that after lekin barriers and other stations for taxing goods in transit have been removed, no attempt shall be made to revive them in any form or under any pretext whatsoever; that in no case shall the surtax on foreign imports exceed the equivalent of one and a half times the import duty leviable in terms of the Final Protocol signed by China and the Powers on the 7th day of Sep- tember, 1901; that payment of the import duty and surtax shall secure for foreign imports, whether in the hands of Chinese or non-Chinese subjects, in original packages. or otherwise, complete immunity from all other taxation, examination or delay; that the total amount of taxation leviable on native produce for export abroad shall, under no circumstances, exceed 7 per cent. ad valorem.
Keeping these fundamental principles steadily in view, the High Contracting Parties have agreed upon the following methods of procedure.
Section 1.-The Chinese Government undertake that all barriers of whatsoever kind, collecting lekin or such like dues or duties, shall be permanently abolished on all roads, railways, and waterways in the Eighteen Provinces of China and the Three Eastern Provinces. This provision does not apply to the Native Custom-houses at present in existence on the seaboard or waterways, at Open Ports, on land routes, and on land frontiers of China.
Section 2.-The British Government agree that foreign goods on importation, in addition to the effective 5 per cent. import duty as provided for in the Protocol of 1901, shall pay a special surtax equivalent to one and a half times the said duty to com- pensate for the abolition of lekin, of transit dues in lieu of lekin, and of all other taxation on foreign goods, and in consideration of the other reforms provided for in this Article; but this provision shall not impair the right of China to tax salt, native opium and native produce as provided for in Sections 3, 5, 6 and 8.
The same amount of surtax shall be levied on goods imported into the Eighteen. Provinces of China and the Three Eastern Provinces across the land frontiers as on goods entering China by sea.
Section 3.-All Native Custom-houses now existing, whether at the Open Ports, on the seaboard, on rivers, inland waterways, land routes or land frontiers, as enumerated in the Hu Pu and Kung Pu Tee Li (Regulations of the Boards of Revenue aud Works) and Ta Ch'ing Hui Tien (Dynastic Institutes), may remain; a list of the same, with their location, shall be furnished to the British Government, for purposes of record.
Wherever there are Imperial Maritime Custom-houses, or wherever such may be hereafter placed, Native Custom-houses may be also established; as well as at any points either on the seaboard or land frontiers.
The location of Native Custom-houses in the Interior may be changed as the circumstances of trade seem to require, but any change must be communicated to the British Government, so that the list may be corrected; the originally stated number of them shall not, however, be exceeded.
Goods carried by junks or sailing-vessels trading to or from Open Ports shall not pay lower duties than the combined duties and surtax on similar cargo carried by
steamers.
Native produce, when transported from one place to another in the Interior, shall, on arrival at the first Native Custom-house, after leaving the place of production, pay duty equivalent to the export surtax mentioned in Section 7.
When this duty has been paid, a certificate shall be given which shall describe the nature of the goods, weight, number of packages, etc., amount of duty paid and intended destination. This certificate, which shall be valid for a fixed period of not
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THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
less than one year from date of payment of duty, shall free the goods from all taxation, examination, delay, or stoppage at any other Native Custom-houses passed en route.
If the goods are taken to a place not in the foreign settlements or concessions of an Open Port, for local use, they become there liable to the Consumption Tax described in Section 8.
If the goods are shipped from an Open Port, the certificate is to be accepted by the Custom-house concerned, in lieu of the Export Surtax mentioned in Section 7.
Junks, boats, or carts shall not be subjected to any taxation beyond a small and reasonable charge, paid periodically at a fixed annual rate. This does not exclude the right to levy, as at present, tonnage (Chuan Chao) and port dues (Chuan Liao) on junks.
Section 4-Foreigu opium duty and present lekin--which latter will now become a surtax in lieu of lekin-shall remain as provided for by existing Treaties.
Section 5.-The British Government have no intention whatever of interfering with China's right to tax native opium, but it is essential to declare that, in her arrangements for levying such taxation, China will not subject other goods to taxation, delay, or stoppage.
China is free to retain at important points on the borders of each province-either on land or water-offices for collecting duty on native opium, where duties or contribu- tions leviable shall be paid in one lump sum; which payment shall cover taxation of all kinds within that province. Each cake of opium will have a stamp affixed as evidence of duty payment. Excise officers and police may be employed in connection with these offices; but no barriers or other obstructions are to be erected, and the excise officers or police of these offices shall not stop or molest any other kinds of goods, or collect taxes thereon,
A list of these offices shall be drawn up and communicated to the British Govern- ment for record.
Section 6.-Lekin on salt is hereby abolished and the amount of said lekin and of other taxes and contributions shall be added to the salt duty, which shall be collected at place of production or at first station after entering the province where it is to be consumed.
The Chinese Government shall be at liberty to establish salt reporting offices at which boats conveying salt which is being moved under salt passes or certificates may be required to stop for purposes of examination and to have their certificates viséd, but at such offices no lekin or transit taxation shall be levied and no barriers or obstructions of any kind shall be erected.
Section 7.-The Chinese Government may recast the Export Tariff with specific duties as far as practicable on a scale not exceeding five per cent. ad valorem; but existing export duties shall not be raised until at least six months' notice has been given.
In cases where existing export duties are above five per cent. they shall be reduced to not more than that rate.
An additional special surtax of one half the export duty payable for the time being, in lieu of internal taxation and lekin, may be levied at time of export on goods exported either to foreign countries or coastwise.
In the case of silk, whether hand or filature reeled, the total export duty shall not exceed a specific rate equivalent to not more than five per cent. ad valorem. Half of this specific duty may be levied at the first Native Custom House in the interior which the silk may pass and in such case a certificate shall be given as provided for in Section 3, and will be accepted by the Custom-house concerned at place of export in lieu of half the export duty. Cocoons passing Native Custom-houses shall be liable to no taxation whatever. Silk not exported but consumed in China is liable to the Con- sumption Tax mentioned in Section 8.
Section 8.-The abolition of the lekin system in China and the abandonment of all other kinds of internal taxation on foreign imports and on exports will diminish the revenue materially. The surtax on foreign imports and exports and on coastwise exports is intended to compensate in a measure for this loss of revenue, but there
THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
83
remains the loss of lekin revenue on internal trade to be met, and it is therefore agreed that the Chinese Government are at liberty to impose a Consumption Tax on articles of Chinese origin not intended for export.
This tax shall be levied only at places of consumption and not on goods while in transit, and the Chinese Government solemnly undertake that the arrangements which they may make for its collection shall in no way interfere with foreign goods or with native goods for export. The fact of goods being of foreign origin shall of itself free them from all taxation, delay, or stoppage, after having passed the Custom-house.
Foreign goods which bear a similarity to native goods shall be furnished by the Custom-house, if required by the owner, with a protective certificate for each package, on payment of import duty and surtax, to prevent the risk of any dispute in the interior.
Native goods brought by junks to Open Ports, if intended for local consumption--- irrespective of the nationality of the owner of the goods shall be reported at the Native Custom-house only, where the consumption tax may be levied.
China is at liberty to fix the amount of this (consumption) tax, which may vary according to the nature of the merchandise concerned, that is to say, according as the articles are necessaries of life or luxuries; but it shall be levied at a uniform rate on goods of the same description, no matter whether carried by junk, sailing-vessel, or steamer. As mentioned in Section 3, the Consumption Tax is not to be levied within foreign settlements or concessions,
Section 9.-Au excise equivalent to double the import duty as laid down in the Protocol of 1901 is to be charged on all machine-made yarn and cloth manufactured in China, whether by foreigners at the Open Ports or by Chinese anywhere in China,
A rebate of the import duty and two-thirds of the Import Surtax is to be given on raw cotton imported from foreign countries, and of all duties, including Consump- tion Tax, paid on Chinese raw cotton used in mills in China.
Chinese machine-made yarn or cloth having paid excise is to be free of Export Duty, Export Surtax, Coast Trade Duty, and Consumption Tax. This Excise is to be collected through the Imperial Maritime Customs.
The same principle and procedure are to be applied to all other products of foreign type turned out by machinery, whether by foreigners at the Open Ports or by Chinese anywhere in China.
This stipulation is not to apply to the out-turn of the Hanyang and Ta Yeh Iron Works in Hupel and other similar existing Government Works at present exempt from taxation; or to that of Arsenals, Government Dockyards, or establishments of that nature for Government purposes which may hereafter be erected.
Section 10.-A member or members of the Imperial Maritime Customs Foreign Staff shall be selected by each of the Governors-General and Governors, and appointed,. in consultation with the Inspector-General of Imperial Maritime Customs, to each pro- vince for duty in connection with Native Customs affairs, Consumption Tax, Salt and Native Opium Taxes. These officers shall exercise an efficient supervision of the work- ing of these departments, and in the event of their reporting any case of abuse, illegal exaction, obstruction to the movement of goods, or other cause of complaint, the Governor-General or Governor concerned will take immediate steps to put an end to
same.
Section 11.-Cases where illegal action as described in this Article is complained of shall be promptly investigated by an officer of the Chinese Government of sufficiently high rank, in conjunction with a British officer and an officer of the Imperial Maritime Customs, each of sufficient standing; and in the event of its being found by a majority of the investigating officers that the complaint is well founded and loss has been incurred, due compensation is to be at once paid from the Surtax funds, through the Imperial Maritime Customs at the nearest open port. The High Provincial Officials are to be held responsible that the officer guilty of the illegal action shall be severely punished and removed from his post.
If the complaint turns out to be without foundation, complainant shall be held responsible for the expenses of the investigation.
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THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
His Britannic Majesty's Minister will have the right to demand investigation where from the evidence before him he is satisfied that illegal exactions or obstructions have occurred.
Section 12.--The Chinese Government agree to open to foreign trade, on the same footing as the places opened to foreign trade by the Treaties of Nanking and Tientsin, the following places, namely:-
Changsha in Hunan;
Wanhsien in Szechuen; Nganking in Anhui;
Waichow (Hui-chow) in Kuangtung; and Kongmoon (Chiang-mên) in Kuangtung.
Foreigners residing in these Open Ports are to observe the Municipal and Police Regulations on the same footing as Chinese residents, and they are not to be entitled to establish Municipalities and Police of their own within the limits of these Treaty Ports except with the consent of the Chinese authorities.
If this Article does not come into operation the right to demand under it the opening of these ports, with the exception of Kongmoon, which is provided for in Article 10, shall lapse.
Section 13.-Subject to the provisions of Section 14, the arrangements provided for in this Article are to come into force on 1st January, 1904.
By that date all lekin barriers shall be removed and officials employed in the collection of taxes and dues prohibited by this Article shall be removed from their posts.
Section 14. The condition on which the Chinese Government enter into the present engagement is that all Powers entitled to most favoured nation treatment in China enter into the same engagements as Great Britain with regard to the payment of surtaxes and other obligations imposed by this Article on His Britannic Majesty's Government and subjects.
The conditions on which His Britannic Majesty's Government enter into the present engagement are:
(1.) That all Powers who are now or who may hereafter become entitled to most favoured nation treatment in China enter into the same engagements;
(2.) And that their assent is neither directly nor indirectly made dependent on the granting by China of any political concession, or of any exclusive commercial concession.
Section 15. Should the Powers entitled to most favoured nation treatment by China have failed to agree to enter into the engagements undertaken by Great Britain under this Article by the 1st January, 1904, then the provisions of the Article shall only come into force when all the Powers have signified their acceptance of these engagements.
Section 16.-When the abolition of lekin and other forms of internal taxation on goods as provided for in this Article has been decided upon and sanctioned, au Imperial Edict shall be published in due form on yellow paper and circulated, setting forth the abolition of all lekin taxation, lekin barriers and all descriptions of internal taxation on goods, except as provided for in this Article.
The Edict shall state that the Provincial High Officials are responsible that any official disregarding the letter or spirit of its injunction shall be severely punished and removed from his post.
Art. IX. The Chinese Government, recognising that it is advantageous for the country to develop its mineral resources, and that it is desirable to attract Foreign as well as Chinese capital to embark in mining enterprises, agree within one year from the signing of this Treaty to initiate and conclude the revision of the existing Mining Regulations. China will, with all expedition and earnestuess, go into the whole question of Mining Rules and, selecting from the rules of Great Britain, India, and other countries, regulations which scem applicable to the condition of China, she will recast her present Mining Rules in such a way as while promoting the interests of
THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
85
Chinese subjects and not injuring in any way the sovereign rights of China, shall offer no impediment to the attraction of foreign capital, or place foreign capitalists at a greater disadvantage than they would be under generally accepted foreign regulations. Any mining concession granted after the publication of these new Rules shall be subject to their provisious,
Art. X. Whereas in the year 1898 the Inland Waters of China were opened to all such steam vessels, native or foreign, as might be especially registered for that trade at the Treaty Ports, and whereas the Regulations dated 28th July, 1898, and Supple- mentary Rules dated September, 1898, have been found in some respects inconvenient in working, it is now mutually agreed to amend them and to annex such new Rules to this Treaty. These Rules shall remain in force antil altered by mutual consent.
It is further agreed that Kongmoon shall be opened as a Treaty Port, and that, in addition to the places named in the special Article of the Burmal Convention of 4th February, 1897, British steamers shall be allowed to land or ship cargo and passengers, under the same regulations as apply to the "Ports of Call" on the Yangtze River, at the following "Ports of Call": Pak Tan Hau (Pai-t'u k'ou), Lo Ting Hau (Lo-ting k'ou), and Do Sing (Tou-ch'ong); and to land or discharge passengers at the following ten passenger landing stages on the West River :-Yung Ki (Jung-chi), Mah Ning (Ma- ning), Kau Kong (Chiu-chiang), Kulow (Ku-lao), Wing On (Yung-an), How Lik (Houli), Luk Pu (Lu-pu), Yuet Sing (Yüeh-ch ́eng), Luk T'o (Lu-tu) and Fung Chuen (Feng-ch'nan).
Art. XI. His Britannic Majesty's Government agree to the prohibition of the general importation of morphia into China, on condition, however, that the Chinese Government will allow of its importation, on payment of the Tariff import duty and under special permit, by duly qualified British medical practitioners and for the use of hospitals, or by British chemists and draggists who shall only be permitted to sell it in small quantities and on receipt of a requisition signed by a duly qualified foreign medical practitioner.
The special permits above referred to will be granted to an intending importer on his signing a bond before a British Consul guaranteeing the fulfilment of these conditions. Should an importer be found guilty before a British Consni of a breach of his bond, he will not be entitled to take out another permit. Any British subject importing morphia without a permit shall be liable to have such morphia con- fiscated.
This Article will come into operation on all other Treaty Powers agreeing to its conditions, but any morphia actually shipped before that date will not be affected by this prohibition.
The Chinese Government on their side undertake to adopt measures at once to prevent the manufacture of morphia in China.
Art. XII. China having expressed a strong desire to reform, her judicial system and to bring it into accord with that of Western nations, Great Britain agrees to give every assistance to such reform, and she will also be prepared to relinquish her extra-territorial rights when she is satisfied that the state of the Chinese laws, the arrangement for their administration and other considerations warrant her in so doing.
Art. XIII. The missionary question in China being, in the opinion of the Chinese Government, one requiring careful consideration, so that, if possible, troubles such as have occured in the past may be averted in the future, Great Britain arces to join in a Commission to investigate this question, and, if possible, to devise means for securing permanent peace between converts and non-converts, should such a Commission be formed by China and the Treaty Powers interested.
Art. XIV. Whereas under Rule V. appended to the Treaty of Tientsin of 1858. British merchants are permitted to export rice and all other grain from one port of China to another under the same conditions in respect of security as copper "cash," it is now agreed that in cases of expected scarcity or famine from whatsoever cause in any district, the Chinese Government shall, on giving twenty-one days' notice, be at liberty to prohibit the shipment of rice and other grain from such district.
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THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
Should any vessel specially chartered to load rice or grain previously contracted for have arrived at her loading port prior to or on the day when a notice of probibition to export comes into force, she shall be allowed an extra week in which to ship her
cargo.
If during the existence of this prohibition, any shipment of rice or grain is allowed by the authorities, the prohibition shall, ipso facto, be considered cancelled and shall not be re-imposed until six weeks' notice has been given.
When a prohibition is notified, it will be stated whether the Government have any Tribute or Army Rice which they intend to ship during the time of prohibition, and if so, the quantity shall be named.
Such rice shall not be included in the prohibition, and the Customs shall keep a record of any Tribute or Army Rice so shipped or landed.
The Chinese Government undertake that no rice, other than Tribute or Army Rice belonging to the Government, shall be shipped during the period of prohibition. Notifications of prohibitions, and of the quantities of Army or Tribute Rice for shipment shall be made by the Governors of the Province concerned.
Similarly, notifications of the removals of prohibitions shall be made by the same authorities.
The export of rice and other grain to foreign countries remains prohibited.
Art. XV.-It is agreed that either of the High Contracting Parties to this Treaty may demand a revision of the Tariff at the end of 10 years; but if no demand be made on either side within 6 months after the end of the first 10 years, then the Tariff shall remain in force for 10 years more, reckoned from the end of the preceding 10 years, and so it shall be at the end of each successive 10 years.
Any Tariff concession which China may hereafter accord to articles of the produce or manufacture of any other State shall immediately be extended to similar articles of the produce or manufacture of His Britannic Majesty's Dominions by whomsoever imported.
Treaties already existing between the United Kingdom and China shall continue in force in so far as they are not abrogated or modified by stipulations of the present Treaty.
Art. XVI. The English and Chinese Texts of the present Treaty have been care- fully compared, but in the event of there being any difference of meaning between them, the sense as expressed in the English text shall be held to be the correct sense.
The ratifications of this Treaty, under the hand of His Majesty the King of Great Britain and Ireland and of His Majesty the Emperor of China respectively shall be exchanged at Peking within a year from this day of signature.
In token whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed and sealed this Treaty, two copies in English and two in Chinese.
Done at Shanghai this fifth day of September in the year of Our Lord, 1902, corresponding with the Chinese date, the fourth day of the eighth moon of the twenty- eighth year of Kwang Hsu,
(L.8.)
JAS. I. MACKAY.
ANNEX A.-(1)
(TRANSLATION.)
Lu, President of the Board of Works ;
SHENG, Junior Guardian of the Heir Apparent, Vice-President of the Board of Works;
Imperial Chinese Commissioners for dealing with questions connected with the Commercial Treaties, to
Sir JAMES MACKAY, His Britannic Majesty's Special Commissioner for the dis- cussion of Trenty matters.
THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
87
Shanghai K. H. XXVIII., 7th moon, 11th day.
(Received August 15, 1902)
We have the honour to inform you that we have received the following telegram from His Excellency Liu, Governor General of the Liang Chiang, on the subject of Clause II. mutually agreed upon by us:
As regards this clause, it is necessary to insert therein a clear stipulation, to the "effect that, no matter what changes may take place in the future, all Customs' duties "must continue to be calculated on the basis of the existing higher rate of the Haikwan "Tael over the Treasury Tael, and that the touch' and weight of the former must be "made good."
As we have already arranged with you that a declaration of this kind should be embodied in an Official Note, and form an annex to the present Treaty, for purposes of record, we hereby do ourselves the honour to make this communication.
ANNEX A-(2.)
Shanghai, August 18th, 1902.
GENTLEMEN,
I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your despatch of the 14th instant forwarding copy of a telegram from His Excellency Liu, Governor-General of the Liang Chiang, on the subject of Article II. of the new Treaty, and in reply I have the honour to state that His Excellency's understanding of the Article is perfectly correct.
I presume the Chinese Government will make arrangements for the coinage of a national silver coin of such weight and touch as may be decided upon by them. These coins will be made available to the public in return for a quantity of silver bullion of equivalent weight and fineness plus the usual mintage charge.
The coins which will become the national coinage of China will be declared by the Chinese Government to be legal tender in payment of Customs duty and in discharge of obligations contracted in Haikwan taels, but only at their proportionate value to the Haikwan tael, whatever that may be.
Their Excellencies
I have the honour to be,
Gentlemen, Your obedient Servant,
(Signed)
LU HAI-HUAN and SHENG HOUAN-HUAI,
JAS. L. MACKAY.
etc.,
etc.,
etc.
ANNEX B-(1.)
(TRANSLATION.)
Lu, President of the Board of Works;
SHENG, Junior Guardian of the Heir Apparent, Vice-President of the Board of Works;
Imperial Chinese Commissioners for dealing with questions connected with the Commercial Treaties, to
SIR JAMES L. MACKAY, His Britannic Majesty's Special Commissioner.
Shanghai, September 2nd, 1902. We have the honour to inform you that on the 22nd of August, we, in conjunction with the Governors-General of the Liang Chiang and the Hu-kuang Provinces, Their Excellencies Liu and Chang, addressed the following telegraphic Memorial to the
Throue
"Of the revenue of the different Provinces derived from lekin of all kinds, a "portion is appropriated for the service of the foreign loans, a portion for the Peking "Government, and the balance is reserved for the local expenditure of the Provinces "concerned.
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THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
"In the negotiations now being conducted with Great Britain for the amendment "of the Commercial Treaties, a mutual arrangement has been come to providing for "the imposition of additional taxes, in compensation for the abolition of all kinds of "lekin and other imposts on goods, prohibited by Article VIII. After payment of "interest and sinking fund on the existing foreign loan, to the extent to which lekin "is thereto pledged, these additional taxes shall be allocated to the various Provinces "to make up deficiencies and replace revenue, in order that no hardships may be "entailed on them. With a view to preserving the original intention underlying the proposal to increase the duties in compensation for the loss of revenue derived from "lekin and other imposts on goods, it is further stipulated that the surtaxes shall not "be appropriated for other purposes, shall not form part of the Imperial Maritime "Customs revenue proper, and shall in no case be pledged as security for any new "foreign loan.
CC
**
It is therefore necessary to memorialize for the issue of an Edict, giving effect to the above stipulations and directing the Board of Revenue to find out what proportion of the provincial revenues derived from lekin of all kinds, now about "to be abolished, each Province has hitherto bad to remit, and what proportion it "has been entitled to retain, so that, when the Article comes into operation, due "apportionment may be made accordingly, thus providing the Provinces with funds "available for local expenditure and displaying equitable and just treatment towards
all,"
**
On the 1st instant an Imperial Decree "Let action, as requested, be taken," was issued, and we now do ourselves the honour reverently to transcribe the same for
your information.
ANNEX B-(2).
Shanghai, September 5th, 1902.
GENTLEMEN,
I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your despatch of the 2nd instant forwarding the text of the Memorial and Decree dealing with the disposal of the
surtaxes.
I understand that the surtaxes in addition to not being pledged for any new foreign loan are not to be pledged to, or held to be security for, liabilities already contracted by China except in so far as lekin revenue has already been pledged to an existing loan.
I also understand from the Memorial that the whole of the surtaxes provided by Article VIII. of the New Treaty goes to the Provinces in proportions to be agreed upon between them and the Board of Revenue, but that out of these surtaxes each Province is obliged to remit to Peking the same contribution as that which it has hitherto remitted out of its lekin collections, and that the Provinces also provide as hitherto out of these surtaxes whatever funds may be necessary for the service of the foreign loan to which lekin is partly pledged.
I hope Your Excellencies will send me a reply to this despatch and that you will agree to this correspondence forming part of the Treaty as an Annex.
I have the honour to be,
Gentlemen,
Their Excellencies,
Your obedient servant,
(Signed)
JAS. L. MACKAY.
LU HAI-HUAN and SHENG HOUAN-HUAI,
etc.,
etc.,
etc.
THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
ANNEX B-(3.)
(TRANSLATION.)
89
Lu, President of the Board of Works;
SHENG, Junior Guardian of the Heir Apparent, Vice-President of the Board of Works;
Imperial Chinese Commissioners for dealing with questions connected with the Commercial Treaties, to
SIR JAMES L. MACKAY, His Britannic Majesty's Special Commissioner.
Shanghai, September 5th, 1902.
We have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your communication of to-day's date with regard to the allocation of the surtax funds allotted to the Provinces, and to inform you that the views therein expressed are the same as our own,
We would, however, wish to point out that, were the whole amount of the alloca- tion due paid over to the Provinces, unnecessary expense would be incurred in the retransmission by them of such portions thereof as would have to be remitted to Peking in place of the contributions hitherto payable out of lekin revenue. The amount, therefore, of the allocation due to the Provinces, arranged between them and the Board of Revenue, will be retained in the hands of the Maritime Customs, who wil await the instructions of the Provinces in regard to the remittance of such portion thereof as may be necessary to fulfil their obligations, and (on receipt of these instructions) will send forward the amount direct. The balance will be held
to the order of the Provinces.
In so far as lekin is pledged to the service of the 1898 loan, a similar method of procedure will be adopted.
As you request that this correspondence be annexed to the Treaty, we have the honour to state that we see no objection to this being done,
ANNEX C.
INLAND WATERS STEAM NAVIGATION
ADDITIONAL RULES.
1. British steamship owners are at liberty to lease warehouses and jetties on the banks of waterways from Chinese subjects for a term not exceeding 25 years, with option of renewal on terms to be mutually arranged. In cases where British mer-
chants are unable to secure warehouses and jetties from Chinese subjects on satis- factory terms, the local officials, after consultation with the Minister of Commerce, shall arrange to provide these on renewable lease as above mentioned at current equitable rates.
2-Jetties shall only be erected in such positions that they will not obstruct the inland waterway or interfere with navigation, and with the sanction of the nearest Commissioner of Customs; such sanction, however, shall not be arbitrarily withheld.
3.-British merchants shall pay taxes and contributions on these warehouses and jetties on the same footing as Chinese proprietors of similar properties in the neigh- bourhood, British merchants may only employ Chinese agents and staff to reside in warehouses so leased at places touched at by steamers engaged in inland traffic to carry on their business; but British merchants may visit these places from time to time to look after their affairs. Tlie existing rights of Chinese jurisdiction over Chinese subjects shall not by reason of this clause be diminished or interfered with
in
any way.
4-Steam vessels navigating the inland waterways of China shall be responsible for loss caused to riparian proprietors by damage which they way do to the banks or works on them and for the loss which may be caused by such damage. In the event of China desiring to prohibit the use of some particular shallow waterway by
2
90
THE BRITISH COMMERCIAL TREATY WITH CHINA
launches, because there is reason to fear that the use of it by them would be likely to injure the banks and cause damage to the adjoining country, the British authorities, when appealed to, shall, if satisfied of the validity of the objection. prohibit the use of that waterway by British launches, provided that Chinese launches are also prohibited from using it.
Both Foreign and Chinese launches are prohibited from crossing dams and weirs at present in existence on inland waterways where they are likely to cause injury to such works, which would be detrimental to the water service of the local people.
5.--The main object of the British Government in desiring to see the inland waterways of China opened to steam navigation being to afford facilities for the rapid transport of both foreign and native merchandise, they undertake to offer no impedi ment to the transfer to a Chinese company and the Chinese flag of any British Steamer which may now or hereafter be employed on the inland waters of China should the owner be willing to make the transfer.
In event of a Chinese company registered under Chinese law being formed to run steamers on the inland waters of China the fact of British subjects holding shares in such a company shall not entitle the steamers to fly the British flag.
6.-Registered steamers and their tows are forbidden, just as junks have always been forbidden, to carry contraband goods. Infraction of this rule will entail the penalties prescribed in the Treaties for such an offence, and cancellation of the Inland Waters Navigation Certificate carried by the vessels, which will be prohibited from thereafter plying on inland water.
7. As it is desirable that the people living inland should be disturbed as little as possible by the advent of steam vessels to which they are not accustomed, inland waters not hitherto frequented by steamers shall be opened as gradually as may be convenient to merchants and only as the owners of steamers may see prospects of remunerative trade.
In cases where it is intended to run steam vessels on waterways on which such vessels have not hitherto run, intimation shall be made to the Commissioner of Customs at the nearest open port who shall report the matter to the Ministers of Commerce. The latter in conjunction with the Governor-General or Governor of the Province, after careful consideration of all the circumstances of the case, shall at once give their approval,
8.--A registered steamer may ply within the waters of a port, or from one open port or ports to another open port or ports, or from one open port or ports of places inland, and thence "back to such port or ports. She may, on making due report to the Customs, land or ship passengers or cargo at any recognised places of trade passed in the course of the voyage; but may not ply between inland places exclusively except with the consent of the Chinese Government.
9.-Any cargo and passenger boats may be towed by steamers. The helmsman and crew of any boat towed shall be Chinese. All boats, irrespective of ownership, must be registered before they can proceed inland.
10. These Rules are supplementary to the Inland Steam Navigation Regulations of July and September, 1898. The latter, where untouched by the present Rules, remain in full force and effect: but the present Rules hold in the case of such of the former Regulations as the present Rules affect. The present Rules, and the Regulations of July and September, 1898, to which they are supplementary, are provisional and may be modified, as circumstances require, by mutual consent.
Done at Shanghai this fifth day of September, in the year of Our Lord, 1902, corresponding with the Chinese date, the fourth day of the eighth moon of the twenty-eighth year of Kwang Hsü,
(L.S.)
JAS. L. MACKAY.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF CHINA
The following is the Chinese Tariff of Import Duties as agreed upon in 1920 between the British Special Commissioner for commercial negotiations in China and the Chinese Commissioners. The Tariff is now in operation, but negotiations are still proceeding with the representatives of other Powers, and until these negotiations are completed the Tariff cannot be corrected with authority.
Note.-If any of the articles enumerated in this Tariff are imported in dimensions exceeding those specified, the Duty is to be calculated in proportion to the weasurements as defined.
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY.
Per
|T. m. c.c.
Agar-agar..........
Agaric. See Fungus.
Picul
0 3 0 0
Amber
Catty
0 3 2 5
Aniseed, Star, 1st Quality
(value Tls. 15 and over
per picnl).
Picul
1 0 0 0
Aniseed, Star, 2nd Quality
per picul)..
(value under Tls. 15
Apricot Seed
Arrowroot and Arrowroot|
Flour
Asafoetida
Asbestos Boiler Compo-
sition
Asbestos Fibre Asbestos Millboard Asbestos Packing, includ- ing Sheets and Blocks. Asbestos Packing, Metal-
lic Asbestos Yarn... Awabi
Bacon and Ham.
Bags, Grass.... Bags, Gunny
Bags, Gunny Old
Bags, Hemp
Bags, Hemp Old..
Bags, Straw..
Baking Powder :----
NAME OF ARTICLE.
Basins, Tin (Common)... Basins. Iron, Enamelled: Up to 9 ins, in diame- ter, Decorated or Un- decorated
Over 9 ins. in diameter, Agate, Blue & White, Grey or Mottled, Un- decorated
Over 9ins. in diameter, Decorated (with Gold) Over 9 ins, diameter,
decorated
Beads, Coral
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY.
Per \T. m. c. c. Gross
0 2 5 0
Dozen
0 0 5 0
0 0 90
0 1 7 5
1
0440 0900
Value 15 p. cent. Picul
1 0 0 0
(without
Gold)
0 1 2 0
*
0 200
Catty
0 7 5 5
5 0 0 0 0 500
Beads, Cornelian
Picul
7000
Beads, Glass, of all kinds.
Value
5p. cent.
Beer. See Wines, etc.
3 5 0 0
..
Beeswax, Yellow
Picul
1 6 0 0
Belting.
Value
5 p. cent
5000
H
Betel-nut Husk, Dried
Picul
2 2 5 0
Betel-nut Husk, Fresh
0 0 7 7 0 0 1 8
T
**
1 5 0 0
Value 5 p. cent. Thousand
125 0
4 2 5 0
Value 5 p. cent.
Thousand 4 2 6 0 Value 5 p. cent. Thousan 1 2 5 0
Betel-nut Leaves, Dried... Betel-nuts, Dried
Bezoar, Cow, Indian
Betel-nuts, Fresh
0 45
25
0 0 1 8
Value
15 p. cent.
Biche de Mer, Black... Biche de Mer, White....
Picul
1 6 0 0
0700
Bicycle Materials Bicycles
Value
5 p. cent.
Each
3000
Dozen
0 0 8 3
+
0 1 1 0
Birds' Nests, 1st Quality. Birds' Nests, 2nd Quality Birds' Nests, 3rd Quality. Blue, Paris
Catty
1 400
0450
0 1 5 0
Picul
1 5 0 0
++
1 4
0 2 2 3
Blue, Prussian
1 5 0 0
11
Bones, Tiger
2 500
2
*
0 3 0 0
4
08 10
1 3 5 3
Picul
0 0 7 0
Books, Chinese
Books (Printed) Charts,
Maps, Newspapers and Periodicals
Free.
4 oz. bottles or tins...
G
8
19
H
+
1 lb. 3
5 +
Bark, Mangrove..
Bark, Plum-tree .........................
Bark, Yellow (for dyeing) Bark, fellow (Medicinal) Barley, Pearl
0 1 2 0 Value 15 p. cent. Picul
Free.
Borax, Crude
Picul
0 6 10
Borax, Refined
1 4 6 0
0 8 0 0
Braid, Llamas...
0 3 0 0
J
Bricks, Fire..........................
Value
5 0 0 0 15 p. cent.
2*
32
CUSTOMS TARIFF
NAME OF ARTICLE,
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY.
NAME OF ARTICLK.
other Packages
Bronze Powder
Butter, in tins, jars, and
Buttons, Agate and Por-
celain
Per Picul
IT. m. c. c. 2 2 0 0
Per
TARIFF UNIT AND DOTT.
T. m. c. c.
Canned Meats.-
2000
Bacon or ham, Sliced:
lb. tins
Dozen
0077
J
0 1 4 4
12 Gross
0 0 1 0
Dozen 17
Buttons Brass, and other
Dried Beef, Sliced......
lb, jars
0 1 4 4
kinds (not Jewellery)...
Gross
0 0 2 0
Byrrh, Sec Wines, etc. Camphor
Camphor Baroos, Clean. Camphor Baroos, Refuse
Candles, 9 oz.
Candles, 12 OZ..........
Candles, 10
J+
Other weights, duty in
proportion.)
Candles, of all kinds dif-
ferently packed
Canes, Bamboo
Canes, Coir 1 ft. long..
Canes, Coir 5 long
+
Canned Fruits, Vegeta- bles, etc. (all weights
and measures approxi
Mincemeat:
1 lbs. pails.............
Dozen
0100
Picul Catty Value Case of 25) packages
1 6 5 0
JI
0 1 8 1
0 £ 5
5 p. cent.
Kits, barrels and
barrels
Picul
0 7 29
0 0 7 5
6 Candles
Pork and Beans Plain
or with Tomato Sauce:
0 1 0 0
1 lb, tins
0 1 3 3
2
*
Preserved Fruits in glass bottles, jars, cardboard or wooden boxes, in- elnding weight of im mediate package................
Picul
0 750
Thousand 0 4 0 0
++
Picul Thousand
0200 0 3 0 0
Potted
Meat: :=་
Ib. tins
H
Potted und Devilled
Poultry and Meat combined :--
lb. tins
Soups and Bouilli
2 lbs. tins
mate) :-
Apples
Dozen
Table
Apricots
21 lb.
0 0 0
G
Fruits,
Grapes
cans
Peaches
Pie
Pears
Fruits.
Plums
+
0 0 5 7
73
J
Tamales Chicken:-
lb. tins
Ja
J
Tongues of every des-
cription:- lb. tins..
Dozen
0 0 40
**
0 0 7 5
JJ
[+]
J 085
>
20
and
Devilled
==
0 0 2
0 4
ENEN
004
+
0101
**
0 2 4 4
**
0 0 5 1
0 0 8 0
:
Asparagus
Corn
Peas
String Beans Tomatoes...
All other Vegetables pre- served in tins, bottles, or jars, including weight of immediate package
Tomato Sauce
1
14
**
1
+
Picul
0 6 5 0
2
Dozen
2)
2 lb.
1
3
1
tins
*
0 0 5 4
0060
F
0 0 5 1
**
0 0 5 4
Picul
0 5 2
0 2
0
3 3
0 4 4 5
0 5 1 6
31
**
*7
All other Canned Meats,
including Game of every description, without
with
Vegetables: -
lb. tins
0 5 4 6
Catsup: pint bottles
1
N
++
H
Ju
KE
*
and
6
++
H
14
53
Dozen
CO
0 0 5
10 30
w
Canvas and Cotton Duck,
not exceeding 36
0 0 5 2 0 0 6 3
01 20
0 2 1 0
0 3 7 0
+4
0 8 10
11.
Jams and Jellies:
1 lb. tins, bottles, or jars
*
Milk (including Con-
densed)
Cream, Evaporated:
dozen pints (family size)
2 dozen quarts (botel
size)
inches wide.....
Yard
**
0 0 6 0 0 1 1 8
Capoor Cutchery
Value
0010 3 p. cent.
Cardamoms, Superior,
Case of 4 dozen 1 lb. tins
and Amomums
Picul
0 2 5 0
Cardamoms, Inferior, or
Grains of Paradise...
Cardamoms, Husk.
Cards, Playing
Case
0 2 3 0
Cassia Buds
Value
Picul
0 2 6 0
Cassia Liguea, Cassia Twigs
፡፡
10.000
1 0 0 0
0 2 50 5 p. cent.
0 7 5 0 0920 0170
CUSTOMS TARIFF
93
NAME OF ARTICLE,
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Cement...
Per Cask of 3 piculs.
T. m. c. c.
Per
T. m. c. 6.
Coral Beads....
0 1 5 0
Catty
0 750
Coral, Broken and Refuse
0 5 5 0
Cereals and Flour
Cornelian Beads
Picul
7 0 0 0
Cornelian Stones, Rough Hundred
0 3 0 0
Including Barley.Maize, Millet, Oats, Paddy, Rice, Wheat, and
Corundum Sand........
Picul
0 1 9 5
Cotton Piece Goods:-
Flour made there-
from;
also Buck-
wheat and Buck-
Sheetings
not
ex-
wheat Flour, Corn-
four and Yellow
Corn Meal,
Rye
Free
Flour, and Hovis
Flour
But not including Ar- rowroot and Arrow- root Flour, Cracked Wheat, Germea, Ho- miny, Pearl Barley,] Potato Flour, Quaker Oats, Rolled Oats, Sago and Sago Flour, Shredded Wheat, Tapioca and Tapioca Flour, and Yam Flour
Free
Chairs, Vienna Bent-wood
Dozen
0 8 0 0
Charcoal
Picul
0 0 3 0
Cheese
Value
5 p. cent.
Chestnuts
Picul
0 1 8 0
China-root, Whole, Sliced,
or in Cubes
Picul
0 6 5 0
Chinaware, Coarse and
Fine
Value 5 p. cent.
Picul Pound
0 3 0 0 0 0 1 2
Chloride of Lime
-Chocolate, Sweetened
Cigarettes, 1st Quality (value exceeding Tls. 4.50 per 1,000?.. Cigarettes, 2nd Quality! (value not exceeding
Ms. 4.50 per 1.000)
-Cigars
Thousand 0 5 0 0
0 0 9 0
中心申
JJ
0 5 0 0
Cinnabar
Picul
3 7 5 0
Cinnamon
4 0 0 0
Clams, Dried
**
0 5 5 0
Clocks of all kinds.
Cloves
Value Picul
5 p. cent.
Cloves, Mother
++
Ton
A
Coal, Asiatic
Coal, other kinds
Coal, Asiatic, Briquetts
Cochineal...
Cockles, Dried...
**
Value Picul
++
0 6 3 0
0 3 6 0
0 2 5 0
0600
0 500 5 p. cent.
◊ 5 0 0 0500
3 0 0 0
Cockles, Fresh
Cocoa
Coffee
1 0 0 0
+
Coir Canes, 1 ft. long
0 2 0 0
J
Coir Canes, 5 ft. long
Coke, Asiatic
Coke, other kinds
Compoy
-Coral
Thousand 0 3 0 0
Ton
23
0 5 0 0 0 9 0 0 Picul 2 0 0 0 Catty 1 1 1 0
Grey Shirtings Or
ceeding 40 ins. wide
and not exceeding 40 yds. long:
a.Weight 7b.and under
b. Over 7 lb. and not
over 9 lb.......
c. Over 91b, and not
over 11 lb.......
d. Over 11 lb.
Imitation Native Cot
(tonClothhandmade) Grey or Bleached: a. Not exceeding 20 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 20 yds. long weight 3 pounds and under..
b. Exceeding 20 108.
wide
White Shirtings, White Irishes, White Sheet- ings, White Brocades, and White Striped or Spotted Shirtings: not exceeding 37 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 42 yds. long Drills, Grey or White not exceeding 31 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 40yds.long : ". Weight 12 lb. and
under.
6. Weight over 124 lb. Jeans, Grey or White: a. Not exceeding 31 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 30 yds. long b. Not exceeding 31 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 40 yds. long
T-Cloths,
White:
Grey OF
a. Not exceeding 34 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 24 yds. long b. Not exceeding 34 ins. wide and exceeding 24 yds, but not ex- ceeding 40 yds. long.. c. Exceeding 34 ins. but not exceeding 37 ins. wide and not exceed! ing 21 yds. long....
•
Piece
0 0 5 0
0 0 8 0
**
0 1 1 0
0 1 2 0
**
0 0 27
Valuo
5 p. cent.
Piece
0 1 3 5
Piece
|
0100 0 1 2 5
0 9 0 0
*
0 1 2 0
#
0 0 7 0
0 1 3 5
0 0 8 0
94
NAME OF ARTICLE.
CUSTOMS TARIFF
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTE,
NAME OF ARTICLE.
Per
Per
IT. m. c. c.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUIT
T.m.c.c.
Crimp Cloth and Crape,
Plain
a. Not exceeding 30 ins.
wide and not exceed-. ing 6 yds. long
b. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide, excceding 6 yds. but not exceeding 10 yds, long
c. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide but exceeding 10 yds, long
White Muslins, White Lawns, and White Cambrics: notoxgeed- ing 46 ins. wide and not exceeding 12 yds. long,
Mosquito Netting, White or Coloured: not exceeding 90 ins. wide
Lenos and Balzarines,
White, Dyed or Print ed: not exceeding 311 ins, wide and not ex- ceeding 30 yds, long Leno Brocades and Bal- zarine Brocades, Dyed Prints:
a. Printed Cambrics, Lawns or Muslins: not exceeding 46 ins, wide and not exceed- ing 12 yds. long b. Printed Chintzes, Printed Crapes,Print- ed Drills, Printed Furnitures, Printed Shirtings, Printed T-Cloth including those goods known as Blue and White Painted T-Cloths, Printed Twills; but] not including goods] (mentioned in e.(h) 1. Not exceeding 20 ins.
wide
2. Exceeding 20 ins. but not exceeding 31 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 30 yds. long
c. Printed Crimp Cloth:| 1. Not exceeding 30 ius. wide and not exceed- ing 6 yds. long
2. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide,exceeding 6 yds. but not exceeding 10 yds. long
3. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide but exceeding 10 yds. long
Piece
0 0 2 7
0 3 5
JJ
0 0 0 34
Piece
0 0 3 2
Yard
0 0 1 0
Piece
0 0 6 0
Value
5 p. cent.
Piece
0 0 3 7
Value
Piece
5p. cent.
0 0 8 0
0 0 2 7
0 0 3 5
Yard
0 0 0 3}
d. Printed Lenos and
Balzarines: not ex- ceeding 31 ins. wide and not exceeding 30 yds. long
e. Printed Sheetings: not exceeding 36 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 43 yds. long f. Printed Turkey Reds, of all kinds: not ex- ceeding 31 ins, wide and not exceeding 25 yds. long
9. Printed Sateens, Printed Satinets, Printed Reps,Printed Cotton Lastings, in- cluding all Cotton Piece Goods which are both Dyed and Printed, except those specified in (ƒ) and (h,) and including finish, any special such as Mercerised Finish, Schreiner Fi- nish, Gassed Finish, silk Finish orElectric Finish, not exceeding 32 ins. wide or 32 yds. long.............. Coloured Woven Cot- tons, i.c., dyed in the Yarn except Crimp] Cloth....
Silk Finish, or Elec- tric Finish: not exceeding 32ins, wide and not exceeding 32 yds. long
A. Duplex Prints OT Reversible Cretonnes (not including those goods known as Blue and White Printed (T-Cloths) Dyed Cottons:
Piece
0 0 90
Value
0 1 8 0
0 100
0 2 50
5p. cent.
Piece
0250
Value
5 p. cent.
a. Dyed Plain Cottons. ie, without woven or embossed figures in- cluding Plain Ita- lians, Lastings, Reps, and Ribs, and all other Dyed Plain Cottons not other- wiso enumerated, and including any special finish, such as Mercerised Finish,| Schreiner Finish, Gassed Finish, Silk Finish, or Electric Finish): not exceedg. 36 ins. wide and not exceedg. 33 yds. long Piece
02 40
NAME OF ARTICLE.
b. Dyed Figured Cot- tons, ie., with woven or embossed figures (including Figured Italians and Last- ings, Figured Reps, and Figured Ribs, and all other Dyed Figured Cotton not otherwise enumerat- ed, and including any special finish, such as Mercerised Finish, Schreiner Finisb, Gassed Finish, Silk Finish, or Electric Finish): not exceed- ing 36 ins. wide and not exceeding 33 yds. long
r. Dyed Crimp Cloth: 1. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide and not exceeding 6 yds.j long 2. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide, exceed- ing 6 yds. but not exceeding 10 yds.] long
3. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide but ex- ceeding 10 yds.long
d. Dyed Drills: not
exceeding
CUSTOMS TARIFF
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Per
T. m. c. c.
Piece
0 1 5 0
0 0 2 7
0 0 3 5
Yard
0 0 0 33
31 ins.
0 1 7 0
Piece
wide and not exceed- ing 43 yds. long
-
4. Dyed Lenos and Bal-
zarines; not exceed- ing 31 ins. wide and not exceeding 30 yds.
long
0 0 90 5 p. cent.
Dyed Leno Brocades, g. Dyed Muslins, Lawns,
Value
and Cambrics
not
exceeding 40ins. wide and not exceeding 12 yds, long
h. Dyed Shirtings and Sheetings: not ex- ceeding 36 ins. wide and not exceeding 43 yds. long... i. Hongkong-dyed Shirtings: not ex- ceeding 36 ins. wide and not exceeding 20 yds. long
j. Dyed Cotton Cuts: not exceeding 30 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 54 yds, long......
N. B.-The pro rata rule does not apply.)|
Piece
0 0 3 7
0 1 5 0
0 1 0 0
Piece
0 0 2 2
NAME OF AFTICLE.
k. Dyed T-Cloths in- cluding Dyed Al- pacianos), Dyed Real] and Imitation Turkey Reds of all kinds; not exceeding 32 ins, wide and not exceeding 25 yds, long:
1. Weight 34 lb. and
under
2. Weight over 341b. Flannelettes and Cotton
Spanish Stripes:
a. Cotton Flannel, Cau- ton Flannel, Swans- downs, Flannelettes, and Raised Cotton Cloths of all kinds, Plain, Dyed, and Printed :
1. Not exceeding 36 ins. wide and not exceeding 15 yds. long.
2. Not exceeding 36 ins, wide, exceed- ing 15 yds. but not exceeding 30 yds. long
b. Dyed Cotton Spanish
Stripes:
1. Not exceeding 32
ins, wide and noti exceeding 20 yds. long.
2. Exceeding 32 ins. but not exceeding 64 ins. wide and not exceeding 20 yds. long. Cordage, of all kinds. Crimp Cloth:
a. Not exceeding 30 ins.
wide and not exceed ing 6 yds, long......................... b. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide and exceeding 6 yds., but not exceed- ing 10 yds. long c. Not exceeding 30 ins. wide but exceeding 10 yds. long
Velvets and Velveteens, Velvet Cords, and Fus- tians:
a. Velvets and Velve-
teens: Clain:
1. Not exceeding 18
ins. wide... 2. Exceeding 18 ins.
but not exceeding 22 ins, wide 3. Exceeding 22 ins. but not exceeding 26 ins. wide
95
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Per
T. m. c. c.
Piece
21
0 0 6 0
0 1 0 0
0 0 6 5
0 1 3 0
0 0 8 6
JJ
0 1 7 0 Value 5p cent.
Fiece
0 0 2 7
JJ
0 0 3
Yard
|0003
0 0 0 6
J
0 0 07
0 0 0 B
13
96
NAME OF ARTICLE.
b. Velvets and Velve-l teens, Printed or Em- bossed, not exceeding
30 ins. wide...
c. Dyed Velvet Cords, Dyed Velveteen
Cords, Dyed Cordu- roys, Dyed Fustians; of any description not exceeding 30 ins. wide
Blankets, Cotton, Plain, Printed or Jacquard Handkerchiefs, Cotton:
a. Plain, Dyed, or Print- ed, not Embroidered, Hemstitched, or Ini- tialled: not exceeding
b. All other Handker-
chiefs
CUSTOMS TARIFF
TRAIFF UNIT AND DUTY.
NAME OF ARTICLE.
Per
\T, m. c. c.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTT
Per
|T. m. 4- <.
Dyes,
Colours,
and
Paints:-
Aniline
Value
5p.cent.
Yard
0 0 1 5
Blue, Paris
Picul
1 5 0 0
>>
1 5 0 0
2 200
22
0 0 1 5
Piece
0 0 3 0
Imitation
Blue, Prussian... Bronze Powder Carthamin Chrome, Yellow Cinnabar
Gambodge
Green, Emerald
Green, Schweinfurt, or
Indigo, Dried, Artificial
or Natural
Indigo, Liquid, Artifi-
cial.......
Indigo, Liquid, Natural Indigo, Paste, Artificial Lead, Red, Dry or mixed
with Oil
Lead White, Dry or mixed with Oil......... Lead Yellow, Dry or mixed with Oil........ Logwood Extract
Value
+
Picul
EJ
P. cent.
**
3 7 5 0 2700
1 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
Value
5 p. cent.
Pienl
20 25
2 15
0 25
0 4 5 0
**
0 4 5 0
0 450
+
0 6 0 0
Ochre
066 0 0
Pairs
Smalt
1 00
Ultramarine
0 5 0 0
Vermilion....
4 0 0 0
Dozen
0 4 3 2
Vermilion Imitation
Value
P. cent.
White Zine
JJ
1 yd. square ....
Dozen
0 0 20
Value
15 p. cent.
Singlets or Drawers, Cot-
tou...
Dozen
0 1 2 5
Socks, Cotton, including
Lisle Thread:
1st Quality, i.e. valued
at Tls. 1 or over per
dozen pairs
2nd Quality, i.e. valued
at less than Tls. 1 per dozen pairs
Towels, Cotton:
a.Honeycomb orHucka-
back, Plan or Printed dimensions exclusive! of fringe :
1. Not exceeding 18 ins. wide and not exceeding 40 ins. long
2 Exceeding 19 ins. wide and not ex- cecding 50ins. long.
b. All other Towels.....
Paints, Unclassed
Elephants's Teeth (other than Tusks) and Jaws, Whole or Parts
Elephants Tusks, Whole
J
Picul
3000
or Farts
Catty
0 170
Emery Cloth and Sand-
002@
paper (sheets not ex-
ceeding 144 square
ins.}
Ream
0 0 3 0
Enery Powder
Value
0 250 5 p. cent.
Value
5 p. cent.
Cottons, Unclassed
Cotton, Raw
Picul
0 600
Cotton, Thread:
Ball Thread, Dyed or
Undyed
On Spools, 50 yds,
Gross
On
JJ
100 yds.
On
200 yds.
3 0 0 0 0 4 0 8 0 0 16 0
Cotton Yarn, Grey or
Bleached
Cotton Yarn, Dyed...
Picul Value
0 9 5 0 5p. cent.
Cotton Yarn, Gassed
Cotton Yarn, Mercerised
Cotton Yarn, Wooloa or
Berlinette
Cow Bezoar, Indian
Crabs, Fresh
Crocodile (including Ar-
madillo) Scales
Currants
Value
Pienl
Pienl 3 500 5 p. cent. 6 0 0
Cutch
Cuttle-fish
NOOO
5 0
0 3 0 0
0 6 6 7
Enamelled Ironware:
Mugs, Cups. Basins, and Bowls, 9 ins. or under in diameter, Decorated or Un- decorated Basins and Bowls, over 9 ins, in diameter, Agate, Blue and White, Grey, Mottled -Undecorated Basins and Bowls, over 9 ins, in diameter, De- corated (with Gold)... Basins and Powls,over 9 ins. diameter, Decor- ated (without Gold) Enamelware, Unclassed... Fans, Falm-leaf, Coarse... Fans, Palm-leaf, Fine Fans, Palu-leaf, Fancy... Fans, Paper or Cotton of
all kinds
31
0 1 2 5 Value 5 p. cent. Thousand O 280
**
0 4 5 0
1 0 0 0
J
1 4 0 0
Dozen
0 0 3 0
0 0 90
017 6
**
CUSTOMS TARIFF
97
NAME OF ARTICLE,
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY.
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Fans, Silk...
Per Value
T、 m. c. c. 15 p. cent.
Per
T. m. c. c.
Glass, Window, Common, (Box of
|
Feathers, Kingfisher, Part
not Stained, Coloured,
Skins (ie., Wings, Tails) or Backs)
Hundred 025 0
Glue
Feathers, Kingfisher,
or otherwise Obscured.
Gold Thread, Imitation.
تم
100 sq.
0 1 7 0
feet. Picul
0 8 3 0
Whole Skins
Feathers, Peacock
Value
0600 5 p. cent.
See Thread,
Ground nuts
0 1 5 0
JJ
Gum Arabic
Files. See Tools.
1 0 0 0
++
Gum Benjamin
0 6 0 0
Fireclay
Picul
Gum Benjamin, Oil of
Value
5 p. cent.
Firewood
0 0 1
Gum Dragon's Blood..
Picul
4 0 0 0
Fish, Cuttle
0 6 6 7
25
Gun Myrrh.....
0 4 6 5
J
Fish, Dried or Smoked,
in
bulk (including Stock-fish but not in-
Gum Olibanum
0 4 5 0
};
Gum Resin
Gutta-percha. See India-
0 1 8 7
cluding Cuttle-fish)
Fish, Fresh
Fiel Maws
Fish, Salt...
Fish, Stock
Flints
Flour. See Cereals.
է
Flour, A rowroot, Potato,,
Sago, Tapioca, Yam
RARA
0 3 1 5
rubber
0 1 3 7
Hair, Horse
2 5 0
Hair, Horse, Tails
60 3 1 5
Hams
0 0 4 0
Handkerchiefs. See Cot-
ton Piece Goods,
Hartall or Orpiment
1
1 4 0 0
2 5 0 0
Value
P. cent.
Fungus, or Agaric
Fungus, White
Catty
Galangal
Picul
Gambier
JJ
0 3 0 0 |
Value Picul
5 p. cent.
1 7 1 5 0 250 0 1 7 0
Hemp
Hessians or Burlaps, all
weights....
Hide Poison or Specific... Hides, Buffalo and Cow.... Hollow-ware, Cast: Coat-
ed or Tinned
Picul Value
0 45 0 5 p. cent.
1,000 Yds., 2 8 5 0
Value Picul
'5 p. cent.
0 8 0 0
0 5 0 0
22
Gambier False, or Cunao
Hoofs, Animal.
0 1 2 5
0 1 5 0
Hops
Value
5 p. cent.
Camboge
H
2700
Horns, Buffalo and Cow...
Picul
0 3 5 0
Horna, Deer.
Value
5 p. cent.
drum
01 50
Horns, Rhinoceros
Catty
2 4 0 0
(Yamroot Dye-stuff)...
Gasolene or StoveNaph-10 gallon
tha
Ginseng, Crude, 1st Qua-
lity (value exceeding
Tis. 2 per catty).
Ginseng, Crude, 2nd Qua-]
lity (value not excced- ing Tls. 2 per catty
Clarified 01
Ginseng,
Cleaned, 1st Quality (value exceeding Tls. 11
per catty)
Ginseng,
Clarified or
Cleaned, 2nd Quality (value exceeding Tls. 6 but not exceeding Tls. 11 per catty)
Ginseng,
Clarified or
Hosiery. Sec Cotton Piece,
Goods (Socks).
0 220 India-rubber and Gutta- percha Articles (other) than Boots and Shoes) India-rubber and Gutta-
percha, Crude....
Catty
0 0 7 2
ود
1 1 0 0
0 3 7 5
India-rubber Boots
India-rubber Shoes
India-rubber, Old (fit only
for remanufacture)
Indigo, Dried, Artificial'
or Natural
Indigo, Liquid, Artificial.. Indigo, Liquid, Natural... Indigo, Paste, Artificial... Ink, Printing
Valtie 5 p. cent.
Pienl Pair
3 1 4 0
0 0 8 0 0020
+
Picul
0 2 5 0
Value
5 p. cent.
Picul
2 0 2 5
0 2 1 5
2 0 2 5
Isinglass (Fish Glue).
Value Picul
5 p. cent.
+ 0 0 0
Isinglass, Vegetable
1 7 5 0
0 2 2 0
Jams and Jellies, 1 lb.)
or
Dozen
0 0 6 0
1 1 8 0
+5
Picul
0 6 4 0
2 cans in)
0 0 0 5
1 case *
Cleaned, 3rd Quality (valuc exceeding Tla, 2 but not exceeding Tls. 6 per catty)..
Ginseng,
Clarified
Cleaned, ith Quality (value not exceeding Fls, 2 per catty)
Glass, Plate, Silvered... Glass, Plate, Unsilvered... Glass Powder (see Match- Making Materials)....... Glass, Window, Colour- ed, Stained, Ground, or obscured
0 0 8 0
37
Square
foot 0 0 2 5 5 p. cent.
Value
Picul Box of
100 sq.
feet.
01 10
0 3 5 0
tins, bottles, or jars
Jams and Jellies, 2 lb.
tins, bottles, or jars
Joss Sticks
Kerosene Oil Cans and
Cases, Empty
Lace, Open-work or Inser- tion-work of Cotton, Machine made:-
(a.) Not exceeding 1 in. wide, outside measurement
0000
L
98
NAME OF ARTICLE.
(b.) Exceeding 1 in. but not exceeding 2 ins. wide, outside measurement
(c.) Exceeding 2 ins, but not exceeding 3 ins. wide, outside
surement
(2.) Exceeding 3 ins.
wide, outside surement
Lace Open-work or Inser- tion-work of any fibrous material except Silk or Cotton or imitation Gold or Silver Thread:- (a.) Machine made...... (b.) Hand made (includ-
ing Cotton)
Lacquerware
Lamps and their Acces-
sories....
Lampwick
Lard, Pure or Compound.
CUSTOMS TARIFF
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Per
12 dozen yards
\T'. m. c. c.
0 1 0 0
Marsala. See Wines, etc.
Vin de Liqueur. Matches, Rainbow or
Brilliant.
TARIFY UNIT AND DUTY,
Per
\T. m. c. c.
Matches, Wax Vestas:
mea-
0 16 6
mea-
0 216
"3
Catty
0500
Value
2400 5 p. cent.
>
2600
0 600
not exceeding 100 in a box
Matches, Wood, Safety
or other; Large: boxes not exceeding 24 ins. by 1 ins. by in. Matches, Wood, Safety
orother; Small: boxes not exceeding 2 ins. by 1 ins. by ins. Matches, Wood, Safety or other, boxes exceeding above sizes
Match-making
Materials:- Glass Powder Phosphorus
50 gross boxes
1 5 0
10 gross
boxes
1600
50 gross boxes
06 30
100 gross boxes
0920
Value
5 p. cent.
Picul
0 1 1 0
3 0 0 0
"
Leather, Kid
7000
Leather, Sole
2500
Leather, Patent
7000
Leather, all other kinds
Value
5 p. cent.
without Husks)
Linen
Lichees, Dried....
Lily Flowers, Dried
Lily Seed (i.c., Lotus-nuts
Lime, Chloride of
Liqueurs. See Wines, etc.
Picul
0 4 5 0
0 3 2 5
"
"
Picul
وو
Splints
Wax, Paraffin
4 12 5 0088
0 5 0 0
Lead, Red, White, Yellow,{
Dry or mixed with Oil. Leather Belting
Wood Shavings
1 1 1 0
045 0
Mats, Coir Door..
Dozen
1 0 0 0
Value
***
5 p. cent.
Mats, Formosa, Grass Bed
Each
0 0 5 0
Leather, C'alf
Picul
7000
Matches, Rush
Hundred
0500
Leather, Coloured
Leather, Cow
Leather, Harness (not in-
cluding Enamelled or Pigskin)
700 0
Matches, Straw
0 225
2 500
Matches, Tatami
Each
0045
Matting, Coir not ex-
ceeding 36 ins. wide Matting, Straw: not ex-i ceeding 36 ins. wide ì Meats, in bulk:
Beef, Corned, Pickled,
in barrels...
Dry Salted Meat, in
boxes and barrels
Roll of
2750
100 yards
Roll of
0 250
|
40 yards )
Picul
0 3 7 5
"
1 0 0 0
Dry Sausages
0475 O S 08
**
Value
0 3 0 0 5 p. cent.
Ham and
Breakfast
Bacon; in boxes or barrels.
Value
5 p. cent.
Liquorice
Logwood Extract
33
Lotus-nuts
(ie., Lily
Seed with Husks)
"
Lucraban Seed
>>
Picul
0 5 0 0 0600
Lard, Pure or Com-
pound
Picul
Melon Seeds
0600 0 250
Metals:
0400 0 350
Anti-friction
Lung-ngans, Dried
"
Value
or Foot......
(Vins de Liqueur.)
Malt
Picul
0 3 0 0 7 3
想
Lung-ngan Pulp
Macaroni and Vermicelli,
and similar Paste
Mace....
Machines, Sewing, Hand
Madeira. See Wines, etc.
Malaga. See Wines, etc.,
(Vins de Liqueur.)
Mangrove Bark
Manure, Chemical.
Margarine, in tins, jars,
or kegs.
Value 5 p. cent.
Picul 1 4 0 0
Copper:-
Bars and Rods
Bolts, Nuts, Rivets,
and Washers
055 0
Antimony
Value Picul
5 p. cent. 0700
0 45 0
Brass & Yellow Metal:-
Bars and Rods
1 1 5 0
"
0 3 2 5
Bolts and Nuts and
5 p. cent.
Accessories
1 1 5 0
"
Foil
1 6 7 5
Nails.
1 1 5 0
53
2
Screws
Value
p. cent.
Sheets, Plates, and
Ingots
Tubes
Pienl
1 1 6 0
1 1 5 0
59
Wire....
1 1 5 0
53
1300
Value 5 p. cent.
Dross, Iron and Tin Dross, Tin
German Silver, Sheets German Silver, Wire...
Iron & Mild Steel, New:-
Anchors,
and Parts
thereof, Mill Iron, Mill and Ships' Cranks, and For- gings for Vessels, Steam-engines, and Locomotives weigh- ing each 25 lbs. or
over
Angles
Anvils, and Parts of
Bar
Bolts and Nuts
Castings, Rough
0 2 6 5 0140
CUSTOMS TARIFF
99
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY.
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY
Per
\T. m. c. c.
Per
T. m. c. c.
Ingots Nails.......
Picul
1 1 7 5
1 3 0 0
Steel, Plates and Sheets Steel, Tool and Cast
Picul
02 50
0750
39
Sheets and Plates
1 3 0 0
#3
Slabs.........
1 1 7 5
Tacks
Value
5 p. cent.
Tubes
Wire.
Picul
1 3 0 0
Tin Foil
Dross, Iron
0 16 0
0 3 0 0
Tin Slabs.......
13
0500
33
2200
J
1 5 0 0
Steel, Wire and Wire
Rope. Steel, Mild.
Tin Compound
Tin Sheets and Pipes
Tin Tacks, Blue, of all!
sizes
Tinned Plates, Decorated Tinned Plates, Plain. White Metal, Sheets...... White Metal, Wire Yellow Metal. See Brass. Zinc Bolier Plates....... Zinc Powder
Zinc Sheets, including
Perforated
Milk,Condensed, in tins
0 7 5 0
See Iron.
Value
15 p. cent.
Picul
1 7 2 5
1 5 0 0
وو
وو
0400
25
27
13
0 3 5 0 0290 2200
*
1 5 0 0
""
"
0600 0400
0 5 20
Sase of
4 dozen
0 2 5 0
1 lb. tins.
33
0400
12 b'tles.
0 1 4 0
32
Mineral Waters ......................
for 24 -
0 0 5 0
Value Picul
15
p.
cent.
bottles
0 1 4 0
Mirrors.
Value
15
p.
cent.
Chains, and Parts of...
0 2 6
J
Morphia, in all forms
Ounce
3 0 0 0
Cobbles and
Wirel
Moulding..
1,000 feet
1 0 5 0
Shorts
1 3 0
Mushrooms
Picul
0 0
33
Hoops
140
Musical Boxes
Value
15 p. cent.
59
Kentledge
0 0 7 5
Musk
Catty
9000
32
Nail-rod
0140
Mussels, Dried
Picul
4000
22
Nails, Wire
0 200
Needles, No. 7/0
100 mille
1 8 0 0
"
Nails, other kinds
Value
5 p. cent.
No. 3/0
1 5 0 0
Pig
Picul
0 0 7 5
Assorted, not in-
Pipes and Tubes
Value
5 p. cent.
cluding 7/0
0 9 8 5
Plate Cuttings
Picul
0 1 0 0
Nutgalls
J
Picul
08 70
Plates and Sheets
0 1 4 0
"
Nutmegs
1 5 0 0
32
Rails...
0 1 2 5
Oakum
0500
وو
JJ
Rivets
0 2 50
Oil, Castor, Lubricating..
0 5 1 0
31
وو
Screws
Sheets and Plates
Tacks, Blue, of all sizes
Wire Shorts
Iron, Old, and Scrap, of
any description fit
only for
re-manu
Value Ticul
0 1 4 0
0400
Wire...
0 25 0
43
Iron, Galvanized:-
Bolts and Nuts
Value
5 p. cent.
Oil, Engine:
Cobbles and Wirel
Shorts
Picul
Sheets, Corrugated
Sheets, Plain
'Tubes
Wire.....
2
Value Picul
0 2 5 0
Oil, Ginger
0 1 3 0
5 p. cent.
Oil,
Medicinal
23
33
0 1 3 0 0 275 0 2 7 5
5 p. cent.
-
Or
(a.) Wholly
partly of mi- neral origin... (b.) All other kinds (except Castor.)
Oil, Kerosene
Oil,
0 0 90
33
0 2 8 5
0 3 3 0
33
0 3 7 5
600
ود
in bulk
Cans and
Oil,
22
Cases, Empty
Oil, Olive..
Catty Picul Amern. gallon
Ameri-
can
gallon
59
Picul Case of 10 Amern. gallons
}
10 Amern.
gallons 2 Cans in
1 Case j Imperial gallon
0400
0 0 5 0
0 0 1 5
0025 6 7 5 0
0070
0050
facture
Lead, in Pigs
0 0 0 5
Lead, in Sheets
Lead, Pipes.....
006 2
Nickel, Unmanufactured.
وو
Quicksilver
Oil, Sandalwood
Catty
J
Spelter.
Oil, Wood.....................
Picul
0 24 050
--
"
Steel, Bamboo
2 5 0 0
"
Olives Fresh, Pickled, or
Steel Bars
0 250
Salted
0 1 8 3
"2
Oil, Clove..
Oil, Cocoa-nut.
Oil, Colza
1 0 0 0 0 1
0
100
CUSTOMS TARIFF
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIF USIT AND DUTT.
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Per
T. m, c. c.
Opium
Opium, Husk
"Pieul {
Duly Likin
80 000
80 0 0 0
Rose Maloes Safflower
Orange Peel
Oysters, Dried
Packing, Asbestos. See
Asbestos.
Packing,
Engine
and
Boiler, all other kinds.
Catty Picul
0 6 2
Saké, in barrels
8000
Value
P. cent.
Saké, in bottles
Paper, Printing, Calen-
Paints. See Dyes, Colours,
and Paints....
Paper, Cigarette; not ex- (100,000 |
ceeding 2 ins. by 4 ins. Į leaves
dered and/or Sized
Seahorse Teeth
Seaweed, Cut
0 1 2 5
Seaweed, Long..
Seaweed, Prepared
Picul
0 7 0 0
Paper, printing, Uncal-
endered or Unsized......'
3 0
Seed,
Paper, Writing or Fool-
Seed, (Lily ie., Lotus-nuts
without Husks)
Lily Seeds with Husks)
Lotus-nuts
scap
1 2 0 0
Seed, Lucraban
Paper, all other kinds.
Value
15
p. cent.
Seed, Melon
Peel, Orange.
Picul
0800
Seed, Pine or Fir-nuts
Pepper, Black
0 7 6 0
Seed. Sesamuun
Pepper, White
Perfumery
Value
5 p. cent.
Phosphorus
Picul
4 1 2 5
Pitch
0 1 2 5
Plushes and Velvets:-
Shellac
a. Plushes and Velvets
of pure Silk
Catty
000 Shells, other kinds
b. Silk Seal (with Cotton
back)
0 2 0 0
1 3 3 0
Sharks' Fins, Black......
Sharks' Fins, Clarified or
Prepared
Sharks' Fins, white.....
Shells, Mother-of-pearl
Sherry. See Wines, etc.
(Vins de Liqueur.}
rubber, for Chinese :-
Shoes and Boots, India-
Saltpetre and Nitrate of
Etia Sand, Red
Sandalwood
Saponwood
{
12 bots, or Mil-bots.
Piçul
Per Picul
35
Value Picul
\T. m, c
100 0
0 5 2 5
0400
1 1 0
0 3 2 5 0 0 4 0400
0 1 1 2
5 p. cent. 0 1 50
0 1 0 0
1 0 0
1 0 0 0
(ie,
++
040
J
יו
0 0
1 6
8
!!
6000 4600
2 5 0 0
0700
Value
5 p. cent.
c. Plushes and Velvets of silk mixed with other fibrous mate- rials (with Cotton, back)
d. Plushes, all Cotton
(including ised)
Mercer-
e. Velvets, Cotton, See Cotton Piece Goods
Pork Rind.
Prawns, Dried (see also
Shrimps)
Freserved Fruits, in glass bottles, jars, cardboard' or wooden boxes, inclu- ding weight of imme-1 diate package
Purses, Leather (not in- cluding Silver or Gold. wonnted)
Boots
Shoes
5 0
Picul
Putchuck
Raisins and Currants
Rattan Chairs
Rattan Core
Rattan Ckin
Rattaus, Split
Shrimps, Dried (see also'
Prawns).
0 1 1 0 Silk Piece Goods, all Silk
0500
(including Crape :-)
a. Plain
b. Brocaded or other-
wise Figured
1 0 0 0 Silk Piece Goods Mix- tures (ie, Silk and Cotton, or Silk and other materials) inclu- ding Crape but not in- cluding Mixtures with Real or Imitation Gold or Silver Thread :- ❝. Plain
0 6 5 0
Gross
0 5 0 0
Picul
0 7 1 5
0 5 0 0 ¦
Value
15 p. cent.
Picul
0 2 2 5
b. Brocaded
or other-
wise Figured
Silver Thread, Imitation.
See Thread.
0 7 5 0 || Sinews, Buffalo and Cow... 0 3 2 5 Sinews, Deer....
Pair
0 0 8 0
0 0 20
Picul
0 6 3 2
Catty
0 3 2 5
0 7 0 0
02 50
0 5 0 0
Picul
0 550
1 0 5 0
+3
Rattans, Whole
5|| Singlets
Or Drawers,
Resin
0
8 7
Cotton
Dozen
0 1 2 ǎ
Ribbons, Silk, Silk and
Singlets or Drawers,
Cotton, Silk and other
fibres, with or without
Imitation Gold
or
Silver Thread
Rope
Catty
0 550
Value 5 p, cent. Snuff
Mixture
Skins, Fish
Skins, Sharks
Smalt
Valne
5 p. cent
Picul
Value
Picul
Value
0000 .5 p. cent
1 6 0 5 O.p cent
NAME OF ARTICLE.
Soap, Household
CUSTOMS TARIFF
101
Tary UNIT AND DUTY.
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY.
Per
T.m. c. c.
Per
|T, m. c. c.
and
Masts and Spars, Soft-
wood..
Value
5 p. cent.
Laundry including Blue Mottled), in bulk, bars and doublets weighing not less thu
lb. ench
Soap, Toilet and Fancy...
Socks, Cotton (including
Lisle Thread):
1st Quality (ie., valued
Files and Piling, includ
Picul
Value
0 2 4 0 p. cent.
at Tls. 1 or over per (Dozen dozen pairs).
2nd Quality (i.e., valned)
at less than Tls. 1
per dozen pairs)
Soda Bicarbonate
Soda Ash
Soda Caustic
Soda Crystals
Soda Crystals, Coneen-
trated
Foy
pairs j
0 0 7 5
**
0 0 3 2
Picul
0 1 5 0
0 1 5 0
0 2 2.5 0 1
0140
**
0 2 5 0
ing Oregon Pine and
Californian Bed-wood: 1,000 sup.
of a thickness of 1 in. Planks, Hard wood Planks, and Flooring, Soft-wood, including Oregon Fine and Cali- fornian Red-wood, and allowing 10 per cent. of cach shipment to be
115 0
feet Cubic foot! 0 0 2
f.et
Tongued and Grooved: 1,000 sup, of a thickness of 1 in. Planks, and Flooring, Soft-wood, Tongued and Grooved, in excess of above 10 per cent. Planks, Teak-wood...... Railway Sleepers Teak-wood Lumber,of all|
lengths and descrip-
1 1 5 0
Valoc Cubic foot
Valuo
5 p. cent
08 I
5 p. cent
Cubic foot
0 0 8 1
Picul
0 3 5 0
Value
5 p. cent.
Picul
"
0 8 0 0
0950
J
*J
0 7 0 0
Picul
0 19 0
0 3 0 0
tions,.
Tinder
Tin-foil...
Spirits. See Wines, etc.. Spirits of Wine. See
Wines, etc.
Sticklac
Stout. See Wines, etc. Sugar, Brown, up to No.! 10 Dutch Standard..... Sugar Candy..
Sugar, White, No. 11
Dutch Standard and over, including Cube and Cefined........
Sulphur and Brimstone,
Crudo
Sulphur and Britstone,
Refined..
Sulphuric Acid
Sunshades. See Umbrellas
and Mirrors.............
Fr
0 2 4 0
Files,
>>
0 1 5 0
AD
J
0 2 3 0 0 1 8 7
Telescopes, Binoculars,
Value
p. cent.
Thread, Cotton :-
Balls, Dyed or Undyed
Picul
3 0 0 0
Spools, 50 yards......
Gross
0 0 4 0
Thread, Gold and Silver,
Imitation, on Silk
Value
5 p. cent.
Lure or
Tobacco Leaf
Tobacco, Frepared, in bulk Tobacco, Prepared, in tins or packages under 5 lbs, ench
Tools
Axes and Hatches....
File Blanks,
asps and Floats, of
all kinds
---
Not exceeding 1 ins long Exceeding 4 ins. and not exceeding 9 ins. long... Exceeding 9 ins. and not exceeding 14 ins. long Exceeding 14 ins. long... Tortoiseshell Trimmings, Bead
Trimmings, of Cotton,
mixed with|
Value
5 p. cent.
Dozen
0 5 0 0
0 0 4
0 0 7 2
0 1 6 8
0 2 2 4
"
Catty Value
045 0
P. cent.
Thread, Gold and Silver,
other materials
but
Real
not Silk
Catty
0 1 2 6
on Cotton......
0000
Beams, Hard-wood
Thread, Gold Imitation,
on Cotton.....
Thread, Silver, Imitation,
Tiles, G ins, square.........
Timber-
Beams, Soft-wood, in-
cluding Oregon Pine and Californian Red-
Hundred O GOO
Cubic foot 0 0 2 0
wood, of a thick- 1.000 sup.
ness of 1 in........
Beams, Teak-wood..
Laths
Masts and Spare, Hard-
wood..
fect
1 1 5 0
Cubic foot 0 0 8 1 Thousand 0 2 1 0
Value
15 p. cent.
Twine
Umbrella Frames
Umbrellas, Parasols, and
Sunshades- With Handles wholly or partly of Precious Metals, Ivory, Mo- ther-of-pearl, Torto- iseshell, Agate, etc., or Jewelled....
Picul Gallon
0 1 8 5
0 0 3 6
Value
5p. cent.
Picul 0 5 0 0
Dozen
0 0 8 0
Value
Trimmings, of Cotton, mixed with Silk and
Imitation
Gold 01
Silver Thread....
Turmeric
Turpentine
Ultramarine
5 p. cent,
102
NAME OF ARTICLE.
With all other Hand- les, all Cotton....... With all other Hand- les, Mixtures, not Silk
With all other Hand- les, Silk and Silk Mixtures Varnish, Crude Lac- quer, Gun Lacquer, or Oil Lacquer Vaseline
Vegetables, Dried and
Salted or Pickled, in
bulk
Vermicelli
Vermilion
CUSTOMS TARIFF
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTT.
NAME OF ATTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTT,
Per
T. m. c. c.
Per T. m. c. c.
Case of 121
Each
0 0 2 0
Brandy and Cognac,
0 0 3 0
*
0 0 8 0
Value
15 p. cent.
**
난
F
Picul
0 3 2 5
H
4 05 0
in bottles
Whisky, in bottles.... Other Spirits (Gin, Rum, etc.), in bot- tles
Other Spirits (Gin: { Imperial}
Rum, in bulk
Spirits of Wine, in) packages of any description
+
Ales, Beers, Cider, Perry, in bottles...
Ales, Beers, Cder, {Imperial 0 0 2 0
reputed quarts
0 500
**
0 3 5 0
事
0 200
gallon
0 0 9
0 0 2
Case of 121
reputed
quarts or
0 0 8 5
21reputed
pints
Wax, White
Wines, etc.:-
Champagnes and all (
Vermouth. See Wines,
etc.
Watches, of all kinds Value Waters, Aerated and (12bots, or
Mineral
Wax, Bees, Yellow... Picul
Wax,
Japan...
Wax, Paraffin
Wax, Sealing
+
Value
p. cent.
Perry, in casks
| gallon
... { |24 -bots. j
0 0 5 0
Case of 12
in bottles.
0 6 0 0 0650 0500 5 p. cent.
ל
ase of 12
bots, or
0 6 5 0
Porters and Stouts, Imperial? 0025
in casks
Liqueurs
Wood, Camagon. Wood Ebony
Porters and Stouts,
reputed
quarts or
0 1 0 0
24reputed
pints
gallon
Value
5 p. cent.
Picul
0 0 9 0
0 2 0 0
Wood, Fragrant.
Value 15 P. cent.
Wood, Garoo
Catty
❤ 1 0 0
Wood, Kranjee
Value
5 p. cent.
Wood, Laka......
Picul
0 1 2 5
Wood, Lignum-vitæ
Value
5 p. cent.
Wood, Purn
Picul
0 0 7 5
Wood, Red
0 200
F
Wood, Rose
0 2 0 0
J
Wood, Sandal
0 3 0 0
Wood, Sapan
0400
0 1 1 2
Wood, Scented
Value
5 p. cent.
Wood, Shavings, Hinoki,
Ficul
1 0 0 0
0 0
other Sparkling
Wines, in bottles (24 -bots.,
Still Wines, Red or
White, exclusively
the produce of the natural fermenta- tion of grapes:
a. Having less than 14 degrees of alcohol:
1. In bottles
2. In bulk
b. Having 14 degrees or more of alcohol;| alzo Vins de Liqueur other than Port......
1. In bottles
2. In bulk
Port Wine, in bottle
Port Wine, in bulk
|
Case of 12]
bota. or 241-bots
Imperial }
gallon
Case of 12 bots, or 24 j-bots.. Imperial
gallon j Case of 12 bots. or 24-bots.) Imperial gallon Case 12 litres Picul Case of 12) bots, or 24-bots. Imperial įgallon
Vermouth and Byrrh{
Sake, in barrels.
Sake, in bottles
Brandies and Whis-
kies, in bulk
0 5 0 0
0 1 5 0
0 7 0 0
0 17 5
0 250
0400
01 10
0 1 2 5
Woollen and Cotton Mix-
tures :-
Flannel (Woollen and Cotton): not exceed- ing 33 inches wide... Italian Cloth, Plain or Figured, having warp entirely Cotton and all one colour, and weft entirely Wool and all one Colour: not exceeding 32 ins. wide and not exceed- ing 32 yards long Poncho Cloth: not ex- ceeding 76 ins, wide. Spanish Stripes (Wool- len and Cotton.) not exceeding 64ine.wide. Union Cloth: not ex- ceeding 76 ins. wide.
Yard
0 0 15
Piece
Yard
0 3 7 2
0 0 3 0
0 0 14
真
0 0 3 0
CUSTOMS TARIFF
103
NAME OF ARTICLE.
Woollen and Cotton Mixtures, Unclassed,
including
Alpacas,
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DETI,
Per
¡T. m. c. c.
Per
IT. m. c. c.
Lustres, Orleans, Si- cilians, etc.
Long Elle: not exceed- ing 31 ins. wide and not exceeding 25 yds. Jong
Piece
¡ 0 2 5 0
Value 5p. cent.
Medium Cloth: not ex-
ceeding 76 ins. wide.
Yard
0047
Woollen Manufactures:
Russian Cloth: not ex-
Blankets and Rugs
Broadcloth: not exceed-
ing 76 ins, wide
Pound
0 0 2 0 ||
+
•
Yaad
00471
Bunting: not exceeding 24 ins. wide and not exceeding40yds.long.
Piece
2000
ceeding 76 ins. wide. Spanish Stripes: not ins.. exceeding 64
wide
Woollens, Unclassed... Woollen and Worsted
Yarns and Cords (not including Berlin Wool).
Berlin Wool
Wooloa or Berlinette......
0047
0 0 2 1
Value 5p. cent.
Picul
5300 400 0
Camlets, Dutch; not ex- ceeding 33 ins. wide and not exceeding 61 yards long Camlets, English not exceeding 31 ins, wide and not exceeding 61 Jards long
Flannel; not exceeding
33 ins. wide.......
Habit Cloth: not ex- ceeding 76 ías. wide. Lastings, Plain, Figur- ed or Creped: not exceeding 31 ins. widej and not exceeding! 32 yards long Llama Braid
J
1 0 0 0
JJ
3 5 0
Worm Tablets, in bottles,
not exceeding 60 pieces Yarn, Asbestos.........
Dozen
0 0 5 5
Picul
2 2 5 0
נן
0 5 0 0
Yarn, Coir.......
Value
P. cent.
Yarn, Cotton, Bleached;
Yard
0 0 1 5
or Grey..
Picul
0 9 5 0
Yarn, Cotton, Dyed
Value
5 p. cent.
Yarn, Cotton, Grey.
Picul
5 9 5 0
Yarn, Cotton, Mercerised
0047
or Gassed.......
Value
5 p. cent.
Yarn, Cotton, Wooloa or
Berlinette
Picul
3 5 0 0
Yarn, Wool, Berlin...
4000
Yarn, Woollen and Worst-
Piece
ed
(not including
Picul
5000
Berlin Wool)
5 3 0 0
RULES
RULE I. Imports unenumerated in this Tariff will pay Duty at the rate of 5 per cent. ad valorem; and the value upon which Duty is to be calculated shall be the market value of the goods in local currency. This market value when converted into Haikwan Taels shall be considered to be 12 per cent. higher than the amount upon which Duty is to be calculated.
If the goods have been sold before presentation to the Customs of the Application to pay Duty, the gross amount of the bona fide contract will be accepted as evidence of the market value. Should the goods have been sold on e. f. and i. terms, that is to say, without inclusion in the price of Duty and other charges, such c. f. and i. price shall be taken as the value for Duty-paying purposes without the deduction mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
101
CUSTOMS TARIFF
If the goods have not been sold before presentation to the Customs of the application to pay Duty, and should a dispute arise between Customs and importer regarding the value or classification of goods, the case will be referred to a Board of Arbitration composed as follows:-
An official of the Customs;
A merchant selected by the Consul of the importer; and
A merchant, differing in nationality from the importer, selected by the Senior
Consul.
Questions regarding procedure, etc., which may arise during the sittings of the Board shall be decided by the majority. The final finding of the majority of the Board, which must be announced within fifteen days of the reference (not including holidays), will be binding upon both parties. Each of the two merchants on the Board will be entitled to a fee of ten Haikwan Taels. Should the Board sustain the Customs valuation, or, in the event of not sustaining that valuation, should it decided that the goods have been undervalued by the importer to the extent of not less than 7 per cent., the importer will pay the fees; if otherwise, the fees will be paid by the Customs. Should the Board decide that the correct value of the goods is 20 per cent. (or more) higher than that upon which the importer originally claimed to pay Duty, the Customs authorities may retain possession of the goods until full Duty has been paid and may levy an additional Duty equal to four times the Duty sought to be evaded.
In all cases invoices, when available, must be produced if required by the Customs. RULE II. The following will not be liable to Import Duty Foreign Rice, Cereals, and Flour; Gold and Silver, both Bullion and Coin; Printed Books, Charts, Maps, Periodicals and Newspapers.
A freight or part freight of Duty-free commodities (Gold and Silver Bullion and Foreign Coins excepted) will render the vessel carrying them, though no other cargo be on board, liable to Tonnage Dues.
Drawbacks will be issued for Ship's Stores and Bunker Coal when taken on
board.
RULE III. Except at the requisition of the Chinese Government, or for sale to Chinese duly authorised to purchase them, Import trade is prohibited in all Arms, Ammunition, and Munitions of War of every description. No Permit to land them will be issued until the Customs have proof that the necessary authority has been given to the Importer. Infraction of this rule will be punishable by confiscation of all the goods concerned. The import of Salt is absolutely prohibited.
CUSTOMS NOTIFICATION
Notification issued by the Imperial Maritime Customs at Canton on the 14th November, 1901.
Notice is hereby given that:-
1. On and after the 11th inst., the Tariff of Import Duties hitherto existing and the list of Duty-free Goods cease to be operative and, until further notice, whatever is imported with certain exceptions, is to pay an effective 5 per cent. ad valorem Duty.
2. The exceptions are as follows:-
(a.) Foreign Rice, Cereals and Flour, as well as Gold and Silver, coined and
uncoined, are exempt from Duty.
(b.) The Import Duty on Opium remains unchanged at thirty taels, that and lekin at the rate of eighty taels, or one hundred and ten taels in all, per picul, being payable simultaneously as at present.
CUSTOMS TARIFE
105
(c.) Foreign Goods on the way to China or which shall have been despatched to China within six days after the signature of the Protocol-that is, on or before the 13th September-are to pay Import Duty according to the old Tariff, a fixed Duty if enumerated, and an ad valorem 5 per cent. Duty if unenumerated, and are to be exempt from Duty if on the Duty-free list. Goods despatched after the 13th September are to pay an effective 5 per cent, according to the new rule. (d.) Merchandise taken out of bond is to pay Duty according to its liability on the day of bonding-that is, if already in bond, or if bonded on any future day, but forming part of a cargo now on the way to Chiua, or despatched to China on or before the 13th September, it is to be treated. according to the old Tariff and Tariff Rules. All other bonded imports are to pay an effective 5 per cent.
(e.) Whatever is imported for the use of Legations at Peking is exempt from Import Duty-applications for Exemption Permits, etc., to be countersigned and sealed by the Consulate of the Legation concerned. (f) Whatever is shipped or discharged for the use of Foreign forces, military or naval, is exempt from Import Duty-applications for Exemption Permits, etc., to be countersigned and sealed by the Consulate of the flag concerned.
3. The values on which the new Tariff is to fix Duties will be the average values for the three years 1897, 1898, 1899. Where the valuation
is questioned, the market value of the day minus Duty and charges, or where that cannot be ascertained, invoice value plus 10 per cent. will rule instead; but as this will involve detention of goods concerned at owner's risk and expense till such market, or failing market, invoice value can be ascertained and settled, it is hoped the valuation
will be acquiesced in.
4. Goods exported pay Duty according to the Tariff hitherto existing.
5. Coast Trade Duty, which is not an Import Duty, but a Coast Duty on Native produce inwards, remains as before, and is not affected by the effective 5 per cent. rules.
106
CUSTOMS TARIFF
TARIFF ON EXPORTS
(As annexed to the Tientsin Treaty of 1858)
J1
Apricot Seeds, or Almonds
Arsenic
Artificial Flowers
Bamboo Ware..
Bangles, or Glass Armlets
Beans and Peas
++
H
0 500
10
0060
J
Bean Cake
0 0 3 5
T
Bone and Horn Ware
1500
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DOTT.
Alum.....
Per Picul
17. m, c. c.
Green or Copperas
0 0 4 0100
]]
Aniseed, Star
Broken
0 250
+
JT
Oil...
*
5000
0 450
0 5 0 0
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Per Picul
|T, n. c. c.
0 1 0 5
0 0 3 0
*J
Galangal Garlic
Ginseng, Native...
**
Corean or Ja- Į pan, 1st quality } 2nd quality...
PI
A
J
0 4 6 0
Glass Beads..
1500 0750
Glass or Vitrified Wire...
Glasscloth, Fine..
jad valorem 5 p. cent.
Catty
*
0500
0 350
Picul
0 500 0500
17
2 500
Coarse
Ground-nuts
Cake
"
0 750
0 1 0 0
3
CA
Brass Buttons
3000
JJ
Gypsum, Ground, or
Plaster of Paris
0
3 0
Foil
1 5 0 0
Hair, Camels
1000
31
JJ
Ware
1000
31
Hair, Goats
0 1 8 0
Wire
1150
Hums
0 550
Camphor
0750
Hartall, or Orpiment.......
0 350
J
Canes
Thousand 0300
Hemp
0 350
Cantharides
Picul
3000
Honey
0900-
*
Capoor Cutchery
0300
Horns, Deers', Young
Carpets and Druggets
Hundred
3500
Old..
Pair Picul
0900
1 3 50
+
Cassia Lignea
Picul
0800
India Ink..
4000
J9
Buds
0 8 0 0
Indigo, Dry.
1000
71
Twigs Oil
Castor Oil
Chestnuts.
China Roots...
Chinaware, Fine..
取件
**
0 2 0 0
.
14
0 1 0 0
0 1 3 0
0900
0 1 5 0
9 0 0 0
Ivory Ware
Joss-sticks
Kittysols,
Catty Picul
0 1 5 0
0 200
OT
PaperHundred
05 00
Umbrellas
Lacquered Ware..
Picul
1000
+
Coarse
**
450
1 500
Lamp wicks.
Lead, Red, (Minium)
**
White, (Ceruse)
Yellow, (Massicot).
0 600
0 3 50
0 3 5 0
41.
0 350
Rags
Crackers, Fireworks
Cubebs......
Curiosities, Antiques
Dates, Black
37
Red
Dye, Green
Eggs, Preserved.
Fans, Feather.
Cinnarbar Clothing, Cotton
Coal
Coir
Silk.
Copper Ore
Sheathing, Old
and Pewter Ware!
JJ
J+
Corals, False
Cotton, Raw
Cow Bezoar...
NJ
| 1 5 0 0
ad valoremo p. cent.
Picul
Catty
0 1 5 0
0090
8 0 0
Thousand 0 3 5 0
Poudrette...
Marble Slabs Mats of all kinds
Matting
14
0040
++
10 0 0 0
Leather Articles,
Pouches, Purses
21
0 1 0 0
0500
0500 1150
Lichees
Green
Lily Flowers, Dried
Seeds or Lotus Nuts
1 8 0 0 0 200
H
0 2
1
0 500
0 350
Liquorice
0 1 3 5
03 30
++
Jung-ngan
0 2 50
JF
23
0 0 4 5
without Stone.
0 350
Catty Picul
0300
Manure Cakes,
OT
0 0 0
0500
Aş
1500
{
Melon Seeds..
Hundred roll of 40 yards) Picul
0 2 0 200
0200
0 1 0 0
Mother-o'-Pearl Ware
Catty
0 1 0 0
Hundred
075 0
Mushrooms
Picul
1 500
J
Paper..
0 0 4 5
Musk
Catty
Palm Leaf, trimmed] Thousand
Palin Leaf, un-?
0 3 6 0
Nankeon and Native
Picul
09
1500
Cotton Cloths
trimmed.
Felt Cuttings...
J+
Caps.......
Fungus, or Agaric....
•
0 2 0
}
Nutgalls
0 5 0 0
**
Picul Hundred Picul
0 1 0 0
Oil, as Bean, Tea, Wood,
1 2 5 0
0 6 0 0
Cotton & Hemp Seed Oiled Paper
0 3 0 0
0450
J
CUSTOMS TARIFF
107
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DITT.
NAME OF ARTICLE.
TARIFF UNIT AND DUTY,
Per
17'. n. c. c.
Per
17. m. c. c.
Olive Seed
Picul
0 3 0 0
Silk, Ribbons and Thread
Picul
10 0 0 0
Palampore,
Bed Quilts
Paper, 1st quality
2nd
JJ
Oyster-shells, Sea-shells.
Paint, Green
or Cotton
0090
4 5 0
Pięco
*J
Goods,
→
Hundred
2 7 5 0
Picul
0700
Pongees, Shawls, Scarves,
Satin, Gauzes,
Velvet and Em.
broidered Goods Piece Goods, Sze- chuen, Shantung
Crape,
12 0 0 0
ナラ
M
+
Oil
Pictures on Pith
Sweetmeats
Pearls, False
Peel, Orange
**
Pumelo, 1st quality
2nd
Peppermint Leaf
Pictures and Paintings..
Rice Paper
Pottery, Earthenware
Preserves, Comfits, and
Rattans, Split.
0400 2000
*
0 3 0 0
0 4 6 0
Tassels
**
#
0 1 5 0
*
Caps
Hundred
4500
10 0 0 0
0900
0 1 0 0
Silk and Cotton Mixtures
Picul
5 0 0 0
3 5 0 0
}
Silver and Gold Ware
*
0 0 0 0
Each
0100
Snuff
**
0800
ΟΙ
Hundred
0 1 0 0
Soy
0400
23
Straw Braid...
0700
J
Picul
0 0 5 0
Sugar, Brown
0 1 2 0
White
0 5 0 0
27
*
0 200
Candy
0 2 5 0
■
0 2 5 0
**
Rattan Ware
0 3 0 0
Rhubarb
1 2 5 0
Rice or Paddy, Wheat,
Tallow, Animal
J
Vegetable
Tea (see Note at the
end of the Tariff)
**
0 200
*
0 3 0 0
2500
想
Millet,
and
other
0 1 0 0
Tin Foil
1 2 5 0
53
**
Grains
Tobacco, Prepared
0 4 5 0
Rugs of Hair or Skin..
Each
0 0 9 0
Tobacco, Leaf..
0 1 6 0
J
Samishoo
Picul
1 5
Sandalwood Ware
Seaweed
Catty Pienil
0 1 0 0
0 1 5 0
Sessamun Seed
0 1 3 5
"
Tortoiseshell Ware. Trunks, Leather Turmeric
Twine, Hemp, Canton
Catty
0 200
Picul
I 5 0 0
0 1 0 0
F
0 1 6 0
2
Shoes and Boots, Lea->
Pairs
Soochow...
0 5 0 0
0 0 0
ther or Satin
Turnips, Salted
"
0 1 8 0
Shoes, Straw
0 18 0
Varnish, or Crude Lac-Į
0500
Silks, Raw and Thrown..
Picul
10 0 0 0
quer
ሁ
Yellow, from Sze-
+
chuen
Reeled from Dupions
Silk, Wild Raw
e-}
Vermicelli
7 0 0 0
FJ
Vermillion
018 2500
0 0 0
35
Wax, White or Insect
1 5 0 0
JI
W
5 0 0
Refuse...
J
**
1 0 0 0
Wood-Piles, Poles, &
Joists....
Each
0 0 3 0
Cocoons
})
3 0 0 0
Wood Ware
Picul
I 1 5 0
25
Floss, Canton..........
43 0 0
Wool .......
0 3
JJ
>>
from other Provinces
10 0 0 0
**
TEA.-Coarse unfired Japanese Tea imported for local consumption. Since February, 1861, it has been the practice of the Shanghai Customis to charge duty ad valorem on Tea of this description.
Tea imported from Japan for the purpose of being refired and re-esported to a Foreign country. Since the 1st of April, 1861, Japanese Tea iniported for re-exportation has been dealt with at Shanghai according to the following rule:- **Tea imported into this port from Japan for the purpose of being refired and re-exported to a Foreign country will be allowed a reduction on the actual weight imported of Twenty per cent. on the Import duty, and when re- exported & Drawback Certificate for the entire amount of duty paid will be granted on application in the usual manner, provided that the terms of Article XLV. of the Treaty between Great Britain and China be complied with, and that the weights, &c., &c., be correctly declared."
Brick Tea. In the Tariff appended to the Russian Regulations of 188, the Export duty on Brick is fixed at 6 Mace per picul.
RULES
(Annexed to the Tariff of 1858.)
RULE L.-Unenumerated Goods.-Articles not enumerated in the list of exports, but enumerated in the list of imports, when exported, will pay the amount of duty set against them in the list of imports; and, similarly, articles not enumerated in the list of imports, but enumerated in the list of exports, when imported, will pay the amount of duty set against them in the list of exports.
Articles not enumerated in either list, nor in the list of duty-free goods, will pay an ad valorem duty of 5 per cent., calculated on their market value.
RULE II-Duty-free Goods.-Gold and silver bullion, foreign coins, flour, Indian meal, sago, biscuits, preserved meats and vegetables, cheese, butter, confectionery, foreign clothing, jewellery, plated-ware, perfumery, soap of all kinds, charcoal, firewood, candles (foreign), tobacco (foreign), cigars (foreign), wine, beer, spirits, household stores, ship's stores, personal baggage, stationery, carpeting, draggeting, cutlery, foreign medicines, glass, and crystal ware.
The above pay no import or export duty, but, if transported into the interior will, with the exception of personal baggage, gold and silver bullion, and foreign coins, pay a transit duty at the rate of 23 per cent, ad valorem.
A freight, or part freight, of duty-free commodities (personal baggage, gold and silver bullion, and foreign coins, excepted) will render the vessel carrying them, though no other cargo be on board, liable to tonnage dnes.
RULE III-Contraband Goods.-Import and export trade is alike prohibited in the following articles: Gunpowder, shot, cannon, fowling-pieces, rifles, muskets, pistols, and all other munitions and implements of war; and salt.
RULE IV. Weights and Measures.In the calculation of the Tariff, the weight of a picul of one hundred catties is held to be equal to one hundred and thirty-three and one-third pounds avoirdupois; and the length of a chang of ten Chinese feet to be equal to one hundred and forty-one English inches.
One Chinese chih is held to be equal to fourteen and oue-tenth inches English; and four yards English, less three inches, to equal one chang.
RULE V-Regarding Certain Commodities Heretofore Contraband.-The restric tions affecting trade in opium, cash, grain, pulse, sulphur, brimstone, saltpetre, and spelter are relaxed, under the following conditions;-
it.
1. Opium will henceforth pay thirty Taels per picul import duty. The importer will sell it only at the port. It will be carried into the interior by Chinese only, and only as Chinese property; the foreign trader will not be allowed to occompany The provisions of Article IX. of the Treaty of Tientsin, by which British subjects are authorized to proceed into the interior with passports to trade, will not extend to it, nor will those of Article XXVII. of the same treaty, by which the transit dues are regulated. The transit dues on it will be arranged as the Chinese Government see fit: nor in future revisions of the Tariff is the same rule of revision to be applied to opium as to other goods.
2. Copper Cash. The export of cash to any foreign port is prohibited; but it shall be lawful for British subjects to ship it at one of the open ports of China to another, on compliance with the following Regulation:--The shipper shall give notice of the amount of cash he desires to ship, and the port of its destination, and shall bind himself either by a bond, with two sufficient sureties, or by depositing
* For duty Opium see Convention signed in 1835, also the Treaty of 1902.
CUSTOMS TARIFF
109
such other security as may be deemed by the Customs satisfactory, to return, within six months from the date of clearance, to the collector at the port of shipment, the certificate issued by him, with an acknowledgment thereon of the receipt of the cash at the port of destination by the collector at that port, who shall thereto affix his seal; or failing the production of the certificate, to forfeit a sum equal in value to the cash shipped. Cash will pay no duty inwards or outwards; but a freight or part freight of cash, though no other cargo be on board, will render the vessel carrying it liable to pay tonnage dues,
3. The export of rice and all other grain whatsoever, native or foreign, no matter where grown or whence imported, to any foreign port, is prohibited; but these commodities may be carried by British merchants from one of the open ports of China to another, under the same conditions in respect of security as cash, on pay- ment at the port of shipment of the duty specified in the Tariff.
No import duty will be leviable on rice or grain; but a freight or part freight of rice or grain, though no other cargo be on board, will render the vessel importing it liable to tonnage dues.
4.-* The export of pulse and beancake from Tung-chau and Newchwang, under the British flag, is prohibited. From any other of the ports they may be shipped, on payment of the tariff duty, either to other ports of China, or to foreign countries.
5. Saltpetre, sulphur, brimstone, and spelter, being munitions of war, shall not be imported by British subjects, save at the requisition of the Chinese Government, or for sale to Chinese duly authorized to purchase them. No permit to land them will be issued until the Customs have proof that the necessary authority has been given to the purchase. It shall not be lawful for British subjects to carry these commodities up the Yang-tsze-kiang, or into any port other than those open on the seaboard, nor to accompany them into the interior on behalf of Chinese. They must be sold at the ports only, and, except at the ports they will be regarded as Chinese property.
Infractions of the conditions, as above set forth, under which trade in opium, cash, grain, pulse, saltpetre, brimstone, sulphur, and spelter may be henceforward carried on, will be punishable by confiscation of all the goods concerned.
RULE VI.-Liability of Vessels Entering Port. For the prevention of misunder- standing, it is agreed that the term of twenty-four hours, within which British vessels must be reported to the Consul under Article XXXVII. of the Treaty of Tientsin, shall be understood to commence from the time a British vessel comes within the limits of the port; as also the term of forty-eight hours allowed her by Article XXX. of the same Treaty to remain in port without payinent of tonnage dues.
The limits of the ports shall be defined by the Customs, with all consideration for the convenience of trade compatible with due protection of the revenue; also the limits of the anchorages within which lading and discharging is permitted by the Customs; and the same shall be notified to the Consul for public information.
RULE VII.-Transit Dues. It is agreed that Article XXXVIII. of the Treaty of Tientsin shall be interpreted to declare the amounts of transit dues legally leviable upon merchandise imported or exported by British subjects to be one-half of the tariff duties, except in the case of the duty-free goods liable to a transit duty of 23 per cent. ad valorem, as provided in Article II. of these Rules. Merchandise shall be cleared of its transit dues under the following conditions:-
In the case of Imports.-Notice being given at the port of entry, from which the Imports are to be forwarded inland, of the nature and quantity of the goods, the ship
*NOTIFICATION,
BRITISH CONSULATE, SHANGHAI, 24th March, 1862.
Article IV. of Rule No. 5 appended to the Tariff of 1858 is rescinded.
Pulse and bean-cake may be henceforth exported from Tungchow and Newchwang, and from all other ports in China open by Treaty, on the same terms and conditions as are applied to other Native produce by the Regulation bearing date the 5th December last; that is to say, they may be shipped on payment of Tarif duty at the port of shipment, and dis charged at any Chinese port on payment of half-duty, with power to claim drawback of the half-duty if re-exported.
By order, WALTER 1. MEDHURST, Consul.
110
CUSTOMS TARIFF
from which they have been landed, and the place inland to which they are bound, with all other necessary particulars, the Collector of Customs will, on due inspection made, and on receipt of the transit duty due, issue a transit duty certificate. This must be produced at every barrier station, and viséd. No further duty will be leviable upon imports so certificated, no matter how distant the place of their destination.
In the Case of Exports.- Produce purchased by a British subject in the interior will be inspected, and taken account of, at the first barrier it passes on its way to the port of shipment. A memorandum showing the amount of the produce and the
port at which it is to be shipped, will be deposited there by the person in charge of the produce; he will then receive a certificate, which must be exhibited and viséd at
every barrier, on his way to the port of shipment. On the arrival of the produce at the barrier Dearest the port notice must be given at the Customs at the port, and the transit dues due thereon being paid, it will be passed. On exportation the produce will pay the tariff duty*.
Any attempt to pass goods inwards or outward otherwise than in compliance with the rule here laid down will render them liable to confiscation.
Unauthorised sale, in transitu, of goods that have been entered as above for a port, will render them liable to confiscation. Any attempt to pass goods in excess of the quantity specified in the certificate will render all the goods of the same denomination, named in the certificate, liable to confiscation. Permission to export produce, which cannot be proved to have paid its transit dues, will be refused by the Customs until the transit dues shall have been paid. The above being the arrange- ment agreed to regarding the transit dues, which will thus be levied once and for all, the notification required under Article XXVIII. of the Treaty of Tientsin, for the information of British and Chinese subjects, is hereby dispensed with.
RULE VIII.-Peking not Open to Trade.It is agreed that Article IX. of the Treaty of Tientsin shall not be interpreted as authorising British subjects to enter the capital city of Peking for purposes of trade.
RULE IX-Abolition of the Meltage Fee.--It is agreed that the percentage of one Tael two Mace, hitherto charged in excess of duty payments to defray the expenses of melting by the Chinese Government, shall be no longer levied on British subjects.
RULE X.-Collection of Duties Under One System at all Ports. It being by Treaty at the option of the Chinese Government to adopt what means appear to it best suited to protect its revenue accruing on British trade, it is agreed that one uniform system shall be enforced at every port.
The high officer appointed by the Chinese Government to superintend foreign. trade will, accordingly from time to time, either himself visit, or will send a deputy to visit the different ports. The said high officer will be at liberty, of his own choice, and independently of the suggestion or nomination of any British authority, to select any British subject he may see fit to aid him in the administration of the Customs Revenue, in the prevention of smuggling, in the definition of port boundaries, or in discharging the duties of harbour master; also in the distribution of lights, buoys, beacons, and the like, the maintenance of which shall be provided for out of the tonnage dues.
The Chinese Government will adopt what measures it shall find requisite to prevent smuggling upon the Yang-tsze-kiang, when that river shall be opened to trade.
Done at Shanghai, in the province of Kiang-su, this eighth day of November, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and fifty-eight, being the third day of the tenth moon of the eighth year of the reign of Hien Fung.
(L.S.) ELGIN AND KINCARDINE.
SEAL OF CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARIES. SIGNATURES OF FIVE CHINESE PLENIPOTENTIARIES.
* See Chefoo Convention, Section III., Article 4.
EMIGRATION CONVENTION
BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND CHINA RESPECTING THE EMPLOYMENT OF
CHINESE LABOUR IN BRITISH COLONIES AND PROTECTORATES
(Signed in London, 13th May, 1904.)
Whereas a Convention between Her Majesty Queen Victoria and His Majesty the Emperor of China was signed at Peking on the 24th October, 1860, by Article V. of which His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China consented to allow Chinese subjects, wishing to take service in British Colonies or other parts beyond the seas, to enter into engagements with British subjects, and to ship themselves and their families on board of British vessels at the open ports of China in conformity with Regulations to be drawn up between the two Governments for the protection of such emigrants:
And whereas the aforesaid Regulations have not hitherto been framed, His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India, and His Majesty the Emperor of China have accordingly appointed the following as their respective Plenipo- tentiaries, that is to say:
His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India, the Most Honourable Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice, Marquess of Lansdowne, His Majestys' Principal Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs; and
His Majesty the Emperor of China, Chang Têh-Yih, Brevet Lieutenant-General of the Chinese Imperial Forces, His Imperial Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India ;
And the said Plenipotentiaries having met aud communicated to each other their respective full powers, and found them in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles :-
Art. I. As the Regulations to be framed under the above-mentioned Treaty were intended to be of a general character, it is bereby agreed that on each occasion when indentured emigrants are required for a particular British Colony or Protectorate beyond the seas, His Britannic Majesty's Minister in Peking shall notify the Chinese Government, stating the name of the Treaty port at which it is intended to embark them, and the terms and conditions on which they are to be engaged; the Chinese Government shall thereupon, without requiring further formalities, immediately instruct the local authorities at the specified Treaty port to take all the steps nccessary to facilitate emigration. The notification herein referred to shall only be required once in the case of each Colony or Protectorate, except when emigration under indenture to that Colony or Protectorate from the specified Treaty port has uot taken place during the preceding three years.
112
EMIGRATION CONVENTION
Art. II.--On the receipt of the instructions above referred to, the Taotai at the port shall at once appoint an officer, to be called the Chinese Inspector; who, together with the British Consular Officer at the port, or his Delegate, shall make known by Proclamation and by means of the native press the text of the Indenture which the emigrant will have to sign, and any particulars of which the Chinese officer considers it essential that the emigrant shall be informed, respecting the country to which the emigrant is to proceed, and respecting its laws.
Art. III.-The British Consular officer at the port, or his Delegate, shall confer with the Chinese Inspector as to the location and installation of the offices and other necessary buildings hereinafter called the Emigration Agency, which shall be erected or fitted up by the British Government, and at their expense, for the purpose of carrying on the business of the engagement and shipment of the emigrants, and in which the Chinese Inspector and his staff shall have suitable accommodation fo carrying on their duties.
Art. IV.--(1.) There shall be posted up in conspicuous places throughout the Emigration Agency, and more especially in that part of it called the Depot, destined for the reception of intending emigrants, copies of the Indenture to be entered into with the emigraut, drawn up in the English and Chinese languages, together with copies of the special Ordinance, if any, relating to immigration into the particular Colony or Protectorate for which the emigrants are required.
(2.) There shall be kept a Register in English and in Chinese, in which the names of intending indentured emigrants shall be inscribed, and in this Register there shall not be inscribed the name of any person who is under 20 years of age, unless he shall have produced proof of his having obtained the consent of his parents or other lawful guardians to emigrate, or, in default of these, of the Magistrate of the district. to which he belongs. After signature of the Indenture according to the Chinese manner, the emigrant shall not be permitted to leave the Depot previously to his embarkation, without a pass signed by the Chinese Inspector, and countersigned by the British Consular Officer or his Delegate, unless he shall have, through the Chinese Inspector, renounced his agreement and withdrawn his name from the register of emigrants.
(3.) Before the sailing of the ship each emigrant shall be carefully examined by a qualified Medical officer nominated by the British Consular Officer or his Delegate. The emigrants shall be paraded before the British Consular Officer or his Delegate and the Chinese Inspector or his Delegate, and questioned with a view to ascertain their perfect understanding of the Indenture.
Art. V. All ships employed in the conveyance of indentured emigrants from China under this Convention shall engage and embark them only at a Treaty port, and shall comply with the Regulations contained in the Schedule hereto annexed and forming part of the Convention.
Art. VI. For the better protection of the emigrant, and of any other Chinese subject who may happen to be residing in the Colony or Protectorate to which the emigration is to take place, it shall be competent to the Emperor of China to appoint a Consul or Vice-Consul to watch over their interests and well-being, and such Consul or Vice-Consul shall have all the rights and privileges accorded to the Consuls of other nations.
Art. VII. Every Indenture entered into under the present Articles shall clearly specify the name of the country for which the labourer is required, the duration of the engagement, and, if renewable, on what terms, the number of hours of labour per working day, the nature of the work, the rate of wages and mode of payment, the rations, clothing, the grant of a free passage out, and, where such is provided for therein, a free passage back to the port of embarkation in China for himself and family, right to free medical attendance and medicines, whether in the Colony or Protectorate, or on the voyage from and to the port of embarkation in China, and any other
EMIGRATION CONVENTION
113.
advantages to which the emigrant shall be entitled. The Indenture may also provide that the emigrant shall, if considered necessary by the medical authorities, be vaccinated on his arrival at the Depôt, and in the event of such vaccination being unsuccessful, revaccinated on board ship.
Art. VIII.The Indenture shall be sigued, or in cases of illiteracy marked, by the emigrant after the Chinese manner, in the presence of the British Consular Officer or his Delegate and of the Chinese Inspector or his Delegate, who shall be responsi- ble to their respectivo Governments for its provisions having been clearly and fully explained to the emigrant previous to signature. To each emigrant there shall be presented a copy of the Indenture drawn up in English and Chinese. Such Inden- ture shall not be considered as definitive or irrevocable until after the embarkation of the emigrant.
Art, IX. In every British Colony or Protectorate to which indentured Chinese emigrants proceed, an officer or officers shall be appointed, whose duty it shall be to insure that the emigrant shall have free access to the Courts of Justice to obtain the redress for injuries to his person and property which is secured to all persons irrespec- tive of race, by the local law.
Art. X.--During the sojourn of the emigrant in the Colony or Protectorate in which he is employed, all possible postal facilities shall be afforded to him for com- municating with his native country and for making remittances to his family.
Art. XI. With regard to the repatriation of the emigrant and his family whether on the expiration of the Indenturo or from any legal cause, or in event of bis having been invalided from sickness or disablement, it is understood that this shall always be to the port of shipment in China, and that in no case shall it take place by any other means than actual conveyance by ship, and payment of money to the returning emigrant in lieu of passage shall not be admissible.
Art. XII. Nothing in any Indenture framed under these Articles shall constitute on the employer a right to transfer the emigrant to another employer of labour without the emigrant's free consent and the approval of his Consul or Vice-Consul; and should any such transfer or assignment take place, it shall not in any way invalidate any of the rights or privileges of the emigrant under the
Indenture.
Art. XIII. It is agreed that a fee on each indentured emigrant shipped under the terms of this convention shall be paid to the Chinese Government for expenses of inspection, but no payment of any kind shall be made to the Chinese Inspector or any other official of the Chinese Government at the port of embarkation. The above fee shall be paid into the Customs bank previous to the clearance of the ship, and shall be calculated at the following rate:-3 Mexican dollars per head for any number of emigrants not exceeding 10,000, and 2 dollars per head for any number in excess thereof, provided they are shipped at the same Treaty port, and that not more than twelve months have elapsed since the date of the last shipment.
Should the port of embarkation have been changed, or a space of more than twelve months have elapsed since the date of the last shipment, inspection charges shall be paid as in the first instance.
Art. XIV.---The English and Chinese text of the present Convention have been carefully compared, but in the event of there being any difference of meaning between them, the sense as expressed in the English text shall be held to be the correct sense,
Art. XV.-The present Convention shall come into force on the date of its signature and remain in force for four years from that date, and after such period of four years it shall be terminable by either of the High Contracting Parties on giving one year's notice.
In witness whereof the Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Convention, and have affixed thereto their seals.
Done at London in four copies (two in English and two in Chinese), this thirteenth day of May of the year 1904.
(Signed)
LANSDOWNE.
T. Y. CHANG.
11
EMIGRATION CONVENTION
SCHEDULE
Regulations
Ships employed in the transport of indentured emigrants from China under this Convention must be seaworthy, clean, and properly ventilated, and with regard to the following matters, shall comply with conditions as far as possible equivalent to those in force in British India with reference to the emigration of natives from India:- Accommodation required on board (vide Section 57 of "The Indian Emigration Act, 1883").
Sleeping accommodation consisting of wooden sheathing to the decks or sleeping platforms (vide rule regarding "iron decks," as amended the 16th August, 1902, in Schedule "A" to the rules under "The Indian Emigration Act, 1883").
Rules as to space on board (vide Section 58 of "The Indian Emigration Act, 1883").
Carriage of qualified surgeon, with necessary medical stores.
Storage of drinking water (vide Rule 118, as amended the 24th February, 1903, under "The Indian Emigration Act, 1888 ").
Provision of adequate distilling apparatus (vide Schedule "C" to the rules under "The Indian Emigration Act, 1883").
day:
The dietary for each indentured emigrant on board ship shall be as follows per
Rice, not less than 11⁄2 lb., or flour or bread stuffs Fish (dried or salt) or meat (fresh or preserved) Fresh vegetables of suitable kinds
Salt
Sugar...
Chinese tea
Ib.
17
11 21 1 oz. 14
33
>>
Chinese condiments in sufficient quantities.
Water, for drinking and cooking
1 gallon
or such other articles of food as may be substituted for any of the articles enumerat- ed in the foregoing scale as being in the opinion of the doctor on board equivalent thereto.
NOTES EXCHANGED BETWEEN THE MARQUESS OF LANSDOWNE AND THE CHINESE
MINISTER ON SIGNING CONVENTION OF MAY 13TH, 1904
Foreign Office, London, May 13th, 1904.
SIR, By Article VI. of the Convention about to be concluded between Great Britain and China with regard to Chinese subjects leaving the Treaty ports of China under Indenture for service in British Colonies or Protectorates, it is provided
that
For the better protection of the emigrant and of any other Chinese subject who may happen to be residing in the Colony or Protectorate to which the emigration is to take place, it shall be competent to the Emperor of China to appoint a Consul or Vice-Consul to watch over their interests and well-being, and such Consul or Vice-Consul shall have all the rights and privileges accorded to the Consul
of other nations."
EMIGRATION CONVENTION
115
His Majesty's Government consider it specially important that the persons appointed to occupy, for the purpose named, the position of Consul or Vice-Consul ahould be experienced officers of Chinese nationality, that they should be exclusively in the service of the Emperor of China, and that in each case the name of the person selected should be communicated to His Majesty's Government, and their agreement to the appointment obtained.
I have the honour to inquire whether the Chinese Government are prepared to meet the wishes of His Majesty's Government in the matter. If so, and if you will inform me accordingly, this note and your reply might be attached to the Convention in order to place on formal record the arrangement concluded. I have, &c.
Chang Ta-Jen, &c., &c., &c.
(Signed)
LANSDOWNE,
Chinese Legation, London,
May 13th, 1904.
My LORD MARQUESS, In reply to your Lordship's note of this date, I have the honour to state that the Chinese Government are in entire accord with His Britannie Majesty's Government as to the great importance they attach to the Consuls and Vice- Consuls to be appointed under Article VI. of the Convention about to be concluded between the two Governments being men of great experience, and will consider it a duty which they owe to the emigrant to confine the selection of these officers to such as in all respects conform to the requirements specified in the note above referred to, which, together with the present one, it has been mutually agreed shall, in proof of that understanding, be appended to the said Convention.
I have, &c.
The Marquess of Lansdowne, K. G.,
&c., &c..
&c.
(Signed)
T. Y. CHANG.
EXCHANGE OF NOTES BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM
AND RUSSIA WITH REGARD TO THEIR RESPECTIVE
RAILWAY INTERESTS IN CHINA
No. 1
Sir C. Scott to Count Mouravieff
The Undersigned, British Ambassador, duly authorized to that effect, has the honour to make the following declaration to his Excellency Count Mourarieff,
Russian Minister for Foreign Affairs:-
Great Britain and Russia, animated by a sincere desire to avoid in China all cause of conflict on questions where their interests meet, and taking into considera- tion the economic and geographical gravitation of certain parts of that Empire,
have agreed as follows:-
1. Great Britain engages not to seek for her own account, or on behalf of British subjects or of others, any railway concessions to the north of the Great Wali of China, and not to obstruct, directly or indirectly, applications for railway concessions in that region supported by the Russian Governent.
2.-Russia, on her part, engages not to seek for her own account, or on behalf of Russian subjects or of others, any railway concessions in the basin of the Yaug. tze and not to obstruct, directly or indirectly, applications for railway concessions in that region supported by the British Government.
The two Contracting Parties, having nowise in view to infringe in any way the sovereign rights of China or existing Treaties, will not fail to communicate to the Chinese Government the present arrangement, which, by averting all cause of com. plications between them, is of a nature to consolidate peace in the Far East, and to serve the primordial interests of China herself.
St. Petersburg, April 28, 1899.
(Signed) CHARLES S. SCOTT.
The Undersigned, Russian Minister for Foreign Affairs, duly authorized to that effect, has the honour to make the following declaration to his Excellency Sir Charles Scott, British Ambassador:
Russia and Great Britain, animated by the sincere desire to avoid in China all cause of conflict on questions where their interests meet, and taking into considera- tion the economic and geographical gravitation of certain parts of that Empire, have agreed as followe
1. Russia engages not to seek for her own account, or on behalf of Russian subjects or of others, any railway concessions in the basin of the Yangtze, and not to obstruct, directly or indirectly, applications for railway concessions in that region supported by the British Government.
EXCHANGE OF NOTES BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND RUSSIA 117
2. Great Britain, ou her part, engages not to seek for her own account, or on bebalf of British subjects or of others, any railway concessions to the north of the Great Wall of China, and not to obstruct, directly or indirectly, applications for railway concessions in that region supported by the Russian Government.
The two Contracting Parties, having nowise in view to infringe in any way the sovereign rights of China or of existing Treaties, will not fail to communicate to the Chinese Government the present arrangement, which, by averting all cause of complication between them, is of a nature to consolidate peace in the Far East, and to serve the primordial interests of China herself.
The Undersigned, etc.
St. Petersburg, April 16 (28), 1899.
(Signed) Count MOURAVIEFF.
No. 3
Sir C. Scott to Count Mouravieff
In order to complete the notes exchanged this day respecting the partition of spheres for concessions for the construction and working of railways in China, it has been agreed to record in the present additional note the arrangement arrived at with regard to the line Shanhaikuan-Newchwang, for the construction of which a loan has been already contracted by the Chinese Government with the Shanghai- Hoogkong Bank, acting on behalf of the British and Chinese Corporation.
The general arrangement established by the above-mentioned notes is not to infringe in any way the rights acquired under the said Loan Contract, and the Chinese Government may appoint both an English engineer and an European accountant to supervise the construction of the line in question, and the expenditure of the money appropriated to it.
But it remains understood that this fact cannot be taken as constituting a right of property or foreign control, and that the line in question is to remain a Chinese line, under the control of the Chinese Government, and cannot be mortgaged or alienated to a non-Chinese Company.
As regards the branch line from Siaoheichan to Sinminting, in addition to the aforesaid restrictions, it has been agreed that it is to be constructed by China her- self, who may permit European-not necessarily British-engineers to periodically inspect it, and to verify and certify that the work is being properly executed.
The present special Agreement is naturally not to interfere in any way with the right of the Russian Government to support, if it thinks fit, applications of Russian subjects or establishments for Concessions for railways, which, starting from the main Manchurian line in a south-westerly direction, would traverse the region in which the Chinese line terminating at Siuminting and Newchwang is to be constructed.
St. Petersburg, April 28th, 1899.
(Signed) CHARLES S. SCOTT.
No. 4
Count Mourarief to Sir C. Scott
In order to complete the notes exchanged this day respecting the partition of spheres for concessions for the construction and working of railways in China, it has been agreed to record in the present additional note the Agreement arrived at with regard to the line Shanhaikuan-Newchwang, for the construction of which a loan has been already contracted by the Chinese Government with the Shanghai-Houg- kong Bauk, acting on behalf of the British and Chinese Corporation.
118
AGREEMENT'S RESPECTING TIBET
The general arrangement established by the above-mentioned notes is not to infringe in any way the rights acquired under the said Loan Contract, and the Chinese Government is at liberty to appoint both an English engineer and a European accountant to supervise the construction of the line in question and the expenditure of the money appropriated to it. But it remains well understood that this fact cannot be taken as constituting a right of property or foreign control. and that the line in question is to remain a Chinese line, subject to the control of the Chinese Government, and cannot be mortgaged or alienated to a non-Chinese Company.
As regards the brauch line from Siaoheïchan to Sinminting, in addition to the aforesaid restrictions, it has been agreed that it is to be constructed by China herself, who may permit European-not necessarily British-engineers to periodi- cally inspect it, and to verify and certify that the works are being properly executed. The present special Agreement is naturally not to interfere in any way with the right of the Russian Government to support, if it thinks fit, applications of Russian subjects or establishments for Concessions for railways, which, starting from the main Manchurian line in a south-westerly direction, would traverse the region in which the Chinese line terminating at Siuninting and Newchwang is to be constructed.
The Undersigned, etc.
St. Petersburg, April 16 (28), 1899.
(Signed) Count MOURAVIEFF.
AGREEMENTS RESPECTING TIBET
Signed at Peking, April 27th, 1906
TO WHICH IS ANNEXED THE CONVENTION BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM
AND TIBET, SIGNED AT LHASA, SEPTEMBER 7TH, 1904
Ratifications exchanged at London July 23rd, 1906
Whereas His Majesty the King of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India, and His Majesty the Emperor of China are sincerely desirous to maintain and perpetuate the relations of friendship and good understanding which now exist between their respective Empires;
And whereas the refusal of Tibet to recognise the validity of or to carry into full effect the provisions of the Anglo-Chinese Convention of March 17th, 1890, and Regulations of December 5th, 1893, placed the British Government under the necessity of taking steps to secure their rights and interests under the said Convention and Regulations;
AGREEMENTS RESPECTING TIBET
119
And whereas a Convention of ten articles was signed at Lhasa on September 7th, 1904, on behalf of Great Britain and Tibet, and was ratified by the Viceroy and Governor-General of India on behalf of Great Britain on November 11th, 1904, a declaration on behalf of Great Britain modifying its terms under certain conditions being appended thereto;
His Britannic Majesty and His Majesty the Emperor of China have resolved to conclude a Convention on this subject and have for this purpose named Plenipoten- tiaries, that is to say:-
His Majesty the King of Great Britain and Ireland:
Sir Ernest Mason Satow, Knight Grand Cross of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, His said Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to His Majesty,the Emperor of China; and His Majesty the Emperor of China:
His Excellency Tong Sboa-yi, His said Majesty's High Commissioner Pleni- potentiary and a Vice-President of the Board of Foreign Affairs;
Who having communicated to each other their respective full powers and find- ing them to be in good and true form have agreed upon and concluded the follow- ing Convention in six articles :-
Art. I.The Convention concluded on September 7th, 1904, by Great Britain and Tibet, the texts of which in English and Chinese are attached to the present Convention as an annexe, is hereby confirmed, subject to the modification stated in the declaration appended thereto, and both of the High Contracting Parties engage to take at all times such steps as may be necessary to secure the due fulfilment of the terms specified therein.
Art. II. The Government of Great Britain engages not to annex Tibetan territory or to interfere in the administration of Tibet. The Government of China also undertakes not to permit any other foreign State to interfere with the territory or internal administration of Tibet.
Art. III.-The concessions which are mentioned in Article 9 (d) of the Con- vention concluded on September 7th, 1904, by Great Britain and Tibet are denied to any state or to the subject of any state other than China, but it has been arranged with China that at the trade marts specified in Article 2 of the aforesaid Convention Great Britain shall be entitled to lay down telegraph lines connecting with India.
Art. IV. The provisions of the Anglo-Chinese Convention of 1890 and Regulations of 1893 shall, subject to the terms of this present Convention and annexe thereto, remain in full force.
Art. V. The English and Chinese texts of the present Convention have been carefully compared and found to correspond, but in the event of there being any difference of meaning between them the English text shall be authoritative.
Art. VI.--This Convention shall be ratified by the Sovereigns of both countries and ratifications shall be exchanged in London within three months after the date of signature by the Plenipotentiaries of both Powers.
In token whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed and sealed this Convention, four copies in English and four in Chiuese.
Done at Peking this twenty-seventh day of April, one thousand nine hundred aud six, being the fourth day of the fourth mouth of the thirty-second year of the reign of Kuang Hsü.
(L.S.)
ERNEST SATow.
(Signature and Seal of the Chinese
Plenipotentiary.)
120
AGREEMENTS RESPECTING TIBET
SIGNED AT LHASA, 7TH SEPTEMBER, 1904.
WHEREAS doubts and difficulties have arisen as to the meaning and validity of the Anglo-Chinese Convention of 1890, and the Trade Regulations of 1893, and as to the liabilities of the Tibetan Government under these agreements; and whereas recent occurrences have tended towards a disturbance of the relations of friendship and good understanding which have existed between the British Government and the Government of Tibet; and whereas it is desirable to restore peace and amicable relations and to resolve and determine the doubts and difficulties as aforesaid, the said Governments have resolved to conclude a Convention with these objects, and the following articles have been agreed upon by Colonel F. E. Younghusband, C.I.E., in virtue of full powers vested in him by His Britannic Majesty's Government and on behalf of that said Government, and Lo-Sang Gyul-Tsen, the Ga-den Ti-Rimpoche, and the representatives of the Council of the three monasteries Se-ra, Dre-pung, and Ga-den, and of the ecclesiastical and lay officials of the National Assembly on behalf of the Government of Tibet:
I.-The Government of Tibet engages to respect the Anglo-Chinese Convention of 1890 and to recognise the frontier between Sikkim and Tibet, as defined in Article I. of the said Convention, and to erect boundry pillars accordingly.
II. The Tibetan Government undertakes to open forthwith trade marts to which all British and Tibetan subjects shall have free right of access at Gyangtse and Gartok, as well as at Yatung.
The Regulations applicable to the trade mart at Yatung, under the Anglo-Chinese Agreement of 1893, shall, subject to such amendments as may hereafter be agreed upon by common consent between the British and Tibetan Governments, apply to the marts above mentioned.
In addition to establishing trade marts at the places mentioned, the Tibetan Government undertakes to place no restrictions on the trade by existing routes, and to consider the question of establishing fresh trade marts under similar conditions if development of trade requires it.
III. The question of the amendment of the Regulations of 1893 is reserved for separate consideration, and the Tibetan Government undertakes to appoint fully authorised delegates to negotiate with representatives of the British Government as to the details of the amendments required.
IV. The Tibetan Government undertakes to levy no dues of any kind other than those provided for in the tariff to be mutually agreed upon.
V. The Tibetan Government undertakes to keep the roads to Gyangtse and Gartok from the frontier clear of all obstruction and in a state of repair suited to the needs of the trade, and to establish at Yatung, Gyangtse and Gartok, and at each of the other trade marts that may hereafter be established, a Tibetan Agent who shall receive from the British Agent appointed to watch over British trade at the marts in question any letter which the latter may desire to send to the Tibetan or to the Chinese authorities. The Tibetan Agent shall also be responsible for the due delivery of sucb communications and for the transmission of replies.
VI.-As an indemnity to the British Government for the expense incurred in the despatch of armed troops to Lhasa, to exact reparation for breaches of treaty obligations, and for the insults offered to and attacks upon the British Commissioner and his following and escort, the Tibetan Government engages to pay a sum of Pounds five hundred thousand, equivalent to Rupees seventy-five lakhs, to the British Government.
The indemnity shall be payable at such place as the British Government may from time to time, after due notice, indicate, whether in Tibet or in the British districts of Darjeeling or Jalpaiguri, in seventy-five annual instalments of Rupees one lakh each on the 1st January in each year, beginning from the 1st January, 1906.
VII.-As security for the payment of the above-mentioned indemnity, and for the fulfilment of the provisions relative to trade marts specified in Articles II., III., IV.,
V.
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the British Government shall continue to occupy the Chumbi Valley until the indemnity has been paid and until the trade marts have been effectively opened for three years, whichever date may be the later.
VIII The Tibetan Government agrees to raze all forts and fortifications and remove all armaments which might impede the course of free communications between the British frontier and the towns of Gyangtse and Lhasa.
IX.-The Government of Tibet engages that, without the previous consent of the British Government-
(a) No portion of Tibetan territory shall be ceded, sold, leased, mortgaged, or otherwise given for occupation, to any foreign Power;
(b) No such Power shall be permitted to intervene in Tibetan affairs;
(e) No representatives or agents of any foreign Power shall be admitted to Tibet; (No concessions for railways, roads, telegraphs, mining or other rights, shall be granted to any foreign Power, or the subject of any foreign Power. In the event. of consent to such concessions being granted, similar or equivalent concessions shall be granted to the British Government;
(e) No Tibetan revenues, whether in kind or in cash, shall be pledged or assigned. to any foreign Power, or the subject of any foreign Power.
X. In witness whereof the negotiators have signed the same, and affixed there. unto the seals of their arms.
Done in quintuplicate at Lhasa, this 7th day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and four, corresponding with the Tibetan date, the 27th day of the seventh month of the Wood Dragon year.
ARRANGEMENT BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND RUSSIA CONCERNING TIBET.
The Governments of Britain and Russia recognizing the suzerain rights of China in Tibet, and considering the fact that Great Britain, by reason of her geographical position, has a special interest in the maintenance of the status quo in the external relations of Tibet, have made the following Arrangement:-
I-The two High Contracting Parties engage to respect the territorial integrity of Tibet and to abstain from all interference in its internal administration.
II-In conformity with the admitted principle of the suzerainty of China over Tibet, Great Britain and Russia engage not to enter into negotiations with Tibet except through the entermediary of the Chinese Government. This engagement does not exclude the direct relations between British Commercial Agents and the Tibetan authorities provided for in Article V. of the Convention between Great Britain and Tibet of September 7th, 1904, and confirmed by the Convention between Great Britain and China of April 27th, 1906; nor does it modify the engagements entered into by Great Britain and China in Article I. of the said Convention of 1906.
It is clearly understood that Buddhists, subjects of Great Britain or of Russia, may enter into direct relations on strictly religious matters with the Dalai Lama and the other representatives of Buddhism in Tibet; the Governments of Great Britain and Russia engage, as far as they are concerned, not to allow those relations to infringe the stipulations of the present arrangement.
III.The British and Russian Governments respectively engage not to send representatives to Lhassa.
IV. The two High Contracting Parties engage neither to seek nor to obtain, whether for themselves or their subjects, any concessions for railways, roads, tele- graphs and mines, or other rights in Tibet.
V-The two Governments agree that no part of the revenues of Tibet, whether in kind or in cash, shall be pledged or assigned to Great Britain or Russia or to any of their subjects.
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ANNEX.
Great Britain reaffirms the Declaration, signed by his Excellency the Viceroy and Governor-General of India and appended to the ratification of the Convention of September 7th, 1904, to the effect that the occupation of the Chumbi Valley by British forces shall cease after the payment of three annual instalments of the indemnity of 25,000,000 Rupees, provided that the trade marts mentioned in Article II. of that Convention have been effectively opened for three years, and that in the meantime the Tibetan authorities have faithfully complied in all respects with the terms of the said Convention of 1904. It is clearly understood that if the occupa tion of the Chumbi Valley by the British forces has, for any reason, not been terminated at the time anticipated in the above Declaration, the British and Russian Governments will enter upon a friendly exchange of views on this subject.
The present Convention shall be ratified, and the ratifications exchanged at St. Petersburg as soon as possible.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Convention and affixed thereto their seals.
Done in duplicate at St. Petersburg, the 18th (31st) August, 1907.
(L.s.) (L.S.)
A. NICOLSON. ISWOLSKY.
St. Petersburg, August 18th (31st), 1907.
M. le Ministre,-With reference to the Arrangement regarding Tibet, signed to- day, I have the honour to make the following Declaration to your Excellency :--
"His Britannic Majesty's Government think it desirable, so far as they are concerned, not to allow, unless by a previous agreement with the Russian Government for a period of three years from the date of the present communication, the entry into Tibet of any scientific mission whatever, on condition that a like assurance is given on the part of the Imperial Russian Government.
"His Britannic Majesty's Government propose, moreover, to approach the Chinese Government with a view to induce them to accept a similiar obligation for a corresponding period; the Russian Government will, as a matter of course, take similar action.
"At the expiration of the term of three years above mentioned His Britannic Majesty's Government will, if necessary, consult with the Russian Government as to the desirability of any ulterior measures with regard to scientific expeditions to Tibet."
I avail, etc,
A. NICOLSON.
St. Petersburg, August 18th (81st), 1907.
M. l'Ambassadeur,-In reply to your Excellency's note of even date, I have the honour to declare that the Imperial Russian Government think it desirable, so far as they are concerned, not to allow, unless by a previous agreement with the British Government, for a period of three years from the date of the present communication, the entry into Tibet of any scientific mission whatever.
Like the British Government, the Imperial Government propose to approach the Chinese Government with a view to induce them to accept a similar obligation for a corresponding period.
It is understood that at the expiration of the term of three years the two Governments will, if necessary, consult with each other as to the desirability of any ulterior measures with regard to scientific expeditions to Tibet.
I have, etc.,
ISWOLSKY.
FRANCE
TREATY OF PEACE, FRIENDSHIP, COMMERCE, AND
NAVIGATION BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
SIGNED, IN THE FRENCH AND CHINESE LANGUAGES, AT TIENISIN, 27TH JUNE, 1858
Ratifications Exchanged at Peking, 25th October, 1860
His Majesty the Emperor of the French and His Majesty the Emperor of China, being desirous to put an end to the existing misunderstanding between the two Empires, and wishing to re-establish and improve the relations of friendship, com- merce, and navigation between the two powers, have resolved to conclude a new Treaty based on the common interest of the two countries, and for that purpose have named as their plenipotentiaries, that is to say :----
His Majesty the Emperor of the French, Barou Gros, Grand Officer of the Legiou of Honour, Grand Cross of the Order of the Saviour of Greece, Commander of the Order of the Conception of Portugal, &c., &c., &c.
And His Majesty the Emperor of China, Kweiliang, Imperial High Commis- sioner of the Ta-Tsing Dynasty, Grand Minister of the East Palace, Director-General of the Council of Justice, &c., &c., &c.; and Hwashana, Imperial High Commissioner of the Ta-Tsing Dynasty, President of the Board of Finance, General of the Bordered Blue Banner of the Chinese Banner Force, &c., &c., &c.;
Who, having exchanged their full powers, which they have found in good and due form, have agreed upon the following Articles:-
Art. I.-There shall be perpetual peace and friendship between His Majesty the Emperor of the French and His Majesty the Emperor of China, and between the subjects of the two Empires, who shall enjoy equally in the respective states of the high contracting parties full and entire protection for their persons and property,
Art. II.-In order to maintain the peace so happily re-established between the two empires it has been agreed between the high contracting parties that, following in this respect the practice amongst Western nations, the duly accredited diplomatic agents of His Majesty the Emperor of the French of His Majesty the Emperor of China shall have the right of resorting to the capital of the empire when important affairs call them there. It is agreed between the high contracting parties that if any one of the powers having a treaty with China obtains for its diplomatic agents the right of permanently residing at Peking, France shall immediately enjoy the same right.
The diplomatic agents shall reciprocally enjoy, in the place of their residence, the privileges and immunities accorded to them by international law, that is to say, that their persons, their families, their houses, and their correspondence, shall be inviolable, that they may take into their service such employés, couriers, interpreters, servants, &c., &c., as shall be necessary to them.
The expense of every kind occasioned by the diplomatic mission of France in China shall be defrayed by the French Government. The diplomatic agents whom
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it shall please the Emperor of China to accredit to His Majesty the Emperor to the French, shall be received in France with all the honours and prerogatives which the diplomatic agents of other nations accredited to the court of His Majesty the Emperor of the French enjoy.
Art. III. The official communications of the French diplomatic and consular agents with the Chinese authorities shall be written in French, but shall be accom- panied, to facilitate the service, by a Chinese translation, as exact as possible, until such time as the Imperial Government at Peking, having interpreters speaking and writing French correctly, diplomatic correspondence shall be conducted in this language by the French agents and in Chinese by the officers of the Empire. It is agreed that until then, and in case of difference in the interpretation, in reference to the French text and Chinese text of the clauses heretofore agreed upon in the conventions made by common accord, it shall always be the original text and not the translation which shall be held correct. This provision applies to the present Treaty, and in the communications between the authorities of the two countries it shall always be the original text, not the translation, which shall be held correct.
Art. IV. Henceforth the official correspondence between the authorities and the officers of the two countries shall be regulated according to their respective ranks and conditions and upon the basis of the most absolute reciprocity. This correspondence shall take place between the high French officers and high Chinese officers, in the capital or elsewhere, by dispatch or communication; between the French sub- ordinate officers and the high authorities in the provinces, on the part of the former by statement, and on the part of the latter by declaration.
Between the officers of lower rank of the two nations, as above provided, on the footing of a perfect equality.
Merchants and generally all persons not having an official character shall on both sides use the form of representation in all documents addressed to or intended for the notice of the respective authorities.
Whenever a French subject shall have recourse to the Chinese authority, his representation shall first be submitted to the Consul, who, if it appears to him reasonable and properly addressed, shall forward it; if it be otherwise, the Consul shall cause the tenour to be modified or refuse to transmit it. The Chinese, on their part, when they have to address a Consulate, shall follow a similar course towards the Chinese authority, who shall act in the same manner,
Art. V. His Majesty the Emperor of the French may appoint Consuls or Con- sular Agents in the coast and river ports of the Chinese empire named in Article VI. of the present Treaty to conduct the business between the Chinese authorities and French merchants and subjects and to see to the strict observance of the stipulated rules. These officers shall be treated with the consideration and regard which are due to them. Their relations with the authorities of the place of their residence shall be established on the footing of the most perfect equality. If they shall have to complain of the proceedings of the said authorities, they may address the superior authority of the province direct, and shall immediately advise the Minister Plenipo- tentiary of the Emperor thereof.
In case of the absence of the French Consul, captains and merchants shall be at liberty to have recourse to the intervention of the Consul of a friendly power, or, if this be impossible, they shall have recourse to the chief of the Customs, who shall advise as to the means of assuring to the said captains and merchants the benefits of the present Treaty.
Art. VI.-Experience having demonstrated that the opening of new ports to foreign commerce is one of the necessities of the age, it has been agreed that the forts of Kiung-chow and Chao-chow in the province of Kwangtung, Taiwan and Tamsui in the island of Formosa (province of Fohkien), Tang-chow in the pro- vince of Shantung, and Nanking in the province of Kiangsu, shall enjoy the same privileges as Canton, Shanghai, Ningpo, Amoy, and Foochow, With regard to
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Nanking, the French agents in China shall not deliver passports to their nationals for this city until the rebels have been expelled by the Imperial troops.
Art. VIL.--French subjects and their families may establish themselves and trade or pursue their avocations in all security, and without hindrance of any kind in the ports and cities enumerated in the preceding article.
They may travel freely between them if they are provided with passports, but it is expressly forbidden to them to trade elsewhere on the coast in search of clandestine markets, under pain of confiscation of both the ships and goods used in such operations, and this confiscation shall be for the benefit of the Chinese Govern- ment, who, however, before the seizure and confiscation can be legally pronounced, must advise the French Consul at the nearest port.
Art. VIII. French subjects who wish to go to interior towns, or ports not open to foreign vessels, may do so in all security, on the express condition that they are provided with passports written in French and Chinese, legally delivered by the diplomatic agents or consuls of France in China and vised by the Chinese authorities.
In case of the loss of his passport, the French subject who cannot present it when it is legally required of him, shall, if the Chinese authorities of the place refuse him permission to remain a sufficient time to obtain another passport from the Consul, be conducted to the nearest consulate and shall not be maltreated or insulted in any way.
As is stipulated in the former Treaties, French subjects resident or sojourning in the ports open to foreign trade may travel without passports in their immediate neighbourhood and there pursue their occupations as freely as the natives, but they must not pass certain limits which shall be agreed upon between the Consul and the local authority. The French agents in China shall deliver passports to their nationals only for the places where the rebels are not established at the time the passport shall be demanded.
These passports shall be delivered by the French authorities only to persons who offer every desirable guarantee.
Art. IX-All changes made by common consent with one of the signatory powers of the treaties with China on the subject of amelioration of the tariff now in force, or which may hereafter be in force, as also all rights of customs, tonnage, importation, transit, and exportation, shall be immediately applicable to French trade and mer- chants by the mere fact of their being placed in execution.
Art. X.-Any French subject who, conformably to the stipulations of Article VI. of the present Treaty, shall arrive at one of the ports open to foreign trade, may, whatever may be the length of his sojourn, rent houses and warehouses for the disposal of his merchandise, or lease land and himself build houses and warehouses. French subjects may, in the same manner, establish churches, hospitals, religious houses, schools, and cemeteries. To this end the local authority, after having agreed with the Consul, shall designate the quarters most suitable for the residence of the French and the sites on which the above mentioned structures may have place.
The terms of rents and leases shall be freely discussed between the interested parties and regulated, as far as possible, according to the average local rates.
The Chinese authorities shall prevent their nationals from exacting or requiring exorbitant prices, and the Consul on his side shall see that French subjects use no violence or constraint to force the consent of the proprietors.
It is further under- stood that the number of houses and the extent of the ground to be assigned to French subjects in the ports open to foreign trade shall not be limited, and that they shall be determined according to the needs and convenience of the parties. If Chinese subjects injure or destroy French churches or cemeteries, the guilty parties shall be punished with all the rigour of the laws of the country.
Art. XI. French subjects in the ports open to foreign trade may freely engage, on the terms agreed upon between the parties, or by the sole intervention of the Consul, compradores, interpreters, clerks, workmen, watermen, and servants. They shall also have the right of engaging teachers in order to learn to speak and write
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the Chinese language and any other language or dialect used in the empire. as also to secure their aid in scientific or literary works. Equally they may teach to Chinese subjects their own or foreign languages and sell without obstacle French books or themselves purchase Chinese books of all descriptions.
Art. XII.-Property of any kind appertaining to French subjects in the Chinese empire shall be considered by the Chinese inviolable and shall always be respected by them. The Chinese authorities shall not, under any circumstances whatever, place French vessels under embargo nor put them under requisition for any service, be it public or private.
Art. XIII-The Christian religion having for its essential object the leading of men to virtue, the members of all Christian communities shall enjoy entire security for their persons and property and the free exercise of their religion, and efficient protection shall be given the missionaries who travel peaceably in the interior furnished with passports as provided for in Article VIII.
No hindrance shall be offered by the authorities of the Chinese Empire to the recognised right of every individual in China to embrace, if he so pleases, Chris. tianity, and to follow its practices without being liable to any punishment therefor.
All that has previously been written, proclaimed, or published in China by order of the Government against the Christian religion is completely abrogated and remains null and void in all provinces of the Empire.
Art. XIV. No privileged commercial society shall henceforward be established in China, and the same shall apply to any organised coalition having for its end the exercise of a monopoly of trade. In case of the contravention of the present article the Chinese Authorities, on the representations of the Consul or Consular Agent, shall advise as to the means of dissolving such associations, of which they are also bound to prevent the existence by the preceding prohibitions, so as to remove all that may stand in the way of free competition.
Art. XV. When a French vessel arrives in the waters of one of the ports open to foreign trade she shall be at liberty to engage any pilot to take her immediately into the port, and, in the same manner, when, having discharged all legal charges she shall be ready to put to sea, she shall not be refused pilots to enable her to leave the port without hindrance or delay.
Any individual who wishes to exercise the profession of pilot for French vessels may, on the presentation of three certificates from captains of ships, be commissioned by the French Consul in the same manner as shall be in use with other nations.
The remuneration payable to pilots shall be equitably regulated for each parti cular port by the Consul or Consular Agent, who shall fix it having regard to the distance and circumstances of the navigation.
Art. XVI.After the pilot has brought a French trading ship into the port, the Superintendent of Customs shall depute one or two officers to guard the ship and prevent fraud. These officers may, according to their convenience, remain in their own boat or stay on board the ship.
Their pay, food, and expenses shall be a charge on the Chinese Customs, and they shall not demand any fee or remuneration whatever from the captain or consignee. Every contravention of this provision shall entail a punishment proportionate to the amount exacted, which also shall be returned in full,
Art. XVII Within the twenty-four hours following the arrival of a French merchant vessel in one of the ports open to foreign trade, the captain, if he be not unavoidably prevented, and in his default the supercargo or consignee, shall report at the French Consulate and place in the hands of the Consul the ship's papers the bills of lading, and the manifest. Within the twenty-four hours next following the Consul shall send to the Superintendent of Customs a detailed note indicating the name of the vessel, the articles, the tonnage, and the nature of the cargo; if, in consequence of the negligence of the captain this cannot be accomplished within the forty-eight hours following the arrival of the vessel, the captain shall be liable to a penalty of 50 Dollars for each day's delay, to the profit of the Chinese Government, but the said penalty shall in no case exceed the sum of 200 Dollars,
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Immediately after the reception of the consular note the Superintendent of Customs shall give a permit to open hatches. If the captain, before having received the said permit, shall have opened hatches and commenced to discharge, he may be fined 500 Dollars, and the goods discharged may be seized, the whole to the profit of the Chinese Government.
Art. XVIII.-French captains and merchants may hire whatever boats and lighters they please for the transport of goods and passengers, and the sum to be paid for such boats shall be settled between the parties themselves, without the intervention of the Chinese authority, and consequently without its guarantee in case of accident, fraud, or disappearance of the said boats. The number of these boats shall not be limited, nor shall a monopoly in respect either of the boats or of the carriage of merchandise by porters be granted to any one.
Art. XIX. Whenever a French merchant shall have merchandise to load or discharge he shall first remit a detailed note of it to the Consul or Consular Agent, who will immediately charge a recognised interpreter to the Consulate to communicate it to the Superintendent of Customs. The latter shall at once deliver a permit for shipping or landing the goods. He will then proceed to the verification of the goods in such manner that there shall be no chance of loss to any party,
The French merchant must cause himself to be represented (if he does not prefer to attend himself) at the place of the verification by a person possessing the requisite knowledge to protect his interest at the time when the verification for the liquida- tion of the dues is made; otherwise any after claim will be null and of no effect.
With respect to goods subject to an ad valorem duty, if the merchant cannot agree with the Chinese officers as to their value, then each party shall call in two or three merchants to examine the goods, and the highest price which shall be offered by any of them shall be assumed as the value of the said goods.
Duties shall be charged on the net weight; the tare will therefore be deducted. If the French merchant cannot agree with the Chinese officer on the amount of tare, each party shall choose a certain number of chests and bales from among the goods respecting which there is a dispute; these shall be first weighed gross, then tared and the average tare of these shall be taken as the tare for all the others.
If during the course of verification any difficulty arises which cannot be settled, the French merchant may claim the intervention of the Consul, who will immediately bring the subject of dispute to the notice of the Superintendent of Customs, and both will endeavour to arrive at an amicable arrangement, but the claim must be made within twenty-four hours; otherwise it will not receive attention. So long as the result of the dispute remains pending, the Superintendent of Customs shall not enter the matter in his books, thus leaving every latitude for the examination and solution of the difficulty.
On goods imported which have sustained damage a reduction of duties propor- tionate to their depreciation shall be made. This shall be equitably determined, and if necessary, in the manner above stipulated for the fixing of ad valorem duties.
Art. XX.-Any vessel having entered one of the ports of China, and which has not yet used the permit to open hatches mentioned in Article XIX., may within two days of arrival quit that port and proceed to another without having to pay either tonnage dues or customs duties, but will discharge them ultimately in the port where sale of the goods is effected.
Art. XXI. It is established by common consent that import duties shall be discharged by the captains or French merchants after the landing and verification of the goods. Export duties shall in the same manner be paid on the shipment of the goods. When all tonnage dues and Customs duties shall have been paid in full by a French vessel the Superintendent of Customs shall give a general quittance, on the exhibition of which the Consul shall return the ship's papers to the captain and permit him to depart on his voyage. The Superintendent of Customs shall name one or several banks, which shall be authorised to receive the sum due by French merchants on account of the Government, and the receipts of these banks for all payments which have been made to them shall be considered as receipts of the
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Chinese Government. These payments may be made in ingots or foreign money, the relative value of which to sycee shall be determined by agreement between the Consul or Consular Agent and the Superintendent of Customs in the different ports, according to time, place, and circumstances.
Art. XXII.-*After the expiration of the two days named in Art. XX., and before proceeding to discharge her cargo, every vessel shall pay tonnage-dues accord- ing to the following scale :-Vessels of one hundred and fifty tous and upwards at the rate of four mace per ton; vessels of less than one hundred and fifty tons mea- surement at the rate of one mace per ton.
Any vessel clearing from any of the open ports of China for any other of the open ports, or trading between China and such ports in Cochin-China as belong to France, or any port in Japan, shall be entitled, on application of the master, to a special certificate from the Superintendent of Customs, on exhibition of which the said vessel shall be exempted from all further payment of tonnage-dues in any open port of China for a period of four months, to be reckoned from the date of her port-clearance; but after the expiration of four months she shall be required to pay tonnage-dues again.
Small French vessels and boats of every class, whether with or without sails, shall be reckoned as coming within the category of vessels of one hundred and fifty tous and under, and shall pay tonnage-dues at the rate of one mace per ton once in every four months.
Native craft chartered by French merchants shall in like manner pay tonnage. dues once in every four months.
Art. XXIII.-All French goods, after having discharged the Customs duties according to the tariff in one of the ports of China, may be transported into the interior without being subjected to any further charge except the transit dues according to the amended scale now in force, which dues shall not be augmented in the future.
If the Chinese Customs Agents, contrary to the tenor of the present Treaty, make illegal exactions or levy higher dues, they shall be punished according to the laws of the empire.
Art. XXIV.--Any French vessel entered at one of the ports open to foreign trade and wishing to discharge only a part of its goods there, shall pay Customs dues only for the part discharged; it may transport the remainder of its cargo to another port and sell it there. The duty shall then be paid.
French subjects having paid in one port the duties on their goods, wishing to re-export them and send them for sale to another port, shall notify the Consul or Consular Agent. The latter shall inform the Superintendent of Customs, who, after having verified the identity of the goods and the perfect integrity of the packages, shall send to the claimants a declaration attesting that the duties on the said goods have been paid. Provided with this declaration, the French merchants on their arrival at the other port shall only have to present it through the medium of the Consul or Superintendent of Customs, who will deliver for this part of the cargo, without deduction or charge, a permit for discharge free of duty; but if the autho- rities discover fraud or anything contraband amongst the goods re-exported, these shall be, after verification, confiscated to the profit of the Chinese Government.
Art. XXV.-Transhipment of goods shall take place only by special permission and in case of urgency; if it be indispensable to effect this operation, the Consul shall be referred to, who will deliver a certificate, on view of which the transhipment shall be authorised by the Superintendent of Customs. The latter may always delegate an employé of his administration to be present.
Every unauthorised transhipment, except in case of peril by delay, will entail the confiscation, to the profit of the Chinese Government, of the whole of the goods illicitly transhipped.
Art. XXVI. In each of the ports open to foreign trade the superintendent of Customs shall receive for himself, and shall deposit at the French Consulate, legal
* Substituted for the original article in 1965.
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scales for goods and silver, the weights and measures agreeing exactly with the weights and measures in use at the Canton Custom-house, and bearing a stamp and seal certifying this authority. These scales shall be the base of all liquidations of duties and of all payments to be made to the Chinese Government. They shall be referred to in case of dispute as to the weights and measures of goods, and the decree shall be according to the results they show.
Art. XXVII.-Import and export duties levied in China on French commerce shall be regulated according to the tariff annexed to the present Treaty under the seal and signature of the respective plenipotentiaries. This tariff may be revised every seven years in order to be in harmony with the changes brought about by time in the value of the products of the soil or industry of the two empires.
By the payment of these duties, the amount of which it is expressly provided shall not be increased nor augmented by any kind of charge or surtax whatever, French subjects shall be free to import into China, from French or foreign ports, and equally to export from China, to any destination, all goods which shall not be, at the date of the signing of the present Treaty and according to the classification of the annexed tariff, the object of a special prohibition or of a special monopoly. The Chinese Government renouncing therefore the right of augmenting the number of articles reputed contraband or subjects of a monopoly, any modification of the tariff shall be made only after an understanding has been come to with the French Government and with its full and entire consent.
With regard to the tariff, as well as every stipulation introduced or to be in- troduced in the existing Treaties, or those which may hereafter be concluded, it remains well and duly established that merchants and in general all French subjects in China shall always have the same rights and be treated in the same way as the most favoured nation.
Art. XXVIII. The publication of the regular tariff doing away henceforth with all pretext for smuggling, it is not to be presumed that any act of this nature may be committed by French vessels in the ports of China. If it should be otherwise, all contraband goods introduced into these ports by French vessels or merchants whatever their value or nature, as also all prohibited goods fraudulently discharged, shall be seized by the local authority and confiscated to the profit of the Chinese Government. Further, the latter may, if it see fit, interdict the re-entry to China of the vessel taken in contravention and compel it to leave immediately after the settle- ment of its accounts.
If any foreign vessel fraudulently makes use of the French flag the French Government shall take the necessary measures for the repression of this abuse.
Art. XXIX.--His Majesty the Emperor of the French may station a vessel of war in any principal port of the empire where its presence may be considered necessary to maintain good order and discipline amongst the crews of merchant vessels and to facilitate the exercise of the Consular authority; all necessary measures shall be taken to provide that the presence of these vessels of war shall entail no inconvenience, and their commanders shall receive orders to cause to be executed the provisions of Article XXXIII. in respect of the communications with the land and the policing of the crews.
Vessels of war shall be subject to no duty.
Art. XXX.-Every French vessel of war cruising for the protection of commeres shall be received as a friend and treated as such in all the ports of China which it shall enter. These vessels may there procure the divers articles of refitting and victualling of which they shall have need, and, if they have suffered damage, may repair there and purchase the materials necessary for such repair, the whole without the least opposition.
The same shall apply to French trading ships which in consequence of great damage or any other reason may be compelled to seek refuge in any port whatsoever of China.
If a vessel be wrecked on the coast of China, the nearest Chinese authority, on being informed of the occurrence, shall immediately send assistance to the crew provide for their present necessities, and take the measures immediately necessary,
130
TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
for the salvage of the ship and the preservation of the cargo. The whole shall then be brought to the knowledge of the nearest Consul or Consular Agent, in order that the latter, in concert with the competent authority, may provide means for the relief of the crew and the salvage of the debris of the ship and cargo.
Art. XXXI.-Should China be at war with another power, this circumstance shall not in any way interfere with the free trade of France with China or with the opposing nation. French vessels may always, except in the case of effective blockade, sail without obstacle from the ports of the one to the ports of the other, trade in the ordinary manner, and import and export every kind of merchandise not prohibited.
Art. XXXII.--Should sailors or other persons desert from French ships-of-war, or leave French trading vessels, the Chinese authority, on the requisition of the Consul, or failing the Consul that of the captain, shall at once use every means to discover and restore the aforesaid fugitives into the hands of one or the other of them. In the same manner, if Chinese deserters or persons accused of any crime take refuge in French houses or on board of French vessels, the local authority shall address the Consul, who, on proof of the guilt of the accused, shall immediately take the measures necessary for their extradition. Each party shall carefully avoid concealment and connivance.
Art. XXXIII.-When sailors come on shore they shall be under special dis- ciplinary regulations framed by the Consul and communicated to the local authority, in order to prevent as far as possible all occasion of quarrel between French sailors and the people of the country.
Art. XXXIV. In case of French trading vessels being attacked or pillaged by pirates within Chinese waters, the civil and military authorities of the nearest place, upon learning of the occurrence, shall actively pursue the authors of the crime and shall neglect nothing to secure their arrest and punishment, according to law. The pirated goods, in whatever place or state they may be found, shall be placed in the hands of the Consul, who shall restore them to the owners. If the criminals cannot be seized, or the whole of the stolen property cannot be recovered, the Chinese officials shall suffer the penalty inflicted by the law in such circumstances, but they shall not be held pecuniarily responsible.
Art. XXXV.-When a French subject shall have a complaint to make or claim to bring against a Chinese, he shall first state his case to the Cousul, who, after having examined the affair, will endeavour to arrange it amicably. In the same manner, when a Chinese has to complain of a French subject, the Consul shall attentively hear his claim and endeavour to bring about an amicable arrangement. But if in either case this be impossible, the Consul shall invoke the assistance of a competent Chinese official, and these two, after having coujointly examined the affair shall decide it equitably.
Art. XXXVI.-If hereafter French subjects suffer damage, or are subjected to any insult or vexation by Chinese subjects, the latter shall be pursued by the local authority, who shall take the necessary measures for the defence and pro- tection of French subjects; if illdoers or any vagrant part of the population com mence to pillage, destroy, or burn the houses or warehouses of French subjects or any other of their establishments, the same authority, either on the requisition of the Consul or of its own motion, shall send as speedily as possible an armed force to disperse the riot and to arrest the criminals, and shall deliver the latter up to the severity of the law; the whole without prejudice of the claims of the French subjects to be indemnified for proved losses.
Art. XXXVII. If Chinese become, in future, indebted to French captains or merchants and involve them in loss by fraud or in any other manner, the latter shall no longer avail themselves of the combination which ́existed under the former state of things; they may address themselves only through the medium of their Consul to the local authority, who shall neglect nothing after having examined the affair to compel the defaulters to satisfy their engagements according to the laws of the country, But, if the debtor cannot be found, if he be dead, or bankrupt, and is not able to pay, the French merchants cannot claim against the Chinese authority.
TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
131
In case of fraud or non-payment on the part of French merchants, the Consul shall, in the same manner, afford every assistance to the claimants, but neither he nor his Government shall in any manner be held responsible.
Art. XXXVIII-If unfortunately any fight or quarrel occurs between French and Chinese subjects, as also if during the course of such quarrel one or more persons be killed or wounded, by firearms or otherwise, the Chinese shall be arrested by the Chinese authority, who will be responsible, if the charge be proved, for their punish- ment according to the laws of the country. With regard to the French, they shall be arrested at the instance of the Consul, who shall take the necessary measures that they may be dealt with in the ordinary course of French law in accordance with the forms and practice which shall be afterwards decided by the French Government.
The same course shall be observed in all similar circumstances not enumerated in the present convention, the principle being that for the repression of crimes and offences committed by them in China French subjects shall be dealt with according to the laws of France.
Art. XXXIX. Disputes or differences arising between French subjects in China shall, equally, be settled by the French authorities. It is also stipulated that the Chinese authorities shall not in any mauner interfere in any dispute between French subjects and other foreigners. In the same way they shall not exercise any authority over French vessels; these are responsible only to the French authorities and the captain.
Art. XL. If the Government of His Majesty the Emperor of the French shall consider it desirable to modify any of the clauses of the present Treaty it shall be at liberty to open negotiations to this effect with the Chinese Government after an interval of ten years from the date of the exchange of the ratifications. It is also understood that no obligation not expressed in the present convention shall be imposed on the Consuls or Consular Agents, nor on their nationals, but, as is stipulated, French subjects shall enjoy all the rights, privileges, immunities, and guarantees whatsoever which have been or shall be accorded by the Chinese Govern- ment to other powers.
Art. XLI. His Majesty the Emperor of the French, wishing to give to His Majesty the Emperor of China a proof of his friendly sentiments, agrees to stipulate in separate articles, having the same force and effect as if they were inserted in the present Treaty, the arrangements come to between the two governments on the matters antecedent to the events at Canton and the expense caused by them to the Government of His Majesty the Emperor of the French.
Art. XLII. The ratifications of the present Treaty of friendship, commerce, and navigation shall be exchanged at Peking within one year after the date of signature or sooner if possible.
After the exchange of ratifications, the Treaty shall be brought to the knowledge of all the superior authorities of the Empire in the provinces and in the capital, in order that its publication may be well established.
In token whereof the respective plenipotentiaries have signed the present Treaty and affixed their seals thereto.
Done at Tientsin, in four copies, this twenty-seventh day of June, in the year of grace one thousand eight hundred and fifty-eight, corresponding to the seventeenth day of the fifth moon of the eighth year of Hien Fung.
(Signed)
[L.8.]
BARON GROS.
[L.S.]
KWEI-LIANG.
J
[L.S.]
HWASHANA.
CONVENTION BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
SIGNED AT PEKING, 25TH OCTOBER, 1860
His Majesty the Emperor of the French and His Majesty the Emperor of China being desirous to put an end to the difference which has arisen between the two Empires, and to re-establish and assure for ever the relations of peace and amity which before existed and which regrettable events have interrupted, have named as their respective Plenipotentiaries :-
His Majesty the Emperor of the French, Sieur Jean Baptiste Louis, Baron Gros, Senator of the Empire, Ambassador and High Commissioner of France in China, Grand Officer of the Imperial Order of the Legion of Honour, Kuight Grand Cross of several Orders, etc., etc., etc.;
And His Majesty the Emperor of China, Prince Kung, a member of the Imperial Family and High Commissioner;
Who, baving exchanged their full powers, found in good and due form, have agreed upon the following articles-
Art. I. His Majesty the Emperor of China bas regarded with pain the conduct of the Chinese military authorities at the mouth of the Tientsin river, in the month of June last year, when the Ministers Plenipotentiary of France and England arrived there on their way to Peking to exchange the ratifications of the Treaties of Tientsin.
Art. II. When the Ambassador, the High Commissioner of His Majesty the Emperor of the French, shall be in Peking for the purpose of exchanging the ratifica- tions of the Treaty of Tientsin, he shall be treated during his stay in the capital with the honours due to his rank, and all possible facilities shall be given him by the Chinese Authorities in order that he may without obstacle fulfil the high mission confided to him.
Art. III.-The treaty signed at Tientsin on the 27th June, 1858, shall be faith- fully placed in execution in all its clauses immediately after the exchange of the ratifications referred to in the preceding article, subject to the modifications introduced by the present Convention.
Art. IV. Article IV. of the Secret Treaty of Tientsin, by which His Majesty the Emperor of China undertook to pay to the French Government an indemnity of two million Taels, is aunulled and replaced by the present Article, which increases the amount of the indemnity to eight million Taels.
It is agreed that the sum already paid by the Canton Customs on account of the sum of two million Taels stipulated by the Treaty of Tientsin shall be considered as baving been paid in advance and on account of the eight million Taels referred to in the present article.
The provisions of the article of the Secret Treaty of Tientsin as to the mode of payment of the two million Taels are annulled. Payment of the remainder of the sum of eight million taels to be paid by the Chinese Government as provided by the present Convention shall be made in quarterly instalments consisting of one-fifth of the gross Customs revenues at the ports open to foreign trade, the first term commencing on the 1st October of the present year, and finishing on the 31st December following. This sum, specially reserved for the payment of the indemnity due to France, shall be paid into the hands of the Minister for France or of his delegates in Mexican dollars or in bar silver at the rate of the day of payment.
A sum of five hundred thousand Taels shall, however, be paid on account in advance at one time, and at Tientsin, on the 30th November next, or sooner if the Chinese Government judges it convenient.
A Mixed Commission, appointed by the Minister of France and by the Chinese Authorities, shall determine the rules to be followed in effecting the payment of the whole of the indemnity, the verification of the amount, the giving of receipts, and in short fulfilling all the formalities required in such case.
CONVENTION BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
133
Art. V.-The sum of eight million Teals is allowed to the French Government to liquidate the expenses of its armament against China, as also for the indemnification of French subjects and protégés of France who sustained loss by the burning of the factories at Canton, and also to compensate the Catholic missionaries who have suffered in their persons or property. The French Government will divide this sum between the parties interested, after their claims shall have been legally established, in satisfaction of such claims, and it is understood between the contracting parties that one million of Taels shall be appropriated to the indemnification of French subjects or protégés of France for the losses they have sustained or the treatment to which they have been subjected, and that the remaining seven million Taels shall be applied to the liquidation of the expenses occasioned by the war.
Art. VI.-In conformity with the Imperial edict issued on the 20th March, 1856, by the August Emperor Tao Kwang, the religious and charitable establishments which have been confiscated during the persecutions of the Christians shall be restored to their proprietors through the Minister of France in China, to whom the Imperial Government will deliver them, with the cemeteries and edifices appertaining to them. Art. VII. The town and port of Tientsin, in the province of Pechili, shall be opered to foreign trade on the same conditions as the other towns and ports of the Empire where such trade is permitted, and this from the date of the signature of the present Convention, which shall be obligatory on the two nations without its being necessary to exchange ratifications, and which shall have the same force as if it were inserted word for word in the Treaty of Tientsin.
The French troops now occupying this town shall, on the payment of the five bundred thousand taels provided by Article IV. of the present Convention, evacuate it and proceed to occupy Taku and the north-east coast of Shantung, whence they shall retire on the same conditions as govern the evacuation of the other points occupied on the shores of the Empire. The Commanders-in-Chief of the French force. shall, however, have the right to winter their troops of all arms at Tientsin, if they judge it convenient, and to withdraw them only when the indemnities due by the Chinese Government shall have been entirely paid, unless the Commanders-in-Chief shall think it convenient to withdraw them before that time.
Art. VIII.--It is further agreed that when the present Convention shall have been signed and the ratifications of the Treaty of Tientsin exchanged, the French forces which occupy Chusan shall evacuate that island, and that the forces before Peking shall retire to Tientsin, to Taku, to the north coast of Shantung, or to the town of Canton, and that in all these places or in any of them the French Government may, if it thinks fit, leave troops until such time as the total sum of eight million taels shall have been fully paid.
Art. IX. It is agreed between the high contracting parties that when the ratifications of the Treaty of Tientsin shall have been exchanged an Imperial edict shall order the high authorities of all the provinces to permit any Chinese who wishes to go to countries beyond the sea to establish himself there or to seek his fortune, to embark himself and his family, if he so wishes, on French ships in the ports of the empire open to foreign trade. It is also agreed, in the interest of the emigrants, to ensure their entire freedom of action and to safeguard their rights, that the competent Chinese authorities shall confer with the Minister of France in China for the making of regulations to assure for these engagements, always voluntary, the guarantees of morality and security which ought to govern them.
Art. X.-It is well understood between the contracting parties that the tonnage dues which by error were fixed in the French Treaty of Tientsin at five mace per ton for vessels of 150 tons and over, and which in the Treaties with England and the United States signed in 1858 were fixed at four mace only, shall not exceed this same sum of four mace, and this without the invocation of the last paragraph of Art. XXXII., of the Treaty of Tientsin, which gives to France the formal right to claim the same treatment as the most favoured nation.
The present Convention of Peace has been made at Peking, in four copies, on the 25th October, 1860, and has been signed by the respective plenipotentiaries.
TREATY OF PEACE, FRIENDSHIP, AND COMMERCE
BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
SIGNED AT TIENTSIN, 9TH JUNE, 1885
The President of the French Republic and His Majesty the Emperor of China each animated by an equal desire to bring to an end the difficulties which have given rise to their simultaneous intervention in the affairs of Annam, and wishing to re-establish and improve the relations of friendship and commerce which previously existed between France and China, have resolved to conclude a new Treaty to further the common interest of both nations on the basis of the preliminary Convention signed at Tientsin on the 11th May, 1884, and ratified by an Imperial decree of the 18th April, 1885.
For that purpose the two bigh contracting parties have appointed as their pleni- potentiaries the following, that is to say :-
The President of the French Republic, M. Jules Patenôtre, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary for France in China, Officer of the Legion of Honour, Grand Cross of the Swedish Order of the Pole Star, &c., &c.
And His Majesty the Emperor of China, Li Hung-chang, Imperial Commissioner, Senior Grand Secretary of State, Grand Honorary Preceptor of the Heir Presumptive; Superintendent of Trade for the Northern Ports, Governor-General of the Province of Chihli, of the First degree of the Third Order of Nobility, with the title of Sou-yi
Assisted by Hsi Chen, Imperial Commissioner, Member of the Tsung-li Yamen' President of the Board of Punishments, Administrator of the Treasury at the Ministry of Finance, Director of Schools for the Education of Hereditary Officers of the Left Wing of the Yellow Bordered Banner;
And Teng Chaug-su, Imperial Commissioner, Member of the Tsung-li Yameu, Director of the Board of Ceremonies;
Who having communicated their full powers, which have been found in good and due form, have agreed upon the following Articles:-
Art. I. Frauce engages to re-establish and maintain order in those provinces of Annam which border upon the Chinese empire. For this purpose she will take the necessary measures to disperse or expel the bands of pirates and vagabonds who endanger the public safety, and to prevent their collecting together again. Nevertheless the French troops shall not, under any circumstances, cross the frontier which separates Tonkin from China, which frontier France promises both to respect herself and to guarantee against any aggression whatsoever.
On her part China undertakes to disperse or expel such bands as may take refuge in her provinces bordering on Tonkin and to disperse those which it may be attempted to form there for the purpose of causing disturbances amongst the populations placed under the protection of France; and, in consideration of the guarantees which have been given as to the security of the frontier, she likewise engages not to send troops into Tonkin.
The high contracting parties will fix, by a special convention, the conditions under which the extradition of malefactors between China and Annam shall be carried out. The Chinese, whether colonists or disbanded soldiers, who reside peaceably in Annam, supporting themselves by agriculture, industry, or trade, and whose conduct shall give no cause of complaint, shall enjoy the same security for their persons and property as French protégés.
TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
135
Art. II China, being resolved to do nothing which may imperil the work of pacification undertaken by France, engages to respect, both in the present and in the future, the Treaties, Conventions, and Arrangements concluded directly between France and Aunam, or which may hereafter he concluded.
As regards the relations between China and Annam, it is understood they shall be of such a nature as shall in no way injure the dignity of the Chinese empire or give rise to any violation of the present Treaty.
Art, III.-Within a period of six months from the signature of the present Treaty commissioners appointed by the high contracting parties shall proceed to the spot in order to define the frontier between China and Tonkin. They shall place landmarks wherever necessary to render the line of demarcation clear. In those cases where they may not be able to agree as to the location of these landmarks or on such rectifications of detail as it may be desirable to make, in the interest of the two nations, in the existing frontier of Tonkin, they shall refer the difficulty to their respective Governments.
J
Art. IV. When the frontier shall have been agreed upon, French or French protégés and foreign residents of Tonkin who may wish to cross it in order to enter China shall not be allowed to do so unless they shall have previously provided them- selves with passports issued by the Chinese frontier authorities on the requisition of the French authorities. For Chinese subjects an authorisation given by the Imperial frontier authorities shall be sufficient.
Chinese subjects wishing to proceed from China to Tonkin by the land route shall be obliged to provide themselves with regular passports, issued by the French authorities on the requisition of the Imperial authorities.
Art. V.-Import and export trade shall be permitted to French or French- protected traders and to Chinese traders across the land frontier between China and Tonkin. It shall, however, be carried on through certain spots which shall be settled later, and both the selection and number of which shall correspond with the direction and importance of the traffic between the two countries.
In this respect the Regulations in force in the interior of the Chinese Empire shall be taken into account.
In any case, two of the said spots shall be marked out on the Chinese frontier, the one above Lao-kai, the other beyond Lang-son. French traders shall be at liberty to settle there under the same conditions, and with the same advantages, as in the ports open to foreign trade. The Government of His Majesty the Emperor of China shall establish Custom houses there, and the Government of the French Republic shall be at liberty to maintain Consuls there whose powers and privileges shall be identical with those of Agents of the same rank in the open ports.
On his part, His Majesty the Emperor of China shall be at liberty, with the concurrence of the French Government, to appoint Consuls in the principal towns of Tonkin.
Such
Art. VI.A special code of Regulations, annexed to the present Treaty, shall define the conditions under which trade shall be carried on by land between Tonkin and the Chinese provinces of Yunnan, of Kwang-si, and of Kwang-tung. Regulations shall be drawn up by Commissioners, who shall be appointed by the High Contracting Parties, within three months from the signature of the present Treaty.
All goods dealt with by such trade shall be subject, on import and export between Tonkin and the provinces of Yünnau and Kwang-si, to duties lower than those laid down by the prensent Tariff for foreign trade. The reduced Tariff shall not, however, be applied to goods transported by way of the land frontier between Tonkin and Kwang-tung, and shall not be enforced within the ports already open by Treaty.
Trade in arms, engines, supplies, and munitions of war of any kind whatsoever shall be subject to the Laws and Regulations issued by each of the Contracting States within its own territory.
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TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA
The export and import of opium shall be governed by special arrangements to be inserted in the above-mentioned code of Regulations.
Trade by sea between China and Annam shall likewise be dealt with by a separate code of Regulations. In the meanwhile, the present practice shall remain unaltered.
Art. VII. With a view to develop under the most advantageous conditions the relations of commerce and of good neighbourship, which it is the object of the present Treaty to re-establish between France and China, the Government of the Republic shall construct roads in Tonkin, and shall encourage the construction of railways there.
When China, on her part, shall have decided to construct railways, it is agreed that she shall have recourse to French industry, and the Government of the Republic shall afford every facility for procuring in France the staff that may be required. It is, moreover, understood that this clause shall not be looked upon as constituting au exclusive privilege in favour of France.
Art. VIII. The commercial stipulations of the present Treaty and the Regula tions to be agreed upon shall be liable to revision after an interval of ten complete years from the date of the exchange of the ratifications of the present Treaty. But in case six months before it expires neither one nor other of the High Contracting Parties shall have expressed a wish to proceed to a revision, the commercial stipula tions shall remain in force for a fresh period of ten years, and so further in like
manner.
Art. IX. As soon as the present Treaty shall have been signed, the French forces shall receive orders to retire from Kelung and to cease search, &c., on the high seas. Within one month from the signature of the present Treaty the Island of Formosa and Pescadores shall be entirely evacuated by the French troops.
Art. X.-All stipulations of former Treaties, Agreements, and Conventions between France and China, which are not modified by the present Treaty, remaia in full force.
The present Treaty shall be ratified at once by His Majesty the Emperor of China, and after it shall have been ratified by the President of the French Republic, the exchange of ratifications shall take place at Peking with the least possible delay.
Done in quadruplicate at Tientsin, this ninth day of June, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-five, corresponding to the twenty-seventh day of the fourth moon of the eleventh year of Kwang-Hsu.
(Signed)
[L.S.]
PATENOTRE.
*
[4.8.1
HSI CHEN.
17
[L.S.]
LI HUNG-CHANG.
[L.S.]
TENG CHANG-SU.
TRADE REGULATIONS FOR THE TONKIN FRONTIER
JOINTLY DETERMINED ON BY FRANCE AND CHINA
SIGNED AT PEKING, 25TH APRIL, 1886
[Translated from the French Text]
Whereas in Article VI. of the Treaty between the President of the French Re- public and His Majesty the Emperor of China, signed the 9th day of June, 1885, it is stated that "Regulations for the conduct of overland trade between Tonkin and the Chinese provinces of Yunnan, Kwang-si, and Kwang-tung shall be jointly discussed and concluded by Commissioners appointed by the two Powers, and will form a supple- ment to the present Treaty"; and whereas in Article X. of that Agreement it is set forth that "provisions of former Treaties and Regulations agreed to by France and China, except in so far as they are modified by the present agreement, will continue to retain their original validity," the two High Contracting Parties have for this purpose named as their plenipotentiaries, that is to say:-
The President of the French Republic, G. Cogordan, Minister Plenipotentiary of France to China, Officer of the Legion of Honour, Knight of the Order of the Crown of Italy, &c., &r., together with E. Bruwaert, Consul of the first class, Assistant Commissioner for Treaty negotiations, Knight of the Order of Gustav of Sweden, and of the Order of Leopold of Belgium;
And His Majesty the Emperor of China, Li, Grand Preceptor of the Heir Ap- parent, Grand Secretary of State, Superintendent of Trade for the Northern Seaboard, Joint Commissioner of Admiralty, Governor of Chilli, and a member of the first degree of the third order of the hereditary nobility, with the title of Sou-yi;
Who after having communicated to each other their respective full powers, and found them to be in due form, have concluded the following Articles:-
Art, I.-In accordance with the terms of Article V. of the Treaty of the 19th June, 1885, the high contracting parties agree that for the present two places shall be opened to trade, one to the north of Langson and the other above Lan-kai. China will establish Custom-houses there, and France shall have the right to appoint Consuls, who shall enjoy all rights and privileges conceded in China to the Consuls of the most favoured nation.
The work of the Commission charged with the delimitation of the two countries not being completed at the time of the signature of the present Convention, the place to be opened to trade north of Langsou shall be selected and determined in the course of the present year by arrangement between the Imperial Government and the representative of France at Peking. As to the place to be opened to trade above Lao-kai, this will also be determined by common accord when the frontier between the two countries shall have been defined.
Art. II.-The Imperial Government may appoint Consuls at Hanoi and at Haiphong. Chinese Consuls may also be sent later on to other large towns in Tonkin by arrangement with the French Government.
The agents shall be treated in the same manner and have the same rights and privileges as the Consuls of the most favoured nation in France. They shall maintain official relations with the French authorities charged with the Protectorate.
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TRADE REGULATIONS FOR THE TONKIN FRONTIER
Art. III.-It is agreed, on the one side and the other, that in the places where Consuls are appointed the respective authorities will facilitate the installation of these agents in suitable residences.
Frenchmen may establish themselves in the places opened to trade on the frontier of China under the conditions set forth in the Articles VII., X., XI., XII., and others of the Treaty of the 27th June, 1858.
Annamites shall enjoy in these places the same privileged treatment.
Art, IV. Chinese shall have the right of possessing land, erecting buildings, opening commercial houses, and having warehouses throughout Annam.
They shall receive for their persons, their families, and their goods the same protection as the most favoured European nation, and, like the latter, may not be made the object of any ill-treatment. The official and private correspondence and telegrams of Chinese officials and merchants shall be freely transmitted through the French postal and telegraphic administrations.
Frenchmen will receive from China the same privileged treatment.
Art. V. Frenchmen, French protégés, and foreigners residing in Tonkin may cross the frontiers and enter China on condition of being furnished with passports. These passports will be given by the Chinese authorities at the frontier, on the requisition of the French authorities, who will ask for them only for respectable persons; they will be surrendered to be cancelled on the holder's return.
In the case
of those who have to pass any place occupied by aborigines or savages, it will be mentioned in the passport that there are no Chinese officials there who can protect them.
Chinese who wish to come from China to Toukin by land must in the same way be furnished with passports granted by the French authorities on the requisition of the Chinese authorities, who will ask for them only on behalf of respectable
persons,
The passports so granted on the one side or the other shall serve only as titles to travel and shall not be considered as certificates of exemption from taxes for the transport of merchandise.
Chinese authorities on Chinese soil and French authorities in Tonkin shall have the right to arrest persons who have crossed the frontier without passports and send them back to their respective authorities to be tried and punished if necessary.
Chinese residing in Anuam may return from Tonkin to China on simply obtaining from the Imperial authorities a pass permitting them to cross the frontier.
Frenchmen and other persons established in the open places on the frontier may travel without passports to a distance of 50 li (578 metres to the li) around such places.
Art. VI.--Merchandise imported into the places opened to trade on the frontier of China by French merchants and French protégés may, after payment of the import duties, be conveyed to the interior markets of China under the conditions fixed by Rule VII. annexed to the Treaty of the 27th June, 1858, and by the general rules of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs with regard to import transit passes.
When foreign merchandise is imported into these places a declaration shall be made at the Custom House of the nature and quantity of the merchandise, as well as of the name of the person by whom it is accompanied. The Customs authorities will proceed to verification, and will collect the duty according to the general tariff of the Imperial Maritime Customs, diminished by one-fifth. Articles not mentioned in the tariff will remain subject to the duty of 5 per cent. ad valorem. Until this duty has been paid the goods may not be taken out of the warehouses to be sent away and sold.
A merchant wishing to send foreign merchandise into the interior shall make a fresh declaration at the Custom House, and pay, without reduction, the transit dues fixed by the general rules of the Chinese Maritime Customs.
After this payment the Customs will deliver a transit pass which will enable the carriers to go to the localities mentioned in the pass for the purpose of disposing of
the said merchandise.
TRADE REGULATIONS FOR THE TONKIN FRONTIER
139
Under these conditions, no new duties will be levied at the interior barriers or lekin stations.
Merchandise for which transit passes have not been obtained will be liable to all the barrier and lekin duties imposed upon indigenous products in the interior of the country.
Art. VII-Merchandise bought by Frenchmen and persons under French protection in the interior markets of China may be brought into the open places on the frontier, for the purpose of being from thence exported to Tonkin, under the conditions fixed by Rule VII. annexed to the Treaty of the 27th June, 1858, with regard to the transit of merchandise for export.
When Chinese merchandise for export arrives at these places, declaration shall be made at the Custom-house as to the nature and quantity of the merchandise, as well as the name of the person accompanying it.
The Customs authorities will proceed to verification.
Such of this merchandise as shall have been bought in the interior by a merchant furnished with a transit pass, and which consequently has not paid any lekin or barrier duty, shall in the first place pay the transit duty fixed by the general tariff of the Chinese Maritime Customs.
It shall then pay the export duty diminished by one-third. Articles not named in the tariff will remain subject to the duty of 5 per cent. ad valorem.
After payment of these duties the merchandise will be allowed to pass free, and to be sent beyond the frontier.
The merchant who, not being furnished with a transit pass, has bought goods in the interior, shall pay the duties levied at the barriers and lekin stations; receipts shall be delivered to him, and on arriving at the Custom-house he shall be exempted from payment of the transit dues ou presentation of these receipts.
French merchants and persons under French protection importing or exporting merchandise through the Customs offices on the frontiers of Yunnan and Kwangsi, and Chinese merchants importing or exporting merchandise to or from Tonkin, will not have to pay any toll on their carriages or beasts of burden. On the navigable water-courses on the frontier, vessels may, on the one side and the other, be subjected to the payment of tonnage-dues, conformably to the rules of the Maritime Customs of the two countries.
As regards the provisions of the present article and the preceding one, it is agreed by the high contracting parties that if a new customs tariff should be established by common accord between China and a third Power, for trade by land on the south-western frontiers of the Chinese Empire, France shall obtain the application of it.
Art. VIII-Foreign merchandise which, not having been sold within a period of thirty-six months after having paid the import duty at one of the Chinese frontier Customs stations, is forwarded to the other frontier Customs station, shall be examined at the first of these stations, and if the wrappings are found intact, and if nothing has been disturbed or changed, a certificate of exemption for the amount of the first duty collected will be given. The bearer of this certificate will deliver it to the other frontier station, in payment of the new duty which he will have to pay. The Customs may in like manner give bonds which will be available for payment of duties at the Custom-house by which they are issued any time within three years. Money will never be returned,
If the same merchandise is re-despatched to one of the open ports of China, it will there, conformably to the general rules of the Chinese Maritime Customs, be subjected to payment of the import duties, and the certificates or bonds given at the frontier Customs shall not there be made use of. Neither will it be allowed to present there, in payment of duties, the quittances delivered by the frontier Customs on the first payment. As to transit dues, conformably to the rules in force at the open ports, when once they have been paid, bonds or exemption certificates will never be given in respect of these.
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TRADE REGULATIONS FOR THE TONKIN FRONTIER
Art. IX.-Chinese merchandise which, after having paid transit and export dues at one of the frontier Customs stations, may be sent to the other frontier Customs station to be sold, shall be subjected on its arrival at the second station only to a payment-called a re-importation duty-of one-half the export duty already collected. The merchandise conformably to the rules established in the open ports may not be transported into the interior by foreign merchants.
If this Chinese merchandise be transported to one of the open ports of China, it will be assimilated to foreign merchandise, and shall pay a new import duty in full, conformably to the general tariff of the Imperial Maritime Customs.
This merchandise will be allowed to pay transit duty on being sent into the in- terior. Chinese merchandise imported from a Chinese seaport into an Annamite port in order to be transported to the land frontier and then to re-enter Chinese territory, will be treated as foreign merchandise and will pay the local import dues. This merchandise will be allowed to pay the transit duty on being sent into the interior.
Art. X. Declarations to the Chinese Customs must be made within thirty-six hours of the arrival of the goods under a penalty of Tls. 50 for each day's delay; but the fine shall not exceed Tls. 200. An inexact declaration of the quantity of the goods, if it is proved that it has been made with the intention of evading payment of the duties, will entail upon the merchant confiscation of his goods. Goods not provided with a permit from the chief of the Customs, which are clandestinely introduced by by-ways, and unpacked or sold, or which are intentionally smuggled, shall be entirely confiscated. In every case of false declaration or attempt to deceive the Customs as regards the quality or the real origin or real destination of goods for which transit passes have been applied the goods shall be liable to con- fiscation. The penalties shall be adjudged according to the conditions and proce dure fixed by the Rules of 31st May, 1868. In all cases where confiscation shall have been declared, the merchant shall be at liberty to recover his goods on payment of a sum equivalent to their value, to be duly settled by arrangement with the Chinese authorities. The Chinese authorities shall have every liberty to devise measures to be taken in China, along the frontier, to prevent smuggling.
Merchandise descending or ascending navigable rivers in French, Annamite, or Chinese vessels will not necessarily have to be landed at the frontier, unless there is an appearance of fraud, or a divergence between the nature of the cargo and the declaration of the manifest. The Customs will only send on board the said vessels agents to visit them.
Art. XI.-Produces of Chinese origin imported into Tonkin by the land frontier shall pay the import duty of the Franco-Annamite tariff. They will pay no export duty on leaving Tonkin. The Imperial Government will be notified of the new tariff which France will establish in Tonkin. If taxes of excise, of consumption, or of guarantee be established in Tonkin on any articles of indigenous production, similar Chinese productions will be subjected, on importation, to equivalent taxes.
Art. XII. Chinese merchandise transported across Tonkin from one of the two frontier Customs stations to the other, or to an Annamite port to be from thence exported to China, shall be subjected to a specific transit duty which shall not exceed two per cent. of the value. At the point where it leaves Chinese territory this merchandise will be examined by the French Customs authorities on the frontier, who will specify its nature, quantity, and destination in a certificate which shall be produced whenever required by the French authorities during its transport across Tonkin, as well as at the port of shipment.
In order to guarantee the Franco-Annamite Customs against any possible fraud, such Chinese produce, on entering Tonkin, shall pay the import duty.
A transit permit will accompany the goods to the place of leaving the country whether this be the port of transhipment or the land frontier, and the sum paid by the proprietor of the merchandise will, after deducting the transit dues, be then restored to him in exchange for the receipt delivered to him by the Tonkin Customs.
Every false declaration or act evidently intended to deceive the French admini- stration as to the quality, quantity, real origin, or real destination of merchandise
TRADE REGULATIONS FOR THE TONKIN FRONTIER
141
on which the special treatment applicable to Chinese products traversing Tonkin in transit is asked, will entail the confiscation of such merchandise. In every case where confiscation has been declared, the merchant shall be free to recover his gooda on payment of a sum equivalent to their value, which shall be duly determined by an arrangement with the French authorities.
The same rules and the same transit duty will be applicable in Annam to Chinese merchandise despatched from a Chinese port to an Annamite port in order to get to the Chinese frontier Customs by crossing Tonkin.
Art. XIII. The following articles, that is to say, gold and silver ingots, foreign money, flour, Indian meal, sago, biscuits, preserved meats and vegetables, cheese, butter, confectionery, foreign clothing, jewellery, plated ware, perfumery, soaps of all kinds, charcoal, firewood, candles (foreign), tobacco, wine, beer, spirits, household stores, ship's stores, personal baggage, stationery, carpeting, cutlery, drugs, foreigu medicines, and glassware, shall be verified by the Chinese Customs on their entry and clearance; if they are really of foreign origin and intended for the personal use of foreigners, and if they arrive in moderate quantity, a duty exemption certificate will be given which will pass them free at the frontier. If these articles are withheld from declaration or the formality of an exemption certificate, their clandestine intro- duction will render them subject to the same penalty as smuggled goods.
With the exception of gold, silver, money, and luggage, which will remain exempt from duty, the above-mentioned articles destined for the personal use of foreigners and imported in moderate quantity, will pay, when they are transported into the interior of China a duty of 2 per cent, on their value.
The Franco-Aunamite frontier Customs shall collect no duty on the following articles of personal use which Chinese carry with them, either on entering or leaving. Tonkin, that is to say, money, luggage, clothes, women's head ornaments, paper, hair pencils, Chinese ink, furniture, or food, or on articles ordered by the Chinese Consuls in Toukin for their personal consumption.
Art. XIV. The high contracting parties agree to prohibit trade in and trans- port of opium of whatsoever origin by the land frontier between Tonkin on the one side and Yunnan, Kwang-si, and Kwangtung on the other side.
Art. XV. The export of rice and of cereals from China is forbidden. The import of these articles shall be free of duty.
The import of the following articles into China is forbidden :-Gunpowder, pro- jectiles, rifles and guns, saltpetre, sulphur, lead, spelter, arms, salt, and immoral publications.
In case of contravention these articles shall be entirely confiscated.
If the Chinese authorities have arms or munitions bought or if merchants receive express authority to buy them, the importation will be permitted under the special surveillance of the Chinese Customs. The Chinese authorities may, further- more, by arrangement with the French Consuls, obtain for the arms and munitions which they wish to have conveyed to China through Tonkin exemption from all the Franco-Annamite duties.
The introduction into Tonkin of arms, munitions of war, and immoral publica- tions is also prohibited.
Art. XVI.-Chinese residing in Annam shall be placed under the same condi tions, with regard to criminal, fiscal, or other jurisdiction, as the subjects of the most favoured nation. Law-suits which may arise in China, in the open markets on the frontier, between Chinese subjects and Frenchmen or Annamites shall be decided in & Mixed Court by Chinese and French officers.
With reference to crimes or offences committed by Frenchmen or persons under French protection in China, in the places opened to trade, the procedure shall be in conformity with the stipulations of Articles XXXIII. and XXXIV. of the treaty of the 27th June, 1858.
Art. XVII. If in the places opened to trade on the froutier of China, Chinese deserters or persons accused of crimes against the Chinese law shall take refuge in the houses or on board the vessels of Frenchmen or persons under French protection
142
CONVENTION BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA, 1887
the local authority shall apply to the Consul, who, on proof of the guilt of the accused, shall immediately take the necessary measures in order that they may be given up and delivered to the regular course of the law.
Chinese guilty or accused of crimes or offences who seek refuge in Aunam shall, on the request of the Chinese authorities and on proof of their guilt, be sought for, arrested, and extradited in all cases where the subjects of the countries enjoying the most liberal treatment in the matter of extradition might be extradited from France. Frenchmen guilty or accused of crimes or offences, who seek refuge in China, shall, at the request of the French authorities and on proof of their guilt, be arrested and delivered up to the said authorities to be tried according to the regular process
of law.
On both sides all concealment and connivance shall be avoided.
Art. XVIII. In any difficulty not provided for in the preceding provisions, recourse shall be had to the rules of the Maritime Customs, which, in conformity with existing Treaties, are now applied in the open towns or ports.
In case these rules are insufficient the representatives of the two countries shall refer the matter to their respective Governments.
In accordance with the terms of Article VIII. of the treaty of the 9th June, 1885, the present stipulations may be revised ten years after the exchange of the ratifications.
Art. XIX. The present Convention of Trade, after having been ratified by the Governments, shall be promulgated in France, in China, and in Anuam.
The exchange of the ratifications shall take place at Peking within one year from
the date of the signature of the Convention, or earlier if possible.
Done at Tientsin, in four copies, the 25th April, 1886, corresponding to the 22nd day of the third moon of the twelfth year of Kwang Hsu,
(Signed)
[L.S.]
G. COGORDAN,
[L.S.]
E. BRUWAERT.
+
[L.S.]
LI HUNG-CHANG.
CONVENTION BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA, 1887
[Translated from the Chinese Text]
His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China and the President of the French Republic, desiring to strengthen the commercial relations between the two countries and also to ratify and give effect to the Treaty signed at Tientsin on the 25th April, 1886, have appointed Plenipotentiaries to take the necessary steps thereto. HIM. the Emperor of China has specially appointed H.I.H. Prince Ching and H.E. Sun Yu-wen, member of the Tsung-li Yamén and Vice-President of the Board of Works. The President of the Republic has appointed His Excellency Constans, Deputy, ex-Minister of the Interior, and Minister Plenipotentiary in China. Who, having exchanged their full powers and established their authenticity in due form, have agreed on the following Articles :-
Art. I.-Such articles of the Treaty signed at Tientsiu as are not affected by this Convention shall on the exchange of the ratifications be put in force at once.
Art. II. Whereas it was agreed by the Treaty of 1886 that Lungchow in Kwangsi and Mengtzu in Yunnan should be opened to trade, and whereas Manghao, which lies between Paasheng and Mengtzu, is in the direct road between the two places by water, it is agreed that this also should be opened to trade on the same conditions as the other ports, and that a deputy of the Consul at Mengtzu shall be allowed to reside there.
CONVENTION BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA, 1887
143
Art. III.-In order to develop the trade between China and Tonkin as rapidly as possible the tariff rules laid down in Articles VI. and VII. of the Treaty of 1886 are temporarily altered, and it is agreed that foreign goods imported to Yunnan and Kwangsi from Tonkin shall pay 70 per cent. of the import duties collected by the Customs at the Coast Ports in China, and that produce exported from China to Ton- kin, shall pay 60 per cent, of the export duties in force at the Treaty Ports.
Art. IV. Chinese produce which has paid import duties under Art. XI. of the Treaty of 1886, and is transported through Tonkin to a port of shipment in Cochin- China, shall, if exported thence to any other place than China, pay export duties accord- ing to the Franco-Annamite tariff.
Art. V. Trade in Chinese native opium by land is allowed on payment of an export duty of Tls. 20 per picul, but French merchants or persons under French pro- tection may only purchase it at Lungchow, Meugtzu, and Manghao, but no more than Tls. 20 per picul shall be exacted from the Chinese merchants as inland dues. When opium is sold the seller shall give the buyer a receipt showing that the inland dues. have been paid, which the exporter will hand to the Customs when paying export duty. It is agreed that opium re-imported to China by the Coast Ports cannot claim the privileges accorded other re-imports of goods of native origin.
Art, VI. French and Tonkinese vessels other than men-of-war and vessels carrying troops and Government stores plying on the Sougkat and Caobang Rivers between Langshan and Caobang shall pay a tonnage due of 5 candareens per ton at Lungchow, but all goods on board shall pass free. Goods may be imported to China by the Songkat and Caobang Rivers or overland by the Government road, but until the Chinese Government establishes Custom-houses on the frontier goods taken overland must not be sold at Lungchow until they have paid duty there.
Art. VII.-It is agreed that should China enter into treaties with regard to com- mercial relations on her southern and south-western frontiers all privileges accorded by her to the most favoured nation are at once without further formality accorded to France.
Art. VIII. The above Articles having been agreed to and translated into Chinese, H.I.H. the Prince on behalf of China and H.E. the Minister on behalf of France have signed duplicate copies and affixed their seals hereto.
Art. IX. When the ratifications of this Convention and of the Treaty of 1886 shall have been exchanged they shall be put in force as if they were one Treaty.
Art. X. The ratifications of the Convention shall be exchanged at Peking when the assent of His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China and of His Excellency the President of the French Republic shall have been signified.
Signed at Peking on the 26th June, 1887.
E. CONSTANS.
PRINCE CHING.
SUN YU-WEN,
ADDITIONAL CONVENTION BETWEEN FRANCE AND
CHINA
SIGNED AT PEKING, 20TH JUNE, 1895
Art. I. It is agreed, to assure the policing of the frontier, that the French Government will have the right of maintaining an agent of the Consular order at Tonghing opposite Moukay on the frontier of Kwantung. A further regulation will determine the conditions under which these should be exercised in accordance with the French and Chinese authorities and the communal police of the Sino- Annamite frontier.
Art. II. Article 2 of the Convention, signed at Peking, June 26th, 1887, is modified and completed as follows:-It is agreed between the high contracting parties that the town of Lungchow in Kwangsi and that of Mengtse in Yunnan are open to French-Annamite commerce. It is intended besides that the pot open to commerce on the river route of Laokay to Mengtse will no longer be Manhao, but Hokow, and that the French Government have the right of maintaining at Hokow an agent under the Consul at Mengtse, at the same time the Chinese Government can maintain a Customs agent.
Art. III.It is agreed that the town of Szemao in Yunnan shall be open to French-Annamite commerce, like Lungchow and Mêngtse, and that the French Government will have the right as in the other open port of maintaining a Consul at the same time that the Chinese Government can maintain a Customs agent. The local authorities will employ themselves to facilitate the installation of the French Consul in the proper residence. Frenchmen and protected French subjects may establish themselves at Szemao under conditions of the Articles 7, 10, 11, 12, and others of the Treaty of June 27th, 1858; also by Article 3 of the Convention of April 25th, 1886. Goods destined for China can be transported by the rivers, particularly the Loso and the Mekong as well as by land routes, and particularly by the Mandarin-road, which leads either from Mongle or Ipang to Szemao and Puerh, the duties which these goods will be subject to being paid at Szemao.
in
Art. IV. Article 9 of the Commercial Convention of April 25th, 1886, is modified as follows:-(1) Chinese goods in transit from one of the other four towns open to commerce on the frontier, Lungchow, Mengtse, Szemao, and Hokow, passing by Aunam, will pay on leaving the reduced duties of four-tenths. A special certificate will be delivered stating the payment of this duty, and destined to accompany the goods. When they have come to another town they shall be exempt from payment and import duty. (2) Chinese goods which shall be exported from the four above-named localities and transported to Chinese ports, maritime or fluvial, open to commerce, shall be freed on leaving the frontier by payment of the reduced export duty of four-tenths. A special certificate will be delivered. stating the payment of this duty, and destined to accompany the goods. When they shall arrive at one of the ports, maritime or fluvial, open to commerce, they shall be freed the half-duty of re-importation in conformity with the general rule for all such goods in the maritime or fluvial ports open to commerce, (3) Chinese goods which shall be transported from Chinese ports, maritime or fluvial, open to commerce, by way of Aunam, towards the four above-named localities, shall be freed on leaving of all duty. A special certificate will be delivered, stating the payment of this duty, and destined to accompany the goods. When they shall have arrived at one of the frontier Customs they shall be freed on entry by half duty of re-importation based on the reduction of four-tenths. (4) The Chinese goods above mentioned, accompanied by the special certificate
I
ADDITIONAL CONVENTION BETWEEN FRANCE AND CHINA, 1895 145
above mentioned, shall be, before passing the export Customs, or after passing Customs re-importation, submitted to the regulations governing native Chinese goods.
Art. V.It is understood that China, for the exploitation of its mines in the provinces of Yunnan, Kwangsi, and Kwangtung, will address itself, in the first instance, to French commerce and engineers, the exploitation remaining otherwise subject to the rules and the edicts by the Imperial Government which affects national industry. It is understood that railways already in existence or projected in Annam can, after mutual agreement, and under conditions to be defined, be prolonged on Chinese territory.
Art. VI. Article 2 of the Telegraphic Convention between France and China, signed at Chefoo, December 1, 1888, is completed as follows:-D.-A union shall be established between the secondary prefecture of Szemao and Annam by two stations which shall be Szemao in China and Muang Halin in Annam, midway between Laichow and Luang Prabang. The tariff shall be fixed in conformity with Article 6 of the Telegraphic Convention of Chefoo.
Art. VII.-It is agreed that the commercial stipulations contained in the present Convention being of a special nature, and the result of mutual concessions deter- mined by the necessities of the relations between Lungchow, Hokow, Mengtse, Szemao, and Annam, the advantages which result therefrom cannot be invoked by the subjects and protected subjects of the two high contracting parties, but on these points as well as on the fluvial and land ways here determined of the frontier.
Art. VIII. The present stipulations shall be put in force as if they were in- serted in the text of the additional convention of June 26th, 1887.
Art. IX.---The terms of former Treaties, Agreements, and Conventious between France and China not modified by the present Treaty remain in full force. The pre- sent complementary Convention shall be ratified immediately by His Majesty the Emperor of China, and after it has been ratified by the President of the French Republic the exchange of ratifications shall be made at Peking with the least delay possible.
Done at Peking in four copies, June twentieth, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five, corresponding to the twenty-eighth day of the fifth moon of the twenty- first year Kwang Hsu.
(Signed)
A. GERARD.
CHING.
**
SIU.
H
GERMANY
TREATY BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND CHINA
SIGNED IN THE GERMAN, FRENCH AND CHINESE LANGUAGES AT TIENTSIN,
2ND SEPTEMBER, 1861
Ratifications Exchanged at Shanghai, 14th January, 1863
Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation between the States of the German Customs Union, the Grand Duchies of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg- Strelitz, and the free Hanseatic Towns of Lubeck, Bremen, and Hamburg on the one part, and China on the other part.
His Majesty the King of Prussia, for himself, as also on behalf of the other members of the German Zollverein, that is to say: The Crown of Bavaria, the Crown of Saxony, the Crown of Hanover, the Crown of Wurtemburg, the Grand Duchy of Baden, the Electorate of Hesse, the Grand Duchy of Hesse, the Duchy of Brunswick, the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg, the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg, the Grand Duchy of Saxony, the Duchies of Saxe Meiningen, Saxe Altenburg, Saxe Coburg Gotha, the Duchy of Nassau, the Principalities Waldeck and Pyrmont, the Duchies Anhalt, Dessau, Koetben, and Anhalt Bernburg, the Principalities Lippe, the Principalities Schwarzburg Sondershausen and Schwarzburg Rudolfstadt, Reuss the Elder Line, and Reuss the Younger Line, the Free City of Frankfort, the Grand Baillewick Meisenheim of the Landgravate Hesse, the Baillewick Hamburg of the Landgravate Hesse, also the Grand Duchies Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and the Senates of the Hanseatic Towns, Lubeck, Bremen, and Hamburg, of the one part, and His Majesty the Emperor of China of the other part being sincerely desirous to establish friendly relations between the said States and China, have resolved to confirm the same by a Treaty of Friendship and Commerce, mutually advantageous to the subjects of both High Contracting Parties, and for that purpose have named for their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:
His Majesty the King of Prussia, Frederick Albert Count of Eulenburg, Chamberlain, His Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Knight of the Red Eagle, Knight of St. John, &c., &c., &c.; and His Majesty the Emperor of China, Cheong-meen, a member of the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs at Peking, Director-General of Public Supplies, and Imperial Commissioner: and Chong-hee, Honorary Under-Secretary of State, Superintendent of the three Northern Ports, and Deputy Imperial Commissioner, who after having communicated to each other their respective full powers, and found the same in good and due form, have agreed upon the following articles:
Art. I.There shall be perpetual peace and unchanging friendship between the contracting States. The subjects of both States shall enjoy full protection of person and property.
Art. II-His Majesty the King of Prussia may, if he see fit, accredit a diplomatic agent to the Court of Peking, and His Majesty the Emperor of China may, in like manner, if he see fit, nominate a diplomatic agent to the Court of Berlin.
The diplomatic agent nominated by His Majesty the King of Prussia shall also represent the other contracting German States, who shall not be permitted to he represented at the Court of Peking by diplomatic agents of their own. His Majesty the Emperor of China bereby agrees that the diplomatic agent, so appointed by His Majesty the King of Prussia, may, with his family and establishment, permanently reside at the capital, or may visit it occasionally, at the option of the Prussian Government.
Art. III. The diplomatic agents of Prussia and China shall, at their respective residences, enjoy the privileges and immunities accorded to them by international law.
TREATY BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND CHINA
147
Their persons, their families, their residence, and their correspondence shall be held inviolable. They shall be at liberty to select and appoint their own officers, couriers, interpreters, servants, and attendants without any kind of molestation.
All expenses occasioned by the diplomatic missions shall be borne by the respective Governments.
The Chinese Government agrees to assist His Prussian Majesty's diplomatic agent, upon his arrival at the capital, in selecting and renting a suitable house and other buildings.
Art. IV. The contracting German States may appoint a Consul-General, and for each port or city opened to foreign commerce a Consul, Vice-Consul, or Consular Agent, as their interests may require.
These officers shall be treated with due respect by the Chinese authorities, and enjoy the same privileges and immunities as the Consular officers of the most favoured.
nations.
In the event of the absence of a German Consular Officer, the subjects of the contracting German States shall be at liberty to apply to the Consul of a friendly Power, or in case of need to the Superintendent of Customs, who shall use all efforts to secure to them the privileges of this Treaty.
Art. V. All official communications addressed by the diplomatic agents of His Majesty the King of Prussia, or by the Consular officers of the contracting German States, to the Chinese authorities, shall be written in German. At present and until otherwise agreed, they shall be accompanied by a Chinese translation; but it is hereby mutually agreed that, in the event of a difference of meaning appearing between the German and Chinese texts, the German Government shall be guided by the sense expressed in the German text.
In like manner shall all official communications addressed by the Chinese autho- rities to the Ambassadors of Prussia, or to the Consuls of the contracting German States, be written in Chinese, and the Chinese authorities shall be guided by this text. It is further agreed that the translations may not be adduced as a proof in deciding difference.
In order to avoid future differences, and in consideration that all diplomatists of Europe are acquainted with the French language, the present Treaty has been executed in the German, the Chinese, and the French languages. All these versions have the same sense and signification; but the French text shall be considered the original text of the Treaty, and shall decide wherever the German and Chinese versions differ.
Art. VI. The subjects of the contracting German States may, with their families, reside, frequent, and carry on trade or industry in the ports, cities, and towns of Canton, Swatow or Chao-chow, Amoy, Foochow, Ningpo, Shanghai, Tangehow or Chefoo, Tientsin, Newchwang, Chinkiang, Kiukiang; Hankow, Kiungchow (Hainan), and at Taiwan and Tamsui in the Island of Formosa. They are permitted to proceed to and from these places with their vessels and merchandise, and within these localities to purchase, rent, or let houses or land, build, or open churches, churhyards, and hospitals.
Art. VII. Merchant vessels belonging to any of the contracting German States may not enter other ports than those declared open in this Treaty. They must not, contrary to law, enter other ports, or carry on illicit trade along the coast. All vessels detected in violating this stipulation shall, together with their cargo, be subject to confiscation by the Chinese Government.
Art. VIII-Subjects of the contracting German States may make excursions in the neighbourhood of the open ports to a distance of one hundred li, and for a time not exceeding five days.
Those desirous of proceeding into the interior of the country must be provided with a passport, issued by their respective Diplomatic or Consular authorities, and countersigned by the local Chinese authorities. These passports must upon demand 1 exhibited.
The Chinese authorities shall be at liberty to detain merchants and travellers, subjects of any of the contracting German States, who may have lost their passports
148
TREATY BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND CHINA
until they have procured new ones, or to convey them to the next Consulate, but they shall not be permitted to subject them to ill-usage or allow them to be ill-used.
It is, however, distinctly understood that no passport may be given to places at present occupied by the rebels until peace has been restored.
Art. IX. The subjects of the contracting German States shall be permitted to engage compradores, interpreters, writers, workmen, sailors, and servants from any part of China, upon a remuneration agreed to by both parties, as also to hire boats for the transport of persons and merchandise. They shall also be permitted to engage Chinese for acquiring the Chinese language or dialects, or to instruct them in foreign languages. There shall be no restriction in the purchasing of German or Chinese books
Art. X. Persons professing or teaching the Christian religion shall enjoy full protection of their persons and property, and be allowed free exercise of their religion.
Art. XI. Any merchant-vessel of any of the contracting German States arriving at any of the open ports shall be at liberty to engage the services of a pilot to take her to port. In like manner, after she has discharged all legal dues and duties, and is ready to take her departure, she shall be permitted to select a pilot to conduct her out of port.
Art. XII. Whenever a vessel belonging to any of the contracting German States has entered a harbour, the Superintendent of Customs may, if he see fit, depute one or more Customs officers to guard the ship, and to see that no merchandise is smuggled. These officers shall live in a boat of their own, or stay on board the ship, as may best suit their convenience. Their salaries, food, and expenses shall be defrayed by the Chinese Customs authorities, and they shall not be entitled to any fees whatever from the master or consignee. Every violation of this regulation shall be punished proportionally to the amount exacted, which shall be returned in full.
Art. XIII. Within twenty-four (24) hours after the arrival of the ship, the master, unless he be prevented by lawful causes, or in his stead the supercargo or the consignee, shall lodge in the bands of the Consul the ship's papers and copy of the manifest.
Within a further period of twenty-four (24) hours the Consul will report to the Superintendent of Customs the name of the ship, the number of the crew, her registered tonnage, and the nature of the cargo.
If owing to neglect on the part of the master the above rule be not complied with within forty-eight hours after the ship's arrival he shall be liable to a fine of fifty (50) Dollars for every day's delay; the total amount of penalty, however, shall not exceed two hundred (200) Dollars.
Immediately after the receipt of the report, the Superintendent of Customs shall issue a permit to open hatches.
If the master shall open hatches and begin to discharge the cargo without said permit, he shall be liable to a fine not exceeding five hundred (500) dollars, and the goods so discharged without permit shall be liable to confiscation.
―
Art. XIV. Whenever a merchant, a subject of any of the contracting German States, has cargo to land or ship, he must apply to the Superintendent of Customs for a special permit. Merchandise landed or shipped without such permit shall be subject to forfeiture.
Art. XV. The subjects of the contracting German States shall pay duties on all goods imported or exported by them at the ports open to foreign trade according to the tariff appended to this Treaty; but in no case shall they be taxed with higher duties than, at present or in future, subjects of the most favoured nations are liable to. The commercial stipulations appended to this Treaty shall constitute an integral part of the same, and shall therefore be considered binding upon both the high con- tracting parties.
Art. XVI. With respect to articles subject to an ad valorem duty, if the German merchant cannot agree with the Chinese officers as to their value, then each party shall call in two or three merchants to examine and appraise the goods, and the highest price at which any of these merchants may declare himself willing to purchase them shall be assumed as the value of the goods.
TREATY BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND CHINA
149
Art. XVII. Duties shall be charged upon the net weight of each article; tare therefore to be deducted. If the German merchant cannot agree with the Chinese officers on the exact amount of tare, then each party shall choose from among the goods respecting which there is a difference a certain number of chests or bales, which being first weighted gross, shall afterwards be tared and the tare fixed accord- ingly. The average tare upon these chests or bales shall constitute the tare upon the whole lot of packages.
Art. XVIII. If in the course of verification there arise other points of dispute, which cannot be settled, the German merchant may appeal to his Consul, who will communicate the particulars of the differences of the case to the Superintendent of Customs, and both will endeavour to bring about an amicable arrangement. But the appeal to the Consul must be made within twenty-four hours, or it will not be attended to.
As long as no settlement be come to, the Superintendent of Customs shall not enter the matter at issue in his books, in order that a thorough investigation and the final settlement of the difference be not prejudiced.
Art. XIX. Should imported goods prove to be damaged, a fair reduction of duty shall be allowed, in proportion to their deterioration. If any disputes arise, they shall be settled in the same manner as agreed upon in Art. XVI. of this Treaty having reference to articles which pay duty ad valorem.
Art. XX. Any merchant vessel belonging to one of the contracting German States having entered any of the open ports, and not yet opened hatches, may quit the same within forty-eight hours after her arrival, and proceed to another port, without being subject to the payment of tonnage-dues, duties, or any other fees or charges; but tonnage-dues must be paid after the expiration of the said forty-eight hours.
Art. XXI-Import duties shall be considered payable on the landing of the goods, and duties of export on the shipping of the same. When all tonnage-dues and duties shall have been paid, the Superintendent of Customs shall give a receipt in full (port-clearance), which being produced at the Consulate, the Consular officer shall then return to the captain the ship's papers and permit him to depart on the
voyage.
Art. XXII. The Superintendent of Customs will point out one or more bankers authorized by the Chinese Government to receive the duties on his behalf. The receipts of these bankers shall be looked upon as given by the Chinese Government itself. Payment may be made in bars or in foreign coin, whose relative value to the Chinese Sycee silver shall be fixed by special agreement, according to circumstances, between the Consular Officers and the Superintendent of Customs.
Art. XXIII.-Merchant-vessels belonging to the contracting German States of more than one hundred and fifty tons burden shall be charged four mace per ton; merchant-vessels of one hundred and fifty tons and under shall be charged at the rate of oue mace per ton.
The captain or consignee having paid the tonnage-dues the Superintendent of Customs shall give them a special certificate, on exhibition of which the ship shall be exempted from all further payment of tonnage-dues in any open port of China which the captain may visit for a period of four months, to be reckoned from the date of the port clearance mentioned in Art. XXI.
Boats employed by subjects of the contracting German States in the conveyance of passengers, baggage, letters, articles of provisions, or articles not subject to duties. shall not be liable to tonnage dues. Any boat of this kind, however, conveying merchandise subject to duty, shall come under the category of vessels under one hundred and fifty tons, and pay tonnage-dues at the rate of one mace per register ton.
to
Art. XXIV.-Goods on which duties have been paid in any of the ports open foreign trade, upon being sent into the interior of the country shall not be subject to any but transit duty. The same shall be paid according to the tariff now existing, and may not be raised in future. This also applies to goods sent from the interior of the country to any of the open ports.
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TREATY BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND CHINA
All transit duties on produce brought from the interior to any of the open ports, or importations sent from any of the open ports into the interior of China may be paid once for all.
If any of the Chinese officers violate the stipulations of this article by demanding illegal or higher duties than allowed by law, they shall be punished according to Chinese law.
Art. XXV.-If the master of a merchant vessel belonging to any of the contracting German States, having entered any of the open ports, should wish to land only a portion of his cargo, he shall only pay duties for the portion so landed. He may take the rest of the cargo to another port, pay duties there, and dispose of the
same.
Art. XXVI.-Merchants of any of the contracting German States, who
may have imported merchandise into any of the open ports and paid duty thereon, if they desire to re-export the same, shall be entitled to make application to the Superintendent of Customs, who shall cause examination to be made to satisfy himself of the identity of the goods and of their having remained unchanged.
On such duty-paid goods the Superintendent of Customs shall, on application of the merchant wishing to export them to any other open port, issue a certificate, testifying to the payment of all legal duties thereon.
The Superintendent of Customs of the port to which such goods are brought, shall, upon presentation of said certificate, issue a permit for the discharge and landing of them free of all duty, without any additional exactions whatever. But if, on comparing the goods with the certificate, any fraud on the revenue be detected then the goods shall be subject to confiscation.
But if the goods are to be exported to a foreign port, the Superintendent of Customs of the port from which they are exported shall issue a certificate stating that the merchant who exports the goods has a claim on the Customs equal to the amount of duty paid on the goods. The certificate shall be a valid tender to the Customs in payment of import or export duties.
Art. XXVII. No transhipment from one vessel to another can be made without special permission of the Superintendent of Customs, under pain of confiscation of the goods so transhipped, unless it be proved that there was danger in delaying the transhipment.
Art. XXVIII.-Sets of standard weights and measures, such as are in use at the Canton Custom-house, shall be delivered by the Superintendent of Customs to the Consul at each port open to foreign trade. These measures, weights, and balances shall represent the ruling standard on which all demands and payments of duties are made and in case of any dispute they shall be referred to.
Art. XXIX.-Penalties enforced or confiscations made for violation of this Treaty, or of the appended regulations, shall belong to the Chinese Government.
Art. XXX.-Ships-of-war belonging to the contracting German States cruising about for the protection of trade, or being engaged in the pursuit of pirates, shall be at liberty to visit, without distinction, all ports within the dominions of the Emperor of China. They shall receive every facility for the purchase of provisions, the procuring of water, and for making repairs. The commanders of such ships shall hold intercourse with the Chinese authorities on terms of equality and courtesy, Such ships shall not be liable to payment of duties of any kind.
of
Art. XXXI. Merchant vessels belonging to any of the contracting German States, from injury sustained, or from other causes, compelled to seek a place of refuge, shall be permitted to enter any port within the dominions of the Emperor China without being subject to the payment of tonnage dues or duties on the goods, if only landed for the purpose of making the necessary repairs of the vessel, and remaining under the supervision of the Superintendent of Customs. Should any such vessel be wrecked or stranded on the coast of China, the Chinese authorities shall immediately adopt measures for rescuing the crew and for securing the vessel and cargo. The crew thus saved shall receive friendly treatment, and, if necessary, be furnished with means of conveyance to the nearest Consular station.
shall
TREATY BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND CHINA
151
Art. XXXII-If sailors or other individuals of ships-of-war or merchant vessels belonging to any of the contracting German States desert their ships and take refuge in the dominions of the Emperor of China, the Chinese authorities shall, upon due requisition by the Consular Officer, or by the captain, take the necessary steps for the detention of the deserter, and haud him over to the Consular Officer or to the captain. In like manner, if Chinese descrters or criminals take refuge in the houses or on board ships belonging to subjects of the contracting German States, the local Chinese authorities shall apply to the German Consular Officer, who will take the necessary measures for apprehending the said deserter or criminal, and deliver him up to the Chinese authorities.
Art. XXXIII.-If any vessel belonging to any of the contracting German States, while within Chinese waters, be plundered by pirates, it shall be the duty of the Chinese authorities to use every means to capture and punish the said pirates, to recover the stolen property where and in whatever condition it may be, and to hand the same over to the Consul for restoration to the owner. If the robbers or pirates cannot be apprehended, or the property taken cannot be entirely recovered, the Chinese authorities shall then be punished in accordance with the Chinese law, but they shall not be held pecuniarily responsible.
Art. XXXIV.-If subjects of any of the contracting German States have any occasion to address a communication to the Chinese authorities, they must submit the same to their Consular Officer, determine if the matter be just, and the lan- guage be proper and respectful, in which event he shall transmit the same to the proper authorities, or return the same for alterations. If Chinese subjects have occasion to address a Consul of one of the contracting German States, they must adopt the same course, and submit their communication to the Chinese authorities, who will act in like manner.
Art. XXXV. Any subjects of any of the contracting German States having reason to complain of a Chinese, must first proceed to the Consular Officer and state bis grievance. The Consular Officer, having inquired into the merits of the case, will endeavour to arrange it amicably. In like manner, if a Chinese have reason to complain of a subject of any of the contracting German States, the Consular Officer shall listen to his complaint and endeavour to bring about a friendly settlement. If the dispute, however, is of such a nature that the Consul cannot settle the same amicably, he shall then request the assistance of the Chinese authorities, that they may conjointly examine into the merits of the case, and decide it equitably.
Art. XXXVI.-The Chinese authorities shall at all times afford the fullest protection to the subjects of the contracting German States, especially when they are exposed to insult or violence. In all cases of incendiarism, robbery, or demolition, the local authorities shall at once dispatch an armed force to disperse the mob, to apprehend the guilty, and to punish them with the rigour of the law. Those robbed. or whose property has been demolished shall have a claim upon the despoilers of their property for indemnification, proportionate to the injury sustained.
Art. XXXVII. Whenever a subject of His Majesty the Emperor of China fails to discharge the debts due to a subject of one of the contracting German States, or fraudulently absconds, the Chinese authorities, upon application by the creditor, will do their utmost to effect his arrest and to enforce payment of the debt. In like manuer the authorities of the contracting German States shall do their utmost to enforce the payment of debts of their subjects towards Chinese subjects, and to bring to justice any who fraudulently abscond. But in no case shall either the Chinese Government or the Government of the contracting German States be held responsible for the debts incurred by their respective subjects.
Art. XXXVIII.-Any subject of His Majesty the Emperor of China having committed a crime against a subject of one of the contracting German States, shall be apprehended by the Chinese authorities and punished according to the laws of China. In like manner, if a subject of the contracting German States is guilty of a crime against a subject of His Majesty the Emperor of China, the Consular Officer shall arrest him and punish him according to the laws of the State to which he belongs.
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TREATY BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND CHINA
Art. XXXIX. All questions arising between subjects of the contracting German States in reference to the rights of property or person shall be submitted to the jurisdiction of the authorities of their respective States. In like manner will the Chinese authorities abstain from interfering in differences that may arise between subjects of one of the contracting German States and foreigners.
Art, XL. The contracting parties agree that the German States and their subjects shall fully and equally participate in all privileges, immunities, and ad- vantages that have been, or may be hereafter, granted by His Majesty the Emperor of China to the government or subjects of any other nation. All changes made in favour of any nation in the tariff, in the Customs duties, in tonnage and harbour dues, in import, export, or transit duties, shall as soon as they take effect, imme diately and without a new Treaty, be equally applied to the contracting German States and to their merchants, shipowners, and navigators.
Art. XLI.-If in future the contracting German States desire a modification of any stipulation contained in this Treaty, they shall be at liberty, after the lapse of ten years, dated from the day of the ratification of this Treaty, to open negotiations to that effect. Six mouths before the expiration of the ten years it must be officially notified to the Chinese Government that modifications of the Treaty are desired, and in what these consist, If no such notification is made the Treaty remains in force for another ten years.
Art. XLII.-The present Treaty shall be ratified and the ratifications be exchanged within one year, dated from the day of signature, the exchange of the ratiñcations to take place at Shanghai or Tientsin, at the option of the Prussian Government. Im mediately after the exchange of ratifications has taken place, the Treaty shall be brought to the knowledge of the Chinese authorities, and be promulgated in the capital and throughout the provinces of the Chinese Empire, for the guidance of the authorities. In faith whereof we, the respective Plenipotentiaries of the high contracting powers, have signed and sealed the present Treaty.
Done in four copies, at Tientsin, this second day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-one, corresponding with the Chinese date of the twenty-eighth day of the seventh moon of the eleventh year of Hien Fung.
(Signed)
[L.S.] L.S.
[L.S.]
COUNT EULENBURG, CHONG MEEN. CHONG HEE,
SEPARATE ARTICLE
In addition to a Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation concluded thir day between Prussia, the other states of the German Customs Union, the Grand Duchies of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the Hanseatic towns of Lubeck, Bremen, and Hamburg of the one part, and China of the other part, which Treaty shall take effect after exchange of the ratifications within twelve months from its signature, and which stipulates that His Majesty the King of Prussia may nominate a diplomatic agent at the Court of Peking with a permanent residence at that capital, it has been covenanted between the respective Plenipotentiaries of these States, that, owing to and in consideration of the disturbances now prevailing in China,. His Majesty the King of Prussia shall wait the expiration of five years after the exchange of ratifications of this Treaty before he deputes a diplomatic agent to take his fixed residence at Peking.
In faith whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have hereunto set their signa- tures and affixed their seals.
Done in four copies at Tientsin, this second day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-one, corresponding to the Chinese date of the twenty-eighth day of the seventh moon of the eleventh year of Hien Fung.
(Signed)
}}
[L.S.] L.S. [L.S.]
COUNT EULENBURG. CHONG MEEN, CHONG HEE.
SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION BETWEEN GERMANY AND CHINA 153
SEPARATE ARTICLE
In addition to a Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, concluded between Prussia, the other States of the German Customs Union, the Grand Duchies of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and the Hanseatic towns of Lubeck, Bremen, and Hamburg on the one part, and China on the other part;
It has been separately agreed that the Senates of the Hanseatic towns sball have the right to nominate for themselves a Consul of their own at each of the Chinese ports open for commerce and navigation.
This Separate Article shall have the same force and validity as if included word for word in the above-mentioned Treaty.
In faith whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed this present Separate Article and affixed their seals.
Done in four copies at Tientsin, the second day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-oue, corresponding to the Chinese date of the twenty-eighth day of the seventh moon of the eleventh year of Hien Fung.
(Signed)
•
[L.S.]
..
L.S. [L.S.
COUNT EULENBURG. CHONG MEEN. CHONG HEE.
SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION BETWEEN GERMANY
AND CHINA, 1880
Ratified 16th September, 1881
[Translated from the German Text]
His Majesty the German Emperor, King of Prussia, &c., in the name of the German Empire, and his Majesty the Emperor of China, wishing to secure the more perfect execution of the Treaty of the 2nd September, 1861, have, in conformity with Article XLI. of that Treaty, according to the terms of which the High Contracting German States are entitled, after a period of ten years, to demand a revision of the Treaty, decided to conclude a Supplementary Convention.
With this view they have appointed their Plenipotentiaries viz., His Majesty the German Emperor, King of Prussia, &c., his Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Max August Scipio von Brandt; and His Majesty the Emperor of China, the Minister of the Tsung-li Yamen, the Secretary of State, &c., Shen Kue-fen; and the Secretary of State, &c., Chin Lien;
Who, after communicating to each other their full powers, and finding them in due form, have agreed upon the following Articles :--
Art. I.-Chinese concession. The harbours of Ichang, in Hupei; Wuhu, in Anhui; Wenchow, in Chekiang; and Pakhao, in Kwangtung, and the landing-places Tatung and Auking in Anhui; Huk'ow, in Kiangsi; Wusuel, Luchikow, and Shah- shil, in Hukuang, having already been opened, German ships are in future also to be permitted to touch at the harbour of Woosung, in the province of Kiangsu, to take in or discharge merchandise. The necessary Regulations are to be drawn up by the Taotni of Shanghai and the competent authorities.
German concession.In the event of special regulations for the execution of concessions which the Chinese Government may make to foreign Governments being attached to such concessions, Germany, while claiming these concessions for herself and for her subjects, will equally assent to the regulations attached to them.
Art. XI. of the Treaty of the 2nd September, 1861, is not affected by this regulation, and is hereby expressly confirmed.
4
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SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION BETWEEN GERMANY AND CHINA
Should German subjects, on the strength of this article, claim privileges, immu- nities, or advantages which the Chinese Government may further concede to another Power, or the subject of such Power, they will also submit to the regulations which have been agreed upon in connection with such concession.
Art. IIChinese concession.-German ships, which have already paid tonnage dues in China, may visit all other open ports in China, as well as all ports not Chinese, without exception, without being again obliged to pay tonnage dues, within the given period of four months.
German sailing-vessels which remain in the same Chinese harbour for a longer period than fourteen days shall only pay for time over and above this period half of the tonnage dues stipulated by Treaty.
German concession. The Chinese Government shall have the right of appointing Consuls to all towns of Germany in which the Consuls of other States are admitted, and they shall enjoy the same rights and privileges as the Consuls of the most favoured nation.
Art. III.-Chinese concession.-The Chinese Commissioner of Customs, and the other competent authorities, shall, after agreeing upon the necessary regulations, themselves take measures for the establishment of bonded warehouses in all the open ports of China in which they are required in the interests of foreign commerce, and where local circumstances would admit of such an arrangement being made.
German concession,-German ships, visiting the open ports of Chica, shall deliver a manifest containing au exact statement as to the quality and quantity of their cargoes. Mistakes which may have occurred in the manifests can be rectified in the course of twenty-four hours (Sundays and holidays excepted). False state- ments as to the quantity and quality of cargo are punishable by confiscation of the goods and also by a fine, to be imposed upon the captain, but not to exceed the sum of Tls. 500,
Art. IV.--Chinese concession.The export duty on Chinese coal, exported by German merchants from the open ports, is reduced to 3 mace per ton. In those ports in which a lower duty on the export of coal has already been fixed upon, the lower duty remains in force.
German concession.-Any one acting as pilot for any kind of craft whatever, without being furnished with the regulation certificate, is liable to a fine not to exceed Tls. 100 for each separate case.
Regulations with a view to exercising a proper control over sailors are to be introduced with the least possible delay.
Art. V. Chinese concession.-German ships in want of repairs in consequence of damages sustained within or without the port are not required to pay tonuage dues during the period necessary for repairs, which is to be fixed by the Inspectorate of Customs.
German concession. Ships belonging to Chinese may not make use of the German flag, nor may German ships make use of the Chinese flag.
Art. VI. Chinese concession. In the event of German ships, no longer fit for sea, being broken up in any open. port of China, the material may be sold without any import duty being levied upon it. But if the materials are to be brought ashore a "permit of discharge" must first be obtained for them from the Customs Inspec torate, in the same manner as in the case of merchandise.
German concession. If German subjects travel into the interior for their own pleasure without being in possession of a passport issued by the Consul and stamped. by the proper Chinese authority, the local authorities concerned are entitled to have them taken back to the nearest German Consulate, in order that the requisite supervision may be exercised over them. The offender is, in addition to this, liable to a fine up to 300 Taela.
Art. VII.-Chinese concession.-Materials for German docks are free of duty. A list of articles which may be imported free of duty in conformity with this stipulation is to be drawn up and published by the Inspector-General of Customs.
SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION BETWEEN GERMANY AND CHINA
155
German concession.-Passes issued to German subjects for conveying foreign merchandise into the interior, as well as passports for the purpose of travelling issued to German subjects, are only to remain in force for a period of thirteen Chinese months from the day on which they were issued.
Art. VIII.--The settlement of the question relating to judicial proceedings in mixed cases, the taxation of foreign merchandise in the interior, the taxation of Chinese goods in the possession of foreign merchants in the interior, and intercourse between foreign and Chinese officials are to become the subject of special negotiations which both Governments hereby declare themselves ready to enter upon.
Art. IX. All the provisions of the former Treaty of the 2nd September, 1861, which have not been altered by this agreement, are hereby confirmed anew, as both parties now expressly declare.
In the cases of those articles, on the other hand, which are affected by the present Treaty, the new interpretation of them is to be considered as binding.
Art. X. The present Supplementary Convention shall be ratified by their Majesties, and the ratifications exchanged at Peking, within a year from the date of its signature.
The provisions of the agreement come into force on the day of the exchange of the ratifications.
In witness whereof the plenipotentiaries of both the High Contracting Powers have signed and sealed with their seals the above agreement in four copies, in the German and Chinese texts, which have been compared and found to correspond.
Done at Peking the thirty-first March, one thousand eight hundred and eighty, corresponding to the twenty-first day of the second month of the sixth year Kwang Hsu.
(Signed)
[L.S.]
L.S.
15
[L.S.]
M. VON BRANDT. SHEN KUE-FEN. CHING LIEN.
SPECIAL STIPULATIONS TO THE SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION
For the sake of greater clearness and completeness, it has seemed fitting to append a number of special stipulations to the Supplementary Convention.
The following stipulations must be observed by the subjects of both the Contracting Parties, in the same way as the stipulations of the Treaty itself. In proof whereof the plenipotentiaries of the two States have thereto set their seals and signalures :-
1.In accordance with the newly granted privileges for the port of Woosung in the province of Kiangsu, German ships shall be at liberty to take in and to unload there merchandise which is either intended for Shanghai or comes from Shanghai; and for this purpose the competent authorities there shall have the right of devising regulations in order to prevent frauds on the taxes and irregularities of every kind; which regulations shall be binding for the merchants of both countries, German merchants are not at liberty to construct landing-places for ships, merchants' houses, or warehouses at the said place.
2-An experiment to ascertain whether bonded warehouses can be established in the Chinese open ports shall first be made at Shanghai. For this purpose the Customs Director at the said place, with the Customs Inspector-General, shall forthwith draw up regulations suitable to the local conditions, and then the said Customs Director and his colleagues shall proceed to the establishment of such bonded
warehouse.
3. If
any goods found on board a German ship, for the discharge whereof a written permit from the Customs Office is required, are not entered in the manifest, this shall be taken as proof of a false manifest, no matter whether a certificate of the reception of such goods on board, bearing the captain's signature, be produced
or not.
4*
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SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION BETWEEN GERMANY AND CHINA
4.-If a German ship, in consequence of damages received in one of the open Chinese ports, or outside thereof, needs repair, the time required for such repair shall be reckoned in addition to the term after the lapse of which tonnage-dues are to be paid. The Chinese authorities have the right to make the necessary arrange- ments for this purpose. But if it appears therefrom that this is only a pretext and a design to evade the legal payments to the Customs, the ship therein concerned shall be fined in double the amount of the tonnage-dues whereof it has tried to evade the payment.
5. No ships of any kind which belong to Chinese subjects are allowed to make use of the German flag. If there are definite grounds for suspicion that this has nevertheless been done, the Chinese authority concerned is to address an official communication thereon to the German Consul, and if it should be shown, in con- sequence of the investigation instituted by him, that the ship was really not entitled. to bear the German flag, the ship as well as the goods found therein, so far as they belong to Chinese merchants, shall be immediately delivered over to the Chinese authorities for further disposal. If it be ascertained that German subjects were aware of the circumstances, and took part in the commission of the irregularity, the whole of the goods belonging to them found in the ship are liable to confiscation, and the people themselves to punishment according to law.
In case a German ship carries the Chinese flag without authority to do so, then, if it be ascertained through the investigation made by the Chinese authorities that the ship was really not entitled to bear the Chinese flag, the ship, as well as the goods found therein, so far as they belong to German merchants, shall be imme- diately delivered over to the German Consul for further disposal and the punishment of the guilty. If it be shown that German owners of goods were aware of the cir- cumstance and took part in the commission of this irregularity, all the goods belong- ing to them found in the ship shall incur the penalty of confiscation by the Chinese authorities. The goods belonging to Chinese may be immediately seized by the Chinese authorities.
6. If on the sale of the materials of a German ship which, from unseaworthi- ness, has been broken up in one of the open Chinese ports, an attempt be made to mix up with them goods belonging to the cargo, these goods shall be liable to con- fiscation, and, moreover, to a fine equal to double the amount of the import duty which they would otherwise have had to pay.
7.-If German subjects go into the interior with foreign goods, or travel there, the passes or certificates issued to them shall only be valid for thirteen Chinese months, reckoned from the day of their issue, and after the lapse of that term must no longer be used. The expired passes and certificates must be returned to the Customs authorities in whose official district they were issued in order to be cancelled.
N.B. If a pleasure excursion be undertaken into regions so distant that the term of a year appears insufficient, this must be noted on the pass by reason of an understanding between the Consul and the Chinese authority at the time it is issued.
If the return of the passport be omitted, no further pass shall be issued to the person concerned until it has taken place. If the pass be lost, no matter whether within the term or after its expiration, the person concerned must forthwith make a formal declaration of the fact before the nearest Chinese authority. The Chinese official applied to will then do what else may be necessary for the invalidation of the pass.
If the recorded declaration prove to be untrue, in case the transport of goods be concerned, they will be confiscated; if the matter relate to travelling, the traveller will be taken to the nearest Consul, and be delivered up to him for punishment.
8.-Materials for German docks only enjoy, in so far as they are actually employed for the repair of ships, the favour of duty-free importation in open ports. The Customs authority has the right to send inspectors to the dock to convince themselves on the spot as to the manner and way in which the materials are being used. If the construction of a new ship be concerned, the materials employed for this, in so far as they are specially entered in the import or export tariff, will be
SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION BETWEEN GERMANY AND CHINA
157
reckoned at the tariff duty, and those not entered in the tariff at a duty of 5 per cent. ad valorem, and the merchant concerned will be bound to pay this duty subsequently.
Any one who wishes to lay out a dock is to get from the Customs Office a gratis Concession certificate, and to sign a written undertaking, the purport and wording whereof is to be settled in due form by the Customs office concerned.
9.-Art. XXIX. of the Treaty of the 2nd September, 1861, shall be applicable to the fines established by this present Supplementary Convention.
Done at Peking the thirty-first March, one thousand eight hundred and eighty, corresponding with the twenty-first day of the second month of the sixth year of Kwang Hsu,
(Signed)
[L.S.] M. VON BRANDT.
[L.S.
>
[L.S.]
SHEN KUE-FEN. CHING LIEN.
THE PRINCE OF KUNG AND THE MINISTERS OF THE TSUNG-LI YAMEN
TO HERE VON BRANDT
Kwang Hsu, 6th year, 2nd mouth, 21st day.
(Peking, March 31st, 1880.)
With regard to the stipulation contained in the second Article of the Supple- mentary Convention concluded on occasion of the Treaty revision, that German sailing-ships which lie for a longer time than fourteen days in Chinese ports shall only pay for the time beyond that term the moiety of the tonnage dues settled by Treaty, the Plenipotentiaries of the two contracting parties have agreed and declared that the said stipulation shall first of all be introduced by way of trial, and that in case, on carrying it out, practical difficulties should arise, another stipula- tion may be put in its place on the basis of a renewed joint discussion by both parties.
PROTOCOL
The undersigned, who have been expressly empowered by their Government to make the following arrangements, have agreed that the term settled by the Pleni- potentiaries of the German Empire and of China in the Supplementary Convention concluded at Peking on the 31st March this year, for the exchange of the Ratifica- tion of the Convention, shall be prolonged till the 1st December, 1881.
The other stipulations of the Supplementary Convention of the 31st March, this year, are not affected by this alteration.
In witness whereof the undersigned have subscribed with their own hands and affixed their seals to this Agreement, in two copies of each of the German and Chinese texts, which have been compared with each other and found to correspond.
Done at Peking the twenty-first August, one thousand eight hundred and eighty, corresponding with the sixteenth day of the seventh month of the sixth year Kwang Hsu.
(Signed)
"
[L.S.] [L.B.]
L.S.
>
[L.S.]
"
*
[L.S.]
71
[L.S.]
M. VON BRANDT. SHEN KUE-FEN.
CHING LIEN.
WANG NEEN-SHOU. LIN SHU.
CHUNG LI.
THE KIAOCHOW CONVENTION
I-His Majesty the Emperor of China, being desirous of preserving the existing good relations with His Majesty the Emperor of Germany, and of promoting an increase of German power and influence in the Far East, sanctions the acquirement under lease by Germany of the land extending for 100 i, at high tide (at Kiaochow). His Majesty the Emperor of China is willing that German troops should take possession of the above-mentioned territory at any time the Emperor of Germany chooses. China retains her sovereignty over this territory, and should she at any time wish to enact laws or carry out plans within the leased area, she shall be at liberty to enter into negotiations with Germany with reference thereto; provided. always that such laws or plans shall not be prejudicial to German interests. Germany may engage in works for the public benefit, such as water-works, within the territory covered by the lease, without reference to China. Should China wish to march troops or establish garrisons therein she can only do so after negotiating with and obtaining the express permission of Germany.
II. His Majesty the Emperor of Germany, being desirous, like the rulers of certain other countries, of establishing a naval and coaling station and constructing dockyards on the coast of China, the Emperor of China agrees to lease to him for the purpose all the land on the southern and northern sides of Kiaochow Bay for a term of ninety-nine years. Germany is to be at liberty to erect forts on this land for the defence of her possessions therein.
III. During the continuance of the lease China shall have no voice in the government or administration of the leased territory. It will be governed and administered during the whole term of ninety-nine years solely by Germany, so that the possibility of friction between the two Powers may be reduced to the smallest magnitude. The lease covers the following districts:-
(a)-All the land in the north-east of Lienban, adjacent to the north-eastern mouth of the Bay, within a straight line drawn from the north-eastern corner of Vintao to Laoshan-wan.
(b.)--All the land in the south-west of Lienban, adjacent to the southern mouth of the Bay, within a straight line drawn from a point on the shore of the Bay bearing south-west by south from Tsi-pe-shan-to.
(c) Tsi-pe-shau-to and Ÿintao.
(d)-The whole area of the Bay of Kiaochow covered at high-water.
(e.)--Certain islands at the entrance of the Bay which are ceded for the purpose of erecting forts for the defence of the German possessions. The boundaries of the leased territory shall hereafter be more exactly defined by a commission appointed jointly by the Chinese and German Governments, and consisting of Chinese and German subjects. Chinese ships of war and merchant-ships, and ships of war and merchant-ships of countries having treaties and in a state of amity with China shall receive equal treatment with German ships of war and merchant ships in Kiaochow Bay during the continuance of the lease. Germany is at liberty to enact any regula- tions she desires for the government of the territory and harbour, provided such regulations apply impartially to the ships of all nations, Germany and China included.
IV. Germany shall be at liberty to erect whatever lighthouses, beacons, and other aids to navigation she chooses within the territory leased, and along the islands and coasts approaching the entrance to the harbour. Vessels of China and vessels of other countries entering the harbour shall be liable to special duties for the repair and maintenance of all lighthouses, beacons and other aids to navigation which Germany may erect and establish. Chinese vessels shall be exempt from other special duties.
V.Should Germany desire to give up her interest in the leased territory before the expiration of ninety-nine years, China shall take over the whole area, and pay
RAILWAY AND MINING CONCESSION
159
Germany for whatever German property may at the time of surrender be there situated. In cases of such surrender taking place Germany shall be at liberty to lease some other point along the coast. Germany shall not cede the territory leased to any other Power than China. Chinese subjects shall be allowed to live in the territory leased, under the protection of the German authorities, and there carry on their avoca- tions and business as long as they conduct themselves as peaceable and law-abiding citizens. Germany shall pay a reasonable price to the native proprietors for whatever lands her Government or subjects require. Fugitive Chinese criminala taking refuge in the leased territory shall be arrested and surrendered to the Chinese authorities for trial and punishment, upon application to the German authorities, but the Chinese authorities shall not be at liberty to send agents into the leased territory to make arrests. The German authorities shall not interfere with the lekin stations outside but adjacent to the territory.
THE RAILWAY AND MINING CONCESSION
I. The Chinese Government sanctions the construction by Germany of two lines of railway in Shantung. The first will run from Kiaochow and Tsinan-fu to the boundary of Shantung province via Wei-hsien. Tsinchow, Pashan, Tsechuten and Suiping. The second line will connect Kiaochow with Chinchow, whence an extension will be constructed to Tsinan through Laiwu-hsien. The construction of this extension shall not be begun until the first part of the line, the main line, is completed, in order to give the Chinese an opportunity of connecting this line in the most advan- tageous manner with their own railway system. What places the line from Tsinan-fu to the provincial boundary shall take in en route is to be determined hereafter.
II. In order to carry out the above mentioned railway work a Chino-German Company shall be formed, with branches at whatever places may be necessary, and in this Company both German and Chinese subjects shall be at liberty to invest money if they so choose, and appoint directors for the management of the undertaking.
III. All arrangements in connection with the works specified shall be determined by a future conference of German and Chinese representatives. The Chinese Govern- ment shall afford every facility and protection and extend every welcome to represent- atives of the German Railway Company operating in Chinese territory. Profits derived from the working of these railways shall be justly divided pro rata between the shareholders without regard to nationality. The object of constructing these lines is solely the development of commerce. In inaugurating a railway system in Shantung Germany entertains no treacherous intention towards China, and under- takes not to unlawfully seize any land in the province.
IV.--The Chinese Government shall allow German subjects to hold and develop mining property for a distance of 30 li from each side of these railways and along the whole extent of the lines. The following places where mining operations may be carried on are particularly specified along the northern railway from Kiaochow to Tsinan, Weihsien, Pa-shan-hsien and various other points; and along the Southern Kiaochow-Tsinan-Chinchow line, Chinchow-fu, Luiwuhsien, etc. Chinese capital may be invested in these operations and arrangements for carrying on the work shall hereafter be made by a joint conference of Chinese and German representatives. All German subjects engaged in such works in Chinese territory shall be properly protected and welcomed by the Chinese authorities and all profits derived shall be fairly divided between Chinese and German shareholders according to the extent of the interest they hold in the undertakings. In trying to develop mining property in China, Germany is actuated by no treacherous motives against this country, but seeks alone to increase commerce and improve the relations between the two countries.
If at any time the Chinese should form schemes for the development of Shantung, for the execution of which it is necessary to obtain foreign capital, the Chinese
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THE UNITED KINGDOM AND GERMANY RELATIVE TO CHINA
Government, or whatever Chinese may be interested in such schemes, shall, in the first instance, apply to German capitalists. Application shall also be made to German manufacturers for the necessary machinery and materials before the manu- facturers of any other Power are approached. Should German capitalists or manu- facturers decline to take up the business the Chinese shall then be at liberty to obtain money and materials from sources of other nationality than German.
This convention requires the sanction of His Majesty the Emperor of China and His Majesty the Emperor of Germany. When the sanction of His Majesty the Emperor of China reaches Berlin the agreement approved by His Majesty the Emperor of Germany shall be handed to the Chinese Ambassador. When the final
draft is agreed to by both parties four clean copies of it shall be made, two in Chinese and two in German, which shall be duly signed by the Chinese and German Minister at Berlin and Peking. Each Power shall retain one Chinese copy and one German copy, and the agreement shall be faithfully observed on either side.
Dated, the fourteenth day of the second moon of the twenty-fourth year of Kuang Hsu. (March 6th, 1898).
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND
GERMANY RELATIVE TO CHINA
OCTOBER 16TH, 1900.
No. 1.
THE MARQUESS OF SALISBURY TO COUNT HATZFELDT.
Your Excellency,
Foreign Office, October 16th, 1900.
I have the honour to inform you that Her Majesty's Government approve the Agreement, annexed hereto, which has been negotiated between your Excellency and myself with regard to the principles on which the mutual policy of Great Britain and Germany in China should be hased.
I have, &c.,
(Signed)
SALISBURY.
Inclosure in No. 1.
AGREEMENT SIGNED ON THE 16TH OCTOBER, 1900.
Her Britannic Majesty's Government and the Imperial German Government being desirous to maintain their interests in China and their rights under existing Treaties, have agreed to observe the following principles in regard to their mutual policy in China:-
1. It is a matter of joint and permanent international interest that the ports on the rivers and littoral of China should remain free and open to trade and to every other legitimate form of economic activity for the nationals of all countries without distinction; and the two Governments agree on their part to uphold the same for all Chinese territory as far as they can exercise influence.
2. Her Britannic Majesty's Government and the Imperial German Government will not, on their part, make use of the present complication to obtain for them- selves any territorial advantages in Chinese dominious, and will direct their policy towards maing intainundiminished the territorial condition of the Chinese Empire.
THE UNITED KINGDOM AND GERMANY RELATIVE TO CHINA
161
3. In case of another Power making use of the complications in China in order to obtain under any form whatever such territorial advantages, the two Contracting Parties reserve to themselves to come to a preliminary understanding as to the eventual steps to be taken for the protection of their own interests in China.
4. The two Governments will communicate this Agreement to the other Powers interested, and especially to Austria-Hungary, France, Italy, Japan, Russia, and the United States of America, and will invite them to accept the principles recorded in it.
No. 2.
COUNT HATZFELDT TO THE MARQUESS OF SALISBURY.
(RECEIVED OCTOBER 16TH.)
(Translation.)
GERMAN EMBASSY, LONDON,
October 16th, 1900.
My Lord,
I have the honour to inform your Excellency that my Government have con- curred in the following points agreed to between your Excellency and myself:-
The Imperial German Government and Her Britannic Majesty's Government, being desirous to maintain their interests in China and their rights under existing Treaties, have agreed to observe the following principles in regard to their mutual policy in China:
1. It is a matter of joint and permanent international interest that the ports on the rivers and littoral of China should remain free and open to trade and to every other legitimate form of economic activity for the nationals of all countries without distinction; and the two Governments agree on their part to uphold thə same for all Chinese territory as far as they can exercise influence.
2. The Imperial German Government and Her Britannic Majesty's Govern ment will not, on their part, make use of the present complication to obtain for themselves any territorial advantages in Chinese dominious, and will direct their policy towards maintaining undiminished the territorial condition of the Chinese Empire.
8. In case of another Power making use of the complications in China in order to obtain under any form whatever such territorial advantages, the two Contracting Parties reserve to themselves to come to a preliminary understanding as to the eventual steps to be taken for the protection of their own interests in China.
4. The two Governments will communicate this Agreement to the other Powers interested, and especially to Austria-Hungary, France, Italy, Japan, Russia, and the United States of America, and will invite them to accept the principles recorded in it.
With the highest respect, &c., &c.,
(Signed)
HATZFELDT.
RUSSIA
TREATY BETWEEN RUSSIA AND CHINA
SIGNED, IN THE RUSSIAN, CHINESE, AND FRENCH LANGUAGES, AT ST. PETERSBURG, 12TH FEBRUARY, 1881
Ratifications exchanged at St. Petersburg, 19th August, 1881
[Translated from the French Text]
His Majesty the Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russias and His Majesty the Emperor of China, desiring to regulate some questions of frontier and trade touching the interests of the two Empires, in order to cement the relations of friendship between the two countries, have named for their plenipotentiaries, to the effect of establishing an agreement on these questions:--
His Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias: His Secretary of State Nicholas. de Giers, senator, actual privy councillor, directing the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and his envoy extraordinary and ministry plenipotentiary to His Majesty the Emperor of China, Eugène de Buzow, actual councillor of state.
And His Majesty the Emperor of China: Tseng, Marquess of Neyong, vice- president of the high court of justice, his envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary to His Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias, furnished with special powers to sign the present Treaty in quality of ambassador extraordinary:
The above named plenipotentiaries, furnished with full powers, which have been found sufficient, have agreed upon the following stipulations:---
Art. I. His Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias cousents to the re establishment of the Chinese Government in the country of Ili, temporarily occupied since 1871 by the Russian Armies. Russia remains in possession of this country within the limits indicated by Article VII. of the present Treaty.
Art. II. His Majesty the Emperor of China engages to decree the proper measures to shelter the inhabitants of the country of Ili, of whatever race and to whatever religion they belong, from all persecution, in their goods or in their persons, from acts committed during or after the troubles that have taken place in that country,
A proclamation in conformity with this engagement will be addressed by the Chinese authorities, in the name of His Majesty the Emperor of China, to the popula tion of the country of Ili, before the restoration of this country to the said authorities.
Art. III. The inhabitants of the country of Ili will be free to remain in the places of their actual residence as Chinese subjects, or to emigrate to Russia and to adopt Russian dependence. They will be called to pronounce themselves on the subject before the re-establishment of Chinese authority in the country of Ili, and a delay of one year, from the date of the restoration of the country to the Chinese authorities, will be accorded to those who show a desire to emigrate to Russia. The Chinese will oppose no impediment to their emigration or to the transportation of their moveable property.
Art. IV. Russian subjects possessing land in the country of Eli will keep their rights of property, even after the re-establishment of the authority of the Chinese Government in that country.
This provision is not applicable to the inhabitants of the country of Ili who shall adopt Russian nationality upon the re-establishment of Chinese authority in this country.
Russian subjects whose lands are situated without places appropriated to Russian factories, in virtue of Article XIII. of the Treaty of Kuldja of 1851, ought to discharge the same taxes and contributions as Chinese subjects.
Art. V. The two governments will appoint commissioners of Kuldja, who will proceed to the restoration on the one part, to the resumption on the other, of
TREATY BETWEEN RUSSIA AND CHINA
163
the administration of the province of Ili, and who will be charged, in general, with the execution of the stipulations of the present Treaty relating to the re-establish- ment, in this country, of the Chinese Government.
The said commissioners will fulfil their commission, in conforming to the understanding which will be established as to the mode of restoration on the one part and of resumption on the other, of the administration of the country of Ili, between the Governor-General of Turkestan and the Governor-General of Shansi and Kansub, charged by the two governments with the high direction of the affair.
The resumption of the country of Ili should be finished within a delay of three months or sooner, if it can be done, dating from the day of the arrival at Tashkend of the functionary who will be delegated by the Governor-General of Shansi and Kansuh to the Governor-General of Turkestan to notify to him the ratification and the promulgation of the present Treaty by His Majesty the Emperor of China.
Art. VI.-The Government of His Majesty the Emperor of China will pay to the Russian Government the sum of nine millions of metallic roubles, designed to cover the expenses occasioned by the occupation of the country of Ili by the Russian troops since 1871, to satisfy all the pecuniary claims arising from, up to the present day, the losses which Russian subjects have suffered in their goods pillaged on Chinese territories, and to furnish relief to the families of Russian subjects killed in armed attacks of which they have been victims on Chinese territory.
The above mentioned sum of nine millions of metallic roubles will be paid within the term of two years from the date of the exchange of the ratifications of the present Treaty, according to the order and the conditions agreed upon between the two governments in the special Protocol annexed to the present Treaty.
Art. VII. The western portion of the country of Ili is incorporated with Russia, in order to serve as a place of establishment for the inhabitants of this country who shall adopt the Russian dependence and who, by this action, will have had to abandon the lands which they possessed there.
The frontier between the possessions of Russia and the Chinese province of Ili will follow, starting from the mountains Bedjin-taou, the course of the river Khorgos, as far as the place where this river falls into the river Ili, and, crossing the latter, will take a direction to the south, towards the mountains Ouzoun-taou, leaving to the west the village of Koldjat. Proceeding from this point it will follow, whilst being directed to the south, the delineation fixed by the protocol signed at Tehugtu-
bhack in 1864.
Art. VIII.A part of the frontier line, fixed by the protocol signed at Tchugtu- chack in 1864, at the east of the Lake Zaisan, having been found defective, the two governments will name commissioners who will modify, by a common agreement, the ancient delineation in such a manner as to remove the defects pointed out and to establish an effective separation between the Kirghiz tribes submitted to the two Empires.
To the new delineation will be given, as much as possible, an intermediate direc tion between the old frontier and a straight line leading from the Kouitoun hill towards the Saour hills, crossing the Tcherny-Irtysh.
Art, IX. The commissioners to be named by the two contracting parties will proceed to place posts of demarcation, as well on the delineation fixed by the preceding Articles VII. and VIII., as on the parts of the frontier where posts have not yet been placed.
The time and the place of meeting of these commissioners shall be fixed by an understanding between the two Governments.
The two Governments will also name commissioners to examine the frontier and to place posts of demarcation between the Russian province of Ferganah and the western part of the Chinese province of Kashgar. The commissioners will take for the base of their work the existing frontier.
Art. X.-The right recognised by the Treaties of the Russian Government to nominate Consuls to Ili, to Tarbagatai, to Kashgar, and to Ourga is extended, from the present time, to the towns of Soutcheon (Tsia-yu-kwan) and of Turfan. In the following towns: Kobdo, Uliassoutai, Khami, Urumtsi, and Goutchen, the Russian
164
TREATY BETWEEN RUSSIA AND CHINA
Government will establish consulates in proportion to the development of commerce,. and after an understanding with the Chinese Government.
The Consul of Soutcheou (Tsia-yu-kwan) and of Turfau will exercise consular functions in the neighbouring districts, where the interests of Russian subjects demand their presence.
The dispositions contained in Articles V. and VI. of the Treaty concluded at Peking in 1860, and relative to the concession of land for the houses for the con- sulates, for cemeteries, and for pasturage, will apply equally to the towns of Sout- cheou (Tsia-yn-kwan) and of Turfan. The local authorities will aid the Consul to find provisional habitations until the time when the houses of the consulates shall be built,
The Russian Consuls in Mongolia and in the districts situated on the two slopes of the Tien-shan will make use of, for their journeys and for their correspondence, the postal institutions of the government, conformably to the stipulations of Article XI. of the Treaty of Tientsin and of Article XII. of the Treaty of Peking. The Chinese authorities, to whom they will address themselves for this purpose, will lend them aid and assistance.
The town of Turfan not being a locality open to foreign trade, the right of establishing a consulate will not be invoked as a precedent to obtain a right analogous to the ports of China for the provinces of the interior and for Manchuria.
Art. XI.-Russian Consuls will communicate, for affairs of service, either with the local authorities of the town of their residence, or with the superior authorities of the circuit or of the province, according as the interests which are respectively confided to them, the importance of the affairs to be treated of, and their prompt expedition shall require. As to the rules of etiquette to be observed at the time of their interviews and, in general, in their relations, they will be based upon the respect which the functionaries of two friendly Powers reciprocally owe each other.
All the affairs which may arise on Chinese territory, ou the subject of commer- cial or other transactions, between those under the jurisdiction of the two States, will be examined and regulated, by a common agreement, by the Consuls and the Chinese authorities.
In lawsuits on commercial matters, the two parties will terminate their difference amicably by means of arbitrators chosen by one side and the other. If agreement is not established in this way, the affair will be examined and regulated by the authorities of the two States.
Engagements contracted in writing, between Russian and Chinese subjects, relative to orders for merchandise, to the transport of it, to the location of shops, of houses, and of other places, or relating to other transactions of the same kind, may be presented for legalisation by the Consulates and by the superior local administrations, who are bound to legalize the documents which are presented to them. In case of non-execution of the engagements contracted, the Consul and the Chinese authorities will consult as to the measures necessary to secure the execution of these obligations.
Art. XII.-Russian subjects are authorized to carry on, as in the past, trade free of duties in Mongolia subject to China, as well as in places and aimaks where there is a Chinese administration as in those where there in none.
Russian subjects will equally enjoy the right of carrying on trade free of duties in the towns and other localities of the provinces of Ili, of Tarbagatai, of Kashgar. of Urumtsi, and others situated on the slopes north and south of the chain of the Tien-shan as far as the Great Wall. This immunity will be abrogated when the development of the trade necessitates the establishment of a customs tariff, conform- able to an understanding to be come to by the two Governments.
Russian subjects can import into the above-named provinces of China and export from them every description of produce, of whatever origin they may be. They may make purchases and sales, whether in cash, or by way of exchange; they will have the right to make their payments in merchandise of every description,
TREATY BETWEEN RUSSIA AND CHINA
165
Art. XIII.-In the places where the Russian Government will have the right to establish consulates, as well as in the town of Kalgan, Russian subjects may construct houses, shops, warehouses, and other buildings on the lands which they will acquire by means of purchase, or which may be conceded to them by the local authorities, conformably to that which has been established for Ili and Tarbagatai, by Article XIII. of the Treaty of Kuldja of 1851.
The privileges granted to Russian subjects, in the town of Kalgan, where there will not be a consulate, constitute an exception which cannot be extended to any other locality of the interior provinces.
Art, XIV.-Russian merchants who may wish to dispatch merchandise from Russia, by land, into the interior provinces of China, can, as formerly, direct it by the towns of Kalgan and Tungchow, to the port of Tientsin, and from there to the other ports and interior markets, and sell it in those different places.
Merchants will use this same route to export to Russia the merchandise purchased, as well in the towns and ports above named as in the interior markets.
They will equally have the right to repair, for matters of trade, to Soutcheou (Tsia-yu-kwan), the terminal point of the Russian caravans, and they will enjoy there all the rights granted to Russian trade at Tientsin.
Art. XV.Trade by land, exercised by Russian subjects in the interior and exterior provinces of China, will be governed by the Regulations annexed to the present Treaty.
The commercial stipulations of the present Treaty, as well as the Regulations. which serve as a supplement to it, can be revised after an interval of ten years has elapsed from the date of the exchange of ratifications of the Treaty; but if, in the course of six months before the expiration of this term, neither of the contracting parties manifest a desire to proceed to the revision, the trade stipulations as well as the Regulations will remain in force for a new term of ten years.
Trade by sea route of Russian subjects in China will be subject to the general' regulations established for foreign maritime commerce in China. If it becomes necessary to make modifications in these regulations, the two Governments will establish an understanding on this subject.
Art. XVI-If the development of Russian overland trade provokes the necessity of the establishment, for goods of export and import in China, of a Customs tariff, more in relation than the tariffs actually in force to the necessities of that trade, the Russian and Chinese Governments will proceed to an understanding on this subject, by adopting as a base for settling the duties of entry and exit the rate of five per cent, of the value of the goods.
Until the establishment of this tariff, the export duties on some kinds of teas of inferior quality, actually imposed at the rates established for the tea of superior quality, will be diminished proportionately to their value. The settling of these duties will be proceeded with, for each kind of tea, by an understanding between the Chinese Government and the envoy of Russia to Peking, within the term of one year, at the latest, from the date of the exchange of the ratifications of the present Treaty.
Art. XVII-Some divergencies of opinion having arisen hitherto as to the application of Article X. of the Treaty concluded at Peking, in 1860, it is established by these presents, that the stipulations of the above-named article, relative to the recoveries to be effected, in case of theft and the harbouring of cattle beyond the frontier, will be for the future interpreted in this sense, that at the time of the discovery of the individuals guilty of theft or the harbouring of cattle, they will be condemned to pay the real value of the cattle which they have not restored. It is understood that in case of the insolvency of the individuals guilty of theft of cattle, the indemnity to be paid cannot be placed to the charge of the local authorities.
The frontier authorities of the two States will prosecute with all the rigour of the laws of their country, the individuals guilty of the harbouring of or theft of cattle, and should take the measures in their power for the restitution to whom they belong of cattle diverted, or which may have passed the frontier.
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The traces of cattle turned aside or which may have passed the frontier may be indicated, not only to the guards of the frontier posts, but also to the elders of the Dearest villages.
Art. XVIII.-The stipulations of the Treaty concluded at Aigoun the 16th May, 1858, concerning the rights of the subjects of the two Empires to navigate the Amoor, the Sungari, and the Oussouri, and to carry on trade with the populations of the riverine localities, are and remain confirmed.
The two Governments will proceed to the establishment of an understanding concerning the mode of application of the said stipulations.
Art. XIX-The stipulations of the old Treaties between Russia and China, not modified by the present Treaty, remain in full vigour.
Art. XX.The present Treaty, after having been ratified by the two Emperors, will be promulgated in each Empire, for the knowledge and governance of each one. The exchange of ratifications will take place at St. Petersburg, within a period of six months counting from the day of the signature of the Treaty.
Having concluded the above Article, plenipotentiaries of the two contract- ing parties have signed and sealed two copies of the present Treaty, in the Russian, Chinese, and French languages. Of the three texts, duly compared and found in agreement, the French text will be evidence for the interpretation of the present Treaty.
one,
Done at St. Petersburg, the twelfth of February, eighteen hundred and eighty-
(Signed)
[L.S.]
NICOLAS DE GIERS.
+
[L.S.]
EUGENE BUrzow.
>>
[L.S.]
TSENG.
PROTOCOL
In virtue of Article VI. of the Treaty signed to-day by the plenipotentiaries of the Russian and Chinese Governments, the Chinese Government will pay to the Russian Government the sum of nine millions of metallic roubles, designed to cover the expenses of the occupation of the country of Ili by the Russian troops and to satisfy divers pecuniary claims of Russian subjects. This sum shall be paid within a period of two years counting from the day of the exchange of the ratifica- tions of the Treaty.
Desiring to fix the mode of payment of the aftermentioned sum the undersigned have agreed as follows:-
The Chinese Government will pay the equivalent of the sum of nine millions of metallic roubles in pounds sterling, say one million four hundred and thirty-one thousand six hundred and sixty-four pounds sterling two shillings to Messrs. Baring Brothers & Co. in London, in six equal parts, of two hundred and thirty- eight thousand six hundred and ten pounds sterling thirteen shillings and eight- pence each, less the customary bank charge which may be occasioned by the transfer of these payments to London.
The payments shall be scheduled at four months' distance the one from the other; the first shall be made four months after the exchange of the ratifications of the Treaty signed to-day, and the last two years after that exchange.
The present Protocol will have the same force and value as if it had been inserted word for word in the Treaty signed to-day,
In faith of which the plenipotentiaries of the two Governments have signed the present Protocol and have placed their seals to it.
Done at St. Petersburg, the twelfth of February, one thousand eight hundred aud eighty-one.
REGULATIONS FOR THE LAND TRADE BETWEEN
RUSSIA AND CHINA
Art. I.-A trade by free exchange and free of duty (free trade) between Russian and Chinese subjects is authorised within a zone extending for fifty versts (100 li) on either side of the frontier. The supervision of this trade will rest with the two Governments, in accordance with their respective frontier regulations.
Art. II.-Russian subjects proceeding on business to Mongolia and to the districts situated on the northern and southern slopes of the Tian-shan mountains may only cross the frontier at certain points specified in the list annexed to those regulations. They must procure from the Russian authorities permits in the Russiau and Chinese languages, with Mongolian and Tartar translation. The name of the owner of the goods, or that of the leader of the caravan, a specification of the goods, the number of packages, and the number of heads of cattle may be indicated in the Mongoliau or Tartar languages, in the Chinese text of these permits. Merchants, on entering Chinese territory, are bound to produce their permits at the Chinese post nearest to the frontier, where, after examination, the permit is to be counter- signed by the chief of the post. The Chinese authorities are entitled to arrest merchants who have crossed the frontier without permit, and to deliver them over to the Russian authorities nearest to the frontier, or to the competent Russian Consul, for the infliction of a severe penalty. In case of the permit being lost, the owner is bound to give notice to the Russian Consul, in order that a fresh one may be issued to him, and inform the local authorities, in order to obtain a temporary certificate which will enable him to pursue his journey, Merchandise introduced into Mongolia and the districts situated on the slopes of the Tian-shan, but which have found no sale there, may be forwarded to the towns of Tientsin and Sou- tcheou (Tsia-yu-kwan), to be sold or to be sent farther into China. With regard to the duties on such merchandise, to the issue of permits for its carriage, and to other Customs formalities, proceedings shall be taken in accordance with the following provisions.
Art. III-Russian merchants forwarding goods from Kiachta and the Nertchinsk country to Tientsin must send them by way of Kalgan, Dounba, and Toun-tcheou. Merchandise forwarded to Tientsin from tho Russian frontier by Kobdo and Kouihoua.tchen is to follow the same route. Merchants must be provided with transport permits issued by the Russian authorities, and duly vised by the competent Chinese authorities, which must give, in the Chinese and Russian languages, the name of the owner of the goods, the number of packages, and a description of the goods they contain. The officials of the Chinese Custom-houses situated on the road by which merchandise is forwarded will proceed, without delay, to verify the number of the packages, and to examine the goods, which they will allow to pass onwards, after fixing a visa to the permit. Packages opened in the course of the Customs examinations will be closed again at the Custom-house, the number of packages. opened being noted on the permit. The Customs examination is not to last more than two hours. The permits are to be presented within a term of six months at the Tientsin Custom-honse to be cancelled. If the owner of the goods fiuds this term insufficient, he must at the proper time and place give notice to the Chinese authorities. In case of the permit being lost the merchant must give notice to the authorities who delivered it to him to obtain a duplicate and must for that
purpose
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make known the number and date of the missing permit. The nearest Custom- house on his road, after having ascertained the accuracy of the merchant's declara- tions, will give him a provisional certificate, accompanied by which his goods may proceed on their journey. An inaccurate declaration of the quantity of the goods, if it be proved that it was intended to conceal sales effected on the road, or to escape payment of duty, will render the merchant liable to the infliction of the penalties laid down by Art. VIII. of the present regulations.
Art. IV. Russian merchants who may wish to sell at Kalgan any portion of the goods brought from Russia must make a declaration to that effect to the local authorities within the space of five days. Those authorities, after the merchant has paid the whole of the entrance duties, will furnish him with a permit for the sale of the goods.
Art. V. Goods brought by Russian merchants by land from Russia to Tientsin will pay an entrance duty equivalent to two-thirds of the rate established by the tariff. Goods brought from Russia to Sou-tcheou (Tsia-yu-kwan) will pay in that town the same duties and be subject to the same regulations as at Tientsiu.
Art. VI.-If the goods left at Kalgan, having paid the entrance duties, are not sold there, their owner may send them on to Toun-tcheon, or to Tientsin, and the Customs authorities, without levying fresh duties, will repay to the merchant one-third of the entrance duty paid at Kalgan, a note to that effect being made on the permit issued by the Kalgan Custom-house. Russian merchants, after paying transit dues, i.e., one-half of the duty specified in the tariff, may forward to the internal markets goods left at Kalgan which have paid the entrance dues, subject only to the general regulations established for foreign trade in China. A transport permit, which is to be produced at all the Custom-houses and barriers on the road, will be delivered for these goods. Goods not accompanied by such permit will have to pay duty at the Custom-houses they pass, and lekin at the barriers.
Art. VII.-Goods brought from Russia to Sou-tcheou (Tsia-yu-kwan) may be forwarded to the internal markets under the conditions stipulated by Art. IX. of these Regulations for goods forwarded from Tientsin destined for the internal market.
Art. VIII.-If it be ascertained, when the Customs examination of goods brought from Russia to Tientsin takes place, that the goods specified in the permit have been withdrawn from the packages and replaced by others, or that their quantity (after deducting what has been left at Kalgan) is smaller than that indicated in the permit, the whole of the goods included in the examination will be confiscated by the Customs authorities. It is understood that packages damaged on the road, and which, con- sequently, have been repacked, shall not be liable to confiscation, provided always that such damage has been duly declared at the nearest Custom-house, and that a note to such effect has been made by the office after it has ascertained the untouched condition of the goods as at first sent off. Goods concerning which it is ascertained that a portion has been sold on the road will be liable to confiscation. If goods have been taken by by-ways in order to evade their examination at the Custom- houses established on the routes indicated in Art, III, the owner will be liable to a fine equal in amount to the whole entrance duty. If a breach of the aforesaid regulations has been committed by the carriers, without the knowledge or connivance of the owner of the goods, the Customs authorities will take this circumstance into consideration in determining the amount of the fine. This provision only applies to localities through which the Russian land trade passes, and is not applicable to similar cases arising at the ports and in the interior of the provinces. When goods are confiscated the merchant is entitled to release them by paying the equivalent of their value, duly arrived at by an understanding with the Chinese authorities.
Art. IX. On the exportation by sea from Tientsin to some other Chinese port opened to foreign trade by Treaty of goods brought from Russia by land, the Tientsin Customs will levy on such goods one-third of the tariff duty, in addition to the two-thirds already paid. No duty shall be levied on these goods in other ports. Goods sent from Tientsin or the other ports to the internal markets are subject to
TRADE REGULATIONS BETWEEN RUSSIA AND CHINA
169
transit dues (ie., half of the tariff duty) according to the general provisions laid down for foreign trade.
Art. X-Chinese goods sent from Tientsin to Russia by Russian merchants must be forwarded to Kalgan by the route indicated under Art. III. The entire export duty will be levied on these goods when they leave the country. Nevertheless, re-imported goods bought at Tientsin, as well as those bought in another port and forwarded in transitu to Tientsin to be exported to Russia, if accompanied by a Customs receipt for the export duty, shall not pay a second time, and the half re-importation duty (coasting duty) paid at Tientsin will be repaid to the merchant if the goods upon which it has been paid are exported to Russia a year from the time of such payment. For the transport of goods in Russia the Russian Consul will issue a permit indicating in the Russian and Chinese languages the name of the owner of the goods, the number of packages, and the nature of the goods they contain. These permits will be vised by the Port Customis authorities, and must accompany the goods for production when they are examined at the Custom-houses ou the road. The rules given in detail in Article III. will be observed as to the term within which the permit is to be presented to the Custom-house to be cancelled, and as to the proceedings in case of the permit being lost. Goods will follow the route indicated by Article III., and are not to be sold on the road; a breach of this rule will render the merchant liable to the penalties provided for under Article VIII. Goods will be examined at the Custom-houses on the road in accordance with the rules laid down under Article III. Chinese goods bought by Russian merchants at Sou-tcheou (Tsia-yu-kwan), or brought by them from the internal markets to be forwarded to Russia, on leaving Sou-tcheou for Russia will have to pay the duty leviable upon goods exported from Tientsin, and will be subject to the regulations established for that port.
Art. XI-Goods bought at Toun-tcheou, on leaving that place for Russia by land, will have to pay the full export duty laid down by the tariff. Goods bought at Kalgan will pay in that town, on leaving for Russia, a duty equivalent to half the tariff rate. Goods bought by Russian merchants in the internal markets, and brought to Toun-tcheou and Kalgan to be forwarded to Russia, will moreover be subject to transit dues, according to the general rules established for foreign trade in the internal markets. The local Čustom-houses of the aforesaid towns after levying the duties will give the merchant a transport permit for the goods. For goods leaving Toun-tcheou this permit will be issued by the Dounba Customs authorities, to whom application is to be made for it, accompanied by payment of the duties to which the goods are liable. The permit will mention the prohibition to sell goods on the road. The rules given in detail in Article III. relative to permits, the examination of goods, &c., will apply in like manner to goods exported from the places mentioned in this Article.
Art. XII-Goods of foreign origin sent to Russia by land from Tientsin' Tour- tcheou, Kalgan, and Sou-tcheou (Tsia-yu-kwan) will pay no duty if the merchant produces a Customs receipt acknowledging payment of the import and transit duties on those goods. If they have only paid entrance duties the competent Custom-house will call upon the merchant for the payment of the transit dues fixed by the tariff.
Art. XIII-Goods imported into China by Russian merchants, or exported by them, will pay Custom duties according to the general tariff for foreign trade with China, and according to the additional tariff drawn up for Russian trade in 1862.
Goods not enumerated in either of those tariffs will be subject to a 5 per cent.
ad valorem duty.
Art. XIV-The following articles will be admitted free of export and import duty:-Gold and silver ingots, foreign coins, flour of all kinds, sago, biscuits, preserved meats and vegetables, cheese, butter, confectionery, foreign clothes, jewellery and silver plate, perfumery and soaps of all kinds, charcoal, firewood, handles of foreign manufacture, foreign tobacco and cigars, wine, beer, spirits household stores and utensils to be used in houses and on board ship, travellers, luggage, official stationery, tapestries, cutlery, foreign medicines, glassware, and
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ornaments. The afore-mentioned articles will pass free of duty on entering and on leaving by land; but if they are sent from the towns and ports mentioned in these regulations to the internal markets they will pay a transit duty of 24 per cent. ad valorem. Travellers' luggage, gold and silver ingots, and foreign coins will, however, not pay this duty.
Art. XV. The exportation and importation of the following articles is prohibited under penalty of confiscation in case of smuggling: -Gunpowder, artillery ammuni tion, cannon, muskets, rifles, pistols, and all firearms, engines, and munitions of war, salt, and opium. Russian subjects going to China may, for their personal defence have one musket or one pistol each, of which mention will be made in the permit they are provided with. The importation by Russian subjects of saltpetre, sulphur, and lead is allowed only under special licence from the Chinese authorities, and those articles may only be sold to Chinese subjects who hold a special purchase- permit. The exportation of rice and of Chinese copper coin is forbidden. On the other hand, the importation of rice and of all cereals may take place duty free.
Art. XVI.-The transport of goods belonging to Chinese merchants is forbidden to Russian merchants attempting to pass them off as their own property.
Art. XVII.-The Chinese authorities are entitled to take the necessary measures against smuggling,
Done at St. Petersburg, the 12th-24th February, 1881.
(Signed)
[L.S.]
NICOLAS DE GIERS.
37
[L.S.]
EUGENE BUrzow.
[L.S.]
TSENG.
PROTOCOL
The undersigned Nicolas de Giers, secretary of state, actual privy councillor directing the Imperial Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Tseng, Marquess of Neyong vice-president of the high court of justice, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of China to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, have met at the hotel of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to proceed to the exchange of the acts of ratification of the Treaty between Russia and China, signed at St. Petersburg, the 12/24 February, 1881.
After perusal of the respective instruments, which have been acknowledged tex- tually conformable to the original act, the exchange of the act ratified by His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, the 4/16 August, 1881, against the act ratified by His Majesty the Emperor of China the 3/15 May, 1881, has taken place according to custom.
In faith of which the undersigned have drawn up the present proces-verbal, and have affixed to it the seal of their arms.
Dlle.
Done at St. Petersburg, the 7th August, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-
(Signed) [L.S.]
NICOLAS DE GIERS.
JJ
[L.S.]
TSENG.
I
UNITED STATES
TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
AND CHINA
SIGNED, IN THE ENGLISH AND CHINESE LANGUAGES, AT TIENTSIN,
18TH JUNE, 1858
Ratifications exchanged at Pehtang, 16th August, 1859
The United States of America and the Ta-Tsing Empire desiring to maintain firm, lasting, and sincere friendship, have resolved to renew, in a manner clear and positive, by means of a Treaty or general Convention of Peace, Amity, and Commerce, the rules which shall in future be mutually observed in the intercourse of their respective countries; for which most desirable object the President of the United States and the August Sovereign of the Ta-Tsing Empire have named for their Plenipotentiaries, to wit: the President of the United States of America, William B. Reed, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to China; and His Majesty the Emperor of China, Kweiliang, a member of the Privy Council and Superintendent of the Board of Punishments, and Hwashana, President of the Board of Civil Office and Major-General of the Bordered Blue Banner Division of the Chinese Baunermen, both of them being Imperial Commissioners and Plenipotenti- aries: And the said Ministers, in virtue of the respective full powers they have received from their governments, have agreed upon the following articles:
Art L.-There shall be, as there has always been, peace and friendship between the United States of America and the Ta-Tsing Empire, and between their people respectively. They shall not insult or oppress each other for any trifling cause, so as to produce an estrangement between them; and if any other nation should act unjustly or oppressively, the United States will exert their good offices, on being informed of the case, to bring about an amicable arrangement of the question, thus showing their friendly feelings.
:
Art. II.-In order to perpetuate friendship, on the exchange of ratifications by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate of the United States, and by His Majesty the Emperor of China, this Treaty shall be kept and sacredly guarded in this way, viz. The original Treaty, as ratified by the President of the United States, shall be deposited at Peking, the capital of His Majesty the Emperor of China, in charge of the Privy Council; and, as ratified by His Majesty the Emperor of China, shall be deposited at Washington, the capital of the United States, in charge of the Secretary of State.
Art. III.In order that the people of the two countries may know and obey the provisions of this Treaty, the United States of America agree, immediately on the exchange of ratifications, to proclaim the same and publish it by proclamation in the Gazettes where the laws of the United States of America are published by authority; and His Majesty the Emperor of China, on the exchange of ratifications, agrees immediately to direct the publication of the same at the capital and by the Governors of all the provinces.
Art. IV.-In order further to perpetuate friendship, the Minister or Commis- sioner, or the highest diplomatic representative of the United States of America in China, shall at all times have the right to correspond on terms of perfect equality and confidence with the officers of the Privy Council at the capital, or with the Governor- General of the Two Kwang, of Folkien and Chekiang, or of the Two Kiang; and whenever he desires to have such correspondence with the Privy Council at the capital he shall have the right to send it through either of the said Governors-General, or by general post; and all such communications shall be most carefully respected. The Privy Council and Governors-General, as the case may be, shall in all cases consider and acknowledge such communications promptly and respectfully.
Art. V. The Minister of the United States of America in China, whenever he has business, shall have the right to visit and sojourn at the capital of His Majesty the
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TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA
Emperor of China and there confer with a member of the Privy Council or any other high officer of equal rank deputed for that purpose, on matters of common interest and advantage. His visits shall not exceed one in each year, and he shall complete bis business without unnecessary delay. He shall be allowed to go by land or come to the mouth of the Pei-ho, in which he shall not bring ships-of-war, and he shall inform the authorities of that place in order that boats may be provided for him to go on his journey. He is not to take advantage of this stipulation to request visits to the capital on trivial occasions. Whenever he means to proceed to the capital he shall communicate in writing his intention to the Board of Rites at the capital, and thereupon the said Board shall give the necessary direction to facilitate his journey, and give him necessary protection and respect on his way. On, his arrival at the capital he shall be furnished with a suitable residence prepared for him, and he shall defray his own expenses; and his entire suite shall not exceed twenty persons exclusive of his Chinese attendants, none of whom shall be engaged in trade.
Art. VI. If at any time His Majesty the Emperor of China shall, by Treaty voluntarily made, or for any other reason, permit the representative of any friendly nation to reside at his capital for a long or short time, then, without any further consultation or express permission, the representative of the United States in China, shall have the same privilege.
Art. VII. The superior authorities of the United States and of China in corresponding together shall do so on terms of equality and in form of mutual communication (chau-hwui). The Consuls and the local officers, civil and military, in corresponding together shall likewise employ the style and form of mutual communication (chau-hunt). When inferior officers of the one government address the superior officers of the other they shall do so in the style and form of memorial (shin-chin). Private individuals, in addressing superior officers, shall employ the style of petition (pin-ching). In no case shall any terms or style be used or suffered which shall be offensive or disrespectful to either party. And it is agreed that no present, under any pretext or formi whatever, shall ever be demanded of the United States by China, or of China by the United States.
Art. VIII. In all future personal intercourse between the representative of the United States of America and the Governors-General or Governors the interviews shall be had at the official residence of the said officers, or at their temporary resi dence, or at the residence of the representative of the United States of America, whichever may be agreed upon between them; nor shall they make any pretext for declining these interviews. Current matters shall be discussed by correspondence so as not to give the trouble of a personal meeting.
Art. IX-Whenever national vessels of the United States of America, in cruising along the coast and among the ports opened for trade for the protection of the com. merce of their country, or the advancement of science, shall arrive at or near any of the ports of China, the commanders of said ships and the superior local authorities of government shall, if it be necessary, hold intercourse on terms of equality and courtesy, in token of the friendly relations of their respective nations; and the said vessels shall enjoy all suitable facilities on the part of the Chinese Government in procuring provisions or other supplies, and making necessary repairs. And the United States of America agree that in case of the shipwreck of any American vessel and its being pillaged by pirates, or in case any American vessel shall be pillaged or captured by pirates on the seas adjacent to the coast, without being shipwrecked, the national vessels of the United States shall pursue the said pirates, and if captured deliver them over for trial and punishment.
Art. X.---The United States of America shall have the right to appoint Consuls and other commercial agents for the protection of trade, to reside at such places in the dominions of China as shall be agreed to be opened, who shall hold official intercourse and correspondence with the local officers of the Chinese Government (a Consul or a Vice-Consul in charge taking rank with an intendant of circuit or a prefect), either personally or in writing, as occasion may require, on terms of equality and reciprocal respect. And the Consuls and local officers shall employ the style of mutual
|
TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA
173
communication. If the officers of either nation are disrespectfully treated, or aggrieved in any way by the other authorities, they have the right to make representation of the same to the superior officers of their respective Governments, who shall see that full inquiry and strict justice shall be had in the premises. And the said Consuls and agents shall carefully avoid all acts of offence to the officers and people of China, On the arrival of a Consul duly accredited at any port in China, it shall be the duty of the Minister of the United States to notify the same to the Governor-General of the province where such port is, who shall forthwith recognize the said Consul and grant him authority to act.
Art. XI-All citizens of the United States of America in China, peaceably attending to their affairs, being placed on a common footing of amity and good- will with subjects of China, shall receive and enjoy for themselves and everything appertaining to them the protection of the local authorities of Government, who shall defend them from all insult or injury of any sort. If their dwellings or property, be threatened or attacked by mobs, incendiaries, or other violent or lawless persons, the local officers, on requisition of the Consul, shall immediately despatch a military force to disperse the rioters, apprehend the guilty individuals, and puish them with the utmost rigour of the law. Subjects of China guilty of any criminal act towards citizens of the United States shall be punished by the Chinese authorities according to the laws of China, and citizens of the United States, either on shore or in any merchant vessel, who may insult, trouble, or wound the persons or injure the property of Chinese, or commit any other improper act in China, shall be punished only by the Consul or other public functionary thereto authorized, according to the laws of the United States. Ar- rests in order to trial may be made by either the Chinese or United States authorities. Art. XII.--Citizens of the United States, residing or sojourning at any of the ports open to foreign commerce, shall be permitted to rent houses and places of business or hire sites on which they can themselves build houses or hospitals, churches, and cemeteries. The parties interested can fix the rents by mutual and equitable agreement; the proprietors shall not demand an exorbitant price, nor shall the local authorities interfere, unless there be some objections offered on the part of the inhabitants respecting the place. The legal fees to the officers for applying their seal shall be paid. The citizens of the United States shall not unreasonably insist on particular spots, but each party shall conduct themselves with justice and moderation. Any desecration of the cemeteries by natives of China shall be severely punished according to law. At the places where the ships of the United States anchor, or their citizens reside, the merchants, seamen, or others can freely pass and repass in the immediate neighbourhood; but in order to the preservation of the public peace, they shall not go into the country to the villages and warts to sell their goods unlawfully, in fraud of the revenue.
Art. XIII--If any vessel of the United States be wrecked or stranded on the coast of China and be subjected to plunder or other damage, the proper officers of the Government, on receiving information of the fact, shall immediately adopt measures for its relief and security; the persons on board shall receive friendly treatment, and be enabled to repair at once to the nearest port, and shall enjoy all facilities for obtaining supplies of provisions and water. If the merchant vessels of the United States, while within the waters over which the Chinese Government exercises jurisdiction, be plundered by robbers or pirates, then the Chinese local authorities civil and military, on receiving information thereof, shall arrest the said robbers or pirates, and punish them according to law, and shall cause all the property which can be recovered to be restored to the owners, or placed in the hands of the Consul. If by reason of the extent of territory and numerous population of China it shall in any case happen that the robbers cannot be apprehended, and the property only in part recovered, the Chinese Government shall not make indemnity for the goods lost; but if it shall be proved that the local authorities have been in collusion with the robbers, the same shall be communicated to the superior authorities for memorializing the Throne, and these officers shall be severely punished and their property be confiscated to repay the losses.
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TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA
Art. XIV. The citizens of the United States are permitted to frequent the ports and cities of Canton and Chan-chau, or Swatow, in the province of Kwangtung; Amoy, Foochow, and Tai-wan in Formosa, in the province of Fulkien; Ningpo in the province of Chekiang; and Shanghai in the province of Kiangsu, and any other port or place hereafter by Treaty with other powers or with the United States opened to commerce; and to reside with their families and trade there, and to proceed at pleasure with their vessels and merchandise from any of these ports to any other of them. But said vessels shall not carry ou a clandestine or fraudulent trade at other ports of China, not declared to be legal, or along the coasts thereof; and any vessel under the American flag violating this provision shall, with her cargo, be subject to confiscation to the Chinese Govern- ment; and any citizen of the United States who shall trade in any contraband article of merchandise shall be subject to be dealt with by the Chinese Government, without being entitled to any countenance or protection from that of the United States; and the United States will take measures to prevent their flag from being abused by the subjects of other nations as a cover for the violation of the laws of the Empire,
Art. XV.-At each of the ports open to commerce, citizens of the United States shall be permitted to import from abroad, and sell, purchase, and export all merchan- dise of which the importation or exportation is not prohibited by the laws of the Empire. The tariff of duties to be paid by the citizens of the United States, on the export and import of goods from and into China, shall be the same as was agreed upon at the Treaty of Wanghia, except so far as it may be modified by Treaties with other nations, it being expressly agreed that citizens of the United States shall never pay higher duties than those paid by the most favoured nation.
Art. XVI. Tonnage duties shall be paid on every merchant vessel belonging to the United States entering either of the open ports at the rate of four mace per ton of forty cubic feet, if she be over one hundred and fifty tons burden; and one mace per ton of forty cubic feet if she be of the burden of one hundred and fifty tons or under, according to the tonnage specified in the register; which, with her other papers, shall, on her arrival, be lodged with the Consul, who shall report the same to the Commis- sioner of Customs. And if any vessel, having paid tonnage duty at one port, shall go to any other port to complete the disposal of her cargo, or being in ballast, to purchase an entire or fill up an incomplete cargo, the Consul shall report the same to the Commissioner of Customs, who shall note on the port-clearance that the tonnage duties have been paid, and report the circumstance to the collectors at the other Custom-houses; in which case the said vessel shall only pay duty on her cargo, and not be charged with tonnage duty a second time. The collectors of Customs at the open ports shall consult with the Consuls about the erection of beacons or light- houses, and where buoys and lightships should be placed.
Art. XVII--Citizens of the United States shall be allowed to engage pilots to take their vessels into port, and, when the lawful duties have all been paid, take them out of port. It shall be lawful for them to hire at pleasure servants, compradores, linguists, writers, labourers, seamen, and persons for whatever necessary service, with passage or cargo-boats, for a reasonable compensation, to be agreed upon by the parties or determined by the Consul.
Art. XVIII. Whenever merchant vessels of the United States shall enter a port the Collector of Customs shall, if he see fit, appoint Custom-house officers to guard said vessels, who may live on board the ship or their own boats, at their convenience. The local authorities of the Chinese Government shall cause to be apprehended all mutineers or deserters from on board the vessels of the United States in China on being informed by the Consul, and will deliver them up to the Consuls or other officers for punishment. "And if criminals, subjects of China, take refuge in the houses, or on board the vessels of citizens of the United States, they shall not be harboured, but shall be delivered up to justice on due requisition by the Chinese local officers, addressed to those of the United States. The merchants, seamen, and other citizens of the United States shall be under the superintendence of the appropriate officers of their government.
If individuals of either nation commit acts of violence or disorder, use arms to the injury of others, or create disturbances endangering life, the officers of
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175
the two governments will exert themselves to enforce order and to maintain the public peace, by doing impartial justice in the premises.
Art. XIX. Whenever a merchant vessel belonging to the United States shall cast anchor in either of the said ports, the supercargo, master, or consignee, shall, within forty-eight hours, deposit the ship's papers in the bands of the Consul or person charged with his functions, who shall cause to be communicated to the Super- intendent of Customs a true report of the name and tonnage of such vessel, the number of her crew, and the nature of her cargo, which being done, he shall give a permit for her discharge. And the master, supercargo, or consignee, if he proceed to discharge the cargo without such permit, shall incur a fine of five hundred Dollars, and the goods so discharged without permit shall be subject to forfeiture to the Chinese Government. But if a master of any vessel in port desire to discharge a part only of the cargo, it shall be lawful for him to do so, paying duty on such part only, and to proceed with the remainder to any other ports. Or if the master so desire, he may within forty- eight hours after the arrival of the vessel, but not later, decide to depart without breaking bulk; in which case he shall not be subject to pay tonnage or other duties or charges, until, on his arrival at another port, he shall proceed to discharge cargo when be shall pay the duties on vessel and cargo, according to law. And the tonnage duties shall be held due after the expiration of the said forty-eight hours.
In case of the absence of the Consul or person charged with his functions, the captain or supercargo of the vessel may have recourse to the consul of a friendly Power; or, if he please, directly to the Superintendent of Customs, who shall do all that is required to conduct the ship's business.
Art. XX. The Superintendent of Customs, in order to the collection of the proper duties, shall, on application made to him through the Consul, appoint suitable officers, who shall proceed, in the presence of the captain, supercargo, or consignee to make a just and fair examination of all goods in the act of being discharged for importation, or laden for exportation, on board any merchant vessel of the United States. And if disputes occur in regard to the value of goods subject to ad valorem duty, or in regard to the amount of tare, and the same cannot be satisfactorily arranged by the parties, the question may, within twenty-four hours, and not after- wards, be referred to the said Consul to adjust with the Superintendent of Customs.
Art. XXI. Citizens of the United States who may have imported merchandise into any of the free ports of China, and paid the duty thereon, if they desire to re-export the same in part or in whole to any other of the said ports, shall be entitled to make application, through their Consul, to the Superintendent of Customs, who, in order to prevent frand on the revenue, shall cause examination to be made, by suitable officers, to see that the duties paid on such goods as are entered on the Custom- house books correspond with the representation made, and that the goods remain. with their original marks unchanged, and shall then make a memorandum in the port-clearance of the goods and the amount of duties paid on the same, and deliver the same to the merchant, and shall also certify the facts to the officers of Customs at the other ports; all which being done, on the arrival in port of the vessel in which the goods are laden, and everything being found, on examination there, to correspond, she shall be permitted to break bulk, and land the said goods without being subject to the payment of any additional duty thereon. But if, on such examination, the Superintendent of Customs shall detect any fraud on the revenue in the case, then the goods shall be subject to forfeiture and confiscation to the Chinese Government. Foreign grain or rice "brought into any port of China in a ship of the United States, and not landed, may be re-exported without hindrance.
Art. XXII. The tonnage duty on vessels of the United States shall be paid on their being admitted to entry.
Duties of import shall be paid on the discharge of the goods, and duties of export on the lading of the same. When all such duties shall have been paid, and not before, the Collector of Customs shall give a port-clearance, and the Consul shall return the ship's papers. The duties shall be paid to the shroffs authorized by the Chinese Government to receive the same. Duties shall be paid and received either in sycee silver or in foreign money, at the rate of the day. If the
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TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA
Consul permits a ship to leave the port before the duties and tonnage dues are paid he shall be held responsible therefor.
Art. XXIII. When goods on board any merchant vessel of the United States in port require to be transhipped to another vessel application shall be made to the Consul, who shall certify what is the occasion therefor to the Superintendent of Customs, who may appoint officers to examine into the facts and permit the transhipment. And if any goods be transhipped without written permits, they shall be subject to be forfeited to the Chinese Government.
Art. XXIV. Where there are debts due by subjects of China to citizens of the United States, the latter may seek redress in law; and on suitable representation being made to the local authorities through the Consul, they will cause due examination in the premises, and take proper steps to compel satisfaction. And if citizens of the United States be indebted to subjects of China, the latter may seek redress by representation through the Consul, or by suit in the Consular Court; but neither government will hold itself responsible for such debts.
Art. XXV.-It shall be lawful for the officers or citizens of the United States to employ scholars and people of any part of China, without distinction of persons, to teach any of the languages of the Empire, and assist in literary labours, and the persons so employed shall not for that cause be subject to any injury on the part either of the Government or individuals; and it shall in like manner be lawful for citizens of the United States to purchase all manner of books in China.
Art. XXVI-Relations of peace and amity between the United States and China being established by this Treaty, and the vessels of the United States being admitted to trade freely to and from the ports of China opeu to foreign commerce, it is further agreed that, in case at any time bereafter China should be at war with any foreign nation whatever, and should for that cause exclude such nation from entering ber ports, still the vessels of the United States shall none the less continue to pursue their commerce in freedom and security, and to transport goods to and from the ports of the belligerent powers, full respect being paid to the neutrality of the flag of the United States, provided that the said flag shall not protect vessels engaged in the transportation of officers or soldiers in the eaemy's service, nor shall said flag be fraudulently used to enable the enemy's ships, with their cargoes, to enter the ports of China; but all such vessels so offending shall be subject to forfeiture and confisca- tion to the Chinese Government.
Art. XXVII.-All questions in regard to rights, whether of property or person, arising between citizens of the United States in China, shall be subject to the jurisdiction and be regulated by the authorities of their own government; and all controversies occurring in China between citizens of the United States and the subjects of any other government shall be regulated by the Treaties existing between the United States and such governments respectively, without interference on the part of China.
Art. XXVIII. If citizens of the United States have special occasion to address any communication to the Chinese local officers of Government, they shall submit the same to their Consul or other officer, to determine if the language be proper and respectful, and the matter just and right, in which event he shall transmit the same to the appropriate authorities for their consideration and action in the premises. If subjects of China have occasion to address the Consul of the United States they may address him directly, at the same time they inform their own officers, representing the case for his consideration and action in the premises; and if controversies arise between citizens of the United States and subjects of China, which cannot be amicably settled otherwise, the same shall be examined and decided conformably to justice and equity by the public officers of the two nations, acting in conjunction. The extortion of illegal fees is expressly prohibited. Any peaceable persons are allowed to enter the Court in order to interpret, lest injustice be done.
Art. XXIX-The principles of the Christian Religion, as professed by the Protestant and Roman Catholic Churches, are recognised as teaching men to do good, and to do to others as they would have others to do to them. Hereafter those who
ADDITIONAL TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA
177
quietly profess and teach these doctrines shall not be harassed or persecuted on account of their faith. Any person, whether citizen of the United States or Chinese convert, who, according to those tenets, peaceably teaches and practises the principles of Christianity, shall in no case be interfered with or molested.
Art. XXX.-The contracting parties hereby agree that should at any time the Ta-Tsing Empire grant to any nation, or the merchants or citizens of any nation, any right, privilege, or favour, connected either with navigation, commerce, political or other intercourse, which is not conferred by this Treaty, such right, privilege, and favour shall at once freely enure to the benefit of the United States, its public officers, merchants, and citizens.
The present Treaty of Peace, Amity, and Commerce shall be ratified by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, within one year, or sooner, if possible, and by the August Sovereign of the Ta-Tsing Empire forthwith; and the ratifications shall be exchanged within one year from the date of the signature thereof.
In faith whereof we, the respective plenipotentiaries of the United States of America and of the Ta-Tsing Empire, as aforesaid, have signed and sealed these presents.
Done at Tientsin, this eighteenth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-eight, and the Independence of the United States of America the eighty-second, and in the eighth year of Hien Fung, fifth moon, and eighth day.
[L.S.] WILLIAM B. REED.
[L.S.]
IL.S.j
KWEILIANG.
HWASHANA.
[Appended to the foregoing Treaty are Tariff and Rules identical with those annexed to the British Treaty of Tientsin.]
ADDITIONAL TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED
STATES AND CHINA
SIGNED, IN THE ENGLISH AND CHINESE LANGUAGES, AT WASHINGTON, 28TH JULY, 1868
Ratifications Exchanged at Peking, 23rd November, 1869
Whereas, since the conclusion of the Treaty between the United States of America and the Ta-Tsing Empire (China) of the 18th June, 1858, circumstances have arisen showing the necessity of additional articles thereto; the President of the United States and the August Sovereign of the Ta-Tsing Empire have named for their Plenipotentiaries: to wit, the President of the United States of America, William R. Seward, Secretary of State; and His Majesty the Emperor of China, Anson Burlingame, accredited as his Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo tentiary, and Chih-kang and Sun-chia-ku, of the second Chinese rank, associated high Envoys and Ministers of his said Majesty; and the said Plenipotentiaries, after having exchanged their full powers, found to be in due and proper form, have agreed upon the following articles :---
for
Art. I.-His Majesty the Emperor of China, being of the opinion that in making concessions to the citizens or subjects of foreign Powers, of the privilege of residing ou certain tracts of land, or resorting to certain waters of that Empire, purposes of trade, he has by no means relinquished his right of eminent domain or dominion over the said lands and waters, hereby agrees that no such concession or grant shall be construed to give to any power or party which may be at war with or hostile to
179
ADDITIONAL TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA
the United States, the right to attack the citizens of the United States, or their property, within the said lands or waters: And the United States for themselves hereby agree to abstain from offensively attacking the citizens or subjects of any power or party, or their property, with which they may be at war, on any such tract of land or water of the said Empire. But nothing in this article shall be construed to prevent the United States from resisting an attack by any hostile power or party upon their citizens or their property.
It is further agreed that if any right or interest in any tract of land in China, has been, or shall hereafter be, granted by the Government of China to the United States or their citizens for purposes of trade or commerce, that grant shall in no event be construed to divest the Chinese Authorities of their right of jurisdiction over persons and property within said tract of land except so far as the right may have been expressly relinquished by Treaty.
Art. II. The United States of America and His Majesty the Emperor of China, believing that the safety and prosperity of commerce will thereby best be promoted, agree that any privilege or immunity in respect to trade or navigation within the Chinese dominions which may not have been stipulated for by Treaty, shall be subject to the discretion of the Chinese Government, and may be regulated by it accordingly, but not in a manner or spirit incompatible with the Treaty stipulations of the parties. Art. III The Emperor of China shall have the right to appoint Consuls at ports of the United States, who shall enjoy the same privileges and immunities as those which are enjoyed by public law and Treaty in the United States by the Consuls of Great Britain and Russia, or either of them.
Art. IV. The 29th article of the Treaty of the 18th June, 1858, having stipulated for the exemption of the Christian citizens of the United States and Chinese converts from persecution in China on account of their faith, it is further agreed that citizens of the United States in China of every religious persuasion, and Chinese subjects in the United States, shall enjoy entire liberty of conscience, and shall be exempt from all disability or persecution on account of their religious faith or worship in either country. Cemeteries for sepulture of the dead, of whatever nativity or nationality, shall be held in respect and free from disturbance or profanation.
Art. V.The United States of America and the Emperor of China cordially recognize the inherent and inalienable right of man to change his home and allegiance, and also the mutual advantage of the free migration and emigration of their citizens. and subjects respectively from the one country to the other for the purposes of curiosity, of trade, or as permanent residents. The High Contracting Parties, therefore, join in reprobating any other than an entirely voluntary emigration for these purposes. They consequently agree to pass laws, making it a penal offence for a citizen of the United States, or a Chinese subject, to take Chinese subjects either to the United States or to any other foreign country; or for a Chinese subject or citizen of the United States to take citizens of the United States to China, or to any other foreign country, without their free and voluntary consent respectively.
Art. VI.Citizens of the United States visiting or residing in China shall enjoy the same privileges, immunities, or exemptious, in respect to travel or residence as may there be enjoyed by the citizens or subjects of the most favoured nation. And reciprocally, Chinese subjects visiting or residing in the United States shall enjoy the same privileges, immunities, and exemptions in respect to travel or residence as may there be enjoyed by the citizens or subjects of the most favoured nation. But nothing herein contained shall be held to confer naturalization upon citizens of the United States in China, nor upon the subjects of China in the United States.
Art. VII. Citizens of the United States shall enjoy all the privileges of the public educational institutions under the control of the Government of China; and reciprocally Chinese subjects shall enjoy all the privileges of the public educational institutions under the control of the Government of the United States, which are enjoyed in the respective countries by the citizens or subjects of the most favoured nation. The citizens of the United States may freely establish and maintain schools within the Empire of China at those places where foreigners are by Treaty permitted.
IMMIGRATION AND COMMERCIAL TREATIES BETWEEN THE U. S. & CHINA 179
to reside; and reciprocally, Chinese subjects may enjoy the same privileges and. immunities in the United States.
Art. VIII. The United States, always disclaiming and discouraging all prae- tices of unnecessary dictation and intervention by one nation in the affairs or domestic administration of another, do hereby freely disclaim and disavow any intention or right to intervene in the domestic administration of China in regard to the construc tion of railroads, telegraphis, or other material internal improvements. On the other hand, His Majesty the Emperor of China reserves to himself the right to decide the time and manner and circumstances of introducing such improvements within his dominions. With this mutual understanding it is agreed by the contracting parties that, if at any time hereafter his Imperial Majesty shall determine to construct, or cause to be constructed, works of the character mentioned within the Empire, and shall make application to the United States or any other Western Power for facilities to carry out that policy, the United States will in that case designate or authorize suitable engineers to be employed by the Chinese Government, and will recommend to other nations an equal compliance with such applications; the Chinese Government in that case protecting sucli engineers in their persons and property, and paying them a reasonable compensation for their services.
In faith whereof, the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed this Treaty and thereto affixed the seals of their arms.
Done at Washington, the twenty-eighth day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-eight.
[L.S.] (Signed) WILLIAM H. SEWARD. [L.S.] (Signed)
CHIH KANG.
[L.B.]
ANSON BURLINGAME.
[L.S.]
11
SUN CHIAKU.
IMMIGRATION AND COMMERCIAL TREATIES BETWEEN
THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA
SIGNED AT PEKING, IN THE ENGLISH AND CHINESE LANGUAGES, ON THE 17TH NOVEMBER, 1880
THE IMMIGRATION TREATY
Whereas, in the eighth year of Hien Fung, Anno Domini 1858, a Treaty of Peace and Friendship was concluded between the United States of America and China, and to which were added in the seventh year of Tung Chi, Anno Domini 1868, certain supplementary articles to the advantage of both parties, which supplementary articles were to be perpetually observed and obeyed; and
Whereas the Government of the United States, because of the constantly in- creasing immigration of Chinese labourers to the territory of the United States, and the embarrassments consequent upon such immigration, now desires to negotiate a modificaton of the existing Treaties which will not be in direct contravention of their spirit; now, therefore, the President of the United States of America appoints James B. Angell, of Michigan; John F. Swift, of California; and William H. Trescott, of South Carolina, as his Commissioners Plenipotentiary; and His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China has appointed Pao Chan, a member of His Imperial Majesty's Privy Council and Superintendent of the Board of Civil Office, and Li Hung Tsao, a member of His Imperial Majesty's Privy Council, as his Commissioners Plenipo- tentiary; and the said Commissioners Plenipotentiary, having conjointly examined their full powers, and having discussed the points of possible modifications in existing Treaties, have agreed upon the following articles in modification:-
Art. I. Whenever, in the opinion of the Government of the United States, the coming of Chinese labourers to the United States, or their residence therein, affects,
180 IMMIGRATION AND COMMERCIAL TREATIES BETWEEN THE U. S. & CHINA
or threatens to affect, the interests of that country, or to endanger the good order of any locality within the territory thereof, the Government of China agrees that the Government of the United States may regulate, limit, or suspend such coming or residence, but may not absolutely prohibit it. The limitation or suspension shall be reasonable, and shall apply only to Chinese who may go to the United States as labourers, other classes not being included in the limitation. Legislation in regard to Chinese labourers will be of such a character only as is necessary to enforce the regulation, limitation, or suspension, of immigration, and immigrants shall not be subject to personal maltreatment or abuse.
Art. IL-Chinese subjects, whether proceeding to the United States as traders or studeuts, merchants, or from curiosity, together with their body and household servants, and Chinese labourers who are now in the United States, shall be allowed to go and come of their own free will and accord and shall be accorded all the rights, privileges, immunities, and exemptions which are accorded to the citizens and subjects of the most favoured nations.
Art. III. If Chinese labourers, or Chinese of any other class, now either permanently or temporarily residing in the territory of the United States, meet with ill-treatment at the hauds of any other persons, the Government of the United States will exert all its power to devise measures for their protection, and secure to them the same rights, privileges, immunities, and exemptions as may be enjoyed by the citizens or subjects of the most favoured nation, and to which they are entitled by Treaty.
Art. IV. The high contracting Powers, having agreed upon the foregoing Articles, whenever the Government of the United States shall adopt legislative measures in accordance therewith, such measures will be communicated to the Government of China, and if the measures, as effected, are found to work hardship upon the subjects of China, the Chinese Minister at Washington may bring the matter to the notice of the Secretary of State of the United States, who will consider the subject with him, and the Chinese Foreign Office may also bring the matter to the notice of the U.S. Minister at Peking and consider the subject with him, to the end that mutual and unqualified benefit may result. In faith whereof, the Plenipo- tentiaries have signed and sealed the foregoing at Peking, in English and Chinese, there being three originals of each text of even tenor and date, the ratifications of which shall be exchanged at Peking within one year from the date of its execution.
Done at Peking, this 17th day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty, Kuang Hsu sixth year, tenth moon, fifteenth day, Signed and sealed by the above-named Commissioners of both Governments.
THE COMMERCIAL TREATY
The President of the United States of America and His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Chiua, because of certain points of incompleteness in the existing Treaties between the two Governments, have named as their Commissioners Plenipotentiary: The President of the United States of America, James B. Angell, of Michigan; John F. Swift, of California; and William H. Trescott, of South Carolina, as his Com- missioners Plenipotentiary; and His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China has appointed Pao Chun, a member of His Imperial Majesty's Privy Council and Super- intendent of the Board of Civil Office; and Li Hung Tsao, a member of His Imperial Majesty's Privy Council, as his Commissioners Plenipotentiary; and the said Com- missioners Plenipotentiary, having conjointly examined their full powers, and having discussed the points of possible modification in existing Treaties, have agreed upon the following Additional Articles:-
-
Art. I. The Governments of the United States and China, recognizing the benefits of their past commercial relations, and in order to still further promote such relations between the citizens and subjects of the two Powers, mutually agree to give the most careful and favourable attention to the representations of either as to such special extension of commercial intercourse as either may desire.
IMMIGRATION AND COMMERCIAL TREATIES BETWEEN THE U. S. & CHINA 181
Art. II-The Governments of China and of the United States mutually agree and undertake that Chinese subjects shall not be permitted to import opium in any of the ports of the United States, and citizens of the United States shall not be permitted to import opium into any of the open ports of China, or transport from one open port to any other open port, or to buy and sell opium in any of the open ports in China. This absolute prohibition, which extends to vessels owned by the citizens or subjects of either Power, to foreign vessels employed by them, or to vessels owned by the citizens or subjects of either Power and employed by other persons for the transportation of opium, shall be enforced by appropriate legislation on the part of China and the United States, and the benefits of the favoured nation clauses in existing Treaties shall not be claimed by the citizens or subjects of either Power as against the provisions of this article.
Art. III. His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China hereby promises and agrees that no other kind or higher rate of tonnage dues or duties for imports or ex- ports or coastwise trade shall be imposed or levied in the open ports of China upon vessels wholly belonging to citizens of the United States, or upon the produce, manu- factures, or merchandise imported in the same from the United States, or from any foreign country, or upon the produce, manufactures, or merchandise exported in the same to the United States, or any foreign country, or transported in the same from one open port of China to another, than are imposed or levied on vessels or cargoes of any other nation, or on those of Chinese subjects. The United States bereby pro- mises and agrees that no other kind or higher rate of tonnage duties and dues for imports shall be imposed or levied in the ports of the United States upon vessels wholly belonging to the subjects of his Imperial Majesty, coming either directly or by way of any foreign port from any of the ports of China which are open to foreign trade to the ports of the United States, or returning therefrom either directly or by way of any foreign port to any of the open ports of China, or upon the produce, manufactures, or merchandise imported in the same from China, or from any foreign country, than are imposed or levied on vessels of any other nations which make no discrimination against the United States in tonnage dues or duties on imports, exports, or coastwise trade, or than are imposed or levied on vessels and cargoes of citizens of the United States.
Art. IV. When controversies arise in the Chinese Empire between citizens of the United States and subjects of His Imperial Majesty, which need to be examined and decided by the public officer of the two nations, it is agreed between the Governments of the United States and China that such cases shall be tried by the proper official of the nationality of the defendant. The properly authorized official of the plaintiff's nationality shall be freely permitted to attend the trial, and shall be treated with the courtesy due to his position. He shall be granted all proper facilities for watching the proceedings in the interest of justice, and if he so desire be shall have the right to be present and to examine and to cross-examine witnesses, If he is dissatisfied with the proceedings, he shall be permitted to protest against them in debate. The law administered will be the law of the nationality of the officer trying the case.
In faith whereof, the respective Plenipotentiaries bave signed and sealed the foregoing, at Peking, in English and Chinese there being three originals of each text, of even tenor and date, the ratifications of which shall be exchanged at Peking within one year from the date of its execution.
Done at Peking, this seventeenth day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty, Kuang Hsu sixth year, tenth moon, fifteenth day.
(Signed)
JAMES B. ANGELL,
JOHN F. SWIFT.
WILLIAM H. TRESCOTT.
**
(Signed)
PAO CHUN.
LI HUNG-TSAO.
IMMIGRATION PROHIBITION TREATY BETWEEN THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND CHINA, 1894
RATIFICATIONS EXCHANGED AT WASHINGTON, 7TH DECEMBER, 1894
Whereas, on the 17th of November, A. D. 1880, and of Kwang Hsu, the sixth year, the tenth month, and the 15th day, a Treaty was concluded between the United States and China for the purpose of regulating, limiting, or suspending the coming of Chinese labourers to and their residence in the United States, and, whereas, the Government of China, in view of the antagonism and much depreciated and serious disorders to which the presence of Chinese labourers has given rise in certain parts of the United States, desires to prohibit the emigration of such labourers from China to the United States; and, whereas, the two Governments desire to co-operate in prohibiting such emigration and to strengthen in many other ways the bonds of relationship between the two countries; and, whereas, the two Governments are desirous of adopting reciprocal measures for the better protection of the citizens or subjects of each within the jurisdiction of the other; now, therefore, the President of the United States has appointed Walter Q. Gresham, Secretary of State, as his Plenipotentiary, and his Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China has appointed Yang Yui, Officer of the Second Rank, Sub-director of the Court of Sacrificial Worship and Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, and the said Plenipotentiaries having exhibited their respective full powers, found to be in due form and good faith, have agreed upon the following articles :-
Art. I. The high contracting parties agree that for a period of ten years, beginning with the date of the ratifications of this Convention, the coming, except under the conditions hereinafter specified, of Chinese labourers to the United States shall be absolutely prohibited.
Art. II. The preceding article shall not apply to the return to the United States of any registered Chinese labourer who has a lawful wife, child, or parent in the United States or property therein of the value of $1,000, or debts of like amount due to him and pending settlement. Nevertheless, every such Chinese labourer shall, before leaving the United States, deposit, as a condition of his return, with the collector of customs of the district from which he departs, a full description in writing of his family or property or debts as aforesaid, and shall be furnished by the said collector with such certificate of his right to return under this Treaty as the laws of the United States may now or hereafter prescribe, and not inconsistent with the provisions of the Treaty; and, should the written description aforesaid be proved to be false, the rights of return thereunder, or of continued residence after return, shall in each case be forfeited. And such right of return to the United States shall be exercised within one year from the date of leaving the United States; but such right of return to the United States may be extended for an additional period, not to exceed one year, in cases where by reason of sickness or other cause of disability beyond his control, such Chinese labourer shall be rendered unable sooner to return, which facts shall be fully reported to the Chinese Consul at the port of departure, and by him certified to the satisfaction of the collector of the port at which such Chinese subject shall land in the United States. And no such Chinese labourer shall be permitted to enter the United States by land or sea without producing to the proper officer of the Customs the return certificate herein required.
IMMIGRATION PROHIBITION TREATY BETWEEN THE U. S. & CHINA
183
Art. III. The provisions of the convention shall not affect the right at present enjoyed of Chinese subjects, being officials, teachers, students, merchants, or travellers for curiosity or pleasure, but not labourers, of coming to the United States and residing therein. To entitle such Chinese subjects as are above described to admission into the United States they may produce a certificate either from their Government or from the Government of the country where they last resided, viséd by the diplomatic or consular representative of the United States in the country or port whence they depart. It is also agreed that Chinese labourers shall continue to enjoy the privilege of transit across the territory of the United States in the course of their journey to or from other countries, subject to such regulations by the Government of the United States as may be necessary to prevent the said privilege of transit from being abused.
Art. IV. In pursuance of Article 3 of the Immigration Treaty between the United States and China, signed at Peking on the 17th day of November, 1880, it is hereby understood and agreed, that Chinese labourers or Chinese of any other class, either permanently or temporarily residing in the United States, shall have for the protection of their persons and property all rights that are given by the laws of the United States to citizens of the more favoured nations, excepting the right to become naturalized citizens. And the Government of the United States reaffirms its obligations, as stated in the said Article 3, to exert all its power to secure the protection to the person and property of all Chinese subjects in the United States.
Art. V. The Government of the United States having, by an Act of Congress, approved May 5th, 1892, as amended and approved November 3rd, 1893, required all Chinese labourers lawfully within the United States, before the passage of the first-uamed Act, to be registered, as in the said Acts provided, with a view of affording them better protection, the Chinese Government will not object to the enforcement of the said Acts, and reciprocally the Government of the United States recognises the right of the Government of China to enact and enforce similar laws and regulations, for the registration, free of charge, of all labourers, skilled or unskilled (not merchants, as defined by the said Acts of Congress), citizens of the United States in China whether residing within or without the Treaty Ports. And the Government of the United States agrees that within twelve months from the date of the exchange of the ratifications of this Convention, and annually thereafter, it will furnish to the Government of China registers or reports showing the full name, age, occupation, and number or place of residence of all other citizeus of the United States, including missionaries residing both within and without the Treaty Ports of China, not including, however, diplomatic and other officers of the United States residing or travelling in China upon official business, together with their body and household servants.
Art. VI. This convention shall remain in force for a period of ten years, beginning with the date of the exchange of ratifications, and, if six mouths before the expiration of the said period of ten years neither Government shall have formally given notice of its final termination to the other, it shall remain in full force for another like period of ten years.
In faith whereof, we, the respective plenipotentiaries, have signed this Convention and have hereunto affixed our seals.
Done, in duplicate, at Washington, the 17th day of March, A.D. 1894.
WALTER Q. GRESHAM,
YANG YUI,
Secretary of State
Chinese Minister to the United States.
COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED
STATES AND CHINA
SIGNED AT SHANGHAI, 8TH OCTOBER, 1903
[Translation]
The United States of America and His Majesty the Emperor of China, being animated by an earnest desire to extend further the commercial relations between them and otherwise to promote the interests of the peoples of the two countries, in view of the provisions of the first paragraph of Article XI. of the Final Protocol. signed at Peking on the 7th day of September, A.D. 1901, whereby the Chinese Gov- ernment agreed to negotiate the amendments deemed necessary by the foreign Governments to the Treaties of Commerce and Navigation and other subjects concern- ing commercial relations, with the object of facilitating them, bave for that purpose named as their Plenipotentiaries:-
The United States of America-Edwin H. Conger, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to China; John Goodnow, Consul-General of the United States of America at Shanghai; John F. Seaman, at Citizen of the United States of America resident at Shanghai;
And His Majesty the Emperor of China-Lu Hai-huan, President of the Board of Public Works; Sheng Hsuan-huai, Junior Guardian of the Heir Apparent, formerly Senior Vice-President of the Board of Public Works; Wu Ting Fang, Senior Vice-President of the Board of Commerce;
Who, having met and duly exchanged their full powers which were found to be in proper form, have agreed upon the following amendments to existing Treaties of Commerce and Navigation previously concluded between the two countries, and upon the subjects hereinafter expressed connected with commercial relations, with the object of facilitating them.
Art, I. In accordance with international custom, and as the diplomatic representative of China has the right to reside in the Capital of the United States, and to enjoy there the same prerogatives, privileges and immunities as are enjoyed by the similar representative of the most favoured nation, the diplomatic representa- tive of the United States shall have the right to reside at the capital of His Majesty the Emperor of China. He shall be given audience of His Majesty the Emperor whenever necessary to present his letters of credence or any communication from the President of the United States. At all such times he shall be received in a place and in a manner befitting his high position, and on all such occasions the ceremonial observed toward him shall be that observed toward the representatives of nations on a footing of equality, with no loss of prestige on either side.
The diplomatic representatives of the United States shall enjoy all the preroga tives, privileges and immunities accorded by international usage to such representatives, and shall in all respects be entitled to the treatment extended to similar representatives of the most favoured nation.
The English text of all notes or despatches from United States officials to Chinese officials, and the Chinese text of all from Chinese officials to United States officials shall be authoritative.
COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN UNITED STATES AND CHINA
185
Art. II.-As China may appoint consular officers to reside in the United States and to enjoy there the same attributes, privileges and immunities as are enjoyed by consular officers of other nations, the United States may appoint, as its interests may require, consular officers to reside at the places in the Empire of China that are now or that may hereafter be opened to foreign residence and trade. They shall hold direct official intercourse and correspondence with the local officers of the Chinese Government within their consular districts, either personally or in writing as the case may require, on terms of equality and reciprocal respect. These officers shall be treated with proper respect by all Chinese authorities, and they shall enjoy a the attributes, privileges and immunities, and exercise all the jurisdiction over their nationals which are or may hereafter be extended to similar officers of the nation the most favoured in these respects. If the officers of either government are disrespect- fully treated or aggrieved in any way by the authorities of the other, they shall have the right to make representation of the same to the superior officers of their own government, who shall see that full inquiry and strict justice be bad in the premises. And the said consular officers of either nation shall carefully avoid all acts of offence to the officers and people of the other nation.
On the arrival of a consul properly accredited at any place in China opened to foreign trade, it shall be the duty of the Minister of the United States to inform the Board of Foreign Affairs, which shall, in accordance with international usage, forth- with cause the due recognition of the said consul and grant him authority to act.
Art. III. Citizens of the United States may frequent, reside, and carry on trade, industries and manufactures, or pursue any lawful avocation, in all the ports or localities of China which are now open or may hereafter be opened to foreign trade and residence; and, within the suitable localities at those places which have been or may be set apart for the use and occupation of foreigners, they may reut or purchase houses, places of business and other buildings, and rent or lease in perpetuity land and build thereon. They shall generally enjoy as to their persons and property all such rights, privileges and immunities as are or may hereafter be granted to the subjects or citizens of the nation the most favoured in these respects.
Art. IV.The Chinese Government, recognising that the existing system of levying dues on goods in transit, and especially the system of taxation known as lekin, impedes the free circulation of commodities to the general injury of trade, hereby undertakes to abandon the levy of lekin and all other transit dues throughout the empire and to abolish the offices, stations and barriers maintained for their collection and not to establish other offices for levying dues on goods in transit. It is clearly understood that, after the offices, stations and barriers for taxing goods in transit have been abolished, no attempt shall be made to re-establish them in any form or under any pretext whatsoever.
The Government of the United States, in return, consents to allow a surtax, in excess of the tariff rates for the time being in force, to be imposed on foreign goods imported by citizens of the United States and on Chinese produce destined for export abroad or coastwise. It is clearly understood that in no case shall the surtax on foreign imports exceed one and one-half times the import duty leviable in terms of the final Protocol signed by Chinn and the Powers on the seventh day of September, A.D. 1901; that the payment of the import duty and surtax shall secure for foreign imports, whether in the hands of Chinese or foreigners, in original packages or other- wise, complete immunity from all other taxation, examination or delay; that the total amount of taxation, inclusive of the tariff export duty leviable on native produce for export abroad shall, under no circumstances, exceed seven and one-half per cent, ad valorem.
Nothing in this article is intended to interfere with the inherent right of China to levy such other taxes as are not in conflict with its provisions.
Keeping these fundamental principles in view, the High Contracting Parties have agreed upon the following method of procedure:
The Chinese Government undertakes that all offices, stations and barriers of whatsover kind for collecting lekin, duties, or such like dues on goods in trausit, shall
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be permanently abolished on all roads, railways and waterways in the nineteen Provinces of China and the three Eastern Provinces. This provision does not apply to the native Customs offices at present in existence on the seaboard, at open ports where there are offices of the Imperial Maritime Customs, and on the land frontiers of China embracing the nineteen Provinces and the three Eastern Provinces.
Wherever there are offices of the Imperial Maritime Customs, or wherever such may be hereafter placed, native Customs offices may also be established, as well as at any point either on the seaboard or land frontiers.
The Government of the United States agrees that foreign goods on import- ation, in addition to the effective five per cent. import duty as provided for in the Protocol of 1901, shall pay a special surtax of one and one-half times the amount of the said duty to compensate for the abolition of lekin, of other transit dues besides lekin, and of all other taxation on foreign goods and in consideration of the other reforms provided for in this article.
The Chinese Government may recast the foreign export tariff with specific duties as far as practicable, on a scale not exceeding five per cent. ad valorem; but existing export duties shall not be raised until at least six months' notice has been given. In cases where existing export duties are above five per cent., they shall be reduced to not more than that rate. An additional special surtax of one-half the export duty payable for the time being, in lieu of internal taxation of all kinds, may be levied at the place of original shipment, or at the time of export on goods exported either to foreign countries or coastwise.
Foreign goods which bear a similarity to native goods shall be furnished by the Customs officers, if required by the owner, with a protective certificate for each pack- age, on the payment of import duty and surtax, to prevent the risk of any dispute in the interior.
Native goods brought by junks to open ports, if intended for local consumption, irrespective of the nationality of the owner of the goods, shall be reported at the native Customs offices only, to be dealt with according to the fiscal regulations of the Chinese Government.
Machine-made cotton yarn and cloth manufactured in China, whether by foreigners at the open ports or by Chinese anywhere in China, shall as regards taxation be on a footing of perfect equality. Such goods upon payment of the taxes thereon shall be granted a rebate of the import duty and of two-thirds of the import surtax paid on the cotton used in their manufacture, if it has been imported from abroad, and of all duties paid thereon if it be Chinese grown cotton. They shall also be free of export duty, coast-trade duty and export surtax. The same principle and pro- cedure shall be applied to all other products of foreign type turned out by machinery.
in China.
A member or members of the Imperial Maritime Customs foreign staff shall be selected by the Governors-General and Governors of each of the various provinces of the Empire for their respective provinces, and appointed in consultation with the Inspector-General of Imperial Maritime Customs, for duty in connection with native Customs affairs to have a general supervision of their working.
Cases where illegal action is complained of by citizens of the United States shall be promptly investigated by au officer of the Chinese Government of sufficiently high rank, in conjunction with an officer of the United States Government, and an officer of the Imperial Maritime Customs, each of sufficient standing; and, in the event of it being found by the investigating officers that the complaint is well founded and loss has been incurred, due compensation shall be paid through the Imperial Mari- time Customs. The high provincial officials shall be held responsible that the officer guilty of the illegal action shall be severely punished and removed from his post. If the complaint is shown to be frivolous or malicious, the complainant shall be held responsible for the expenses of the investigation.
When the ratifications of this Treaty shall have been exchanged by the High Contracting Parties hereto, and the provisions of this Article shall have been accepted by the Powers having Treaties with China, then a date shall be agreed upon when
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the provisions of this Article shall take effect, and an Imperial Edict shall be published in due form on yellow paper and circulated throughout the Empire of China setting forth the abolition of all lekin taxation, duties on goods in transit, offices, stations and barriers for collecting the same, and of all descriptions of internal taxation on foreign goods, and the imposition of the surtax on the import of foreign goods and on the export of native goods, and the other fiscal changes and reforms provided for in this Article, all of which shall take effect from the said date. The Edict shall state that the provincial high officials are responsible that any official disregarding the letter or the spirit of its injunction shall be severely punished and removed from his post.
Art. V. The tariff duties to be paid by citizens of the United States on goods imported into China shall be as set forth in the schedule annexed hereto and made part of this Treaty, subject only to such amendment and changes as are authorised by Article IV. of the present Convention, or as may hereafter be agreed upon by the present High Contracting Parties. It is expressly agreed, however, that citizens of the United States shall at no time pay other or higher duties than those paid by the citizens or subjects of the most favoured nation.
Conversely, Chinese subjects shall not pay higher duties on their imports into the United States than those paid by the citizens or subjects of the most favoured nation.
Art. VI. The Government of China agrees to the establishment by citizens of the United States of warehouses approved by the proper Chinese authorities as bonded warehouses at the several open ports of China, for storage, re-packing, or preparation for shipment of lawful goods, subject to such needful regulations for the protection of the revenue of China, including a reasonable scale of fees according to com- modities, distance from the Custom-house, and hours of working, as shall be made from time to time by the proper officers of the Government of China.
Art. VII. The Chinese Government, recognising that it is advantageous for the country to develop its mineral resources, and that it is desirable to attract foreign as well as Chinese capital to embark in mining enterprises, agrees, within one year from the signing of this Treaty, to initiate and conclude the revision of the existing mining regulations. To this end China will, with all expedition and earnestness, go into the whole question of mining rules; and, selecting from the rules of the United. States and other countries, regulations which seem applicable to the condition of China, will recast its present mining rules in such a way as, while promoting the interests of Chinese subjects and not injuring in any way the sovereign rights of China, will offer no impediment to the attraction of foreign capital nor place foreign capitalists at a greater disadvantage than they would be under generally accepted foreign regulations; and will permit citizens of the United States to carry on in Chinese territory mining operations and other necessary business relating thereto, provided they comply with the new regulations and conditions which may be imposed by China on its subjects and foreigners alike, relating to the opening of mines, the renting of mineral land, and the payment of royalty, and provided they apply for permits, the provisions of which in regard to necessary business relating to such operations shall be observed. The residence of citizens of the United States in connection with such mining operations shall be subject to such regulations as sball be agreed upon between the United States and China.
Any mining concession granted after the publication of such new rules shall be subject to their provisions.
Art. VIII. Drawback certificates for the return of duties shall be issued by the Imperial Maritime Customs to citizens of the United States within three weeks of the presentation to the Customs of the papers entitling the applicant to receive such drawback certificates, and they shall be receivable at their face value in payment of duties of all kinds (tonnage dues excepted) at the port of issue; or shall, in the case of drawbacks on foreign goods re-exported within three years from the date of importation, be redeemable by the Imperial Maritime Customs in full in ready money at the port of issue, at the option of the holders thereof. But if, in conection with any application for a drawback certficate, the Customs authorities discover an
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attempt to defraud the revenue, the applicant shall be dealt with and punished in accordance with the stipulations provided in the Treaty of Tientsin, Article XXI. in the case of detected frauds on the revenue. In case the goods have been removed from Chinese territory, then the Consul shall inflict on the guilty party a fine to be paid to the Chinese Government.
Art. IX. Whereas the United States undertakes to protect the citizens of any country in the exclusive use within the United States of any lawful trade-marks, provided that such country agrees by Treaty or Convention to give like protection to citizens of the United States:-
Therefore the Government of China, in order to secure such protection in the United States for its subjects, now agrees to fully protect any citizen, firm or corpora- tion of the United States in the exclusive use in the Empire of China of any lawful trade-mark to the exclusive use of which they are entitled in the United States, or which they have adopted and used, or intend to adopt and use as soon as registered, for exclusive use within the Empire of China. To this end the Chinese Government agrees to issue by its proper authorites proclamations having the force of law, for- bidding all subjects of China from infringing on, imitating, colourably imitating, or knowingly passing off an imitation of trade marks belonging to citizens of the United States, which shall have been registered by the proper authorities of the United States at such offices as the Chinese Government will establish for such purpose, on payment of a reasonable fee, alter due investigation by the Chinese authorities, and in com- pliance with reasonable regulations.
Art. X.-The United States Government allows subjects of China to patent their inventions in the United States and protects them in the use and ownership of such patents. The Government of China now agrees that it will establish a Patent Office. After this office has been established and special laws with regard to inventions bave been adopted it will thereupon, after the payment of the legal fees, issue certificates of protection, valid for a fixed term of years, to citizens of the United States on all their patents issued by the United States, in respect of articles the sale of which is lawful in China, which do not infringe on previous inventions of Chinese subjects, in the same manner as patents are to be issued to subjects of China.
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Art. XI. Whereas the Government of the United States engages to give the benefits of its copyright laws to the citizens of any foreign State which gives to the citizens of the United States the benefits of copyrights on an equal basis with its own citizens:-
Therefore the Government of China, in order to secure such benefits in the United States for its subjects, now agrees to give full protection, in the same way and manner and subject to the same conditions upon which it agrees to protect trade- marks, to all citizens of the United States who are authors, designers or proprietors of any book, map, print or engraving especially prepared for the use and education of the Chinese people, or translation into Chinese of any book, in the exclusive right to print and sell such book, map, print, engraving or translation in the Empire of China during ten years from the date of registration. With the exception of the books, maps, etc., specified above, which may not be reprinted in the same form, no work shall be entitled to copyright privileges under this article. It is understood that Chinese subjects shall be at liberty to make, print and sell original translations into Chinese of any works written or of maps compiled by a citizen of the United States. This article shall not be held to protect against due process of law any citizen of the United States or Chinese subject who may be author, proprietor or seller of any publication calculated to injure the well-being of China.
Art. XII The Chinese Government having in 1898 opened the navigable inland waters of the Empire to commerce by all steam vessels, native or foreign, that may be specially registered for the purpose, for the conveyance of passengers and lawful merchandise, citizens, firms and corporations of the United States may engage in such commerce on equal terms with those granted to subjects of any foreign power. In case either party hereto considers it advantageous at any time that the rules and regulations then in existence for such commerce be altered or amended, the
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Chinese Government agrees to consider amicably, and to adopt such modifications thereof as are found necessary for trade and for the benefit of China.
The Chinese Government agrees that, upon the exchange of the ratifications of this Treaty, Mukden and Antung, both in the province of Sheng-king, will be opened by China itself as places of international residence and trade. The selection of fitting localities to be set apart for international use and occupation, and the regula- tions for these places set apart for foreign residence and trade shall be agreed upon by the Governments of the United States and China after consultation together.
Art. XIII.-China agrees to take the necessary steps to provide for a uniform national coinage which shall be legal tender in payment of all duties, taxes and other obligations throughout the Empire of China by the citizens of the United States as well as Chinese subjects. It is understood, however, that all Customs duties shall continue to be calculated and paid on the basis of the Haikuan Tael.
Art. XIV. The principles of the Christian religion, as professed by the Pro- testant and Roman Catholic Churches, are recognised as teaching men to do good and to do to others as they would have others do to them. Those who quietly pro- fess and teach these doctrines shall not be harassed or persecuted on account of their faith. Any person, whether citizen of the United States or Chinese convert, who, according to these tenets, peaceably teaches and practises the principles of Chris- tianity shall in no case be interfered with or molested therefor. No restrictions shall be placed on Chinese joining Christian Churches. Converts and non-converts, being Chinese subjects, shall alike conform to the laws of China; and shall pay due respect to those in authority, living together in peace and amity; and the fact of being con- verts shall not protect them from the consequences of any offence they may have com- mitted before or may commit after their admission into the Church, or exempt them from paying legal taxes levied on Chinese subjects generally, except taxes levied and contributions for the support of religious customs and practices contrary to their religion. Missionaries shall not interfere with the exercise by the native authorities of their jurisdiction over Chinese subjects; nor shall the native authorities make any distinction between converts and non-converts, but shall administer the laws without partiality so that both classes can live together in peace.
Missionary societies of the United States shall be permitted to rent and to lease in perpetuity, as the property of such societies, buildings or lands in all parts of the Empire for missionary purposes and, after the title deeds have been found in order and duly stamped by the local authorities, to erect such suitable buildings as may be required for carrying on their good work.
Art. XV. The Government of China having expressed a strong desire to reform. its judicial system and to bring it into accord with that of Western nations, the United States agrees to give every assistance to this reform, and will also be prepared to relinquish extraterritorial rights when satisfied that the state of the Chinese laws, the arrangements for their administration, and other considerations warrant it in so doing.
Art. XVI. The Government of the United States consents to the prohibition by the Government of China of the importation into China of morphia and of instru- ments for its injection, excepting morphia and instruments for its injection imported for medical purposes, on payment of tariff duty, and under regulations to be framed. by China which shall effectually restrict the use of such import to the said purposes. This prohibition shall be uniformly applied to such importation from all countries. The Chinese Government engages to adopt at once measures to prevent the manu- facture in China of morphia and of instruments for its injection.
Art. XVII.-It is agreed between the High Contracting Parties hereto that all the provisions of the several Treaties between the United States and China which were in force on the first day of January A.D, 1900, are continued in full force and effect except in so far as they are modified by the present Treaty or other Treaties to which the United States is a party.
The present Treaty shall remain in force for a period of ten years beginning with the date of the exchange of ratifications and until a revision is effected as hereinafter provided.
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It is further agreed that either of the High Contracting Parties may demand that the tariff and the articles of this convention be revised at the end of ten years from the date of the exchange of the ratifications hereof. If no revision is demanded before the end of the first term of ten years, then these articles in their present form shall remain in full force for a further term of ten years reckoned from the end of the first term and so on for successive periods of ten years.
The English and Chinese texts of the present Treaty and its three Annexes have been carefully compared; but, in the event of there being any difference of meaning between them, the sense as expressed in the English text shall be held to be the correct one.
This Treaty and its three Annexes shall be ratified by the two High Contracting Parties in conformity with their respective constitutions, and the ratifications shall be exchanged in Washington not later than twelve months from the present date.
In testimony whereof, we, the undersigned, by virtue of our respective powers, have signed this Treaty in duplicate in the English and Chinese languages, and have affixed our respective seals.
Done at Shanghai, this eighth day of October in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and three, and in the twenty-ninth year of Kuang Hsü eighth month and eighteenth day.
ANNEX I.
As citizens of the United States are already forbidden by Treaty to deal in or handle opium, no mention has been made in this Treaty of opium taxation.
As the trade in salt is a Government monopoly in China, no mention has been made in this Treaty of salt taxation.
It is, however, understood, after full discussion and consideration, that the col- lection of inland duties on opium and salt and the means for the protection of the revenue herefrom and for preventing illicit traffic therein are left to be administered by the Chinese Government in such manner as shall in no wise interfere with the provision of Article IV, of this Treaty regarding the unobstructed trasit of other goods.
ANNEX II.
Article IV. of the Treaty of Commerce between the United States and China of this date provides for the retention of the native Customs offices at the open ports. For the purpose of safeguarding the revenue of China at such places, it is understood that the Chinese Government shall be entitled to establish and maintain such branch native Customs offices at each open port within a reasonable distance of the main native Customs offices at the port, as shall be deemed by the authorities of the Imperial Maritime Customs at that port necessary to collect the revenue from the trade into and out of such port. Such branches, as well as the principal native Customs offices at each open port, shall be administered by the Imperial Maritime Customs as pro- vided by the Protocol of 1901.
ANNEX III.
The schedule of tariff duties on imported goods annexed to this Treaty under Article V. is hereby mutually declared to be the schedule agreed upon between the representatives of China and of the United States and signed by John Goodnow for the United States and Their Excellencies Lu Hai-huan and Sheng Hsian-huai for China at Shanghai on the sixth day of September, A.D. 1902, according to the Proto- col of the seventh day of September, A.D. 1901.
PORTUGAL
PROTOCOL, TREATY, CONVENTION AND AGREEMENT BETWEEN PORTUGAL AND CHINA
Art. 1st.-A Treaty of friendship and commerce with the most favoured nation clause will be concluded and signed at Peking.
Art, 2nd. China confirms perpetual occupation and government of Macao and its dependencies by Portugal, as any other Portuguese possession.
Art. 3rd.-Portugal engages never to alienate Macao and its dependencies without agreement with China.
Art. 4th.--Portugal engages to co-operate in opium revenue work at Macao in the same way as England in Hongkong.
Done at Lisbon, the 26th March, 1887.
HENRIQUE DE BARROS GOMES. JAMES DUNCAN CAMPBELL.
THE TREATY
Ratifications Exchanged at Peking 28th April, 1888
His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal and the Algarves, and His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China, desiring to draw closer and to consolidate the ties of friendship which have subsisted for more than three hundred years between Portugal aad China, and having agreed in Lisbon on the 26th day of March, 1887, 2nd day of 3rd moon of the 13th year of the reign of the Emperor Kwang Hsu, through their representatives, on a Protocol of four Articles, have now resolved to conclude a Treaty of Amity and Cominerce to regulate the relations between the two States; for this end they have appointed as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:-
His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal, Thomas de Souza Roza, his Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of Peking, Knight of the Order of Nossa Senhora de Conceicao de Villa Vicosa, Grand Cross of the Order of the Rising Sun of Japan and of the Crown of Siam, Commander of the Order of Charles II. and of Isabella the Catholic of Spain, and Knight of the Iron Crown of Austria:
His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China, His Highness Prince Ching, Pre- sident of the Tsung-li Yamên, and Sun, Minister of the Tsung-li Yamên and Senior Vice-President of the Board of Public Works;
Who, after having communicated to each other their respective full powers and found them to be in good and due form, have agreed upon the following Articles:→
Art. I. There shall continue to exist coustant peace and amity between His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal and His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China, whose respective subjects shall equally enjoy in the dominions of the High Contracting Parties the most complete and decided protection for their persons and property.
Art. II China confirms in its entirety the second article of the Protocol of Lisbon, relating to the perpetual occupation and government of Macao by Portugal. It is stipulated that Commissioners appointed by both Governments shall proceed to the delimitation of the boundaries, which shall be determined by a special con- vention; but so long as the delimitation of the boundaries is not concluded, every- thing in respect to them shall continue as at present, without addition, diminution, or alteration by either of the parties.
Art. III.-Portugal confirms the third article of the Protocol of Lisbon, relating to the engagement never to alienate Macao without previous agreement with China. Art. IV. Portugal agrees to co-operate with China in the collection of duties on opium exported from Macao into China ports, in the same way, and as long as England Co-operates with China in the collection of duties on opium exported from Hongkong.
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The basis of this co-operation will be established by a convention appended to this Treaty, which shall be as valid and binding to both the High Contracting Parties as the present Treaty.
Art. V.-His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal may appoint an Ambassador, Minister, or other diplomatic agent to the Court of His Im- perial Majesty the Emperor of China, and this agent, as well as the persons of his suite and their families, will be permitted, at the option of the Portuguese Govern- ment, to reside permanently in Peking, to visit that Court, or to reside at any other place where such residence is equally accorded to the diplomatic representative of other nations. The Chinese Government may also, if it thinks fit, appoint an Ambassador, Minister, or other diplomatic agent to reside at Lisbon, or to visit that Court when his Government shall order.
Art. VI,―The diplomatic agents of Portugal and China shall reciprocally enjoy in the place of their residence all the prerogatives and immunities accorded by the laws of nations; their persons, families, and houses, as well as their correspondence shall be inviolate.
Art. VII.-The official correspondence addressed by the Portuguese authorities to the Chinese authorities shall be written in the Portuguese language accompanied by a translation in Chinese, and each nation shall regard as authoritative the document written in its own language.
Art. VIII. The form of correspondence between the Portuguese and the Chi- nese authorities will be regulated by their respective rank and position, based upon complete reciprocity. Between the high Portuguese and Chinese functionaries at the capital or elsewhere, such correspondence will take the form of dispatch (Chau-hoei); between the subordinate functionaries of Portugal and the chief authorities of the provinces, the former shall make use of the form of exposition (Xen-chen) and the fatter that of declaration (Cha-hsing); and the subordinate officers of both nations shall correspond together on terms of perfect equality. Merchants and generally all others who are not invested with an official character shall adopt, in addressing the authorities, the form of representation or petition (Pin-ching).
Art. IX. His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal way appoint Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, or Consular Agents in the ports or other places where it is allowed to other natious to have thein. These functionaries will have powers and attributes similar to those of the Consuls of other nations, and will enjoy all the exemptions, privileges, and immunities which at any time the consular functionaries of the most favoured nation may enjoy.
The Consuls and the local authorities will show to each other reciprocal civilities and correspond with each other on terms of perfect equality.
The
The Consuls and acting Consuls will rank with Tao-tais, Vice-Consuls, acting Vice-Consuls, Consular agents and interpreters-translators, with Prefects. Consuls must be officials of the Portuguese Government and not merchants. The Chinese Government will make no objection in case the Portuguese Government should deem it unnecessary to appoint an official Consul at any port and choose to entrust a Consul of some other nation, for the time being, with the duties of Portu- guese Consul at that port,
Art. X. All the immunities and privileges, as well as all the advantages con- cerning commerce and navigation, such as any reduction in the duties of navigation importation, exportation, transit or any other, which may have been or may be here- after granted by China to any other State or to its subjects, will be immediately extended to Portugal and its subjects. If any concession is granted by the Chinese Government to any foreign Government under special conditions, Portugal, on claim- ing the same concession for herself and for her own subjects, will equally assent to the conditions attached to it.
Art XI-Portuguese subjects are allowed to reside at, or frequent, the ports of China opened to foreign commerce and there carry on trade or employ themselves freely. Their boats may navigate without hindrance between the ports open to foreign
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commerce, and they may import and export thier merchandise, enjoying all the rights and privileges enjoyed by the subjects of the most favoured nation.
Art. XII-Portuguese subjects shall pay import and export duties on all mer- chandise according to the rates specified in the tariff of 1858, adopted for all the other nations; and in no instance shall higher duties be exacted from them than those paid by the subjects of any other foreign nation.
Art. XIII.-Portuguese subjects are permitted to hire any description of boats they may require for the conveyance of cargo or passengers, and the price of said hire will be fixed by the contracting parties alone, without interference by the Chinese Government. No limit shall be put to the number of boats, neither will it be
per- mitted to any one to establish a monopoly of such boats or of the service of coolies employed in the carriage of merchandise.
Should contraband articles be on board any such boats, the guilty parties shall immediately be punished according to law.
Art. XIV. Portuguese subjects residing in the open ports may take into their service Chinese subjects, aud employ them in any lawful capacity in China, without restraint or hindrance from the Chinese Government; but shall not engage them for foreign countries in contravention of the laws of China.
Art. XV.--The Chinese authorities are bound to grant the fullest protection to the persons and to the property of Portuguese subjects in China, whenever they may be exposed to insult or wrong. In case of robbery or incendiarism, the local autho- rities will immediately take the necessary measures to recover the stolen property, to terminate the disorder, to seize the guilty, and puuish them according to the law. Similar protection will be given by Portuguese authorities to Chinese subjects in the possessions of Portugal.
Art. XVI. Whenever a Portuguese subject intends to build or open houses, shops or warehouses, churches, hospitals, or cemeteries, at the Treaty ports or at other places, the purchase, rent, or lease of these properties shall be made out accord- ing to the current terms of the place, with equity, without exaction on either side, without offending against the usages of the people, and after due notice given by the proprietors to the local authority. It is understood, however, that the shops or ware- houses above mentioned shall only be allowed at the ports open to trade, and not in any place in the interior.
Art. XVII.-Portuguese subjects conveying merchandise between open ports shall be required to take certificates from the Superintendent of Customs such as are specified in the regulations in force with reference to other nationalities.
But Portuguese subjects, who, without carrying merchandise, would like to go to the interior of China, must have passports issued by their Consuls and counter- signed by the local authorities. The bearer of the passport must produce the same when demanded, and the passport not being irregular, he will be allowed to proceed and no opposition shall be offered, especially to his hiring persons or vessels for the carriage of his baggage or merchandise.
If he be without a passport, or if he commits any offence against the law, he shall be handed over to the nearest Consul of Portugal to be punished, but he must not be subjected to an oppressive measure. No passport need be applied for by persons going on excursions from the ports open to trade to a distance not exceeding 100 li and for a period not exceeding five days.
The provisions of this article do not apply to crews of ships, for the due restraint. of whom regulations will be drawn up by the Consul and the local authorities.
Art. XVIII. In the event of a Portuguese merchant vessel being plundered by pirates or thieves within Chinese waters, the Chinese authorities are to employ their utmost exertions to seize and punish the said robbers and to recover the stolen goods, which, through the Consul, shall be restored to whom they belong.
Art. XIX. If a Portuguese vessel be shipwrecked on the coast of China, or be compelled to take refuge in any of the ports of the Empire, the Chinese authorities, on receiving notice of the fact, shall provide the necessary protection, affording
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prompt assistance and kind treatment to the crews and, if necessary, furnishing them with the means to reach the nearest Consulate.
Art. XX. Portuguese merchant vessels of more than one hundred and fifty tons burden will pay tonnage dues at the rate of four mace per ton; if of one hundred and fifty tons and under they shall be charged at the rate of one mace per ton. The Superintendent of Customs shall grant a certificate declaring that the tonnage dues have been paid.
Art, XXI.-Import duties shall be paid on the landing of goods; and export duties upon the shipment of the same.
Art. XXII. The captain of a Portuguese ship may, when he deems convenient, land only a part of his cargo at one of the open ports, paying the duties due on the portion landed, the duties on the remainder not being payable until they are lauded at some other port.
Art. XXIII. The master of a Portuguese ship has the option, within forty- eight hours of his arrival at any of the open ports of China, but not later, to decide whether he will leave port without opening the hatches, and in such case he will not have to pay tonnage dues. He is bound, however, to give notice of his arrival for the legal registering as soon as he comes into port, under penalty of being fined in case of non-compliance within the term of two days.
The ship will be subject to tonnage dues forty-eight hours after her arrival in port, but neither then nor at her departure shall any other impost whatsoever be exacted.
Art. XXIV. All small vessels employed by Portuguese subjects in carrying passengers, baggage, letters, provisions or any other cargo which is free of duty, between the open ports of China, shall be free from tonuage dues; but all such vessels carrying merchandise subject to duty shall pay tonnage dues every four months at the rate of one mace per ton.
Art. XXV.-Portuguese merchant vessels approaching any of the open ports will be at liberty to take a pilot to reach the harbour; and likewise to take a pilot to leave it, in case the said ship shall have paid all the duties due by her.
Art. XXVI. Whenever a Portuguese merchant ship shall arrive at any of the open ports of China, the Superintendent of Customs will send off one or more Custom-house officers, who may stay on board of their boat or on board of the ship as best suits their convenience. These officers will get their food and all necessaries from the Custom-house, and will not be allowed to accept any fee from the captain of the ship or from the consignee, being liable to a penalty proportionate to the amount received by them.
J
Art. XXVII. Twenty-four hours after the arrival of a Portuguese merchant ship at any of the open ports, the papers of the ship, manifest, and other documents, shall be handed over to the Consul, whose duty it will be also to report to the Superintendent of Customs within twenty-four hours, the name, the registered tonnage, and the cargo brought by the said vessel. If, through negligence or for any other motive, this stipulation be not complied with within forty-eight hours after the arrival of the ship, the captain shall be subject to a fine of fifty taels for each day's delay over and above that period, but the total amount of the fine shall not exceed two hundred taels.
The captain of the ship is responsible for the correctness of the manifest, in which the cargo shall be minutely and truthfully described, subject to a fine of five hundred Taels as penalty in case the manifest should be found incorrect. This fine, however, will not be incurred if, within twenty-four hours after the delivery of the manifest to the Custom-house officers, the captain expressed the wish to rectify any error which may have been discovered in the said manifest.
Art. XXVIII.-The Superintendent of Customs will permit the discharging of the ship as soon as he shall have received from the Consul the report drawn up in due form. If the captain of the ship should take upon himself to commence discharging without permission, he shall be fined five hundred Taels and the goods so discharged shall be confiscated.
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Art. XXIX-Portuguese merchants having goods to ship or to land will have to obtain a special permission from the Superintendent of Customs to that effect, without which all goods shipped or landed shall be liable to confiscation.
Art. XXX. No transhipment of goods is allowed from ship to ship without special permission, under penalty of confiscation of all the goods so transhipped.
Art. XXXI. When a ship shall have paid all her duties, the Superintendent of Customs will grant her a certificate and the Consul will return the papers, in order that she may proceed on her voyage.
Art. XXXII.-When any doubt may arise as to the value of goods which by the tariff are liable to an ad valorem duty, and the Portuguese merchants disagree with the Custom-house officers as regards the value of said goods, both parties will call two or three merchants to examine them, and the highest offer made by any of the said merchants to buy the goods will be considered as their just value.
Art. XXXIII. Duties will be paid on the net weight of every kind of merchandise. Should there be any difference of opinion between the Portuguese merchant and the Custom-house officer as to the mode by which the tare is to be fixed, each party will choose a certain number of boxes or bales from among every hundred packages of the goods in question, taking the gross weight of said packages, then the tare of each of the packages separately, and the average tare resulting therefrom will be adopted for the whole parcel.
In case of any doubt or dispute not mentioned herein, the Portuguese merchant may appeal to the Consul, who will refer the case to the Superintendent of Customs; this officer will act in such a manner as to settle the question amicably. The appeal, however, will only be entertained if made within the term of twenty-four hours; and in such a case no entry is to be made in the Custom-bouse books in relation to the said goods until the question shall bave been settled.
Art. XXXIV.--Damaged goods will pay a reduced duty proportionate to their deterioration; any doubt on this point will be solved in the way indicated in the clause of this Treaty with respect to duties payable on merchandise ad valorem.
Art. XXXV. Any Portuguese merchant who, having imported foreign goods into one of the open ports of China and paid the proper duties thereon, may wish to re-export them to another of the said ports, will have to send to the Superintendent of Customs an account of them, who, to avoid fraud, will direct his officers to examine whether or not the duties have been paid, whether the same have been entered on the books of the Customs, whether they retain their original marks, and whether the entries agree with the account sent in. Should everything be found correct, the same will be stated in the export permit together with the total amount of duties paid, and all these particulars will be communicated to the Custom-house officers at other ports.
Upon arrival of the ship at the port to which the goods are carried, permission will be granted to land without any new payment of duties whatsoever if, upon examination, they are found to be the identical goods; but if during the exam- ination any fraud be detected, the goods may be confiscated by the Chinese Govern-
ment.
Should any Portuguese merchant wish to re-export to a foreign country any goods imported, and upon which duties have been already paid, he will have to make his application in the same form as required for the re-exportation of goods to another port in China, in which case a certificate of drawback or of restitution of duties will be granted, which will be accepted by any of the Chinese Custom-houses in payment of import or export duties.
Foreign cereals imported by Portuguese ships into the ports of China may be re-exported without hindrance if no portion of them has been discharged.
Art. XXXVI. The Chinese authorities will adopt at the ports the measures which
they may deem the most convenient to avoid fraud or smuggling.
Art. XXXVII. The proceeds of fines and confiscations inflicted on Portuguese subjects, in conformity to this Treaty, shall belong exclusively to the Chinese
Government.
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TREATY BETWEEN PORTUGAL AND CHINA
Art. XXXVIII.-Portuguese subjects carrying goods to a market in the interior of the country, on which the lawful import duties have already been paid at any of the open ports, or those who buy native produce in the interior to bring to the ports on the Yang-sze-kiang, or to send to foreign ports, shall follow the regulations. adopted towards the other nations.
Custom-house officers who do not comply with the regulations, or who may exact more duties than are due, shall be punished according to the Chinese law.
Art. XXXIX.-The Consuls and local authorities shall consult together, when neces- sary, as to the construction of Light-houses and the placing of Buoys and Light-ships. Art. XL-Duties shall be paid to the bankers authorized by the Chinese Govern- ment to receive them in sycee or in foreign coin, according to the official assay made at Canton on the 15th July, 1843.
Art. XLI.-In order to secure the regularity of weights and measures and to avoid confusion, the Superintendent of Customs will hand over to the Portuguese Consul at each of the open ports standards similar to those given by the Treasury Department for collection of public dues to the Custoins at Canton.
Art, XLII. Portuguese merchant ships may resort only to those ports of China which are declared open to commerce. It is forbidden to them, except in the case of force majeure provided for in Article XIX., to enter into other ports, or to carry on a clandestine trade on the coast of China, and the transgresser of this order shall be subject to confiscation of his ship and cargo by the Chinese Government.
Art. XLIII.-All Portuguese vessels despatched from one of the open ports of China to another, or to Macao, are entitled to a certificate of the Custom-house, which will exempt them from paying new tonnage dues, during the period of four months reckoned from the date of clearance.
Art. XLIV.-If any Portuguese merchant ship is found smuggling, the goods smuggled, no matter of what nature or value, will be subject to confiscation by the Chinese authorities, who may send the ship away from the port, after settlement of all her accounts, and prohibit her to continue to trade.
Art. XLV. As regards the delivery of Portuguese and Chinese criminals, with the exception of the Chinese criminals who take refuge in Macao, and for whose extradition the Governor of Macao will continue to follow the existing practice, after the receipt of a due requisition from the Viceroy of the Kwangs, it is agreed that, in the Chinese ports open to foreign trade, the Chinese criminals who take refuge at the houses or on board ships of Portuguese subjects, shall be arrested and delivered to the Chinese authorities on their applying to the Portuguese Consul; and likewise the Portuguese criminals who take refuge in China shall be arrested and delivered. to the Portuguese authorities on their applying to the Chinese authorities; and by neither of the parties shall the criminals be harboured nor shall there be delay in delivering them.
Art. XLVI. It is agreed that either of the High Contracting Parties to this Treaty may demand a revision of the Tariff, and of the commercial articles of this Treaty, at the end of ten years; but if no demand be made on either side within six months after the end of the first ten years, then the tariff shall remain in force for ten years more, reckoned from the end of the preceding ten years; and so it shall be; at the end of each successive ten years,
Art. XLVII.-All disputes arising between Portuguese subjects in China with regard to rights, either of property or person, shall be submitted to the jurisdiction of the Portuguese authorities.
Art. XLVIII-Whenever Chinese subjects become guilty of any criminal act towards Portuguese subjects, the Portuguese authorities must report such acts to the Chinese authorities in order that the guilty be tried according to the laws of China.
If Portuguese subjects become guilty of any criminal act towards Chinese subjects, the Chinese authorities must report such acts to the Portuguese Consul in order that the guilty may be tried according to the laws of Portugal.
Art. XLIX. If any Chinese subject shall have become indebted to a Portuguese subject and withholds payment, or fraudulently absconds from his creditors, the
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197
Chinese authorities shall use all their efforts to apprehend him and to compel him to pay, the debt being previously proved and the possibility of its payment ascertained. The Portuguese authorities will likewise use their efforts to enforce the payment of any debt due by any Portuguese subject to a Chinese subject.
But in no case will the Portuguese Government or the Chinese Government be considered responsible for the debts of their subjects.
Art. L. Whenever any Portuguese subject shall have to petition the Chinese authority of a district, he is to submit his statement beforehand to the Consul, who will cause the same to be forwarded should he see no impropriety in so doing, otherwise he will have it written out in other terms, or decline to forward it. Likewise, when a Chinese subject shall have occasion to petition the Portuguese Consul he will only be allowed to do so through the Chinese authority who shall proceed in the same manner.
Art. LI-Portuguese subjects who may have any complaint or claim against any Chinese subject, shall lay the same before the Consul, who will take due cognizance of the case and will use all his efforts to settle it amicably. Likewise, when a Chinese subject shall have occasion to complain of a Portuguese subject, the Consul will listen to his complaint and will do what he possibly can to re-establish harmony between the two parties.
If, however, the dispute be of such a nature that it cannot be settled in that conciliatory way, the Portuguese Consul and Chinese authorities will hold a joint. investigation of the case, and decide it with equity, applying each the laws of his own country according to the nationality of the defendant.
Art. LII.The Catholic religion has for its essential object the leading of men to virtue. Persous teaching it and professing it shall alike be entitled to efficacious protection from the Chinese authorities; nor shall such persons pursuing peaceably their calling and not offending against the laws be prosecuted or interfered with.
All
Art. LIII-In order to prevent for the future any discussion, and considering that the English language, among all foreign languages, is the most generally known in China, this Treaty, with the Convention appended to it, is written in Por tuguese, Chinese, and English, and signed in six copies, two in each language. these versions have the same sense and meaning, but if there should happen to be any divergence in the interpretation of the Portuguese and Chinese versions, the English text will be made use of to resolve the doubts that may have arisen.
Art. LIV. The present Treaty, with the Convention appended to it, shall be ratified by His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal and the Algarves and His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China. The exchange of the ratifications shall be made, within the shortest possible time, at Tientsin, after which the Treaty, with the Convention appended, shall be printed and published in order that the functionaries and subjects of the two countries may have full knowledge of their stipulations and may fulfil them.
In faith whereof, the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Treaty and have afixed their seals thereto.
Done in Peking, this first day of the mouth of December in the year of Our Lord Jesus Christ one thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven, corresponding to the Chinese date of the seventeenth day of the tenth moon of the thirteenth year of Kwang-Hsu.
[1.8.] (Signed) [Chinese Seal]
Signatures of the Chinese Plenipotentiaries.
THOMAS DE SOUZA Roza.
PRINCE CH'ING. SUN-IU-UEN.
CONVENTION
It having been stipulated in the Art. IV. of the Treaty of Amity and Commerce, concluded between Portugal and China on the 1st day of the month of December
198
CONVENTION BETWEEN PORTUGAL AND CHINA
1887, that a Convention shall be arranged between the two High Contracting Parties in order to establish a basis of co-operation in collecting the revenue on opium ex. ported from Macao to Chinese ports, the undersigned Thomas de Souza Roza, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal and the Algarves, in special mission to the Court of Peking, and His Highness the Prince Ching, President of the Tsung-li Yamen, and Sun, Minister of the Tsung-li Yamen and Senior Vice-President of the Board of Public Works, Min- isters Plenipotentiary of His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China, have agreed on the following Convention in three articles:-
Art. I.-Portugal will enact a law subjecting the opium trade of Macao to the following provisions:-
1.-No opium shall be imported into Macao in quantities less than one chest. 2. All opium imported into Macao must, forthwith on arrival, be reported to the competent department under a public functionary appointed by the Portuguese Government, to superintend the importation and exportation of opium in Macao.
3. No opium imported into Macao shall be transhipped, landed, stored, removed from one store to another, or exported, without a permit issued by the Superintendent.
4. The importers and exporters of opium in Macao must keep a register, accord- ing to the form furnished by the Government, showing with exactness and clearness the quantity of opium they have imported, the number of chests they have sold, to whom and to what place they were disposed of, and the quantity in stock.
5. Only the Macao opium farmer, and persons licensed to sell opium at retail, will be permitted to keep in their custody raw opium in quantities inferior to one chest. 6. Regulations framed to enforce in Macao the execution of this law will be equivalent to those adopted in Hongkong for similar purposes.
Art. 11.-Permits for the exportation of opium from Macao into Chinese ports, after being issued, shall be communicated by the Superintendent of Opium to the Commissioner of Customs at Kung-pac-nan.
Art. III. By mutual consent of both the High Contracting Parties the stipula- tions of this Convention may be altered at any time.
In faith whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed and sealed this Convention.
Done in Peking this first day of December in the year of Our Lord Jesus Christ one thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven, corresponding to the Chinese date of the seventeenth day of the tenth moon of the thirteenth year of Kwang Hsu.
[L.S.] (Signed) [Chinese Seal]
THOMAS DE SOUZA ROZA.
Signature of the Chinese Plenipotentiaries.
PRINCE CH'ING. SUN-IU-UEN,
AGREEMENT
The basis of the co-operation to be given to China by Portugal in the collection of duties on opium conveyed from Macao to Chinese ports, having been fixed by a Convention appended to the Treaty of Amity and Commerce, concluded between China and Portugal on the 1st December, 1887, and it being now convenient to come to an understanding upon some points relating to the said co-operation as well as to fixed rules for the treatment of Chinese'junks trading with Macao, Bernardo Pinheiro Correa de Mello, Secretary of the Special Mission of His Most Faithful Majesty in Peking, duly authorized by His Excellency Thomas de Souza Roza, Chief of the said Mission, and Sir Robert Hart, K.C.M.G., Inspector-General of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs, provided with the necessary instructions from the Chinese Government, have agreed on the following:
1.-An office under a Commissioner appointed by the Foreign Inspectorate of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs, shall be established at a convenient spot on
COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN CHINA AND PORTUGAL
199
Chinese territory, for the sale of opium duty certificates, to be freely sold to merchants and for such quantities of opium as they may require. The said Commissioner will also administer the Customs stations near Macao.
2. Opium accompanied by such certificates, at the rate of not more than 110 Taels per picul, shall be free from all other imposts of every sort, and have all the benefits stipulated for by the Additional Article of the Chefoo Convention between China and Great Britain on behalf of opium on which duty has been paid at one of the ports of China, and may be made up in sealed parcels at the option of the purchaser. 3. The Commissioner of Customs responsible for the management of the Customs stations shall investigate and settle any complaint made by Chinese mer- chants of Macao against the Customs stations or revenue cruisers; and the Governor of Macao, if he deems it advisable, shall be entitled to send an officer of Macao to be present and assist in the investigation and decision. If, however, they do not agree, a reference may be made to the Authorities at Peking for a joint decision.
4.-Junks trading between Chinese ports and Macao, and their cargoes, shall not be subject to any dues or duties in excess of those leviable on junks and their cargoes trading between Chinese ports and Hongkong, and no dues whatsoever shall be de- manded from junks proceeding to Macao from ports of China, or coming from Macao to ports in China, over and above the dues paid, or payable, at the ports of clearance or destination. Chinese produce which has paid Customs duties and lekin tax before entering Macao may be re-exported from Macao to Chinese ports without paying Customs duties and lekin tax again, and will be only subject to the payment of the tax named Siao-hao.
In witness whereof, this agreement has been written in Portuguese and English and signed in duplicate at Peking this the first day of December, 1887.
(Signed)
(Signed)
BERNARDO PINHEIRO CORREA DE MELLO,
Secretary of the Special Mission of His Most Faithful Majesty.
SIR ROBERT HART,
Inspector-General of Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs.
COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN CHINA
AND PORTUGAL
SIGNED AT SHANGHAI, NOVEMBER, 1904
Art. I.The Treaty of Amity and Commerce between China and Portugal dated the first day of December, 1887 (17th day, 10th moon, 13th year of Kwang Hsu) continues in force except in so far as modified by the present Treaty.
Art. II.-Portugal accepts the increase in the import duties stipulated for in Article VI of the Peking protocol of 7th September, 1901, from the date of the ratifica- tion of this Treaty. Portugal will enjoy the privileges of the most favoured nation, and in no case shall Portuguese subjects pay higher or lower duties than those paid by the subjects of any other foreign nation. Article XII. of the Treaty of First Decem. ber, 1887, is therefore rendered null and void.
Art. III. The duty and lekin on foreign opium will continue as provided for in existing Treaties. The Government of His Most Faithful Majesty agrees to con- tinue as heretofore to co-operate with the Government of His Imperial Chinese Majesty in the collection of the duty and lekin on opium exported from Macao to China, and also to co-operate in the repression of smuggling in accordance with the Treaty and Special Opium Convention of 1st December, 1887. In order to render this co-operation effective, it is clearly stipulated that all opium imported into Macao
1:
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COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN CHINA AND PORTUGAL
shall, on arrival, be registered at the Special Government Bureau provided for this purpose, and the Portuguese Government will take the necessary steps, in order to have all this opium stored under its exclusive control in a depôt from which it will be removed as required by the demands of trade. The quantity of opium required for consumption in Macao and its dependencies will be fixed aunually by the Government of Macão in agreement with the Commissioner of the Imperial Maritime Customs referred to in Article II. of the above mentioned Convention, and under no pretext will removal from the Portuguese Government depôt be permitted of any quantity of opium for local consumption in excess of that fixed by the said agreement, and neces- sary measures will be taken to prevent opium removed from the depot for re-export to any port other than a port in China being sent fraudulently to Chinese territory. The removal from the depot of opium for export will not be permitted except on production of proof that such opium has already paid all dues and duties leviable thereon by China. The rules for the carrying out of this Article shall be arranged by delegates from the Government of Macao and the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs.
Art. IV.-Such steps as are necessary for the repression of smuggling in the territory and waters of Macao shall be taken by the local Portuguese Government in concert with the Commissioner of the Imperial Maritime Customs, and similar steps in the Chinese territory and waters near Macao shall be taken by the Imperial Maritime Customs in concert with the Portuguese Government of Macao.
This co- operation is intended to render such steps effective on all points in respect of which co-operation is needed, and to avoid at the same time any injury to the sovereign rights of either of the High Contracting Parties. Special delegates from the local Government of Macao and the Imperial Maritime Customs shall proceed to fix the re- spective zones of operations, and shall devise practical means for the repression of smuggling.
Art. V.-With a view to the development of trade between Macao and neigh- bouring ports in the Kwangtung Province, the High Contracting Parties have agreed as follows:-
1.-Portuguese steamers desirous of proceeding for the purposes of trade from Macao to any of the ports of call and passenger stages on the West River, enumerated in the Special Article of the English-Burmah Convention of 1897, and Article X of the British Treaty of Commerce of 1902, shall be permitted to do so, provided they comply with the Special Regulations to be framed for this purpose by the two High Contracting Parties.
2. -Steamers specially registered for trade under the Inland Waters Steam Navigation Rules shall be permitted to ply between Macao and places in the Depart- ment of Kwang-chow-fu other than those mentioned in Section 1, provided they report to the Kungpei-kuau Customs for examination of cargo and payment of duties in accordance with Special Regulations to be framed for this purpose by the two High Contracting Parties. Such vessels may engage in all lawful trade, including the tow- age of jucks and conveyance of passengers and cargo, subject to the regulations for the time being in force.
The privileges hereby granted are granted on the express understanding that Special Regulations shall be framed defining in detail the conditions under which such traffic may be carried on, Until then, the said Regulations have been agreed upon and published, the Article shall not become operative; and subsequently only on compliance with the said Regulations.
Art. VI. Portugal having the right of most favoured nation treatment, it is clearly stipulated that any advantages China may think fit to grant to any nation in the importation of agricultural products, specially wines and oil, or in the importa- tion of industrial products, specially woollen and cotton goods and preserved food stuffs, shall be extended to similar Portuguese goods on exactly the same conditions It is also clearly understood that Portuguese wine of all kinds proved by means of certificate of origin, issued by Portuguese Consuls, to have been imported from Portugal, direct or otherwise, shall when their alcoholic strength exceeds 14° pay the duty leviable according to the annexed tariff on wines exceeding 14° of alcholic
COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN CHINA AND PORTUGAL
201
"Port
strength. Wine passed through the Chinese Customs under designation Wine" shall not be entitled to the benefit of this Article unless accompanied by a certificate of origin as above.
Art. VII. Portuguese subjects may frequent, reside at, and carry on trade, industries and manufactures, and pursue any other lawful avocation in all the ports and localities in China which have already been or may hereafter be opened to foreign residence and trade; and wherever in any such ports or localities a special area has been or may hereafter be set apart for the use and occupation of foreigners, Portuguese subjects may therein lease land, ercet buildings, and in all respects enjoy the same privileges and immunities as are granted to subjects of the most favoured nations. Art. VIII-Whereas China, with the object of reforming its fiscal system, proposes to levy a surtax in addition to the tariff duties on all goods passing through the Custom-houses, whether maritime or inland and frontier, in order to make good the loss incurred by the complete abolition of lekin, the Portuguese Government agrees that foreign goods imported into China by Portugeuse subjects shall on entry pay an import surtax equivalent to one and a half times the duty fixed by the Import Tariff as now revised, and that Chinese produce exported abroad by Portuguese sub- jects shall pay export duties, inclusive of the tariff export duty, not exceeding seven and a half per cent, ad valorem, provided always that such import surtax and export duties have been accepted by all the Powers having Treaties with China. With regard to the produce tax, cousumption tax, and excise, as well as the duties on native opium and salt, leviable by China, Portugal further agrees to accept the same arrangements as shall be agreed upon between all the Treaty Powers and China. It is, however, understood that the commerce, rights, and privileges of Portugal shall not, in consequence of this undertaking, be placed in any way at a disadvantage as compared with the commerce, rights, and privileges of any other power.
Art. IX.-Drawback certificates for the return of duties shall be issued by the Imperial Maritime Customs to Portuguese subjects within twenty-one days from the date of presentation to the Customs of the papers entitling the applicant to receive such drawback certificates. These certificates will be accepted at their face value by the Customs authorities at the port of issue in payment of duties of all kinds, ton- nage dues excepted; or shall, in the case of drawbacks for duty paid on foreign goods re-exported abroad within three years from the date of importation, be redeemable in full in ready money by the Imperial Maritime Customs at the port of issue, at the option of the holders thereof. But if, in connection with any applica- tion for a drawback certificate, the Customs authorities discover an attempt on the part of a Portuguese subject to defraud the revenue, he shall be liable to a fine not exceeding five times the amount of the duty whereof he attempted to defrand the Customs, or to a confiscation of the goods. In case the goods have been removed, from Chinese territory, then the Consul shall inflict on the guilty party a suitable fine to be paid to the Chinese Government.
Art. X.-China agrees to herself establish a system of uniform national coinage and provide for a uniform national currency, which shall be freely used as legal tender in payment of all duties, taxes, and other obligations by Portuguese subjects as well as by Chinese subjects in the Chinese Empire. It is understood, however, that all Customs duties shall continue to be calculated and paid on the basis of the Hai-Kwan Tael.
Art. XI. The Government of His Most Faithful Majesty agrees to the prohibi- tion by the Chinese Government of the importation into China of morphia and of instruments for its injection, on condition, however, that the Chinese Government will allow the importation of morphia and of instruments for its injection for medical purposes by Portuguese docters, chemists, and druggists, on payment of the prescribed duty and under special permit which will only be granted to an intending importer upon his signing at the Portuguese Consulate a suitable bond undertaking not to sell morphia except in small quantities and ou receipt of a requisition signed by a duly qualified foreign medical practitioner. If fraud in connection with such importation be discovered by the Customs authorities the morphia and instrument
202
COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN CHINA AND FORTUGAL
for its injection will be seized and confiscated, and the importer will be denied the right to import these articles.
Art. XII.-The Chinese Government recognizing that it is advantageous for the country to develop its mineral resources, and that it is desirable to attract foreign as well as Chinese capital to embark in mining enterprise, agrees to revise its exist. ing mining regulations in such manner, by the selection of those rules in force in other nations which seem applicable to conditions in China, that the revision while promoting the interests of Chinese subjects and in no way prejudicing the sovereign rights of China, will offer no impediment to the employment of foreign capital, nor place foreign capitalists at a greater disadvantage than they would be under generally accepted foreign regulations, and will permit Portuguese subjects to carry on in Chinese territory mining operations and other necessary business relating thereto, provided they comply with the new regulations and conditions which will be imposed by China on its subjects and foreigners alike, relating to the opening of mines, the renting of mineral land, and payment of royalty, and provided they apply for permits, the provisions of which, in regard to necessary business relating to such operations, shall be observed. The residence of Portuguese subjects in connection with such mining operations shall be agreed upon between Portugal and China. Any mining concession granted after the publication of such new rules shall be subject to these provisions.
Art. XIII.-It being only right that the shareholders of any joint stock com- pany, or the partners in any commerical undertaking, should all be on a footing of equality as regards division of profits and payment of obligations, according to the partnership agreement or memorandum and articles of association, the Chinese Government agrees that Chinese subjects joining with Portuguese subjects in the or- ganisation of a joint stock company or commercial undertaking, legally constituted, shall be liable to the fulfilment of the obligations imposed by said agreement or memorandum and articles of association, and that Chinese Courts will enforce fulfil- ment of such obligations, if a suit to that effect be entered; provided always that their liability shall not be other or greater than that of Portuguese shareholders or partners in the same company or partnership. Similarly Portuguese subjects who invest their capital in Chinese enterprises shall be bound to fulfil the obligations imposed by the partnership agreement or memorandum, and articles of association, and their liability shall be the same as that of the Chinese subjects engaged in the same undertaking. But as existing Treaty stipulations do not permit foreign mer- chants to reside in the interior of China for purpose of trade, such joint stock com. panies and commercial undertakings may be established in the interior by Portuguese and Chinese subjects conjointly.
Art. XIV. As Portugal affords protection to trademarks used by subjects of any other nationality, provided a like protection is reciprocated for trademarks used by Portuguese subjects, China, in order to obtain this protection for its subjects in Portuguese territory, agrees to grant protection to Portuguese trademarks against unlawful use, falsification or imitation by Chinese subjects. To this end the Chinese Government will enact the necessary laws and regulations, and will establish registration offices at which foreign trademarks may be registered on payment of reasonable fees. Further, the Chinese Government agrees that, as soon as a Patent Office has been established, and special laws with regard to inventions have been adopted, it will, after payment of the prescribed fees, issue certificates, valid for a fixed term of years, to Portuguese inventors, extending to their inventions the same protection as shall be given to Chinese patents in Portugal, provided that such inven. tions do not infringe on previous inventions by subjects of China. Any Chinese or Portuguese subject who is the author, proprietor, er seller of any publication injurious to the peace and good government of China shall be dealt with in accordance with the laws of his own country.
Art. XV. The Government of China having expressed a strong desire to reform its judicial system, and to bring it into accord with that of Western nations, Portugal agrees to give every assistance to such reform, and will also be prepared to relinquish
COMMERCIAL TREATY BETWEEN CHINA AND PORTUGAL
203
extraterritorial rights when satisfied that the state of the Chinese laws, the arrangements for their administration, and other considerations warrant it in so
doing.
Art. XVI.-The missionary question in China demands, in the opinion of the Chinese Government, careful consideration, so as to avert in the future troubles which have occurred in the past. Portugal, as a nation specially interested in the protection of its Catholic missions in Chinese territory, agrees to join in a commission to investigate this question and, if possible, to devise means for securing permanent peace between converts and non-converts, should such a commission be formed by China and the Treaty Powers interested. No person, whether Portuguese subject or Chinese convert who, according to the tenets of Christianity, peaceably teaches or practises the principles of that religion, which aims at teaching men to do good, shall be persecuted or harassed on account of his faith. But converts and non-converts, being alike subjects of China, shall conform to her laws, and shall pay due respect to those in authority, living together in peace and amity; and the fact of his being a convert shall protect no one from the consequence of any offence he may have committed before or may commit after his admission into the Church, or exempt him from, paying legal taxes and contributions levied for the support of religious customs and practices contrary to his faith. Missionaries shall not interfere with the exercise by the native authorities of their jurisdiction over Chinese subjects, nor shall the native authorities make any distinction between converts and non-couverts, but shall administer the law without partiality, so that both classes may live together in peace. Portuguese missions shall be permitted to rent and lease in perpetuity, as the property of the mission, buildings or lands in all parts of the Empire for mission purposes and, after the title deeds have been found in order and duly stamped by the focal authorities, to erect such suitable buildings as may be required for carrying out their good work.
Art. XVII. The present Treaty shall remain in force for a period of ten years beginning with the date of the exchange of ratifications and until a revision is effected as hereinafter provided.
It is further agreed that either of the two High Contracting Parties may demand revision of the Tariff and the Articles of the Treaty six months before the end of ten years from the date of the exchange of ratifications thereof. If no re- vision is demanded before the end of the first term of the ten years, then these articles in their present form shall remain in full force for a further term of ten years reckoned from the end of the first term and so on for successive periods of ten years.
Art. XVIII.-In order to prevent in the future any discussion, this Treaty is written in Portuguese, Chinese and English, and signed in six copies, two in each lan- guage. All these versions have the same sense and meaning, but if there should happen to be any divergence in the interpretation of the Portuguese and Chinese versions, the English text will be made use of to resolve the doubts that may have arisen.
Art. XIX. The present Treaty shall be ratified by His Most Faithful Majesty the King of Portugal and Algarves and His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of China. The exchange of the ratifications shall be made within the shortest possible time, and the Treaty will be printed and published, in order that the functionaries and subjects of the respective countries may have full knowledge of its stipulations and may fulfil them.
In faith whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Treaty and have affixed their seals thereto.
JAPAN
TREATY OF PEACE BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
SIGNED AT SHIMONOSEKI (BAKAN), JAPAN, ON THE 17TH APRIL, 1895
Ratifications Exchanged at Chefoo, China, on the 8th May, 1895
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, and His Majesty the Emperor of China desiring to restore the blessings of peace to their countries and subjects, and to remove all cause for future complications, have named as their Plenipotentiaries for the purpose of concluding a Treaty of Peace, that is to say:-
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, Count Ito Hirobumi, Junii, Grand Cross of the Imperial Order of Paulownia, Minister-President of State, and Viscount Mutsu Muneniitsu, Junii, First Class of the Imperial Order of the Sacred Treasure, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs;
And His Majesty the Emperor of China, Li Hung Chang, Senior Tutor to the Heir Apparent, Senior Grand Secretary of State, Minister Superintendent of Trade for the Northern Ports of China, Viceroy of the Province of Chibli, and Earl of the First Rank, and Li Ching Fong, ex-Minister of the Diplomatic Service of the Second Official Rank;
Who, after having exchanged their full powers, which were found to be in good and proper form, have agreed to the following Articles:-
Art. I.--China recognizes definitely the full and complete independence and autonomy of Corea, and, in consequence, the payment of tribute and the perform- ance' of ceremonies and formalities by Corea to China in derogation of such independ- ence and autonomy shall wholly cease for the future.
Art. II.-China cedes to Japan in perpetuity and full sovereignty the follow- ing territories, together with all fortifications, arsenals, and public property thereon:
(a.) The southern portion of the Province of Feng-tien, within the following boundaries-
The line of demarcation begins at the mouth of the River Yalu, and ascends that stream to the mouth of the River An-ping; from thence the line runs to Fêng Huang; from thence to Haicheng; from thence to Ying Kow, forming a line which describes the southern portion of the territory. The places above named are included in the ceded territory. When the line reaches the River Liao at Ying Kow it follows the course of that stream to its mouth, where it terminates. The mid-channel of the River Liao shall be taken as the line of demarcation.
This cession also includes all islands appertaining or belonging to the Province of Feng Tien situated in the eastern portion of the Bay of Lino Tung, and in the northern part of the Yellow Sea.
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(b.) The Island of Formosa, together with all islands appertaining or belonging to the said Island of Formosa.
(c.) The Pescadores Group, that is to say all islands lying between the 119th and 120th degrees of longitude east of Greenwich and the 23rd and 24th degrees of north latitude.
Art. III. The alignments of the frontiers described in the preceding Article, and shown on the annexed map, shall be subject to verification and demarcation on the spot by a Joint Commission of Delimitation, consisting of two or more Japanese and two or more Chinese Delegates, to be appointed immediately after the exchange of the ratifications of this Act. In case the boundaries laid down in this Act are found to be defective at any point, either on account of topography or in consideration of good administration, it shall also be the duty of the Delimitation Commission to rectify the same.
The Delimitation Commission will enter upon its duties as soon as possible, and will bring its labours to a conclusion within the period of one year after appointment.
The alignments laid down in this Act shall, however, be maintained until the ractifications of the Delimitation Commission, if any are made, shall have received the approval of the Governments of Japan and China.
Art. IV. China agrees to pay to Japan as a war imdemnity the sum of 200,000,000 Kuping taels. The said sum to be paid in eight instalments. The first instalment of 50,000,000 taels to be paid within six months, and the second instalment of 50,000,000 taels to be paid within twelve months after the exchange of the ratifications of this Act. The remaining suns to be paid in six equal annual instalments as follows: the first of such equal annual instalments to be paid within two years, the second with- in three years, the third within four years, the fourth within five years, the fifth within six years, and the sixth within seven years after the exchange of the ratifications of this Act. Interest at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum shall begin to run on all unpaid portions of the said indemnity from the date the first instalment falls due.
China shall, however, have the right to pay by anticipation at any time any or all of said instalments. In case the whole amount of the said indemnity is paid within three years after the exchange of the ratifications of the present Act, all interest shall be waived, and the interest for two years and a half, or for any less period if then already paid, shall be included as a part of the principal amount of the indemnity.
Art. V.-The inhabitants of the territories ceded to Japan who wish to take up their residence outside the ceded districts shall be at liberty to sell their real property and retire. For this purpose a period of two years from the date of the exchange of the ratifications of the present Act shall be granted. At the expiration of that period those of the inhabitants who shall not have left such territories shall, at the option of Japan, be deemed to be Japanese subjects.
Each of the two Governments shall, immediately upon the exchange of the ratifications of the present Act, send one or more Commissioners to Formosa to effect a final transfer of that province, and within the space of two months after the exchange of the ratifications of this Act such transfer shall be completed.
Art. VI. -All Treaties between Japan and China having come to an end in- consequence of war, China engages, immediately upon the exchange of the ratifica tions of this Act, to appoint Plenipotentiaries to conclude with the Japanese Pleni- potentiaries a Treaty of Commerce and Navigation, and a Convention to regulate frontier intercourse and trade. The Treaties, Conventions, and Regulations, now subsisting between China and European Powers, shall serve as a basis for the said Treaty and Convention between Japan and China. From the date of the exchange of the ratifications of this Act until the said Treaty and Convention are brought into actual operation the Japanese Government, its officials, commerce, navigation, frontier intercourse and trade, industries, ships and subjects, shall in every respect be accorded by China most favoured-nation treatment.
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China makes, in addition, the following concessions, to take effect six months after the date of the present Act:-
1. The following cities, towns, and ports, in addition to those already opened shall be opened to the trade, residence, industries, and manufactures of Japanese subjects under the same conditions, and with the same privileges and facilities as exist at the present open cities, towns, and ports of China.
(a.) Shashih, in the Province of Hupeh.
(6.) Chung King, in the Province of Szechuan, (e.) Suchow, in the Province of Kiang Su.
(d.) Hangehow, in the Province of Chekiang.
The Japanese Government shall have the right to station Consuls at any or all of the above-named places.
2. Steam navigation for vessels under the Japanese flag for the conveyance of passengers and cargo shall be extended to the following places:-
(a.) On the Upper Yangtsze River, from Iclang to Chung King.
(b.) On the Woosung River, and the Canal, from Shanghai to Suchow and Hangchow.
The Rules and Regulations which now govern the navigation of the inland waters of China by foreign vessels, shall, so far as applicable, be enforced in respect of the above-named routes, until new Rules and Regulations are conjointly agreed to.
3. Japanese subjects purchasing goods or produce in the interior of China or transporting imported merchandise into the interior of China, shall have the right temporarily to rent or hire warehouses for the storage of the articles so purchased or transported, without the payment of any taxes or exactions whatever.
4. Japanese subjects shall be free to engage in all kinds of manufacturing industries in all the open cities, towns, and ports of China, and shall be at liberty to import into China all kinds of machinery, paying only the stipulated import duties thereou.
All articles manufactured by Japanese subjects in China, shall in respect of inland transit and internal taxes, duties, charges, and exactions of all kinds and also in respect of warehousing and storage facilities in the interior of China, stand upon the same footing and enjoy the same privileges and exemptions as merchandise imported by Japanese subjects into China.
In the event of additional Rules and Regulations being necessary in connection with these concessions, they shall be embodied in the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation provided for by this Article.
Art. VII. Subject to the provisions of the next succeeding Article, the evacua tion of China by the armies of Japan, shall be completely effected within three months after the exchange of the ratifications of the present Act.
Art. VIII. As a guarantee of the faithful performance of the stipulations of this Act, China consents to the temporary occupation by the military forces of Japan, of Wei-hai-wei, in the Province of Shantung.
Upon the payment of the first two instalments of the war indemnity herein stipulated for and the exchange of the ratifications of the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation, the said place shall be evacuated by the Japanese forces, provided the Chinese Government consents to pledge, under suitable and sufficient arrangements the Customs Revenue of China as security for the payment of the principal and interest of the remaining instalments of said indemnity. In the event of no such arrangement being concluded, such evacuation shall only take place upon the pay- ment of the final instalment of said indemnity,
It is, however, expressly understood that no such evacuation shall take place until after the exchange of the ratifications of the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation.
Art. IX.-Immediately upon the exchange of the ratifications of this Act, all prisoners of war then held shall be restored, and China undertakes not to ill-treat or punish prisoners of war so restored to her by Japan. China also engages to at once
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release all Japanese subjects accused of being military spies or charged with any other military offences. China further engages not to punish in any manner, nor to allow to be punished, those Chinese subjects who have in any manner been compromised in their relations with the Japanese army during the war.
Art. X.-All offensive military operations shall cease upon the exchange of the ratifications of this Act.
Art. XI. The present Act shall be ratified by their Majestics the Emperor of Japan and the Emperor of China, and the ratifications shall be exchanged at Chefoo on the eighth day of the fifth month of the twenty-eighth year of Meiji, corresponding to fourteenth day of the fourth month of twenty-first year of Kuang Hsü.
In witness whereof, the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same and have affixed thereto the seal of their arms.
Done at Shimonoseki, in duplicate, this seventeenth day of the fourth month of the twenty-eighth year of Meiji, corresponding to twenty-third of the third month of the twenty-first year of Kuang Hsü.
(L.S.)
(L.S.)
(L.S.)
(L.S.)
Count ITO HIROBUMI, Junii, Grand Cross of the Imperial Order of Paullownia, Minister-President of State, Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan.
Viscount
MUTSU MUNEMITSU, Junii, First Class of the Imperial Order of the Sacred Treasure, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan.
LI HUNG-CHANG, Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of China, Senior Tutor to the Heir Ap- parent, Senior Grand Secretary of Northern Ports of China, Viceroy of the Province of Chihli, and Earl of the First Rank.
LI CHING-FONG, Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of China, Ex-Minister of the Diplomatic Service, of the Second Official Rank.
TREATY OF COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION
MADE AT PEKING, JULY 21st, 1896
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan and His Majesty the Emperor of China having resolved, in pursuance of the provisions of Article VI. of the Treaty signed at Shimonoseki on the 17th day of the 4th month of the 28th year of Meiji, corresponding to the 23rd day of the 3rd month of the 21st year of Kwang-Hsü, to conclude a Treaty of Commerce and Navigation, have for that purpose, named as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:-
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, Baron Hayashi Tadasu, Shosbii, Grand Cross of the Imperial Order of the Sacred Treasure, Grand Officer of the Imperial Order of the Rising Sun, Minister Plenipotentiary and Envoy Extraordinary; and His Majesty the Emperor of China, Chang Yin-hoon, Minister of the Tsung-li Tamen, holding the rank of the President of a Board and Senior Vice-President of the Board of Revenue.
Who, after having communicated to each other their full powers, found to be in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles.
Art. I. There shall be perpetual peace and friendship between His Majesty the Emperor of Japan and His Majesty the Emperor of China, and between their respective subjects who shall enjoy equally in the respective countries of the High Contracting Parties full and entire protection for their persons and property.
Art. II. It is agreed by the High Contracting Parties that His Majesty the Emperor of Japan may, if he see fit, accredit a Diplomatic Agent to the Court of Peking and His Majesty the Emperor of China way, if he see fit, accredit a Diplomatic Agent to the Court of Tokyo.
The Diplomatic Agents thus accredited shall respectively enjoy all the pre- rogatives, privileges and immunities accorded by international law to such Agents and they shall also in all respects be entitled to the treatment extended to similar Agents of the most favoured nation.
Their persons, families, suites, establishments, residences and correspondence shall be held inviolable. They shall be at liberty to select and appoint their own officers, couriers, interpreters, servants, and attendants without any kind of molestation.
Art. III.-His Majesty the Emperor of Japan may appoint Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, and Consular Agents to reside at such of the ports, cities, and towns of China which are now or may hereafter be opened to foreign residence and trade, as the interests of the Empire of Japan may require.
These officers shall be treated with due respect by the Chinese Authorities, and they shall enjoy all the attributes, authority, jurisdiction, privileges and immunities which are or may hereafter be extended to similar officers of the nation most favoured in these respects.
His Majesty the Emperor of China may likewise appoint Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, and Consular Agents to reside at any or all of those places in Japan where Consular Officers of other nations are now or may hereafter be admitted, and, saving in the matter of jurisdiction in respect of Chinese subjects and property in Japan which is reserved to the Japanese Judicial Courts, they shall enjoy the rights and privileges that are usually accorded to such officers.
Art. IV. Japanese subjects may, with their families, employés and servants, frequent, reside and carry on trade, industries and manufactures or pursue any other lawful avocations, in all the ports, cities and towns of China, which are now or may
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hereafter be opened to foreign residence and trade. They are at liberty to proceed to or from any of the open ports with their merchandise and effects, and within the localities at those places which have already been or may hereafter be set apart for the use and occupation of foreigners, they are allowed to rent or purchase houses, rent or lease land and to build churches, cemeteries and hospitals, enjoying in all respects the same privileges and immunities as are now or may hereafter be granted to the subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation.
Art. V. Japanese vessels may touch for the purpose of landing and shipping passengers and merchandise, in accordance with the existing Rules and Regulations concerning foreign trade there, at all those places in China which are now ports of. call, namely, Ngan-ching, Ta-tung, Hu-kow, Wu-suel, Lu-chi-kow and Wo
Voosung and such other places as may hereafter be made ports of call also. If any vessel should unlawfully enter ports other than open ports and ports of call in China or carry on clandestine trade along the coast or rivers, the vessel with her cargo shall be subject to confiscation by the Chinese Government.
Art. VI-Japanese subjects may travel, for their pleasure or for purpose of trade, to all parts of the interior of China, under passports issued by Japanese Consuls and countersigned by the Local Authorities. These passports, if demanded, must be produced for examination in the localities passed through. If the passports be not irregular, the bearers will be allowed to proceed and no opposition shall be offered to their hiring of persons, animals, carts or vessels for their own conveyance or for the carriage of their personal effects or merchandise. If they be without passports or if they commit any offence against the law, they shall be handed over to the nearest Consul for punishment but they shall only be subject to necessary restraint and in no case to ill-usage. Such passports shall remain in force for a period of 13 Chinese months from the date of issue. Any Japanese subject travelling in the interior without a passport shall be liable to a fine not exceeding 300 Taels. Japanese sub- jects may, however, without passports go on excursions from any of the ports open to trade, to a distance not exceeding 100 Chinese li and for a period not exceeding five days. The provisions of this Article do not apply to crews of ships.
Art. VII. Japanese subjects residing in the open ports of China may take into their service Chinese subjects and employ them in any lawful capacity without restraint or hindrance from the Chinese Government or Authorities.
Art. VIII-Japanese subjects may hire whatever boats they please for the conveyance of cargo or passengers and the sum to be paid for such boats shall be settled between the parties themselves, without the interference of the Chinese Government or Officers. No limit shall be put upon the number of boats, neither shall a monopoly, in respect either of the boats or of the porters or coolies engaged in carrying goods, be granted to any parties. If any smuggling takes place in them the offenders will of course be punished according to law.
Art. IX. The Tariffs and Tariff Rules now in force between China and the Western Powers shall be applicable to all articles upon importation into China by Japanese subjects or from Japan, or upon exportation from China by Japanese subjects or to Japan. It is clearly understood that all articles, the importation or exportation of which is not expressly limited or prohibited by the Tariffs and Tariff Rules existing between China and the Western Powers, may be freely imported into and exported from China, subject only to the payment of the stipulated import or export duties. But in no case shall Japanese subjects be called upon to pay in China other or higher import or export duties than are or may paid by the subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation; nor shall any article imported into China from Japau or exported from China to Japan, be charged upon such importation or exportation, other or higher duties than are now or may hereafter be imposed in China on the like article when imported from or exported to the nation most favoured in those respects.
be
Art. X. All articles duly imported into China by Japanese subjects or from Japan shall, while being transported, subject to the existing Regulations, from one open port to another, be wholly exempt from all taxes, imposts, duties, lekin, charges
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and exactions of every nature and kind whatsoever, irrespective of the nationality of the owner or possessor of the articles, or the nationality of the conveyance or vessel in which the transportation is made.
Art. XI. It shall be at the option of any Japanese subject desiring to convey duly imported articles to an inland market, to clear his goods of all transit duties by payment of a commutation transit tax or duty, equal to one-half of the import duty in respect of dutiable articles, and two and a half per cent. upon the value in respect of duty-free articles; and on payment thereof a certificate shall be issued which shall exempt the goods from all further inland charges whatsoever.
It is understood that this Article does not apply to imported Opium. Art. XII.--All Chinese goods and produce purchased by Japanese subjects in China elsewhere than at an open port thereof and intended for export abroad, shall in every part of China be freed from all taxes, imposts, duties, lekin, charges and exactions of every nature and kind whatsoever, saving only export duties when exported, upon the payment of a commutation transit tax or duty calculated at the rate mentioned in the last preceding Article, substituting export duty for import duty, provided such goods and produce are actually exported to a foreign country within the period of 12 mouths from the date of the payment of the transit tax All Chinese goods and produce purchased by Japanese subjects at the open ports of China and of which export to foreign countries is not prohibited, shall be exempt from all internal taxes, imposts, duties, lekin, charges and exactions of every nature and kind whatsoever, saving only export duties upon exportation, and all articles purchased by Japanese subjects in any part of China, may also, for the purposes of export abroad, be transported froui open port to open port subject to the existing Rules and Regulations.
Art. XIII.-Merchandise of a bonú fide foreign origin, in respect of which full import duty shall have been paid, may at any time within three years from the date of importation, be re-exported from China by Japanese subjects to any foreign country, without the payment of any export duty, and the re-exporters shall, in addition, be entitled forthwith to receive from the Chinese Customs drawback certi- ficates for the amount of import duty paid thereon, provided that the merchandise remains intact and unchanged in its original packages. Such drawback certificates shall be immediately redeemable in ready money by the Chinese Customs Authorities at the option of the holders thereof.
Art. XIV. The Chinese Government consents to the establishment of Bonded Warehouses at the several open ports of China. Regulations on the subject shall be made hereafter.
Art. XV. Japanese merchant vessels of more than 150 tons burden, entering the open ports of China, shall be charged tonnage dues at the rate of 4 mace per registered ton; if of 150 tous and under, they shall be charged at the rate of 1 mace per registered ton. But any such vessel taking its departure within 48 hours after arrival, without breaking bulk, shall be exempt from the payment of tonnage dues.
Japanese vessels having paid the above specified tonnage dues shall thereafter be exempt from all tonnage dues in all the open ports and ports of call of China, for the period of four months from the date of clearance from the port where the pay ment of such tonnage dues is made. Japanese vessels shall not, however, be required to pay tonnage dues for the period during which they are actually undergoing repairs
in China.
No tonnage dues shall be payable on small vessels and boats employed by Japanese subjects in the conveyance of passengers' baggage, letters, or duty-free articles between any of the open ports of China. All small vessels and cargo boats, however, conveying merchandise which is, at the time of such conveying, subject to duty, shall pay tonnage dues once in four months at the rate of 1 mace per ton.
No fee or charges, other than tonnage dues, shall be levied upon Japanese vessels and boats, and it is also understood that such vessels and boats shall not be required to pay other or higher tonnage dues than the vessels and boats of the most favoured nation.
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Art. XVI.-Any Japanese merchant vessel arriving at an open port of China shall be at liberty to engage the services of a pilot to take her into port. In like manner, after she has discharged all legal dues and duties and is ready to take her departure, she shall be allowed to employ a pilot to take her out of port.
or any
Art. XVII-Japanese merchant vessels compelled on account of injury sustained other cause, to seek a place of refuge, shall be permitted to enter any nearest port of China, without being subject to the payment of tonnage dues or duties upon goods landed in order that repairs to the vessel may be effected, provided the goods so landed remain under the supervision of the Customs authorities. Should any such vessel be stranded or wrecked on the coast of China, the Chinese authorities shall immediately adopt measures for rescuing the passengers and crew and for securing the vessel and cargo. The persons thus saved shall receive friendly treatment, and, if necessary, shall be furnished with means of conveyance to the nearest Consular station. Should any Chinese merchant vessel be compelled on account of injury sustained or any other cause to seek a place of refuge in the nearest port of Japan, she shall likewise be treated in the same way by the Japanese authorities.
Art. XVIII. The Chinese authorities at the several open ports shall adopt such means as they judge most proper to prevent the revenue suffering from fraud or smuggling.
Art. XIX.--If any Japanese vessel be plundered by Chinese robbers or pirates, it shall be the duty of the Chinese authorities to use every endeavour to capture and punish the said robbers or pirates and to recover and restore the stolen property.
Art. XX.-Jurisdiction over the persons and property of Japanese subjects in China is reserved exclusively to the duly authorized Japanese authorities, who shall bear and determine all cases brought against Japanese subjects or property by Jap- anese subjects or by the subjects or citizens of any other Power, without the interven- tion of the Chinese authorities.
Art. XXI. If the Chinese authorities or a Chinese subject make any charge or complaint of a civil nature against Japanese subjects or in respect of Japanese property in China, the case shall be heard and decided by the Japanese authorities. In like manner all charges and complaints of a civil nature brought by Japanese authorities or subjects in China against Chinese subjects or in respect of Chinese property, shall be heard and determined by the Chinese authorities.
Art. XXII.-Japanese subjects, charged with the commission of any crimes or offences in China, shall be tried and, if found guilty, punished by the Japanese authorities according to the laws of Japan.
In like manner Chinese subjects charged with the commission of any crimes or offences against Japanese subjects in China, shall be tried and, if found guilty, punished by the Chinese authorities according to the laws of China.
Art. XXIII.-Should any Chinese subject fail to discharge debts incurred to a Japanese subject or should he fraudulently abscond, the Chinese authorities will do. their utmost to effect his arrest, and enforce recovery of the debts. The Japanese Authorities will likewise do their utmost to bring to justice any Japanese subject who fraudulently absconds or fails to discharge debts incurred by him to a Chinese subject.
Art. XXIV.-If Japanese subjects in China who have committed offences or have failed to discharge debts and fraudulently abscond, should flee to the interior of China or take refuge in houses occupied by Chinese subjects or on board of Chinese ships, the Chinese authorities shall, at the request of the Japanese Consul, deliver them to the Japanese authorities.
In like manner if Chinese subjects in China who have committed offences or have failed to discharge debts and fraudulently abscond, should take refuge in houses occupied by Japanese subjects in China or on board of Japanese ships in Chinese waters, they shall be delivered up at the request of the Chinese authorities made to the Japanese authorities.
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Art. XXV. The Japanese Government and its subjects are hereby confirmedin all privileges, immunities and advantages conferred on them by the Treaty stipulations between Japan and China which are now in force; and it is hereby expressly stipu- lated that the Japanese Government and its subjects will be allowed free and equal participation in all privileges, immunities and advantages that may have been or may be hereafter granted by His Majesty the Emperor of China to the Government or subjects of any other nation.
Art. XXVI. It is agreed that either of the High Contracting Parties may demand a revision of the Tariffs and of the Commercial Articles of this Treaty at the end of ten years from the date of the exchange of the ratifications; but if no such demand be made on either side and no such revision be effected within six months after the end of the first ten years then the Treaty and Tariffs, in their present form, shall remain in force for ten years more, reckoned from the end of the preceding ten years, and so it shall be at the end of each successive period of ten years.
Art. XXVII.-The High Contracting Parties will agree upon Rules and Regulations necessary to give full effect to this Treaty. Until such Rules and Regulations are brought into actual operation the Arrangements, Rules and Regulations subsisting between China and the Western Powers, so far as they are applicable and not inconsistent with the provisions of this Treaty, shall be binding between the Contracting Parties.
Art. XXVIII.-The present Treaty is signed in the Japanese, Chinese and English languages. In order, however, to prevent future discussions, the Pleni- potentiaries of the High Contracting Parties have agreed that in case of any divergencies in the interpretation between the Japanese and Chinese Texts of the Treaty, the difference shall be settled by reference to the English Text.
Art. XXIX.--The present Treaty shall be ratified by His Majesty the Emperor of China and His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, and the ratification thereof shall be exchanged at Peking not later than three months from the present date.
In Witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same and have affixed thereto the seal of their arms.
Done at Peking this twenty-first day of the seventh month of the twenty- ninth year of Meiji, corresponding to the eleventh day of the sixth month of the twenty-second year of Kuang Hsu (July 21st, 1896).
[L.S.] [L.S.]
CHANG YIN-HOON.
HAYASHI TADASU.
PROTOCOL REGARDING NEW PORTS
MADE AT PEKING, 19TH OCTOBER, 1896
Baron Hayashi Tadasu, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of His Majesty the Emperor of China have agreed upon the following stipulations supple- mentary to the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation :-
Art. I. It is hereby agreed that special Japanese settlements shall be formed at the places uewly opened to commerce, and that affairs relating to roads and police shall be under the control of the Japanese Consul.
Art. II.-Regulations with respect to steamers or ships owned or chartered by Japanese subjects at Suchow, Hangchow, and Shanghai shall be determined after conference with Japan, on the basis of the Provisional Regulations for the conduct of business by foreign merchants at those places, issued by the Shanghai Customs on August third of the twenty-second year of Kwang Hsü.
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Art. III. The Government of Japan concedes the right of the Chinese Govern- ment to impose upon articles manufactured by Japanese subjects in China such a tax as may seem expedient, provided that the said tax shall not differ from, or exceed, the tax paid by Chinese subjects; and provided that the Chinese Govern- ment shall, when the Japanese Government so desires, immediately provide sites for the formation of special Japanese Settlements in Shanghai, Tientsin, Amoy, and Hankow.
Art. IV. Instructions shall be issued in Sunfu, in Shantung, that no Chinese troops shall approach, or take possession of any position, within 5 Japanese ri, that is to say, about 40 Chinese li, of the limits of any positions held by Japanese forces in accordance with Treaty stipulations.
The above Protocol shall be drawn up in the Chinese and Japanese languages and after comparison, the two copies shall be signed and sealed, each side taking one of the copies.
HAYASHI TADASU.
PRINCE KING.
[Signed]
-
YIN LU.
CHANG YIN-WHAN.
**
Nineteenth day, tenth month, twenty-ninth year of Meiji; thirteenth day, ninth month, twenty-second year of Kuang Hsü.
SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY OF COMMERCE AND
NAVIGATION BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
SIGNED AT SHANGHAI, 8th OCTOBER, 1903
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan and His Majesty the Emperor of China, in order to give full effect to the provisions of Article XI. of the Final Protocol signed at Peking on the seventh day of the ninth month of the thirty-fourth year of Meiji, corresponding to the twenty-fifth day of seventh moon of the twenty-seventh year of Kuang-hsü, have resolved to conclude a Supplementary Treaty of Commerce and Navigation, designed to facilitate and promote the commercial relations between Japan and China, and have for that purpose named as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan:-Hioki Eki, Jugoi, Fifth Class of the Imperial Order of the Rising Sun, First Secretary of Legation, and Odagiri Masnoske, Shorokui, Fifth Class of the Imperial Order of the Rising Sun, Consul-General; and
His Majesty the Emperor of China:-Lü Hai-huan, President of the Board of Public Works; Sheng Hsuan-huai, Junior Guardian of the Heir Appareut formerly Senior Vice-President of the Board of Public Works; and Wu Ting-fang, Senior Vice-President of the Board of Commerce.
Who, after having communicated to each other their full powers, found to be in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles :--
Art. I. Whereas China, with the object of reforming its fiscal system, proposes to levy a surtax in excess of the tariff rates on all goods passing through the Custom- houses, whether maritime, or inland and frontier, in order to compensate, in a mea- sure, for the loss incurred by the complete abolition of lekin, Japan consents to pay same surtax as is agreed upon between China and all the Treaty Powers. With
the
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regard to the production tax, consumption tax, and excise, and the taxes on native opium and salt, leviable by China, Japan also consents to accept the same arrange- ments as are agreed upon between all the Treaty Powers and China. It is under- stood, however, that the commerce, rights and privileges of Japan shall not, on account of the above, be placed at any disadvantage as compared with the commerce, rights and privileges of other Powers.
Art. II. The Chinese Government agrees to permit Japanese steamship-owners to erect, at their own expense, appliances for hauling through the rapids of that part of the Yangtzekiang between Ichang and Chungking; but as the interests of the population of the provinces of Szechuen, Hunan and Hupeh are involved, it is there- fore necessary that the approval of the Imperial Maritime Customs be obtained before such appliances may be so erected. These appliances, which shall be at the disposal of all vessels, both steamers and junks, shall not obstruct the waterway nor interfere with the free passage of junks or of persons on the banks on the river. Such ap- pliances shall be subject to special regulations to be drawn up by the Imperial Customs.
Art. III. The Chinese Government agrees that any Japanese steamer capable of navigating the inland waterways, upon reporting at the Imperial Maritime Cus- toms, may proceed for the purpose of trade from a Treaty Port to places inland so reported, on complying with the Original and Supplementary Regulations for Steam Navigation Inland.
Art. IV. In case Chinese subjects conjointly with Japanese subjects organise a partnership or company for a legitimate purpose, they shall equitably share the profits and losses with all the members according to the terms of the agreement or memorandum and articles of association and the regulations framed thereunder, and they shall be liable to the fulfilment of the obligations imposed by the said agreement or memorandum and articles of association and the regulations framed thereunder, as accepted by them and as interpreted by the Japanese Courts. Should they fail to fulfil the obligations so imposed and legal action be taken against them in consequence, Chinese Courts shall at once enforce fulfilment of such obligations. It is understood that in case Japanese subjects conjointly with Chinese subjects organise a partnership or company, they shall also equitably share the profits and losses with all the members according to the terms of the agreement or memorandum and articles of association and the regulations framed thereunder. Should such Japanese subjects fail to fulfil any of the obligations imposed by the said agreement or memorandum and articles of association, or by the regulations framed thereunder, Japanese Courts shall in like manner at ouce enforce fulfilment of such obligations by them.
Art. V. The Chinese Government agrees to make and faithfully enforce such regulations as are necessary for preventing Chinese subjects from infringing regis- tered trade-marks held by Japanese subjects. The Chinese Government likewise agrees to make such regulations as are necessary for affording protection to registered copyrights held by Japanese subjects in the books, pamphlets, maps and charts written in the Chinese language and specially prepared for the use of Chinese people. It is further agreed that the Chinese Government shall establish registration offices where foreign trade-marks and copyrights held by Japanese subjects in protec tion of the Chinese Government, shall be registered in accordance with the provisions of the regulations to be hereafter framed by the Chinese Government for the purpose of protecting trade-marks and copyrights. It is understood that Chinese trade- marks and copyrights properly registered according to the provisions of the laws and regulations of Japan, will receive similar protection against infringement in Japan.
This Article shall not be held to protect against due process of law any Japanese or Chinese subject who may be the author, proprietor, or seller of any publication calculated to injure the well-being of China.
Art. VI.--China agrees to establish itself, as soon as possible, a system of uniform national coinage, and provide for a uniform national currency, which shall be
SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
215
freely used as legal tender in payment of all duties, taxes and other obligations by Japanese subjects as well as by Chinese subjects in the Chinese Empire. It is understood, however, that all Customs duties shall continue to be calculated and paid on the basis of the Haikwan tael.
Art. VII. As the weights and measures used by the mercantile and other classes for general and commercial purposes in the different provinces of China vary and do not accord with the standards fixed by the Imperial Government Boards, thus resulting in detriment to the trade of Chinese and foreigners, the Governors-General and Governors of all the provinces, after careful inquiry into existing conditions, shall consult together and fix upon uniform standards which, after a Memorial to the Throne for sanction, shall be adopted and used in all transactions by officials and people throughout all the Empire. These standards shall be first used in the places opened to foreign trade and gradually extended to inland places. Any differences resulting from divergence between the new weights and measures and those now in vogue shall be equitably settled, whether by way of increase or decrease, according to the amount of such difference.
Art. VIII.-The Regulations for Steam Navigation Inland of the fifth moon of the twenty-fourth year of Kuang Hsu and the Supplementary Rules of the seventh moon of the same year, having been found in some respects inconvenient in working, the Chinese Government hereby agrees to amend them, and to annex such new Rules to this Treaty, These Rules shall remain in force until altered by mutual consent.
Art, IX.--The provisions of all Treaties and Engagements now subsisting between Japan and China, in so far as they are not modified of repealed by this Act, are hereby expressly stipulated in addition, that the Japanese Government, Officers, Subjects, Commerce, Navigation, Shipping, Industries and Property of all kinds shall be allowed free and full participation in all privileges, immunities and advantages which have been or may hereafter be granted by His Majesty the Emperor of China or by the Chinese Government or by the Provincial or Local Administrations of China to the Government, Officers, Subjects, Commerce, Navigation, Shipping, In- dustries or Property of any other nation. The Japanese Government will do its utmost to secure to Chinese Officers and Subjects resident in Japan the most favourable treatment compatible with the laws and regulations of the Empire,
the
Art. X. The High Contracting Parties hereto agree that, in case of and after complete withdrawal of the foreign troops stationed in the province of Chilli and of the Legation guards, a place of international residence and trade in Peking will be forthwith opened by China itself. The detailed regulation relating thereto shall be settled in due time after consultation. The Chinese Government agrees to open to foreign trade, within six months from the exchange of the Ratifications of this Treaty, Changsha-fu in the province of Hunan on the same footing as the ports already opened to foreign trade. Foreigners residing in this open port are to observe the Municipal and Police Regulations on the same footing as Chinese residents, and they are not to be entitled to establish a Municipality and Police of their own within the limits of this Treaty Port, except with the consent of the Chinese authorities. The Chinese Government agrees that, upon the exchange of the Ratifications of this Treaty, Moukden and Tatungkow, both in the province of Shengking, will be opened by China itself as places of international residence and trade. The selection of suitable localities to be set apart for international use and occupation and the regul ations for these places set apart for foreign residence and trade shall be agreed upon by the Goveruments of Japan and China, after consultation together.
Art. XI.-The Government of China having expressed a strong desire to reform its judicial system and to bring it into accord with that of Japan and Western nations, Japan agrees to give every assistance to such reform, and will also be pre- pared to relinquish its extraterritorial rights when satisfied that the state of the Chinese laws, the arrangements for their administration, and other considerations warrant it in so doing,
216
SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
Art. XII--The present Treaty is signed in the Japanese, Chinese and English languages. In order, however, to prevent future discussions, the Plenipotentiaries of the High Contracting Parties have agreed that in case of any divergence in the in- terpretation between the Japanese and Chinese texts of the Treaty, the difference shall be settled by reference to the English text.
Art. XIII. The present Treaty shall be ratified by His Majesty the Emperor of Japan and His Majesty the Emperor of China, and the ratifications thereof shall be exchanged at Peking as soon as possible, and not later than six months from the present date. In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same and have affixed thereto the seals of their arms.
Done at Shanghai, this eighth day of the tenth month of the thirty-sixth year of Meiji, corresponding to the eighteenth day of the eighth moon of the twenty-ninth year of Kuang Hst.
[L..S.] [L.S.] (Signed)
+1
HIOKI EKI.
ODAGIRI MASNOSKE.
LU HAI-HUan. SHENG HSUAN-HUAL. WU TUNG-FANG.
ANNEX 1
INLAND WATERS STEAM NAVIGATION
ADDITIONAL RULES
1.-Japanese steamship owners are at liberty to lease warehouses and jetties on the banks of waterways from Chinese subjects for a term not exceeding twenty-five years, with option of renewal on terms to be mutually arranged. In cases where Japanese merchants are unable to secure warehouses and jetties from Chinese subjects on satisfactory terms, the local officials, after consultation with the Governor or Governor-General or Minister of Commerce, shall arrange to provide these on renewable lease, as above mentioned, at current equitable rates.
2. Jetties shall only be erected in such positions that they will not obstruct the inland waterway or interfere with navigation, and with the sanction of the nearest Commissioner of Customs; such sanction, however, shall not be arbitrarily withheld.
3. Japanese merchants shall pay taxes and contributions on these warehouses and jetties on the same footing as Chinese proprietors of similar properties in the neighbourhood. Japanese merchants may only employ Chinese agents and staff to reside in warehouses so leased at places touched at by steamers engaged in inland traffic to carry on their business; but Japanese merchants may visit these places from time to time to look after their affairs. The existing rights of Chinese jurisdiction over Chinese subjects shall not by reason of this clause be diminished or interfered with in ally way.
4.Steam vessels navigating the inland waterways of China shall be responsible for loss caused to riparian proprietors by damage which they may do to the banks or works on them, and for the loss which may be caused by such damage. In the event of China desiring to prohibit the use of some particular shallow waterway by launches, because there is reason to fear that the use of it by them would be likely to injure the banks and cause damage to the adjoining country, the Japanese authorities, when appealed to, shall, if satisfied of the validity of the objection, prohibit the use of that waterway by Japanese launches, provided that Chinese launches are also prohibited from using it. Both Foreign and Chinese
SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
217
launches are prohibited from crossing dams and weirs at present in existence on inland waterways where they are likely to cause injury to such works, which would be detrimental to the water service of the local people.
5. The main object of the Japanese Government in desiring to see the inland waterways of China opened to steam navigation being to afford facilities for the rapid transport of both foreign and native merchandise, they undertake to offer no impediment to the transfer to a Chinese company and the Chinese flag of any Japanese steamer which may now or hereafter be employed on the inland waters of China, should the owner be willing to make the transfer. In the event of a Chinese company registered under Chinese law being formed to run steamers on the inland waters of China, the fact of Japanese subjects holding shares in such a company shall not entitle the steamer to fly the Japanese flag.
6. Registered steamers and their tows are forbidden, just as junks have always been forbidden, to carry contraband goods. Infraction of this rule will entail the penalties prescribed in the Treaties for such an offence and cancellation of the Inland Waters Navigation Certificate carried by the vessels, which will be prohibited from thereafter plying on inland waters.
7. As it is desirable that the people living inland should be disturbed as little as possible by advent of steam vessels to which they are not accustomed, inland waters not hitherto frequented by steamers shall be opened as gradually as may be convenient to merchants and only as the owners of steamers may see prospect of remunerative trade. In cases where it is intended to run steam vessels on water- ways on which such vessels have not hitherto run, intimation shall be made to the Commissioner of Customs at the nearest open port, who shall report the matter to the Ministers of Commerce. The latter, in conjunction with the Governor-General or Governor of the province, after careful consideration of all the circumstances of the case, shall at once give their approval.
8. A registered steamer may ply within the waters of a port, or from one open port or ports to another open port or ports, or from one open port or ports to places inland, and thence back to such port or ports. She may, on making due report to the Customs, land or ship passengers or cargo at any recognised places of trade passed in the course of the voyage; but may not ply between inland places exclusively except with the consent of the Chinese Government.
9. Any cargo and passenger boats may be towed by steamers. The helmsman and crew of any boat towed shall be Chinese. All boats, irrespective of ownership, must be registered before they can proceed inland.
10. The above Rules are supplementary to the Regulations published in the fifth and seventh moons of the twenty-fourth year of Kuang Hsü, which remain in full force and effect in so far as they are not modified by the Rules now agreed upon. The present Rules and the Regulations of the fifth and seventh moons of the twenty-fifth year of Kuang Hsi may hereafter be modified, as circumstances require, by mutual consent.
Done at Shanghai this eighth day of the tenth moon of the thirty-sixth year of Meiji, corresponding to the eighteenth day of the eighth moon of the twenty-ninth year of Kuang Hsü.
[L.S.]
HIOKI EKI.
[L.S.]
ODAGIRI MASNOSKE.
(Signed)
LU HAI-HUAN.
נו
SHENG HSUAN-HUAI
WU TING-FANG
6
218
SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
ANNEX 2
IMPERIAL JAPANESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION TO IMPERIAL CHINESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION
Shanghai, the 8th Day of the 10th Month of the 36th Year of Meiji.
GENTLEMEN. According to Article III. of present Treaty, the Chinese Govern- ment agree that any Japanese steamer capable of navigating the Inland Waterways, upon reporting at the Imperial Maritime Customs, may proceed for purpose of trade from a treaty port to places inland, so reported, on complying with the Original and Supplementary Regulations for Steam Navigation Inland,
It is understood that all classes of Japanese steamers, whatever their size, provided they are capable of navigating the Inland Waterways, may, on complying with the Regulations, receive an Inland Waters Certificate, and carry on trade with Inland places, and the Chinese Government will in no case raise difficulties and stop such steamers from plying to and from Inland places.
We have the honour, in order to prevent future misunderstandings, to address this despatch to Your Excellencies and to request that instructions be sent to the Inspector General of Maritime Customs to act in accordance with this understanding.
We have further the honour to request a reply from Your Excellencies.
We have the honour &c.,
(Signed)
..
HIOKI EKI. ODAGIRI MASNOSKE.
ANNEX 3
IMPERIAL CHINESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION TO IMPERIAL JAPANESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION
Shanghai, the 18th Day of the 8th Moon of the 26th Year of Kuang Hsü. GENTLEMEN,--We have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of Your Excel- lencies' despatch of this date, written with a view of preventing future misunder- standings, to the effect that, in accordance with the provisions of Article III. of the present Treaty, all classes of Japanese steamers, whatever their size, provided they are capable of navigating the Inland Waterways, may on complying with the Regulations receive an Inland Waters Certificate, and ply to and from inland places, and that the Chinese Government will in no case raise difficulties and stop them.
During the negotiations of this Article, we received a list from Your Excellencies of the Japanese steamers, viz:-Sanyo Maru, Setagawa Maru, Hiuga Maru, Urato Maru, Neisei Maru, Heiau Maru, Taiko Maru, Yoshino Maru, Meiko Maru, Fukoju Maru, Hijikawa Maru, Nagata Maru, Kyodo Maru, Horai Maru, Kwanko Maru, Keiko Mara, Kinriu Maru, Zensho Maru and Kohei Maru, ranging from one hundred and twenty-one tous to four hundred and ten tons register-plying from Chefoo to inland places in Manchuria, under Inland Waters Certificate and in accordance with the Regulations for Steam Navigation Inland, which vessels have not been prevented from doing so on account of their class.
At that time we instructed the Deputy Inspector General of Customs to make inquiries into the records of the Custom-houses, and he reported that the circum- stances were in accordance with Your Excellencies' statement.
In consequence of the receipt of Your Excellencies' despatch we shall communi- cate with the Waiwupu and request that instructions be sent to the Inspector General of Customs to take these circumstances into consideration and to act accordingly, and we have the honour to write this despatch for purposes of record.
We have the honour to be,
(Signed)
**
11
LU HAI-HUAN. SHENG HSUAN-HUAN. WU TING-FANG,
A
SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
ANNEX 4
219
IMPERIAL JAPANESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION TO IMPERIAL CHINESE
COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION
Shanghai, the 8th Day of the 10th Month of the 26th Year of Meiji
GENTLEMEN,The provision contained in No. 9 of the Supplementary Rules governing steam navigating on Inland Waters, published in the seventh moon of the twenty-fourth year of Kuang Hsü, regarding the appointment of an officer to collect dues and duties, not having in all cases been given effect to, we have the honour to request that Your Excellencies' Government will again issue instructions to all pro- vinces to give strict effect to this provision, as it is a matter of importance.
We trust that Your Excellencies will comply with the request contained in this despatch and that you will favour us with a reply.
We have the honour, &c.,
(Signed)
HIOKI EKI. ODAGIRI MASNOSKE.
ANNEX 5
IMPERIAL CHINESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION TO IMPERIAL JAPANESE
COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION
Shanghai, the 18th Day of the 8th Moon of the 29th Year Kuang-Hsû. GENTLEMEN, We have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of Your Excel- lencies' despatch of this date to the effect that, the provision contained in No. 9 of the Supplementary Rules governing steam navigation on Inland Waters, published in the seventh moon of the twenty-fourth year of Kuang Hsü, regarding the appoint- ment of an officer to collect dues and duties, not having in all cases been given effect to, you request that instructions be again issued to all provinces to give strict effect to this provision, as it is a matter of importance.
We have noted the above and have communicated with proper authorities in order that action may be taken, and have now the honour to write this reply for Your Excellencies' information.
We have the honour, &c.,
(Signed)
27
LU HAI-HUAN. SHENG HSUAN-HUAI. WU TING FANG.
ANNEX 6
IMPERIAL CHINESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION TO IMPERIAL Japanese
COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION
Shanghai, the 18th Day of the 8th Moon of the 29th Year of Kuang Hsü. GENTLEMEN, According to the provision of Article X. of this Treaty, regarding the establishment in Peking of a place of international residence and trade, it is agreed that in case of, and after, the complete withdrawal of the foreign troops, now guarding the Legations and communications, a place in Peking outside the Inner City, convenient to both parties and free from objections, shall be selected and set apart as a place where merchants of all nationalities may reside and carry on trade.
6*
220
SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA
Within the limits of this place merchants of all nationalities shall be at liberty to lease land, build houses and warehouses, and establish places of business; but as to the leasing of houses and land belonging to Chinese private individuals, there must be willingness on the part of the owners, and the terms thereof must be equitably arranged without any force or compulsion. All roads and bridges in this place will be under the jurisdiction and control of China. Foreigners residing in this place are to observe the Municipal and Police Regulations on the same footing as Chinese residents, and they are not to be entitled to establish a Municipality and Police of their own within its limits except with the consent of the Chinese authorities. When such place of international residence and trade shall have been opened and its limits properly defined, the foreigners who have been residing scattered both within and without the city walls, shall all be required to remove their residence thereto and they shall not be allowed to remain in separate places, and thereby cause inconvenience in the necessary supervision by the Chinese authorities. The value of the land and buildings held by such foreigners shall be agreed upon equitably, and due compen- sation therefore shall be paid. The period for such removal shall be determined in due time, and those who do not remove before the expiry of this period shall not be entitled to compensation.
We have considered it to be to our mutual advantage to come to the present basis of understanding in order to avoid future unnecessary negotiations, and we beg that Your Excellencies will consider and agree to it, and will favour us with a reply,
We have the honour, &c.,
(Signed)
"J
LU HAI-HUAN. SHENG HUAN-HUAI, WU TING-FANG.
ANNEX 7
IMPERIAL JAPANESE COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION TO IMPERIAL CHINESE
COMMISSIONERS FOR TREATY REVISION
Shanghai, the 8th Day of the 10th Mouth of the 36th Year of Meiji.
GENTLEMEN,-We have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of Your Excellencies' despatch of the 18th day of the 8th moon of the 29th year of Kuang Hsu,
In reply we beg to inform you that we agree generally to all the terms contained in the despatch under acknowledgment. As to the detailed regulations, these shall in due time be considered and satisfactorily settled in accordance with Article X. of this Treaty; but it is understood that such regulations shall not differ in any respect to our prejudice from those which may be agreed upon between China and other Powers. We have the honour to send Your Excellencies this communi- cation in reply and for your information.
We have the honour, &c.,
(Signed)
*
HIOKI EKI.
ODAGIRI MASNOSKE.
TREATY BETWEEN CHINA AND JAPAN RELATING TO MANCHURIA
SIGNED AT PEKING, 22ND DECEMBER, 1905.
I. The Chinese Government agrees to all the transfers made to Japan by Russia by Articles V. and VI. of the Treaty of Peace between Japan and Russia.
II. The Japanese Government agrees to observe as much as possible the exist- ing Treaties in regard to the lease of land for the construction of railways, which have been concluded between China and Russia.
In case of any question arising in future, the Japanese Government will consult with the Chinese Government before settlement.
III. This present Treaty will take effect from the date of signing, and will be ratified by his Imperial Japanese Majesty and his Imperial Chinese Majesty, and ratifications will be exchanged in Peking as early as possible within two months from the date of signing.
In witness whereof the Plenipotentiaries of the two contraccting parties have signed and affixed their respective seals on the Treaty done in duplicate in Japanese and Chinese.
Done at Peking, 22nd December, 1905.
KOMURA JUTARO,
Minister for Foreign Affairs, Special Ambassador;
UCHIDA KOSAL,
Minister Plenipotentiary;
PRINCE CHING,
Minister Plenipotentiary;
KU KO-KI,
Minister Plenipotentiary ;
YUAN SHI-KAI,
Minister Plenipotentiary.
SUPPLEMENTARY AGREEMENT
The Governments of the two contracting parties have decided on the following matters in which both parties are interested in Manchuria and agreed upon the following stipulations for their guidance:-
I. The Chinese Government agrees to open the following cities in Manchuria to the residence of foreigners and foreign trade with as little delay as possible after the evacuation of Manchuria by the Japanese and Russian armies:-
Shingking Province:-Whangfengcheng, Liaoyang, Sinminting, Tieling, Tung- kiangtze, and Fakamen.
Kirin Province:-Changchun (Kwangchengtze), Kirin, Harbin, Ninguta, Hong- chun and Sanchin.
Heilunking Province :---Tsitsikar, Hailar, Aihon and Manjuri.
II.-The Chinese Government having expressed its earnest desire for the speedy withdrawal of the Japanese and Russian armies and railway guards in Manchuria, and the Japanese Government being desirous of complying with the desire of the Chinese Government, agrees to make similar arrangements in case of the Russian Government agreeing to the withdrawal of its railway guards, or of any special under- standing having been arrived at between China and Russia in the matter. order has been perfectly established in Manchurid and the Chinese authorities have become able to fully protect the life and property of foreigners in Manchuria, the Japanese Government, in common with the Russian Government, will withwraw the railway guards.
When
III. The Japanese Government will immediately inform the Chinese Govern- ment of any locality in Manchuria witch is evacuated by the Japanese troopa, and
222 TREATY BETWEEN CHINA AND JAPAN RELATING TO MANCHURIA.
on receiving such information the Chinese Government is authorised to send a force of troops necessary for the maintenance of the public security and order to the locality evacuated by the Japanese troops, even before the expiration of the term specified in the Japanese-Russian Treaty for the withdrawal of the troops. In case of bandits molesting villages in the district still under occupation of the Japanese troops, the Chinese local authorities may send troops to arrest the bandits, but Chinese troops dispatched on this work shall not be allowed to enter within twenty Chinese miles of the place where Japanese troops are stationed.
IV. The Japanese Government agrees to return to their respective owners all the Government or private property in Manchuria occupied or taken possession of by the Japanese army for military purposes, as Manchuria is evacuated by the troops. Even before the evacuation such property, when useless for the needs of the troops, will be returned to the respective owners.
V.-The Chinese Government agrees to take all measures necessary for protecting the tombs of the Japanese soldiers killed in battle in Manchuria, and the monuments erected in commemoration of their loyalty.
The
VI-The Chinese Government agrees to the military railway constructed between Antongcheng and Mukden being transformed into a line for the transmission of merchandise of all nationals and conducted by the Japanese Government. term in which the railway will be conducted by the Japanese to be fifteen years from the date on which the transformation of the line is completed. Upon the expiry of the term, the railway will be sold to the Chinese Government, its value being decided by two experts, one to be appointed by each of the contracting parties. During the time the line is under the control of the Japanese, Chinese troops, arms, and provi- sions will be transported according to the terms of the Chinese Eastern Railway Treaty. In effecting the transformation of the railway, the Japanese authorities in charge will consult with commissioners to be appointed by the Chinese Government. Rates of freight on goods belonging to the Chinese Government or private individuals will be specially arranged.
VII. The two contracting parties agree to make arrangements as soon as possible for connecting the service of railways in South Manchuria and those in China proper, in order to promote and facilitate the communications and transport of goods.
VIII. The Chinese Government agrees to exempt materials required for the railways in South Manchuria from all duties and lekin.
IX. At Yingkow (Newchwaug), which is already opened to foreign trade, and also in Antongcheng, Mukden, and other places in the Shingking province, which it is agreed to open to foreign trade, settlements for the exclusive use of Japanese will be established, and the provision for this purpose made by the Japanese and Chinese authorities in a special agreement.
X.-The Chinese Government agrees to a joint-stock lumber company of Japanese and Chinese being formed with a view to carrying on a business of cutting lumber in the forests on the right bank of the Yalu. The Chinese Government further agrees that the area of land where the business will be carried on, the term of the charter, the process of the formation of the company, and the articles of the business, will be determined upon in a special agreement. The interest in the company of the Japanese and Chinese shareholders will be equally divided.
XI-In regard to the trade on the frontier of Manchuria and Corea, treatment according to most-favoured-nation principle will be extended to each contracting party. XII. The Governments of the two contracting parties agree that in all the matters specified in the Articles of the Treaty signed this day, and in the supplementary agree- ment, each party will give the most considerate treatment to the other.
This agreement will take effect from the date of signing and is to be considered
as ratified with the ratification of the Treaty sigued this day.
In witness whereof the contracting parties have signed and affixed their seals in duplicate in Japanese and Chinese, with due authority entrusted to them by their respective Governments.
FINAL PROTOCOL MADE BETWEEN CHINA
AND ELEVEN POWERS, 1901
[Translation]
The Plenipotentiaries of Germany, Monsieur A. Mumm von Selwartzenstein; Austria-Hungary, Baron M. Czikann; Belgium, Monsieur Joosteus; Spain, Monsieur B. J. de Cologan; United States, Mr. W. W. Rockhill; France, Monsieur Beau; Great Britain, Sir Ernest Satow; Italy, Marquiss Salvago Raggi; Japan, Monsieur Jutaro Komuro; Netherlands, Monsieur F. M. Knobel; Russia, Monsieur Michael de Giers; and the Plenipotentaries of China, His Highness Yi-K'uang, Prince of the first rank; Ch'ing, President of the Board of Foreign Affairs; and His Excellency Li Hung-chang, Count of the first rank, Su-Yi, Tutor of the Heir Apparent, Grand Secretary of the Wên-Hua Throne Hall, Minister of Commerce, Superintendent of Trade for the North, Governor-General of Chihli, have met for the purpose of declaring that China has complied with the conditions laid down in the Note of the 22nd of December, 1900, and which were accepted in their entirety by His Majesty the Emperor of China in a Decree dated the 27th of December, 1900 (Annex No 1).
Art. I-By an Imperial Edict of the 9th of June last (Annex No. 2) Tsai- Feng, Prince of the first rank, Chun, was appointed Ambassador of His Majesty the Emperor of China and directed in that capacity to convey to His Majesty the Emperor of Germany the expression of the regrets of His Majesty the Emperor of China and of the Chinese Government at the assassination of His Excellency the late Baron von Ketteler, German Minister. Prince Chun left Peking the 12th of July last to carry out the orders which had been given him.
Art. II. The Chinese Government has stated that it will erect on the spot of the assassination of H. E. the late Baron von Ketteler, a commemorative monument, worthy of the rank of the deceased, and bearing an inscription in the Latin, German and Chinese languages, which shall express the regrets of H. M. the Emperor of China for the murder committed.
The Chinese Plenipotentiaries have informed H. E. the German Plenipotentiary, in a letter dated the 22nd of July last (Annex No. 3) that an arch of the whole width of the street would be erected on the said spot, and that work on it was begun the 25th of June last.
Art. IIa. Imperial Edicts of the 13th and 21st of February, 1901 (Annexes Nos. 4, 5 and 6), inflicted the following punishments on the principal authors of the attempts and crimes committed against the Foreign Governments and their nationals:
Tsai-I, Prince Tuan, and Tsai-Lan, Duke Fu-kuo, were sentenced to be brought before the Autumnal Court of Assize for execution and it was agreed that if the Emperor saw fit to grant them their lives, they should be exiled to Turkestan and there imprisoned for life, without the possibility of commutation of these punishments.
Tsai Hsün, Prince Chuang, Ying-Nieu, President of the Court of Censors; and Chao Shu-chiao, President of the Board of Punishments, were condemned to commit suicide.
Yi Hsien, Governor of Shansi; Ch'i Hsiu, President of the Board of Rites; and Hsu Cheng-yu, formerly senior Vice-President of the Board of Punishments, were condemned to death.
Posthumous degradation was inflicted on K'ang Yi, Assistant Grand Secretary President of the Board of Works; Hsu Tung, Grand Secretary; and Li Ping-hèng former Governor-General of Szu-ch'uan.
4
I
224 FINAL PROTOCOL BETWEEN CHINA AND ELEVEN POWERS, 1901
Imperial Edict of February 13th, 1901 (Annex No. 7), rehabilitated the- memories of Hsu Yung-yi, President of the Board of War; Li Shan, President of the Board of Works; Hsu Ching-ch'èng, Senior Vice-President of the Board of Civil Office; Lien Yüan, Vice-Chancellor of the Grand Council; and Yuan Ch'ang. Vice-President of the Court of Sacrifices, who had been put to death for having protested against the outrageous breaches of International Law of last year.
Prince Chuang committed suicide on the 21st of February, 1901: Ying Nien and Cbao Shu-chiao the 24th, Yu-Hsien was executed the 22nd, Ch'i-Hsiu and Hsu Ch'ing-yü on the 26th, Tung Fu-hsiang, General in Kansu, has been deprived of his office by Imperial Edict of the 13th of February, 1901, pending the determination of the final punishment to be inflicted on him.
Imperial Edicts dated the 29th April and the 19th August, 1901, have inflicted various punishments on the provincial officials convicted of the crimes and outrages.
of last summer.
Art. II.-An Imperial Edict promulgated the 19th August, 1901 (Annex No. 8) ordered the suspension of official examinations for five years in all cities where foreigners were massacred or submitted to cruel treatment.
Art. III. So as to make honourable reparation for the assassination of Mr. Sugiyama, Chancellor of the Japanese Legation, H.M. the Emperor of China by au Imperial Edict of the 18th of June, 1901 (Annex No. 9), appointed Na Tung Vice-President of the Board of Finances, to be his Envoy Extraordinary, and specially directed him to convey to H.M. the Emperor of Japan the expression of the regret of H.M. the Emperor of China and of his Government at the assassination of Mr. Sugiyama.
Art. IV. The Chinese Government has agreed to erect an expiatory monument in each of the foreign or international cemeteries which were desecrated or in which the tombs were destroyed.
It has been agreed with the Representatives of the Powers that the Legations interested shall settle the details for the erection of these monuments, China bearing all the expenses thereof, estimated at ten thousand Taels for the cemeteries at Peking and in its neighbourhood, and at five thousand Taels for cemeteries in the Provinces. The amounts have been paid and the list of these cemeteries is enclosed herewith (Annex No. 10).
Art. V.-China has agreed to prohibit the importation into its territory of arms and ammunition as well as of materials exclusively used for the manufacture of arms and ammunition.
An Imperial Edict bas been issued on the 25th of August, 1901 (Annex No. 11), forbidding said importation for a term of two years. New Edicts may be issued. subsequently extending this by other successive terms of two years in case of necessity recognised by the Powers.
Art. VI. By an Imperial Edict dated the 22nd of May, 1901 (Annex No. 12), H. M. the Emperor of China agreed to pay the Powers an indemnity of four hundred and fifty millions of Haikwan Taels.
This sum represents the total amount of the indemnities for States, Companies. or Societies, private individuals and Chinese referred to in Artlele VI of the Note of December 22nd, 1900.
(a) These four hundred and fifty millions constitute a gold debt calculated at the rate of the Haikwan Tael to the gold currency of each country as indicated below.
Haikwan Tael-Mark
Austro-Hungary crown Gold dollar
Franc
Pound sterling
Yeu ...
Netherlands florin
Geld rouble
+
3.055
3.595
0.742
8.740
£0. 8s. Od.
1.407
1.796
1.412.
FINAL PROTOCOL BETWEEN CHINA AND ELEVEN POWERS, 1901
225
This sum in gold shall bear interest at 4 per cent. per annum, and the capital shall be reimbursed by China in thirty-nine years in the manner indicated in the annexed plan of amortization. (Annex No. 13). Capital and interest shall be payable in gold or at the rates of exchange corresponding to the dates at which the different payments shall fall due.
The amortization shall commence the 1st of January, 1902, and shall finish at the end of the year 1940. The amortizations are payable annually, the first payment being fixed on the first of January, 1903. Interest shall run from the first of July, 1901, but the Chinese Government shall have the right to pay off within a term of three years, beginning January, 1902, the arrears of the first six months ending the 31st of December, 1901, on condition, however, that it pays compound interest ut the rate of four per cent. perannum on the sums, the payments of which shall have been thus deferred.
Interest shall be payable semi-annually, the first payment being fixed on
the 1st of July, 1902.
(b) The service of the debt shall take place in Shaughai in the following
manner :--
Each Power shall be represented by a delegate on a commission of bankers authorised to receive the amount of interest and amortization which shall be paid to it by the Chinese Authorities designated for that purpose, to divide it among the interested parties and to give a receipt for the same.
This
(c) The Chinese Government shall deliver to the Doyen of the Diplomatis Corps at Peking a bond for the lump sum, which shall subsequently be converted into fractional bonds bearing the signature of the delegates of the Chinese Government designated for that purpose. operation and all those relating to issuing of the bonds shall be performed by the above-mentioned Commission, in accordance with the instructions which the Powers shall send their delegates.
(d) The proceeds of the revenues assigned to the payment of the bonds
shall be paid monthly to the Commission.
(e) The revenues assigned as security for the bonds are the following:- (1.) The balance of the revenues of the Imperial Maritime Customs after payment of the interest and amortization of preceding loans secured on those revenues, plus the proceeds of the raising to five per cent. effective of the present tariff on maritime imports, including articles until now on the free list, but exempting rice, foreign cereals and flour, gold and silver bullioe
and coin.
(2.) The revenues of the native Customs, administered in the open ports by
the Imperial Maritime Customs.
(3.) The total revenues of the salt gabelle, exclusive of the fraction previously
set aside for other foreign loans.
The raising of the present tariff on imports to five per cent. effective is agreed to on conditions mentioned below. It shall be put in force two months after the signing of the present protocol, and no exceptions shall be made except for merchandise in transit not more than ten days after the said signing.
(1.) All duties levied on imports ad valorem shall be converted as far as
possible and as soon as may be into specific duties.
This conversion shall be made in the following wanner:
The average value of merchandise at the time of their landing during the three years 1897, 1898 and 1899, that is to say, the market price less the amount of import duties and incidental expenses, shall be taken as the basis for the valuation of merchandise.
226
FINAL PROTOCOL BETWEEN CHINA AND ELEVEN POWERS, 1901
Pending the result of the work of conversion, duties shall be levied. ad valorem.
(2.) The beds of the rivers Whangpoo and Peiho shall be improved with the
financial participation of China,
Art. VII.--The Chinese Government has agreed that the quarter occupied by the Legations shall be considered as one specially reserved for their use and placed under their exclusive control, in which Chinese shall not have the right to reside and which may be made defensible.
The limits of this quarter have been fixed as follows on the annexed plan (Annex No. 14.)-
On the East, Ketteler Street ( 10, 11, 12).
On the North, the line 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10.
On the West, the line 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
On the South, the line 12-1 drawn along the exterior base of the
Tartar wall and following the line of the bastions.
In the Protocol annexed to the letter of the 16th of January, 1901, China recognised the right of each Power to maintain a permanent guard in the said quarter for the defence of its Legation.
Art. VIII.-The Chinese Government has consented to raze the forts of Taku and those which might impede free communication between Peking and the sea. Steps have been taken for carrying this out.
Art. IX.-The Chinese Government conceded the right to the Powers in the Protocol annexed to the letter of the 16th of January, 1901, to occupy certain points, to be determined by an agreement between them for the maintenance of open com- munication between the capital and the sea. The points occupied by the Powers are-Huang-ts'un, Lang-faug, Yang-ts'un, Tientsiu, Chun-liang-Ch'eng, Tong-ku, Lu-t'ai, Tong-shan, Lan-chou, Chang-li, Ch'in-wang Tao, Shaubai-kwan.
Art. X-The Chinese Government has agreed to post and to have published during two years in all district cities the following Imperial Edicts:-
(a) Edict of the 1st of February, 1901 (Annex No. 15), prohibiting for
ever, under pain of death, membership in an anti-foreign society.
(b) Edicts of the 18th and 21st of February, 29th of April and 19th of August, 1901, enumerating the punishments inflicted on the guilty. (c) Edict of the 19th of August, 1901, prohibiting examinations in all cities
where foreigners were massacred or subjected to cruel treatment. (d) Edict of the 1st of February, 1901 (Annex No. 16), declaring all Governors-general, Governors and Provincial or local officials responsible for order in their respective districts, and that in case of new anti-foreign troubles or other infractions of the Treaties which shall not be immedi- ately repressed and the authors of which shall not have been punished, these officials shall be immediately dismissed without possibility of being given new functions or new honours.
The posting of these Edicts is being carried on throughout the Empire. Art. XI-The Chinese Government has agreed to negotiate the amendments deemed necessary by the Foreign Governments to the Treaties of Commerce and Navigation and the other subjects concerning commercial relations with the object of facilitating them.
At present, and as a result of the stipulation contained in Article VI concern- ing the indemnity, the Chinese Government agrees to assist in the improvement of the courses of the rivers Peiho and Whangpoo, as stated below.
(a) The works for the improvement of the navigability of the Peiho, begun in 1898 with the co-operation of the Chinese Government, have been resumed under the direction of an International Commission. As soon as the administration of Tientsin shall have been handed back to the Chinese Government it will be in a position to be represented on this Commission, and will pay each year a sum of 60,000 Haikwan Taels for maintaining the works.
227
FINAL PROTOCOL BETWEEN CHINA AND ELEVEN POWERS, 1901
(b) A Conservancy Board, charged with the management and control of the works for straightening the Whangpoo and the improvement of the course of that river, is hereby created.
This Board shall consist of members representing the interests of the Chinese Government and those of foreigners in the shipping trade of Shanghai.
The expenses incurred for the works aud the general management of the under- taking are estimated at the annual sum of 460,000 Haikwan Taels for the first twenty years. This sum shall be supplied in equal portious by the Chinese Government and the foreign interests concerned. Detailed stipulatious concerning the composition, duties and revenues of the Conservancy Board are embodied in Annex No. 17.
Art. XII.-An Imperial Edict of the 24th of July, 1901 (Annex No. 18), reformed the Office of Foreign Affairs, Tsungli Yamen, on the lines indicated by the Powers, that is to say, transformed it into a Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Wai Wu Pu, which takes precedence over the six other Ministries of State: the same Edict appointed the principal members of this Ministry.
An agreement has also been reached concerning the modification of Court Ceremonial as regards the reception of the Foreign Representatives, and has been the subject of several notes from the Chinese Plenipotentiaries, the substance of which has been embodied in a memorandum herewith annexed. (Annex No. 19.)
Finally it is expressly understood that as regards the declarations specified above and the annexed documents originating with the Foreign Plenipotentiaries, the French Text only is authoritative.
The Chinese Government having thus complied to the satisfaction of the Powers with the conditions laid down in the above-mentioned Note of December 22nd, 1900, the Powers have agreed to accede to the wish of China to terminate the situation created by the disorders of the summer of 1900. In consequence thereof the Foreign Plenipotentiaries are authorised to declare in the names of their Governments that, with the exception of the Legation guards mentioned in Article VII, the Interna- tional troops will completely evacuate the city of Peking on the 17th of September, 1901, and, with the exception of the localities mentioned in Article IX, will withdraw from the Province of Chihli on the 22nd of September, 1901,
The present Final Protocol has been drawn up in twelve identical copies and signed by all the Plenipotentiaries of the contracting countries. One copy shall be given to each of the Foreign Plenipotentiaries, and one copy shall be given to the Chinese Plenipotentiaries.
(Signed)
Certified copy.
A. VON MUMM
M. CZIKANN
JOOSTENS
B. J. DE COLOGAN W. W. ROCK HILL
BEAU
ERNEST SATOW
SALVAGO RAGGI
JUTARO KOMURA
F. M. KNOBEL M. DE GIERS
YI K'UANG
LI HUNG-CHANG
(Signed)
A. D'ANTHOUARD B. KROUPENSKY
REGINALD TOWER
VON BOHLENUND HALBACK
TREATIES WITH COREA
GREAT BRITAIN
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND COREA
SIGNED, IN THE ENGLISH AND CHINESE LANGUAGES, AT HANYang (Seoul) ON THE 26TH NOVEMBER, 1883
Ratifications exchanged at Hanyang on the 28th April, 1884
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland,. Empress of India, and His Majesty the King of Corea, being sincerely desirous of establishing permanent relations of Friendship and Commerce between their re- spective dominions, have resolved to conclude a Treaty for that purpose, and have therefore named as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, Sir Harry Smith Parkes, Knight Grand Cross of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, Knight Commander of the Most Honourable Order of The Bath, Her Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to His Majesty the Emperor of China;
His Majesty the King of Cores, Min Yöng-mok, President of His Majesty's Foreign Office, a Dignitary of the First Rank, Senior Vice-President of the Council. of State, Member of His Majesty's Privy Council, Junior Guardian of the Crown. Prince;
Who, after baving communicated to each other their respective full powers, found in good and dne form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles:-
Art. I.-There shall be perpetual peace and friendship between Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, her heirs and successors, and His Majesty the King of Corea, his heirs and succes. sors, and between their respective dominions and subjects, who shall enjoy full security and protection for their persons and property within the dominions of the other.
2. In case of difference arising between one of the High Contracting Parties and a third Power, the other High Contracting Party, if requested to do so, shall exert its good offices to bring about an amicable arrangement.
Art. II. The High Contracting Partics may each appoint a Diplomatic Re- presentative to reside permanently or temporarily at the Capital of the other, and may appoint a Consul-General, Consuls or Vice-Consuls, to reside at any or all of the ports or places of the other which are open to foreign commerce. The Diplo. matic Representatives and Consular functionaries of both countries shall freely enjoy the same facilities for communication personally or in writing with the authorities of the country where they respectively reside, together with all other privileges and immunities, as are enjoyed by Diplomatic or Consular functionaries in other
countries.
2. The Diplomatic Representative and the Consular functionaries of each Power and the members of their official establishments shall have the right to travel. freely in any part of the dominions of the other, and the Corean authorities shall furnish passports to such British officers travelling in Corea, and shall provide such escort for their protection as may be necessary.
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND COREA
229
3. The Consular officers of both countries shall exercise their functions ou receipt of due authorisation from the Sovereign or Government of the country in which they respectively reside, and shall not be permitted 10 engage in trade.
Art. III. Jurisdiction over the persons and property of British subjects in Corea shall be vested exclusively in the duly authorised British Judicial authorities, who shall hear and determine all cases brought against British subjects by any British or other foreign subject or citizen without the intervention of the Corean authorities.
2. It the Corean authorities or a Corean subject make any charge or complaint against a British subject in Corea the case shall be heard and decided by the British Judicial authorities.
3.If the British authorities or a British subject make any charge or complaint against a Corean subject in Corea, the case shall be heard and decided by the Corean authorities.
4. A British subject who commits any offence in Corea shall be tried and punished by the British Judicial authorities according to the laws of Great Britain.
5.-A Corean subject who commits in Corea any offence against a British sub- ject shall be tried and punished by the Corean authorities according to the laws of Coren.
6.--Any complaint against a British subject involving a penalty or confiscation, by reason of any breach either of this Treaty or of any Regulation annexed thereto, or of any Regulation that may hereafter be made in virtue of its provisions, shall be brought before the British Judicial authorities for decision, and any penalty imposed, and all property confiscated in such cases, shall belong to the Corean Government.
7.-British goods, when seized by the Corean authorities at an open port, shall be put under the seals of the Corean and the British Consular authorities and shall be detained by the former until the British Judicial authorities shall have given their decision. If this decision is in favour of the owner of the goods, they shall be imme- diately placed at the Consul's disposal. But the owner shall be allowed to receive them at once on depositing their value with the Corean Authorities pending the decision of the British Judicial authorities.
8. In all cases, whether civil or criminal, tried either in Corean or British Courts in Corea, a properly authorised official of the nationality of the plaintiff or prosecutor shall be allowed to attend the hearing, and shall be treated with the courtesy due to his position. He shall be allowed, whenever he thinks it necessary, to call, examine, and cross-examine witnesses, and to protest against the proceedings or decision.
9.--If a Corean subject who is charged with an offence against the laws of his country takes refuge on premises occupied by a British subject or on board a British merchant vessel, the British Consular authorities, on receiving an application from the Corean authorities, shall take steps to have such person arrested and handed over to the latter for trial. But without the consent of the proper British Consular authority no Corean officer shall enter the premises of any British subject without his consent, or go on board any British ship without the consent of the officer in charge.
10. On the demand of any competent British Consular authority, the Corean authorities shall arrest and deliver to the former any British subject charged with a criminal offence, and any deserter from a British ship of war or merchant vessel.
Art. IV. The port of Chemulpo (Jenchuan), Wonsan (Gensan), and Pusan (Fusan), or, if the latter port should not be approved, then such other port as may be selected in its neighbourhood, together with the city of Hanyang and the town of Yanghwa Chin, or such other place in that neighbourhood as may be deemed desirable, shall, from the day on which this Treaty comes into operation, be opened to British
commerce.
2.-At the above-named places British subjects shall have the right to rent or to purchase land or houses, and to erect dwellings, warehouses, and factories. They shall be allowed the free exercise of their religion. All arrangements for the selection, determination of the limits, and laying out of the sites of the Foreign settlements,
230
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND COREA
and for the sale of land at the various ports and places in Corea open to foreign trade, shall be made by the Corean authorities in conjunction with the competent Foreign authorities.
3. These sites shall be purchased from the owners and prepared for occupation by the Corean Government, and the expenses thus incurred shall be a first charge on the proceeds of the sale of the land. The yearly rental agreed upon by the Corean authorities in conjunction with the Foreign authorities shall be paid to the former, who shall retain a fixed amount thereof as a fair equivalent for the land tax, and the remainder, together with any balance left from the proceeds of inud sales, shall belong to a Municipal fund to be administered by a Council, the constitution of which shall be determined hereafter by the Corean authorities in conjunction with the competent Foreign authorities.
4.-British subjects may rent or purchase land or houses beyond the limits of the foreign settlements, and within a distance of ten Corean li from the same. But all land so occupied shall be subject to such conditions as to the observance of Corean local regulations and payment of land tax as the Corean authorities may see fit to impose.
5.--The Corean authorities will set apart, free of cost, at each of the places open to trade, a suitable piece of ground as a foreign cemetery, upon which no rent, land tax, or other charges shall be payable, and the management of which shall be left to the Municipal Council above mentioned.
6.-British subjects shall be allowed to go where they please without passports within a distance of one hundred Corean li from any of the ports and places open to trade, or within such limits as may be agreed upon between the competent authorities of both countries. British subjects are also authorised to travel in Corea for pleasure or for purposes of trade, to transport and sell goods of all kinds, except books and other printed matter disapproved of by the Corean Government, and to purchase native produce in all parts of the country, under passports which will be issued by their Consuls and countersigned or sealed by the Corean local authorities. These passports, if demanded, must be produced for examination in the districts passed through. If the passport be not irregular, the bearer will be allowed to proceed, and he shall be at liberty to procure such means of transport as he may require. Any British subject travelling beyond the limits above named without a passport, or com- mitting when in the interior any offence, shall be arrested and handed over to the nearest British Consul for punishment. Travelling without a passport beyond the said limits will tender the offender liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred Mexican Dollars, with or without imprisonment for a term not exceeding one month.
7.-British subjects in Corea shall be amenable to such municipal, police, aud other regulations for the maintenance of peace, order, and good government as may be agreed upon by the competent authorties of the two countries."
Art. V.-At each of the ports or places open to Foreign trade, British subjects shall be at full liberty to import from any Foreign port or from any Corean open port, to sell or to buy from any Corean subjects or others, and to export to any Foreign or Corean open port, all kinds of merchandise not prohibited by the Treaty, on paying the duties of the Tariff annexed thereto. They may freely transact their business with Corean subjects or others without the intervention of Corean officials or other persons, and they may freely engage in any industrial occupation.
2. The owners or consignees of all goods imported from any Foreign port upon which the duty of the aforesaid Tariff shall have been paid shall be entitled on re-exporting the same to any foreign port at any time within thirteen Corean months from the date of importation, to receive a drawback certificate for the amount of such import duty, provided that the original packages containing such goods remain intact. These drawback certificates shall either be redeemed by the Corean Customs on demand, or they shall be received in payment of duty at any Corean open port.
3.-The duty paid on Corean goods, when carried from one Corean open port to another, shall be refunded at the port of shipment on production of a Customs
L
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND COREA
231
certificate shewing that the goods have arrived at the port of destination, or on satisfactory proof being produced of the loss of the goods by shipwreck.
4. All goods imported into Corea by British subjects, and on which the duty of the Tariff annexed to this Treaty shall have been paid, may be conveyed to any Corean open port free of duty, and, when transported into the interior, shall not be subject to any additional tax, excise, or transit duty whatsoever in any part of the country. In like manner, freedom shall be allowed for the transport to the open ports of all Corean commodities intended for exportation, and such commodities slall not, either at the place of production, or when being conveyed from any part of Corea to any of the open ports, be subject to the payment of any tax, excise, or transit duty whatsoever.
5. The Corean Government may charter British mercbant vessels for the con- veyance of goods or passengers to unopened ports in Corea, and Corean subjects shall have the same right, subject to the approval of their own authorities.
6. Whenever the Government of Corea shall have reason to apprehend a scarcity of food within the kingdom, His Majesty the King of Corea may, by Decree, temporarily prohibit the export of grain to foreign countries from any or all of the Corean open ports, and such prohibition shall become binding on British subjects in Corea on the expiration of one month from the date on which it shall have been officially communicated by the Corean Authorities to the British Consul at the port concerned, but shall not remain longer in force than is absolutely necessary.
7.--All British ships shall pay tonnage dues at the rate of thirty cents (Mexican) per register ton. One such payment will entitle a vessel to visit any or all of the open ports in Corea during a period of four months without further charge. All tonnage dues shall be appropriated for the purposes of erecting lighthouses and beacons and placing buoys on the Corean coast, more especially at the approaches to the open ports, and in deepening or otherwise improving the anchorages. No tonnage dues shall be charged on boats employed at the open ports in landing or shipping cargo.
8. In order to carry into effect and secure the observance of the provisions of this Treaty, it is hereby agreed that the Tariff and Trade Regulations hereto annexed. shall come into operation simultaneously with this Treaty. The competent authorities of the two countries may, from time to time, revise the said Regulations with a view to the insertion therein, by mutual consent, of such modifications or additions as experience shall prove to be expedient.
Art. VI.-Any British subject who smuggles, or attempts to smuggle, goods into any Corean port or place not open to foreign trade shall forfeit twice the value of such goods, and the goods shall be confiscated. The Corean local authorities may seize such goods, and may arrest any British subject concerned in such smuggling or attempt to smuggle. They shall immediately forward any person so arrested to the nearest British Consul for trial by the proper British Judicial authority, and may detain such goods until the case shall have been finally adjudicated.
Art. VII.-If a British ship be wrecked or stranded on the coast of Corea, the local authorities shall immediately take such steps to protect the ship and her cargo from plunder, and all the persons belonging to her from ill-treatment, and to render such other assistance as may be required. They shall at once inform the nearest British Consul of the occurrence, and shall furnish the shipwrecked persons, if neces- sary, with means of conveyance to the nearest open port.
2. All expenses incurred by the Government of Corea for the rescue, clothing, maintenance, and travelling of shipwrecked British subjects, for the recovery of the bodies of the drowned, for the medical treatment of the sick and injured, and for the burial of the dead, shall be repaid by the British Government to that of Corea.
3.The British Government shall not be responsible for the repayment of the expenses incurred in recovery or preservation of a wrecked vessel, or the property belonging to her. All such expenses shall be a charge upon the property saved, and shall be paid by the parties interested therein upon receiving delivery of the same.
232
TREATY BE (WEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND COREA
4. No charge shall be made by the Government of Corea for the expenses of the Government officers, local functionaries, or police who shall proceed to the wreck, for the travelling expenses of officers escorting the shipwrecked men, nor for the expenses of official correspondence. Such expenses shall be borne by the Corean Government.
5. Any British merchant ship compelled by stress of weather or by want of fuel or provisions to enter an unopened port in Corea shall be allowed to execute repairs, and to obtain necessary supplies. All such expeuses shall be defrayed by the master of the vessel.
Art. VIII-The ships of war of each country shall be at liberty to visit all the ports of the other. They shall enjoy every facility for procuring supplies of all kinds or for making repairs, and shall not be subject to trade or harbour regulations, nor be liable to the payment of duties or port charges of any kind.
2. When British ships of war visit unopened ports in Corea, the officers and men may land, but shall not proceed into the interior unless they are provided with passports.
3. Supplies of all kinds for the use of the British Navy may be landed at the open ports of Corea, and stored in the custody of a British officer, without the pay- ment of any duty. But if any such supplies are sold, the purchaser shall pay the proper duty to the Corean authorities..
4. The Corean Government will afford all the facilities in their power to ships belonging to the British Government which may be engaged in making surveys in Corean waters.
Art. IX.The British authorities and British subjects in Corca shall be allowed to employ Corean subjects as teachers, interpreters, servants, or in any other lawful capacity, without any restriction on the part of the Corean Authorities; and, in like manner. no restrictions shall be placed upon the employment of British subjects by Corean Authorities and subjects in any lawful capacity.
2. Subjects of either nationality who may proceed to the country of the other to study its language, literature, laws, arts, or industries, or for the purpose of scien- tific research, shall be afforded every reasonable facility for doing so.
Art. X. It is hereby stipulated that the Government, public officers, and subjects of Her Britannic Majesty shall, from the day on which this Treaty comes into operation, participate in all privileges, immunities, and advantages, especially in relation to import or export duties on goods and manufactures, which shall then have been granted or may thereafter be granted by His Majesty the King of Corea to the Government, public officers, or subjects of any other power.
Art. XI. Ten years from the date on which this Treaty shall come into opera- tion, either of the High Contracting Parties may, on giving one year's previous notice to the other, demand a revision of the Treaty or of the Tariff annexed thereto, with a view to the insertion therein, by mutual consent, of such modifications as experience shall prove to be desirable.
Art. XII. This Treaty is drawn up in the English and Chinese languages, both of which versions have the same meaning, but it is hereby agreed that any difference which may arise as to interpretation shall be determined by reference to the English
text.
2. For the present all official communications addressed by the British Autho- rities to those of Corea shall be accompanied by a translation into Chinese.
Art. XIII. The present Treaty shall be ratified by Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, and by His Majesty the King of Corea, under their hands and seals; the ratifications shall be exchanged at Hanyang (Seoul) as soon as possible, or at latest within one year from the date of signature, and the Treaty, which shall be published by both Governments, shall come into operation on the day on which the ratifications are exchanged.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries above named have signed the present Treaty, and have thereto affixed their seals.
REGULATIONS FOR BRITISH TRADE WITH COREA
233
Done in triplicate at Hanyang, this twenty-sixth day of November, in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-three, corresponding to the twenty-seventh day of the tenth mouth of the four hundred and ninety-second year of the Corean era, being the ninth year of the Chinese reign Kuang Hsü.
[L.8.] [L.S.]
HARRY S. PARKES
MIN YONG=MOK.
REGULATIONS UNDER WHICH BRITISH TRADE IS TO BE CONDUCTED IN COREA
I-Entrance and Clearance of Vessels
1. Within forty-eight hours (exclusive of Sundays and holidays) after the arrival of a British ship in a Corean port, the master shall deliver to the Corean Customs authorities the receipt of the British Consul showing that he has deposited the ship's papers at the British Consulate, and he shall then make an entry of this ship by handing in a written paper stating the name of the ship, of the port from which she comes, of her master, the number, and, if required, the names of her passengers, her tonnage, and the number of her crew, which paper shall be certified by the master to be a true statement, and shall be signed by him. He shall, at the same time, deposit a written manifest of his cargo, setting forth the marks and numbers of the packages and their contents as they are described in the bills of lading, with the names of the persons to whom they are consigned. The master shall certify that this description is correct, and shall sign his name to the same. When a vessel has been duly entered, the Customs authorities will issue a permit to open hatches, which shall be exhibited to the Customs officer on board. Breaking bulk without having obtained such permission will render the master liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred Mexican Dollars.
2.-If any error is discovered in the manifest, it may be corrected within twenty- four hours (exclusive of Sundays and holidays) of its being bauded in, without the payment of any fee; but for alteration or post entry to the manifest made after that time a fee of five Mexican dollars shall be paid.
3.-Any master who shall neglect to enter his vessel at the Corean Custom-house within the time fixed by this Regulation shall pay a penalty not exceeding fifty Mexican Dollars for every twenty-four hours that he shall so neglect to enter his ship.
4.-Auy British vessel which remains in port for less than forty-eight hours (exclusive of Sundays and holidays) and does not open her hatches, also any vesel driven into port by stress of weather, or only in want of supplies, shall not be required to enter or pay tonnage dues so long as such vessel does not engage in trade.
5. When the master of a vessel wishes to clear, he shall hand in to the Customs authorities an export manifest containing similar particulars to those given in the import manifest. The Customs authorities will then issue a clearance certificate and return the Consul's receipt for the ship's papers. These documents must be handed into the Consulate before the ship's papers are returned to the master.
6. Should any ship leave the port without clearing outwards in the manner above prescribed, the master shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding two hundred Mexican Dollars.
7-British steamers may enter and clear on the same day, and they shall not be required to hand in a manifest except for such goods as are to be landed or transhipped
port of entry.
at the
II. Landing and Shipping Cargo and Payment of Duties
1.-The importer of any goods who desires to land them shall make and sign an application to that effect at the Custom-house, stating his own name, the name of the ship in which the goods have been imported, the marks, numbers, and contents of the packages and their values, and declaring that this statement is correct. The Customs authorities may demand the production of the invoice of each consignment of
Ꮀ
234
REGULATIONS FOR BRITISH TRADE WITH COREA
merchandise. If it is not produced, or if its absence is not satisfactorily accounted for, the owner shall be allowed to land his goods on payment of double the Tariff duty, but the surplus duty so levied shall be refunded on the production of the invoice.
2. All goods so entered may be examined by the Customs officers of the places. appointed for the purpose. Such examination shall be made without delay or injury to the merchandise, and the packages shall be at once re-sorted by the Customs authorities to their original condition, in so far as may be practicable.
3. Should the Customs authorities consider the value of any goods paying an ad valorem duty as declared by the importer or exporter insufficient, they shall call upon him to pay duty on the value determined by an appraisement to be made by the Customs appraiser. But should the importer or exporter be dissatisfied with that appraisement, he shall within twenty-four hours (exclusive of Sundays and holidays) state his reasons for such dissatisfaction to the Commissioner of Customs, and shall appoint an appraiser of his own to make a re-appraisement. He shall then declare the value of the goods as determined by such re-appraisement. The Commissioner of Customs will thereupon, at his option, either assess the duty on the value deter- mined by this re-appraisement, or will purchase the goods from the importer or exporter at the price thus determined, with the addition of five per cent. In the latter case the purchase money shall be paid to the importer or exporter within five days from the date on which he has declared the value determined by his own appraiser.
4.Upou all goods damaged on the voyage of importation a fair reduction of duty shall be allowed, proportionate to their deterioration. If any disputes arise as to the amount of such reduction, they shall be settled in the manner pointed out in the preceding clause.
5.-All goods intended to be exported shall be entered at the Corean Custom- house before they are shipped. The application to ship shall be made in writing, and shall state the name of the vessel by which the goods are to be exported, the marks and number of the packages, and the quantity, description, and value of the contents. The exporter shall certify in writing that the application gives a true account of all the goods contained herein, and shall sign his name thereto.
6.-No goods shall be landed or shipped at other places than those fixed by the Corean Customs authorities, or between the hours of sunset and sunrise, or on Sundays or holidays, without the special permission of the Customs authorities, who will be entitled to reasonable fees for the extra duty thus performed.
7.-Claims by importers or exporters for duties paid in excess, or by the Customs authorities for duties which have not been fully paid, shall be entertained only when made within thirty days from the date of payment.
8. No entry will be required in the case of provisions for the use of British ships, their crews and passengers, nor for the baggage of the latter which may be landed or shipped at any time after examination by the Customs officers.
9.-Vessels needing repairs may land their cargo for that purpose without the payment of duty. All goods so landed shall remain in charge of the Corean Autho rities, and all just charges for storage, labour, and supervision shall be paid by the master. But if any portion of such cargo be sold, the duties of the Tariff shall be paid on the portion so disposed of.
10.Any person desiring to tranship cargo shall obtain a permit from the Customs authorities before doing so.
III-Protection of the Revenue
1.-The Customs authorities shall have the right to place Customs officers on board any British merchant vessel in their ports. All such Customs officers shall have access to all parts of the ship in which cargo is stowed. They shall be treated with civility, and such reasonable accommodation shall be allowed to them as the ship affords.
2. The hatches and all other places of entrance into that part of the ship where cargo is stowed may be secured by the Corean Customs officers between the hours of sunset and sunrise, and on Sundays and holidays, by affixing seals, locks, or other
PROTOCOL TO TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND COREA
235
fastenings, and if any person shall, without due permission, wilfully open any entrance that has been so secured, or break any seal, lock, or other fastening that has been affixed by the Coreau Customs officers, not only the person so offending, but the master of the ship also, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding one hundred Mexican Dollars.
3-Any British subject who ships, or attempts to ship, or discharges, or attempts to discharge, goods which have not been duly entered at the Custom-house in the manner above provided, or packages containing goods different from those described in the import or export permit application, or prohibited goods, shall forfeit twice the value of such goods, and the goods shall be confiscated.
4. Any person signing a false declaration or certificate with the intent to defraud the revenue of Corea shall be liable to a fine not exceeding two hundred Mexican dollars.
5. Any violation of any provision of these Regulations, to which no penalty is 'specially attached therein, may be punished by a fine not exceeding one hundred
Mexican dollars.
Note. All documents required by these Regulations, and all other communications addressed to the Corean Customs authorities, may be written in the English language.
[L.S.] [L.S.]
HARRY S. PARKES. MIN YONG-NOK,
PROTOCOL
The above-named Plenipotentiaries hereby make and append to this Treaty the following three Declarations:-
I. With reference to Article III. of the Treaty, it is hereby declared that the right of extra-territorial jurisdiction over British subjects in Corea granted by this Treaty shall be relinquished wben, in the judgment of the British Government, the laws and legal procedure of Corea shall have been so far modified and reformed as to remove the objections which now exist to British subjects being placed under Corean jurisdiction, and Corean Judges shall bave attained similar legal qualifications and a similar independent position to those of British Judges.
II. With reference to Article IV. of this Treaty, it is hereby declared that if the Chinese Government shall hereafter surrender the right of opening commercial establishments in the city of Hanyang, which was granted last year to Chinese subjects, the same right shall not be claimed for British subjects, provided that it be not granted by the Corean Government to the subjects of any other Power.
III. It is hereby declared that the provisions of this Treaty shall apply to all British Colonies, unless any exception shall be notified by Her Majesty's Government to that of Corea within one year from the date on which the Ratifications of this Treaty shall be exchanged.
And it is hereby further stipulated that this Protocol shall be laid before the High Contracting Parties simultaneously with this Treaty, and that the ratification of this Treaty shall include the confirmation of the above three declarations for which, therefore, no separate act of ratification will be required.
In faith of which the above-named Plenipotentiaries have this day signed this Protocol, and have hereto affixed their seals.
Done at Hanyang this twenty-sixth day of November, in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-three, corresponding to the twenty-seventh day of the tenth month of the four hundred and ninety-second year of the Čorean era, being the ninth year of the Chinese reign Kuang Hsü,
[L.S.]
LL.S.]
HARRY S. PARKES. MIN YONG-MOK.
236
COREAN TARIFF
IMPORTS
Ad valorem
N.
ARTICLE.
Rate of Duty. Per cent.
No.
ARTICLE.
Ad valorem Rate of Duty. Per cent.
**** 12
→ Alum
1 Agricultural implements.
3 Amber
Anchors and chains
Arms, ammunition, fire-arms, fowling- pieces, or sidearms imported under special permit of the Corean Govern-
ment for sporting purposes or for self- defence
6 Artificial flowers
7 Bamboo, split or not
Free
52
Fans, all kinds
5
53
Feathers, all kinds
20
54
Felt
55
Fire engines
56
Fireworks
57 Fish, fresh
58
dried and salted
+
7}
71
7
Free
20
5
7}
59
20
60
Flints
Flax, hemp, and jute...
*
5
20
+
61
Floor rugs, all kinds
5
62
Flour and meal, all kinds
th
8 Bark for tanning
5
63
Foil, gold and silver
10
* Beans, peas, and pulse, ali kinde
5
64
J+
---
tin, copper, and all other kinds...
10 Beer, porter, and cider
10
65
Fruit, fresh, all kinds
11 Beverages, such as lemonade, ginger-
66
dried, salted, or preserved
beer, soda and mineral waters
767
Furniture of all kinds
10
12 Birds' nests
20
68
Furs, superior, as sable, sea otter, seal,
13 Blankets and rugs
otter, beaver, &c.
20
14 Bones
69
Gamboge
refined
16 Books, maps, and charts
16 Bricks and tiles
++
17 Bullion, being gold or silver refined 18 Buttons, buckles, hooks and eyes, &c. 19 Camphor, crude
20
+4
Free 70
5 71
Free
7 72
5
10 73
***
Glass, plate, silvered or unsilvered,
framed or unframed...
Glassware, all kinds...
Ginseng, red, white, crude, and clarified 20 Glass, window, plaiu and coloured, all
qualities
21 Candles
7 74
Gine
10
10
5
22 Canvas
...
74 75
Grain and corn, all kinds
23 Carmine
+
+++
10 76
21 Carpets of jute, hemp, or felt, patent
tapestry
Grasscloth, and all textiles in hemp,
jute, &c.
+
74 77
Guano and mauures, all kinds
27 Carriages...
29
Charcoal...
-
25 Carpets, superior quality, as Brussels, Kidderminster, and other kinds not enumerated
26 Carpets, velvet
26 Cement, as Portland and other kinds
30 Chemicals, all kinds...
31 Clocks and parts thereof
32 Clothing and wearing apparel, all kinds,
bats, boots and shoes, &c.
33 Clothing and wearing apparel made
wholly of silk...
78
Hair, all kinds except human
79
human...
10
20
988
10
80
ornaments, gold and silver
20
20
82
7 83
7 84
Incense sticks
10
85
+
86
81 Hides and skins, raw and undressed tanned and dressed
Horns and hoofs all kinds not otherwise
provided for
India-rubber, manufactured or not Iainglass, all kinds
+4
20
10
---
++
7 87
Ivory, manufactured or not
20
88 Jade-ware
20
10
89
31 Coal and coke
5
J
90
Jewellery, real or imitation Kerosine, or petroleum, and
20
other
35
Cochineal
20
36
Cocoons
791
minerial oils Lacquered-ware, common
10
37 Coins, gold and silver
Free
92
superior
20
38 Confectioneries and sweetmeats, all kinds 10 39 Coral, manufactured or not
93
Lamps, all kinds
+
20
94
Lanterns, paper.....
+
40 Cordage and rope, all kinds and sizes... 41 Cotton, raw ...
7 95
Leather, all ordinary kinds, plain...
5
96
**
**
42 Cotton manufacture, all kinds... 43 Cutton and woollen mixtures, all kinds 44 Cotton and silk mixtures, all kinds
46 Drugs, all kinds
45 Cutlery, all kinds
48
47 Dyes, colours, and paints, paint oils, and materials used for mixing paints Earthenware
7
100
7 101
50 Enamel-ware
49 Embroideries in gold, silver, or silk
51 Explosives used for mining, &c., and imported under special permit
20
+
20 102
10
103 Meat, fresh...
superior kinds, and stamped, figured, or coloured...
97 Leather manufactures, all kinds
98
Lime
99 Linen, linen and cotton, linen and wool- len mixtures, linen and silk mixtures, all kinds
Matches
-
H
Matting, floor, Chinese, Japanese, coir,
&c., common qualities
Matting, superior qualities, Japanese
tatamis," &c.
C+
ffofofa æfa & g90. pofego og Fogg 49gëvë gre
10
1
71
7
7
71
5
7}
7#
*N
COREAN TARIFF
237
No.
101 Meat, dried and salted... 105 Medicines, all kinds not otherwise
provided for
106 Metals, all kinds, in pig, block, ingot, slab, bar, rod, plate, sheet, hoop, strip, band and flat, T and angle-iron, old and scrap iron...
107 Metals, all kinds, pipe or tube, cor- rugated or galvanized, wire, steel, tin- platos, quicksilver, nickel, platina, German silver, yellow metal, tuten- auge or white copper, unrefined gold and silver
108 Metal manufactures, all kinds, as nails, screws, tools, machinery, railway plant,
ARTICLE.
Að valorent Rate of Duty.
Ad valorem
No.
ARTICLE.
Rate of Duty.
Per cent.
Per cent.
7
152 Silk manufactures, as
gauze, crape,
5
Japanese amber lnstrings, satius, satin damasks, figured satius, Japanese white silk (habutai"}
HE
163 Silk manufactures not otherwise pro-
10
vided for
10.
154
Silk thread and floss silk in skein...
10
155
Soap, common qualities
10
156
Soup, superior qualities
71
157
Soy, Chinese and Japanese
5
158
Spectacles
159
Spices, all kinds
7}
160
Spirits, in jars
7}
161
Spirits and liqueurs, in wood or bottle,
all kinds
20
++
་
and hardware...
71
162
109 Models of inventions
Free
Stationery and writing materials, all
kinds, blank books, &c.
7+
110 Mosquito netting, not made of silk
7
163
Stones and slate, cut and dressed...
7+
111
made of silk...
10
164
112 Musical boxes...
10
Sugar, brown and white, all qualities,
molasses, and syrups...
L4
71
113 Musical instruments, all kinds
10
165
Sugar candy
10
114 Musk
115 Needles and pins...
20
166
Sulphur
71
71
167
Table stores, all kinds, and preserved
116 Oil-cake
5
provisions
71
117 Oils, vegetable, all kinds
7
168
Tallow
7}}
+
HE
118 Oil, wood (Tung-yu)...
5
160
Tea
7
119 Oil, and floor cloth, all kinds
71
170
Telescopes and binocular glasses
10
120 Packing bags, packing matting, tea- lead, and ropes for packing goods
171
Tobacco, all kinds and forms...
+
200
Free
172
Tortoise shell, manufactured or not
20
121 Paper, common qualities
5
173
Tooth powder...
10
122
+2
all kinds, not otherwise provided
174 Travellers' baggage...
Free
for
74
---
175 Trunks and portmanteaux
10
123 Paper, coloured, fancy, wall and hanging 10
176
Twine and thread, all kinds, excepting
124 Pearls
20
in silk
5
125 Pepper, unground....
5
177
Types, new and old
Free
---
126 Perfumes and scent
20
178
Umbrellas, paper
5
127 Photographic apparatus
10
179
cotton
7}
>>
HE
+
128 Pictures, prints, photographs, engray- ings, all kinds framed or unframed...
180
wilk
10
10
181
Umbrella frames
7}
129 Pitch and tar
5
182
Varnish
7
FIL
131
hard
133 Plate, gold and silver
130 Planks, soft
++
132 Plants, trees and shrubs, all kinds
134 Plated-ware, all kinds...
135 Porcelain, common qualities
7/
183
Vegetables, fresh, dried, and salted
5
10
184
Velvet, silk...
20
Free
185
Vermicelli
7
+
+
20
196
Vermilion
10
***
10
187
Watches, and parts thereof in common
71
metal, nickel, or silver
10
136
1
superior qualities
10
188
Watches, in gold or gilt
20
137 Precious stones, all kinds, set or unset 20
189
Wax, bees' or vegetable
7+
138 Rattans, split or not
5
190
T
cloth...
7
+
139 Rhinoceros horns
20
+++
THE
191
Wines in wood or bottle, all kinds
10
140 Resin
7
192
Wood or timber, soft
**
7}
142 Salt
141 Saddlery and harness
143 Samples in reasonable quantities
144 Sapanwood
***
145 Scales and balances...
146 Scented wood, all kinds
147 Scientific instruments, as physical, ma- thematical, meteorological, and sur-
++
10
193
bard
10
+++
71
194
Wool, sheep's, raw...
5
Free
195
Woollen manufactures, all kinds
7+ 196 Woollen and silk mixtures, all
5
20
197
kinds Works of art
71
20
198
Yarns, all kinds, in cotton, wool, hemp,
&c.
5
gical, and their appliances
Free
148 Seals, materials for...
10
All unenumerated articles, raw or un-
manufactured...
149 Sea products, as seaweed, beclie-de-mer,
&c.
7+
All unenumerated articles, partly manu-
factured
7
150 Seeds, all kinds
All unenumerated articles, completely
15 Silk, raw, reeled, thrown, floss or waste
manufactured...
10
238
COREAN TARIFF
Foreigu ships, when sold in Corea, will pay a duty of 25 cents per ton on sailing vessels, and 50 cents per ton on steamers.
Prohibited Goods.
Adulterated drags or medicines.
Arms, munitions, and implements of war, as ordnance, or cannon, shot and shell, firearms of all kinds, cartridges, side-arms, spears or pikes,
CLASS I.
saltpetre, gunpowder, guucotton, dynamite, and other explosive substances.
The Corean authorities will grant special permits for the importation of arms, firearms, and ammunition for purposes of sport or self-defence on satisfactory proof being furnished to them of the bona fide character of the application.
EXPORTS
Duty-Free Export Goods. Bullions, being gold and silver refined, Coins, gold and silver, all kinds, Plants, trees, and shrubs, all kinds. Samples in reasonable quantity. Traveller's baggage.
i
Counterfeit coins, all kinds. Opium, except medicinal opium.
CLASS II.
All other native goods or productions not enumerated in Class I. will pay an ad valorem | duty of five per cent.
bited.
The exportation of red ginseng is prohi-
RULES
I. In the case of imported articles the ad valorem duties of this Tariff will be calculated on the actual cost of the goods at the place of production or fabrication, with the addition of freight, insurance, etc. In the case of export articles the ad valorem duties will be calculated on market values in Corea.
II. Duties may be paid in Mexican dollars or Japanese silver yen.
-
III. The above Tariff of import and export duties shall be converted, as soon as possible and as far as may be deemed desirable, into specific rates by agreement between the competent authorities of the two countries.
[L.8.]
HARRY S. PARKES.
[1.5.]
MIN YONG-MOK.
UNITED STATES
TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND COREA (CHOSEN)
SIGNED AT GENSAN, 22ND MAY, 1882
Ratifications Exchanged at Hanyang, 19th May, 1883
Art. I-There shall be perpetual peace and friendship between the President of the United States and the King of Chosen and the citizens and subjects of their respective Governments. If other Powers deal unjustly or oppressively with either government the other will exert their good offices, on being informed of the case, to bring about an amicable arrangement, thus showing their friendly feelings.
Art. II. After the conclusion of this Treaty of Amity and Commerce the high contracting Powers may each appoint diplomatic representatives to reside at the Court of the other, and may each appoint consular representatives at the ports of the other which are open to foreign commerce, at their own convenience.
The officials shall have relations with the corresponding local authorities of equal rank upon a basis of mutual equality. The Diplomatic and Consular repre- sentatives of the two Governments shall receive mutually all the privileges, rights, and immunities, without discrimination, which are accorded to the same classes of repre- sentatives from the most favoured nations.
Consuls shall exercise their functions only on receipt of an exequatur from the Government to which they are accredited. Consular authorities shall be bond fide officials. No merchants shall be permitted to exercise the duties of the office, nor shall consular officers be allowed to engage in trade.
At ports to which no consular representatives have been appointed the consuls of other Powers may be invited to act, provided that no merchant shall be allowed to assume consular functions, or the provisions of this Treaty may be, in such case, enforced by the local authorities.
If consular representatives of the United States in Chosen conduct their business in an improper manner their exequaturs may be revoked, subject to the approval, previously obtained, of the diplomatic representative of the United States.
Art. III-Whenever United States vessels, either because of weather or by want of fuel or provisions, cannot reach the nearest open port in Chosen, they may enter any port or harbour either to take refuge therein or to get wood, coal, and other necessarics or to make repairs; the expenses incurred thereby being defrayed by the ship's master. In such event the officers and people of the locality shall display their sympathy by rendering full assistance, and their liberality by furnishing the necessities required.
If a United States vessel carries on a clandestine trade at a port not open to foreign commerce, such vessel with her cargo shall be seized and confiscated.
If a United States vessel be wrecked on the coast of Chosen, the coast authorities, on being informed of the occurrence, shall immediately render assistance to the crew, provide for their present necessities, and take the measures necessary for the salvage of the ship and the preservation of the cargo. They shall also bring the matter to the knowledge of the nearest consular representative of the United States, in order
240
TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND COREA
that steps may be taken to send the crew home and save the ship and cargo. The necessary expenses shall be defrayed either by the ship's master or by the United States.
Art. IV. --All citizens of the United States of America in Chosen, peaceably attending to their own affairs, shall receive and enjoy for themselves and everything appertaining to them the protection of the local authorities of the Government of Chosen, who shall defend them from all insult and injury of any sort. If their dwellings or property be threatened or attacked by mobs, incendiaries, or other violent or lawless persons, the local officers, on requisition of the Consul, shall immediately dispatch a military force to disperse the rioters, apprehend the guilty individuals, and punish them with the utmost rigour of the law.
Subjects of Chosen guilty of any criminal act towards citizens of the United States, shall be punished by the authorities of Chosen according to the laws of Chosen; and citizens of the United States, either on shore or in any merchant vessel, who may insult, trouble, or wound the persons or injure the property of the people of Chosen shall be arrested and punished only by the Consul or other public functionary of the United States thereto authorized, according to the laws of the United States.
When controversies arise in the kingdom of Chosen, between citizens of the United States and subjects of His Majesty, which need to be examined and decided by the public officers of the two nations, it is agreed between the two governments of the United States and Chosen that such case shall be tried by the proper official of the nationality of the defendant according to the law of that nation. The properly authorized official of the plaintiff's nationality shall be freely permitted to attend the trial and shall be treated with the courtesy due to his position. He shall be granted all proper facilities for watching the proceedings in the interests of justice. If he so desire he shall bave the right to be present, to examine and cross-examine witnesses. If he is dissatisfied with the proceedings he shall be permitted to protest against them in detail.
It is, however, mutually agreed and understood between the high contracting Powers that whenever the King of Chosen shall have so far modified and reformed the statutes and the judicial procedure of his kingdom that, in the judgment of the United States, they conform to the laws and course of justice in the United States, the right of exterritorial jurisdiction over United States citizens in Chosen shall be abandoned, and thereafter United States citizens, when within the limits of the kingdom of Chosen, shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the native authorities.
Art. V.-Merchants and merchant vessels of Chosen visiting the United States for the purpose of traffic shall pay duties and tonnage dues and fees according to the customs regulations of the United States, but no higher or other rates of duties and tonnage dues shall be exacted of them than are levied upon citizens of the United States or upon citizens or subjects of the most favoured nation.
Merchants and merchant vessels of the United States visiting Chosen for purposes of traffic shall pay duties upon all merchandise imported and exported. The authority to levy duties is of right vested in the Government of Chosen. The tariff of duties upon exports and imports, together with the customs regulations for the prevention of smuggling and other irregularities, will be fixed by the authorities of Chosen and communicated to the proper officials of the United States, to be by the latter notified to their citizens and duly observed.
It is, however, agreed in the first instance, as a general measure, that the tariff upon such imports as are articles of daily use shall not exceed an ad valorem duty of ten per cent.; that the tariff upon such imports as are luxuries as for instance foreign wines, foreign tobacco, clocks and watches-shall not exceed an ad valorem duty of thirty per cent., and that native produce exported shall pay a duty not to exceed five per cent. ad valorem. And it is further agreed that the duty upon foreign imports shall be paid once for all at the port of entry, and that no other dues, duties, fees, taxes, or charges of any sort shall be levied upon such imports either in the interior of Chosen or at the ports.
TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND COREA
241
United States merchant vessels entering the ports of Chosen shall pay tonnage dues at the rate of five mace per ton, payable once in three months on each vessel, according to the Chinese calendar.
Art. VI. Subjects of Chosen who may visit the United States shall be per- mitted to reside and to rent premises, purchase land, or to construct residences or warehouses in all parts of the country. They shall be freely permitted to pursue their various callings and avocations, and to traffic in all merchandise, raw and manufactured, that is not declared contraband by law. Citizens of the United States who may resort to the ports of Chosen which are open to foreign commerce shall be permitted to reside at such open ports within the limits of the concession and to lease buildings or land, or to construct residences or warehouses therein.
They shall be freely permitted to pursue their various callings and avocations within the limits of the ports and to traffic in all merchandise, raw and manufactured, that is not declared contraband by law.
No coercion or intimidation in the acquisition of land or buildings shall be permitted, and the land rent as fixed by the authorities of Chosen shall be paid. And it is expressly agreed that land so acquired in the open ports of Chosen still remains an integral part of the kingdom, and that all rights of jurisdiction over persons and property within such areas remain vested in the authorities of Chosen, except in so far as such rights have been expressly relinquished by this Treaty,
American citizens are not permitted either to transport foreign imports to the interior for sale or to proceed thither to purchase native produce, nor are they per- mitted to transport native produce from one open port to another open port.
Violation of this rule will subject such merchandise to confiscation, and the merchants offending will be handed over to the consular authorities to be dealt with. Art. VII. The Governments of the United States and of Chosen mutually agree and undertake that subjects of Chosen shall not be permitted to import opium into any of the ports of the United States, and citizens of the United States shall not be permitted to import opium into any of the open ports of Chosen, to transport it from one open port to another open port, or traffic in it in Chosen. This absolute prohibition, which extends to vessels owned by the citizens or subjects of either Power, to foreign vessels employed by them, and to vessels owned by the citizens or subjects of either Power and employed by other persons for the transportation of opium, shall be enforced by appropriate legislation on the part of the United States and of Chosen, and offenders against it shall be severely punished.
Art. VII. Whenever the Government of Chosen shall have reason to appre- hend a scarcity of food within the limits of the kingdom, His Majesty nay by decree temporarily prohibit the export of all breadstuffs, and such decree shall be binding upon all citizens of the United States in Chosen upon due notice having been given them by the authorities of Chosen through the proper officers of the United States; but it is to be understood that the exportation of rice and breadstuffs of every description is prohibited from the open port of Yin-Chuen,
Chosen having of old prohibited the exportation of red ginseng, if citizens of the United States clandestinely purchase it for export it shall be confiscated and the offenders punished.
Art. IX. Purchase of cannon, small arms, swords, gunpowder, shot, and all munitions of war is permitted only to officials of the Government of Chosen, and they may be imported by citizens of the United States only under written permit from the authorities of Chosen. If these articles are clandestinely imported they shall be confiscated and the offending party shall be punished.
Art. X. The officers and people of either nation residing in the other shall have the right to employ natives for all kinds of lawful work.
Should, however, subjects of Chosen, guilty of violation of the laws of the king- dom,
or against whom any action has been brought, conceal themselves in the residences or warehouses of United States citizens or on board United States merchant vessels, the Consular authorities of the United States, on being notified of the fact by the local authorities, will either permit the latter to despatch constables to make
242
TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND COREA
the arrests, or the persons will be arrested by the Consular authorities and handed over to the local constables.
Officials or citizens of the United States shall not harbour such persons.
Art. XI-Students of either nationality who may proceed to the country of the other in order to study the language, literature, laws, or arts, shall be given all possible protection and assistance, in evidence of cordial goodwill.
Art. XII. This being the first Treaty negotiated by Chosen, and hence being general and incomplete in its provisions, shall, in the first instance, be put into opera tion in all things stipulated herein. As to stipulatious not contained herein, after an interval of five years, when the officers and people of the two Powers shall have become more familiar with each other's language, a further negotiation of commercial provisions and regulations in detail, in conformity with international law and without unequal discriminations on either part, shall be had.
Art. XIII-This Treaty and future official correspondence between the two contracting governments shall be made on the part of Chosen in the Chinese language. The United States shall either use the Chinese language, or if English be used it shall be accompanied with a Chinese version in order to avoid misunderstanding. Art. XIV. The high contracting Powers hereby agree that should at any time the King of Chosen grant to any nation or to the merchants or citizens of any nation any right, privilege, or favour connected either with navigation, commerce, political or other intercourse, which is not conferred by this Treaty, such right, privilege, and favour shall freely enure to the benefit of the United States, its public officers, merchants, and citizens; provided always, that whenever such right, privilege, or favour is accompanied by any condition or equivalent concession granted by the other nation interested, the United States, its officers and people, shall only be entitled to the benefit of such right, privilege, or favour upon complying with the conditions or concessions connected therewith."
In faith whereof the respective Commissioners Plenipotentiary have signed and sealed the foregoing at Yin-Chuen, in English and Chinese, being three originals of each text of even tenor and date, the ratifications of which shall be exchanged at Yin-Chuen within one year from the date of its execution, and immediately hereafter this Treaty shall be, in all its provisions, publicly proclaimed and made known by both governments in their respective countries in order that it may be obeyed by their citizens and subjects respectively.
R. W. SHUFeldt,
Commodore United States Navy, Envoy
of the United States to Chosen.
SHIN CHEN,
CHIN HONG CHI,
Members of the Royal Cabinet of Chosen.
JAPAN
TREATY OF PEACE AND FRIENDSHIP BETWEEN
JAPAN AND COREA (CHOSEN)
SIGNED AT KOкWA, 26TH FEBRUARY, 1876
The Governments of Japau and Chosen being desirous to resume the amicable relations that of yore existed between them and to promote the friendly feelings of both nations to a still firmer basis have, for this purpose, appointed their Pleni- potentiaries, that is to say:-The Government of Japan. Kuroda Kiyotaka, High Commissioner Extraordinary to Chosen, Lieutenant-General and Member of the Privy Council, Minister of the Colonization Department, and Inouyè Kaoru. Associate. High Commissioner Extraordinary to Chosen, Member of the Genró In; and the Government of Chosen, Shin Ken, Han-Choo-Su-Fu, and In-Jisho, Fu-So-Fu, Fuku-so-Kwan, who, according to the powers received from their respective Govern- ments, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles :--
Art. I. Chosen being an independent state enjoys the same sovereign rights as does Japan.
In order to prove the sincerity of the friendship existing between the two nations, their intercourse shall henceforward be carried on in terms of equality and courtesy, each avoiding the giving of offence by arrogance or manifestations of suspicion.
In the first instance, all rules and precedents that are apt to obstruct friendly intercourse shall be totally abrogated, and, in their stead, rules, liberal and in general usage fit to secure a firm and perpetual peace, shall be established.
Art. II. The Government of Japan, at any time within fifteen months from the date of signature of this Treaty, shall have the right to send an Envoy to the Capital of Chosen, where he shall be admitted to confer with the Rei-sohan-sho on matters of a diplomatic nature. He may either reside at the capital or return to his country on the completion of his mission.
The Government of Chosen in like manner shall have the right to send an Envoy to Tokyo, Japan, where he shall be admitted to confer with the Minister for Foreign Affairs on matters of a diplomatic nature. He may either reside at Tokyo or return. home on the completion of his mission.
Art. III. All official communications addressed by the Government of Japan to that of Chosen shall be written in the Japanese language, and for a period of ten years from the present date they shall be accompanied by a Chinese translation. The Government of Chosen will use the Chinese language.
Art. IV. Sorio in Fusan, Chosen, where an official establishment of Japan is situated, is a place originally opened for commercial intercourse with Japan, and trade shall henceforward be carried on at that place in accordance with the provisions of this Treaty, whereby are abolished all former usages, such as the practice of Sai- ken-sen (junk annually sent to Chosen by the late Prince of Tsushima to exchange a certain quantity of articles between each other).
In addition to the above place, the Government of Chosen agrees to open two ports, as mentioned in Article V. of this Treaty, for commercial intercourse with Japanese subjects.
In the foregoing places Japanese subjects shall be free to lease land and to erect buildings thereon, and to rent buildings the property of subjects of Chosen.
Art. V.On the coast of five provinces, viz:-Keikin, Chiusei, Jeura, Kensbo, and Kankio, two ports, suitable for commercial purposes, shall be selected, and the time for opening these two ports shall be in the twentieth month from the second month of the ninth year of Meiji, corresponding with the date of Chosen, the first moon of the year Hei-shi.
Art. VI. Whenever Japanese vessels either by stress of weather or by want of fuel and provisions cannot reach one or the other of the open ports in Chosen they
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TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND COREA
may enter any ports or harbour either to take refuge therein, or to get supplies of wood, coal, and other necessaries, or to make repairs; the expenses incurred thereby are to be defrayed by the ship's master. In such events both the officers and the people of the locality shall display their sympathy by rendering full assistance, and their liberality in supplying the necessaries required.
If any vessel of either country be at any time wrecked or stranded on the coasts of Japan or of Chosen, the people of the vicinity shall immediately use every exertion. to rescue her crew, and shall inform the local authorities of the disaster, who will either send the wrecked persons to their native country or hand them over to the officer of their country residing at the nearest port.
Art. VII. The coasts of Chosen, having hitherto been left unsurveyed, are very dangerous for vessels approaching them, and in order to prepare charts showing the positions of islauds, rocks, and reefs, as well as the depth of water, whereby all navigators may be enabled safely to pass between the two countries, any Japanese mariners may freely survey said coasts.
Art. VIII. There shall be appointed by the Government of Japan an officer to reside at the open ports in Chosen for the protection of Japanese merchants resorting there, provided that such arrangement be deemed necessary. Should any question interesting both nations arise, the said officer shall confer with the local authorities of Chosen and settle it.
Art. IX.-Friendly relations having been established between the two contract- ing parties, their respective subjects may freely carry on their business without any interference from the officers of either Government, and neither limitation nor pro- hibition shall be made on trade.
In case any fraud be committed, or payment of debt be refused by any merchant of either country, the officer of either one or of the other Government shall do their utmost to bring the delinquent to justice and to enforce recovery of the debt.
Neither the Japanese nor the Chosen Government shall be held responsible for the payment of such debt.
Art. X. Should a Japanese subject residing at either of the open ports of Chosen commit any offence against a subject of Chosen, he shall be tried by the Japanese authorities. Should a subject of Chosen commit any offence against a Japanese subject, he shall be tried by the authorities of Chosen. The offenders shall be punished according to the laws of their respective countries. Justice shall be equitably and impartially administered on both sides.
Art. XI.-Friendly relations having been established between the two contract- ing parties, it is necessary to prescribe trade relations for the benefit of the merchants of the respective countries.
Such trade regulations, together with detailed provisions, to be added to the Articles of the present Treaty, to develop its meaning and facilitate its observance, shall be agreed upon at the capital of Chosen, or at Kokwa Fu in the country, within six months from the present date, by Special Commissioners appointed by the two countries.
Art. XII The foregoing eleven articles are binding from the date of the signing hereof, and shall be observed by the two contracting parties, faithfully and invariably, whereby perpetual friendship shall be secured to the two countries.
The present Treaty is executed in duplicate and copies will be exchanged between the two contracting parties.
In faith whereof we, the respective Plenipotentiaries of Japan and Chosen, have affixed our seals hereunto this twenty-sixth day of the second month of the ninth year of Meiji, and the two thousand five hundred and thirty-sixth since the accession of Jimmu Tenno; and, in the era of Chosen, the second day of the second moon of the year Heishi, and of the founding of Chosen the four hundred and eighty-fifth.
(Signed)
**
KURODA KIYOTAKA. INOUTE KAORU. SHIN KEN,
IN JI-SHO.
NEW PROTOCOL BETWEEN JAPAN AND COREA
CONCLUDED FEBRUARY 23Rd, 1904
Art. I. For the purpose of maintaining a permanent and solid friendship between Japan and Corea, and firmly establishing peace in the Far East, the Imperial Government of Corea shall place full confidence in the Imperial Government of Japan, and adopt the advice of the latter in regard to improvements in administra-
tion.
Art. II. The Imperial Government of Japan shall, in a spirit of firm friendship, ensure the safety and repose of the Imperial House of Corea.
Art. III. The Imperial Government of Japan definitively guarantees the in- dependence and territorial integrity of the Corean Empire.
Art. IV. In case the welfare of the Imperial House of Corea, or the territorial integrity of Corea, is endangered by the aggression of a third Power or internal disturbances, the Imperial Government of Japan shall immediately take such necessary measures as circumstances require, and, in such case, the Imperial Government of Corea shall give full facilities to promote all action of the Imperial Japanese Govern- ment. The Imperial Government of Japan may, for the attainment of the above- mentioned object occupy, when the circumstances require it, such places as may be necessary from strategic points of view.
Art. V. The Government of the two countries shall not, in the future, without mutual consent, conclude with a third Power such an arrangement as may be contrary to the principles of the present Protocol.
Art. VI.-Details in connection with the present Protocol shall be arranged as circumstances may demand, between the Representative of Japan and the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs of Corea.
TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND COREA
SIGNED NOVEMBER 17TH, 1905
[Translated from the Japanese official text.]
The Japanese and Corcan Governments, being desirous of strengthening the identity of interests which unite the two Empires, have, with the same end in view, agreed upon the following Articles, which will remain binding until the power and prosperity of Corea are recognised as having been firmly established:---
I-The Japanese Government, through the Foreign Office at Tokyo, will henceforward take control and direct the foreign relations and affairs of Corea, and Japanese diplomatic representatives and Consuls will protect the subjects and interests of Corea abroad.
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TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND COREA
II. The Japanese Government will take upon itself the duty of carrying out the existing Treaties between Corea and foreign countries; and the Corean Govern- ment binds itself not to negociate any Treaty or Agreement of a diplomatic nature without the intermediary of the Japanese Government.
III. (a) The Japanese Government will appoint under his Majesty the Emperor of Corea a Resident-General as its representative, who will remain in Seoul chiefly to administer diplomatic affairs with the prerogative of having private audience with his Majesty the Emperor of Corea.
(b) The Japanese Government is entitled to appoint a Resident to every Corean open port and other places where the presence of such Resident is considered necessary. These Residents, under the supervision of the Resident-General, will administer all the duties hitherto appertaining to Japanese Consulates in Corea and all other affairs necessary for the satisfactory fulfilment of the provisions of this Treaty.
IV. All the existing Treaties and Agreements between Japan and Corea, within limits not prejudical to the provisions of this Treaty, will remain in force.
V. The Japanese Government guarantees to maintain the security and respect the diguity of the Corean Imperial House.
In witness whereof the undersigned, with due power granted by their respective Governments, have signed this Treaty and affixed their seals.
HAYASHI GONSUKE,
Japanese Minister Plenipotentiary and
Envoy Extraordinary.
PAK CHAI SYUL,
Corean Minister of State for
Foreign Affairs.
JAPANESE IMPERIAL ORDINANCE No. 240 RELATING TO THE ESTABLISHMENT OF
THE RESIDENCY-GENERAL AND RESIDENCY OFFICES IN COREA.
In accordance with Article III. of the Treaty concluded on November 17th, 1905, between the Imperial Japanese and Corean Governments, the office of the Residency. General shall be established at Seoul, and Residency Offices in Seoul, Chemulpo, Fusan, Geusan, Chinnampo, Mokpo, Masan, and other places where such offices are required for the administration of all affairs relating to the Treaty.
The duties of the Resident-General will be conducted by the existing Japanese Legation, and duties of the Residents by the existing Japanese Consulates for the time being.
I
TREATIES WITH JAPAN
GREAT BRITAIN
TREATY OF COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION BETWEEN
GREAT BRITAIN AND JAPAN
SIGNED AT LONDON, 16TH JULY, 1894
Ratifications Exchanged at Tokyo, 25th August, 1894
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, and His Majesty the Emperor of Japau, being equally desirous of maintaining the relations of good understanding which happily exist between them, by extending and increasing the intercourse between their respective States, and being convinced that this object cannot better be accomplished than by revising the Treaties hitherto existing between the two countries, have resolved to complete such a revision, based upon principles of equity and mutual benefit, and, for that purpose, have named as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, the Right Honourable John, Earl of Kimberley, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, &c., &c., Her Britannic Majesty's Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs;
And His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, Viscount Aoki Siuzo, Junii, First Class of the Imperial Order of the Sacred Treasure, His Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of St. James';
Who, after having communicated to each other their full powers, found to be in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles :-
Article I.-The subjects of each of the two High Contracting Parties shall have full liberty, to enter, travel, or reside in any part of the dominions and possessions of the other Contracting Party, and shall enjoy full and perfect protection for their persons and property.
They shall have free and easy access to the Courts of Justice in pursuit and defence of their rights; they shall be at liberty equally with native subjects to choose and employ lawyers, advocates, and representatives to pursue and defend their rights before such Courts, and in all other matters connected with the administration of justice they shall enjoy all the rights and privileges enjoyed by native subjects.
In whatever relates to rights of residence and travel; to the possession of goods and effects of any kind; to the succession to personal estate, by will or otherwise, and the disposal of property of any sort in any manner whatsoever which they may lawfully acquire, the subjects of each Contracting Party shall enjoy in the dominions and possessions of the other the same privileges, liberties, and rights, and shall be subject to no higher imposts, or charges in these respects than native subjects, or subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation. The subjects of each of the Contracting Parties shall enjoy in the dominions and possessions of the other entire liberty of conscience, and, subject to the Law, Ordinances, and Regulations, shall enjoy the right of private or public exercise of their worship, and also the right of burying their respective countrymen, according to their religious customs, in such suitable and convenient places as may be established and maintained for that purpose.
They shall not be compelled, under any pretext whatsoever, to pay any charges or taxes other or higher than those that are, or may be, paid by native subjects, or subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation.
Article II. The subjects of either of the Contracting Parties residing in the dominions and possessions of the other shall be exempted from all compulsory military service whatsoever, whether in the army, navy, national guards, or militia,
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TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND JAPAN
from all contributions imposed in lieu of personal service; and from all forced loan or military exactions or contributions.
Article III-There shall be reciprocal freedom of commerce and navigation between the dominions and possessions of the two High Contracting Parties.
The subjects of each of the High Contracting Parties may trade in any part of the dominions and possessions of the other by wholesale or retail in all kinds of produce, manufactures, and merchandize of lawful commerce, either in person or by agents, singly, or in partnerships with foreigners or native subjects: and they may there own or hire and occupy the houses, manufactories, warehouses, shops, and premises which may be necessary for them. and lease land for residential and commercial purposes, conforming themselves to the Laws, Police, and Customs Regulations of the country like native subjects.
They shall have liberty to come with their ships and cargoes to all places, ports, and rivers in the dominions and possessions of the other which are or may be opened to foreign commerce, and shall enjoy, respectively, the same treatment, in matters of commerce and navigation, as native subjects, or subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation, without having to pay taxes, imposts, or duties, of whatever nature or under whatever denomination levied in the name or for the profit of the Government, public functionaries, private individuals, corporations, or establish- ments of any kind, other or greater than those paid by native subjects, or subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation, subject always to the Laws, Ordinances, and Regulations of each country.
Article IV.-The dwellings, manufactories, warehouses, and shops of the sabjects of each of the High Contracting Parties in the dominions and possessions of the other, and all premises appertaining thereto destined for purposes of residence or commerce, shall be respected.
It shall not be allowable to proceed to make a search of, or a domiciliary visit to, such dwellings and premises, or to examine or inspect books, papers, or accounts ex-pi under the conditions and with the forms prescribed by the Laws, Ordinances,
Regulations for subjects of the country.
Article V. No other or higher duties shall be imposed on the importation into the dominions and possessions of Her Britannic Majesty of any article, the produce manufacture of dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, from whatever place arriving; and no other or higher duties shall be imposed on the importation into the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan of any article, the produce or manufacture of the dominions and possessions of Her Britannic Majesty, from whatever place arriving than on the like article. produced or manufactured in any other foreign country; nor shall any prohibition. Le maintained or imposed on the importation of any article, the produce or amafa-ture of the dominions and possessions of either of the High Contracting Parties, into the dominions and possessions of the other, from whatever place arriving, which shall not equally extend to the importation of the like article, being the produce or manufacture of any other country. This last provision is not applicable to the sanitary and other prohibitions occasioned by the necessity of protecting the safety of persons, or of cattle, or of plants useful to agriculture.
Article VL-No other or higher duties or charges shall be imposed in the deminions and possessions of either of the High Contracting Parties on the exporta- tion of any article to the dominions and possessions of the other than such as are, or may be, payable on the exportation of the like article to any other foreign country; nor shall any prohibition be imposed on the exportation of any article from the dominions and possessions of either of the two Contracting Parties to the dominions and possessions of the other which shall not equally extend to the exportation of the like article to any other country.
Article VII.The subjects of each of the High Contracting Parties shall enjoy in the dominions and possessions of the other exemptions from all transit duties and a perfect equality of treatment with native subjects in all that relates to warehousing, bounties, facilities, and drawbacks.
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND JAPAN
249
Article VIII-All articles which are or may be legally imported into the ports of the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan in Japanese vessels may likewise be imported into those ports in British vessels, without being liable to any other or higher duties or charges of whatever denomination than if such articles were imported in Japanese vessels; and reciprocally, all articles which are or may be legally imported into the ports of the dominions and possessions of Her Britannic Majesty in British vessels may likewise be imported into those ports in Japanese vesssels, without being liable to any other or higher duties or charges of whatever denomination than if such articles were imported in British vessels. Such reciprocal equality of treatment shall take effect without distinction, whether such articles come directly from the place of origin or from any other places.
In the same manner there shall be perfect equality of treatment in regard to exportation, so that the same export duties shall be paid and the same bounties and drawbacks allowed in the dominions and possessions of either of the High Contract- ing Parties on the exportation of any article which is or may be legally exported therefrom, whether such exportation shall take place in Japanese or in British vessels, and whatever may be the place of destination, whether a port of either of the Contracting Parties or of any third Power.
Article IX. No duties of tonnage, harbour, pilotage, lighthouse, quarantine, or other similar or corresponding duties of whatever nature or under whatever denomination, levied in the name or for the profits of the Government, public functionaries, private individuals, corporations, or establishments of any kind, shall be imposed in the ports of the dominions and possessions of either country upon the vessels of the other country which shall not equally and under the same conditions be imposed in the like cases on national vessels in general, or vessels of the most favoured nation. Such equality of treatment shall apply reciprocally to the respective vessels, from whatever port or place they may arrive, and whatever may be their place of destination.
Article X.In all that regards the stationing, loading, and unloading of vessels in the ports, basins, docks, roadsteads, harbours, or rivers of the dominions and possessions of the two countries, no privilege shall be granted to national vessels which shall not be equally granted to vessels of the other country; the intention of the High Contracting Parties being that in this respect also the respective vessels shall be treated on the footing of perfect equality.
Article XI. The coasting trade of both the High Contracting Parties is excepted from the provisions of the present Treaty, and shall be regulated according to the Laws, Ordinances, and Regulations of Japan and of Great Britain respec- tively. It is, however, understood that Japanese subjects in the dominions and possessions of Her Britannic Majesty, and British subjects in the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, shall enjoy in this respect the rights which are or may be granted under such Laws, Ordinances, and Regulations to the subjects or citizens of any other country.
A Japanese vessel laden in a foreign country with cargo destined for two or more ports in the dominions and possessions of Her Britannic Majesty, and a British vessel laden in a foreign country with cargo destined for two or more ports in the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, may discharge a portion of her cargo at one port, and continue her voyage to the other port or ports of destination where foreign trade is permitted, for the purpose of landing the remainder of her original cargo there, subject always to the Laws and Custom- honse Regulations of the two countries.
The Japanese Government, however, agrees to allow British vessels to continue, as heretofore, for the period of the duration of the present Treaty, to carry cargo between the existing open ports of the Empire, excepting to or from the ports of Osaka, Niigata, and Ebisu-minato.
Article XII-Any ship of war or merchant vessel of either of the High Contracting Parties which may be compelled by stress of weather, or by reason of any other distress, to take shelter in a port of the other, sha 1 be at liberty to refit
7
250
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND JAPAN
therein, to procure all necessary supplies, and to put to sea again, without paying any dues other than such as would be payable by national vessels. In case, how- ever, the master of a merchant vessel should be under the necessity of disposing of a part of his cargo in order to defray the expenses, he shall be bound to conform to the Regulations and Tariffs of the place to which he may have come.
If any ship of war or merchant vessel of one of the Contracting Parties should run aground or be wrecked upon the coast of the other, the local authorities shall inform the Consul-General, Cousul, Vice-Consul, or Consular Agent of the district. of the occurrence, or if there be no such Consular officer, they shall inform the Consul-General. Consul, Vice-Consul, or Consular Agent of the nearest district.
All proceedings relative to the salvage of Japanese vessels wrecked or east on shore in the territorial waters of Her Britannic Majesty shall take place in accordance with the Laws, Ordinances, and Regulations of Great Britain, and, reciprocally, all measures of salvage relative to British vessels wrecked or cast on shore in the territorial waters of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan shall take place in accordance with the Laws, Ordinances, and Regulations of Japan.
Such stranded or wrecked ship or vessel, and all parts thereof, and all furniture, and appurtenances belonging thereunto, and all goods and merchandise saved therefrom, including those which may have been cast into the sea, or the proceeds thereof, if sold, as well as all papers found on board such stranded or wrecked ship or vessel, shall be given up to the owners or their agents, when claimed by them. If such owners or agents are not on the spot, the same shall be delivered to the respective Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, or Consular Agents upon being claimed by them within the period fixed by the laws of the country, and such Consular officers, owners, or agents shall pay only the expenses incurred in the preservation of the property, together with the salvage or other expenses which would have been payable in the case of a wreck of a national vessel.
The goods and merchandise saved from the wreck shall be exempt from all the duties of Customs unless cleared for consumption, in which case they shall pay the ordinary duties.
When a ship or vessel belonging to the subjects of one of the Contracting Parties is stranded or wrecked in the territories of the other, the respective Consuls- General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, and Consular Agents shall be authorized, in case the owner or master, or other agent of the owner, is not present, to lend their official assistance in order to afford the necessary assistance to the subjects of the respective states. The same rule shall apply in case the owner, master, or other agent is present, but requires such assistance to be given.
Article XIII. All vessels which, according to Japanese law, are to be deemed Japanese vessels, and all vessels which, according to British law, are to be deemed British vessels, shall, for the purposes of this Treaty, be deemed Japanese and British vessels respectively.
Article XIV. The Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, and Consular Agents of each of the Contracting Parties, residing in the dominions and possessions of the other, shall receive from the local authorities such assistance as can by law be given to them for the recovery of deserters from the vessels of their respective countries. It is understood that this stipulation shall not apply to the subjects of the country where the desertion takes place.
Article XV.-The High Contracting Parties agree that, in all that concerns commerce and navigation, any privilege, favour, or immunity which either Contract- ing Party has actually granted, or may hereafter grant to the Government, ships, subjects, or citizens of any other State, shall be extended immediately and uncondi tionally to the Government, ships, subjects, or citizens of the other Contracting Party, it being their intention that the trade and navigation of each country shall be placed, in all respects, by the other on the footing of the most favoured nation.
Article XVI. Each of the High Contracting Parties may appoint. Consuls- General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, Pro-Consuls, and Consular Agents in all the ports,
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND JAPAN
251
cities, and places of the other, except in those where it may not be convenient to recognize such officers.
This exception, however, shall not be made in regard to one of the Contracting Parties without being made likewise in regard to every other Power.
The Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls, Pro-Consuls, and Consular Agents may exercise all functions, and shall enjoy all privileges, exemptions, and immunities which are or may hereafter be granted to Consular officers of the most favoured nation. Article XVII. The subjects of each of the High Contracting Parties shall enjoy in the dominions and possessions of the other the same protection as native subjects in regard to patents, trade marks, and designs, upon fulfilment of the formalities prescribed by law.
Article XVIII. Her Britannic Majesty's Government, so far as they are concerned, give their consent to the following arrangement :--
The several foreign Settlements in Japan shall be incorporated with the respective Japanese Communes, and shall thenceforth form part of the general municipal systein of Japan.
The competent Japanese authorities shall thereupon assume all municipal obligations and duties in respect thereof, and the common funds and property, if any, belonging to such Settlements, shall at the same time be transferred to the said Japanese authorities.
When such incorporation takes place existing leases in perpetuity under which property is now held in the said Settlements shall be confirmed, and no conditions whatsoever other than those contained in such existing leases shall be imposed in respect of such property. It is, however, understood that the Consular authorities mentioned in the same are in all cases to be replaced by the Japanese authorities.
All lands which may previously have been granted by the Japanese Goverument free of rent for the public purposes of the said Settlements shall, subject to the right of eminent domain, be permanently reserved free of all taxes and charges for the public purposes for which they were originally set apart.
Article XIX-The stipulations of the present Treaty shall be applicable, so far as the laws permit, to all the Colonies and foreign possessions of Her Britannic Majesty, excepting to those hereinafter named, that is to say, except to-
The Dominion of Canada. † Newfoundland.
India. The Cape.
Victoria.
South Australia.
Natal. Queensland.
Western Australia.
New South Wales. Tasmania. New Zealand.
Provided always that the stipulations of the present Treaty shall be made applicable to any of the above-named Colonies or foreign possessions on whose behalf notice to that effect shall have been given to the Japanese Government by Her Britannic Majesty's Representative at Tokyo within two years from the date of the exchange of ratifications of the present Treaty.
* Owing to serious difference of opinion which arose between Japan of the one part and Great Britain, France and Germany of the other part regarding the interpretation of this clause with regard to lenses held in perpetuity, an Arbitration Tribunal was appointed. The Governments of Germany, France and Great Britain named as Arbitrator M. Louis Renault, Professor of Law in the University of Paris and Legal Adviser to the Department of Foreign Affairs, and Japan named as Arbitrator His Excellency Itchiro Motono, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Flenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, at Paris, Doctor of Law. M. Gregers Gram, formerly Norwegian Minister of State, was chosen by the Arbitrators as Umpire. The Tribunal sat at the Hague, and on May 22nd, 1905, decided by a majority of yotes and declared that: "The provisions of the Treaties and other engagements mentioned in the Protocols of Arbitration exempt not only the land held in virtue of the leases in perpetuity granted by or on behalf of the Government of Japan, but they exempt the land and buildings of every description constructed or which may hereafter be constructed on such land from all imposts, taxes, charges, contributions or conditions whatsoever, other than those expressly stipulated in the leases in question." Mr. Motono recorded his entire disagreement with the decision.
On January 31st, 1906, an agreement was signed in Tokyo making the Stipulations of this Treaty applicable to the Dominion of Canada.
7*
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TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND JAPAN
Article XX. The present Treaty shall, from the date it comes into force, be substituted in place of the Conventions respectively of the 23rd day of the 8th mouth of the 7th year of Kayai, corresponding to the 14th day of October, 1854, and of the 13th day of the 5th month of the 2nd year of Keiou, corresponding to the 25th day of June, 1866, the Treaty of the 18th day of the 7th month of the 5th year of Ansei, corresponding to the 26th day of August, 1858, and all Arrangements and Agreements subsidiary thereto concluded or existing between the High Con- tracting Parties; and from the same date such Conventions, Treaty, Arrangements and Agreements shall cease to be binding, and, in consequence, the jurisdiction then exercised by British Courts in Japan, and all the exceptional privileges, exemp- tious, and immunities then enjoyed by British subjects, as a part of or appurtenant to such jurisdiction, shall absolutely and without notice cease and determine, and thereafter all such jurisdiction shall be assumed and exercised by Japanese Courts.
Article XXI. The present Treaty shall not take effect until at least five years after its signature. It shall come into force one year after His Imperial Japanese Majesty's Government shall have given notice to Her Britannic Majesty's Govern- ment of its wish to have the same brought into operation. Such notice may be given
any
time after the expiration of four years from the date hereof. The Treaty shall remain in force for the period of twelve years from the date it goes into operation.
at
Either High Contracting Party shall have the right, at any time after eleven years shall have elapsed from the date this Treaty takes effect, to give notice to the other of its intention to terminate the same, and at the expiration of twelve months after such notice is given this Treaty shall wholly cease and determine.
Article XXII. The present Treaty shall be ratified, and the ratifications thereof shall be exchanged at Tokyo as soon as possible, and not later then six months from the present date.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same and have affixed thereto the seal of their arms.
Done at London, in duplicate, this sixteenth day of the seventh month of the twenty-seventh year of Meiji.
PROTOCOL.
[L.S." KIMBERLEY. [L,S.] AOKI.
The Government of Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland and Empress of India, and the Government of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, deeming it advisable in the interests of both countries to regulate certain special matters of mutual concern, apart from the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation signed this day have, through their respective Plenipotentiaries, agreed upon the following stipula-
tions:
But
1. It is agreed by the Contracting Parties that one month after the exchange of the ratifications of the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation signed this day, the Import Tariff hereunto annexed shall, subject to the provisions of Article XXIII. of the Treaty of 1858 at present subsisting between the Contracting Parties, as long as the said Treaty remains in force and thereafter, subject to the provisions of Articles V. and XV. of the Treaty signed this day, be applicable to the articles therein enumerated, being the growth, produce, or manufacture of the dominions and possessions of Her Britannic Majesty, upon importation into Japan. nothing contained in this Protocol, or the Tariff hereunto annexed, shall be held to limit or qualify the right of the Japanese Government to restrict or to prohibit the importation of adulterated drugs, medicines, food, or beverages, indecent or obscene prints, paintings, books, cards, lithographic or other engravings, photographs, or any other indecent or obscene articles; articles in violation of patent, trade-mark, or copy-right laws of Japan, or any other article which for sanitary reasons, or in view of public security or morals, might offer any danger.
SUPPLEMENTARY CONVENTION BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND JAPAN 253
The ad valorem duties established by the said Tariff shall, so far as may be deemed practicable, be converted into specific duties by a supplementary Convention, which shall be concluded between the two Governments within six months from the date of this Protocol; the medium prices, as shown by the Japanese Customs Returns during the six calendar months preceding the date of the present Protocol, with the addition of the cost of insurance and transportation from the place of purchase, production or fabrication, to the port of discharge, as well as commission, if any, shall be taken as the basis for such conversion, In the event of the Supplementary Convention not having come into force at the expiration of the period for the said Tariff to take effect, ad valorem duties in conformity with the rule recited at the end of the said Tariff shall, in the meantime, be levied.
In respect of articles not enumerated in the said Tariff, the General Statutory Tariff of Japan for the time being in force shall, from the same time, apply, subject, as aforesaid, to the provisions of Article XXIII. of the Treaty of 1858 and Articles V. and XV. of the Treaty signed this day respectively.
From the date the Tariffs aforesaid take effect, the Import tariff now in opera- tion in Japan in respect of goods and merchandise imported into Japan by British subjects shall cease to be binding.
In all other respects the stipulations of the existing Treaties and Conventions shall be maintained unconditionally until the time when the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation signed this day comes into force.
2. The Japanese Government, pending the opening of the country to British. subjects, agrees to extend the existing passport system in such a manner as to allow British subjects, on the production of a certificate of recommendation from the British Representative in Tokyo, or from any of Her Majesty's Consuls at the open ports in Japan, to obtaiu upon application passports available for any part of the country, and for any period not exceeding twelve months, from the Imperial Japanese Foreign Office in Tokyo, or from the chief authorities in the Prefecture in which an open port is situated; it being understood that the existing Rules and Regulations governing British subjects who visit the interior of the Empire are to be maintained, 3. The Japanese Government undertakes, before the cessation of British Consular jurisdiction in Japan, to join the International Conventions for the Pro- tection of Industrial Property and Copyright.
4. It is understood between the two High Coutracting Parties that, if Japan thinks it necessary at any time to levy an additional duty on the production or manufacture of refined sugar in Japan, an increased customs duty equivalent in amount may be levied on British refined sugar when imported into Japan, so long as such additional excise tax or inland duty continues to be raised.
Provided always that British refined sugar shall in this respect be entitled to the treatment accorded to refined sugar being the produce or manufacture of the most favoured nation.
5. The undersigned Plenipotentiaries have agreed that this Protocol shall be submitted to the two High Contracting Parties at the same time as the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation signed this day, and that when the said Treaty is ratified. the agreements contained in the Protocol shall also equally be considered as approved, without the necessity of a further formal ratification.
It is agreed that this Protocol shall terminate at the same time the said Treaty ceases to be binding.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same, and have affixed thereto the seal of their arms.
Done at London, in duplicate, this sixteenth day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-four.
[..] KIMBERLEY.
[L.S.] AKOI.
[In place of the Tariff above referred to we give in the following pages the Tariff oficially promulgated in 1906, which embodies all the changes effected by Treaties with other Powers.]
THE CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
ENFORCED FROM THE 1ST OCTOBER, 1906.
Article I-Upon articles imported from foreign countries import duties shall be imposed according to the annexed tariff.
Article II. With regard to those articles in respect of which it is found advis- able to replace the ad valorem duties by specific duties, such duties may be converted on the basis of the average values for a period of not less than six months and determined by Imperial Ordinance.
The rates of the specific duties mentioned in the preceding paragraph may be determined by subdividing the articles, or by gross weight.
Article III. With regard to the productions of regions to which Conventional Tariff rates are not applicable, such regions and articles may, in case of necessity, be named by Imperial Ordinance and rates of duty fixed in respect thereof within limits not falling below the Conventional Tariff rates.
Article IV. With respect to the productions of a country in which Japanese vessels or productions are subjected to a more disadvantageous treatment than the vessels or producticus of other countries, the articles may be named by Imperial Ordinance, whereby may be imposed on dutiable articles a surtax not exceeding in amount the rate of duty prescribed in the present Law, and upon duty-free articles an import duty not exceeding fifty per cent. ad valorem.
Article V. In respect of articles on which an export bounty is granted in foreign countries a surtax of the same amount as the said bounty may be imposed by Imperial Ordinance.
Article VI. The dutiable value of an article subject to ad valorem duty shall be the actual cost thereof at the place of production or purchase with the addition of packing charges, cost of transportation, insurance, and all other charges incurred up to its arrival at the port of importation; however, in case of doubt respecting the actual cost and the various charges, the balance after deducting the import duty from the price of the article at the port of importation shall be taken as the dutiable value thereof.
Article VII. The following articles are exempted from import duty:
1. Articles imported for Imperial use;
2.-Articles belonging to chiefs of foreign states visiting this country, their families and suites;
3.- Arms, ammunition, and explosives imported by the Army or the Navy; 4.--Warships;
5.-Articles intended for the personal use of Foreign Ambassadors and Ministers accredited to this country;
6.-Orders or decorations, medals, and badges sent to persons resident in this
country;
7.- Records, documents, and other papers;
8. Articles imported as specimens or objects for the purpose of reference- which are to be exhibited in Government or public schools, museums. commercial museums, and other institutions;
9. Articles contributed for purposes of charity or relief; 10.-Government monopoly articles imported by the Government; 11.-Samples of merchandise which are only fit as such;
12. Travellers' effects and tools and instruments of professional necessity to travellers, which, however, must correspond to the social status of such travellers and be recoguised as suited thereto by the Customs;
13. Articles sent back by forces and warships abroad;
14. Personal effects in course of removal, which, however, must have already been used;
15.-Exported articles which are imported within five years without any change in the character and form which they possessed at the time of exportation, with the
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
255
exception, however, of alcohol, alcoholic liquors, sugar, and articles which enjoyed exemption from import duty, or a drawback thereof under Arts. VIII and IX;
16. Receptacles of exported goods named by Ordinance when such receptacles are re-imported;
17. Fish, shellfish, mollusca, sea-animals, see-weeds, and other aquatie products caught or gathered by vessels which set out for the purpose from this country, and manufactures thereof which are simple in workmanship; they must, however, be imported by the said vessel or vessels attached thereto;
18.--Articles for ship's use delivered in an open port to warships and vessels bound for foreign countries;
19.-Wreckages and equipments of Japanese vessels which have been ship-
wrecked;
20.-Exported goods shipped by vessels clearing ports in this country, which are brought back on account of the shipwreck of such vessels;
21.-Horses, cattle, and swine for breeding imported by the State and prefec- tures, horses for breeding imported by horse-breeding associations, and cattle for breeding imported by cattle-breeding associations.
Article VIII.--The following articles are exempted from import duty if they are to be re-exported within one year from the date of importation; "but security corres- ponding in amount to the duty must be tendered at the time of importation:-
1. Articles imported for the purpose of having work done thereto, which are named by Imperial Ordinance;
2.-Articles imported for repair:
3-Articles imported for the use of travellers engaged in scientific research; 4-Articles imported for the purpose of trial;
5-Articles imported for use in theatrical and other performances,
Article IX. When articles named by Ordinance have been manufactured with imported raw materials and exported to foreign countries, the whole or part of the import duty on such materials may be refunded in a manner to be determined by Ordinance.
When manures named by Ordinance have been manufactured with imported raw materials, the whole or part of the import duty on such materials may be refunded in a manner to be determined by Ordinance.
Any person who obtains or attempts to obtain by fraud or dishonest action the refundment mentioned in the preceding two paragraphs shall be dealt with according to the provision of Art. LXXV of the Customs Duties Law.
Article X. The importation of the articles specified hereunder is prohibited :- 1. Opium and utensils for smoking opium (excepting such as are imported by the Government).
2.-Coins, bank-notes, and Imperial Government certificates, which are counter- feit, altered, or imitatiors;
3.-Books, pictures, carvings, and other articles, which are considered injurious to public security or morals;
4. Articles which infringe patents, new devices for practical use, designs, trademarks, and copyrights;
5.Articles the importation of which has been prohibited by laws and Ordinances.
ADDITIONAL ARTICLES.
L
Article XI. The date at which the present Law will be put in operation shall be determined by Imperial Ordinance,
Article XII. The provisions relating to import duties in Arts. II and III of the Extraordinary Special Tax Law and Law No. 85 of the Thirty-third Year of Meiji (1900), are abolished.
Imperial Ordinance No. 52 of the 39th year of Meiji (1906).
The Customs Tariff Law shall be put into force on and after the 1st of October of the 39th year of Meiji (1906).
No.
IMPORT TARIFF
(For Conventional Tariff see page 274)
Articles.
Group 1.- Plants and Animals (living).
1 Plants, roots and bulbs, fit only for replanting
2
Horses
3 Bulls, oxen and cows
HD 20 10 10 11 00 c
Sheep and goats
Pigs and hogs
Poultry
Fish, shellfish and mollusca
Bees...
All other live animals...
GROUP II.-Grains and Seeds.
10
1 ice and paddy
11
Barley
1
12
Wheat
13
Oats...
14
15
16
17
18
+
Millet, Italian and German
Beans, soja
>
red or white (Phaseolus Subtrilobata) (Ficia faba)
green small (Phaseolus Radiatus)...
19
Peas (Pisum Sativum)
20
Sesame seed
21
Seeds of Perila Ocimoides
22
Rape seed
23
Cotton seed
24
All other grains and seeds
25
25
:
:
+
+
+
+
LIK
-
Rates
Unit.
of Duty.
Yen.
free
ad cal.
5%
10..
25
J
Te
GROUP III-Beverages and Comestibles.
Vegetables (excluding those preserved with sugar, molasses,,
syrup or honey):
1. Preserved in tins
20
P
J
++
25 v
25
30
10
1+
25 **
100k ins
0.64
0.45
35
0.57
>>
0.47
0.41
0.43
15
0.45
0.37
+
0.44
T
+
0.38
0.79
0.86
0.51
0.20
+
ad val.
15%.
...including receptacles
100 kins
7.30
2. Preserved in bottles or jars
ad val.
40%
3. Not preserved in tins, bottles or jars :
A. Freshi
100 kins
1.15
B. Dried
4.10
++
26
C. Others
Fruits and nuts (excluding those preserved with sugar,
molasses, syrup or honey):
1. Preserved in tins, bottles or jars
2. Not preserved in tins, bottles or jars:
ad val.
30%
H
45%
A. Fruits, fresh
B.
dried
100 kins
4.00
8.10
2.
27
Tea:
C. Nuts...
D. Others
1. Black tea
3. All other
Coffee
388
28
29
30
Chicory Cocoa
6.50
ad val.
40%
100 kins
20.00
+++
dust
+3
2.70
+
ad val. 100 kins
ad vol.
45% 15.00
45
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
257
Rates
Unit.
of Duty.
Yen.
A. In the seed
31
Spices:
1. Pepper:
2. Curry powder
32
B. Ground
3. Mustard
4. All other
Flours, meals and groats of grains and starches:
1. Wheat flour
2. Oatmeal...
3. Indian corn meal
4. Tapioca or manioca
5. All other
100 kins
13.00
including receptacles
18,00
H
23.00
2
al val.
45%
**
45%
100 kins
1.45
4.42
3.87
1.50
72
ud val.
30%
100 kins
11.00
++
6.60
...including receptacles
12.00
8.20
J
1 litre
0.18
Biscuits (excluding fancy or sweetened biscuits) Macaroni, vermicelli and the like
$285
33
34
35 Fruit juice (not sugared)
36
Sauce
37
Vinegar
$999*99
38
39
40
Note. Vinegar containing more than 10 grammes of pure acetic acid in 100 cubic centimeters at 15′ C is subject to an additional duty at the rate of 3 sen per litre for every additional one gramme of pure acetic acid.
Meat, poultry, game, fish, shellfish and mollusca...
1. Fresh:
4. Mutton
B. Others
2. Preserved in tins, bottles or jars:
A. Meat, poultry and game
H. Fish, shellfish and mollusca
3. All other:
4. Ham and bacon
B. Salted meat
C. Salted whale:
a. Tail
b. Others D. Salted fish
E. Others
Condensed milk
Butter
100 kins ad val.
7.30
30%
...including receptacles
100 kins
9.75
4.30
14.00
5.50
-
4.50
1.40
2.00
M
ad val.
30%
...including receptacles
100 kins
10.00
27.00
**
41
Artificial butter
23.00
42
Cheese
17.00
43
Extract of ineat
..including receptacles
77.00
44
Peptone, somatose, hemoglobin, infant food and other simi-
lar nutritious food
ad val.
35%
15
Eggs, fresh
100 kins
5.80
46
Mineral water, soda water & other non-alcoholic beverages:
1. In bottles, not exceeding
litre each
1 doz.
0.55
2.
J
**
exceedinglitre each
1.10
47
All other comestibles
ad val.
-10%
48
$96
49
50
51
GROUP IV-Sugar, Confectioneries and Sweetmeats.
Sugar:
1. Below Dutch standard No. 8
2. From Dutch standard No. 8 to No. 15, exclusive... 3. From Dutch standard No. 15 to No. 20, exclusive 4. Dutch standard No. 20 and above
Molasses...
---
Fruit juice (sugared) and syrup
Grape sugar, malt sugar and the like
100 kins
1.65
2.25
3.25
3.50
+う
0.85
[
ad val.
45%
100 kins
7.26
258
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Rates
Articles.
Unit.
of Duty.
Yen
金鋁盒洽洽坛
Honey
Milk sugar
Sugar, rock candy
100 kins
8.80
זוז
ad val.
50%
100 kins
4.90
55
Confectioneries, fancy biscuits and other cakes) including
20.00
ԵՐ Jam, fruit jelly and the like
+++
57 Vegetables and fruits preserved with sugar, molasses, syrup
or honey...
including receptables
GROUP V-Alcoholic Liquors and Alcohol.
..f receptacles
57
17
1.3.00
8.00
3883
58 59
sule
Chinese liquors, fermented
60 Beer, ale, porter and stout
61
Wines of all kinds:
1. In bottles
2. In casks or barrels
88
62
Champagne
63
All other alcoholic liquors :
1 litre
0.15
0.16
0.10
F
+
0.80
+1
0.30
+
2.00
0.90
10.50
1. In bottle
2. In other receptacles*.
* Note-Alcoholic liquors containing more than 50% by volume of pure alcohol, specific gravity 0.7947 at 15° C. are subject to an additional duty at the rate of 1 sen per litre for every additional 1% of pure alcohol,
61
Alcohol
+4
Grove II. Shins, Hairs, Bones, Horns, Teeth,
Tusks, Shells, &c.
--
+
0.65
+1
25
65
66
67
68
C. Others:
Furs
Hides and skins, raw:
1. Of bull, ox, cow and buffalo
2. Of deer
3. Of red deer (Cervus Elaphus)
4. All other
:
Waste hides and skins (fit only for glue manufacture or
manure)...
Leather:
1. Of bull, ox, cow and buffalo:
A. Sole leather...
B. Tanned hide, known as Indian blood leather"
a. Lacquered or varnished
6. Not lacquered or vanished
+
ad val.
50%
100 kins
1,20
4.00
**
2.10
37
od val.
10%
free
100 kins
13.30
7.60
22.40
17.00
..
2. Of sheep and goat
-
22.40
---
3. Of chamois
55.00
4. Of alligator
98,20
*
5. Roller leather
69.20
6. Waste
8.40
-
7. All other
ad val.
20%
69
Hair, animal (excluding wool, goat's hair and camel's hair)
1. Bristles, pig or hog
100 kins
free
2. Of badger
33.50,
F
3. Of horse
5.85
*
4. All other
ad val.
10%
70
Feathers, quills and down.....
50%
+
H
71
Bones, animal
free
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
72
Tusks or ivory, animal:
1. Of elephant
2.
*
+
waste
3. Of walrus or seahorse
4. All other
73
Horns, animal:
+
1. Of bull, ox, cow and buffalo
2. Of deer
3. Of rhinoceros
4. All other
Baar
Hoofs, animal
75
Sinews, animal
76
Shells of shellfish
77
Tortoise-shells:
259
Rates
Unit.
of Duty,
Yen.
100 kins
45.20
9,00
20.40
...
ad val.
20%
100 kins
2.00
4.10
14.80
ad val.
20%
100 kins
0.70
nd val.
10%
free
100 kins
150.00
7.30
+1
20.00
ad val.
40%
**
60%
100 kins
103.00
6.50
!!
ad val.
20%
1. Shells and marginal scales known as "Claws '
2. Wasto
3. All other
228
78
Corals
79
Pearls
80
Sponges;
1. Prepared
2. Unprepared
21
All other skins, hairs, bones, horns, teeth, tusks, shells, &c.
(excluding wool, goat's hair and camel's hair)
GROUP VII-Drugs, Chemicals, Medicines and Medical
Preparations.
87
89
90
Nard or Spikenard
92
Semen cyna or wormseeds
93
Senega roots
+
94
Ergot of rye
96
97
98
99
100
101
85
28
82
83
Hops Liquorice
84 Saffron
86
5888688288588
Ipecacuanha roots
Ginseng-
1. Not exceeding 30 roots per kin 2. All other
Cassia and cinnamon bark...
Cinchona bark
Gentian roots...
Rhubarb...
Musk
Artificial musk
Cloves
Agalwood or aloeswood
Sandal wood
Rosin
Catechu and gambier
+4
+
..
102
Galls
103
Gum arabic
104
+
tragacanth
105
shellac ...
106
Glue...
107
Gelatine.
108
Isinglass
109
Dextrine
110
Phosphorus, yellow and red or amorphous
111
Acid, borie
112
33
acetic
113
tartaric
+
100 kins
28.90
2.36
11
1 kin
1,26
100 kins
77.10
kin
3.60
0.70
J
100 kins
3.50
6.50
2.70
3.50
2.90
J
6.90
22.50
18.10
+
1 kin
150 00
16.50
++
100 kns
7.20
62.70
יז
1.00
0.60
2.00
++
3.75
++
+
2.90
EJ
15.20
++
17.90
-
2.58
16.70
ad val.
20%
15%
free
100 kins
2.90
5.60
JA
13.10
**
260
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
Unit.
Rates
of Duty.
You,
114
115
>J
116
22
117
37
118
J
119
120
121
JJ
122
123
Acid, salicylic carbolic
citric
pyrogallic
tannic
Soda, caustic
carbonate of (soda ash) bicarbonate of
Soda, nitrate of (Chili saltpetre or cubic nitre)
1. Crude
2. Refined
Soda, horate of (horax)
:
100 kins
11,80
**
6.10
13.00
ני
J+
134.00
P
14.20
0.65
17
0.35
7:
0.52
33
--
free
að val.
20%
100 kins
1.32
124
J
salicylate of
12.70
**
125
Potash, nitrate of (saltpetre)
1.88.
120
chlorate of, and cyanide of, and soda, cyanide of
free
127
bichromate of...
100 kins
2.53.
128
bromide of
18.80
IŲ
129
Magnesia, carbonate of
2.73
2
130
Alum
0.44
**
131
Bismuth, subnitrate of
86.90
+3
132
133
*J
Ammonia, chloride of
1. Crude
2.28
sulphate of-
:
free
2. Refined
od val.
20%
134
Ammonia, carbonate of
100 kins
3.80
+
135
Formaline
6.90
1
H
136
Wood spirit or methyl alcohol
3.31
137
Alcohol, denatured
1 litre
0.66
138
Glycerine
100 kins
6.50
139
Chloroform
22.00
140
141
Saccharin and other similar sweet substances Camphor, Borneo and blumea or ngai
1 kin
60.00
3.00
+
142
Antifebrine
100 kins
9.50
143
Antipyrine
1 kin
0,80
144
Santonine
3.07
145
146
147
148
149
150
Guaiacol, carbonate of...
151
Quinine, hydrochlorate of, and sulphate of Morphine, hydrochlorate of, and sulphate of... Cocaine, hydrochlorate of, and sulphate of Cinchonine, hydrochlorate of, and sulphate of Creosote, carbonate of...
Aniline salt or aniline, hydrochlorate of...
2.03
8.90
35
25.00
H
100 kins
38.50
52.40
17
98,60
3.55
152
Insect powder
15.80
J+
153
Alcoholic medicinal preparations (excluding tincture cf
opium)
1 litre
0.65
154
Plasters
ad val.
30%
155
Lints and bandages
30%
156
Gelatine capsules and wafers
20%
157
All other drugs, chemicals and medicines
20%
די
158
30%
E
159
Pills, powders, ointments and other medicinal preparations
GROUP VIII-Oils, Fats and Waves.
Volatile or essential oils, vegetable:
1. Of cassia and cinnamon
2. Of citronella...
3. Of lavender and hergamot...
4. Of turpentine:
A. In caus or barrels
B. In other receptacles
5. All other...
TT
-
++
100 kins
45.00 32.30 120.00
10 Am. gals. ad val.
2.48 20% 30%
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
261
Articles,
Unit
No.
Rates of Duty.
Yen.
160
161
162
163
Oil, linseed:
1. In cans or barrels 2. In other receptacles Oil, castor:
1. In cans, barrels or jars 2. In other receptacles Oil, olive:
1. In cans or barrels
2. in other receptacles
Oil, palm:
100 kins
1.000
ad val.
20%
100 kins
2.00
ad val.
20%
100 kins
4.10
ad val.
30%
100 kins
1.30
164
+2
arachis or groundont
3,90
185
cotton seed
H
8.30
"
166
167
Cocoa butter (obtained from Theobroma Cacao)
Oil, cod-liver ...
ad vol.
20
30%
168
fish and whale
30%
**
169
Fats, animal:
1. Lard
100 kins
5.80
2. All other
1.3-1
170
Stearin
2.10
171
Olein
2.00
172
Mineral oils (excluding crude oil):
1. Light oils (specific gravity less than 0.730 at 15 C.)... 2. Illuminating oils (specific gravity not exceeding 0.875
at 15 (.)
ad val.
20
10 Am. gals.
090
173
3. Heavy oils (specific gravity exceeding f.875 at 15 C.) Vaseline
100 kins
1.23
22.95
174
Paraffin wax:
1. Melting point below 50 n.
free
2. All other
100 kins
180
176
Candles
57
176
All other oils, fats and waxes
ad val.
20%
177
178
179
180
181
GROUP IX-Dyes, Pigments and Paints.
Indigo, natural :
1. "Dry.
++
2. Liquid or paste Artificial indigo:
1. Dry
2. Liquid or paste Indigo carmine
Mangrove bark
Safflower:
1. In cake
2. All other
Turmeric
Logwood extract
182
183
184
Aniline dyes
185
Alizarine dyes:
1. Dry...
י!
2. Liquid or paste
Cobalt, oxide of
Gold, silver and platinum, liquid Prussian blue
Ultramarine blue...
186
187
188
189
190
Lead pigments
191
Zinc white
192
193
Paints
194
195
Vermillion and cinnabar
Lacquer (juice of Rhus Vernicifera).
Varnish
100 kins ad val.
65.81
30%
100 kins
$3.40
od val.
30%
209
100 kins
(1,20
L+
$.50
3,20
H
---
T
D
8,30
12,30
27,80
"
9.511
**
+
+
$5,00
1 kin
15.00
100 kins
10.00
.
1.80
+
2,00
•
T
28:30
4.10
++
6.80 13.00
262
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
No.
Articles.
Unit.
Rates of Duty.
Yen.
196
Wood tar and coal tar...
197
Fitch
198
Asphaltum
199
Shoe polish
200
100 kins
1.10
..
0.45
+1
+
Including receptacles
að vat.
15%
100 kins
8.30
HH
201
|
Pencils (excluding those in metallic case );
1. Cased in wood
2. All other
Inks:
J
1. For copying or writing
2. For printing:
4. Liquid or paste:
a. For lithograph
b. Others
B. Solid
ייי
+
1 gross
0.50
ad val.
30%
Including receptacles
100 kins
10.00
100 kins
15.00
2.50
ad val.
15%
3. All other
זיי
202
Solid inks, black or red, Chinese
203
204
205
Patent dryers...
206
Copper paint
201
All other dyes and pigments
208
All other paints
t
30%
30
13
Artist's colours and artist's paints
Anti-fouling composition, anti-corrosive paint and the
similar ship's bottom paints
30
T
100 kins
6.40
3.00
4.
5.90
+
ad val.
15%
30%
---
GROUP X.-Yarns, Threads, Twines, Cordages and
Materials Thereof.
209
Cotton, in the seed and ginned
210
Waste and old cotton
211
Cotton yarns :
1. Gassed, mercerized and the like
2. All other
212
Cotton threads
213
Waste cotton yarns
214
215
Linen yarns
216
threads
217
Flax, heup, china grass, ramie and other vegetable fibres...
Hemp, china grass, ramie or jute yarns
218
219
Wool, goat's hair and camel's hair
220
Woollen yarns:
1. Fit only for weaving
230
!
231
232
221
222
223
2. All other
Cocoons
Curlies, knubs and other waste silk Silk, floss
224
>
raw, dupion and thrown
225
wild...
>>
226
227
228
220
yarns, spun
threads
Artificial silk
All other yarns and threads:
1. Of silk in part
2. All other
free
free
100 kins
21.50
12.00
Including spools
100 kins
29.40
free
+
free
+
100 kins
18.50
-12.20
ad val.
+11
20%
*
30%
free
100 kins
21/0
26.00
free
free
1
ad val. 100 king
15%
164.00
31.00
+
ן.
ad val.
30
30
J
30
20%
82 888
gazeze zeze
Small ropes or cords (not exceeding 5 m. m, in diameter)
and twines:
1. Of cotton
2. All other
100 kins
+
-
12.90 5.90
6.25
171
ad val.
10%
Cordages or ropes (exceeding 5 m. m. in diameter)
Old cords twines, cordages and ropes
:
threads
:
+
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
Rates
263
Unit.
of Duty,
GROUP XI--Textile Fabrics and Manufactures thereof.
Yen.
233
234
22
J
235
236
237
238
239
J
240
35
241
212
J7
243
J+
24-4
JT
245
216
247
Shirtings and sheetings, gray
10 sq. yd.
0,31
white...
0,41
}
+
ducks
victoria-lawis...
T-cloths...
twilled
dyed and turkey and cambrics
Putton drills...
sating and cotton italians
prints
Hannels
velvets and plush
mosquito mettings...
lace curtainings
tissues, pure, not otherwise provided for
248 Linen damasks
0.37
JT
0.39
0.43
0.63
1.56
"J
0.76
0,49
0,73
1+
1,30
JT
0.2L
0.41
ad val.
30%
ל
309%
10 sq. yd.
2.33
Hemp cloth
249
"
tissues, not otherwise provided for
230
251
China grass and ramie cloths
252
Canvas
253
Elastic canvas
254
Gunny cloth
255
256
ad val.
30%
[+]
30%
30%
10 sq, yd.
1, 48
0.37
+14
ad val.
10%
10 u, yl.
0.77
257
255
Bamboo cloth or Chikufu and pineapple cloth
Woollen cloths and serges:
1. Of wool...
F
A. Not exceeding 250 grammes per square yard B. Others
2. Of wool and cotton:
A. Not exceeding 40 grammes per square yard
B. Others
Alpacas, crleans and lustres
Mousseline de laine including wool and cotton mixture):
1. Gray
2. All other
1,60
21.
3.20
1,60-
1,60
1,46
0.87
259
Italian cloth
4
260
Flannels:
ARA
1.10
1,22
201
262
263
204
Roller cloths...
265
1. Of wool...
2. Of wool and cotton
Buntings
Woollen damasks...
Velvets and plush (of wool or of wool and cotton)
Woollen feltings
104
1.43
0.98
2,50
2,40
4,20
1.34
J
266
1
tissues, pure, not otherwise provided for
ad val.
30%
267
Silk crapes
10 sq, yd,
6.76
268
1.55
pongees
+
269
}}
satins, figured
5,61
270
J
unfigured...
9,50
271
Fatins of silk and cotton
10 sq. yd.
8.04
272
273
274
275
276
Velvets and plush (of silk, wholly or partly)
Silk tissues, pure, not otherwise provided for Mixed tissues, not otherwise provided for:
1. Of silk in part
2. All other
Embroidered tissues
Handkerchief:
1. In piece:
4. Of cotton.
H
B. Of silk, wholly or partly C. Other
4.90
H
ad val.
40%
40%
H
30%
4
++
40%
10 sq. yd.
0,37
ad ral.
42%
30%
261
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
2. Single:
4. Of cotton...
B. Of flax
++1
Of cotton and flax...
C.
D.
E.
Of silk, wholly or partly Others
TH
277
Towels
278
Blankets and blanketing:
1. Of wool or of wool and cotton...
2
All other
279
Carpets and carpetings:
1. Of hemp or jute.
2.
Brussels
3.
Patent tapestry
Velvet
5.
Felt
6. All other
280
Travelling rugs;
1.
2 All other
281
Table cloths:
Of silk, wholly or partly
1. Of silk, wholly or partly
All other
2.
Curtains:
282
1. Of silk, wholly or partly 2 All other
283
Mosquito nets
281
Hammocks
285
Fishing nets
286
Elastic webbings, for boots and shoes:
1. Of silk in part
2. All other
287
Bookbinder's cloth
288
Leather or oil cloths
269
200
Oil cloths and linolium for floors
Elastic braids and cords
291
Insulating tapes
+
+
292
Lamp wicks
293
Gunny bags
·
294
Old gunny bags
295
Rags...
296
All other tissues
297
זוז
Rates
Unit.
of Duty.
Yen.
1 doz.
0.22
0.88
0.46
M
ad val.
50%
40%
*
40%
100 kins
32,80
ad val.
30%
10 sq. yds.
1.60
7.30
3.70
ad val.
40%
10 sq. yds.
1.30
ad val.
40%
20
50%
**
40%
* R
50%
40%
25
50%
++
40%
"
40% 404
25
10 sq. yds.
15 S0
8.87
"
0.42
1.07
T
1.83
TO
ad val.
30%
100 kins
17.90
ad val.
30%
100 pcs.
1.39
free
free
nd val.
30%
301
2.
Of silk, wholly or partly
All other manufactures of tissues, not otherwise provided
for:
1. Of silk, wholly or partly
2. All other
GROUP XII-Clothings and Accessories.
Waterproof coats
298 299
Shirts, collars and cuffs
300
Under shirts and drawers:
1.
Of cotton, knit
2. Of wool, knit
3. Of wool and cotton, kuit
4. All other
Gloves:
1. Of leather
+
T
50
40
11
2020
}}
40% 40%
1 doz.
4.00
7.00
4.20
ad val.
40%
1 doz.
4.40
3.00
3. All other
1.40
302
Stockings and socks:
1. Of silk, wholly or partly 2. All other
1 kin
2.50
0.80
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
265
Rates
Articles.
Unit.
No.
of Duty.
Yen.
308
Shawls, comforters and mufflers:
1. Of silk, feather or fur, wholly or partly
ad val.
50
2. All other
40
+
304
Neckties:
1. Of silk, wholly or partly
1 kin
5.50
2. All other
2.00
11
305
+
Braces or suspenders:
1. Of silk, wholly or partly
að val.
50%
306
307
308
309
.310
2. All other
Arm-suspenders, stocking suspenders and the like Hats, caps, bonnets and hoods
Boots, shoes, slippers, sandals, clogs and the like Buttons (excluding ornamental buttons):
1. Covered...
2. Of metal
+
3. Of porcelain or glass
4. Of ivory nuts (including imitation) 5. All other
Buckles, books, eyes and the like:
1. Buckles
1 doz.
1.20
+++
ad val.
10%
++
10%
ht
-10%
including inner packings
100 kins
$7.50
34.00
10.70
52,40
11
ad ral.
35%
100 kins
13.60
+
2. Hooks
3. Shoe eyelets
4. All other
311
23.10
+
36.20
+
ad val.
35%
·
60%
H
50%
312
313
314
Jewelry:
1. Of precious metals or precious stones, wholly or partly 2. All other
Trimmings (ribbons, tapes, braids, cords, laces, fringes, tassels, knots, stars, metallic threads and braids, and the like):
I. Of gold, silver or silk, wholly or partly..
2. All other
All other clothings and accessories:
1. Of silk, feather of fur, or of silk, fur, gold or silver in
part, or embroidered
2. All other
+
GROUP XIII. Papers, Paper Manufactures, Books
Paper, printing:
and Pictures.
1. Weighing not more than 45 lbs por 500 sheets and measuring not less than 1086 sq. inches per sheet
50% 40%
*
50% 40%
100 kins
1.00
2. All other
315
Paper, writing
316
>
drawing
317
**
blotting
318
filtering
319
>>
fancy
320
**
321
*
322
*
323
324
11
325
bookbinder's
packing (including match paper). cigarette
wall
pasteboard or cardboard
uhinese
326
J+
imitation Japanese...
327
H
imitation parchment
328
1.95
+
*
2.42
+
3.08
...
77
2.15
יז
14
+
**
19.70
3.45
3.65
33
1.26
4-4
12,30
5.06
2.40
5.60
4.30
**
4.15
all other
320 Books and forms, blank
330
331
332
Note paper (with envelopes in boxes) including boxes Albums
Photographic papers, albuminized and sensitized :
1. Albuminized..
2. Bromide and platinum
3. All other
+
+++
ad val.
+
30%
J
30%
100 kins
15.80
at vek.
40%
including inner packings
100 kins
65.90
112,00
22
$9.40
266
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles,
Unit.
Rates of Duty.
Playing cards...
Photographs, caligraphies and pictures...
333
Labels
331
335
336
337 338
339
340
341
342
343
Printed matters and pictures for advertisement
Illustrated postal cards, Christmas cards and the like Printed books and pamphlets, copy books, drawing books with designs, music books, newspapers, magazines and other periodicals
Plans, architectural and engineering
Geographical atlases and maps, charts and scientific
diagrams...
T
וי.
Paper money, bank notes, coupons, share certificates and
other negotiable papers
Waste paper
All other paper manufactures, not otherwise provided for...
Ten.
100 kins
30.70
nd val.
60
50% free
50%
free
**
H
30%
GROUP XIV.-Ores and Minerals.
344
345
Metallic ores ...
1. Unworked
tree
Precious stones:
ad ral.
40%
2. Worked, not otherwise provided for
+
50%
346
Stones :
1. Unworked
10%
2. Worked, not otherwise provided for
30%
347
Amber:
1. Unworked
40%
2. Worked, not otherwise provided for
50%
3-4k
Plumbago or black-lead
349
Asbestos ...
I
350
Mica:
1. Sheets
free
10%
100 kins
25.00
ad val.
10%
100 kins
0.12
0.27
free
2. All other
351
Gpysum
352
Plaster of Paris
353
Phosphorite
354
Kainite, kiesetite, carnallite and other similar salts
H
355
Cryolite
356
Clay...
357
oal
358
Cokes
359
Brick coal or briquettes
360
Chalk and whiting
301
Emery sands...
362
Grindstones or whetstones...
3633
All other raw mineral materials
1 Eng, ton
2.18
and val.
10%
100 kins
0.54
free
ad val.
15%
10%
GROUP XV-Metals,
364
Platinum:
1. Blocks, ingots and slabs
od rat.
74%
2. Wire, plates and sheets
1 kin
150.00
365
Gold bullion
free
366
Silver bullion...
free
367
Iron and steel:
1. Pigs, ingots, slabs and blooms:
A. Pigs ...
B. Others
2. Bars and rods, exceeding
3. Bars and rods, not exceeding
wire
4. Galvanized wire
5. Hoop and band
6. Ribbons .
100 kins
0.10
0.60
inch in diameter
ad vol.
30%
inch in diameter and
100 kins
2.00-
L
1.80
1
0.72
.
:
að val.
10%
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
267
Rates
Unit.
No.
of Duty.
Yen.
7. Faragon wire.......
8. Wire rope :
A. Galvanized
B. Others
9. Tinned plates and sheets:
1. Plain
B. Others
10. Plates and Sheets:
4. Galvanized
B. Others
11. T. angle and the like
100 kins
:
:
4.05
4.50
6.00
1,34
++
3.60
1
2.60
ud val.
+
30%
100 kins
1.10
12. Rails
13. Fish plates for rails
14. Pipes and tubes
368
Spiegeleisen
369
Copper:
1. Pigs, ingots and slabs...
2. Bars and rods
1.00
15
.1.20
ور
od val.
30%
15. Scrap (and old fit only for remanufacturing)
100 kins
0.17
0.16
ad vol. 100 kins
7%
10 20
870
Lead:
371
.872
.373
.374
376
Nickel:
Aluminium:
376
377
3. Wire
4. Plates and sheets...
5. Pipes and tubes
6. Olà (fit only for remanufacturing)
1. Pigs, ingots and slabs...
2. Wire, plates and sheets
3. Tea lead...
4. Tubes
5 Old (fit only for remanufacturing)
Tin:
1. Blocks, ingots and slabs
2. Plates and sheets...
3. Tubes
Zinc or spelter:
1. Blocks, ingots and slabs
2. Plates and sheets:
A. Nickeled ...
B. Others:
a. Sheet No. 2
b. Others...
3. Old (fit only for remanufacturing)
1. Grains, cubes, blocks and ingots
2. Bars, rods, wire, plates, sheets and tubes Mercury or quicksilver...
1. Blocks, ingots and slabs
2. Bars, wire, plates, sheets and tubes...
Antimony
Brass and yellow metal:
1. Bars and rods
11.20
**
יזי
11.00
+
>J
13.00
**
1.66
20
0.38
1.60
free
1.90
++
ek val.
73%
+
HP
100 kins
ed val.
3.7+
20%
11
20%
:
100 kins
0.72
3.92
÷
free
+
2,27
39
0.67
1,65
ad val.
20%
100 kins
7,20
+
--
3.90 18.60
ad val.
74%
100 kins
6.70
2. Wire, plates and sheets
7.40
3. Pipes and tubes
9.40
HI
4. Old (fit only for remanufacturing)
2.06
378
German silver (bars, rods, wire, plates and sheets)
14.50
**
379
Solder
ad val.
71%
380
381
forms and qualities:
Babitts metal and other anti-friction metals...
1. Pigs, blocks, ingots, and slabs
3. Bars, rods, ribbons, bands, wires, plates, sheets, pipes, tubes, angles and the like (excluding those for trim- ming)
3. Scrap and old (fit only for remanufacturing)
100 kins
3,50
All other metals and forementioned metals of non-specified)
ad val.
71%
*
20 71%
+1
**
265
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
Unit.
Rates
of Duty.
GROUP XVI-Metal Manufactures.
Yen.
382
Coins:
1. Home currencies and foreign gold and silver coins 2. All other
free
+
að vat.
10%
383
384
385 386
Metallic foils and powders :
1. Tin foil
2. Bronze powder
3. All other
T
Capsules for bottles
Crown-corks
Sewing needles, knitting needles and pius:
1. Needles, hand sewing
100 kins
19.00
19.80
11
ad val.
25%
1000 pcs.
0.63
1 gross
0.10
I kin
0.45
2.
++
for sewing machines
3.90
-
-
ad val.
3. All other
30%
387
Pen nibs:
1. Of gold
G0%
-
A
1 gross
0.16
388
2. All other
Nails, rivets, screws, bolts, nuts and the like:
1. Nails (of iron or copper):
A. Of iron:
a. Galvanized
b. Others...
B. Of copper
2. Screws (of iron and brass)
A. Of iron
B. Of brass
3. Bolts, nuts and washers (of iron)
4. Rivets (of iron)
+
5. Dog-spikes (of iron)
6. Boots-protectors (of iron)
Materials for building and bridge construction, posts for
electric wires and the like materials
7. All other
389
390
Submarine and underground cables and other insulated
electric wire and cables
391
Metallic fittings for doors and furnitures:
1. Door locks (of iron and brass):
A. Of iron
B. Of brass
2. Door hinges (of iron and brass)
A. Of iron
B. Of brass
3. All other
Mechanic's tools and agricultural implements and parts
392
thereof:
1. Anvils
2. Hammers
3. Wrenches
4. Vices
5. Shovels and scoops, with handles
6. All other
Cutlery (excluding those of gold or silver, gilt or silvered,
and otherwise provided forì
393
394
Anchors and anchor chains
395
Iron chains
396
Watch chains:
1. Of gold or platinum.
ITI
111
2. Gilt,..
All other
397
Stoves
398
399
Enamelled iron wares
Coffee-mills and meat-choppers...
100 kins
4.20
1.60
13.50
ad val.
20%
100 kins
20.00
ad val.
30%
100 kins
2.00
1.80
5.40
J
ad val.
30%
25%
20%
100 kins
9.12
36.50
7.65
25.60
ad val.
30%
100kins
2.35
4.65
10.90
4.00
57
3.27
ad val.
20%
TJ
40%
100 kins
1.68
2.03
J
ad val.
60%
1 kin
14.30
ad vat.
50%
ד
30%
100 kins
9.48
ad val.
30%
No.
400
Cocks and valves:
1. Of iron
2. Of brass
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles,
3. All other
401
402
408
401
405
408
Alarm-bells for vehicles aud call-bells
Gold ware, not otherwise provided for
Silver wares and gilt or silverod wares, not otherwise
provided for
Copper and brass manufactures, not otherwise provided for Aluminium manufactures, not otherwise provided for
All other metal manufactures, not otherwise provided for
GROUP XVII, -Earthenware. Porcelain, Glass and Glass
Manufactures.
269
Unit.
Bates of Duty.
Yen.
100 kins
9,55
26.70
23
ad val.
30%
100 kins
46.00
ad val.
60%
H
50%
100 kins
30.80
60.00
að val.
30%
407
409
Bricks and tiles:
1. Fire-bricks
++
2. Tiles:
4. Enamelled
B. Others
:
A
412
413
Watch glass...
#14
3. All other
Earthenware and porcelain, not otherwise provided for Glass or vitrifications in lumps
400
410 411
rods and tubes
**
77
+
plates and sheets:
1. Uncoloured or unstained (flat surface):
A. Not exceeding 4 m. m, in thickness:
a. Not exceeding 10 sq. ft. in surface b. Others
+
+
+
B. Exceeding 4 m, m, in thickness:
a. Not exceeding 1 sq. ft. in surface b. Others
2, Silvered:
4. Not exceeding 1 sq. ft. in surface B. Others
3. Coloured, stained or ground:
4. Not exceeding 10 sq. ft. in surface
B. Others
4. All other
Side-light glass and skylight glass...
+
Photographic dry-platos:
A
+
::
100 kins
0.38
2.93
*
1,50
ad val.
20%
40%
+3
L+
20%
20%
100 sq. ft.
0.95
1.18
41
1.52
++
3.90
13.80
D
15.80
|
3.25
++
3.71
23
ad val.
30%
30%
-
30%
**
1. Undeveloped
Including inner packings
100 kins
18.20
2. Developed
ad val.
40%
415
+
Looking glasses or mirrors
40%
J
*
416
417
Lenses and other optical glasses, without frames or handles Glass collet and powdered glass
30%
+
free
$19
ad val.
-10%
410
420
All other glass manufactures, not otherwise provided for...
GROUP XVIII-Vehicles, Vessels, Scientific Instruments,. ¦
Clocks, Watches and Machinery.
Locomotives and locomotive tenders
T
Parts of locomotives and locomotive tenders:
1. Wheels and axles
2. Tyres
3. All other
Railway passenger cars and freight wagons...
ad val,
20
100 kins
4.70
1,54
---
ad val.
20%
*
20%
270
Xo.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
Unit.
Rates
of duty.
Yen.
122
Parts of railway passenger cars and freight wagons:
1. Wheels aud axles
100 kins
1,51
2. Tyres
+
1.32
יזי
3. Buffers
H
2.33
4. Springs
2.00
I
421
425
426
-423
5. All other
Electric, horse and other tramway cars and parts thereof... Carriages, perambulators, automobiles, and parts thereof... Bicycles and tricycles...
Parts of bicycles and tricycles:
1. Tyres
2. All other
od vol.
20%
**
20%
E
50%
10%
102 kius
95.60
ad val.
10%
£39
438
1. Movements
2. Springs
3. Hair springs...
4. All other
Watches:
1. Of gold or platinum cases...
2. All other
Parts of Watches:
1. Cases:
A. Of gold or platinum
B. Others
2. Springs
3. Hair springs
4. Dials
127
Carts and drays
428
Dredging machines and parts thereof
429
430
131
Spectacles or eyeglasses
132
Microscopes and parts thereof.
133
Binoculars
134
Telescopes
135
436
137
Parts of clocks, standing and hanging:
20%
J3
+
PJ
Steam and sailing vessels and boats
Instruments, physical, chemical, surgical, drawing, survey-
ing and other scientifical
37
10%
20%
23
40%
20%
-10%
20%
Compasses and chronometers, mariners' and parts thereof...
Clocks, standing and hanging.
10%
-10%
100 kins
40.10
3.15
að val.
10%
30%
++
1:
50%
*
-10%
+
50%
40%
33
100 pcs.
1.10
0.80
4.10
++
154
455
456
5. All other
440
I
441
422
4413
414
Magic lanterns and parts thereof
145
Photographic instruments and parts thereof
146
Phonographic instruments and parts thereof
447
Sewing machines:
1. Hand moving
2. Foot moving
448
Parts of sewing machines...
449
Diving apparatus and parts thereof
450
451
452
453
Typewriters
Telegraphic and telephonic instruments and parts thereof...
Boilers
Steam engines, gas engines, petroleum engines, electric engines and other motive power machines, and parts thereof
J
Machine tools and wood working machinery, and parts
thereof
+
Spinning and weaving machinery, and parts thereof... All other machinery and parts thereof
ad val.
10%
Balances, steelyards and measuring scales
Thermometers and barometers...
Water-meters, gas-meters, pressure-gauges, amperemeters,
voltmeters and other similar gauges or ineters
Musical instruments and parts and accessories thereof
20%
20%
20%
40%
---
50%
50%
H
50%
100 kins
11.10
100 kins
9.25
að val.
20%
20%
A
20%
30
20%
F
!
15%
15%
**
15
15%
وار
471
440
#$$$$86
400
481
芭蓉慈东药
482
100
容器
464
No
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
Rates
271
Unit.
of Duty.
Yen,
free
free
free
100 kins
0.42
1.32
++
0.94
*A
ad val.
20%
100 kins
1.66
8.92
ad val.
༈་
10%
Copra
GROUP XIX.-Miscellaneous Articles.
Funori (Gloiopeltis)
Selhasai (Gelidium Corneum)
T'an-bark...
Rattans:
1. Split
2. All other
Bamboos...
Cork:
1. Bark
2. Stoppers...
3. All other
Wood:
+
++
Th
1. Kwarin (Cydonia Sinensis), Tagayasan or ironwood, Tsuge or boxwood, red or rose wood, and santalum and ebony wood...
2. Lignum vitæ...
3. Tenk
4. Oregon pine, fir and cedar :
A. Board
+++
B. Timber, round, squared or sided
5. Kiri (Paulownia Tomentosa)
6. All other
Fire-wood
Charcoal ...
animal
Carbon rods for electric light
Pulp for paper manufacture
Spalteries
Straw braids or plaits:
++
+1+
1. Not exceeding 4 inch in breadth
100 kins
0.63
0.60
100 cub. ft.
11.80
+
100super. ft.j
0.60
100 cub. ft.
4,56
100 kins
0.52
ad val.
15%
100 kins
0.05
ad val.
15%
100 kins
0.79
6.96
025
ad val.
20%
100 kins
20.30
7.76
·
3.85
19.70
30.50
free
ad val.
30%
10 sq. yds.
1.61
ad val.
30%
100 kins
0.66
2.
+
25
3. All other...
きまな
Hat bodies, felt
Sweat bands or hat leather (including imitation)
Mats and mattings:
1. Packing
2. Of rnsh
3. Of coir
4. All other
470
Oakum
476
Carred felt, tarred paper, malthoid and other similar roofing
and sheathing materials:
1. Tarred felt
++
2. All other
Yeast
Malt...
Fodders:
1. Hay...
2. All other
Fishing guts
Sealing wax
Putty
Roller composition
India rubber or caoutchouc:
1. Crude or raw...
2. Plates and sheets:
4. Soft:
σ.
b. Others
B. Hard
100 king
2.10
ad val.
20%
15%
100 kins
kins
2,00
0.16
ad val.
5%
100 kins
108.00
ad val.
20%
100 kins
0.97
9.19
+
free
Not exceeding 1 m. m. in thickness
100 king
87.80
35.90
37.50
272
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
Unit.
Rates
of Duty.
Yen.
485
3. Rods
Tubes:
A. Soft B. Hard
5. All other
Guttapercha:
100 kins
31.60
J
A
64.20
·
63.20
od val.
20%
1. Crude or raw...
2. Plates and sheets...
free
100 kins
39.40
486
provided for:
1. Combs
2. Teats
3. All other
487
Dental rubber
488
India rubber solution
480
490
491
492
1. Combs
2. All other
493
Brushes and brooms
494
Emery cloth
495
Sand paper
496
Emery wheels
497
Crucibles...
493
Portland cement....
499
500
501
3. All other
Caoutchouc and guttapercha manufactures, not otherwise
að val.
20%
including inner packings
100 kins
161.00
100 kins
171.00
33
ad vol.
40%
209
31
0%
...including receptacles
100 kins
18.00
Waste or old caoutchouc (fit only for re-manufacturing) Hard fibres (rods, plates, sheets, tubes, &c.) Celluloid (bars, bands, rods, plates, sheets, tubes, &c.) Celluloid manufactures, not otherwise drovided for:
free
100 kins
10.90
25.60
+
including inner packings
100 kins
67.50
að val.
40%
+
+
40%
100 kins
2,67
1.86
35
6.16
ad val.
20%
100 kins
0.33
C
4. All other
302
503
Asbestos boards or sheets
Packings for cngines
Beltings and hoses for machinery:
1. Of leather
2. Of caoutchoue
3. Of canvas
Saddles, bridles and harness
Trunks, portmanteaux, satchels, kuapsacks and travelling
2.05
7.51
J
25.30
**
12.50
13.50
+
að val.
15%
14
40%
40
or courier bags
+
504
Leather manufactures, not otherwise provided for
40
33
505
Picture frames and mouldings...
50%
506
Wood manufactures, not otherwise provided for...
40%
507
508
Cane and rattan manufactures, not otherwise provided for
Lamps, lanterns and parts thereof:
40%
1. Incandescent electric lamps:
4. Not exceeding 32 candle power...
100 pcs.
5.80
10.20
B. Others
*
5.10
2. Asbestos mantles
**
3. All other
ad val.
30%
+
500
Walking sticks, whips and umbrella or parasol sticks:
1. With fittings, of gold or silver and gilt or silvered 2. All other
50%
40%
510
Umbrellas and parasols:
1. Of silk, wholly or partly
50%
53
2. All other
40%
511
50%
Handles of umbrellas, parasols, stocks or whips:
1. Of gold or silver and gilt or silvered
2. All other
Photographic films:
512
1. Undeveloped
513
514
515
2. Developed
Artificial flowers
Statues, human and animal (excluding those of gold)
Ivory manufactures, not otherwise provided for
+
**
ول
J
40%
40
401
95888
50
50
50%
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
278
Articles.
Unit.
No.
Rates of Duty.
Ten.
516
517
518
Tortoise-shell manufactures, not otherwise provided for Coral manufactures, not otherwise provided for Imitation precious stones and pearls
ad val.
50%
50
J
4
50%
519
Toilet or dressing cases
ני!
50%
520
Toilet or perfumed waters and oils, dentifrices and all other
cosmétics and perfumery
60%
521
Soaps:
1. Toilet
100 kins
24.70
2. Washing:
A. Marseille soap
3.92
B. Others
3.54
522
3. All other
Articles for billiards, tennis, cricket, chess and other games
and accessories thereof
ad val.
30%
50%
523
Articles for gymnastics
+
30%
524
Toys...
לו
50%
525
Tobacco, prepared or manufactured...
250%
526
Joss sticks
......including inner packings
100 kins
4.14
527
Matches
ad val.
40%
525
Fire works
100 kins
6.41
+
529
Explosives:
2. Dynamite
1. Gunpowder (excluding smokeless gunpowder)
+
6.30
5.90
+
3. Detonators
H
including inner packings,
30.30
4. Fuses
22.80
JT
5. All other
ad val.
25%
530
Cartridges and projectiles for fire-arius
+
*
40%
531
Sporting guns
40
532
Muskets, revolvers, cannon, bayonets, side-arms and other
arms...
*
40%
533
Models
free
534
Sign boards
free
535
530
Manures (bran, oil cake, dried fish unfit for food, bone dust, dried blood, bone ash, guano, superphosphate of lime, &c.) All other articles, raw, crude or unmanufactured All other articles, partly manufactured
free
10%
20%
538
All other articles, wholly manufactured:
1. Coarse
33
30%
2. Fine
40%
No.
CONVENTIONAL TARIFF.
Articles.
Unit.
Rates of Contract-
Duty.
Yen.
ing States.
GROUP IIL-Beverages and Comestibles.
'doz. 1 lb. tins and
propor-
30
Condensed milk
tionately
0.123
G.B.,G.
for tins
of other
weights.
Milk:
Desiccated..
Sterilized
do.
ad val.
0.123 5 per cent
0.
GROUP IV. Sugar, Confectioneries and
Sugar, refined :-
1.
Siveet meats.
-
No. 15 to No. 20 inclusive, Dutch standard in colour
B. Above No. 20 Dutch standard in colour..
GROUP V.-Alcoholic Liquors and Alcohol. I All sorts of still wines exclusively the produce
of natural fermenation of grapes-
1. Not exceeding 16 degrees of pure alcohol:
d. In cask of barrel
100 catties
0.748 0.827
G.B.,G.
11
11
hectolitre
1.242
F.
B. In case containing 24 bottles, not ex- ceeding litre each or 12 bottles, exceed- inglitre and not exceeding 1 litre each. per case ¦
0.760
2. Exceeding 16 degrees and not exceeding
24 degrees of pure alcohol:
4. In cask or barrel
hectolitre
7.925
B. In case containing 24 bottles, not ex- ceeding litre each, or 12 bottles, exceed-
ing 1⁄2 litre and not exceeding 1 litre each. per case
Note. Vermouth is classified as still wine and is subject to the tariff of the same in respect to the degrees of strength of alcohol.
Champagne and all other sorts of sparkling, wines, exclusively the produce of the natural fermentation of grapes :
In case containing 24 bottles, not exceed
inglitre each, or 12 bottles, exceeding
litre and not exceeding 1 litre each GROUP VI-Skins, Hair, Bones, Horns, Teeth, Tusks, Shells, de.'
Leather :-
1. Of bull, ox, cow and buffalo:
A.
Sole leather
.. 100 catties
B. Tanned hide, known as "Indian blood,
leather"
F
0.680
1.550
+
5.690
G.B.,G.
blood at ral. 10 percent
No
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
C. Others:
a. Lacquered or varnished
2. Of sheep and goat
Not lacquered or varnished
3. Of chamois
4. Of alligator
5. Roller leather
6. Waste
7. All other
GROUP VIL--Drugs, Chemicals, Medicines
and Medicinal Preparations.
Hops...
Amorphous phosphorus
Acid salicylic...
114
135
兰资
Potash, nitrate of (saltpetre)
Chlorate of potasli
135
Potash, bromide of
131
Bismuth, subnitrate of
145
Unit.
276
Rates of Contract- Duty.ling States.
Yen.
ad val.
10 per cent G.B..G.
17
**
**
T
**
10
י
11
71
11
catty
0.029 0.165
G.
12
ad val. 10 per cent 100 catties
0.490
G.B.G.
2.267
G.
11
catty
0.093
0.206
ad val.
8 per cent
1
10 per cent
*RAA
"
IT
8 per cent 10 per cent
*
1+
+
100 catties
0.544
#
**
0.544 2.146
F.
174
Quinine, hydrochlorate of and sulphate of Bromide (excluding bromide of potash, Quinine (excluding quinine, hydrochlor-
ate of and sulphate of)
Iodide of potasli
GROUP VIII-078, Fats and Waxes.
Oil, purattin
Parathin wax :-
1. Melting point below 50°C
2.
175
All other
Candles
J
ויד
.י.
GROUP IX.--Dyes, Pigments and Paints.
Indigo, natural :-
Artificial indigo :
-
11
Logwood extract
177
1. Dry
158
1. Dry
183
185
Alizarine dyes:--
1. Dry
2. Liquid or paste
193
Paints
Aniline dyes...
T
12.903
G, B..
ad val. 100 catties:
ad val.
12.953 10 per tent 2.150 10 per cent
G.
F.
G., F.
G.
E
100 catties
1.304
G.B.,G.
GROUP X.--Yarns, Threads, Twines, and
Materials thereof
Gassed, mercerized and the like
911
Cotton yarns :
1.
2. All other
215
Linen yarns
Yarns of hemp or jute for weaning pur-
poses. plain or dyed .....
+
Yarns of all other sorts (yarns of China)
grass or ramie
74
---
4.180 4.180
TJ
31
+1
6.527
*
71
ad val.
8 percent
G.
וי
10 percent G.B.,G.
276
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
No.
Articles.
220
Woollen yarns :-
Unit.
Rates of Contract-
Duty.
ing States.
Yen.
235
Turkey-red cambrics
237
T-cloths
238
Cotton drills
239
ducks
JJ
240
11
211
+
242
*
243
velvets and plushes
211
victoria lawns
31
245
*
246
+
lace curtainings
247
**
1. Fit only for weaving
2. All other
A
Yarns of all sorts, not specially provided
for in conventional tariff
GROUP XI-Textile Fabrics and Manu-
factures thereof.
Shirtings, gray
Sheetings, gray
Shirtings, white or bleached
Sheetings, white
Shirtings, twilled
Shirtings, dyed
100 catties 8.000
{
9.169
**
9.169
G., F. G. B. G.B.,G.
ad val.
10 per cent
+
sq yd. ad val.
sq. yd. ad val.
0.006 10 per cent 0.010
G.B.,G.,F.
גל
1
10 per cent
J
sq. yd.
0.011
**
0.013
D
0.012
**
0.009
33
+
0.016
"
*
0.053
"
satins and cotton italians
prints...
flannels
sq. yd.
0.017
0.012
ad val. sq. yd.
10 per cent
3
0.041
1)
0.006
"
**
ad val.
10 per cent
**
1
J]
mosquito nettings
tissues, pure, not otherwise pro-
vided for
brocades and figured shirtings.
248 249
Linen damasks
17
Offlax
tissues, not otherwise provided for.
canvas
Woollen cloth :---
4. Wholly of woollen or worsted yarn, or of woollen and worsted yarn, such as broad, narrow and army cloth, cas- simeres, tweeds and worsted coatings. B. In part of woollen or worsted yarn and in part of cotton yarn, such as pilot, president and union cloth
Serges
A. Where the warp is worsted and the
weft woollen
B. All other kinds
Alpacas
Orleans and lustres
+
11
sq. yd.
ad val.
0.017
10 per cent G.B.,G.
sq, yd.
að val.
0.047 10 per cent
11
57
sq. yd.
0.003
G.B.,G.,F.
++
0.039
J
ad val.
sq. yd.
0.056 10 per cent 0.075
41
11
"
að val.
10 per cent
1
Mousseline de laine:-
0.015
F.
4. Gray and white.
sq. yd.
0.018
G.
0.021
G. B.
B. All other kinds
11
0,021
G.B.,G.,F.
259
Italian cloth
0.029
260
261
262
Flannels
1. Of wool
2. Of wool and cotton
Buntings... Woollen damasks
+++
---
3
*
יד
{
0.044 0.030 0,044 0.031
ad val. 10 per cent
G., F.
G. B. G.B., G.,F.
JJ
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
277
No.
Articles.
Velvets and plushes (of wool or of wool
263
and cotton
261
Roller cloths
206
vided for
J
+++
Woollen tissues, pure, not otherwise pro-
Long ells...
Silk satins, figured
51
unfigured
Satins of silk and cotton
269
270
カウ
271
1. In piece :-
4.
Of cotton.
Blanketing
+
If cotton or wool predominates in weight
and whipped blankets in
plain weave...
---
Blanketing and whipped blankets GROUP XII-Clothing and Accessories. Hats, including also hats of felt
Imitation jewelry :-
1. Gilt, silvered, treated with aqua fortis, burnished, polished, varnished, tinn- ed, enamelled, oxidized or nickeled, garnished with vitrification, enamelled (cloisonné) or not, embellished with false pearls, corals both genuine and false, imitation precious stones
2. Garnished with mother of pearl, ivory, tortoise shell, gold and silver plated if the value of the garnitures or plating does not surpass the value of the principal composition
Note.-Jewelry most commonly used are finger rings, colliers, rings of all kinds, bracelets, earrings, medals, medallions, brooches, combs, ornamental hair pins, hat pins, scarf pins, trinkets, buckles, hooks, snuff boxes, buttons (common) buttons excepted), coulants, purses, handles and ferrules of sticks, para- pluies or umbrellas, sequins, pencil holders, portemines and generally all other small objects of adornment not mentioned herein.
GROUP XIII. Papers, Paper Manufactures, Books and Pictures.
Paper, printing:
1.
Weighing not more than 24 lbs. per ream of 500 sheets and measuring not
Unit.
ad val.
1
sq.yd.
ad val.
++
*
Rates of Contract-
Duty.
Yen.
ing States.
10 per cent G.B.,G., F.
11
"
15
0.036 10 per cent
**
M
15 per cent
91
F
G., F.
G. B.
10 per cent G.B.,G.,F.
sq. yd.
0.011
100 catties
7.458
B
G.B., G.
+1
7.458
F.
ad val.
10 per cent G.B.,G
ad val.
10 per cent
F.
less than 1,086 square inches per sheet. 100 catties {
2. All other kinds of printing paper
Paper, writing
315
319
事
drawing
317
"
318
1
310
blotting
filtering fancy
+++
+
..
多
ad val.
0.800 1.163 1,163 10 per cent
G. G. B. G.B.,G. G.
H
12
+1
+
:
**
R
278
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
320
321
71
322
11
323
J
324
325
Chinese
+
326
**
Paper, bookbinder's
+ H
packing (including match paper)... cigarette wall
pasteboard or cardboard
imitation Japanese
327 328
imitation parchment all other
Rates of Contract-
Unit.
Duty.
ing States.
Yen.
ad val, 10 per cent
G.
*
早少
**
A
77
T
**
++
17
↑
**
*
GROUP XV.-Metals.
Pig and ingot :--
4. Of iron and mild sterl
B. Of steel (other than mild steel)
---
Bar and rod, exceeding 1 inch in diameter:-
A. Of iron and mild steel
+
B. Of steel (other than mild steel) Wire and small rod not exceeding inch in
diameter:
A. Of iron and mild steel
B. Of steel (other than mild steel) ... Telegraph or galvanized wire :-
4. Of iron and mild steel
+++
B. Of steel (other than mild steel)...
Tinned plates
4. Of iron and mild steel:
a. Ordinary
b. Crystallized...
B. Of steel (other than mild steel)...
Plates and sheets:--
4. Of iron and mild steel...
7. Of steel (other than mild steel)...
Sheets, galvanized, both plain and eor
rugated ;-
4. Of iron and mild steel
B. Of steel (other than mild steel) ..
Hails
A. Of iron and mild steel.
Pipes and tubes :
1. Of iron and mild steel...
B. Of steel (other than mild steel)...
100 catties
að val.
100 catties!
0.083
G.B..G.
5 per cent G.B., G.,F.
0,261
að
ad val.
74
per cent G.B.G.
100 catties
0,503.
1.810
**
ai val.
0.256 5 percent
G.
100 catties
ad val.
0.691 10 per cent)
G.B.,G..
ä.
37
100 catties
að val.
0.296 7 per cent
G.B.,G.
74
100 catties!
01740
ad mat.
10 per cent
G.
100 catties!
B. Of steel (other than mild steel).......
ad val.
0.129 per cent
G.B.,G. G.
*
10 per cent
G.B,C.
G.
*+
370
Lead:
1. Pigs, ingots and slabs
100 catties
0.316
G.BG.
371
Tin:
1. Blocks, ingots and slabs
100 catties
2. Plates and sheets
ai val.
1.992 10 per cent
G. B.
372
Zinc or spelter:-
1. Blocks, ingots and slabs
100 catties
f 0.400 | 0.451
G. G. B.
Plates
Sheets
Mercury or quicksilver
0.400 10.830 | 0.928 3.048
G.
+
G. B
**
**
No.
419
420
436
437
279
Unit.
Rates of
Duty.
Contract-
ing States.
Yen,
100 catties
ad val.
0.573 10 per cent
G.B.,G.
17
31
15
11
5
**
100 catties
0.573
31
ad val.
10 per cent
11
5 per cent
G.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
GROUP XVI-Metal Manufactures.
Iron and mild steel nails, also wire nails, in-
cluding spikes, sprigs, tacks and brads:-
1. Plain...
B. Galvanized
d. Of iron
3. Bolts, nuts and washers (of iron)
4. Rivets (of iron)
A. Plain...
B. Galvanized
Telegraph wire other than telegraph or galvanized wire of iron, mild steel or steel
GROUP XVII-Earthenware, Porcelain, Glass and Glass Manufactures.
Glass, window, ordinary:
Uncoloured and unstained...
Coloured, stained and ground
GROUP XVIII.-- Vehicles, Vessels, Scientific Instruments, Clocks, Watches and Machinery.
Locomotives and locomotive tenders
Parts of locomotives and locomotive
tenders -
י
1. Wheels and axles
2. Tyres...
...100 sq. ft.
ad val.
0.302 10 per cent
G.B.,G.
>>
**
5 per cent
G.
47
11
11
M
+4
17
+
ני
15
**
10 per cent
F.
3. All other
Railway carriages for passengers
Parts of railway carriages for passengers. Instruments, scientific, for drawing Spy glasses, opera glasses, monocular and binocular, field, marine, and glasses :-
4. Constructed in shell, mother of pearl, ivory, gold, silver, platinum, nielles (in- laid), enamelled or other precious mate- rials of fancy and luxury; or garnished with precious stones or pearls
B. All other kinds
Clocks, standing and hanging
Parts of clocks standing and hanging
I.
Movements
2. Springs
...་
11
per piece
**
sta val.
3. Hair springs
4. All other
+
Machine, printing...
GROUP XIX.-Miscellaneous Articles
India rubber or caoutchouc :---
3. Rods
4. Tubes:
1. Soft
B
Hard
5. All other
Caoutchone, manufactures of
0.750 0.250 10 per cent
བཞིན༴
17
>>
4+
+1
*
**
11
}}
--
57
5 per cent
F.
13
PATR
10 per cent G.B.,G.
་་
ני
K
"
280
No.
CUSTOMS TARIFF OF JAPAN
Articles.
Unit.
Rates of Contract
Duty.ing States.
Yen.
100 catties
0.065
G.B.,G.
498
Portland cement
Perfumery:-
1. Liquid perfumery: essences or extract of scents, oils, vinegars, waters and alcohols of toilet or scent, and other liquids of the same kinds
2. Dry perfumery: salts, powders, cos-
metics, ponades, pastes, and other non liquid preparations of perfumeries for
toilet
Note,--Musk, natural and artificial, civet and ambergris are excluded from the perfumery,
Soaps:
per catty
0.092
F.
ad val.
10 per cent
++
521
1. Toilet...
per catty
0.070
**
=
2. Washing
A. Marseilles soaps...
100 catties
0.972
B. Others
0.972
+
**
529
Explosives :-
2. Dynamite...
per catty
0.056
G.
CERTIFICATES OF ORIGIN.
(See the Regulations for execution of the Customs Duties Law, Imperial Ordinance No. 310, dated 29th June, 1899.)
Certain articles when imported from countries to which special conventions are applicable, are subject to a rate of duty differont to that imposed under the general tariff. To secure the application of this different, and usually but not always, lower scale of duties, it is necessary for the import r to produce a certificate of the original place of produce or manufacture; such certificate must be made by the Japanese Consul or Commercial Agent at the locality of produce or manufacture, or shipment of the goods. If, however, there is neither a Japanese Consul nor Commercial Agent, a certificate made by the Custom House or any other Government or public office anthorities or Chamber of Commerce of the locality will be accepted. Postal matter and goods of which the dutiable amount does not exceed
Yen 100 are excepted.
In the certification mentioned in the preceding paragraph, there shall be stated the marks, numbers, nature, and quantity of the goods, number of packages, and the territory of produce or manufacture.
The attention of shippers abroad is specially directed to these requirements. It is absolutely necessary that the certificates of origin should reach the consignees before arrival of the vessel carrying the goods to which they refer.
CONVENTION BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND
JAPAN FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE ESTATES
OF DECEASED PERSONS
SIGNED AT TOKYO, APRIL 26TH, 1900 Ratifications exchanged at Tokyo, 25th October, 1900
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, and His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, being equally desirous of maintaining the relations of good understanding which happily exist between them, by laying down rules for the protection of the estates of deceased persons, have agreed to conclude a Convention, and for that purpose have named as their respective Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:-Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, Sir Ernest Mason Satow Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, Her Britannic Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, and His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, Viscount Aoki Siüzo, Junú, First Class of the Imperial Order of the Rising Sun, His Imperial Majesty's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Who, having communicated to each other their respective full powers, found in good and due form, have agreed upon the following Articles :-
Art. I. Whenever a subject of one of the High Contracting Parties shall die within the dominions of the other, and there shall be no person present at the time of such death who shall be rightly entitled to administer the estate of such deceased person, the following rules shall be observed:
1. When the deceased leaves, in the above-named circumstances, heirs of his or her own nationality only, or who may be qualified to enjoy the civil status of their father or mother, as the case may be, the Consul-General, Consul, Vice-Consul, or Consular Agent of the country to which the deceased belonged, on giving notice to the proper authorities, shall take possession and have custody of the property of the said deceased, shall pay the expenses of the funeral, and retain the surplus for the payment of his or her debts, and for the benefit of the heirs to whom it may rightly belong.
But the said Consul-General, Consul, Vice-Consul or Consular Agent shall be bound immediately to apply to the proper Court for letters of administration of the effects left by the deceased, and these letters shall be delivered to him with such limitations and for such time as to such Court may seem right.
2. If, however, the deceased leaves in the country of his or her decease and in the above-named circumstances, any heir or universal legatee of other nationality than his or her own, or to whom the civil status of bis or her father or his or her mother, as the case may be, cannot be granted, then each of the two Governments may determine whether the proper Court shall proceed according to law, or shall confide the collection and administration to the respective Consular officers under the proper limitations. When there is no Consul-General, Consul, Vice-Consul, or Consular Agent, in the locality where the decease has occurred (in the case contemplated by the first rule of this Article) upon whom devolves the custody and administration of the estate, the proper authority shall proceed in these acts until the arrival of the respective Consular officer.
Art. II. The stipulations of the present Convention shall be applicable, so far as the laws permit, to all the Colonies and foreign possessions of Her Britannic Majesty, excepting to those hereinafter named, that is to say, except to
India
The Dominion of Canada
Newfoundland
The Cape
Natal
New South Wales
Victoria
Queensland
Tasmania South Australia Western Australia
New Zealand
282
CONVENTION BETWEEN JAPAN AND INDIA
Provided always that the stipulations of the present Convention shall be made applicable to any of the above-named Colonies or foreign possessions, ou whose behalf notice to that effect shall have been given to the Japanese Government by Her Britannic Majesty's Representative at Tokyo, within two years from the date of the exchange of ratifications of the present Convention.
Art. III. The present Convention shall come into force immediately after the exchange of the ratifications thereof, and shall remain in force until the 17th July.
1911.
Either High Contracting Power shall have the right at any time after the 16th July, 1910, to give notice to the other of its intention to terminate the same, and at the expiration of twelve months after such notice is given, this Convention shall wholly cease and determine.
Art. IV. The present Convention shall be ratified, and the ratifications thereof shall be exchanged at Tokyo as soon as possible, and not later than six months from the present date.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same, and have affixed thereto the seal of their arms.
Done at Tokyo, in duplicate, this 26th day of April, nineteen hundredth year of the Christian era.
(L.S.)
ERNEST MASON SATOW,
(L.S.)
SIUZO VICOMTE ÅKOI.
CONVENTION REGARDING
THE
COMMERCIAL
RELATIONS BETWEEN JAPAN AND INDIA
SIGNED AT TOKYO ON THE 20TH DAY OF AUGUST, 1904.
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan and His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India, being equally desirous of facilitating the commercial relations between Japan and India have resolved to conclude a Convention to that effect, and have named as their respective Plenipotentiaries:
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, Baron Jutaro Komura, Jusammi, First Class of the Imperial Order of the Rising Sun, His Imperial Majesty's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs; and
His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India, Sir Claude Maxwell Macdonald, Knight Grand Cross of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, Knight Commander of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath, His Britannic Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary; Who, having reciprocally communicated their full powers, found in good and due form, have agreed as follows:--
Art. 1-Any article, the produce or manufacture of the dominions and posses- sions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan shall enjoy, upon importation into India, the lowest customs duties applicable to similar products of any other foreign origin.
Art II Reciprocally any article, the produce or manufacture of India shall enjoy, upon importation into the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, the lowest customs duties applicable to similar products of any other foreign origin.
AGREEMENT BETWEEN UNITED KINGDOM AND JAPAN
283
Art. III. The privileges and engagements of the present Convention shall extend to Native States of India which by treaty with His Britannic Majesty or otherwise may be entitled to be placed with regard to the stipulations of the Convention on the same footing as British India.
His Britannic Majesty's Government shall communicate from time to time to the Imperial Government of Japan a list of these States.
Art. IV. The present Convention shall be ratified and the ratifications shall be exchanged at Tokyo as soon as possible. It shall come into effect immediately after the exchange of ratifications, and shall remain in force until the expiration of six months from the day on which one of the High Contracting Parties shall have announced the intention of terminating it.
In witness whercof the above mentioned Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Convention and have affixed thereto their seals.
Done in duplicate at Tokyo, in the Japanese and English languages, this 29th day of 8th month of the 37th year of Meiji, corresponding to the 29th day of August of the year one thousand nine hundred and four.
[L. S.]
[L. 8.]
Baron JUTARO KOMURA, His Imperial Japanese Majesty's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs.
CLAUDE M. MACDONALD, His Britannic Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM
AND JAPAN
SIGNED AT LONDON, AUGUST 12TH, 1905
The Governments of Great Britain and Japan, being desirous of replacing the Agreement concluded between them on the 30th January, 1902, by fresh stipulations, have agreed upon the following Articles, which have for their object--
(a) The consolidation and maintenance of the general peace in the regions of Eastern Asia and of India;
(b) The preservation of the common interests of all Powers in China by nsuring the independence and integrity of the Chinese Empire and the principle of equal opportunities for the commerce and industry of all nations in China;
(e.) The maintenance of the territorial rights of the High Contracting Parties in the regions of Eastern Asia and of India, and the defence of their special interests in the said regions:
Art. I.--It is agreed that whenever, in the opinion of either Great Britain or Japan, any of the rights and interests referred to in the preamble of this Agreement are in jeopardy, the two Governments will communicate with one another fully and frankly, and will consider in common the measures which should be taken to safe- guard those menaced rights of interests.
Art. II.-If by reason of unprovoked attack or aggressive action, wherever arising, on the part of any other Power or Powers either Contracting Party should be involved in war in defence of its territorial rights or special interests mentioned in the preamble of this Agreement, the other Contracting Party, will at one come to the assistance of its ally, and will conduct the war in common, and make peace in mutual agreement with it.
8*
284
AGREEMENT BETWEEN UNITED KINGDOM AND JAPAN
Art. III-Japan possessing paramount political, military, and economic interests in Corea, Great Britain recognizes the right of Japan to take such measures of guidance, control, and protection in Cor, a as she may deem proper and necessary to safeguard and advance those interests, provided always that such measures are not contrary to the principle of equal opportunities for the commerce and industry of all nations.
Art. IV. Great Britain having a special interest in all that concerns the security of the Indian frontier, Japan recognizes her right to take such measures in the proximity of that frontier as she may find necessary for safeguarding ber Indian possessions.
Art. V. The High Contracting Parties agree that neither of them will, without consulting the other, enter into separate arrangements with another Power to the prejudice of the objects described in the preamble of this Agreement.
Art. VI. As regards the present war between Japan and Russia, Great Britain will continue to maintain strict neutrality unless some other Power or Powers should join in hostilities against Japan, in which case Great Britain will come to the assistance of Japan, and will conduct the war in common, and make peace in mutual agreement with Japan.
Art. VII. The conditions under which armed assistance shall be afforded by either Power to the other in the circumstances mentioned in the present Agreement, and the means by which such assistance is to be made available, will be arranged by the Naval and Military authorities of the Contracting Parties, who will from time to time consult one another fully and freely upon all questions of mutual interest.
Art. VIII. The present Agreement shall, subject to the provisions of Article VI, come into effect immediately after the date of its signature, and remain in force for ten years from that date.
In case neither of the High Contracting Parties should have notified twelve months before the expiration of the said ten years the intention of terminating it it shall remain binding until the expiration of one year from the day on which either of the High Contracting Parties shall have denounced it. But if, when the date fixed for its expiration arrives, either ally is actually engaged in war, the alliance shall, ipso facto, continue until peace is concluded.
In faith whereof the Undersigned, duly authorized by their respective Govern- ments, have signed this Agreement and have affixed thereto their Seals.
Done in duplicate at London, the 12th day of August, 1905.
(L.S.)
LANSDOWNE,
His Britannic Majesty's Principal Secretary of State
for Foreign Affairs.
(L.S.)
TADASU HAYASHI,
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan at the Court of St. James.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
EXTRADITION TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA AND JAPAN
Signed at Tokyo, ON THE 29TH APRIL, 1886 Ratified at Tokyo, on the 27th September, 1886
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan and the President of the United States of America having judged it expedient, with a view to the better administration of justice, and to the prevention of crime within the two countries and their jurisdictions, that persons charged with or convicted of the crimes or offences hereinafter named, and being fugitives from justice, should, under certain circumstances, be reciprocally delivered up, they have named as their Plenipotentiaries to conclude a Treaty for this purpose, that is to say:
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, Count Inouye Kaoru, Jiusammi, His Imperial Majesty's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, First Class of the Order of the Rising Sun, &c., &c., &e., and the President of the United States of America, Richard B. Hubbard, their Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary near His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Japan, who, after having communicated to each other their respective full powers, found in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following Articles:
Art. 1-The High Contracting Parties engage to deliver up to each other, under the circumstances and conditions stated in the present Treaty, all persons who, being accused or convicted of one of the crimes or offences named below in Article II. and committed within the jurisdiction of the one party, shall be found within the jurisdic- tion of the other party.
Art. II.-1.-Murder and assault with intent to commit murder.
2.-Counterfeiting or altering money, or uttering or bringing into circulation. counterfeit or altered money, counterfeiting certificates or coupons of public indebted- ness, bank notes, or other instruments of public credit of either of the parties, and the utterance or circulation of the same.
3-Forgery, or altering and uttering what is forged or altered.
4-Embezzlement or criminal malversation of the public funds committed within the jurisdiction of either party, by the public officers or depositaries.
5.-Robbery.
-Burglary, defined to be the breaking and entering by night-time into the house of another person with the intent to commit a felony therein; and the act of breaking and entering the house of another, whether in the day or night time, with the intent to commit a felony therein.
The act of entering, or of breaking and entering, the offices of the Govern- ment and public authorities, or the offices of banks, banking-houses, savings banks, trust companies, insurance or other companies, with the intent to commit a felony
,therein.
8.-Perjury or the subornation of perjury,
9.-Rape.
10.-Arson.
11-Piracy by the law of nations.
286 EXTRADITION TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND JAPAN
12. Murder, assault with intent to kill, and manslaughter committed on the high seas, on board a ship bearing the flag of the demanding country.
13. Malicious destruction of, or attempt to destroy, railways, trams, vessels, bridges, dwellings, public edifices, or other buildings, when the act endangers human
life.
Art. III.-If the person demanded be held for trial in the country on which the demand is made, it shall be optional with the latter to grant extradition or to proceed with the trial: Provided that, unless the trial shall be for the crime for which the fugitive is claimed, the delay shall not prevent ultimate extradition.
Art. IV. If it be made to appear that extradition is sought with a view to try or punish the person demanded for an offence of a political character, surrender shall not take place, nor shall any person surrendered be tried or punished for any political offence committed previously to his extradition, or for any offence other than that in respect of which the extradition is granted.
Art. V. The requisition for extradition shall be made through the diplomatic agents of the contracting parties, or in the event of the absence of these from the country or its seat of Government, by superior consular officers.
If the person whose extradition is requested shall have been convicted of a crime, a copy of the sentence of the Court in which he was convicted, authenticated under its seal, and an attestation of the official character of the judge by the proper executive authority, and of the latter by the Minister or Consul of Japan or of the United States, as the case may be, shall accompany the requisition.
When the fugitive is merely charged with crime, a duly authenticated copy of the warrant of arrest in the country making the demand and of depositions on which such warrant may have been issued, must accompany the requisition.
The fugitive shall be surrendered only on such evidence of criminality as according to the laws of the place where the fugitive or person so charged shall be found, would justify his apprehension and commitment for trial if the crime had been there committed.
Art. VI.-On being informed by telegraph, or other written communication through the diplomatic channel, that a lawful warrant has been issued by competent authority upon probable cause for the arrest of a fugitive criminal charged with any of the crimes enumerated in Article II. of this Treaty, and ou being assured from the sanie source that a request for the surrender of such criminal is about to be made in accordance with the provisions of this Treaty, each Government will endeavour to procure, so far as it lawfully may, the provisional arrest of such criminal, and keep him in safe custody for a reasonable time, not exceeding two months, to await the production of the documents upon which claim for extradition is founded.
Art. VII. Neither of the contracting parties shall be bound to deliver up its own subjects or citizens under the stipulations of this convention, but they shall have the power to deliver them up if in their discretion it be deemed proper to do so.
Art. VIII. The expenses of the arrest, detention, examination, and transporta tion of the accused shall be paid by the Government which has requested the extradi- tion.
T
Art. IX. The present Treaty shall come into force sixty days after the exchange of the ratifications thereof. It may be terminated by either party, but shall remain in force for six months after notice has been given of its termination.
The Treaty shall be ratified, and the ratifications shall be exchanged at Washington as soon as possible.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Treaty in duplicate and have thereunto affixed their seals.
Done at the city of Tokyo, the twenty-ninth day of the fourth month of the nineteenth year of Meiji, corresponding to the twenty-ninth day of April in the eighteen hundred and eighty-sixth year of the Christian era.
(Signed)
[L.S.]
INOUYE KAORU.
[L.S.]
RICHARD B. HUBBARD.
TREATY OF PEACE BETWEEN JAPAN AND RUSSIA
SIGNED AT PORTSMOUTH U.S.A, AUGUST 23RD, 1905 Ratified November, 5th, 1905.
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan on the one part, and His Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias on the other part, animated by the desire to restore the blessings of peace to Their countries and peoples, have resolved to conclude a Treaty of Peace, and have, for this purpose, named Their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say:---
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan.-
His Excellency Baron Komura Jutaro, Jusammi, Grand Cordon of the Imperial Order of the Rising Sun, His Minister for Foreign Affairs, and
His Excellency M. Takahira Kogoro, Jusammi, Grand Cordon of the Imperial Order of the Sacred Treasure, His Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary to the United States of America; and
His Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias-
His Excellency M. Serge Witte, His Secretary of State and President of the Committee of Ministers of the Empire of Russia, and
His Excellency Baron Roman Rosen, Master of the Imperial Court of Russia and His Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the United States of America;
Who, after having exchanged their full powers, which were found to be in good and due form, have concluded the following Articles:-
Art. I. There shall henceforth be peace and amity between Their Majesties the Emperor of Japan and the Emperor of all the Russias, and between Their respective States and subjects.
Art. II.-The Imperial Russian Government, acknowledging that Japanu possesses in Korea paramount political, military, and economical interests, engage neither to obstruct nor interfere with the measures of guidance, protection, and control which the Imperial Government of Japan may find it necessary to take in Korea.
It is understood that Russian subjects in Korea shall be treated exactly in the some manner as the subjects or citizens of other foreign Powers, that is to say, they shall be placed on the same footing as the subjects or citizens of the most favoured uation.
It is also agreed that, in order to avoid all cause of misunderstanding, the two High Contracting Parties will abstain, on the Russo-Korean frontier, from taking any military measure which may menace the security of Russian or Korean territory.
Art. III.-Japan and Russia mutually engage-
(1.) To evacuate completely and simultaneously Manchuria except the tierritory affected by the lease of the Liaotung Peninsula, in conformity with the provsions of additional Article I. annexed to this Treaty; and
(2.) To restore entirely and completely to the exclusive administration of China all portions of Manchuria now in the occupation or under the control of the Japanese or Russian troops, with the exception of the territory above mentioned.
The Imperial Government of Russia declare that they have not in Manchuria any territorial advantages or preferential or exclusive concessions in impairment of Chinese sovereignty or inconsistent with the principle of equal opportunity.
Art. IV. Japan and Russia reciprocally engage not to obstruct any general measures common to all countries, which China may take for the development of the commerce and industry of Manchuria.
288
TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND RUSSIA
Art. V.--The Imperial Russian Government transfer and assign to the Imperial Government of Japan, with the consent of the Government of China, the lease of Port Arthur, Talien, and adjacent territory and territorial waters, and all rights, privileges, and concessions connected with or forming part of such lease, and they also transfer and assign to the Imperial Government of Japan all public works and properties in the territory affected by the above mentioned lease.
The two High Contracting Parties mutually engage to obtain the consent of the Chinese Government mentioned in the foregoing stipulation.
The Imperial Government of Japan on their part undertake that the proprietary rights of Russian subjects in the territory above referred to shall be perfectly respected.
Art. VI. The Imperial Russian Government engage to transfer and assign to the Imperial Government of Japan, without compensation and with the consent of the Chinese Government, the railway between Chang-chun (Kuan-cheng-tzu) and Port Arthur and all its branches, together with all rights, privileges, and properties appertaining thereto in that region, as well as all coal mines in the sail region belonging to or worked for the benefit of the railway,
The two High Contracting Parties mutually engage to obtain the consent of the Government of China mentioned in the foregoing stipulation.
Art. VII-Japan and Russia engage to exploit their respective railways in Manchuria exclusively for commercial and industrial purposes and in no wise for strategic purposes.
It is understood that restriction does not apply to the railway in the territory affected by the lease of the Liaotung Peninsula.
Art. VIII. The Imperial Governments of Japan and Russia, with a view to promote and facilitate intercourse and traffic, will as soon as possible conclude a separate convention for the regulation of their connecting railway services in Manchuria.
Art. IX. The Imperial Russian Government cede to the Imperial Government of Japan in perpetuity and full sovereignty, the southern portion of the Island of Saghalien and all islands adjacent thereto, and all public works and properties thereon. The fiftieth degree of North latitude is adopted as the northern boundary of the ceded territory. Exact alignment of such territory shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of additional Article II. annexed to this Treaty.
Japan and Russia mutually agree not to construct in their respective possessions on the Island of Saghalien or the adjacent islands, any fortifications or other similar military works. They also respectively engage not to take any military measures which may impede the free navigation of the Straits of La Perouse and Tartary.
Art. X. It is reserved to the Russian subjects, inhabitants of the territory ceded to Japan, to sell their real property and retire to their country; but, if they prefer to remain in the ceded territory, they will be maintained and protected in the full exercise of their industries and rights of property, on condition of submitting to Japanese laws and jurisdiction. Japan shall have full liberty to withdraw the right. of residence in, or to deport from, such territory, any inhabitants who labour under political or administrative disability. She engages, however, that the proprietary rights of such inhabitants shall be fully respected.
Art. XI.-Russia engages to arrange with Japan for granting to Japanese subjects rights of fishery along the coasts of the Russian possessions in the Japan, Okhotsk, and Behring Seas.
It is agreed that the foregoing engagement shall not affect rights already be- longing to Russian or foreign subjects in those regions.
Art. XII.-The Treaty of Commerce and Navigation between Japan and Russia having been annulled by the war, the Imperial Governments of Japan and Russia engage to adopt as the basis of their commercial relations, pending the conclusion of a new Treaty of Commerce and Navigation on the basis of the Treaty
TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND RUSSIA
250
which was in force previous to the present war, the systeru of reciprocal treatment on the footing of the most-favoured nation, in which are included import and export duties, Customs formalities, transit and tonnage dues, and the admission and treat- ment of the agents, subjects, and vessels of one country in the territories of the other. Art. XIII. As soon as possible after the present Treaty comes into force, all prisoners of war shall be reciprocally restored. The Imperial Governments of Japan. and Russia shall each appoint a special Commissioner to take charge of prisoners. All prisoners in the hands of one Government shall be delivered to and received by the Commissioner of the other Government or by his duly authorised representative, in such convenient numbers and at such convenient ports of the delivering State as such delivering State shall notify in advance to the Commissioner of the receiving State.
The Governments of Japan and Russia shall present to each other as soon as possible after the delivery of prisoners has been completed, a statement of the direct expenditures respectively incurred by them for the care and maintenance of prisoners from the date of capture or surrender up to the time of death or delivery. Russia engages to repay to Japan, as soon as possible after the exchange of the statements as above provided, the difference between the actual amount so expended by Japan and the actual amount similarly disbursed by Russia.
Art. XIV. The present Treaty shall be ratified by Their Majesties, the Emperor of Japan and the Emperor of all the Russias. Such ratification shall, with as little delay as possible and in any case not later than fifty days from the date of the signature of the Treaty, be announced to the Imperial Governments of Japan and Russia respectively through the French Minister in Tokyo and the Ambassador of the United States in St. Petersburg, and from the date of the later of such announcements this Treaty shall in all its parts come into full force.
The formal exchange of the ratifications shall take place at Washington as soon as possible.
Art. XV. The present Treaty shall be signed in duplicate in both the English and French languages. The texts are in absolute conformity, but in case of dis- crepancy in interpretation, the French text shall prevail.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed and affixed their seals to the present Treaty of Peace.
Done at Portsmouth (New Hampshire) this fifth day of the ninth month of the thirty-eighth year of Meiji, corresponding to the twenty-third day of August (fifth September N. S.) one thousand nine hundred and five.
SERGE WITTE,
ROSEN.
JOTARO KOMURA.
K. TAKAHIRA,
SUPPLEMENTARY AGREEMENT
In conformity with the provisions of Articles III. and IX. of the Treaty of Peace between Japan and Russia of this date, the undersigned Plenipotentiaries have concluded the following additional Articles:---
I. To Art. III. The Imperial Governments of Japan and Russia mutually engage to commence the withdrawal of their military forces from the territory of Manchuria simultaneously and immediately after the Treaty of Peace comes into operation; and within a period of eighteen months from that date the armies of the two countries shall be completely withdrawn from Manchuria, except from the leased territory of the Liaotung Peninsula.
The forces of the two countries occupying the front positions shall be first withdrawn.
290
TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND RUSSIA
The High Contracting Parties reserve to themselves the right to maintain guards to protect their respective railway lines in Manchuria. The number of such guards shall not exceed fifteen per kilomètre, and within that maximum number the Com- manders of the Japanese and Russian armies shall, by common accord, fix the number of such guards to be employed, as small as possible having in view the actual requirements.
The Commanders of the Japanese and Russian forces in Manchuria shall agree upon the details of the evacuation in conformity with the above principles, and shall take by common accord the measures necessary to carry out the evacuation as soon as possible and in any case not later than the period of eighteen months.
II. To Art. IX.--As soon as possible after the present Treaty comes into force, a Commission of Delimitation, composed of an equal number of members to be appointed respectively by the two High Contracting Parties, shall on the spot mark in a permanent manner the exact boundary between the Japanese and Russian possessions on the Island of Saghalien. The Commission shall be bound, so far as topographical considerations permit, to follow the fiftieth parallel of North latitude. as the boundary line, and in case any deflections from that line at any points are found to be necessary, compensation will be made by correlative deflections at other points. It shall also be the duty of the said Commission to prepare a list and de- scription of the adjacent islands included in the cession, and finally the Commission shall prepare and sign maps showing the boundaries of the ceded territory. The work of the Commission shall be subject to the approval of the High Contracting Parties.
The foregoing additional Articles are to be considered as ratified with the ratification of the Treaty of Peace to which they are annexed.
Portsmouth, the 5th day, 9th month, 38th year of Meiji, corresponding to the 23rd August (5th September N.S.) 1905.
SERGE WITTE. ROSEN.
JUTARO KOMURA. K. TAKAHIRA.
AGREEMENT RELATING TO CHINA, 1907
The Government of his Majesty the Emperor of Japan and the Government of his Majesty the Tsar of all the Russias, being desirous of strengthening the peaceful, friendly, and neighbourly relations now happily restored between Japan and Russia, and also of removing all possible future cause of misunderstanding in the relations of the two Powers, have entered into the following agreements:---
Art. I.-Each of the High Contracting Parties agrees to respect the present territorial integrity of the other, as well as all the rights arising out of Treaties, Con- ventions, and Contracts now in force between them and China, copies of which have been exchanged between the Contracting Parties, so far as the said rights are not incompatible with the principle of equal opportunity enunciated in the Treaty signed at Portsmouth on September 5th, 1905, ie. August 23rd in the Russian Calendar, and other special conventions concluded between Japan and Russia.
Art. II. The two High Contracting Parties agree to recognise the independence and the territorial integrity of the Chinese Empire, and the principle of equal op portunity for the commerce and industry of all nations in the said Empire, and they engage to uphold and defend the maintenance of the status quo and the respect of that principle by all the peaceful means possible to them.
In witness whereof, the undersigned, duly authorised by their respective Govern- ments, have signed this Agreement and have affixed thereto their seals.
year
Done at St. Petersburg, the 30th day of the seventh month of the 40th Meiji, corresponding to 17th of July, 1907 (Russian Calendar July 30th, 1907).
(L.S.) ICHIRO MOTONO.
(L.S.) ISWOLSKY,
of
RUSSO-JAPANESE RAILWAY CONVENTION
[SIGNED AT ST. PETERSBURG, Max, 1907]
The Imperial Government of Japan and the Imperial Government of Russia, having resolved to conclude a Convention concerning the connection of the Japanese and the Russian Railways in Manchuria, conformably to the provisions of Art, VIII of the Treaty of Peace sigued at Portsmouth on September 5 (August 23, 1905, o.s.), the undersigned, Itchiro Motono, Docteur en Droit, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Japan, and le Maitre de la Cour Imperial Alexandre Iswolsky, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Russia, being duly authorized for the purpose by their respective Governments, have agreed and concluded the following articles, under the title of Provisionary.
Regarding the provisions of this Convention which concern the South Manchuria Railway Company on the one part and the Chinese Eastern Railway Company on the other, the two Governments engage mutually to take necessary measures to ensure their prompt execution by the said Companies.
Art. I.-The junction of the sections of the two railways will be made at the boundary line of the Kuanchengtze station of the Chinese Eastern Railway. The Southern Manchurian Railway Company shall prolong its line at the gauge adopted by that Company from the Tchantchuu station of the said Company to the limit of the Kuanchengt ze station of the Chinese Eastern Railway, and the Chinese Eastern Railway shall construct a line of the same gauge in continuation to the Japanese line con- structed by the Southern Manchurian Railway to the platform of the Russian Kuanchengtze station. The Chinese Eastern Railway shall construct in prolongation of its line, a railway of the gauge of 1 meter 524 (Russian gauge of 5 English feet) from the platform of the Russian Kuauchengtze station to the limit of that station, and the Southern Manchurian Railway Company shall construct a line of the same guage in continuation to the rolongation of the Russian railway constructed by the Chinese Eastern Railway Company to the Japanese Tchantchun station.
The point of junction of the two sections of the Japanese and Russian railways and the plans of that junction shall be resolved upon in common accord between the two companies.
Art. II The Southern Manchurian Railway Company as well as the Chinese Eastern Railway Company shall establish, besides the junction of their lines, direct communication for passengers and for merchandise, and also all the necessary in- stallatious, in order to effect in the shortest time and with the least expense possible, the transport of the merchandise at the terminal stations, made necessary by the difference in the width of the gauges.
Each Company reserves the right to decide on the plans of construction within the limits of its own ground.
Art. III-Each Company takes charge of all the undertakings mentioned in Articles I and II of the present Convention which entails on them respectively, and the undertakings shall be executed by the companies with the least possible delay and as far as possible simultaneously.
Art. IV. The maintenance of the tracks, of the installations for transmission and transport, and all the other accessories upon the ground of each railway shall respectively be taken charge of by the companies.
Art. V.--The traffic between the Southern Manchurian Railway and the Chinese Eastern Railway shall be established conformably to the following conditions:
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RUSSO-JAPANESE RAILWAY CONVENTION
The passenger trains of the Southern Manchurian Railway, with passengers, their baggage, and other objects transported by those trains, proceed on the Japanese track to the Russian station of Kuanchengtze, and the passenger trains of the Chinese Eastern Railway, with passengers, their baggage, aud other objects transported by those trains, proceed on the Russian track to the Japanese station of Tchantchun.
The freight trains of the Southern Manchuria Railway to proceed on the Chinese Eastern line come on the Japanese track to the Russian station of Kuanchengtze, where the delivery and transport of the merchandise to the Russian railway are effected, and the freight trains of the Chinese Eastern Railway to proceed on the Southern Manchurian line come by the Russian track to the Japanese station of Tchantchun, where the delivery and transport of the merchandise to the Japanese railway are effected.
Art. VI.--The time schedule for the movement of trains, having in view the connection of the two railways, shall be arranged in common accord by the manage- ments of the two Railway Companies.
Art. VII. The passenger fares and freight charges for travelling between the terminal stations shall be collected: those going from south to north, conformatory to the tariffs in force on the Southern Manchurian line, and those going from north to south, conformatory to the tariffs in force on the Chinese Eastern line.
The distribution of the fees collected for transport on the lines of the two Com- panies shall be made in accordance with an agreement to be concluded between the managements of the two Companies.
Art. VIII. Each Company enjoys the right gratuitously and reciprocally to make use of the connecting line and the installations attached to the service of transport appertaining to the other.
Art. IX.-The two railway Companies shall organize a train service mutually co-ordinating and sufficient to ensure regular passenger and merchandise traffic, and establish regulations and provisions for the service of exploitation, all in conformity with the interests of that service.
Art. X.-All the provisions to be later adopted on the basis of the present Convention and concerning the train service, the transportation of passengers, the transport of merchandise, the signal service, etc., shall be regulated by special arrangement between the two Companies, with due approval of the respective Governments. The mutual use of the means of transportation, the relations between employees of the two railways, as well as the mode of apportioning the quota to each administration in the distribution of the receipts, shall be regulated subsequently by similar arrangement.
Art. XI. In all cases where the management of the two railways cannot agree on points covered by the present Convention or in general upon all the other points concerning their reciprocal relations mentioned in the said Convention, the differences shall be regulated by the decision of the two respective Governments, arrived at in common after the exchange of views between them on the subject,
In witness whereof the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Japan and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Russia have signed the present Provi- sionary Convention and affixed their seals thereto.
Done at St. Petersburg in duplicate on the 18th day of the sixth month of the 40th of Meiji corresponding to May 31 (June 13) 1907.
(Signed) IswOLSKY. (Signed) I. MOTONO.
PROTOCOL
At the moment of proceeding to the signature of the Provisionary Convention for the connexion of the Japanese and Russian railways in Manchuria, the two High Contracting Parties, judging it useful to settle certain questions relative to the terminus of Kuanchengtze and to the coal-mines of Shibelin and Taokiatun,
the
CHINA-KOREAN BOUNDARY AGREEMENT
293
undersigned, Ichiro Motono, Docteur en Droit, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Japan, and le Maître de la Cour Imperial, Alexandre Iswolsky, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Russia, have concluded the following:-
Art. I. It has been agreed between the two High Contracting Parties that in principle the terminus of Kuanchengtze and its appendages are the common property of Japan and Russia, but that, for the sake of practical convenience, the exclusive ownership of the said terminus and of its appendages shall remain with Russia and that for it the Russian Government shall pay to the Japanese Government a sum of 560,393 roubles in virtue of compensation for the renunciation by Japan of her rights of co-ownership of the Kuauchengtze terminus and its appendages.
Art. II. The Russian Government shall remit to the Japanese Government, with the briefest possible delay, after the signature of the Provisionary Convention of the railway connection, in their actual state, all the railways and all the objects belonging to these railways which are to the South of the point marked N. 2,223 in the plan here annexed, as well as the coal mines at Shibelin and Taokiatun with all their appendages. Immediately after the signing of the said Convention, the necess- ary instructions shall be sent by the two Governments of Japan and Russia, ou the one part, to the South Manchurian Railway Company, and on the other part, to the Chinese Eastern Railway, directing the transfer of the said railways and of the appendages of these railways as well as the aforementioned coal mine.
Art. III.It is agreed between the two High Contracting Parties that the Japanese Government shall subsequently choose a site where shall be constructed the Japanese terminus of Changchun, between the Russian terminus of Kuanchengtse and the town of Changchun.
In the event of the construction of the Kirin railway line, the Japanese Govern ment shall exert itself to cause the construction by the railway company, outside the limits of the Changchun terminus, of crossings and viaducts to the points of the said line and the principal roads between the Russian station of Kuanchengtze and the town of Changchun.
Art. IV. The detailed regulations relative to the transfer of passengers and merchandise from one railway to the other, shall be discussed and concluded between the railway companies interested, with the briefest possible delay, after the signing of the Provisional Convention relating to railway connection. The place and the date of the meeting of the Delegates appointed to make these arrangement, shall be subsequently determined in the manner most agreeable to the Parties.
Art. V-It is agreed between the two High Contracting Parties that the Con- vention signed this day shall be put in force immediately after the construction of the provisional Japanese station mentioned in Article 3 of the Additional Articles of the said Convention shall have been completed.
In testimony whereof, the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Japan and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Russia have signed the present Protocol and affixed thereto their seuls.
Done at St. Petersburg in duplicate, this 13th day of the 6th month of the 40th year of Meiji, corresponding to May 31 (June 13), 1907.
(Signed) L. MOTONO. (Signed)
ISWOLSKY.
AGREEMENT REGARDING THE CHINA-KOREAN
BOUNDARY
SIGNED AT PEKING, SEPTEMBER 41H, 1909.
The Imperial Government of Japan and the Imperial Government of China, desiring to secure for Chinese and Korean inhabitants in the frontier region the blessings of permanent peace and tranquillity, and consid ring it essential to the
291
CHINA-OREAN BOUNDARY AGREEMENT
attainment of such desire that the two Governments should, in view of their relations of cordial friendship and good neighbourhood, recognise the River Tumen as forming the boundary between China and Korea, and should adjust all matters relating thereto in a spirit of mutual accommodation, have agreed upon the following stipulations:-
Art. 1.-The Governments of Japan and China declare that the River Tumea is recognise 1 as 'orming the boundary between China and Korea, and that in the region of the source of that river the boundary line shall start from the boundary monument, and thence follow the course of the stream Shih-Yi-Shwei.
Art II--The Government of China shall, as soon as possible after the signing of the present agreement, open Tung-Ching-tsun, Chu-tsz-Chie, Tou-tao-kou, Pai- Tsao-kou to the residence and trade of foreigners, and the Government of Japan may there establish Consulates or branch offices of Consulates
The date of opening such places shall be separately determined.
Art. III. The Government of China recognise the residence of Korean people, as heretofore, on the agricultural lands lying north of the River Tumen.
Art. IV. The Korean people residing on the agricultural lands within the mixed residence district to the north of the River Tumen shall submit to the laws of China, and shall be amenable to the jurisdiction of the Chinese local officials. Such Korean people sha 1 be accorded by the Chinese authorities equal treatment with Chinese subjects, and similarly in the matter of taxation and all other administrative measures they shall be placed on equal footing with Chinese subjects. All cases, whether civil or criminal, relating to such Korean people shall be heard and decided by the Chinese authorities in accordance with the laws of China, and in a just and equitable manner. A Japanese Consular officer, or an official duly authorised by him, shall be allowed freely to attend the Court, and previous notice is to be given to the Japanese Consular officers the hearing of important cases concerning lives of persons. Whenever the Japanese Consular officers find that decision has been given in disregard of law, they shall have right to apply to the Chinese authorities for a new trial, to be conducted by officials specially selected, in order to assure a just of decision.
Art. V. The Government of China engages that lands and buildings owned by Korean people in the mixed residence district to the north of the River Tamen shall be fully protected, equally with properties of Chinese subjects. Ferries shall be established on the River Tumen at places properly chosen, and people on either side of the river shall be entirely at liberty to cross to the other side, it being, however, understood that persons carrying arms shall not be permitted to cross the frontier without previous official notice or passports. In respect of cereals produced in the mixed residence district, Korean people shall be permitted to export them out of the said district, except in time of scarcity, in which case such expor ation may be prohibited. Collection of firewood and grass shall be dealt with in accordance with the practice hitherto followed.
Art. VI--The Government of China shall undertake to extead the Kirin- Changchun Railway to the southera boundary of Yenchi, and to connect it at Hoiryong with a Korean railway, aid such extension shall be effected upon the same terms as the Kirin-Changchun Railway. The date of commencing the work of proposed extension shall be determined by the Government of China considering the actual requirements of the situation and upon consultation with the Government of Japan.
Art. VII. The present agreement shall come into operation immediately upon its signature, and thereafter the Chientao branch office of the Residency-General, as well as all the civil and military officers attached thereto, shall be withdrawn as soon as possible an I within two months. The Government of Japan shall within two months hereafter establish its Consulates at the places mentioned in Art. II.
In witness whereof the undersigned, duly authorised by their respective Gov. ernments, have signed and sealed the present agreement in duplicate in the Japanese and Chinese languages.
CHINA-JAPAN AGREEMENT REGARDING
MANCHURIAN QUESTIONS.
SIGNED AT PEKING, SEPTEMBER 4TH, 1909.
The Imperial Government of Japan and the Imperial Government of China, actuated by the desire to consolidate relations of amity and good neighbourhood between the two countries by settling definitively matters of common concern in Manchuria and by removing for the future all cause of misunderstanding, have agreed upon the following stipulations:-
Art. I.--The Government of China engages that in the event of its under- taking to construct a railway between Hsin-min-tun and Fakumen, it shall arrange previously with the Government of Japan.
Art. II. The Government of China recognises that the railway between Taschichao and Yingkow is a branch line of the South Manchurian Railway, and it is agreed that the said branch line shall be delivered up to China simultaneously with the South Manchurian Railway upon the expiration of the term of concession for that main line. The Chinese Government further agrees to the extension of the said branch line to the port of Yingkow.
Art. II. In regard to coal mines at Fushun and Yuentai, the Governments of Japan and China are agreed as follows:-
".-The Chinese Government recognises the right of the Japanese Government to work the said coal mines.
b.-The Japanese Government, respecting the full sovereignty of China, en- gages to pay to the Chinese Government a tax on coals produced in those mines, the rate of such tax to be separately arranged on the basis of the lowest tariff for coals produced in any other part of China.
c.-The Chinese Government agrees that, in the matter of exportation of coals produced in the said mines, the lowest tariff of export duty for coals of any other mines shall be applied.
The extent of the said coal mines, as well as all the detailed regulations, shall be separately arranged by Commissioners specially appointed for that purpose. Art. IV.-All mines along the Antung-Mukden Railway and the main line of the South Manchurian Railway, excepting those at Fushun and Yuentai, shall be exploited as joint enterprises of Japanese and Chinese subjects upon the general principles which the Viceroy of the Three Eastern Provinces and the Governor of Shingking Province agreed upon with the Japanese Consul-General in 19 7, corres- ponding to the 33rd year of Kuanghsu. Detailed regulations in respect of such mines shall in due course be arranged by the Viceroy and the Governor with the Japanese Con-sul-General,
Art V.The Government of Japan declares that it has no objection to the extension of the Peking-Mukden Railway to the city wall of Mukden. Practical measures for such extension shall be adjusted and determined by the local Japanese and Chinese authorities and technical experts.
In witness whereof the undersigned, duly authorised by their respective Govern- ments, have signed and sealed the present agreement in duplicate in the Japanese and Chinese languages. (Signatures follow.)
AGREEMENT BETWEEN JAPAN AND THE
UNITED STATES
NOTES EXCHANGED AT WASHINGTON 30TH NOVEMBER, 1908.
Letter from Sir Kogoro Takahira, Japanese Minister at Washington, to the Hon, Elihu Root, American Secretary of State.
-
SIR, The exchange of views between us which has taken place at the several interviews which I have recently had the honour of holding with you, has shown that Japan and the United States, holding important outlying insular possessions in the region of the Pacific Ocean, the Governments of the two countries are animated by a common aim, policy and intention in the region.
Believing that a frank avowal of that aim, policy and intention would not only tend to strengthen the relations of friendship and good neighbourhood which have inmemorially existed between Japan and the United States, but would materially contribute to the preservation of the general peace, the Imperial Government have authorised me to present to you an outline of their understanding of that common aim, policy and intention.
1. It is the wish of the two Governments to encourage the free and peaceful development of their commerce on the Pacific Ocean.
2. The policy of both Governments, uninfluenced by any aggressive tendencies, is directed to the maintenance of the existing status quo in the region above mention- ed, and to the defence of the principle of equal opportunity for commerce and industry in China.
3. They are accordingly firmly resolved reciprocally to respect the territorial possessions belonging to each other in the said region.
4. They are also determined to preserve the common interests of all Powers in China by supporting by all pacific means at their disposal, the independence and integrity of China, and the principle of equal opportunity for commerce and industry of all nations in that empire.
5. Should any event occur threatening the status quo as above described, or the principle of equal opportunity as above defined, it remains for the two Governments to communicate with each other in order to arrive at an understanding as to what measures they may consider it useful to take.
If the foregoing outline accords with the view of the Government of the United States, I shall be gratified to receive your confirmation.
From Hon. Elihn Root, American Secretary of State, to Sir Kogoro
Takahira, Japanese Minister at Washington.
YOUR EXCELLENCY, I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your Note of to-day setting forth the result of the exchange of views between us in our recent interviews defining the understanding of the two Governments in regard to their policy in the region of the Pacific Ocean.
It is a pleasure to inform you that this expression of mutual understanding is welcome to the Government of the United States as appropriate to the happy relations of the two countries, and as the occasion for a concise mutual affirmation of that ac- cordant policy respecting the Far East which the two Governments have so frequently declared in the past.
I am happy to be able to confirm to Your Excellency, on behalf of the United States, the declaration of the two Governments embodied in the following words.
[Then follow the five points mentioned in Japan's Note which are repeated in exactly the same wording.]
TREATIES WITH SIA M
GREAT BRITAIN
TREATY OF FRIENDSHIP AND COMMERCE
Ratifications Exchanged at Bangkok, 15th April, 1856
Art. I. There shall henceforward be perpetual peace and friendship between Her Majesty and her successors, and Their Majesties the Kings of Sism and their successors. All British subjects coming to Siam shall receive from the Siamese Government full protection and assistance to enable them to reside in Siam in full security, and trade with every facility, free from oppression or injury on the part of the Siamese, and all Siamese subjects going to an English country shall receive from the British Government the same complete protection and assistance that shall be granted to British subjects by the Government of Siam.
Art. II. The interests of all British subjects coming to Siam shall be placed under the regulation and control of a Consul, who will be appointed to reside at Bangkok; be will himself conforin to, and will enforce the observance by British subjects of all the provisions of this Treaty, and such portions of the former Treaty negotiated by Cap- tain Burney, in 1826, as shall still remain in operation. He shall also give effect to all rules or regulations that are now or may hereafter be enacted for the government of British subjects in Siam, and conduct of their trade, and for the prevention of viola- tions of the laws of Siam. Any disputes arising between British and Siamese subjects shall be heard and determined by the Consul, in conjunction with the proper Siamese officers; and criminal offences will be punished, in the case of English offenders, by their own laws, through the Siamese authorities. But the Consul shall not interfere in any matters referring solely to Siamese, neither will the Siamese authorities interfere in questions which only concern the subjects of Her Britannic Majesty.
It is understood, however, that the arrival of the British Consul at Bangkok shall not take place before the ratification of this Treaty, nor until ten vessels owned by British subjects sailing under British colours and with British papers shall have entered the port of Bangkok for the purposes of trade, subsequent to the signing of this Treaty.
Art. III.-If Siamese in the employ of British subjects offend against the law of their country, or if any Siamese having so offended, or desiring to desert, take refuge with a British subject in Siam, they shall be searched for, and upon proof of their guilt or desertion, shall be delivered up by the Consul to the Siamese authorities. In like manner any British offenders resident or trading in Siam, who may desert, escape to, or hide themselves in Siamese territory, shall be apprehended and delivered over to the British Consul on his requisition. Chinese not able to prove themselves to be British subjects, shall not be considered as such by the British Consul, nor be entitled to his protection.
298
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
But
Art. IV. British subjects are permitted to trade freely in all the seaports of Siam, but may reside permanently only at Bangkok, or within the limits assigned by this Treaty. British subjects coming to reside at Bangkok may rent land, buy or build houses, but cannot purchase land within a circuit of 200 sen (not more than 4 miles English) from the city walls, until they shall have lived in Siam for ten years, or shall obtain special authority from the Siamese Government to enable them to do so. with the exception of this limitation, British residents in Siam may at any time buy or rent houses, lands, or plantations, situated anywhere within a distance of twenty-four hours journey from the city of Bangkok, to be computed by the rate at which boats of the country can travel. In order to obtain possession of such land or houses, it will be necessary that the British subject shall, in the first place, make application through the Consul to the proper Siamese officers; and the Consul having satisfied himself of the honest intention of the applicant, will assist him in settling, upon equitable terms, the amount of the purchase money, will mark out and fix the boundaries of the property, and will convey the same to the British purchaser under scaled deeds. Whereupon he and his property shall be placed under the protection of the Governor of the district and that of the particular local authorities; he shall conform, in ordmary matters, to any just directions given him by them, and will be subject to the same taxation that is levied on Siamese subjects. But if through negligence and want of capital or other cause, a British subject should fail to commence the cultivation or improvement of the land so acquired within a term of three years from the date of receiving possession thereof, the Siamese Government shall have the power of resuming the property, upon returning to the British subject the purchase-money paid by him for the same.
Act. V. All British subjects intending to reside in Siam shall be registered at the British Consulate. They shall not go out to sea, nor proceel beyond the limits assigned by this Treaty for the residence of British subjects, without a passport from the Siamese authorities, to be applied for by the Britsh Consul; nor shall they leave Siam, if the Samese authorities show to the British Consul that legitimate objection exists to their quitting the country. But within the limits appointed under the preceding article, British subjects are at liberty to travel to and fro under protection of a pass, to be furnished them by the British Consul and counter-sealed by the proper Siamese officer, stating, in the Siainese characters, their names, calling, and description. The Siamese officers of the Government stations in the interior may, at any time, call for the production of this pass, and immediately on its being exhibited, they must allow the parties to proceed; but it will be their duty to detain those persons who, by travelling without a pass from the Consul, render themselves liable to the suspicion of their being deserters; and such detention shall be immediately reported to the Consul. Art. VI. All British subjects visiting or residing in Siam shall be allowed the free exercise of the Christian religion and liberty to build churches in such localities as shall be consented to by the Siamese authorities. The Siamese Government will place no restriction upon the employment by the English of Siamese subjects as servants, or in any other capacity. But whenever a Siamese subject belongs to or owes service to some particular master, the servant who engages himself to a British subject without the couse.t of his master may be reclaimed by him; and t e Siamese Government will not enforce an agreement between a British subject and any Siamese in his employ, unless made with the knowledge and consent of the master who has a right to dispose of the services of the person engaged.
Art. VII-British ships of war may enter the river and anchor at Paknam, but they shall not proceed above Paknam, unless with the consent of the Siamese authorities, which shall be given when it is necessary that a ship shall go into dock for repairs. Any British ship of war conveying to Siam a public functionary accredited by Her Majesty's Government to the Court of Bangkok shall be allow d to come up to Bangkok, but shall not pass the forts called Pong Phrachamit and Pit-patch-nuck, unless expressly permitted to do so by the Siamese Government; but in the absence of a British ship of war, the Siamese authorities engage to furnish the Consul with a force sufficient to enable him to give effect to his authority over British subjects, and to enforce discipline among British shipping.
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
299
Art. VIII. The measurement duty hitherto paid by British v. ssels trading to Bangkok under the Treaty of 1826 shall be abolished from the date of this Treaty coming into operation, and British shipping and trade will henceforth be only subject to the payment of import and export duties on the goods landed or shipped. On all articles of import the duties shall be three per cent., payable at the option of the importer, either in kind or money, calculated upon the market value of the goods. Drawback of the full amount of duty shall be allowed upon goods found unsaleable and re-exported. Should the British merchant and the Custom-house officers dis- agree as to the value to be set upon imported articles, such disputes shall be referred to the Consul and proper Siamese officer, who shall each have the power to call in an equal number of merchants as assessors, not exceeding two on either side, to assist them in coming to an equitable decision.
Opium may be imported free of duty, but can only be sold to the opium farmer or his agents. In the event of no arrangement being effected with them for the sale of the opium, it shall be re-exported, and no impost or duty shall be levied thereon. Any infringement of this regulation shall subject the opium to seizure and confisca
tion.
Articles of export from the time of production to the date of shipment shall pay one import duty, whether this be levied under the name of inland tax, transit duty, or duty on exportation. The tax or duty to be paid on each article of Siamese produce previous to or upon exportation is specified in the tariff attached to this Treaty; and it is distinctly agreed that goods or produce which pay any description of tax in the interior shall be exempted from any further payment of the duty on exportation.
English merchants are to be allowed to purchase directly from the producer the articles in which they trade, and in like manner to sell their goods directly to the parties wishing to purchase the same, without the interference, in either case, of any other person.
The rates of duty laid down in the tariff attached to this Treaty are those that are now paid upon goods or produce shipped in Siamese or Chinese vessels or junks; and it is agreed that British shipping shall enjoy all the privileges now exercised by, or which hereafter may be granted to, Siamese or Chinese vessels or junks.
British subjects will be allowed to build ships in Siam, on obtaining permission. to do so from the Siamese authorities.
Whenever a scarcity may be apprehended of salt, rice, or fish, the Siamese Government reserve to themselves the right of prohibiting, by public proclamation, the exportation of these articles.
Bullion or personal effects may be imported free of charge.
Art. IX.-The code of regulations appended to this Treaty shall be enforced by the Consul, with the co-operation of the Siamese authorities; and they, the said authorities and Consul, shall be enabled to introduce any further regulations which may be necessary in order to give effect to the objects of this Treaty.
All fines and penalties inflicted for infraction of the provisions and regulations. of this Treaty shall be paid to the Siamese Government.
Until the British Consul shall arrive at Bangkok, and enter upon his functions the consignees of British vessels shall be at liberty to settle with the Siamese authorities all questions relating to their trade.
Art. X.-The British Government and its subjects will be allowed free and equal participation in any privileges that may have been, or may hereafter be, granted by the Siamese Government to the government or subject of any other nation.
Art. XI-After the lapse of ten years from the date of the ratification of this Treaty, upon the desire of either the British or Siamese Government, and on twelve months' notice being given by either party, the present and such portions of the Treaty of 1826 as remain unrevoked by this Treaty, together with the Tariff and the Regulations hereunto annexed, or those that may hereafter be introduced, shall be saljert to revision by Commissioners appointed on both sides for this purpose, who will be empowered to decide on and insert therein such amendments as experience shall prove to be desirable.
GENERAL REGULATIONS UNDER WHICH BRITISH
TRADE IS TO BE CONDUCTED IN SIAM
Art. I. The master of any English ship coming to Bangkok to trade must, either before or after entering the river, as may be found convenient, report the arrival of his vessel at the Custom-house at Paknam, together with the number of his crew and guns, and the port from whence he comes. Upon anchoring his vessel at Paknam, he will deliver into the custody of the Custom-house officers all his guns and ammunition; and a Custom-house officer will then be appointed to the vessel, and will proceed in her to Bangkok.
Art. II. A vessel passing Paknam without discharging her guns and ammuni tion as directed in the foregoing regulation will be sent back to Paknam to comply with its provisions, and will be fined eight hundred ticals for having so disobeyed. After delivery of her guns and ammunition she will be permitted to return to Bangkok to trade.
Art. III.-When a British vessel shall have cast anchor at Bangkok, the master, unless a Sunday should intervene, will within four and twenty hours after arrival proceed to the British Consulate, and deposit there his ship's papers, bills of lading &c., together with a true manifest of his import cargo; and upon the Consuls, reporting these particulars to the Custom-house, permission to break bulk will at once be given by the latter.
For neglecting so to report his arrival or for presenting a false manifest, the master will subject himself, in each instance, to a penalty of four hundred ticals; but he will be allowed to correct, within twenty-four hours after delivery of it to the Consul, any mistake he may discover in his manifest, without incurring the above- mentioned penalty.
Art. IV-A British vessel breaking bulk, and commencing to discharge, before due permission shall be obtained, or smuggling, either when in the river or outside the bar, shall be subject to the penalty of eight hundred ticals and confiscation of the goods so smuggled or discharged.
Art. V.As soon as a British vessel shall have discharged her cargo, and completed her outward lading, paid all her duties and delivered a true manifest of her outward cargo to the British Consul, a Siamese port-clearance shall be granted her on application from the Consul, who in the absence of any legal impediment to her departure, will then return to the master his ship's papers, and allow the vessel to leave. A Custom-house officer will accompany the vessel to Paknam; and on arriving there she will be inspected by the Custom-house officers of that station, and will receive from them the guns and ammunition previously delivered into their charge. The above regulations, numbered from 1 to 5, are obligatory under the Treaty concluded between Great Britain and Siam; those which follow, numbered from 6 to 14, are equally to be observed by masters of British vessels and their crews.
Art. VI. Masters of British vessels, when reporting their arrival at Her Majesty's Consulate at the port of Bangkok, as directed by the fourth regulation above quoted, shall notify in writing the names of all passengers and persons not forming part of the registered crew.
Notice must likewise be given of the number and names of persons, who, as passengers or in any other capacity (seamen borne on the muster-roll excepted), in tend to leave Siam in a British vessel.
Art. VII. Seamen, lascars, and others belonging to British vessels in the port are strictly prohibited to wear side knives and other weapons while on shore.
Art. VIII. Should any seaman or apprentice absent himself without leave, the master will report his absence, if such exceeds twenty-four hours, at the Consulate
offices.
Art. IX. Any British subject who entices a seaman or apprentice to desert, incurs, according to the Merchant Shipping Act, 1854, paragraph 257, a penalty not exceed ng ten pounds; or any such subject who wilfully harbours or secretes a person deserted from his ship incurs a penalty not exceeding twenty pounds, if it be proved that he had knowledge of his being a deserter.
TARIFF OF DUTIES-SIAM
301
In default of the payment of such fines, the offender is to be imprisoned in the Consular gaol for any term not exceeding three months, with or without hard labour,
Art. X.-All cases of death, and especially of sudden death, occurring on board of British vessels in the port of Bangkok must be immediately reported at the Consulate.
Art. XI. The discharge of guns from vessels anchored in the port of Bangkok, without notice having been previously given, and permission obtained through H.M. Consul from the proper Siamese authority, is forbidden, under a penalty not exceed ing ten pounds.
Act. XII.-It is strictly prohibited to shoot birds within the precincts of the Wats or Temples, either in Bangkok or elsewhere within the Siamese dominions, or to injure or damage any of the statues or figures, the trees or shrubs in such localities of Siamese worship: any British subject or seaman of a British vessel guilty of such an act renders himself liable to a penalty not exceeding twenty pounds, or in default thereof to an imprisonment in the Consular gaol for a period of not more than one month.
Art. XIII. When a vessel under the British flag is ready to leave the port of Bangkok, the master will give notice at the Consulate office, and hoist a blue peter twenty-four hours before departure, which is to fly until she breaks anchorage.
Art. XIV. Should any vessel take in or discharge cargo subsequent to the issue of the Siamese port clearance, as directed by the fifth regulation above quoted, the master, as in a case of smuggling, subjects himself to a penalty of 600 ticals (equal to £100), and goods so taken or discharged will be liable to confiscation.
Art. XV.-Every fine or penalty levied under these regulations is (if not paid in sterling money) at the rate of eight ticals Siamese currency for one pound.
Tarif of Export and Inland Duties to be levied on Articles of Trade
I. The undermentioned Articles shall be entirely free from Inland or other taxes, on production of transit pass, and shall pay Export Duty as follows:--
1 Ivory
2 Gamboge
3 Rhinoceros' horns
4 Cardamons, best...
6 Cardamons, bastard
6 Dried mussels
7 Pelicans' quills
8 Betel nut, dried
9 Krachi wood...
10 Sharks' fins, white...... 11 Sharks' fins, black......
12 Lukkraban seed
18 Peacocks' tails
14 Buffalo and cow boneg
10 Rhinoceros' bides
16 Hide cuttings
17 Turtle shell
18 Soft ditto
19 Beche-de-mer
20 Fish maws
21 Birds' nests, uncleaned
22 Kingfishers' feathers.
23 Cutch
21 Beyche seed (Nuz Vomica)
25 Pungtarai seed
28 Gum Benjamin
27 Angrai bark
28 Agilla wood
29 Ray skins
80 Old deers' horns
31 Soft, or young ditto
32 Deer hides, fine
13 Deer bides, common
31 Deer sinewa..
35 Buffalo and cow hides...
TICAL
10
C
50
14
10
0
1
SALUNG FUANG
HUN
0 per picul
14
DOONDNOSNO UNHOODO
3
20 par cent.0
T
2
[]
0
1
10 per cent.
3
U
JE
54
+
71
**
per 100 taels
per picul
IL
0
U
0 per 100
per picul
34
-
14
+
per 100 hides
0 per picul
0
0
****
302
AGREEMENT BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
35 Elephants' boues
37 Tigers' bones
33 Buffalo horns
39 Elephants' hides.
40 Tigers' skin
41
Armadillo eking
42 Sticklac
43 Hemp
44 Driod Fish, Plaheng 45 Dried Fish, Plusalit
Sapanwood
40
47 Salt meat
48 Mangrove bark
49 Rosewood
50 Ebony..
51 Rice..
TICAL 1
SALUNG FUANG
HUN
per pical
5
0
34
"}
0
0
บ
1
1
1
1
OHNGONOMNI
::
per skin
per picul
F
12
++
11
per Foyan
II. -The undermentioned Articles being subject to the Inland or Transit duties herein named, and which shall not be increased, shall be exempt from export duty.
51 Sugar, White
54 Cotton, clean and uncleaned
53 Sugar, Red
55 Paper
50 Salt fish, Plat
67
Beans and Peas
58 Dried Prawns
59 Tilseed
60 Silk, raw
TICAL SALUNG FUANG
HUN
0
43
0
0 per picul
(8
10 per cent
1
1
1
one twelfth
one twelfth
one twelfth
P. 1,000 fish
لات
Bees' wax
62
Tawool
63 Salt
#1 Tobacco
one twelfth
one fifteentlı
0
6
1
0 per picnl
per koyan Op. 1,000 bdle.
III. All goods or produce unenumerated in this Tariff shall be free of Export Duty, and shall only be subject to one Iuland Tax or Transit Duty, not exceeding the rate now paid.
AGREEMENT RELATIVE TO THE REGISTRATION
OF BRITISH SUBJECTS IN SIAM
SIGNED AT BANGKOK, NOVEMBER 29TH, 1899
The Governments of Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, and of His Majesty the King of Siam recognizing the necessity of having a satisfactory arrangement for the registration of British subjects in Siam, the Undersigned, Her Britannic Majesty's Minister Resident and His Siamese Majesty's Minister for Foreign Affairs, duly authorized to that effect, have agreed as follows:-
Art. I. The registration according to Article V of the Treaty of April 18th, 1855, of British subjects residing in Siam, shall comprise the following categories:
(1.) All British natural born or naturalized subjects, other than those of Asiatic descent.
(2.) All children and grandchildren born in Siam of persons entitled to be registered under the first category, who are entitled to the status of British subjects in contemplation of English law.
Neither great-grandchildren nor illegitimate children born in Siam of persons mentioned in the first category are entitled to be registered.
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
303
(3.) All persons of Asiatic descent, born within the Queen's dominions, or naturalized within the United Kingdom, or born within the territory of any Prince or State in India under the suzerainty of, or in alliance with, the Queen,
Except natives of Upper Burmah or the British Shan States who became domiciled in Siam before January 1st, 1886.
(4.) All children born in Siam of persons entitled to be registered under the
third category.
No grandchildren born in Siam of persons mentioned in the third category are entitled to be registered for protection in Siam.
(5.) The wives and widows of any persons who are entitled to be registered under the foregoing categories.
Art. II.The lists of such registration shall be open to the inspection of a properly authorized Representative of the Siamese Government on proper notice being given.
Art. III.-If any question arises as to the right of any person to hold a British certificate of registration or as to the validity of the certificate itself, a joint inquiry shall be held by the British and Siamese authorities and decided according to the conditions laid down in this Agreement, upon evidence to be adduced by the holder of the certificate, in the usual way.
Art. IV. Should any action, civil or criminal, be pending while such inquiry is going on, it shall be determined conjointly in what Court the case shall be heard.
Art. V.-If the person, in respect of whom the inquiry is held, come within the conditions for registration laid down in Article I, he may, if not yet registered, forthwith be registered as a British subject and provided with a certificate of registration at Her Britannic Majesty's Consulate; otherwise he shall be recognized as falling under Siamese jurisdiction, and, if already on the lists of Her Britannic Majesty's Consulate, his name shall be erased.
In witness whereof the Undersigned have signed the same in duplicate and have affixed thereto their seals at Bangkok, on the 29th day of November, 1899, of the Christian era, corresponding to the 118th year of Ratanakosindr.
[SEAL.] [SEAL.]
(Signed) (Signed)
GEORGE GREVILLE,
DEVAWONGSE VAROPRAKAR.
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
Signed at Bangkok, March 10, 1909.
Ratifications exchanged at London, July 9, 1909.
His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India, and His Majesty the King of Siam, being desirous of settling various questions which have arisen affect- ing their respective dominions, have decided to conclude a Treaty, and have appointed for this purpose as their Plenipotentiaries:
His Majesty the King of Great Britain, Ralph Paget, Esq., his Envoy Extra- ordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, &c.;
His Majesty the King of Siam, His Royal Highness Prince Devawongse Varoprakar, Minister for Foreign Affairs, &c.;
Who, after having communicated to each other their respective full powers, and found them to be in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the follow- ing Articles:-
Art. 1.-The Siamese Government transfers to the British Government all rights of suzerainty, protection, administration, and control whatsoever which they
304
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
possess over the States of Kelantan, Tringganu, Kedah, Perlis, and adjacent islands. The frontiers of these territories are defined by the Boundary Protocol annexed hereto.
Art. 2. The transfer provided for in the preceding Article shall take place within thirty days after the ratification of this Treaty.
Art. 3. A mixed Commission, composed of Siamese and British officers, shail be appointed within six months after the date of ratification of this Treaty, and shall be charged with the delimitation of the new frontier. The work of the Commission shall be commenced as soon as the season permits, and shall be carried out in accordance with the Boundary Protocol annexed hereto,
Subjects of His Majesty the King of Siam residing within the territory de- scribed in Article 1 who desire to preserve their Siamese nationality will, during the period of six months after the ratification of the present Treaty, be allowed to do so if they become domiciled in the Siamese dominions. His Britannic Majesty's Government undertake that they shall be at liberty to retain their immovable property within the territory described in Article 1.
It is understood that in accordance with the usual custom where a change of suzerainty takes place, any Concessions within the territories described in Article 1 hereof to individuals or companies, granted by or with the approval of the Siamese Government, and recognized by them as still in force on the date of the signature of the Treaty, will be recognized by the Government of His Britannic Majesty.
Art. 4.His Britannic Majesty's Government undertake that the Governinent of the Federated Malay States shall assume the indebtedness to the Siamese Govern- ment of the territories described in Article 1.
Art. 5. The jurisdiction of the Siamese International Courts, established by Article 8 of the Treaty of the 3rd September, 1883, shall, under the conditions defined in the Jurisdiction Protocol annexed hereto, be extended to all British sub- jects in Siam registered at the British Consulates before the date of the present Treaty.
This system shall come to an end, and the jurisdiction of the International Courts shall be transferred to the ordinary Siamese Courts after the promulgation and the coming into force of the Siamese codes, namely, the Penal Code, the Civil and Commercial Codes, the Codes of Procedure, and the Law for organization of Courts.
All other British subjects in Siam shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the ordinary Siamese Courts under the conditions defined in the Jurisdiction Protocol.
Art. 6. British subjects shall enjoy throughout the whole extent of Siam the rights and privileges enjoyed by the natives of the country, notably the right of property, the right of residence and travel.
They and their property shall be subject to all taxes and services, but these shall not be other or higher than the taxes and services which are or may be imposed by law on Siamese subjects. It is particularly understood that the limitation in the Agreement of the 20th September, 1900, by which the taxation of land shall not exceed that on similar land in Lower Burmah, is hereby removed.
British subjects in Siam shall be exempt from all military service, either in the army or navy, and from all forced loans or military exactions or contributions.
Art. 7. The provisions of all Treaties, Agreements, and Conventions between Great Britain and Siam, not modified by the present Treaty, remain in full force.
Art. 8. The present Treaty shall be ratified within four months from its date. In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have sigued the present Treaty and affixed their seals.
Done at Bangkok, in duplicate, the 10th day of March, in the year 1909.
(Seal.) (Signed) RALPH PAGET. (Seal.)
(Signed) DEVAWONGSE VAROPRAKAR.
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SLAM
(ANNEX 1)
Boundary Protocol annexed to the Treaty
305
The frontiers between the territories of His Majesty the King of Siam and the territory over which his suzerain rights have by the present Treaty been transferred to His Majesty the King of Great Britain and Ireland are as follows:-
Commencing from the most seaward point of the northern bank of the estuary of the Perlis River and thence north to the range of hills which is the watershed between the Perlis River on the one side and the Pujoh River on the other; then following the watershed formed by the said range of hills until it reaches the main watershed or dividing line between those rivers which flow into the Gulf of Siam on the one side and into the Indian Ocean on the other; following this main watershed so as to pass the sources of the Sungei Patani, Sungei Telubin, and Sungei Perak, to a point which is the source of the Sungei Pergau; then leaving the main watershed and going along the watershed separating the waters of the Sungei Pergau from the Sungei Telubin, to the hill called Bukit Jeli or the source of the main stream of the Sungei Golok. Thence the frontier follows the thalweg of the main stream of the Sungei Golok to the sea at a place called Kuala Tabar.
This line will leave the valleys of the Sungei Patani, Sungei Telubin, and Sungei Tanjung Mas and the valley on the left or west bank of the Golok to Siam and the whole valley of the Perak River and the valley on the right or east bank of the Golok to Great Britain.
Subjects of each of the parties may navigate the whole of the waters of the Sungei Golok and its affluents.
The island known as Pulo Langkawi, together with all the islets south of mid- channel between Terutau and Langkawi and all the islands south of Langkawi shall become British. Terutau and the islets to the north mid-channel shall remain
to Siam.
With regard to the islands close to the west coast, those lying to the north of the parallel of latitude where the most seaward point of the north bank of the Perlis River touches the sea shall remain to Siam, and those lying to the south of that parallel shall become British.
All islands adjacent to the eastern States of Kelantan and Tringganu, south of a parallel of latitude drawn from the point where the Sungei Golok reaches the coast at a place called Kuala Tabar shall be transferred to Great Britain, and all islands to the north of that parallel shall remain to Siam.
A rough sketch of the boundary herein described is annexed hereto.
2. The above-described boundary shall be regarded as final, both by the Govern- ment of His Britannic Majesty and that of Siam, and they mutually undertake that, so far as the boundary effects any alteration of the existing boundaries of any State or province, no claim for compensation on the ground of any such alteration made by any State or province so affected shall be entertained or supported by either.
3. It shall be the duty of the Boundary Commission, provided for in Article 3 of the Treaty of this date, to determine and eventually mark out the frontier above described.
If during the operations of delimitation it should appear desirable to depart from the frontier as laid down herein, such rectification shall not under any circumstance be made to the prejudice of the Siamese Government.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Protocol and affixed their seals.
Done at Bangkok, in duplicate, the 10th day of March, 1909.
(Seal.) (Seal.)
(Signed) RALPH PAGET.
(Signed) DEVAWONGSE VAKOPRAKAR.
306
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
(ANNEX 2)
Protocol concerning the Jurisdiction applicable in the Kingdom of Siam to British Subjects and annexed to the Treaty dated March, 10, 1909.
Sec. 1.-International Courts shall be established at such places as may seem desirable in the interests of the good administration of justice; the selection of these places shall form the subject of an understanding between the British Minister at Bangkok and the Siamese Minister for Foreign Affairs.
Sec. 2. The jurisdiction of the International Courts shall extend-
1. In civil matters: To all civil and commercial matters to which British subjects
shall be parties.
2. In penal matters: To breaches of law of every kind, whether committed by British subjects or to their injury.
Sec. 3.--The right of evocation in the International Courts shall be exercised in accordance with the provisions of Article 8 of the Treaty of the 3rd September, 1883.
The right of evocation shall cease to be exercised in all matters coming within the scope of codes or laws regularly promulgated as soon as the text of such codes or laws shall have been communicated to the British Legation in Bangkok. There shall be an understanding between the Ministry for Foreign Affairs and the British Legation at Bangkok for the disposal of cases pending at the time that the said codes and laws are communicated.
Sec. 4. In all cases, whether in the International Courts or in the ordinary Siamese Courts in which a British subject is defendant or accused, a European legal adviser shall sit in the Court of First Instance.
In cases in which a British born or naturalized subject not of Asiatic descent may be a party, a European adviser shall sit as a Judge in the Court of First Instance, and where such British subject is defendant or accused the opinion of the adviser shall prevail.
A British subject who is in the position of defendant or accused in any case arising in the provinces may apply for a change of venue, and should the Court consider such change desirable the trial shall take place either at Bangkok or before the Judge in whose Court the case would be tried at Bangkok. Notice of any such application shall be given to the British Consular officer.
Sec. 5.-Article 9 of the Treaty of the 3rd September, 1883, is repealed. Appeals against the decisions of the International Courts of First Instance shall be adjudged by the Siamese Court of Appeal at Bangkok. Notice of all such appeals shall be communicated to His Britannic Majesty's Consul, who shall have the right to give a written opinion upon the case to be annexed to the record.
The judgment on an appeal from either the International Courts or the ordinary Siamese Courts shall bear the signature of two European Judges.
Sec. 6.--An appeal on a question of law shall lie from the Court of Appeal at Bangkok to the Supreme or Dika Court.
Sec. 7.-No plea of want of jurisdiction based on the rules prescribed by the present Treaty shall be advanced in any Court after a defence on the main issue has been offered.
Sec. 8.--In order to prevent difficulties which may arise in future from the transfer of jurisdiction contemplated by the present Treaty and Protocol, it is agreed:-
(a.) All cases in which action shall be taken subsequently to the date of the ratification of this Treaty shall be entered and decided in the competent International or Siamese Court, whether the cause of action arose before or after the date of ratification.
(b.) All cases pending in His Britannic Majesty's Courts in Siam on the date of the ratification of this Treaty shall take their usual course in such Courts and in any Appeal Court until such cases have been finally disposed of, and the jurisdiction of His Britannic Majesty's Courts shall remain in full force for this
purpose.
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
807
The execution of the judgment rendered in any such pending case shall be carried out by the International Courts.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Protocol and affixed their seals.
Done at Bangkok, in duplicate, the 10th day of March, 1909.
(Seal.) (Signed) RALPH PAGET.
(Seal.) (Signed) DEVAWONGSE VAROPRAKAR.
M. le Ministre,
(ANNEX 3)
Mr. Paget to Prince Devawongse.
March 10, 1909.
In view of the position of British possessions in the Malay Peninsula and of the contiguity of the Siamese Malay provinces with British-protected territory, His Majesty's Government are desirous of receiving an assurance that the Siamese Government will not permit any danger to arise to British interests through the use of any portion of the Siamese dominions in the peninsula for military or naval purposes by foreign Powers.
His Majesty's Government would therefore request that the Siamese Govern- ment shall not cede or lease, directly or indirectly, to any foreign Government any territory situated in the Malay Peninsula south of the southern boundary of the Monthon Rajaburi, or in any of the islands adjacent to the said territory; also that within the limits above mentioned a right to establish or lease any coaling station, to build or own any construction or repairing docks, or to occupy exclusively any harbours, the occupation of which would be likely to be prejudicial to British interests from a strategic point of view, shall not be granted to any foreign Govern- ment or Company.
Since this assurance is desired as a matter of political expediency only, the phrase "coaling station" would not be held to include such small deposits of coal as may be required for the purposes of the ordinary shipping engaged in the Malay Peninsula coasting trade.
Prince Devawongse to Mr. Paget.
M. le Ministre,
Foreign Office, Bangkok, March 10, 1909.
I have the honour to acknowledge receipt of your note of this date, in which you express the desire of your Government that the Siamese Government shall not cede or lease, directly or indirectly, to any foreign Government any territory situated in the Malay Peninsula south of the southern boundary of the Monthon Rajaburi or in any of the islands adjacent to the said territory; also that within the limits above mentioned a right to establish or lease any coaling station, to build or own any construction or repairing docks, or to occupy exclusively any harbours, the occupation of which would be likely to be prejudicial to British interests from a strategic point of view, shall not be granted to any foreign Government or Company.
In reply, I beg to say that the Siamese Government gives its assurance to the above effect, taking note that the phrase "coaling station" shall not include such small deposits of coal as may be required for the purposes of the ordinary shipping engaged in the Malay Peninsula coasting trade.
308
M. le Ministre,
TREATY BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
Prince Devawongse to Mr. Paget.
Foreign Office, Bangkok, March 10, 1909. With reference to the provision contained in Article 4 of the Jurisdiction Protocol to the effect that in all cases in which a British subject is defendant or accused a European adviser shall sit in Court, I would express the hope, on behalf of His Majesty's Government, that His Britannic Majesty's Government will be prepared in due course to consider the question of a modification of or release from this guarantee when it shall be no longer needed; and, moreover, that in any negotiations in connection with such a modification or release the matter may be treated upon its merits alone, and not as a consideration for which some other return should be expected.
The Siamese Government appreciates that a Treaty like the one signe to-day marks an advance in the administration of justice in the kingdom. The conclusion of such a Treaty is in itself a sign of progress. It is the intention of the Siamese Government to inaintain the high standard in the administration of justice which it has set before it, and towards which it has been working for some time.
In this connection I take pleasure in acknowledging the contribution which Mr. J. Stewart Black has made to this work.
I wish also to say that provision will be made for the treatment of European prisoners according to the standard usual for such prisoners in Burmah and the Straits Settlements.
Mr. Paget to Prince Devawongse.
M. le Ministre,
March 10, 1909. With reference to the guarantee contained in the first paragraph of Article 4 of the Jurisdiction Protocol, I have the honour to state that His Majesty's Government will be prepared in due course to consider the question of modification of or release from this guarantee when it shall no longer be needed. His Majesty's Government are also willing that in any negotiations in connection with such a modification or release the matter shall be treated upon its merits alone, and not as a consideration for which some other return shall be expected.
His Majesty's Government learn with much satisfaction that it is the intention of the Siamese Government to maintain the high standard in the administration of justice which it has set before it, and towards which it has been working for same time; and I may assure your Royal Highness that it will be the aim of His Majesty's Government in every manner to second the efforts of His Siamese Majesty's Govern- ment in this direction.
I wish also to say that the International Courts referred to in section I of the Protocol on Jurisdiction annexed to the Treaty signed to-day need not necessarily be Courts specially organized for this purpose, Provincial ("Montbon") Courts or District ("Muang") Courts may constitute International Courts, according as British subjects may be established in greater or less number within the jurisdiction of those Courts. The fact that an ordinary Court is designated as an International Court will have as a consequence the introduction into that ordinary Court of all the provisions relating to International Courts secured by the Protocol on Jurisdic
tion,
(Signed)
RALPH PAGET.
FOREIGN JURISDICTION.
STATUTORY RULES AND ORDERS, 1909, No. 754.
THE SIAM ORDER IN COUNCIL, 1909,
At the Court at Buckingham Palace, the 28th day of June, 1909.
Lord President.
Lord Steward.
Earl Grey.
Earl Carringtou.
PRESENT:
Sir Frederick M. Darley.
Mr. Herbert Samuel. Mr. C. E. H. Hobhouse. Mr. Russell Rea.
Whereas by Treaty, grant, usage, sufferance, and other lawful means, His Majesty the King has power and jurisdiction within the dominions of the King of Siam:
And whereas the exercise of the power and jurisdiction aforesaid is now regulated by the Siam Order in Council, 1906:
And whereas by a Treaty between His Majesty the King and His Majesty the King of Siam, signed in Bangkok on the 10th day of March, 1909, the States of Kelantan, Trengganu, Kedah, Perlis, and the adjacent islands, were transferred to the Government of His Majesty, the frontiers of the said territories being defined in the Boundary Protocol annexed to the said Treaty:
And whereas by Article of the said Treaty it was agreed that the jurisdiction of the Siamese International Courts, established by Article 8 of the Treaty of the 3rd September, 1883, between Her late Majesty Queen Victoria and His Majesty the King of Siam, should, under the conditions defined in the Jurisdiction Protocol annexed to the said recited Treaty of the 10th March, 1909, and printed in the Schedule to this Order, be extended to all British subjects in Siam registered at the British Consulates before the date of the said Treaty, and that this system should come to an end, and the jurisdiction of the International Courts should be trans. ferred to the ordinary Siamese Courts after the promulgation and the coming into force of the Siamese codes, namely, the Penal Code, the Čivil and Commercial Codes, the Codes of Procedure, and the Law for organization of Courts, and that all other British subjects in Siam should be subject to the jurisdiction of the ordinary Siamese Courts under the conditions defined in the said Jurisdiction Protocol.
Now, therefore, His Majesty, by virtue and in exercise of the powers in this behalf by The Foreigu Jurisdiction Act, 1890," or otherwise in His Majesty vested, is pleased, by and with the advice of His Privy Council, to order, and it is hereby ordered as follows:-
I. This Order may be cited as "The Siam Order in Council, 1909," and shall be read as one with the "Siam Order in Council, 1906," hereinafter called the "Principal Order."
2. From and after the commencement of this Order the Principal Order shall, ex- cept as regards any judicial matters pending in any Court established by the Principal Order on the day above mentioned, cease to be in force and operation in the States of Kelantan, Triogganu, Kedah, Perlis, and the adjacent islands, being the territories transferred to the control of His Majesty's Government, the frontiers whereof are defined by the Boundary Protocol annexed to the said Treaty.
3. With respect to any civil or criminal case arising within the limits of the Principal Order, elsewhere than in the districts referred to in Article 2, between
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FOREIGN JURISDICTION BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND SIAM
British subjects who were registered at the date of the said Treaty in accordance with Part VIII. of the Principal Order, or in which a British subject so registered may be a party as complainant, accused, plaintiff, or defendant, the Principal Order shall not operate or have any effect so long as the said Treaty of the 10th March, 1909, continues in force, unless and until such case shall have been transferred by au exercise of the right of evocation in accordance with the provisions of the Jurisdiction Protocol annexed to the s.id Treaty and printed in the Schedule hereto to a Court established under the Principal Order.
4. Notwithstanding anything contained in Article 3, the Courts established by the Principal Order shall continue to transact all non-contentious business in relation to the probate of wills and the administration of estates of deceased British subjects who were registered in accordance with Part VIII. of the Principal Order at the date of the said Treaty; but, except as to non-contentious business, the provisions of Article 3 shall apply in matters of probate and administration.
5. "The Foreigu Jurisdiction (Probates) Order in Council, 1908," shall not operate in Siam, except to the extent and in the cases where the provisions of the Principal Order are in operation.
6. With respect to all civil or criminal cases, other than those referred to in Articles 3 and 4, arising within the limits of the Principal Order, elsewhere than in the districts referred to in Article 2, the Principal Order shall not operate or have effect so long as the said Treaty continues in force.
7. Where a case is transferred from an International Court to a Court established by the Principal Order, such Court shall give such directions as seem proper for its determination, having regard to the proceedings (if any) in the International Court. In determining such case the Court shall apply any Siamese law, other than a law relating to procedure, which would have been applied in the International Court.
In a criminal case, if the accused is handed over by the International Court in custody, he may be detained in custody as if he had been arrested under a warrant on the day on which he is handed over.
8. Criminal or civil proceedings which have been instituted in any Court established under the Principal Order before the commencement of this Order shall not be affected by this Order.
9. Articles 139 to 153 (inclusive), 156 and 157 of the Principal Order are hereby repealed, but such repeal shall not affect the past operation of such Articles, or any right, title, obligation or liability accrued or the validity or invalidity of anything done or suffered under such Articles before the commencement of this Order.
10. This Order shall commence and have effect on such date as the Minister shall appoint.
And the Right Honourable Sir Edward Grey, Baronet, one of His Majesty's Principal cretaries of State, is to give the necessary directions herein.
A. W. Fitzroy.
+
FRANCE
TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND SIAM
SIGNED AT PARIS, FEBRUARY, 1904
I. The frontier between Siam and Cambodia starts on the left bank of the Great Lake, from the mouth of the River Stung Ruolos. It follows the parallel of this point in an Eastward direction till it meets the River Preak Kompung Tiam; then, turning Northward, it corresponds to the meridian of that point till it reaches the Prom Dong-rek Mountains. Thence it follows the watershed between the basins of the Nam-Sen and the Mekong on the one side, and of the Nam-Mun on the other, and joins the Puon Padang range, the crest of which it follows towards the East as far as the Mekong. Above that point the Mekong remains the frontier of the King- dom of Siam, in conformity with Clanse I. of the Treaty of October 3, 1893.
II. With regard to the frontier between Louang-Prabang, on the right bank of the Mekong, and the Provinces of Muang-Phichai and Muang-Nan, it starts from the Mekong at its confluence with the Nam-Huong, and follows the thalweg of that river to its confluence with the Nam-Tang. Then, ascending the course of the said River Nam-Tang, it reaches the watershed between the basins of the Mekong and the Menan, at a point situated near Pou-Dene-Deue. From that spot it turns Northward, following the watershed between the two basins to the sources of the River Nam-Kop, the course of which it follows till it meets the Mekong.
III. The delimitation of the frontier between the Kingdom of Siam and the territories forming French Indo-China shall be carried out. That delimitation shall be made by mixed Commissions, composed of officers appointed by the two contracting countries. The duties of those Commissions shall concern the frontier determined by Clauses I, and II., as well as the region comprised between the Great Lake and the sea.
With the object of facilitating the work of the Commissions and of avoiding every possible difficulty in the delimitation of the frontier in the region comprised between the Great Lake and the sea, the two Governments will come to an agreement before nominating the mixed Commissions, fixing the principal points of the delimit- ation in that region, and especially the point at which the frontier will reach the sea. The mixed Commissions shall be appointed and begin their work within four months after the notification of the present Convention.
IV. The Siamese Government renounces all Sovereign rights over the territories of Louang-Prabang, situated on the right bank of the Mekong. Merchant boats and wood rafts belonging to the Siamese shall have the right to navigate freely that portion of the Mekong traversing the territory of Louang-Prabang.
V. As soon as the Agreement stipulated for in Paragraph 2 of Clause III.. relative to the delimitation of the frontier between the Great Lake and the sea, shall have been established, and as soon as it has been officially notified to the French authorities that the territory involved in this Agreement, and the territories situated to the East of the frontier, as indicated in Clauses I. and II. of the present Treaty, are at their disposal, the French troops which provisionally occupied Chantabun, in virtue of the Convention of October 3, 1893, sliall leave that town.
VI-The stipulations of Clanse IV. of the Treaty of October 3, 1893, shall be replaced by the following: His Majesty the King of Siam undertakes that the troops he sends or keeps throughout the whole of the Siamese Basin of the Mekong shall always be troops of Siamese nationality, commanded by officers of that nationality.
The only exception to this rule is made in favour of the Siamese Gendarmerie, at present commanded by Danish officers. Should the Siamese Govern- ment wish to substitute for these officers foreign officers belonging to another nationality, it must previously come to an understanding with the French Govern-
meut.
So far as the Provinces of Siem Reap, Battambang, and Sesupon are
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TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND SIAM
concerned, the Siamese Government undertakes to keep there none but the Police Contingents necessary for the maintenance of order. These contingents shall be recruited exclusively on the spot, from among the native inhabitants.
"
VII. In future, in the Siamese portion of the Mekong Basin, if the Royal Government wishes to construct ports, canals, railways (especially railways intended to connect the Capital with any point in that basin), it will come to an agreement with the French Government, if such works cannot be exclusively executed by Siamese and with Siamese capital. The same would naturally apply to the working of the said enterprises. With regard to the use of the ports, canals, and railways in the Siamese portion of the Mekong Basin, as well as in the rest of the Kingdom, it is understood that no differential rights shall be established, contrary to the principle of commercial equality included in the Treaties signed by Siam.
VIII. In execution of Clause VI. of the Convention of October 3, 1893, plots of land of a superficial area to be determined shall be ceded by the Siamese Govern. ment to the Government of the Republic at the following points situated on the right bank of the Mekong-Xieng-Kheng, Mong-Kheng, Mong-Sing; on the right or left bank-Mong-Dahan, Kemmarat, and the mouth of the Nam-Mong. The two Gov- ernments will come to an understanding to clear the course of the Nam-Monn, be- tween its confluents with the Mekong and Pimun, of the obstacles which binder navigation. In case of those works being found impossible to execute, or too costly, the two Governments will concert together for the establishment of communication by land between Pimun and Mekong. They will also come to an understanding for the construction between Bassak and the frontier of Louang-Prabang, of the railway lines which may be recognised as necessary owing to the innavigability of the Mekong.
IX. It is from the present moment agreed that the two Governments will facilitate the establishment of a railway connecting Pnom Penh and Battanbang. The construction and working shall be undertaken either by the Governments themselves, each undertaking the portion which is on its territory, or by a Franco-Siamese Com- pany accepted by the two Governments. The two Governments are agreed on the necessity of carrying out work for the improvement of the course of the river between the Great Lake and Battanbang. With that object in view, the French Government is ready to place at the disposal of the Siamese Government the technical agents it may require, both for the execution and maintenance of the said works.
X.--The Government of his Majesty the King of Siam accepts the list of the French proteges such as they exist at the present moment, with the exception of the persons whose licences may be recognised by both Parties as having been illegally obtained. A copy of these lists will be communicated to the Siamese authorities by the French authorities. The descendents of the protegés thus maintained under French jurisdiction shall not have the right to claim their licence if they do not be- long to the category of persons described in the following Clause of the present Convention:
XI.-Persons of Asiatic origion born in a territory subject to the direct domina. tion, or placed under the Protectorate of France, except those who took up their residence in Siam previous to the time when the territory on which they were born was placed under that domination, or that Protectorate, shall have the right to French protection. French protection will be granted to the children of those persons, but it shall not extend to their grandchildren.
XII. So far as concerns the jurisidicton to which, for the future and without exception, all French subjects and all French protegés shall be subjected to in Siam, the two Governments agree to substitute for the existing regulations the following:- 1. In criminal matters, French subjects or French protegés shall only be amenable to French judicial authority.
2. In civil matters, all actions brought by a Siamese against a Frenchman or French protege, shall be heard before the French Consular Court. All actious in which the Defendant is a Siamese shall be heard before the Siamese Court of Foreign Causes, instituted at Bangkok. Except in the provinces of Xieng Mai, Lakhon, Lampoun, and Nan, all civil and criminal cases involving
TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND SIAM
313
French subjects and protegés shall be heard before the International Siamese Court. But it is understood that in all these cases the French Consul shall have the right of being present at the trial, or of being represented by a duly authorised deputy, and of making all observations which may appear to him to be required in the interest of justice. In the case of the Defendent being French or a French protege, the French Consul may, at any time during the proceedings if he thinks fit, and upon a written requisition, claim to hear the case. The case shall then be transferred to the French Consular Court, which, from this moment, shall alone he competent, and to which the Siamese authorities are bound to give their assistance and good offices, Appeals against the judgments delivered both by the Court of Foreign Causes, as well as the International Court, shall be taken before the Court of A; peal at Bangkok.
XIII. With regard to the future admission to French protection of Asiatics. who are not born on territory under the direct authority or the protectorate of France, or who may not find themselves legally naturalised, the Government of the Republic shall enjoy rights equal to those which Siam may accord to any other Power.
XIV. The Regulations under former Treaties, Agreements, and Conventions between France and Siam, which are not modified by the present Convention, remain in full force.
XV. In case of difficulties in the interpretation of the present Convention, which is drawn up in French and Siamese, the French text alone shall stand.
XVI. The present Convention shall be ratified within four months from the day of the signature, or earlier if possible.
ADDITIONAL TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND SIAM
[SIGNED AT BANGKOK, MARCH 23RD, 1907]
(Translation.)
The President of the French Republic, and His Majesty the King of Siam, in continuation of the work of delimitation undertaken with a view to carrying out the Convention of the 13th February, 1904, being desirous on the one hand of assuring the final settlement of all questions relative to the common frontiers of Indo-China and Siam, by a reciprocal and rational system of exchanges, and being desirous on the other hand of facilitating the relations between the two countries by the progres- sive introduction of an uniform system of jurisdiction, and by the extension of the rights of French nationals established in Siam, have decided to conclude a fresh Treaty, and have appointed for this purpose as their Plenipotentiaries, namely:
The President of the French Republic, M. Victor Emile Marie Joseph Collin (de Plancy), Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of the French Republic in Siam, Officer of the Legion of Honour and of Public Instruction;
His Majesty the King of Siam, His Royal Highness Prince Devawongse Varoprakar, Chevalier of the Order of Maha-Chakrkri, Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour, &c., Minister for Foreign Affairs;
Who, furnished with full powers, which have been found in good and due form, have resolved upon the following provisions:--
Art. I. The Siamese Government cedes to France the territories of Battambang, Siem Reap, and Sisophon, the frontiers of which are defined by Clause I of the Protocol of Delimitation annexed herewith.
Art. II.-The French Government cedes to Siam the territories of Dan-Sai and Kratt, the frontiers of which are defiued by Clauses I and II of the said Protocol, as well as all the islands situated to the south of Cape Lemling as far as and inclusive of Koh-Kut.
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ADDITIONAL TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND SIAM
Art. III. The handing over of these territories shall take place on one side and the other not less than twenty days after the date on which the present Treaty is ratified.
Art. IV.-A mixed Commission, composed of French and Siamese officers and officials, shall be appointed by the two contracting countries, not less than four months after the ratification of the present Treaty, and shall be charged with delimiting the new frontiers. It shall commence its operations as soon as the season shall permit, and shall carry them out in conformity with the Protocol of Delimita- tion annexed to the present Treaty.
Art. V.-All French Asiatic subjects and protected persons who shall be registered at the French Consulates in Siam after the signature of the present Treaty, by application of Article XI of the Convention of the 18th February, 1904, shall be under the jurisdiction of the ordinary Siamese Tribunals.
The jurisdiction of the International Siamese Courts, the institution of which is arranged for by Article XII of the Convention of the 13th February, 1904, shall, subject to the conditions given in the Protocol of Jurisdiction annexed herewith, be extended, throughout the whole kingdom of Siam, to the French Asiatic subjects and protected persons alluded to in Articles X and XI of the same Convention, and who are actually registered at the French Consulates in Siam.
This régime shall terminate and the jurisdiction of the International Courts shall be transferred to the ordinary Siamese Tribunals, after the promulgation and the bringing into force of the Siamese Codes (Penal Code, Civil and Commercial Code, Codes of Procedure, Law of Judicial Organization).
Art, VI.-French Asiatic subjects and protected persons shall enjoy throughout the whole kingdom of Siam the same rights and privileges which the natives of the country possess, notably rights of property, of free residence, and of free circulation.
They shall be subject to the ordinary taxes and "prestations."
They shall be exempt from military service and shall not be subjected to extra- ordinary requisitions and duties.
Art. VII. The provisions of the old Treaties, Agreements, and Conventions between France and Siam, which are not modified by the present Treaty, remain in
full force.
Art. VIII. In the event of any difficulty arising in connection with the interpretation of the present Treaty drawn up in French and Siamese, the French text shall be binding.
Art. 1X. The present Treaty shall be ratified in not less than four months from the date of signature or sooner if possible.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Treaty, and have affixed their seals.
Done at Bangkok, in duplicate, the 23rd March, 1907.
(Signed)
V. COLLIN (de Plancy). Devawongse VAROPRAKAR.
Protocol concerning the Delimitation of the Frontiers, and annexed to the Treaty of
March 23rd, 1907.
With a view to facilitating the labours of the Commission arranged for in Article IV of the Treaty of to-day's date, and with a view to avoiding any possible difficulties arising in regard to the delimitation, the Government of the French Republic and the Government of His Majesty the King of Siam have agreed upon the following:-
Clause I.-The frontier between French Indo-China and Siam starts from the sea at a point situated opposite the highest summit of the Island of Koh-Kut. It follows from this point a north-easterly direction to the crest of Prom-Krevanh. It is formally agreed that, in all cases, the east slopes of these mountains, including the whole of the basin of the Klong-Kopo, should continue to form part of French Indo-China.
The frontier follows the crest of the Pnom-Krevanh in a northerly direction as far as Prom-Thom, which is situated on the main line of the watershed, between
ADDITIONAL TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND SIAM
315
the rivers which flow towards the gulf of Siam, and those which flow towards the Groat Lake.. From Puom-Thom, the frontier follows at first in a north-westerly direction, then in a northerly direction, the actual frontier between the Province of Battambang on the one hand, and that of Chantaboum aud Kratt on the other, as far as the point where this frontier joins the river called Nam-Sai. It then follows the course of this river as far as its confluence with the River of Sisophon, and the latter river to a point situated 10 kilom. below the town of Arauh. Lastly, from this latter point, it continues in a straight line to a point situated on the Daug-Reck, halfway between the passes called Chong-Ta-Koh and Chong-Sa-Met. It is understood that this latter line must leave in Siamese territory the direct route between Aranh and Chong-Ta-Koh. From the above mentioned point, situated on the crest of Dang-R k, the frontier follows the watershed between the basin of the Great Lake and the Mekong on the one side, and the basin of the Nam-Moun on the other, and touches the Mekong below Pak-Moun, at the month of the Huei-Doue, in conformity with the sketch map adopted by the last Commission of Delimitation on the 18th January, 1907.
Clause II. From the side of Luang Prabang, the frontier quits the Mekong, in the south, at the month of the Nam-Huong, and follows the thalweg of that river as far as its source which is situated at the Phu-Khao-Mieng. Thence the frontier follows the watershed between the Mekong and the Menam and tern inates in the Mekong, at the point called Keng-Pa-Dai, in conformity with the sketch map adopted by the last Commission of De imitation of the 16th January, 1906.
Clause III.-The Commission of Delimitation arranged for in Article IV of the Treaty of to-day's date shall determine and trace if necessary, on the spot, that portion of the frontier which is described in Clause I of the present Protocol. If, in the course of the work of delimitation, the French Government should wish to obtain a rectification of the frontier with a view to substituting natural lines for conventional lines, this rectification cannot be made, in any case, to the detriment of the Siamese Government.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Protocol, and have affixed their seals.
Done at Bangkok, in duplicate, the 23rd March, 1907.
(Signed) V. COLLIN (de Flancy).
DEVAWONGSE VAROPRAKAR,
Protocol concerning the jurisdiction applicable in the Kingdom of Siam to French Asiatic
subjects and protected persons, and annexed to the Treaty of the 23rd March, 1907.
In fulfilment of Article V of the Treaty of to-day's date, the Government of the French Republic and the Government of His Majesty the King of Siam, being desirous of regulating the organization and working of the International Courts, have agreed upon the following:-
г
Clause International Courts shall be created, wherever the requirements of justice shall make such a course necessary, after an understandin has been arrived at between the Minister of the French Republic and the Siamese Minister for Foreign Affairs.
Clause II.The jurisdiction of International Courts extends:
1. In civil matters; to all civil or commercial matters in which French Asiatic subjects and protected persons are involved.
2. In criminal matters: to intractions of every kind committed either by or against French Asiatic subjects or protected persons.
lause III. In the Provinces of Udorn and Isarn the jurisdiction of the Inter- national Courts shall extend provisionally to all French Asiatic subjects and protected persons, whatever may be the date of their registration at the French Consulates.
Clanse IV.--The right of removing a cause shall be exercised in accordance with the provisions of Article XII of the Convention of the 13th February, 1904.
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ADDITIONAL TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND SIAM
This right, however, shall no longer be exercised in regard to all matters which form the subject of Codes or Laws regularly promulgated, after the said Codes or Laws have been communicated to the French Legation, and have been brought
into force.
An understanding shall be arrived at between the Ministry for Foreign Affairs and the French Legation for the settlement of outstanding questions whenever the said Codes or Laws shall come into force.
Clause V-All appcals against the decisions of the International Courts of First Instance shall be communicated to the French Consul, who shall be entitled to furnish on the subject a written opinion, which shall be added to the dossier.
The appeal must bear the signature of two European Judges.
Clause VI.-Appeal shall lie from the decisions of the Courts of Appeal. Such appeal can be exercised on the ground of want of jurisdiction, and on account of abuse of power, and, in general, all violations of the law.
The appeal shall be determined by the Supreme Court, or San Dika.
Clause VII. Before whatever Court a civil or criminal cause may be brought, the pl a of want of jurisdiction, pursuant to the rules laid down by the Treaty of to-day's date, must be raised before the defence on the merits.
In witness whereof the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Protocol and have attached their seals.
Done at Bangkok, in duplicate, the 23rd March, 1907.
(Signed) V. COLLIN (de Plancy).
DEVAWONGSE VAROPRAKAR,
Agreement regulating the régime of Concessions allotted to the Government of the French Republic on the right bank of the Mekong, in pursuance of Article VIII of the Convention of the 13th February, 1904.
Clause I.-In fulfilment of Article VIII of the Convention of the 18th February, 1904, the Siamese Government leases to the Government General of Indo-China, which agrees to the lease, territories exempt from all servitude, active or passive, situated at Xieng-Khan, Nong Khay, Muong-Saniabouri, mouth of the Nam-Khan, Ban-Mouk-Dahan, Kenmarat and Pak-Mam.
Clause II.-The leases are made for a period of fifty years, renewable for the same period if the Government General of Indo-China so desires.
Clause III. The Government General of Indo-China shall pay annually to the Siamese Government, from the 1st January, 1908, a nominal rent of 1 tical per hectar and part of a hectar.
Clause IV. In accordance with Article IV of the Treaty of the 3rd October, 1893, and with Article VIII of the Convention of the 13th February, 1904, the Concessions are exclusively framed with a view to facilitating commercial navigation.
The following establishments can be created there:
Depots of fuel and coal;
Depots of material, such as timber, iron, bamboo, dynamite, &c.;
Warehouses for goods in transit ;
Quarters for passengers and for the crews of pirogues and launches;
Quarters and offices for the staff of navigation companies and public works; Commercial establishments, on the express understanding that there shall be no
trade in spirituous liquors, opium, arms, and ammunition,
The territory ceded is under Siamese jurisdiction, as exercised in the rest of the kingdom in accordance with the Treaties concluded between France and Siam,
Done at Bangkok, in duplicate, the 23rd March, 1907.
(Signed)
CHATIDEJ. BERNARD
V. COLLIN (de Plancy). DEVAWONGSE.
JAPAN
TREATY OF FRIENDSHIP, COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION BETWEEN JAPAN AND SIAM
SIGNED AT BANGKOK, 25TH FEBRUARY, 1898
His Majesty the Emperor of Japau and His Majesty the King of Siam, being equally animated by a desire to promote the relations of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation which happily exist between their respective states and subjects, have resolved to conclude a Treaty for that purpose, and have named as their Plenipo- tentiaries, that is to say:
His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, Manjiro Inagaki, Shogoi, His Majesty's Minister Resident at the Court of His Majesty the King of Siam, and His Majesty the King of Siam, His Royal Highness Prince Krom Luang Derawongse Varoprakar, Knight of the Order of Chakrakri, First Class of the Order of Rising Sun, &c., Minister for Foreign Affairs of His Majesty the King of Siam.
Who, after having communicated to each other their respective full powers, found to be in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following articles.
Art. I. There shall be constant peace and perpetual friendship between Japan and Siam and the subjects of each of the High Contracting Parties shall enjoy in the dominions and possessions of the other, full and entire protection for their persons and property according to the established law of the country.
Art. II. It shall be free to each of the Contracting Parties to appoint Consuls- General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls and Consular Agents to reside in the towns and ports of the dominious and possessions of the other, where similar officers of other Powers are permitted to reside. Such Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls and Consular Agents, however, shall not enter upon their functions until after they shall have been approved and admitted in the usual form by the Government to which they are sent. They shall enjoy all the honours, privileges, exemptions and iminunities which are or may be granted to Consuls of the most favoured nation.
Art. III. The subjects of each of the High Contracting Parties may enter, remain and reside in any part of the dominions and possessions of the other, where the subjects and citizens of the nation most favoured in these respects are permitted to enter, remain and reside; they may there hire and occupy houses, manufactories shops and warehouses, and they may there engage in trade by wholesale and retail in all kinds of produce, manufactures and merchandise, paying no other or higher taxes, imposts, charges or exactions of any kind than are now or may hereafter be paid by the subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation.
In all that relates to travel, trade and residence; to the acquisition, possession and disposal of property of all kinds, and to the right to engage in all kinds of busi- ness, occupation and enterprise, the subjects of each of the Contracting Parties in the dominions and possessions of the other, shall at all times enjoy the treatment accorded to the subjects or citizens of the most favoured nations.
Art, IV.-There shall be reciprocally full and entire freedom of commerce and navigation between the dominions and possessions of the two High Contracting Parties. The subjects of each of the Contracting Parties shall have liberty freely and securely to come and go with their ships and cargoes to and from all places, ports and rivers in the dominions and possessions of the other, which are now or may hereafter be opened to foreign commerce and navigation.
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TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND SIAM
Art. V.-The subjects of each of the High Contracting Parties shall enjoy in the dominions and possessions of the other, a perfect equality of treatment with the subjects or citizens of the most favoured nation in all that relates to transit duties, warehousing, bounties, the examination and appraisement of merchandise and draw- backs.
Art. VI. No other or higher duties shall be imposed on the importation into the dominions, and possessions of His Majesty the King of Siam of any article, the produce or manufacture of the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Em- peror of Japan, from whatever place arriving, and no other or higher duties shall be imposed on the importation into the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan of any article, the produce or manufacture of the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the King of Siam, from whatever place arriving, than on the like article produced or manufactured in any other foreign country; nor shall any prohibition be maintained or imposed on the importation of any article, the pro- duce or manufactures of the dominions and possessions of either of the High Contracting Parties into the dominions and possessions of the other from whatever place arriving, which shall not equally extend to the importation of the like article being the produce or manufacture of any other country. This last provision is not applicable to the sanitary and other prohibitions occasioned by the necessity of pro- tecting the safety of persons, or of cattle, or of plants useful to agriculture.
Art. VII.-No other or higher duties, taxes, or charges of any kind shall be imposed in the domioions and possessions of either of the High Contracting Parties in respect of any article exported to the dominions and possessions of either of the other than such as are or may be payable in respect of the like article exported to any other foreign country; nor shall any prohibition be imposed on the exportation of any article from the dominions and possessions of either of the two Contracting Parties to the dominions and possessions of the other, which shall not equally extend to the exportation of the like article to any other country.
Art. VIII-All articles which are or may be legally imported into the ports of the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the Emperor of Japan in Japanese vessels or vessels of the most favoured nation, may likewise be imported into those ports in Siamese vessels, without being liable to any other or higher duties or charges of whatever denomination than if such articles were imported in Japanese vessels or vessels of the most favoured nation, and reciprocally, all articles which are or may be legally imported into the ports of the dominions and possessions of His Majesty the King of Siam in Siamese vessels or in vessels of the most favoured nation, may like- wise be imported into those ports in Japanese vessels, without being liable to any other or higher duties or charges of whatever denomination than if such articles were imported in Siamese vessels or vessels of the most favoured nation. Such reciprocal equality of treatment shall take effect without distinction, whether such articles come directly from the place of origin or from any other place.
In the same manner there shall be perfect equality of treatment in regard to exportation, so that the same internal and export duties shall be paid and the same bounties and drawbacks allowed in the dominions and possessions of either of the High Contracting Parties on the exportation of any article which is or way be legally exported therefrom whether such exportation shall take place in Japanese or Siamese vessels or in vessels of a third Power and whatever may be the place of destination, whether a port of either of the Contracting Parties, or of any third Power.
in
Art. IX. No other higher duties or charges on account of tonnage, light or harbour dues, pilotage, quarantine, salvage in case of damage or shipwreck or any other local cliarges, shall be imposed in any ports of Japan on Siamese vessels nor any of the ports of Siam on Japanese vessels than are now or may bereafter be payable in the like cases in the same ports on national vessels in general or vessels of the most favoured nation. Such equality of treatment shall apply reciprocally to the respective vessels from whatever port or place they may arrive and whatever may be their place of destination.
TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND SIAM
319
Art. X. In all that concerns the entering, clearing, stationing, loading and unloading of vessels in the ports, basins, docks, roadsteads, harbours, or rivers of the dominions and possessions of the two countries no privilege shall be granted by one country to national vessels or vessels of any third Power, which shall not be equally granted in similar cases to vessels of the other country.
Art. XI.Any ship of war or merchant vessel of either of the High Contracting Parties which may be compelled by stress of weather, or by reason of any other dis- tress, to take shelter in a port of the other, shall be at liberty to refit therein, to pro- cure all necessary supplies, and to put to sea again, without paying any duties other, than such as would be payable by national vessels. In case, however, the master of a merchant vessel should be under the necessity of disposing of a part of his cargo in order to defray the expenses, he shall be bound to conform to the regulations and tariffs of the place to which he may come.
If any ship of war or merchant vessel of one of the Contracting Parties should run aground or be wrecked upon the coasts of the other, such ship or vessel, and all parts thereof, and all furnitures and appurtenances belonging thereunto, and all goods and merchandise saved therefrom, including those which may have been cast into the sea, or the proceeds thereof, if sold, as well as all papers found on board such stranded or wrecked ship or vessel, shall be given up to the owners, master or their agents, when claimed by them. If such owners, master or agents are not on the spot, the same shall be delivered to the respective Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls or Consular Agents upon being claimed by them within the period fixed by the laws of the country, and such consular officers, owners, master or agents shall pay only the expenses incurred in the preservation of the property, together with the salvage or other expenses which would have been payable in the case of a wreek of a national vessel.
The goods and merchandise saved from the wreck shall be exempt from all the duties of the customs unless cleared for consumption, in which case they shall pay the ordinary duties.
In the case of a ship or vessel belonging to the subjects of either of the Con- tracting Parties being driven in by stress of weather, run aground or wrecked in the dominions and possessions of the other, the respective Consuls-General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls and Consular Agents shall, if the owner or master or other agent of the owner is not present, or is present but requires it, be authorized to interpose in order to afford the uecessary assistanc; to the subjects of the respective States.
Art. XII. The vessels of war of each of the High Contracting Parties may enter, remain, and make repairs in those ports and places of the other, to which the vessels of war of the most favoured nation are accorded access; they shall there submit to the same regulations and enjoy the same honours, advantages, privileges and exemptious as are now or may hereafter be conceded to vessels of war of the most favoured nation.
Art. XIII.The High Contracting Parties agree that in all that concerns com- merce, industry and navigation, any privilege, favour, or immunity which either Contracting Party has actually granted, or may hereafter grant, to the Government, subjects, citizens, ships or inerchandise of any other State shall be extended immedi ately, and unconditionally to the Government, subjects, ships or merchandise of the other Contracting Party; it being their intention that the trade, industry and naviga tion of each country shall be placed, in all respects, by the other on the footing of the most favoured nation.
Art. XIV. The present Treaty shall come into fores immediately after the exchange of ratifications, and shall remain in force for ten years, and thereafter until the expiration of a year from the day on which one or the other of the Contracting Parties shall have repudiated it.
Art. XV. The present Treaty is signed in duplicate in the Japanese, Siamese and English languages, and in case there should be found any discrepancy between the Japanese and Siamese texts, such discrepancy shall be decided in conformity with the English text.
320
TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND SIAM
Art. XVI. The present Treaty shall be ratified and the ratifications there to shall be exchanged at Bangkok as soon as possible.
In witness whereof, the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the same and have affixed thereto the seal of their arms.
Done at Bangkok in sextuplicate, this twenty-fifth day of the second month of the thirty-first year of Meiji, corresponding to the twenty-fifth day of February, of the one hundred and sixteenth year of Ratanakosindr Sok and the eighteen. bundred and ninety-eighth year of the Christian era.
(L.B.)
MANJIRO INAGAKI. DEVAWONGSE VAROPRAKAR, (L.S.)
PROTOCOL
At the moment of proceeding this day to the signature of the Treaty of Friend- ship, Commerce and Navigation between Japan and Siam, the Plenipotentiaries of the two High Contracting Parties have declared as follows:
I. The Siamese Government consents that Japanese Consular officers shall exercise jurisdiction over Japanese subjects in Siam until the judicial reforms of Siam shall have been completed; that is, until a Criminal Code, a Code of Criminal Procedure, a Civil Code (with exception of Law of Marriage and Succession), a Code of Civil Procedure and a Law of Constitution of the Courts of Justice will come into force.
II. The Japanese Government accept as binding upon Japanese subjects and vessels resorting to Siam the Trade Regulations and Customs Tariffs now in force in Siam in respect of the subjects, citizens and vessels of the Powers having Treaties with Siam.
Such Regulations and Tariffs shall be subject to revision at any time upon twelve months' previous notice, on demand of either Japan or Siam.
All fines and penalties imposed for infractions of the said Regulations or of the Treaty signed this day, shall be paid to the Siamese Government.
III. Any controversies which may arise respecting the interpretation or the execution of the Treaty signed this day or the consequences of any violation thereof, shall be submitted, when the means of settling them directly by amicable agreement are exhausted, to the decision of Commissions of Arbitration, and that the result of such arbitration shall be binding upon both Governments.
The members of such Commissions shall be selected by two Governments by common consent, failing which each of the Parties shall nominate an Arbitrator or an equal number of Arbitrators, and the Arbitrators thus appointed shall select an Umpire.
The procedure of the Arbitration shall in each case be determined by the Con- tracting Parties, failing which the Commission of Arbitration shall be itself entitled to determine it beforehand.
The undersigned Plenipotentiaries have agreed that this Protocol shall be sub- mitted to the High Contracting Parties at the same time as the Treaty, and that when the Treaty is ratified, the agreements contained in this Protocol shall also equally be considered as approved, without the necessity of a further formal ratification. In witness whereof, the respective Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Protocol and have affixed thereto their seals.
Done at Bangkok in sextuplicate, this twenty-fifth day of the second mouth of the thirty-first year of Meiji, corresponding to the twenty-fifth day of February of the one hundred and sixteenth year of Ratanakosindr Sok and the eighteen hundred and ninety-eighth year of the Christian era.
MANJIRO INAGAKI.
(L.8.)
DEVAWONGSE VAROPRAKAR. (L.S.)
RUSSIA
DECLARATION EXCHANGED BETWEEN RUSSIA AND SIAM
SIGNED AT Bangkok, 23rd June, 1899
The Imperial Government of Russia and the Royal Government of Siam, being desirous to facilitate the relations between the two countries, have, awaiting the conclusion of a Treaty of Commerce and Amity, agreed as follows:-
That for everything relating to jurisdiction, commerce, and navigation, Russian subjects on Siamese territory and Siamese subjects on Russian térritory shall hence- forth enjoy, till the expiration of the present arrangement, all the rights and privileges granted to the subjects of other nations respectively in Siam and in Russia by the Treaties now in existence and by Treaties that may be concluded in the future.
This arrangement shall be applied by the two contracting parties from the day of its signature and till the expiration of six months after the day on which the one or the other of the high contracting parties shall have denounced it.
The present declaration having been drawn up in the Russian, Siamese and French languages, and the three versions having the same scope and the same meaning, the French text shall be regarded as official and legal in all respects.
In faith of which the undersigned, duly authorised for that purpose, have drawn up the present declaration, to which they have affixed their signatures and seals.
GREAT BRITAIN AND FRANCE
DECLARATION SIGNED BY GREAT BRITAIN AND FRANCE RESPECTING SPHERES OF INFLUENCE
SIGNED AT LONDON, 15TH JANUARY, 1896
The undersigned, duly authorised by their respective Governments, have signed the following Declaration :-
I.-The Governments of Great Britain and France engage to one another that neither of them will, without the consent of the other, in any case, or under any pretext, advance their armed forces into the region which is comprised in the basing of the Petcha Bouri, Meiklong, Menam, and Bang Pa Kong (Petriou) rivers and their respective tributaries, together with the extent of coast from Muong Bang Tapan to Muong Pase, the basins of the rivers on which those two places are situated, and the basins of the other rivers, the estuaries of which are included in that coast; and including also the territory lying to the north of the basin of the Menam and situated between the Anglo-Siamese frontier, the Mekong River, and the Eastern watershed of the Me Ing. They further engage not to acquire within this region any special privilege or advantage which shall not be enjoyed in common by, or equally open to, Great Britain and France and their nationals and dependents. These stipulations, however, shall not be interpreted as derogating from the special clauses which, in virtue of the Treaty concluded on Oct. 3, 1893, between France and Siam, apply to a zone of 25 kilom. on the right bank of the Mekong and to the navigation of that river.
II.--Nothing in the foregoing clause shall hinder any action on which the two Powers may agree, and which they shall think necessary in order to uphold the independence of the Kingdom of Siam. But they engage not to enter into any separate agreement permitting a third Power to take any action from which they are bound by the present declaration themselves to abstain.
322
THE MALAY STATES FEDERATION AGREEMENT
III. From the mouth of the Nam Huok northwards as far as the Chinese- frontier the thalweg of the Mekong shall form the limit of the possessions or spheres of influence of Great Britain and France. It is agreed that the nationals and dependents of each of the two countries shall not exercise any jurisdiction or authority within the possessious or sphere of influence of the other.
The police of the islands in this part of the river, which are separated from the British shore by a branch of the river, shall, so long as they are thus separated, be entrusted to the French authorities. The fishery shall be open to the inhabitants of both banks.
IV. The two Governments agree that all commercial and other privileges and advantages conceded in the two Chinese provinces of Yunnan and Szechuen either to Great Britain or France, in virtue of their respective Conventions with China of March 1, 1894, and June 20, 1895, and all privileges and advantages of any nature which may in the future be conceded in these two Chinese provinces, either to Great Britain or France, shall, as far as rests with them, be extended and rendered common to both Powers and to their nationals and dependents, and they engage to use their influence and good offices with the Chinese Government for this purpose.
THE MALAY STATES FEDERATION AGREEMENT, 1896
Agreement between the Governor of the Straits Settlements, acting on behalf of the Government of Her Majesty the Queen, Empress of India, and the Rulers of the following Malay States, that is to say, Perak, Selangor, Pahang, and Negri Sembilan.
Art, I.-In confirmation of various previous Agreements, the Sultan of Perak, the Sultan of Selangor, the Sultan of Pahang, and the Chiefs of the States which form the territory known as the Negri Sembilan, hereby severally place themselves and their States under the protection of the British Government.
Art. II. The above-named Rulers and Chiefs of the respective States hereby agree to coustitute their countries a Federation, to be known as the Protected Malay States, to be administered under the advice of the British Government.
Art. 1II.It is to be understood that the arrangement hereby agreed upon does not imply that any one Ruler or Chief shall exercise any power or authority in respect of any State other than that which he now possesses in the State of which he is the recognised Ruler or Chief.
Art. IV. The above-named Rulers agree to accept a British Officer, to be styled the Resident-General, as the agent and representative of the British Government under the Governor of the Straits Settlements. They undertake to provide him with suitable accommodation, with such salary as is determined by Her Majesty's Government, aud to follow his advice in all matters of administration other than those touching the Mohammedan religion. The appointment of the Resident-General will not affect the obligations of the Malay Rulers towards the British Residents now existing or to be hereafter appointed to offices in the above- mentioned Protected States.
Art. V. The above-named Rulers also agree to give to those States in the Federation which require it such assistence in men, money, or other respects as the British Government, through its duly appointed officers, may advise; and they further undertake, should war break out between Her Majesty's Government and that of any other Power, to send, on the requisition of the Governor, a body of armed and equipped Indian troops for service in the Straits Settlements.
Art. VI. Nothing in this Agreement is intended to curtail any of the powers or authority now held by any of the above-named Rulers in their respective States, nor does it alter the relations now existing between any of the States named and the British Empire.
TREATY PORTS, PORTS OF CALL, AND PLACES OPEN
TO FOREIGN TRADE IN THE FAR EAST.
[Note.-E.O. signifies "effectively opened."]
I.-CHINA.
(a) Treaty ports and places opened by China to foreign trade:-
Aigun (Sino-Japanese Treaty, 1905; actually opened, June 28, 1907). Amoy (Nanking), 1842.
Antung (United States' Treaty, 1903; actually opened, May 1, 1906) Canton (Nanking, 1842).
Changchun (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.O. January 14, 1907).
Changsha (Japanese Treaty of October 8, 1903, E.O. July 1, 1904). Chefoo (Yentai or Tangchow) (Tientsin, 1858, E.O. 1861), a Chinan (Imperial Decrec, 1904, E.O. January 20, 1906). Ching-wang-tao (Imperial Decree, 1898).
Chinkiang (Tientsin, 1858, E.O. 1861).
Choutsun (Imperial Decree, 1904, E.O. January 20, 1906).
Chungking (Additional Article, Peking, 1890; Shimonoseki, 1895).
Dairen (Dalny) (by Japan, E.0. September 1, 1906).
Fakumen (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.O. September 10, 1906).
Feng Huang Cheng (Sino-Japanese Treaty, 1905; actually opened, June 28,
1907).
Foochow (Nanking, 1842).
Hailar (Sino-Japanese Treaty, 1905; actually opened, June 28, 1907). Hangchow (Shimonoseki, 1895).
Hankow (Tientsin, 1858, E.O. 1861), b
Harbin (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.Ó. January 14, 1907).
Hun Chun (Sino-Japanese Treaty, 1905; actually opened, June 28, 1907). Ichang (Chefoo, 1876, E.Q. 1877).
Kiao-chau (leased to Germany, 1898).
Kirin (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.O. January 14, 1907).
Kiukiang (Tientsin, 1858, E.O. 1861). b
Kiungchow (or Hoihow-in-Hainan) (Tientsin, 1858).
Kong Kung Market (Special Article, 1897, modifying Burmah Convention,
1894).
Kongmoon (Shanghai Treaty, 1902).
Kowloon, port of entry for Canton.
Kuang-chouwan (leased to France).
Lappa, port of entry for Canton.
Liao Yang (Sino-Japanese Treaty, 1905; actually opened, June 28, 1907), Lungchow (French Treaty, 1886).
Mandchourie (Manchuli) (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.O. January 14, 1907). Mengtze (French Treaty, 1886).
Mukden (United States' Treaty, 1903; netually opened, June 1, 1906). Nanking (French Treaty, 1858, E.O. 1899).
Nanning (Note from Tsung-li Yamen to Sir C. MacDonald of February 4, 1897, supplementing Treaty of 1897 modifying Burmah Convention of 1894, E.Ö. January 1, 1907).
Newchwang (or Yingkou) (Tientsin, 1858, E.O. 1861). c
Ningpo (Nanking, 1842).
Ninguta (Sino-Japanese Treaty, 1905; actually opened, June 28, 1907). Pakhoi (or Pei-hai) (Chefoo, 1876, E.O. 1877).
Samshui (Special Article, 1897, modifying Burmah Convention, 1894).
a Tangehow is the port named in the Treaty, but Chefoo is the port actually opened.
Hankow and Kiukiang were selected, by arrangement with the Chinese Government, in November, 1860, as ports to be opened under Article X of the Treaty of Tientsin.
Yingkou is the port of Newchwang.
324
FOREIGN TRADE IN THE FAR EAST
Sanhsing (Sino-Japanese Treaty, 1905; actually opened, June 28, 1907). Santuao (or Funing) (Imperial Decree, 1898).
Shanghae (Nanking, 1842).
Shashi (Shimonoseki, 1895).
Sinmintin (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.O. October 10, 1906).
Soochow (Shimonoseki, 1895).
Swatow (or Chao-Chow) (Tientsin, 1858, E.O. 1860), a
Szemao (French Additional Convention, 1895).
Ta-tung-kou (Japanese Treaty, 1903).
Tengyueh (Momein) (Agreement of 1897, modifying Burmah Convention.
1894).
Tieliling (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.O. September 10, 1906).
Tientsin (Peking, 1860).
Tsi-tsi-har (Japanese Treaty, 1905. E.O. January 14, 1907).
Tungchiangtzu (Japanese Treaty, 1905, E.0. September 10, 1906).
Weihaiwei (leased to Great Britian).
Wei-hsien (Imperial Decree, 1904, E.O. January 20, 1906).
Wenchow (Chefoo, 1876, E.O. 1877).
Wuchow (Special Article, 1897, modifying Burmah Convention, 1894).
Wuhu (Chefoo, 1876, E.O. 1877). Wusung (Imperial Decree, 1898). Yochow (Imperial Decree, 1898).
(b) Ports of call:-
(1.) On the Yang-tsze, for passengers and cargo-
Ho-kou (Chefoo Convention, 1876). Luchikou (Chefoo Convention, 1876). Nganking (Anking) (Chefoo Convention, 1876). Tatung (Chefoo Convention, 1876). Wu-Suel (Chefoo Convention, 1876). (2.) On the Yang-tsze, for passengers-
Hwangchow (Yang-tsze Regulations, 1898). Hwang-tze-kang (Yang-tsze Regulations, 1898). I-chang b (Yang-tsze Regulations, 1898). Kiang-yin (Yang-tsze Regulations 1898). (3.) On the West River, for passenger and cargo--- Do-Singed (by Shanghae Treaty, 1902). Komchuk (Burmah Convention, 1897). Lo-ting bau (by Shanghae Treaty, 1902). d Pak-tau hau (by Shanghai Treaty, 1902). Shiu-hing (Burmah Convention, 1897). Takhing (Burmah Convention, 1897). (4.) On the West River, for passengers-
Fung-chuen (Shanghae Treaty, 1902), d How-lik (Shanghae Treaty, 1902), e d Kau Kong (Shanghae Treaty, 1902). c d Kulow (Shanghae Treaty, 1902), d Luk Pu (Shanghae Treaty, 1902). ed Luk To (Shanghae Treaty, 1902), e d Mah-ning (Shanghae Treaty, 1902). c d Wing-on (Shanghae Treaty, 1902). d Yuet Sing (Shanghae Treaty, 1902). e d Yungki (Shanghae Treaty, 1902). e d
a Chao-Chow is the port named in the Treaty.
b Not to be confounded with Ichang the Treaty port,
Opened for passenger traffic in January, 1903, by the Viceroy of Canton at the suggestion
of His Majesty's Consul-General prior to ratification of Treaty.
d Canton Consulate reported, June 20, 1901, by telegram that all had been declared open
by Customs notification of March 1, 1004.
FOREIGN TRADE IN THE FAR EAST
II. JAPAN.
325
(a.) Treaty ports:--
Hakodate.. Nagasaki
opened in 1859 | Hiogo
opened in 1859 Osaka b
Tókið a
...opened in 1867
nato)
.opened in 1868
opened in 1868
Yokobama or Kanagawa..opened in 1859 | Niigata b (or Ebisumi-
(b.) Ports in Formosa opened to subjects of Powers having Commerical Treaties with Japau for residence and trade:
.opened in 1869
Auping..
Kelung
,opened in 1896 | Tamsui..
.opened in 1896
Takao
(c.) Opened with a
proviso as to closing
opened in 1896 Tainau (or Taiwan-foo) (opened in 1896; opened in 1896
to foreign vessels and their cargo only).
at three months' notice:-
Shimizu d (Province of Suruga) Taketoyo & (Province of Owari) Nagoya e (Province of Owari)
Opened in
...1899 ...1899
Opened in
.1907
Miyazu d (Province of Tango) Turuga d (Province of Echizen) ...1899 Nannod (South Bay) (Province of
...1899
Yokkaichid (Province of Ise)
1899
Noto)
Shimonoseki (Province of Nagato)1899
Fushiki d (Provinee of Etchu)
Mojid (Province of Buzen)
.1899
.1899
.1899
1899
Hakata d (Province of Chikzen). 1899
Karatsu (Province of Hizen)
.1899
Kuchinotsud (Province of Hizen)..1899
Misumi d (Province of Higo)
.1899
Izuhara d (Island of Tsuhima)
.1899
Sasuna d (Island of Tsushima)
.1899
Hamada d (Province of Iwami)
...1899
Sakai (Province of Hoki)
.1899
Otaru d (Porvince of Shiribeshi) Kushiro d (Province of Kushiro)...1899 Muroranƒh (Province of Iburi) ...1899 Itozuki (Province of Bingo)
1900
Wakamatsui (Province of Chikuzen)1904 Shishimi (Island of Tsushima)...1899 Nahad (Loochoo Islands)
1899
Suminoyej (Province of Hizen) ...1906 Awomoriƒ g (Province of Mutsu).. 1906
" Tōkio was never a shipping port, but simply a place open to foreign trade and residence,
These ports are under Article XI of the Treaty of 1894 excluded from the category of ports between which coasting trade is permitted to British vessels.
* Opening notified by departmental notice issued by Foreign Office in Tókið (February, 1896), d Article 3 of Imperial Ordinance No. 342 (published in Cfficial Gazette" *
July, 1899), by which the opening of these ports was notified, reads as follows:--
When the imports and exports together at any of the ports mentioned in Article 1 for
any two years in succession do not reach the value of 50,000 yen, they shall be closed.
When in cases where, in consequence of the development of communications, new ports are established in the vicinity of any of the ports enumerated in Article 1, the further maintenance of any such port, as an open port, is considered unnecessary, it may be closed, notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding clause.
"The date of the closing shall be notified three months beforehand by the Minister of Finance."
Opened by Imperial Ordinance No. 330 (published in "Official Gazet'e " of the 28th October, 1907), under same conditious as ports under 4.
ƒ The following articles only may be imported at the ports of Muroran and Awonori:-
Grains and seeds.
Beverages and comestibles (articles in Group 3 of the Import Tariff attached to the
Customs Tariff Law).
Sugar, confectionery, and sweetmeats 'articles included in Group 4 of the said Tariff). Furs.
Hides and skins (articles inc'uded in Group 6, No. 66 of the above-mentioned Tariff). Oils, fats, and waxes.
Iron-
T, angle, and the like.
Rails and fishplates for rails.
Bolts, nuts, washers, rivets, and dogspikes (all made of iron).
Materials for bridging and building (made of metal).
Mechanics' stool, and agricultural implements and parts thereof.
Locomotives, locomotive tenders, and parts thereof.
Railway passenger cars, freight waggons, and parts thereof.
Duty free articles,
Articles exempted from import duty (articles included in Article 7 of Customs
Toriff Law).
320
FOREIGN TRADE IN THE FAR EAST
L
(d.) Ports in Formos and the Pescadores open, for the present, only to juok traffic:-
(1.) Forn osa-l
Opened in
Opened in
Gosei (or Tokaku) m
Taichu
Prefecture...
1899
Koro for Oulong) Taichu Pre-
fecture
1899
Kiuko (or Kiukong) Taihoku Pre-
fecture Toko (or Tongkong), Tainan Pre-
fecture
1899
1899
Rokko (or Iakon) Taichu Pre-
fecture
1899
Tosekiko (or Toucho), Tainan
Prefecture
1899
(2.) The Pescadores--
Makiu (or Makung), opened in 1899.
Treaty ports:
III-COREA.
Chemulpo (opened 1880 under Japanese Treaty 1876).
Chinampo (opened October 1, 1897).
Chungchin (opened April 1, 1908).
Fusan (Japanese Treaty, 1876).
Kansan (May 1, 1899).
Masampo (May 1, 1899).
Mokpo (October 1, 1897).
Seoul (Hanyang) (British Treaty, 1883).
Songchiu (My 1, 1899).
Wonsan (or Gensan) (opened 1880 under Japanese Convention, 1879). Ping-yang (held to be open by Agreement among foreign Representatives
at Seoul, November, 1899).
Yang-wha-chin (opened 1883 under Japanese Convention, 1882).
Yongampo (date of opening not yet fixed).
Wiju (date of opening not yet fixed).
N.B.-Though the opening of the ports of Yongampo and Wiju has not yet been officially announced, the Customs opened offices at these ports in July, 1906, and foreigu steamers call there without objection on the part of the authorities.
IV. SIAM.
Article IV of the Treaty of April 18, 1855, stipulates that:-
'British subjects are permitted to trade freely in all the seaports of Siam, but may reside permanently only at Bangkok or within the limits assigned by this Treaty."
g At the port of Awomori the following additional goods may be imported from the 1st December, 1907:-
Tinplates, iron tubes, solder.
h At the port of Muroran all articles may be imported after the 1st December, 1907, with the exception of those prohibited by Article 10 of the Customs Tariff Law.
i At the port of Wakamatsu the following goods may be imported:-
Fresh eggs.
Rice, unhulled rice, barley, wheat, oats, Indian corn and beans,
Iron ore.
Pig iron.
Manure.
And from the 1st December, 1907:-
Coke, minganese ore, ferro-manganese, and spiegleisen.
j At the Port of Suminoys only the export of commodities is permitted.
* Opening notified by Decree of Formosan Government, dated August. 1899.
The Port of Kakoko or Hokkokei), opened with the others in 189.), was closed from the
1st July, 1907, by Decree of Formosau Government, dated May, 1907.
The name in brackets in this case, as in the case of each of the ports of Formosa and of
the port in the Pescadores, is the local Chinese name of the port in question,
THE FOREIGN JURISDICTION ACT, 1890
53 AND 54 VICTORIA, CHAPTER 37
AN ACT TO CONSOLIDATE THE FOREIGN JURISDICTION ACTS
[4th August, 1890]
WHEREAS by treaty, capitulation grant, usage, sufferance, and other lawful means, Her Majesty the Queen has jurisdiction within divers foreign countries, and it is expedient to consolidate the Acts relating to the exercise of Her Majesty's jurisdiction out of Her dominions:
Be it therefore enacted by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
jurisdiction in
1.It is and shall be lawful for Her Majesty the Queen to hold, Exercise of exercise, and enjoy any jurisdiction which Her Majesty now has or may reign country. at any time bereafter have within a foreign country in the same and as ample a manner as if Her Majesty had acquired that jurisdiction by the cession or conquest of territory.
jurisdiction over
2.--Where a foreign country is not subject to any government from Exercise of whom Her Majesty the Queen might obtain jurisdiction in the manner British subjects recited by this Act, Her Majesty shall by virtue of this Act have jurisdic- ne untries
without regular tion over Her Majesty's subjects for the time being resident in or resort- governments. ing to that country, and that jurisdiction shall be jurisdiction of Her Majesty in a foreign country within the meaning of the other provisions
of this Act.
3.-Every act and thing done in pursuance of any jurisdiction of Her Validity of ects Majesty in a foreign country shall be as valid as if it had been done done in pursu according to the local law then in force in that country.
wues of jurisdic- tion,
oxi01100 or
country.
4.-(.) If in any proceeding, civil or criminal, in a court in Her Evidence as to Majesty's dominions or held under the authority of Her Majesty, any extent of juris- question arises as to the existence or extent of any jurisdiction of Hur diet on in foreign Majesty in a foreign country, a Secretary of State shall, on the application of the court, send to the court within a reasonable time his decision on The question, and his decisiou shall for the purposes of the proceeding be final.
(2.) The court shall send to the Secretary of State, in a document under the seal of the court, or signed by a judge of the court, questions framed so as properly to raise the question, and sufficient answers to those questions shall be returned by the Secretary of State to th court, and those answers shall, on production thereof, be conclusive evidence of the matters therein contained.
L
enactments in
5.-(1.) It shall be lawful for Her Majesty the Queen in Council, Power to extend if She thinks fit, by Order to direct that all or any of the enactments First schedule. described in the First Schedule to this Act, or any enactments for the time being in force amending or substituted for the same, shall extend, with or without any exceptions, adaptations, or modifications in the Order mentioned, to any foreign country in which for the time being Her Majesty has jurisdiction.
(2) Thereupon those enactments shall, to the extent of that jurisdiction, operate as if that country were a British possession, and as if Her Majesty in Council were the Legislature of that possession.
J
328
Power to send
with offences for
FOREIGN JURISDICTION ACT, 1890
6.(1.) Where a person is charged with an offence cognizable by person charged a British court in a foreign country, any person having authority derived trial to a British from Her Majesty in that behalf may, by warrant, cause the person so pussession, charged to be sent for trial to any British possession for the time being
Provision as to place of punish-
convicted.
appointed in that behalf by Order in Council, and upon the arrival of the person so charged in that British possession, such criminal court of that possession as is authorised in that behalf by Order in Council, or, if no court is so authorised, the supreme criminal court of that possession may cause him to be kept in safe and proper custody, and so soon as con- veniently may be may inquire of, try, and determine the offence, and on conviction punish the offender according to the laws in force in that behalf within that possession in the same manner as if the offence had been committed within the jurisdiction of that criminal court.
Provided that-
(a.) A person so charged may, before being so sent for trial, tender for examination to a British court in the foreign country where the offence is alleged to have been committed any competent witness whose evidence he deems material for his defence and whom he alleges himself unable to produce at the trial in the British possession:
(b.) In such case the British court in the foreign country shall proceed in the examination and cross-examination of the witness as though he had been tendered at a trial before that court, and shall cause the evidence so taken to be reduced into writing, and shall transmit to the criminal court of the British possession by which the person charged is to be tried a copy of the evidence, certified as correct under the seal of the court before which the evidence was taken, or the signature of a judge of that court: (c.) Thereupon the court of the British possession before which the trial takes place shall allow so much of the evidence so taken as would have been admissible according to the law and practice of that court, had the witness been produced and examined at the trial, to be read and received as legal evidence at the trial: (d) The court of the British possession shall admit and give effect to the law by which the alleged offender would have been tried by the British court in the foreign country in which his offence is alleged to have been committed, as far as that law relates to the criminality of the act alleged to have been committed, or the nature or degree of the offence, or the punishment thereof, if the law differs in those respects from the law in force in that British possession.
(2.) Nothing in this section shall alter or repeal any law, statute, or usage by virtue of which any offence committed out of Her Majesty's dominions may, irrespectively of this Act, be inquired of, tried, determined and punished within Her Majesty's dominions, or any part thereof.
7. Where an offender convicted before a British court in a foreign ment of persons Country has been sentenced by that court to suffer death, penal servitude, imprisonment, or any other punishment, the sentence shall be carried into effect in such place as may be directed by Order in Council or be determined in accordance with directions given by Order in Council, and the conviction and sentence shall be of the same force in the place in which the sentence is so carried into effect as if the conviction had been made and the sentence passed by a competent court in that place.
Validity of nota done under Order in Council.
8. Where, by Order in Council made in pursuance of this Act, any British court in a foreign country is authorised to order the removal or deportation of any person from that country, that removal or deportation, and any detention for the purposes thereof, according to the provisions
FOREIGN JURISDICTION ACT, 1890
329
of the Order in Council, shall be as lawful as if the order of the court were to have effect wholly within that country.
jurisdiction to
9. It shall be lawful for Her Majesty the Queen in Council, by Power to assign Order, to assign to or confer on any court in any British possession, or British courts in held under the authority of Her Majesty, any jurisdiction, civil or criminal, cases within original or appellate, which may lawfully by Order in Council be assigned Jurisdiction Acl.
Foreign to or conferred on any British court in any foreign country, and to make such provisions and regulations as to Her Majesty in Council seem meet respecting the exercise of the jurisdiction so assigned or conferred, and respecting the enforcement and execution of the judgments, decrees, orders, and sentences of any such court, and respecting appeals therefrom.
10. It shall be lawful for Her Majesty the Queen in Council to revoke Power to amend or vary any Order in Council made in pursuance of this Act.
Orders in
Council,
nad affect of
11. Every Order in Council made in pursuance of this Act shall be Laying before laid before both Houses of Parliament forthwith after it is made, if Parliament, Parliament be then in session, and if not, forthwith after the commence- Orders in ment of the then next session of Parliament, and shall have effect as if it Council. were enacted in this Act.
Orders in
12. (1.) If any Order in Council made in pursuance of this Act as In what cases respects any foreign country is in any respect repugnant to the provisions Council void for of any Act of Parliament extending to Her Majesty's subjects in that repugnancy. country, or repugnant to any order or regulation made under the authority of any such Act of Parliament, or having in that country the force and effect of ally such Act, it shall be read subject to that Act, order, or regulation, and shall, to the extent of such repugnancy, but not otherwise, be void.
(2.) An Order in Council made in pursuance of this Act shall not be, or be deemed to have been, void on the ground of repuguancy to the law of England unless it is repugnant to the provisions of some such Act of Parliament, order, or regulation as aforesaid.
persons
13. (1) An action, suit, prosecution, or procceding against any Provisions for person for any act done in pursuance or execution or intended protection of execution of this Act, or of any enactment repealed by this Act, or of any acting under Order in Council made under this Act, or of any such jurisdiction of Her
Foreign Juriadio- tion Acts. Majesty as is mentioned in this Act, or in respect of any alleged neglect or default in the execution of this Act, or of any such enactment, Order in Council, or jurisdiction as aforesaid, shall not lie or be instituted:
(a.) in any court within Her Majesty's dominions, unless it is commenced within six months next after the act, neglect, or default complained of, or in case of a continuance of injury or damage within six months next after the ceasing thereof, or where the cause of action arose out of Her Majesty's dominions within six months after the parties to the action, suit, prosecu- tion, or proceeding have been within the jurisdiction of the court in which the same is instituted; nor
(b.) in any of Her Majesty's courts without Her Majesty's dominions unless the cause of action arose within the jurisdiction of that court, and the action is commenced within six months next after the act, neglect or default complained of, or, in case of a continuance of injury, or damage, within six months next after the ceasing thereof.
(2.)-In any such action, suit, or proceeding, tender of amends before the same was commenced may be pleaded in lieu of or in addition to any other plea. If the action, suit, or proceeding was commenced after such tender, or is proceeded with after payment into court of any money in satisfaction of the plaintiff's claim, and the plaintiff does not recover more than the sum tendered or paid, he shall not recover any costs
330
Jurisdiction
tain Eastern seat.
FOREIGN JURISDICTION ACT, 1890
incurred after such tender or payment, and the defendant shall be entitled to costs, to be taxed as between solicitor and client, as from the time of such tender or payment; but this provision shall not affect costs on any injunction in the action, suit, or proceeding.
14.-It shall be lawful for Her Majesty the Queen in Council to over ships in cer- make any law that may seem meet for the government of Her Majesty's subjects being in any vessel at a distance of not more than one hundred miles from the coast of China or of Japau, as fully and effectual as any such law might be made by Her Majesty in Council for the Government of Her Majesty's subjects being in China or in Japan.
Provision as to
princes.
15. Where any Orler in Council made in pursuance of this Act subjects of Indian extends to persons enjoying Her Majesty's protection, that expression
shall include all subjects of the several princes and states in India.
16. In this Act,-
Definitions.
Power to repeal
or vary Acts in
The expression "foreign country" means any country or place out
of Her Majesty's dominions:
The expression "British court in a foreign country" means any British court having jurisdiction out of Her Majesty's dominions in pursuance of an Order in Council whether made under any Act or otherwise:
The expression "jurisdiction" includes power.
17.--The Acts mentioned in the Second Schedule to this Act may
Second Schedule, be revoked or varied by Her Majesty by Order in Council. Repeal.
Bhort title.
18. The Acts mentioned in the Third Schedule to this Act are hereby repealed to the extent in the third column of that schedule mentioned: Provided that,-
1890.
(1) Any Order in Council, commission, or instructions made or issued in pursuance of any enactment repealed by this Act, shall, if in force at the passing of this Act, continue in force, until altered or revoked by Her Majesty as if made in pursuance of this Act; and shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to have been made or issued under and in pursuance of this Act; and
(2) Any enactment, Order in Council, or document referring to any enactment repealed by this Act shall be construed to refer to the corresponding enactment of this Act.
19.-(1.) This Act may be cited as the Foreign Jurisdiction Act,
(2.) The Acts whereof the short titles are given in the First Schedule to this Act may be cited by the respective short titles given in that schedule.
FOREIGN JURISDICTION ACT, 1890
3 1
SCHEDULES
SEBBION
AND CHAPTER.
FIRST SCHEDULE (Sections 5 and 19)
TITLE.
ENACTMENTS WHICH
MAY BE EXTENDED BY ORDER IN COUNCIL.
12 & 13 Vict. c. 96. An Act to provide for the Pro-The whole Act.
14 & 15 Vict. c. 99.
17 & 18 Vict. c. 104.
19 & 20 Vict. c 113.
-22 Vict. c. 20.
secution and Trial in Her Majesty's Colonies of Offences committed within the juris- diction of the Admiralty. An Act to amend the law of
evidence.
The Merchant Shipping Act,
185-1.
An Act to provide for taking evidence in Her Majesty's Dominions in relation to civil and commercial matters pend- ing before Foreign tribunals. |
SHORT TITLE.
Admiralty Offences
(Colonial) 1849.
Act,
Sections seven and Evidence Act, 1851
eleven. Part X.
The whole Act.
An Act to provide for taking The whole Act.
evidence in Suits and Proceed-
ings pending before Tribunals in Her Majesty's Dominions, in places out of the jurisdic- tion of such tribunals.
22 & 23 Vict. c. 63. An Act to afford Facilities for The whole Act.
23 & 24 Vict. c.
122.
the moro certain Ascertain- ment of the Law administered in one Part of Her Majesty's Dominions, when pleaded in the Courts of another Part thereof.
An Act to enable the Legisla. The whole Act.
tures of Her Majesty's Posses- sions Abroad to make Enact-
Foreign Tribunals Evidence Act, 1856.
Evidence by Com- mission Act, 1859
British Law Ascer-
tainment 1859.
Act,
Admiralty Offences (Colonial) Act,
1860,
ments similar to the Enact-
ment of the Act ninth. George
the Fourth, chapter thirty- one, section eight.
24 & 25 Vict. c. 11. An Act to afford facilities for The whole Act.
30 & 31 Vict. c.
124.
37 & 38 Vict. c. 94.
44 & 45 Viet. c. 69.
48 & 49 Vict. c. 74.
the better Ascertainment of the Law of Foreign Countries when pleaded in Courts with- in Her Majesty's Dominions. The Merchant Shipping Act,
1807.
The Conveyancing (Scotland)
Act, 1874.
The Fugitive Offenders Act,
1881.
The Evidence by Commission
Act, 1885.
Section eleven.
Section fifty-one.
The whole Act.
The whole Act.
¦
Foreign Law Ascer-
tainment 1861.
Act.
332
FOREIGN JURISDICTION ACT, 1899
SECOND SCHEDULE (Section 17)
Acts which may be revoked or varied by Order in Council
SESSION AND CHAPTER.
24 & 25 Vict. c. 31.
26 & 27 Viet no. 35.
TITLE.
EXTENT OF REPEAL.
An Act for the prevention and punishment The whole Act.
of offences committed by Her Majesty's subjects within certain territories adja- cent to the colony of Sierra Leone.
An Act for the prevention and punishment, The whole Act.
of offences committed by Her Majesty's subjects in South Africa.
THIRD SCHEDULE (Section 18)
Enactments repealed
SESSION AND CHAPTER.
26 & 7 Vict. c. 94 20 & 21 Vict. c. 75
28 & 29 Vict. c. 116
29 & 30 Vict. c. 87
33 & 34 Vict. c. 55
38 & 39 Vict. c. 85
39 & 40 Vict. c. 46
41 & 42 Vict. c. 67
TITLE OR SHORT TITLE.
The Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1843 An Act to confirm an Order in Council con- cerning the exercise of jurisdiction in matters arising within the kingdom of Siam.
The Foreign Jurisdiction Act Amendment
Act, 1865.
The Foreign Jurisdiction Act Amendment
Act. 1860.
EXTENT OF REPEAL.
The whole Act. The whole Act.
The whole Act.
The whole Act.
The Siam and Straite Settlements Juris- The whole Act.
diction Act, 1870.
'The Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1875. An Act for more effectually punishing offences against the laws relating to the slave trade.
The Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1878.
The whole Act. Sections four and six,
The whole Act.
ORDERS IN COUNCIL
ORDER OF HIS MAJESTY THE KING IN COUNCIL
FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF HIS MAJESTY'S
SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
AT THE COURT AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE, THE 24TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 1904
PRESENT:-
THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY IN COUNCIL.
LORD PRESIDENT.
MR. SECRETARY BRODRICK.
LORD WINDSOR.
MR. A. GRAHAM MURRAY.
WHEREAS by Treaty, grant, usage, sufferance, and other lawful means, His Majesty the King has jurisdiction within the dominions of the Emperor of China and of the Emperor of Corea;
Now, therefore, His Majesty, by virtue and in exercise of the powers in this behalf by the Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1890, or otherwise in His Majesty vested, is pleased by and with the advice of his Privy Council to order, and it is hereby ordered, as follows:-
1. PRELIMINARY AND GENERAL.
1. This Order is divided into parts, as follows:-
PARTS.
SUBJECT.
ARTICLES.
I
Preliminary and General
1.6
II
Constitution and Powers of Courts
7-34
III
Criminal Matters
35.88
IV
Civil Matters
89-117
V
Procedure, Criminal and Civil
118-128
VI
Mortgages and Bills of Sale...
129-150
VII
Foreign Subjects and Tribunals
151-154
VIII
IX
Regulations
Miscellaneous...
155-159
160-171
Schedule of Repealed Orders.
Division Order.
2. The limits of this Order are the dominions of the Emperor of Limits of China and of the Emperor of Corea, including the territorial waters of Order. those dominions respectively; but, except as provided in this Order, the said limits do not include places within the limits of the Wei-hai-wei Order in Council, 1901.
334
Interpreta-
tion.
ORDERS IN COUNCIL
3. In the construction of this Order the following words and express- sions have the meanings hereby assigned to them, unless there be some- thing in the subject or context repugnant thereto, that is to say:-
"Administration" means letters of administration, including the same with will annexed or granted for special or limited purposes or limited in duration.
**
British ship' means a merchant-ship being a British ship within the meaning of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, and includes any ship provided with sailing letters from the Governor of Hongkong, or from His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea. British possession means any part of His Majesty's dominions
exclusive of the United Kingdom.
21
"British subject" includes a British protected person, that is to say, a person who either (a) is a native of any Protectorate of His Majesty, and is for the time being in China or Corea; or (b) hy virtue of Section 15 of the Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1890, or otherwise enjoys His Majesty's protection in China and Corea. "China means so much of the Empire of China as is within the
limits of this Order.
"Consular district" means the district in and for which a Consular officer usually acts, or for which he may be authorized to act, for all or any of the purposes of this Order by authority of the Secretary of State. "Consular officer" means a Consul-General, Consul, Vice-Consul Consular Agent, or Pro-Consul of His Majesty resident in China or Corea, including a person acting temporarily, with the approval of the Secretary of State, as or for a Consul-General, Consul, Vice-Consul, or Consular Agent of His Majesty so resident. "Commissioned Consular officer means a Consular officer holding a commission of Consul-General, Consul, or Vice-Consul from His Majesty, including a person acting temporarily, with the approval of the Sercetary of State, or of His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea, as or for such a commissioned Consular officer. "Consulate and
+1
C
**
Consular office" refer to the Consulate and office of a Consular officer.
"The Court," except when the reference is to a particular Court, means any Court established under this Order, subject, however, to the provisions of this Order with respect to powers and local jurisdictions.
"Foreigner" means a subject or citizen of a State in amity with.
His Majesty, including China and Corea.
C
"Judge," except where the context intends a reference to the Judge
of the Supreme Court only, inclules Assistant Judge, and, except where the context intends a reference in the Supreme Court only, includes the officer for the time being holding a Provincial Court.
Legal practitioner" includes barrister-at-law, advocate, solicitor, writer to the Signet, and any person possessing similar qualifications.
"Lunatic means idiot or person of unsound mind.
"Master," with respect to any ship, includes every person (except a
pilot) having command or charge of that ship.
Minister" means His Majesty's Minister in China or in Corea, as the case may be, and includes Charge d'Affaires or other chief Diplomatic Representative.
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
"Month" means calendar month. "Oath" and "affidavit," in the case of persons for the time being allowed by law to affirm or declare, instead of swearing, include affirmation and declaration, and the expression "swear," in the like case, includes affirm and declare.
"Offence" includes crime, and any act or omission punishable
criminally in a summary way or otherwise.
"Person" includes Corporation.
Prescribed" means prescribed by Regulations or Rules of Court. "Prosecutor" means complainant or any person appointed or allowed
by the Court to prosecute.
"Proved" means shown by evidence on oath, in the form of affidavit, or other form, to the satisfaction of the Court or Consular officer acting or having jurisdiction in the matter, and "proof" means the evidence adduced in that behalf.
+4
Rules of Court
of this Order.
means rules of Court made under the provisions
"Secretary of State" means one of His Majesty's Principal Secretaries
of State.
44
Ship" includes any vessel used in navigation, however propelled, with her tackle, furniture and apparel, and any boat or other craft. "The Treasury" means the Commissioners of His Majesty's Treasury. "Treaty" includes any Convention, Agreement, or Arrangement,
made by or on behalf of His Majesty with any State or Govern- ment, whether the Government of China or of Corea is a party thereto or not.
"Will" means will, codicil, or other testamentary instrument. Expressions used in any rules, regulations, or orders made under this. Order shall, unless a contrary intention appears, have the same respective meanings as in this Order.
335
Construction.
4.-(1) In this Order, words importing the plural or the singular Rules of may be construed as referring to one person or thing, or to more than one person or thing, and words importing the masculine as referring to the feminine (as the case may require).
(2) Where this Order confers any power or imp
uposes any
duty, then, unless a contrary intention appears, the power may be exercised and the duty shall be performed from time to time as occasion requires.
(3) Where this Order confers a power, or imposes a duty on, or with respect to, a holder of an office, as such, then, unless a contrary intention appears, the power may be exercise and the duty shall be per- formed by, or with respect to, the holder for the time being of the office or the person temporarily acting for the holder.
(4) Where this Order confers a power to make any rules, regulations, or orders, the power shall, unless a contrary intention appears, be construed as including a power exercisable in the like manner and subject to the like consent and conditious, if any, to rescind, revoke, vary, or amend the rules, regulations, or orders.
(5) This Article shall apply to the construction of any rules, regula- tions, or orders made under this Order, unless a contrary intention appears. 5. The jurisdiction conferred by this Order extends to the persons and matters following, in so far as by Treaty, grant, usage, sufferance, or other lawful means, His Majesty has jurisdiction in relation to such matters and things, that is to say
(1) British subjects, as hercin defined, within the limits of this Order. (2) The property and all personal or proprietary rights and liabilities within the said limits of British subjects, whether such subjects are within the said limits or not.
Extent of Jurisdiction.
336
Exercise of Jurisdiction,
Constitution of Supreme Court.
Acting Judge,
Acting Assist- ant Judge.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(3) Foreigners in the cases and according to the conditions specified
in this Order and not otherwise. (4) Foreigners, with respect to whom any State, King, Chief, or Government, whose subjects, or under whose protection they are, has by any Treaty as herein defined or otherwise agreed with His Majesty for, or consents to, the exercise of power or authority by His Majesty.
(5) British ships with their boats, and the persons and property on board thereof, or belonging thereto, being within the limits of this Order.
6. All His Majesty's jurisdiction exercisable in China or Corea for the hearing and determination of criminal or civil matters, or for the maintenance of order, or for the control or administration of persons or property, or in relation thereto, shall be exercised under and according to the provisions of this Order, and not otherwise.
IL-CONSTITUTION AND POWERS OF COURTS.
(i) Supreme Court.
7-(1) There shall be a Court styled "His Britannic Majesty's Supreme Court for China and Corea" (in this Order referred to as the Supreme Court, and comprised in the term "the Court").
(2) Subject to the provisions of this Order, there shall be a Judge, and as many Assistant Judges of the Supreme Court as may from time to time be required, who shall respectively be appointed by His Majesty by warrant under His Royal sign manual,
Every Judge shall be at the time of his appointment a member of the Bar of England, Scotland, or Ireland, of not less than seven years' standing.
(3) The Judges, or any two of them, shall sit together for the pur- poses described in this Order, and the Supreme Court so constituted is hereinafter in this Order referred to as the Full Court."
(4) When the Full Court consists of not more than two Judges, aud there is a difference of opinion, the opinion of the Judge, or, in his absence, the Senior Assistant Judge, shall prevail.
(5) Subject to any Rules of Court, the Judge shall make any such arrangements as he thinks fit for the distribution of the business of the Court.
(6) If the Chief Justice in office at the passing of this Order becomes the Judge of the Supreme Court under this Order, he shall retain the title of Chief Justice during his tenure of office.
8. During a vacancy in the office of Judge, or in case of the illness or incapacity of the Judge, or of his absence from the district of the Consul- ate of Shanghai, the Secretary of State may appoint a fit person to act as Judge, but unless or until such appointment is made, the Assistant Judge or Senior Assistant Judge shall act as Judge.
An Acting Judge shall, during the continuance of his appointment, have all the power and authority of the Judge.
9. During a vacancy or temporary vacancy in the office of Assistant Judge, or in case of the absence, or illness, or other incapacity of an Assistant Judge, the Judge may, by writing under his hand and the seal of the Supreme Court, appoint any fit person, approved by the Secretary of State, or by His Majesty's Minister in China, to act as and for such Assistant Judge for the time therein mentioned or during the vacancy, as the case may be; but every such appointment shall be revocable, at pleasure, by the Judge, by writing under his hand and the seal of the Supreme Court, or by the Secretary of State.
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
The person so appointed shall, during the continuance of his appoint- ment, have all the power and authority of an Assistant Judge.
Assistant
10. The Secretary of State may appoint either a person qualified as Additional provided in Article 7, or a Consular officer to act as an additional Assis Judge. tant Judge, and any person so appointed shall, during the continuance of his appointment, have all the power and authority of an Assistant Judge.
Court.
ii. The Supreme Court shall have a seal, bearing the style of the seal of Court and such device as the Secretary of State approves, but the seal in Supreme use at the commencement of this Order shall continue to be used until a new seal is provided,
12.-(1) There shall be attached to the Supreme Court a Sheriff, Officers of Crown Advocate, a Registrar, a Chief Clerk, a Marsbal, and such other Supreme officers and clerks under such designatious as the Secretary of State thinks fit.
(2) The Secretary of State, or His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea, as the case may be, may temporarily attach to the Supreme Court. such persons, being Consular officers, as he thinks fit.
(3) Every officer, clerk, and other person thus attached shall dis- charge such duties in connection with the Court as the Judge may direct, subject to any instructions of the Secretary of State.
13. The Sheriff shall have all the powers and authorities of the Sheriff of a county in England, with all the privileges and immunities of the office, and shall be charged with the execution of all decrees, orders and sentences made and passed by the Supreme Court, on the requisition in that behalf of the Supreme Court.
He shall be entitled to such fees and costs as the Supreme Court may direct.
14. The Registrar shall be appointed by His Majesty.
He shall be either a member of the Bar of England, Scotland, or Ireland, or a Solicitor of the Supreme Court in England or Ireland, or a Writer to His Majesty's Signet, or a Solicitor in the Supreme Courts of Scotland.
He may also, with the approval of the Secretary of State, hold the office of Chief Clerk of the Supreme Court,
In case of the absence from Shanghai or of the illness of the Regis- trar, or during a vacancy in the office of Registrar, or during the employ- ment of the Registrar in another capacity, or on emergency, the Judge may, by writing under his hand and the seal of the Supreme Court, appoint fit person to act as Registrar for the time therein mentioned, or until the appointment is revoked by the Judge or disapproved or revoked by the Secretary of State.
any
15. The Judge, each Assistant Judge, and the Registrar shall hold office during the pleasure of His Majesty.
Court.
Sheriff.
Registrar.
337
Tenure of Judges and Registrar. Revocation of
16. In case at any time His Majesty thinks fit by warrant under his Royal sign manual to revoke the warrant appointing any person to be Appointments Judge, Assistant Judge, or Registrar, or while there is a Judge, Assistant Judge, or Registrar in office, thinks fit by warrant under his Royal sign manual to appoint another person to be Judge, Assistaut Judge, or Registrar (as the case may be), then, and in every such case, until the warrant of revocation or of new appointment is notified by His Majesty's Minister in China to the person holding office, all powers and authorities vested in that person shall continue and be deemed to have continued in as full force and he shall continue, and be deemed to have continued, entitled to all the privileges and emoluments of the office as fully, and all things done by him shall be and be deemed to have been as valid iu law- as if such warrant of revocation or new appointment had not been
made.
338
Sittings of Supreme Court.
Visitation of Judges.
Constitution of Provincial
Courts.
Courts of Record.
Jurisdiction of Supreme Court at Shanghai.
Jurisdiction of Provincial Courts.
Concurrent
jurisdiction of Supreme Court.
Jurisdiction of Registrar.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
17. The Supreme Court shall ordinarily sit at Shanghai; but may, if it seems expedient, sit at any other place within the limits of this Order, and may at any time transfer its ordinary sittings to any such place as the Secretary of State approves. Under this Article the Judges may sit at the same time at different places, and each sitting shall be deemed to be a sitting of the Supreme Court.
18. The Judge or under his directions an Assistant Judge may visit, in a magisterial or judicial capacity, any place in China or Corea, and there inquire of, or hear and determine, any case, civil or criminal, and may examine any records or order documents in any Provincial Court, and give directions as to the keeping thereof.
(ii) Provincial Courts.
19. (1) Every commissioned Consular officer, with the exception of those at Shanghai and with such other exceptions (if any) as the Secre- tary of State thinks fit to make, shall for and in his Consular district bold and form a Court, in this Order referred to as a Provincial Court.
(2) Where His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea, as the case may be, appoints any person to be Acting Consul-General, Consul, or Vice-Consul at any port or place in China or Corea, which is for the time being open to foreign trade, and at which no commissioned Consular officer is resident, that person shall hold and form a Provincial Court for the district for which he is appointed to act.
(3) Every Provincial Court shall be styled "His Britannic Majesty's Court at Canton," (or as the case may be).
(4) Every Provincial Court may, with the approval of the Judge of the Supreme Court, appoint a competent person, or persons, to perform such duties and to exercise such powers in and for that Court as are by this Order and any Rules of Court imposed or conferre i upon the Regis- trar and Marshal respectively, and any person so appointed shall perform such duties and exercise such powers accordingly.
(5) Every Provincial Court shall have a seal bearing its style and such device as the Secretary of State from time to time directs; but where such a seal is not provided, the seal of the Consular officer holding the Court may be used.
(iii) Jurisdiction of Courts.
20. The Supreme Court, and each Provincial Court, shall, in the exercise of every part of its jurisdiction, be a Court of Record.
21. All His Majesty's jurisdiction, civil and criminal, including any jurisdiction by this Order conferred expressly on a Provincial Court, shall for and within the district of the Consulate of Shanghai be vested exclusively in the Supreme Court as its ordinary original jurisdiction.
22. All His Majesty's jurisdiction, civil and criminal, not under this Order vested exclusively in the Supreme Court, shall to the extent and in the manner provided by this Order be vested in the Provincial Courts.
23. The Supreme Court shall have in all matters, civil and criminal, an original jurisdiction, concurrent with the jurisdiction of the several Provincial Courts, to be exercised subject and according to the provisions of this Order.
24. (1) The Registrar of the Supreme Court shall, subject to any directions of the Judge, hold preliminary examinations, and shall hear and determine such criminal cases in that Court as are not, under this Order, required to be heard and determined on a charge.
(2) The Registrar shall also have authority to hear and determine such civil actions as may be assigned to him by the Judge, but actions.
H.B.M, SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
which under this Order are required or directed to be heard with a jury or assessors shall not be so assigned.
(3) For the purposes of this Article the Registrar shall exercise all the powers and jurisdiction of a Provincial Court, and the provisions of this Order with respect to appeal and reserved case in criminal matters and to appeal in civil matters shall apply accordingly.
Supreme
389
25-(1) Where any case, civil or criminal, commenced in a Pro- Case reported vincial Court, appears to that Court to be beyond its jurisdiction, or to or removed to be one which for any other reason ought to be tried in the Supreme Court. Court, the Provincial Court shall report the case to the Supreme Court for directions.
(2) The Supreme Court may of its own motion, or upon the report of a Provincial Court, or on the application of any party concerned require any case, civil or criminal, pending in any Provincial Court to be transferred to, or tried in, the Supreme Court, or may direct in what Court and in what mode, subject to the provisions of this Order, any such case shall be tried.
26. The Supreme Court and every Provincial Court shall be auxi- liary to one another in all particulars relative to the administration of justice, civil or criminal.
Courts to be auxiliary to
one another.
27. Every Judge and Officer of Courts established under this Order Conciliation. shall, as far as there is proper opportunity, promote reconciliation and encourage and facilitate the settlement in an amicable way and without recourse to litigation, of matters in difference between British subjects, or between British subjects and foreigners in China or Corea.
28. Subject to the provisions of this Order, criminal and civil cases Modes of trial. may be tried as follows:
(a) In the case of the Supreme Court, by the Court itself, or by the
Court with a jury, or with assessors.
(b) In the case of a Provincial Court by the Court itself, or by the
Court with assessors.
29. Any of His Majesty's Courts in China or Corea may cause any summons, order, or judgment issuing from the Supreme Court of Hong- kong, in any civil proceeding, and accompanied by a request in writing under the seal of that Court, to be served in China or Corea.
30.-(1) Notwithstanding anything in this Order, the Court shall not exercise any jurisdiction in any proceeding whatsoever over His Majesty's Minister, or over his official or other residences, or his official or other property.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in this Order, the Court shall not exercise, except with the consent of the Minister signified in writing to the Court, any jurisdiction in any proceeding over any person attached to or being a member of, or in the service of, the Legation. The consent of the Minister may be given, either specially with respect to any person, or generally with respect to any class of persons so attached.
(3) If in any case under this Order it appears to the Court that the attendance of the Minister, or of any person attached to or being a mem- ber of the Legation, or being in the service of the Legation, to give evidence before the Court is requisite in the interest of justice, the Court may address to the Minister a request in writing for such attendance.
(4) A person attending to give evidence before the Court shall not be compelled or allowed to give any evidence or produce any document, if, in the opinion of the Minister, sinified by him personally or in writing to the Court, the giving or production thereof would be injurious to His Majesty's service.
31. Where, by virtue of any Imperial Act, or of this Order, or other wise, any provisions of any Imperial Acts, or of any law of a British
Process of Supreme Hongkong
Court of
tmmunity of
Legation.
Operation of Acts, &c.
Imperial
340
Jury.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
possession, or of any Orders in Council other than this Order, are applic able in China or Corea, or any forms, regulations, or procedure prescribed or established by or under any such Act, Law or Order, are made applic able for any purpose of this Order or any other order relating to China or Corea, such Acts, Laws, Orders, Forms, Regulations, or procedure may be construed or used with such alterations and adaptations not affecting the substance as may be necessary having regard to local circumstances, and anything required to be done by, to, or before any Court, Judge, officer, or authority may be done by, to, or before a Court, Judge, officer, or authority having the like or analogous functions, or by, to, or before any officer designated by the Secretary of State or by the Court (as the case may require) for that purpose; and the seal of the Supreme or Provin cial Court (as the case may be) may be substituted for any other seal, and in case any difficulty occurs in the application it shall be lawful for a Secretary of State to direct by, to, or before whom and in what man- ner anything is to be done, and such Act, Law, Order, Form, Regulation, or Procedure shall be construed accordingly.
Where under any such Imperial Act, Law, or Order any publication is required to be made, as respects any judicial proceeding in any Gazette or otherwise, such publication shall in China or Corea be made in such newspaper or by such other mode as the Court shall think fit to direct.
Jurors and Assessors.
32. (1) Every male resident British subject--being of the age of 21 years upwards having a competent knowledge of the English language having or earning a gross income at such rate as may be fixed by Rules of Court-not having been attainted of treason or felony, or convicted of any crime that is infamous (unless he has obtained a free pardon) and not being under outlawry-shall be qualified to serve on a jury
(2) All persons so qualified shall be liable so to serve, except the following persons, who shall nevertheless be competent to serve, that is to say :-
Persons in His Majesty's Diplomatic, Consular, or other Civil Ser
vice, in actual employment;
Officers, clerks, keepers of prisons, messengers, and other persons
attached to or in the service of the Court;
Officers and others on full pay in His Majesty's navy or army, or in actual employment in the service of any Department connected therewith;
Persons holding appointments in the civil, naval, or military service
of China or Corea;
Clergymen and other ministers of religion in the actual discharge
of professional duties;
Legal practitioners in actual practice;
Physicians, surgeons, and apothecaries in actual practice;
Persons who are over 60 years of age or are disabled by mental or
bodily infirmity.
(3) A jury shall consist of such number of jurors, not more than twelve nor less than five, as may be determined in accordance with Rules of Court; and in such Rules different provisions may be made with respect to the several places at which the Supreme Court may sit, regard being had to the number of available jurors and any other considerations.
(4) In civil and in criminal cases the like challenges shall be allowed as in England-with this addition, that in civil cases each party may challenge three jurors peremptorily.
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
(5) A jury shall be required to give an unanimous verdict; provided that, with the consent of parties, the verdict of a majority may be taken in civil cases.
33. (1) An Assessor shall be a competent and impartial British Assessors subject, of good repute, nominated and summoned by the Court for the purpose of acting as Assessor.
(2) In the Supreme Court there may be one, two, or three Assessors, as the Court thinks fit.
(3) In a Provincial Court there shall ordinarily be not fewer than two, and not more than four, Assessors. Where, however, by reason of local circumstances, the Court is able to obtain the presence of one Assessor only, the Court may, if it thinks fit, sit with one Assessor only: and where, for like reasons, the Court is not able to obtain the presence of an Assessor, the Court may, if it thinks fit, sit without an Assessor- the Court in every case, recording in the Minutes its reasons for sitting with one Assessor only or without an Assessor.
(4) An Assessor shall not have any voice in the decision of the Court in any case, civil or criminal; but an Assessor dissenting, in a civil case, from any decision of the Court, or, in a criminal case, from any decision of the Court or the conviction or the amount of punishment awarded, may record in the Minutes his dissent, and the grounds thereof, and shall be entitled to receive without payment a certified copy of the Minutes.
34.-(1) Any person failing to attend as juror or Assessor according to a summons shall be deemed guilty of a contempt of Court, and shall be liable to a fine not exceeding £10, but a person shall not be liable to fine for non-attendance unless he is resident in the Consular district in which the Court sits.
(2) Any such fine shall not be levied until after the expiration of fourteen days. The proper officer of the Court shall forthwith give to the person fined notice in writing of the imposition of the fine, and require him within six days after receipt of the notice to file an affidavit excusing non-attendance (if he desire to do so). The Court shall con- sider the affidavit, and may, if it seems proper, remit or reduce the fine.
III.-ĈRIMINAL MATTERS.
35.-(1) Except as regards offences made or declared such by this or any other Order relating to China or Corea, or by any Rules or Regn- lations made under any Order;
Any act that would not by a Court of Justice having criminal jurisdiction in England be deemed an offence in England, shall not, in the exercise of criminal jurisdiction under this Order, be deemed an offence, or be the subject of any criminal proceeding under this Order.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this Order, criminal jurisdiction under this Order shall, as far as circumstances admit, be exercised on the principles of, and in conformity with English law for the time being, and with the powers vested in the Courts of Justice and Justices of the Peace in England, according to their respective jurisdiction and authority.
Local Jurisdiction in Criminal Matters.
Penalty for ance.
non-attend-
Application
criminal lawy
of England.
36. Every Court may cause to be summoned or arrested, and brought Power to before it, any person subject to and being within the limits of its juris- fenders diction, and accused of having committed an offence cognizable under this Order, and may deal with the accused according to the jurisdiction of th Court and in conformity with the provisions of this Order.
341
342
Place of offence for
purposes of trial.
Escape and arrest in
another district.
Achairalty
ffences, &c.
Bringing
accused before Court,
Remand.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
37. For the purposes of criminal jurisdiction every offence and cause
of complaint committed or arising within the limits of this Order shall be deemed to have been committed or to have arisen, either in the place where the same actually was committed or arose, or in any place where the person charged or complained of happens to be at the time of the institution or commencement of the charge or complaint.
38. Where a person accused of an offence escapes or removes from the Consular district within which the offence was committed, and is found within another Consular district, the Court within whose district he is found may proceed in the case to trial and punishment, or to pre- liminary examination (as the case may require), in like manner as if the offence had been committed in its own district; or may, on the requisi tion or with the consent of the Court within whose district the offence was committed, send him in custody to that Court, or require him to give security for his surrender to that Court, there to be dealt with according to law.
Where any person is to be so sent in custody, a warrant shall be issued by the Court within whose district he is found, and that warrant shall be sufficient authority to any person to whom it is directed to receive and detain the person therein named, and to carry him to and deliver him up to the Court within whose district the offence was committed, according to the warrant.
39. (1) In cases of murder or manslaughter if either the death, or the criminal act which wholly or partly caused the death, happened within the jurisdiction of a Court acting under this Order, that Court shall have the like jurisdiction over any British subject who is accused either as the principal offender, or as accessory before the fact to murder, or as accessory after the fact to murder or manslaughter, as if both the criminal act and the death had happened within that jurisdiction.
(2) In the case of any offence committed on the high seas, or with- in the Admiralty jurisdiction, by any British subject on board a British ship, or on board a foreign ship to which he did not belong, the Court shall, subject to the provisions of this Order, have jurisdiction as if the offence had been committed within the jurisdiction of that Court. In cases tried under this Article no different sentence can be passed from the sentence which could be passed in England if the offence were tried there.
(3) The foregoing provisions of this Article shall be deemed to be adaptations, for the purposes of this Order and of the Foreign Juris- diction Act, 1890, of the following enactments, that is to say:-
The Admiralty Offences (Colonial) Act, 1849. The Admiralty Offences (Colonial) Act, 1860. The Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, Part. XIII.
-
And those enactments shall apply accordingly and be administered in
China and Cores.
Apprehension and Custody of Accused Persons.
40.-(1) Where a person accused of an offence is arrested on a warrant issuing out of any Court, he shall be brought before the Court within forty eight hours after the arrest, unless in any case circumstances unavoidably prevent his being brought before the Court within that time, which circumstances shall be recorded in the Minutes.
(2) In every case, he shall be brought before the Court as soon as circumstances reasonably admit, and the time and circumstances shall be recorded in the Minutes.
41.-(1) Where an accused person is in custody, he shall not be remanded at any time for more than seven days, unless circumstances
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
appear to the Court to make it necessary or proper that he should be remanded for a longer time, which circumstances, and the time of re- mand, shall be recorded in the Minutes.
(2) In no case shall a remand be for more than fourteen days at one time, unless in case of illness of the accused or other case of necessity.
343
42. Where the Supreme Court or a Provincial Court issues a sum- Detention of mons or warrant against any person on complaint of an offence committed ship. on board of, or in relation to, a British ship, then, if it appears to the Court that the interests of public justice so require, the Court may issue a warrant or order for the detention of the ship, and may cause the ship to be detained accordingly, until the charge is heard and deter- mined, and the order of the Court thereon is fully executed, or for such shorter time as the Court thinks fit; and the Court shall have power to make all such orders as appears to it necessary or proper for carrying this provision into effect.
writs of
43. Every Provincial Court shall execute any writ, order, or warrant Execution of issuing from the Supreme Court, and may take security from any person Supreme named therein for his appearance personally or by attorney, according to Court. the writ, order, or warrant; or may cause such person to be taken in custody or otherwise to the Supreme Court or elsewhere in China or Corea, according to the writ, order, or warrant.
44.-(1) The Court may, in its discretion, almit to tail persons Bail. accused of any of the following offences, namely:-
Any felony.
Riot.
Assault on any officer in the execution of his duty, or on any
person acting in his aid.
Neglect or breach of duty by an officer.
But a person accused of treason or murder shall not be admitted to bail except by the Supreme Court.
(2) Iu all other cases the Court shall admit the accused to bail unless the Court, having regard to the circumstances, sees good reason to the contrary, which reason shall be recorded in the Minutes.
(3) The Supreme Court may admit a person to bail, although a Provincial Court has not thought fit to do so.
(4) The accused who is to be admitted to bail, either on remand or on or after trial ordered, shall produce such surety or sureties as, in the opinion of the Court, will be sufficient to insure his appearance as and when required, and shall with him or them enter into a recognizance accordingly.
Trial with Jury or Assessors.
45.-(1) Where the offence charged is treason or murder the case Trial with jury must be tried on a charge before the Supreme Court with a jury.
(2) In each of the two following cases, namely:-
(i) Where the offence charged is rape, arson, housebreaking, rob.
bery with violence, piracy, forgery, or perjury; or (ii) Where the offence charged is any other than as aforesaid, but it appears to the Court at any time before the trial, the opinion of the Court being recorded in the Minutes, that the offence charged, if proved, would not be adequately punished by im- prisonment for three months with hard labour, or by a fine of £20, or both such imprisonment and fine-
The offence shall be tried on a charge with a jury or assessors (according to the provisious of this Order applicable to the Court); but may, with the consent of the accused, be tried without assessors or jury.
or assessors,
344
Speedy trial.
Report of sentences.
Summary trial.
Preliminary
Examination,
Trial before Court in His Majesty's dominions.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
In the Supreme Court, when the accused does not so consent, the charge shall be tried with a jury, unless the Court is of opinion that a jury cannot be obtained.
any
(3) The Supreme Court may, for any special reason, direct that case shall be tried with assessors or a jury, and a Provincial Court may, for any special reason, direct that any case shall be tried with assessors. In each such case the special reason shall be recorded in the Minutes.
46.-(1) Where an accused person is ordered to be tried before a Court with a jury or with assessors, he shall be tried as soon after the making of the order as circumstances reasonably admit.
(2) As long notice of the time of trial as circumstances reasonably admit shall be given to him in writing, under the seal of the Court, which notice, and the time thereof, shall be recorded in the Minutes.
47-(1) The Supreme Court shall, when required by the Secretary of State, send to him a report of the sentence of the Court in any case tried before that Court with a jury or assessors, with a copy of the Minutes and notes of evidence, and with any observations which the Court thinks fit to make.
(2) Every Provincial Court shall, in accordance with Rules of Court, send to the Supreme Court a report of the sentence of the Court in every case tried by the Court with assessors, with such Minutes, notes of evidence, and other documents as such Rules may direct, and with any observations which the Court thinks fit to make.
Summary Trial.
48. Where the complaint discloses an offence which is not required or directed to be heard on a charge, the accused may be tried summarily on the complaint: Provided that where an offence is tried summarily no greater punishment shall be awarded than imprisonment for three months or a fine of £20, or both.
Preliminary Examination.
49.-(1) Where the accused is before the Court, and it appears to the Court that the complaint discloses an offence-
(a) Which ought to be tried in or reported to another Court; or (6) Which ought to be tried before the same Court with a jury or
assessors;
the Court shall proceed to make a preliminary examination in the prescribed manner.
(2) On the conclusion of the preliminary examination, the Court shall bind by recognizance the prosecutor and every witness to appear at the trial to prosecute, or to prosecute and give evidence, or to give evidence (as the case may be), and if the case is to be tried in or reported to another Court, shall forthwith send the depositions, with a minute of other evidence (if any) and a report, to the Court before which the trial is to take place.
50. Where a British subject is accused of an offence the cognizance whereof appertains to any Court established under this Order, and it is expedient that the offence be inquired of, tried, determined, and punished in a British possession, the accused may (under the Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1890, Section 6) be sent for trial to Hongkong or to Burma; and the Supreme Court of Hongkong and the Sessions Court at Mandalay shall respectively be the authorized Courts for the purposes of that enactment.
The Court may, where it appears so expedient, by warrant under the hand of a Judge and the seal of the Court, cause the accused to be sent for trial to Hongkong or to Mandalay accordingly.
H B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
The warrant shall be sufficient authority to any person to whom it is directed to receive and detain the person therein named, and to carry him to and deliver him up at H ngkong or Mandalay, according to the
warrant.
Where any person is to be so sent to Hongkong or to Burma, the Court before which he is accused shall take the preliminary examination, and if it seems necessary and proper shall bind over such of the proper witnesses as are British subjects in their own recognizances to appear and give evidence on the trial.
enter into
345
51-(1) If a British subject, having appeared as prosecutor or Refusal to witness at a preliminary examination, refuses to enter into a recognizance recognizance. to appear at the trial to prosecute or give evidence, the Court may send him to prison, there to remain until after the trial, unless in the mean- time he enters into a recognizance.
(2) But if afterwards, from want of sufficient evidence or other cause, the accused is discharged, the Court shall order that the person imprisoned for so refusing be also discharged,
(3) Where the prosecutor or witness is not a British subject, the Court may require him either to enter into a recognizance or to give other security for his attendance at the trial, and if he fails to do so may in its discretion dismiss the charge
witnesses,
jurors, &c.
52. Subject to Rules of Court made under this Order, the Court Expenses of may order payment of allowances in respect of their reasonable expenses to any complainant or witness attending before the Court on the trial of any criminal case by a jury or with assessors, and also to jurors, asses- srs, interpreters, medical practitioners, or other persons employed in or in connection with criminal cases.
Charges.
53. (1) The charge upon which an accused person is tried shall Trial on state the offence charged, with such particulars as to the time and place charge. of the alleged offence, and the person (if any) against whom or the thing (if any) in respect of which it was committed, as are reasonably sufficient to give the accused notice of the matter with which he is charged.
(2) The fact that a charge is made is equivalent to a statement that every legal condition required by law to constitute the offence charged was fulfilled in the particular case.
(3) Where the nature of the case is such that the particulars above mentioned do not give such sufficient notice as aforesaid, the charge shall also contain such particulars of the manner in which the alleged offence was committed as will give such sufficicut notice.
(4) For the purposes of the application of any Statute law, a charge framed under the provisions of this Order shall be deemed to be au
indictment.
54. For every distinct offence of which any person is accused there Separate shall be a separate charge, and every such charge shall be tried separately, separate except in the cases following, that is to say:
(a) Where a person is accused of more offences than one of the same kind committed within the space of twelve months from the first to the last of such offences, he may be charged with, and tried at one trial for any number of them not exceeding three. (b) If in one series of acts so connected together as to form tho same transaction more offences than one are committed by the same person, he may be charged with and tried at one trial for every such offer.ec.
(c) If the acts alleged constitute an offence falling within two or more definitions or descriptions of offences in any law or laws,
offences.
10
346
Trial of
ORDER IN COUNCIL
the accused may be charged with, and tried at one trial for each of such offences.
(1) If several acts constitute several offences, and also when combined, a different offence, the accused may be charged with, and tried at one rial for, the offence constituted by such acts when combined, or one or more of the several offences, but in the latter case shall not be punished with more severe punish- ment than the Court which tries him could award for any one of those offences.
(e) If a single act or series of acts is of such a nature that it is doubtful which of several offences the facts which can be proved will constitute, the accused may be charged with having com- mitted all or any of such offences, and any number of such charges may be tried at once; or he may be charged in the alternative with having committed some one of the offences; and if it appears in evidence that he has committed a different offence for which he might have been charged, he may be convicted of that offence, although not charged with it.
55. When more persons than one are accused of the same offence or co-defendants. of different offences committed in the same transaction, or when one is accused of committing an offence and another of abetting or attempting to commit that offence, they may be charged and tried together or separately, as the Court thinks fit.
Alteration of charges.
Errors and variances
Charge of previous conviction.
56.-(1) Any Court, if sitting with a jury or assessors, may alter any charge at any time before the verdict of the jury is returned or the opinions of the assessors are expressed; if sitting without jury or asses- sors, at any time before judgment is pronounced.
(2) Every such alteration shall be read and explained to the accused. (3) If the altered charge is such that proceeding with the trial immediately is likely, in the opinion of the Court, to prejudice the accused or the prosecutor, the Court may either direct a new trial or adjourn the trial for such period as may be necessary.
57.-(1) No error or omission in stating either the offence or the particulars shall be regarded at any stage of the case as material, unless the accused was misled by such error or omission.
(2) When the facts alleged in certain particulars are proved and constitute an offence, and the remaining particulars are not proved the accused may be convicted of the offence constituted by the facts proved, although not charged with it.
(3) When a person is charged with an offence, and the evidence proves either the commission of a minor offence or an attempt to commit the offence charged, he may be convicted of the minor offence or of the attempt.
58-(1) If the accused has been previously convicted of any offence, and it is intended to prove such conviction for the purpose of affecting the punishment which the Court is competent to award, the fact, date, and place of the previous conviction shall he stated in the charge.
(2) If such state eut is omitted, the Court may add it at any time before sentence is passel,
(3) The part of the charge stating the previous convictions shall not be read out in Court, nor shall the accused be asked whether he has been previously convicted, as alleged in the charge, unless and until he has either pleaded guilty to, or been convicted of, the subsequent offence.
(4) If he pleads guilty to, or is convicted of, the subsequent offence, he shall then be asked whether he has been previously convicted, as alleged in the charge.
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
(5) If he answers that he has been so previously convicted, the Court may proceed to pass sentence on him according y, but, if he denies that he has been so previously convicted, or refuses to, or does not, answer such question, the Court shall then inquire concerning such previous conviction, and in such case (where the trial is by jury) it shall not be necessary to swear the jurors again.
Punishments.
59. The powers of the Courts with respect to punishments are limited as follows:-
(1) The Supreme Court may award in respect of an offence any punishment which may in respect of a similar offence be awarded in England provided that (a) imprisonment with hard labour shall be substituted for penal servitude, and (b) the Supreme Court shall not award a fine exceeding £500; or, in case of a continuing offence, in addition to imprisonment or fin, or both, a fine exceeding £1 for each day during which the offence continues after conviction. (2) A Provincial Court may award imprisonment, not exceeding twelve months, with or without hard labour, and with or without a fine uot exceeding £100; or a fine not exceeding £100, without imprisonment; or in case of a continuing offence. in addition to imprisonment or fine, or both, a fine not exceeding 10s. for each day during which the offence continues after conviction.
(8) But nothing in this Article shall be deemed to empower any Court to award for any offence any punishment not authorized by law in relation to that offence.
847
Limitation of powers of Courts.
against this Order.
60.-(1) If any person is guilty of an offence against this Order offences not distinguished as a grave offence against this Order, he is liable:
(i) To a fine not exceeding £5, without any imprisonment; or (ii) To imprisonment not exceeding one month, without fine; or (iii) To imprisonment not exceeding fourteen days, with a fine not
exceeding 508.
(2) Imprisonment under this Article is without hard labour.
against this Order.
61-(1) If any person is guilty of an offence against this Order, Grave offences distinguished as a grave offence against this Order, be is liable:-
(i) To a fine not exceeding £10, without imprisonment; or (ii) To imprisonment not exceeding two months, without fine; or (ii) To imprisonment not exceeding one month, with a five not
exceeding £5.
(2) Imprisament under this Article is, in the discretion of the Court, with or without hard labour.
Assault.
62-(1) The Court may, if it thinks fit, order a person convicted Damages for of an assault to pay to the person assaulted by way of damages any sum not exceeding £10.
(2) Damages so ordered to be paid may be either in addition to or in lieu of a fine, and shall be recoverable in like manner as a fine.
(3) Payment of such damages shall be a defence to an action for
the assault.
68.-(1) The Court may, if it thinks fit, order a person convicted Expenses of before it to pay all or part of the expenses of bis prosecution, or of his prosecution. imprisonment or other punishment or of both, the amount being specified
in the order.
(2) Where it appears to the Court that the charge is malicious, or frivolous and vexatious, the Court may, if it thinks fit, order the
10*
348
Punishment of death.
Prisons and punishments.
Imprisonment in His Majesty's dominions.
Mitigation of punishments.
Inquests.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
complainant to pay all or part of the expenses of the prosecution, the amount being specified in the order.
(3) In these respective cases the Court may, if it thinks fit, order that the whole or such portion as the Court thinks fit of the expenses so paid be paid over to the complainant or to the accused (as the case may be).
(4) In all cases the reasons of the Court for making any such order shall be recorded in the Minutes.
64. Where any person is sentenced by the Supreme Court to suffer the punishment of death, the Judge shall forthwith send a report of the sentence, with a copy of the Minutes of Proceedings and notes of evidence in the case, and with any observations he thinks fit, to His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea as the case may be,
The sentence shall not be carried into execution without the direction of His Majesty's Minister in writing under his hand.
If His Majesty's Minister does not direct that the sentence of death be carried into exccution, he shall direct what punishment in lieu of the punishment of death is to be inflicted on the person convicted, and the person convicted shall be liable to be so punished accordingly.
65.-(1) The Judge of the Supreme Court may by general order, approved by the Secretary of State, prescribe the manner in which and the prisons in China or Corea at which punishments passed by any Court or otherwise awarded under this Order are to be carried into execution,
(2) The warrant of any Court shall be sufficient authority to any person to whom it is directed to receive and detain the person therein named in any prison so prescribed.
(3) For the purposes of this Article "China" includes places within the limits of the Wei-bai-Wei Order in Council, 1901.
66. (1) Where an offender is sentenced to imprisonment, and the Supreme Court thinks it expedient that the sentence be carried into effect within His Majesty's dominions, and the offender is accordingly, under Section 7 of the Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1890, sent for imprisonment to a place in His Majesty's dominions, the place shall be either Hongkong, or a place in some other part of His Majesty's dominions, the Govern ment whereof consents that offenders may be sent thither under thisArticle.
(2) The Supreme Court may, by warrant under the hand of a Judge and the seal of the Court, cause the offender to be sent to Hongkong, or other such place as aforesaid, in order that the sentence may be there carried into effect accordingly.
(3) The warrant shall be sufficient authority to any person to whom it is directed to receive and detain the person therein named, and to carry him to and deliver him up at the place named, according to the
warrant.
67.--(1) A Judge of the Supreme Court may, if he thinks fit, report to the Secretary of State or to the Minister in China or in Corea, as the case may be, recommending a mitigation or remission of any punishment awarded by any Court, and thereupon the punishment may be mitigated or remitted by the Secretary of State or Minister.
(2) Nothing in this Order shall affect His Majesty's prerogative of pardon.
Inquests.
68. (1) The Court shall have and discharg all the powers and duties appertaining to the office of Coroner in England, in relation to deaths of British subjects happening in the districtof the Court.
(2) The Court may also exercise the said powers in relation to deaths of any persons having happened at sea on board British ships
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
arriving in the district, and to deaths of British subjects having hap- pened at sea on board foreign ships so arriving.
(3) The jurisdiction of the Court under this Article shall be exercised subject to the following provisions :-
(a) Where a British subject is charged with causing the death, the Court may, without holding an inquest, proceed forthwith with the preliminary examination.
(b) Where a British subject is not charged with causing the death, the Court shall, without any jury, hold an inquest, taking the depositions of those who know the facts. If, during or after the inquest, a British subject is so charged, the depositions shall be read over in the presence of the witnesses and of the accused, who shall be entitled to cross-examine each witness, and the procedure shall be as in other cases of preliminary examination. If after the inquest the Court does not see fit to cause any person to be charged, the Court shall certify its opinion of the cause of the death. When the inquest is held by a Provincial Court, the certificate and the depositions shall be sent forthwith to the Supreme Court, and that Court may give any directions which may seem proper in the circumstances. (4) In this Article the expression" the Court "includes the Registrar of the Supreme Court.
Statutory or other Offences.
349
trade-marks.
69. Any act which, if done in the United Kingdom, or in a British Patents and possession, would be an offence against any of the following Statutes of the Imperial Parliament or Orders in Council, that is to say:
The Merchandize Marks Act, 1887;
The Patents, Designs and Trade-marks Act, 1883 to 1888;
Any Act, Statute, or Order in Council for the time being in force. relating to copyright, or to inventions, designs, or trade-marks; Any Statute amending, or substituted for, any of the above-men-
tioned Statutes;
Shall, if done by a British subject in China or Corea, be punishable as a grave offence against this Order, whether such act is done in relation to any property or right of a British subject, or of a foreigner, or native, or otherwise howsoever;
Provided--
(1) That a copy of any such Statute or Order in Council shall be published in the public office of the Consulates at Shanghai and Seoul, and shall be there open for inspection by any person at all reasonable times; and a person shall not be punished under this Article for anything done before the expiration of one month after such publication, unless the person offending is proved to have had express notice of the Statute or Order in Council.
(2) That a prosecution by or on behalf of a prosecutor who is not a British subject shall not be entertained unless the Court is satisfied that effectual provision exists for the punishment in Consular or other Courts in China or Corea of similar acts committed by the subjects of the State or Power of which such prosecutor is a subject, in relation to, or affecting the interests of, British subjects.
70.-(1) If a British subject-
(i) Smuggles, or attempts to smuggle, out of China or Corea any goods on exportation whereof a duty is payable to the Chinese or Corean Government;
Smuggling.
350
Levying war, etc.
Piracy.
Violation of Treaties.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(ii) Imports or exports, or attempts to import or export, into or out of China or Corea, any goods, mtending and attempting to evade payment of duty payable thereon to the Chinese or Corean Government ;
(iii) Imports or exports, or attempts to import or export, into ot out of China or Corea any goods the importation or exportation whereof, into or out of China or Corea, is prohibited by law; (iv) Without a proper licence, sells, or attempts to sell, or offers for sale, in China or Corea, any goods whereof the Chinese or Corean Government has by law a monopoly ;
In each of the four cases aforesaid he shall be guilty of an offence against this Order, and on conviction shall be liable to imprisonment, with or without hard labour, for any term not exceeding six months, and with or without a fine not exceeding £100, or to a fine not exceeding £100 without imprisonment.
(2) Where a person is charged with such an offence as in this Article is mentioned, the Court may seize the goods in relation to which. the alleged offence was committed, and may hold the same until after the bearing of the charge.
(3) If a person so charged is convicted, then those goods, whether they have been so seized or not, shall be forfeited to His Majesty the King, and the Court shall dispose of them, subject to any general or special directions of the Secretary of State as the Court thinks fit.
71. (1) If any British subject, without His Majesty's authority, proof whereof shall lie on the party accused, does any of the following things, that is to say:
(a) Levies war or takes any part in any operation of war against, or aids or abets any person in carrying on war, insurrection, or rebellion against the Government of China or of Corea; or, (b) Takes part in any operation of war in the service of the Govern- ment of China or of Corea against any persons engaged in carrying on war, insurrection, or rebellion against those respective Governments be shall be guilty of an oflence against this Order, and, on conviction thereof, shall be liable to im- prisonment, with or without hard labour, for any term not exceeding two years, and with or without a fine not exceeding £500, or to a fine not exceeding £500 without imprisonment. (2) In addition to any such punishment every conviction under the provisions of this Article shall of itself, and without further proceed- ings, make the person convicted liable to deportation, and the Court may order bim to be deported from Chiua or Corea in manner provided by
this Order.
(3) Where a person accused of an offence against this Article is brought before a Provincial Court, that Court shall report the case to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court shall thereupon direct in what mode and where the case shall be heard and determined, and the case shall be heard and determined accordingly.
72. Any British subject being in China or Corea may be proceeded against, tried, and punished under this Order for piracy wherever committed.
If a person accused of piracy is brought before a Provincial Court, that Court shall report the case to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court shall thereupon give such directions as it may think fit with respect to the trial.
73. If any British subject in China or in Corea violates or fails to observe any stipulation of any Treaty between His Majesty, His pre- decessors, heirs, or successors, and the Emperor of China or of Cures
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
for the time. being in force, in respect of the violation whereof any penalty is stipulated for in the Treaty, he shall be deemed guilty of an offence against the Treaty, and on conviction thereof under this Order shall be liable to the penalty stipulated in the Treaty.
361
74-(1) Where, by agreement among the Diplomatic or Consular International
Regulations. representatives in China and Corca of foreign States, or some of them, in conjunction with the Chinese or Corcan authorities, Sanitary, or Police, or Port, or Game, or other Regulations are established, and the same, as far as they affect British subjects, are approved by the Secretary of State, the Court may, subject and according to the provisions of this Order, entertain any complaint made against a British subject for a breach of those Regulations, and may enforce payment of any fine incurred by that subject or person in respect of that breach, in like manner, as nearly as may be, as if that breach were by this Order declared to be an offence against this Order.
(2) In any such case the fine recovered shall, notwithstanding any- thing in this Order, be disposed of and applied in manner provided by those Regulations.
75. Every person subject to the criminal jurisdiction of the Court who prints, publishes, or offers for sale any printed or written newspaper or other publication containing matter calculated to excite tumultor disorder, or to excite enmity between His Majesty's subjects, and the Government of China or Corea, as the case may be, or between that Government and its subjects, shall be guilty of a grave offence against this Order, and may, in addition to, or in lien of, any other punishment, be ordered to give security for good behaviour, and in default thereof, or on a further conviction for the like offence, he may be ordered to be deported. An offence against this Article shall not be tried except by the Supreme Court.
76. (1) If a British subject-
Seditious conduct.
Offences
against
(i) Publicly derides, mocks, or insults any religion established or religions.
observed within China or Corea; or
(ii) Publicly offers insult to any religious service, feast, or ceremony established or kept in any part of those dominions, or to any place of worship, tomb, or sanctuary belonging to any religion established or observed within those dominions, or to the ministers or professors thereof; or
(iii) Publicly and wilfully commits any act tending to bring any religion established or observed within those dominions, or its ceremonies, mode of worship, or observances, into hatred, ridicule, or contempt, and thereby to provoke a breach of the public peace;
he shall be guilty of an offence, and on conviction thereof, liable to imprisonment not exceeding two years, with or without hard labour, and with or without a fine not exceeding £50, or to a fine alone not exceed- jug £50.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in this Order, every charge under this Article shall be heard and determined by the Court alone, without jury or assessors, and any Provincial Court shall have power to impose the punishment aforesaid.
(8) Consular officers shall take such precautionary measures as seem to them proper and expedient for the prevention of such offences.
77.--(1) If any person, subject to the criminal jurisdiction of a Contempt of Court, does any of the following things, namely:-
(a) Wilfully, by act or threat, obstructs an officer of, or person executing any process of, the Court in the performance of his Juty; or
Court,
252
Negligence of officers.
Extortion.
Offences within 100 miles of the coast.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(b) Within or close to the room or place where the Court is sitting wilfully misbehaves in a violent, threatening, or disrespectful manner, to the disturbance of the Court, or to the intimidation of suitors or others resorting thereto; or
(e) Wilfully insults any member of the Court, or any assessor or juror, or any person acting as clerk or officer of the Court, during his sitting or attendance in Court, or in his going to or returning from Court; or
(d) Does any act in relation to the Supreme Court or a Provincial Court or a matter pending therein, which, if done in relation to the High Court in England, would be punishable as a con- tempt of that Court,-
he shall be guilty of a grave offence against this Order;
Provided that the Court, if it thinks fit, instead of directing proceed. ings as for an offence against this Order, may order the offender to be apprehended forthwith, with or without warrant, and on inquiry and consideration, and after the hearing of any defence which such person may offer, without further process or trial, may adjudge him to be punished with a fine not exceeding £10, or with imprisonment not ex- ceeding twenty-four hours, at the discretion of the Court.
(2) A Minute shall be made and kept of every such case of punish- ment, recording the facts of the offence, and the extent of the punish- ment. In the case of a Provincial Court, a copy of the Minute shall be forthwith sent to the Supreme Court.
(3) Nothing herein shall interfere with the power of the Court to remove or exclude persons who interrupt or obstruct the proceedings of the Court.
78.-(1) If an officer of the Court employed to execute an order loses by neglect or omission the opportunity of executing it, then, on complaint of the person aggrieved, and proof of the fact alleged, the Court may, it thinks fit, order the officer to pay the damages sustained by the person complaining, or part thereof.
(2) The order shall be enforced as an order directing payment of
money.
79.-(1) If a clerk or officer of the Court, acting under pretence of the process or authority of the Court, is charged with extortion, or with not paying over money duly levied, or with other misconduct, the Court, if it thinks fit, may inquire into the charge in a summary way, and may for that purpose summon and enforce the attendance of all necessary persons, as in an action, and may make such order for the repayment of any money extorted, or for the payment over of any money levied, and for the payment of such damages and costs, as the Court thinks fit.
(2) The Court may also, if it thinks fit, on the same inquiry, impose on the clerk or officer such fine, not exceeding £5 for each offence, as the
Court thinks fit.
(3) A clerk or officer against whom an order has been made or who has been acquitted under this Article shall not be liable to an action in respect of the same matter; and any such action, if begun, shall be stayed by the Court in such manner and on such terms as the Court thinks fit.
Authority within 100 miles of Coast.
80.-(1) Where a British subject, being in China or Corea, is charged with having committed, either before or after the commencement of this Order, any offence within a British ship at a distance of not more than 100 miles from the coast of China, or within a Chinese or Corean ship at such a distance as aforesaid, or within a ship not lawfully entitled to claim the protection of the flag of any State, at such a distance as
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
aforesaid, any of His Majesty's Courts in China or Corca within the jurisdiction whereof he is found may cause him to be apprehended and brought before it, and may take the preliminary examination aud commit him for trial,
(2) If the Court before which the accused is brought is a Provincial Court, the Court shall report to the Supreme Court the pendency of the
case.
The Supreme Court shall thereupon direct in what mode, and where the case shall be heard and determined, and (notwithstanding anything in this Order) the case shall be so heard and determined accordingly.
(3) The provisions of this Order relative to offences, and proceedings in criminal matters, shall in all respects, as far as may be, extend and apply to every such case, in like manner as if the offence had been com- mitted in China or Corea.
Court at
81. Where a British subject, being in Hongkong, is charged with Jurisdiction baving committed, either before or after the commencement of this Supreme Order, any crime or offence within any British, Chinese, or Coreau ship Honkgong. at such a distance as aforesaid, the Supreme Court at Hongkong shall have and may exercise authority and jurisdiction with respect to the crime or offence as fully as if it had been committed in Hongkong.
of desertere.
353
82. His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea, any Judge of the Apprehension Supreme Court, auy Consular officer in China or Corea, or the Governor of Hongkong, on receiving satisfactory information that any soldier, sailor, marine, or other person belonging to any of His Majesty's military or naval forces, has deserted therefrom, and has concealed himself in any British ship at such a distance as aforesaid, may, in pursuance of such information, issue his warrant for a search after and apprehension of such deserter, and on being satisfied on investigation that any person so apprehended is such a deserter, shall cause him to be, with all convenient speed, taken and delivered over to the nearest military station of His Majesty's forces, or to the officer in command of a ship of war of His Majesty serving in China or Corca, as the case may require.
Deportation.
83.-(1) Where it is proved that there is reasonable ground to Deportation. apprehend that a British subject is about to commit a breach of the public peace or that the acts or conduct of a British subject are or is likely to produce or excite to a breach of the public peace the Court may, if it thinks fit, cause him to be brought before it, and require him to give security to the satisfaction of the Court, to keep the peace, or for his future good behaviour, as the case may require.
(2) Where a British subject is convicted of an offence before the Court, the Court may, if it thinks fit, require him to give security to the satisfaction of the Court for his future good behaviour, and for that purpose may (if need be) cause him to be brought before the Court.
(3) In either of the foregoing cases, if the person required to give security fails to do so, the Court may order that he be deported from China or Corea to such place as the Court directs.
(4) The place shall be a place in some part (if any) of His Majesty's dominions to which the person belongs, or the Government of which consents to the reception of persons deported under this Order.
(5) A Provincial Court shall report to the Supreme Court any order of deportation made by it and the grounds thereof, before the order is executed. The Supreme Court may reverse the order, or may confirm it with or without variation, and in case of confirmation, shall direct it to be carried into effect.
354
Dealing with deported persons at
Hongkong.
Appeal and reserved case,
Procedure case stated.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(6) The person to be deported shall be detained in custody until a fit opportunity for his deportation occurs.
(7) He shall, as soon as is practicable, and in the case of a person convicted, either after execution of the sentence or while it is in course of execution be embarked in custody under the warrant of the Supreme Court on board one of His Majesty's ships of war, or, if there is no such ship available, then on board any British or other fit ship bound to the place of deportation.
(8) The warrant shall be sufficient authority to the commander or master of the ship to receive and detain the person therein named, and to carry him to and deliver him up at the place named according to the
warrant.
(9) The Court may order the person to be deported to pay all or any part of the expenses of his deportation. Subject thereto, the expenses of deportation shall be defrayed in such manner as the Secretary of State, with the concurrence of the Treasury, may direct.
(10) The Supreme Court shall forthwith report to the Secretary of State any order of deportation made or confirmed by it and the grounds thereof, and shall also inform His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea as the case may require.
(11) If any person deported under this or any formei Order returns to China or Corea without permission in writing of the Secretary of State (which permission the Secretary of State may give), he shall be deemed guilty of a grave offence against this Order; and he shall also be liable to be forthwith again deported.
84. Where any person is deported to Hongkong, he shall on his arrival there be delivered, with the warrant under which he is deported, into the custody of the Chief Magistrate of Police of Hongkong, who, on receipt of the person deported, with the warrant, shall detain him and shall forthwith report the case to the Governor of Hongkong, who shall either by warrant (if the circumstances of the case appear to him to make it expedient) cause the person so deported to be taken to England. and in the meantime to be detained in custody (so that the period of such detention do not exceed three months), or else shall discharge him from custody.
Appeal and Reserved Case.
85.-(1) Where a person is convicted of any offence before any Court-
(a) If he considers the conviction erroneous in law, then, on his application, within the prescribed time (unless it appears merely frivolous, when it may be refused); or
(b) If the Judge thinks fit to reserve for consideration of the full
Supreme Court any question of law arising on the trial; the Judge shall state a case, setting out the facts and the grounds of the conviction, and the question of law, and send or deliver it to the Registrar of the Supreme Court.
86. (1) Where a case is stated under the last preceding Article, the Court, before whom the trial was bad, shall, as it thinks fit, either postpone judgment on the conviction, or respite execution of the judg ment, and either commit the person convicted to prison, or take security for him to appear and receive judgment, or to deliver himself for execution of the judgment (as the case may require), at an appointed time and place.
(2) The full Supreme Court, sitting without a jury or assessors, shall bear and determine the matter, and thereupon shall reverse, affirm, or amend the judgment given, or set it aside, and order an entry to be
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
made in the Minutes that, in the judgment of the Supreme Court, the person ought not to have been convicted, or order judgment to be given at a subsequent sitting of the Provincial Court, or order a new trial, or make such other order as the Supreme Court thinks just, and shall also give all necessary and proper consequential directions.
(3) The judgment of the full Court shall be delivered in open Court, after the public hearing of any argument offered on behalf of the prosecutor or of the person convicted.
(4) Before delivering judgment, the full Court may, if necessary, cause the case to be amended by the Provincial Court.
(5) The full Court shall not annul a conviction or sentence, or vary a sentence, or order a new trial on the ground-
(a) Of any objection which, if stated during the trial, might, in the opinion of the Supreme Court, have been properly met by amendment at the trial; or
(b) of any error in the summoning of assessors; or
(c) Of any person having served as assessor who was not qualfied; or (d) of any objection to any person as assessor which might have
been raised before or at the trial; or
(e) Of any informality in the swearing of any witness; or
(/) of any error or omission in the charge, or any informality in procedure which, in the opinion of the Supreme Court, did not affect the substance of the case or subject the convicted person to any undue prejudice.
356
Privy Counoll.
87. There shall be no appeal in a criminal case to His Majesty the Appeal to King in Council from a decision of the Supreme Court, except by special leave of His Majesty in Council.
Fugitive Offenders.
offenders.
88. The Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, and the Colonial Prisoners Fugitive Removal Act, 1884, shall apply to China and Corea, as if those places. were a British possession and part of His Majesty's dominions.
Subject as follows:-
(a) His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea, as the case may require, is hereby substituted for the Governor or Government of a British possession; and
(b) The Supreme Court is hereby substituted for a Superior Court
of a British possession.
(c) The Supreme Court and each Provincial Court is substituted
for a Magistrate of any part of His Majesty's dommions. (d) For the purposes of Part II of the said Act of 1881, and of this Article in relation thereto, China, Corea, Weihaiwei, and Hong- kong shall be deemed to be one group of British possessions.
IV. CIVIL MATTERS.
provision sa
89. Subject to the provisions of this Order, the civil jurisdiction of General every Court acting under this Order shall, as far as circumstances admit, to civil be exercised on the principles of, and in conformity with, English law for the time being in force.
Procedure.
jurisdiction,
90-(1) Every civil proceeding in the Court shall be taken by All proceed. action, and not otherwise, and shall be designated an action.
(2) For the purposes of any statutory enactment or other provision applicable under this Order to any civil proceeding in the Court, an
Ings to be by action.
356
Commence. ment of action.
Trial by jury In Supreme Court.
Trial by MARESSOPA.
Special case.
Oosts.
Arbitration.
Reference of actions to special referees.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
action under this Order shall comprise and be equivalent to a suit, cause, or petition, or to any civil proceeding, howsoever required by any such enactment or provision to be instituted or carried on.
91. (1) Every action shall commence by a summons issued from the Court, on the application of the plaintiff, and served on the defendant (in this Order referred to as an original summons); but not withstanding this provision, proceedings may be taken in and applications may be made to the Court in particular classes of cases, in such maruer as may be prescribed by Rules of Court, or where such manner is not so pre- scribed, in such manner as like proceedings and applications are taken and made in England.
92. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Order, every action in the Supreme Court which involves the amount or value of £150 or upwards shall, on the demand of either party in writing, filed in the Court seven days before the day appointed for the bearing, be heard with a jury.
(2) Any other suit may, on the suggestion of any party, at any stage, be heard with a jury, if the Court thinks fit.
(8) Any suit may be heard with a jury if the Court, of its own motion, at any stage, thinks fit.
98. (1) The Supreme Court may, if it thinks fit, hear any action with assessors.
(2) A Provincial Court shall (subject to the provisions of this Order) hear with assessors every action which involves the amount or value of £150 or upwards.
(3) In all other cases a Provincial Court may, as it thinks fit, hear the action either with or without assessors.
94. (1) After the issue of a summous by any Court, the decision of that Court may be given upon a special case submitted to the Court by the parties.
(2) Any decision of a Provincial Court may be given subject to a case to be stated by, or under the direction of, that Court for the opinion or direction of the Supreme Court.
95. Subject to the provisions of this Order and the Rules of Court, the costs of and incident to all proceedings in the Court shall be in the discretion of the Court, provided that if the action is tried with a jury the costs shall follow the event, unless the Court shall for good cause (to be entered in the Minutes) otherwise order.
Arbitration.
96.(1) Any agreement in writing between any British subjects or between British subjects and foreigners to submit present or future differences to arbitration, whether an Arbitrator is named therein or not, may be filed in the Court by any party thereto, and, unless a con- trary intention is expressed therein, shall be irrevocable, and shall have the same effect as an order of the Court.
(2) Every such agreement is in this Order referred to as a submission. (3) If any action is commenced in respect of any matter covered by a submission, the Court, on the application of any party to the action, may by order stay the action.
97. (1) In any action-
(a) If all parties consent, or
(b) If the matters in dispute consist wholly or partly of matters of
account, or require for their determination prolonged examina tion of documents or any scientific or local examination: the Court may at any time refer the whole action, or any question or issue arising therein, for inquiry and report, to the Registrar or any special Refere e
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
(2) The report of the Registrar or special Referee may be adopted wholly or partially by the Court, and if so adopted may be enforced as a judgment of the Court.
(3) The Court may also in any case, with the consent of both parties to an action, or of any parties between whom any questions in the action arise (such consent being signified by a submission) refer the action or the portions referred to in the submission to arbitration, in such man- ner and upon such terms as it shall think reasonable or just.
(4) In all cases of reference to a Registrar, special Referee, or Arbitrator, under any order of the Court, the Registrar, special Referee, or Arbitrator shall be deemed to be an officer of the Court, and shall have such powers and authority, and shall conduct the reference or arbitration in such manner as may be prescribed by any Rules of Court, and subject thereto as the Court may direct.
98. Subject to Rules of Court, the Court shall have authority to enforce any submission, or any award made thereunder, and to control and regulate the proceedings before and after the award, in such manner and on such terms as the Court thinks fit.
Bankruptcy.
357
Enforcement
of subinission
or award.
99. Each Court shall, as far as circumstances admit, have, for and Bankruptcy. within its own district, with respect to the following classes of persons being either resident in China or Corea, or carrying on business there, namely, resident British subjects and their debtors and creditors, being British subjects, or foreigners submitting to the jurisdiction of the Court, all such juris liction in bankruptcy as for the time being belongs to the High Court and the County Courts in England
Admiralty.
100-(1) The Supreme Court shall have Admiralty jurisdiction jurisdiction. for and within the limits of this Order, and over vessels and persons coming within the same,
(2) The following enactments of the Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act, 1890, that is to say, Section 2, Sub-sections (2) to (4); Sections 5 and 6; Section 16, Sub-section (3); shall apply to the Supreme Court as if that Court were a Colonial Court of Admiralty, and as if China and Corea were a British possession; and for the purpose of this application the expressions "judgment" and "appeal" shall in the enactinents so applied have the same respective meanings as are assigned thereto in Section 15 of the said Act.
Matrimonial.
jurisdiction.
101. The Supreme Court shall, as far as circumstances admit, have Matrimonial for and within China and Corea, with respect to British subjects, all such jurisdiction in matrimonial causes except the jurisdiction relative to dissolution or nullity or jactivation of marriage, as for the time being belongs to the High Court in England.
Lunacy.
102. (1) The Supreme Court shall, as far as circumstances admit, Lunacy have for and within China and Corea, in relation to British subjects, all jurisdiction. such jurisdiction relative to the custody and management of the persons and estates of lunatics, as for the time being belongs to the Lord Chan- cellor or other Judge or Judges in England intrusted by virtue of His Majesty's sign manual with the care and commitment of the custody of persons and estates of lunatics, and also such jurisdiction as may be
the
358
to devolve as personal
ORDER IN COUNCIL
exercised in England by a judicial authority under the provisions of the Lunacy Act, 1890, or any Art amending the saine.
(2) A Provincial Court shall, as far as circumstances permit, have in relation to British subjects, such jurisdiction relative to the custody and management of the persons and estates of lunatics as for the time being may be prescribed by Rules of Court, and until such Rules are made, and so far as such Rules do not apply, as may be exercised in England by a judicial authority and by the Masters in Lunacy under the Irovisions of the Lunacy Act, 1890, or any Act amending the same.
(3) In any such case the Provincial Court may, of its own motion, or on the application of any person interested, take or authorise such steps as to the Court may seem necessary or expedient for the
person and property of any person appearing to the Court to be a lunatic, and may from time to time, revoke, or vary, or supplement any order or proceeding taken in th matter.
(4) Subject to the provisions of this Article and to any Rules of Court, a Provincial Court shall not proceed in any such matter except under and according to the directions of the Supreme Court.
(5) Sections 5 to 7 of the Lunatics Removal (India) Act, 1851 (14 and 15 Viet.. cap. 81), shall apply to Chi a and Corea, with the sub- stitution of "the Supreme Court" for "the Supreme Court of Judicature ut any of he Presidencies of India." Provided that the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under tho e sections may be exercised in and for Corea by the Provincial Court at Seou'.
Probate and Administration.
103. All real or immovable property situate in China or Corea, and Real property belonging at the time of bis death to any British subject dying after the commencement of this Order, shall be deemed to be personal estate, and the devolution thereof, in case of intestacy, shall be regulated according to the law of England for the time being relating to person l estate.
ostate.
Jurisdiction of Courts.
Enactment applied.
Bealing of British or
Colonial
probate, &c.
104. (1) The Supreme Court shall, as far as circumstances admit, have, for and within Obina and Corea, with respect to the wills and the property in China and Corea of deceased British subjects, ali such jurisdiction as or the time being belongs to the High Court in England.
(2) A Provincial Court shall have power to grant probate or letters of administration where there is no contention respecting the right to the grant.
(3) Probate or administration granted by a Court nuder this Order shall have effect over all the property of the deceased within Ch na or Corea, and shall effectually discharge persous dealing with an executor or administrator hereunder, notwithstanding that any defect afterwards appears in the grant.
105. Section 51 of the Conveyancing (Scotland) Act, 1874, and any enactment for the time being in force amending or substitute for the same, are hereby extended to China and Corea with the adaptation follow- ing, namely:
The Supreme Court is hereby substituted for a Court of Probate in
a Colony.
106. -(1) Where a Court of Probate in the United Kingdom or in any British Possession to which the Colonial Probates Act, 1892, for the time being extends, has granted probate or letters of administration or confirmation in respect of the estate of a deceased person, the probate letters or confirmation so granted may, on being produced to, and a copy thereof deposited with, the Supreme Court, be sealed with the scal of that Court, and thereupon shall be of the like force and effect and have the same operation as if granted by that Court.
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
(2) Provided that the Supreme Court shall, before sealing any probate letters or confirmation under this section, be satisfied either that all probate or estate duty has been paid in respect of so much of the estate, situated in China or Corea, as is liable to such duty, or that security has been given in a sum sufficient to cover the property (if any) in China or Corea, and may require such evidence, if any, as it thinks fit as to the domicile of the deceased person.
(3) The Supreme Court may, also, if it thinks fit, on the applica- tion of any creditor, require before sealing that adequate se urity be given for the payment of debts due from the estate to creditors residing in China or Corea.
(4) For the purposes of this Article, a duplicate of any probate letters of administration, or confirmation sealed with the seal of the Court grauting the saine, or a copy thereof certified as correct by or under the authority of the Court granting the same, shall have the same effect as the original.
107.-(1) Where a British subject dies in China or Corea, or else. where, intestate, then, until administration is granted, his property in China or Corea shall be vested in the Judge of the Supreme Court.
(2) The Court within whose jurisdiction any property of the de- ceased is situated shall, where the circumstances of the case appear to the Court so to require, forthwith on his death, or as soon after as may be, take possession of his property within the particular jurisdiction, or put any such property under the seal of the Court (in either case if the nature of the property or other circumstances so requie, making an inventory), and so keep it until it can be dealt with according to law.
108. If any person named executor in the will of the deceased takes possession of and administers or otherwise deals with any part of the property of the deceased, and does not obtain probate within one mouth after the death, or after the termination of any suit or dispute respect- ing probate or administration, he shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable to a fine not exceeding £50.
109. If any person, other than the person named, administrator or an executor or an officer of the Court, takes possession of and administers or otherwise deals with any part of the property of a deceased British subject, whether resident or not, he shall be deemed guilty of a contempt of Court, and shall be liable to a fine not exceeding £50.
359
Custody of property of
estate.
Executor failing to probate.
obtain
Administering estate without authority.
failure of executor.
110. Where a person appointed executor in a will survives the Death or testator, but either dies without having taken probate, or, having been called on by the Court to take probate, does not appear, his right in re- spect of the executorship wholly ceases: and without further renuncia- tion the representation to the testator and administration of his pro- perty shall go and may be committed as if that person had not been appointed executor.
111 (1) Where a British subject dies in China or Corea, any other such subject having in his possession, or under his control, any paper or writing of the deceased, being, or purporting to be testament- ary, shall forthwith bring the original to the Court within whose parti- cular jurisdiction the death happens, and deposit it there.
If any person fails to do so for fourteen days after having knowledge of the death of the deceased, he shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding £50.
(2) Where it is proved that any paper of the deceased, being or purporting to be testamentary, is in the possession or under the control of a British subject, the 'ourt may, whether a suit or proceeding respecting probate or administration is pending or not, order him to produce the paper and bring it into Court.
Testamentary deposited in Court,
papers to be
360
Administra. tion of small
Itates.
Appeal to Supreme Court.
Rebearing in Supreme Court.
Appeal to Privy Council.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(3) Where it appears to the Court that there are reasonable grounds for believing that any person has knowledge of any paper being, or purporting to be, testamentary (although it is not shown that the
paper is in his possession or under his control), the Court may, whether a suit or proceeding for probate or administration is pending or not, order that he be examined respecting it before the Court or elsewhere, and that he do attend for that purpose, and after examination order that he do produce the paper and deposit it m Court.
112. Where it appears to the Court that the value of the property or estate of a deceased person does not exceed £50, the Court may, without any probate or letters of administration, or other formal proceeding, pay thereont any debts or charges, and pay, remit, or deliver any surplus to such persons, subject to such conditions (if any) as the Court thinks proper, and shall not be liable to any action, suit, or proceedings in respect of anything done under this Article. Provided that a Provincial Court shall not exercise the powers of this Article except with the approval of the Supreme Court. Every proceeding of the Court under this Article shall be recorded in the Minutes.
Appeals and Rehearings.
113.-(1) Where an action in a Provincial Court involves the amount for value of £25 or upwards, any party aggrieved by any decision of that Court, with or without assessors, in the action shall have the right to appeal to the Supreme Court against the same, on such terms and conditions as may be prescribed by Rules of Court.
(2) In any other case, the Provincial Court may, if it seems just and expedient, give leave to appeal on like terms.
(3) In any case the Supreme Court may give leave to appeal on such terms as seem just.
114. (1) The Supreme Court may, if it thinks fit, on the application of any party or of its own motion, order a rehearing of an action, or of an appeal, or of any arguments ou a verdict or on any other question of law.
(2) The provisions of this Order respecting a hearing with a jury or assessors shall extend to a rehearing of an action.
(3) The Supreme Court may, if it thinks fit, direct any rehearing to be before the full Court.
(4) If the party applying for a rebearing has by any order been ordered to pay money or do any other thing, the Court may direct either that the order be carried into execution, or that the execution thereof be suspended pending the rehearing, as it thinks fit.
(5) If the Court directs the order to be carried into execution, the party in whose favour it is given shall before the execution give security to the satisfaction of the Court for the performance of such order as shall be made on the rehearing.
(6) If the Court directs the execution of the order to be suspended, the party against whom it is given shall, before an order for suspension is given, give security to the satisfaction of the Judge for performance of such order as shall be made on the rehearing.
(7) An application for a rehearing shall be made within the pre- scribed time.
Appeals to His Majesty in Council.
115.-(1) Where a final judgment or order of the Supreme Court made in a civil action involves the amount or value of £500 or upwards, any party aggrieved thereby may, within the prescribed time, or, if no
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COKEA
time is prescribed, within fifteen days after the same is made or given, apply by motion to the Supreme Court for leave to appeal to His Majesty the King in Council.
(2) The applicant shall give security to the satisfaction of the Court to an amount not exceeding £500 for prosecution of the appeal, and for such costs in the event of the disinissal of the appeal for want of pro- secution as the Supreme Court may award, and for payment of all such costs as may be awarded to any respondent by His Majesty in Council, or by the Lords of the Judicial Committee of His Majesty's Privy Council.
(3) He shall also pay into the Supreme Court a sum estimated by that Court to be the amount of the expense of the making up and trans- mission to England of the transcript of the record.
(4) If security and payment are so given and made within two months from the filing of the motion-paper for leave to appeal, then, and not otherwise, the Supreme Court shall give leave to appeal, and the appellant shall be at liberty to prefer and prosecute his appeal to His Majesty in Council according to the rules for the time being in force respecting appeals to His Majesty in Council from His Colonies, or such other rules as His Majesty in Council from time to time thinks fit to make concerning appeals from the Supreme Court.
(5) In any case the Supreme Court, if it considers it just or expedient to do so, may give leave to appeal on the terms and in the manner aforesaid,
appeal.
116. (1) Where leave to appeal to His Majesty in Council is Execution applied for by a person ordered to pay money or do any other act, the pending Supreme Court shall direct either that the order appealed from be carried into execution, or that the execution thereof be suspended pending the appeal, as the Court thinks just.
(2) If the Court directs the order to be carried into execution, the person in whose favour it is made shall, before the execution of it, give security to the satisfaction of the Court for performance of such order as His Majesty in Council may think fit to make.
(3) If the Court directs the execution of the order to be suspended the party against whom it is given shall, before an order for suspension is made, give security to the satisfaction of the Court for performance of
such order as His Majesty in Council may think fit to make.
361
117. This Order shall not affect the right of His Majesty in Council Appeal by at any time, on the humble petition of a person aggrieved by a decision special leave. of the Supreme Court, to admit his appeal thereon on such terms and in
such manner as His Majesty in Council may think fit, and to deal with
the decision appealed from in such manner as may be just.
V.-PROCEDURE, CRIMINAL AND ĈIVIL.
118.-(1) In every case, civil or criminal, Minutes of the proceedings Minutes of shall be drawn up, and shall be signed by the Judge before whom the proceedings. proceedings are taken, and shall, where the trial is held with assessors, be open for their inspection and for their signature if concurred in by them.
(2) These Minutes, with the depositions of witnesses, and the notes of evidence taken at the hearing or trial by the Judge, shall be preserved in the public office of the Court.
Rules of
119. The Judge of the Supreme Court may make Rules of Court- (a) For regulating the pleading practice and procedure in the Courts Court.
established under this Order with respect to all matters within the jurisdiction of the respective Courts;
362
Power to dispense with payment of Court fees.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(b) For regulating the means by which particular facts may be
proved in the said Courts;
(c) For prescribing any forms to be used;
(d) For prescribing or regulating the duties of the officers of the
said Courts;
(e) For prescribing scales of costs and regulating any matters in
connection therewith;
(ƒ) For prescribing and enforcing the fees to be taken in respect of any proceedings under this Order, not exceeding, as regards any matters provided for by the Consular Salaries and Fees Act, 1891, fees fixed and allowed from time to time by any Order in Council made under that Act;
(g) For prescribing the allowances to be made in criminal cases to complainants, witnesses, jurors, assessors, interpreters, medical practitioners, and other persons employed in the administration of Justice and the conditions upon which an order may be made by the Court for such allowances;
(h) For taking and transmitting depositions of witnesses for use at
trials in a British possession or in the United Kingdom;
(i) For regulating the mode in which legal practitioners are to be admitted to practise as such, and for withdrawing or suspending the right to practise on grounds of misconduct, subject to a right of appeal to His Majesty in Council.
Where under any Act of Parliament which is applicable to China and Corea, Rules may or are required to be made in England by the Lord Chancellor or any Judicial authority, the powers of this Article shall include a power to make such Rules for the purposes of that Act so far as applicable.
Rules framed under this Article shall not have effect until approved by the Secretary of State and, so far as they relate to fees and costs, sanctioned by the Treasury; but in case of urgency declared in any such Rules with the approval of His Majesty's Minister, the same shall bave effect unless and until they are disapproved by the Secretary of State and notification of such disapproval is recorded and published by the Judge of the Supreme Court.
Until such rules have been made, or in relation to matters to which they do not extend, a Court way adopt and use any procedure or forms beretofore in use in the Consular Courts in China or Corea, or any Regulations or Rules made thereunder and in force immediately before the commencement of this Order, with any modificatious or adaptations which may be necessary.
120.-(1) The Court may, in any case, if it thinks fit, on account of the poverty of a party, or for any other reason, to be recorded in the Minutes, dispense with or remit the payment of any fee in whole or in part.
(2) Payment of fees payable under any Rules to be made in pur- suance of this Order, and of costs and of "charges and expen-es, of witnesses, prosecutions, punishments, and deportations and of other charges and expenses, and of fines respectively payable under this Order, may be enforced under order of the Court by seizure and sale of goods, aud in default of sufficient goods, by imprisonment as a civil prisoner for a term not exceeding one month, but such imprisonment shall not operate as a satisfaction or extinguishment of the liability.
(3) Any bill of sale or mortgage, or transfer of property made with a view of avoiding seizure or sale of goods or ship under any provision of this Order, shall not be effectual to defeat the provisions of this Order:
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
363
121. (1) Every person doing an act or taking a proceeding in the Appearances. Cour as plaintiff in a civil case, as making a criminal charge against another person, or otherwise, shall do so in his own name and not other- wise, and either-
(a) By himself; or
(b) By a legal practitioner; or
(c) By his attorney or agent thereunto lawfully authorized in
writing and approved by the Court.
(2) Where the act is done or proceeding taken by an attorney or by an agent (other than a legal practitioner), the power of attorney, or instrument authorizing the agent, or an authenticated copy thereof, shall be first filed in the Court.
(3) Where the authority has reference only to the particular pro- ceeding, the original document shall be filed.
(4) Where the authority is general, or has reference to other matters in which the attorney or agent is empowered to act, an authenticated copy of the document may be filed.
(5) Any person doing any act or taking any proceeding in the Court in the name or on behalf of another person, not being lawfully authorized thereunto, and knowing himself not to be so authorized, is guilty of a contempt of Court.
122.-(1) In any case, criminal or civil, and at any stage thereof, Witnesses. the Court either of its own motion or on the application of any party, may summon a British subj ct to attend to give evidence, or to produce documents, or to be examined: but a Provincial Court shall have power so to summon British subjects in its own district only.
(2) If the person summoned, having reasonable notice of the time and place at which he is required to attend, and (in civil cases) his reason- able expenses having been paid or tendered, fails to attend and be sworn, and give evidence, or produce documents or submit to examination accordingly, and does not excuse his failure to the satisfaction of the Court, he shall be guilty of an offence against this Order.
(3) Persons of Chinese, Corean, or other Asiatic origin or nationality shall be deemed to be persons allowed by law to affirm or declare instead of swearing.
(4) Any person appearing before the Court to give evidence in any case, civil or criminal, may be examined or give evidence in the form or with the ceremony that he declares to be binding on his conscience.
(5) If in any case, civil or criminal, a British subject wilful y gives false evidence in the Court, or on a reference, he shall be deemed guilty of wil ul and corrupt perjury.
of accused persons.
123. Whenever under this Order any person is to be taken for trial Conveyance or imprisonment or by way of deportation or for other
any purpose, to the Supreme Court or elsewhere in China or Corea, or to Hongkong, England, or elsewhere, the Court or other authority by this Order authorize I to cause him to be so taken, may for that purpose (if neces sary) cause him to be embarked on board one of His Majesty's ships of war, or if there is no such ship available, then on board any British or other fit ship, at any port or place whether within or beyond the parti- cular jurisdiction or district of that Court or authority, and in order to such embarkment may (if necessary) cause him to be taken, in custody or therwise, by land or by water, from any place to the port or place of embarkment.
The writ, order, or warrant of the Court, by virtue whereof any person is to be so taken, shall be sufficient authority to every constable, officer, or other person acting thereunder, and to the commander or master of any ship of war, or other ship (whether the coustable, officer,
364
Expenses of removal.
Application of enactinents as to evidence.
The following Acts, namely.
Protection of public officers
Evidence by Co nimission.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
or other person, or the ship or the commander or master thereof, is named therein or not), to receive, detain, take, and deliver up such person, according to the writ, order, or warrant.
Where the writ, order, or warrant is executed under the immediate direction of the Court or authority issuing it, the writ, order or warrant shall be delivered to the constable, officer, or other person acting there. under, and a duplicate thereof shall be delivered to the commander or master of any ship in which the person to whom the writ, order, or warrant relates is embarked.
Where the writ, order, or warrant issues from the Supreme Court, and is executed by a Provincial Court, a copy thereof certified under the seal of the Court executing the same shall be delivered to the constable, officer, or other person acting thereunder, and to the commander or master of any ship in which the person taken is embarked; and any such copy shall be for all purposes conclusive evidence of the order of which it purports to be a copy.
124. Subject to the other provisions of this Order, all expenses of rem oval of prisoners and others from or to any place in China or Corea, or from or to Hongkong, and the expenses of deportation and of the sending of any person to England, shall be defrayed in such manner as the Secretary of State from time to time directs.
Any master of a British ship when required shall be bound to take such persons for a reasonable remuneration, to be determined by a Judge of the Supreme Court, and in case of non-compliance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding £50.
125. The following Acts, namely:--
The Foreign Tribunals Evidence Act, 1856; The Evidence by Commission Act, 1859;
The Evidence by Commission Act, 1885;
or so much thereof as is for the time being in force, and any enactment for the time being in force amending or substituted for the same, are hereby extended to China and Corea, with the adaptation following, namely:-
In the said Acts the Supreme Court is hereby substituted for a
Supreme Court in a Colony.
126. The following Acts, namely:-
The British Law Ascertainment Act, 1859;
The Foreign Law Ascertainment Act, 1861;
or so much thereof as is for the time being in force, and any enactment for the time being in force amending or substituted for the same, are hereby extended to China and Corea, with the adaptation following, namely:
In the said Acts the Supreme Court is hereby substituted for a
Superior Court in a Colony.
127. The Public Authorities Protection Act, 1893, shall extend and apply to China and Corea, as if China and Corea were therein mentioned in place of the United Kingdom, and as if this Order and any other Order relating to China or Corea, and any Regulations or Rules made under any such Order were therein referred to, in addition to any Act of Parliament.
128. The Supreme Court may, if it thinks fit, order that a Com- mission do issue for examination of witnesses at any place out of China and Corea on oath, by interrogatories or otherwise, and may by order, give such directions touching the time, place, and manner of the examina- tion, or anything connected therewith, as to the Court appear reasonable and just.
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
VI.-MORTGAages and Bills of Šale.
Mortgages.
305
129. A deed or other instrument of mortgage, legal or equitable, of Registration lands or houses in China or Corea, executed by a British subject, may of mortgage. be registered at any time after its execution at the Consulate of the Consular district wherein the property mortgaged is situate.
130-Registration is made as follows: The original and a copy of Mode of the deed or other instrument of mortgage, and an affidavit verifying the registration. execution and place of execution thereof, and verifying the copy, are brought into the Consulate and the copy and affidavit are left there.
registration.
131. If a deed or other instrument of mortgage is not registered at Time for the Consulate aforesaid within the respective time following (uamely) :-
(1) Within fourteen days after its execution, where it is executed in the Consular district wherein the property mortgaged is situate; (2) Within two months after its execution, where it is executed in China or Corea, elsewhere than in that Consular district, or in Wei-hai-Wei or Hongkong;
(3) Within six months after its execution, where it is executed else-
where than in China, Corea, Wei-bai-Wei or Hongkong
then, and in every such case, the mortgage debt secured by the deed or other instrument and the interest thereon shall not have priority over judgment or simple contract debts contracted before the registration of that deed or other instrument.
132. Registered deeds or other instruments of mortgage, legal or Priority. equitable, of the same lauds or houses have, as among themselves, priority in order of registration.
mortgages.
133. His Majesty's Minister may, with the approval of the Secretary Rules for of State, mako Rules for prescribing and regulating the making and indexes of keeping of indexes, and of a general index, to the register of mortgages, and searches in those indexes, and other particulars connected with the making, keeping, and using of those registers and indexes, and for authorizing and regulating the unregistering of any deed or other instrument of mortigage, or the registering of any release or satisfaction in respect thereof.
Bill of Sale.
To what bill
of sale this
134. The provisions of this Order relating to bills of sale:-- (1) Apply only to such bills of sale executed by British subjects as Order applies.
are intended to affect chattels in China or Corea ;
(2) Do not apply to bills of sale given by sheriffs or others under
or in execution of process authorizing seizure of chattels.
bill of sale.
135.-(1) Every bill of sale must conform with the following rules Contents of (namely) :-
(a) It must state truly the name, description, and address of the
grantor.
(b) It must state truly the consideration for which it is granted. (e) It must have annexed thereto or written thereunder an inventory
of the chattels intended to be comprised therein.
(d) Any defeasance, condition, or declaration of trust affecting the bill not contained in the body of the bill must be written ou the same paper as the bill.
(e) The execution of the bill must be attested by a credible witness,
with his address and description.
(2) Otherwise, the bill is void in China and in Corea to the extent following, but not further (that is to say):-
366
Time for
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(a) In the case of failure to conform with the rule respecting an inventory, as far as regards chattels omitted from the inventory; and.
(b) In any other case, wholly.
(3) The inventory, and any defeasance, condition, or declaration as aforesaid, respectively, is for all purposes deemed part of the bill.
136. A bill of sale conforming, or appearing to conform, with the registration of foregoing rules, may be registered, if it is intended to affect chattels in China or Corea, at the Supreme Court or at the Consulate of the Consular district wherein the chattels are; within the respective time following and not afterwards (namely) :-
Mode of
registering
Penalty for failure to register.
Priority,
Effect of bill in case of bankruptcy.
Subsequent bill covering came goods.
Time for renewal,
Mode of renewal,
(1) Within fourteen days after its execution, where it is executed
in the Consular district wherein the chartels are;
(2) Within two months after its execution, where it is executed in China or in Corea elsewhere than in that Consular district, or in Wei-hai-Wei or Hongkong;
(3) Within six months after its execution, where it is executed else-
where than in China, Corea, Wei-bai-Wei, or Hongkong.
137. Registration is made as follows:--The original and a copy of the bill of sale, and an affidavit verifying the execution, and the time and place of execution, and the attestation thereof, and verifying the copy, are brought into the proper office of the Court or the Consulate; and the copy and affidavit are left there.
138. If a bill of sale is not registered at a place and within the time by this Order appointed and allowed for registration there f, it is, from and after the expiration of that time, void in Chiua or in Corea, according as that place is in China or in Corea, to the extent following, but not further (that is to say):--
(1) As against trustees or assignees of the estate of the grantor, in or under bankruptcy, liquidation, or assignment for the benefit of creditors; and
(2) As against all sheriffs and others seizing chatteis under process of any Court, and any person on whose behalf the seizure is made; but only
(3) As regards the property in, or right to, the possession of such chattels comprised in the bill as, at or after the filing of the petition for bankruptcy or liquidation, or the execution of the assignment, or the seizure, are in the grantor's possession, or apparent possession.
139. Registered bills of sale affecting the same chattels have as among themselves priority in order of registration.
140. Chattels comprised in a registered bill of sale, are not in the possession, order, or disposition of the grantor within the law of bank- ruptcy.
141. If in any case there is an unregistered bill of sale, and within or on the expiration of the time by this Order allowed for registration thereof, a subsequent bill of sale is granted affecting the same or some of the same chattels, for the same or part of the same debt, then the subsequent bill is, to the extent to which it comprises the same chattels and is for the same debt absolutely void, unless the Court is satisfied that the subsequent bill is granted in good faith for the purpose of correcting some material error in the prior bill, and not for the purpose of unlawfully evading the operation of this Order.
142. The registration of a bill of sale must be renewed once at least every five years.
143. Renewal of registration is made as follows:--Au affidavit stating the date of and parties to the bill of sale, and the date of the original
H.B.M, SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
registration, and of the last renewal, and that the bill is still a subsisting security, is brought in to the proper office of the Court or the Consulate of original registration, and is left there.
TEL.
144. If the registration of a bill of sale is not so renewed in any Pailure to period of five years, then on and from the expiration of that period the bill is deemed to be uuregistered.
145. The provisions of this Order relating to renewal apply to bills of sale registered under the Orders in Council repealed by this Order.
146. A transfer or assignment of a registered bill of sale need not be registered; and renewal of registration is not necessary by reason only of such a transfer or assignment.
Application
367
to subsisting bille.
Transfer of
billa.
time on
Sunday.
147. Where the time for registration or renewal of registration of a Expiration of bill of sale expires on a Sunday, or other day on which the office for registration is closed, the registration or renewal is valid if made on the first subsequent day on which the office is open.
register may be rectifled.
148. If in any case the Court is satisfied that failure to register or Failure to to renew the registration of a bill of sale in due time, or any omission or mis-statement connected with registration or renewal, was accidental or inadvertent, the Court may, if it thinks fit, order the failure, omission, or mis-statement to be rectified in such manner and on such terms, if any, respecting security, notice by advertisement or otherwise, or any other mutter, as the Court thinks fit.
149. The provisions of this Order apply to a bill of sale executed before the commencement of this Order.
150. The power conferred on the Judge of the Supreme Court by this Order of framing Rules from time to time, extends to the framing of Rules for prescribing and regulating the making and keeping of indexes, and of a general index, to the registers of bills of sale and searches in those indexes, and other particulars connected with the making, keeping, and using of those registers and indexes, and for authorizing and regulating the unregistering of any bill of sale, or the registering of any release or satisfaction in repect thereof.
VII FOREIGN SUBJECTS AND TRIBUNALS.
151,-(1) Where a foreigner desires to institute or take in the Court an action against a British subject, or a British subject desires to institute or take in the Court an action against a foreigner, the Court shall entertain the same, and shall hear and determine it, according to the ordinary course of the Court.
(2) Provided that the foreigner, if so required by the Court, first obtains and files in the Court the consent in writing of the competent authority on behalf of his own nation to his submitting, and does submit, to the jurisdiction of the Court, and, if required by the Court, give security to the satisfaction of the Court, and to such reasonable amount as the Court thinks fit, by deposit or otherwise, to pay fees, damages, costs, and expenses, and abide by and perform such decision as shall be given by the Court or on appeal.
(3) A cross-action or counter-claim shall not be brought in the Court against a plaintiff, being a foreigner.
(4) Where a foreigner obtains in the Court an order against a defendant being a British subject, and in another suit that defendant is plaintiff and the foreigner is defendant, the Court may, if it thinks fit, on the application of the British subject, stay the enforcement of the order pending that other suit, and may set off any amount ordered to be paid by one party in oue suit against any amount ordered to be paid by the other party in the other suit.
Bills executed
before this Order comes
into force. Rules for register of
indexes to
bills.
Actions by and agalost
foreignera.
365
Attendance
of British
subjects before
Chinese or foreign Tribunals.
Actions by British subjects in Chinese or
foreign Court.
Garnishee proceedings
in aid of
judgment of foreign Court.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(5) Where a plaintiff, being a foreigner, obtains an order in the Court against two or more defendants being British subjects jointly, and in another action one of them is plaintiff and the foreigner is defendant, the Court may, if it thinks fit, on the application of the British subject, stay the enforcement of the order pending that other action, and may set off any amount ordered to by paid by one party in one action against any amount ordered to be paid by the other party in the other action, without prejudice to the right of the British subject to require contribution from his co-defendants under the joint liability.
(6) Where a foreigner is co-plaintiff in a suit with a British subject who is within the particular jurisdiction, it shall not be necessary for the foreigner to give security for costs, unless the Court so directs, but the co-plaintiff British subject shall be responsible for all fees and costs.
152. (1) Where it is proved that the attendance within the parti- cular jurisdiction of a British subject to give evidence, or for any other purpose connected with the administration of justice, is required in a Court of China or Corea, or before a Chinese or Corean judicial officer, or in a Court or before a judicial officer of a State in amity with His Majesty, the Court may, if it thinks fit, in a case and in circumstances in which the Court would require his attendance before the Court, order that he do attend in such Court, or before such judicial officer, and for such purpose as aforesaid.
(2) A Provincial Court, however, cannot so order attendance at any place beyond its particular jurisdiction.
(3) If the person ordered to attend, having reasonable notice of the time and place at which he is required to attend, fails to attend accord- ingly, and does not excuse his failure to the satisfaction of the Court, he shall (independently of any other liability) be guilty of an offence against this Order.
153. When a British subject invokes of submits to the jurisdiction of a Chinese, Corean, or foreign Tribunal, and engages in writing to abide by the decision of that Tribunal, or to pay any fees or expenses ordered by such Tribunal to be paid by him, the Supreme Court, or any Provincial Court may, on such evidence as it thinks fit to require, enforce payment of such fees and expeuses in the same manner as if they were fees payable in a proceeding by such person in that Court, and shall pay over or account for the same when levied to the proper Chinese, Corean, or foreign authority, as the Court may direct.
154-(1) The Supreme Court may, upon the application of any British subject or foreigner who has obtained a judgment or order for the recovery or payment of money in a foreign Court in China or Corea against a person subject to the jurisdiction of that Court, and upon a certificate by the proper officer of the foreign Court that such judgment has been recovered or order made (specifying the amount), and that it is still unsatisfied, and that a British subject is alleged to be indebted to such debtor and is within the jurisdiction, order that all lebts owing or accruing from such British subject (hereinafter called the garnishee) to such debtor shall be attached to answer the judgment or order; and by the same or a subsequent order, may order the garnishee to pay his debt or so much as may be sufficient to satisfy the judgment or order of the foreign Court.
(2) The proceedings for the summoning of the garnishee, for the ascertainment of his liability, and for the payment of money ordered by the Court to be paid, and all matters for giving effect to this Article, may be regulated by Rules of Court.
(3) An order shall not be made under this Article unless the Court is satisfied that the foreign Court is authorized to exercise similar power
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
in the case of a debt due from a person subject to the jurisdiction of that Court to a British subject against whom a judgment has been obtained in a Court established under this Order.
VIII-REGULATIONS.
369
155. His Majesty's Ministers in China and Corea shall have power King's collectively with respect to China and Corea or any parts thereof, or
Regulations. severally with respect to China or Corea, or any parts thereof as the case may be, to make Regulations (to be called King's Regulations) for the following purposes, that is to say :--
(a) For the peace, order, and good government of British subjects in relation to matters not provided for by this Order, and to matters intended by this Order to be prescribed by Regulation. (b) For securing the observance of any Treaty for the time being in force relating to any place or of any native or local law or custom whether relating to trade, commerce, revenue, or any other
matter.
(e) For regulating or preventing the importation or exportation in British ships or by British subjects of arms or munitions of war, or any parts or ingredients thereof, and for giving effect to any Treaty relating to the importation or exportation of the same. (d) For requiring returns to be made of the nature, quantity, and value of articles exported from or imported into his district. any part thereof, by or on account of any British subject who is subject to this Order, or in any British ship, and for prescribing the times and manner at or in which, and the persons by whom, such returns are to be made.
(2) Any Regulations made under this Article may provide for forfeiture of any goods, receptacles, or things in relation to which, or to the contents of which, any breach is committed of such Regulations, or of any Treaty or any native or local law or custom, the observance of which is provided for by such Regulations.
(3) Any person committing a breach of any such Regulations shall, in addition to any forfeiture prescribed thereby, be liable, on conviction, to imprisonment, for a period not exceeding three months, or to a fine, or to both.
:
(4) Any fine imposed for a breach of Regulations shall not exceed £50 Provided that where the breach is of any Regulation relating to customs law, or to the importation or exportation of any goods, the fine may extend to a sum equivalent to treble the value of the goods in relation to which the breach is committed,
156. His Majesty's Ministers in China and Corea respectively, in Municipal the exercise of the powers aforesaid, may, if they think fit, join with the Regulations. Ministers of any foreign Powers in amity with His Majesty in making or adopting Regulations for the municipal government of any foreign con- cession or settlement in China or Corea as the case may be, and as regards British subjects, such joint Regulations shall be as valid and binding as if they related to British subjects only.
157.--(a) Regulations made or adopted under this Order shall not Approval of have effect as respects British subjects unless and until they are approved Regulations, by His Majesty the King, that approval being signified through the Secretary of State- save that, in case of urgency declared in any such Regulations, the same shall take effect before that approval, and shall continue to have effect unless and until they are disapproved by His Majesty the King, and until notification of that disapproval has been received and published by His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea as the case may Le.
370
Publication of Regulations
Prison Regulations,
Custome maŢ be observed.
Customary powers of Consular oficers.
Registration of British subjects.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(b) Any Regulations when so approved, and published as provided by this Order, shall have effect as if contained in this Order.
158. (1) All Regulations approved under this Order, whether impos ing penalties or not, shall be printed, and a printed copy thereof shall be affixed, and be at all times kept exhibited conspicuously in the public office. of each Consulate in China and Corea.
(2) Printed copies of the Regulations shall be kept on sale at such reasonable price as His Majesty's Minister from time to time directs.
(3) A printed copy of any Regulations purporting to be made under this Order, and to be certified under the hand of His Majesty's Minister in China or Corea, or under the hand and Consular seal of one of His Majesty's Consular officers in China and Corea, shall be conclusive evidence of the due making of such Regulations.
159. The respective powers aforesaid extend to the making of Regulations for the governance, visitation, care, and superintendence of prisons in China or in Corea, for the removal of prisoners from one prison to another, and for the infliction of corporal or other punishment on prisoners committing offences against the rules or discipline of a prison; but the provisions of this Order respecting penalties, and respecting the printing, affixing, exhibiting, and sale of Regulations, and the mode of trial of charges of offences against Regulations, do not apply to Regula tions respecting prisons and offences of prisoners.
IX.-MISCELLANEOUS.
160. Nothing in this Order shall deprive the Court of the right to observe, and to enforce the observance of, or shall deprive any person of the benefit of any reasonable custom existing in China or Corea, unless this Order contains some express and specific provision incompatible with the observance thereof.
161. Nothing in this Order shall prevent any Consular officer in China or Corea from doing anything which His Majesty's Consuls in the dominions of any other State in amity with His Majesty are, for the time being, by law, usage, or sufferance, entitled or enabled to do.
162(1) Every British subject resident shall, in January in every year, register himself at the Consulate of the Consular district within which he is resident: Provided that-
(a) The registration of a man shall comprise the registration of bis
wife, if living with him; and
(b) The registration of the head of a family shall be deemed to com- prise the registration of all females and minors being bis rela- tives, in whatever degree, living under the same roof with him at the time of his registration.
(2) The Consular officer may, without fee, register any British sub- jects being minors living in the houses of foreigners.
(3) Every British subject arriving at a place in China or Corea where there is a Consular office, unless borne on the muster-roll of a British ship there arriving, shall, on the expiration of one month after arrival, be deemed, for the purposes of this article, to be resident, and shall register himself accordingly.
(4) A person shall not be required to register himself oftener than once in a year, reckoned from the 1st January.
(5) The Consular officer shall yearly give to each person_registered by him a certificate of registration, signed by him and sealed with his Consular seal.
(6) The name of a wife, if her registration is comprised in her husband's, shall, unless in any case the Consular officer sees good reason to the contrary, be indorsed on the husband's certificate.
H.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
The names and descriptions of females and minors whose registration is comprised in that of the head of the family shall, unless in any case the Consular officer sees good reason to the contrary, be indorsed on the certificate of the head of the family.
(8) It shall be lawful by King's Regulations to require that every person shall, on every registration of himself, pay such fee as may therein. be prescribed, not exceeding 2 dollars in China and 2 yen in Corea; and such Regulations may provide that any such fee may either be uniform for all persons, or may vary according to the position and circumstances. of different classes.
(9) The mode of registration may be prescribed by King's Regula- tions, but if no other mode is so prescribed, every person by this Order required to register himself or herself shall, unless excused by the Con sular officer, attend personally for that purpose at the Consulate on each occasion of registration.
(10) If any person fails to comply with the provisions of this Order respecting registration, and does not excuse his failure to the satisfaction. of the Consular officer, he or she shall be guilty of an offence against this Order, and any Court or authority may, if it thinks fit, deeline to recognize him as a British subject.
163. Section 48 of the Conveyancing and Law of Property Act, 1881 (which relates to the deposit of instruments creating powers of attorney in the Central Office of the Supreme Court in England or Irelan1), shall apply to China and Corea with these modifications, that is to say: the Office of the Supreme Court is substituted for the Central Office, and Rules of Court under this order are substituted for General Rules.
Deposit of
were of
attorney.
Rates of
371
exchange for payment of
164. All fees, fines, penalties, and other sums of money which, un- der the provisions of this Order or any Regulations or Rules of Court, are stated or imposed in terms of British currency, shall, if not paid fees, fines, &c. in British gold, be paid in China in British or Mexican dollars at the rate of exchange fixed periodically by the Treasury; in Corea, in Japanese currency at the rate of 10 yen to the pound sterling.
The said rates of exchange shall apply to the ascertainment of the value of any income for any purpose of qualification or of any limitation or security, in any case where this Order or any Rule or Regulation con- tains a reference to British currency.
fines, fees, &c.
165. Except as in this Order otherwise provided, all fees, dues, fines, Accounting of and other receipts under this Order shall be carried to the public account, and shall be accounted for and paid as the Secretary of State, with the concurrence of the Treasury, directs.
166. Not later than the 31st March in each year, the Judge of the Supreme Court shall send to the Secretary of State a report on the operation of this Order up to the 31st December of the preceding year, showing for the then last twelve months the number and nature of the proceedings, criminal and civil, taken in the Court under this Order, and the result thereof, and the number and amount of fees received, and containing an abstract of the registration list, and such other informa- tion, and being in such form as the Secretary of State from time to time directs.
Report by Judge of the Court,
Supreme
167. Each Provincial Court shall at such time as may be fixed by Report by Rules of Court furnish to the Supreme Court an annual report of Provincial
every Court case, civil and criminal, brought before it, in such form as the Supreme Court directs.
Order.
168.-(1) A printed copy of this Order shall be always kept exhibit- Publication ed in a conspicuous place in each Consular office and in each Court-Louse. () Printed copies shall be sold at such reasonable price as the Supreme Court directs.
372
Repeal.
Commence. ment of Order.
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(3) Judicial notice shall be taken of this Order, and of the com- mencement thereof, and of the appointment of Consuls, and of the con- stitution and limits of the Courts and districts, and of Consular seals and signatures, and of any Rules made or in force under this Order, and no proof shall be required of any of such matters.
The provisions of the Evidence Act, 1851 (14 & 15 Vict., cap. 99), Secs. 7 and 11, relating to the proof of judicial and other documents, shall extend and be applied for all purposes as if the Courts, districts, and places to which this Order applies were in a British Colony.
169.-(1) The Orders in Council mentioned in the Schedule to this Order are hereby repealed, but this appeal shall not--
(a) Affect the past operation of those Orders, or any of them, or any appointment made, or any right, title, obligation, or liability accrued, or the validity or invalidity of anything done or suffer- ed under any of those Orders, before the making of this Order; (b) Interfere with the institution or prosecution of any proceeding or action, criminal or civil, in respect of any offence committed against, or forfeiture incurred or liability accrued under or in consequence of any provision of any of those Orders, or any Regulation confirmed by any such Order or made thereunder; (c) Take away or abridge any protection or benefit given or to be
enjoyed in relation thereto,
(2) Notwithstanding the repeal of the Orders aforesaid, all Rules and Regulations approved or confirmed by or under any Order so re- pealed, shall continue and be as if this Order had not been made; but so that the same may be revoked, altered, or otherwise dealt with under this Order, as if they had been made under this Order.
(3) Criminal or civil proceedings begun under any of the Orders re- pealed by this Order, and pending at the time when this Order comes into operation, shall, from and after that time, be regulated by the provisions of this Order, as far as the nature and circumstances of each case aduits.
(4) Lists of jurors and assessors in force at the passing of this Order shall continue in force until revised and settled under the provi- sions of this Order.
170.-(1) This Order shall take effect on such day not less than one month nor more than three months after it is first exhibited in the public office of the Supreme Court at Shanghai, as the Minister shall by public notification appoint.
(2) The day on which this Order so takes effect is in this Order referred to as the commencement of this Order.
(3) For the purposes of this Article the Judge of the Supreme Court shall forthwith, on the receipt by him from the Minister in China of a certified printed copy of this Order, cause the same to be affixed and exhibited conspicuously in that office, together with the said notification. (4) He shall also keep the same so affixed and exhibited until the commencement of this Order.
(5) A copy of the said notification shall, as soon as practicable, be published at each of the Provincial Consulates in such manner as the Supreme Court may direct.
(6) A certified printed copy of this Order shall also be affixed and exhibited in the public offices of the Provincial Court at Seoul, at the same time (or as near as circumstances admit) at which it is first exhi bited at Shanghai.
(7) Proof shall not in any proceeding or matter be required that the provisions of this Article have been complied with, nor shall any act or proceeding be invalidated by any failure to comply with any of such provisions.
II.B.M. SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
(8) Where this Order confers power to make any appointment, Rules, or Regulations, or to do any other thing for the purposes of this Order, that power may be exercised at any time after the passing of this Order, so, however, that any such appointment, Rules, or Regulations shall not take effect before the commencement of this Order.
A
171. This Order may be cited as The China and Corea Orden in Short title. Council, 1904."
A. W. Fitz Roy.
SCHEDULE.
ORDERS REPEALED.
The China and Japan Order in Council, 1865. The China and Japan Order in Council, 1877. The China and Japan Order in Council, 1878. The China and Japan Order in Council, 1881.
The China, Japan, and Corea Order in Council, 1884.
The China, Japan, and Corea Order in Council, 1884 (Supplemental). The China, Japan, and Corea Order in Council, 1886.
The China, Japan, and Corea Order in Council, 1886 (No. 2).
The China and Japan Order in Council, 1898.
The China, Japan, and Corea (Supreme Court) Order in Council, 1899.
378
THE CHINA AND COREA (AMENDMENT) ORDER IN COUNCIL, 1907
WE
AT THE COURT AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE, THE 11TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1907
PRESENT:
THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY IN COUNCIL
HEREAS by Treaty, grant, usage, sufferance, and other lawful means, His Majesty the King has jurisdiction within the dominions of the Emperor of China and the Emperor of Corea.
Now, therefore, His Majesty, by virtue and in exercise of the powers in this behalf by "The Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1890," or otherwise in His Majesty vested, is pleased by and with the advice of His Privy Council to order, and it is hereby ordered, as follows :
1. This Order may be cited as "The China and Corea (Amendment) Order in Council, 1907," and shall be read as one with "The China and Corea Order in Coun- cil, 1904," hereinafter referred to as the "Principal Order."
2.-(1.) Where one or more commissioned Consular officers are stationed in a Consular district assigned to another commissioned Consular officer, the Minister may, if he think fit, appoint such commissioned Consular officer or officers to whom no district is assigned to be an additional Judge or additional Judges of the Provincial Court of the district.
374
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(2.) Where an officer is so appointed he sha 1 hear and determine such matters, civil and criminal, being within the jurisdiction of a Provincial Court, as the Consulir officer to whom the district is assigned, with the sanction of the Judge of the Supreme Court, directs.
(3.) Where an officer is appointed under this Article he may sit at the same time and place as the Consular officer to whom the district is assigned, or in a different place, and each sitting shall be deemed a sitting of the Provincial Court of the district. 3. The following Article shall be substituted for Article 69 of the Principal Order:-
Any act which, if lone in the United Kingdom, or in a British Possession, would be an offence against any of the following Statutes of the Imperial Parliament or Orders in Conncil, that is to say:
(a.) The Merchandize Marks Act, 1887";
(b.) "The Patents, Designs, and Trade-marks Acts, 1883 to 1902"; (c.) "The Trade Marks Act, 1905";
(d.) "Any Statute amending or substituted for any of the above mentioned
Statutes;
(e.) Auy Statute, or Order in Council for the time being relating to copy right, or to inventions, designs, or trade-marks, of which a copy is kept exhibited in the public offices of the Consulates at Shanghai and Seoul, and is there open for inspection by any person at all reason-
able times;
shall, if done by a British subject in China or Corea, be punishable as a grave offence against the Principal Order, whether such act is done in relation to any pro- perty or right of a British subject, or of a foreigner or native, or otherwise howsoever,
Provided:-
(1.) That no person shall be punished under this Order for an act which would be an offence against any Act, Statute, or Order in Council, the exhibition of which is required by paragraph (e) above, unless such exhibition had commenced not less than one month before the act took place, or unless the person offending is proved to have had express notice of such Act, Statute, or Order in Council.
(2) That a prosecution by or on behalf of a prosecutor who is not a British subject shall not be entertained, un.ess either (a) an arrangement is in force between His Majesty's Government and the Government of the State or Power to which the prosecutor belongs, or (b) the Court is satisfied that effectual provision exists, for the punishment in Consular or other Courts in China or Crea of similor acts committed by the subjects of such State or Power in relation to or affecting the interests of British subjects. Where such an arrangement is in force the Minister may issue a notification to that effect, and the Court shall take judicial notice thereof.
4. No action shall be brought for the protection of any copyright, trade-mark, patent, or design by an person who is not a British subject, untess either (a) an arrangement is in force between His Majesty's Government and the Government of the State or Power to which the plaintiff belongs, or (6) the Court is satisfied that effectual provision exists, for the protection in Consular or other Courts in China, or Coren of the rights an interests of British subjects in copyrights, trade-marks, patents, and designs infringed by the subjects of such State or Power.
Where such an arrangement is in force the Minister may issue a notification to that effect, and the Court shall take judicial notice thereof.
5. The following Article shall take effect instead of Article 75 of the Principle Order:-
(1.) Every person subject to the criminal jurisdiction of the Court who prints, publishes, or offers for sale any printed or written newspaper or other publicati n containing seditious matter shall be guilty of a grave offence against the Principal Order, and may, in addition to, or in lieu of, any other punishment, be ordered to give security for good behaviour, and in default thereof, or on a further conviction for the like offence, he may be ordered to be deported.
H.M.B, SUBJECTS IN CHINA AND COREA
375
(2.) Where any printed or written newspaper or other publication containing seditious matter is printed, published, or offered for sale within the limits of the Order by a Company registered in the United Kingdom or in a British possession, the Court may, after notice to the Company, and on proof of the facts, require the Company to give security to abstain from such printing, publishing, or offering for sale in future. If the Company fail to give security, or if the Company is shown to have again printed, published, or offered for sale such newspaper or other publica- tion containing seditious matter after giving such security, the Court may make an order prohibiting the Company from carrying on business within the limits of the Order, and may make such other orders as to the Court may seem just. The Court may also declare all the property of the Company within the limits of the Order to be forfeited to His Majesty the King, and shall dispose of it, subject to any general or special directions of the Secretary of State, as it thinks fit.
(3.) Matter calculated to excite tumult or disorder, or to excite enmity between His Majesty's subjects and the Government of China or the Government of Corea, or the authorities or subjects of any Power in amity with His Majesty, being within the limits of this Order, or between the Government of China and its subjects, or the Government of Corea and its subjects, shall be deemed to le seditions matter within the meaning of this Article.
(4) Jurisdiction under this Article shall not be exercised except by the Supreme Court,
6. The following Article shall be substituted for Art, 84 of the Principal Order:~~- Where any person is deported to any place to which he can most conveniently be sent through Hongkong, and it is necessary to land and tranship him at Hong- kong, he shall, on his arrival there, be delivered, with the warrant under which be is deported, into the custody of a Magistrate of Police at Hongkong, who, on receipt of the person deported and of the warrant, shall detain him, and shall forthwith report the case to the Governor of Hongkong, who shall, by warrant, cause the person so deported to be detained in custody until a convenient opportunity oceurs for sending him to the place to which he has lean deported, and shall then sond him to that place.
7. Where a case is stated under Article 85 of the Principal Order, the Judge shall have power, save where the case has been stated by himself, to order that it shall be heard and determined in the manner provided by Article 86 by himself alone, instead of by the full Court.
8. The following Article shall be substituted for Article 108 of the Principal Order:
If any person named executor in a will takes possession of, and administers or otherwise deals with any part of the property of the deceased, and does nt obtain probate within one month after the death or after the termination of any proceedings respecting probate or administration, he shall be liable to pay double the amount of any fees chargeable on obtaining probate, and he shall also be liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred pounds.
9. Article 112 of the Principal Order shall be amended by the substitution of the sum of one hundred pounds for the sum of fifty pounds therein mentioned.
10. Any person desirous of levying a distress for rent may apply to the Court to appoint bailiff to levy such distress, and the Court may thereupon, and upon the applicant giving sufficient security to answer for any misconduct on the part of such bailiff, appoint a person to act as bailiff to levy such distress.
11. The following Articles shall be substituted for Article 114 of the Principal Order
(1.) Any party to an action in the Supreme Court, other than an Admiralty action, or to an appeal to the Supreme Court, aggrieved by the decision of that Court or by the verdict of a jury, may move the Supreme Court to rehear such
action or
appeal.
376
ORDER IN COUNCIL
(2.) The motion shall be heard by the full Court unless the Judge of the Supreme Court otherwise orders.
(3.) On such motion the Supreme Court may make any order that may be made by the Court of Appeal in England in the exercise of its ordinary appellate jurisdiction.
(4.) Au application for a rehearing shall be made within the prescribed time. 12. The following provision shall be substituted for Article 151 (1) of the Principal Order :-
(1) Where a foreigner desires to institute or take in the Conrt an action against a British subject, or a British subject desires to institute or take in the Court an action against a foreigner the Court shall entertain the same, and the action shall be heard and determined either by the Judge sitting alone or, if all parties consent or the Court so directs, with a jury or assessors, but in all other respects according to the ordinary procedure of the Court.
13. The following provision shall be substituted for Article 155 (3) of the Order:-
Any person committing a breach of any such Regulations shall, ou conviction, be liable to the punishmeut, forfeiture, or fine therein prescribed, or if no such punishment or fine is prescribed, he shall be liable, on conviction, to imprisonment, with or without hard labour, for a period not exceeding three months, or to a fine, or to both. Regulations imposing penalties shall be so framed as to allow in every case of part only of the highest penalty being imposed.
14. The following Article shall take effect instead of Article 157 of the Principal Order:
King's Regulations and Municipal Regulations made or adopted under Articles 155 and 156 of the Principal Order shall not have effect unless and until they are approved by a Secretary of State, save that in case of urgency declared in any such Regulations, the same shall take effect before that approval, and shall continue to have effect unless and until they are disapproved by a Secretary of State, and until notice of that disapproval has been received and published by the Minister.
15. Every Consular officer shall, as far as there is proper opportunity, promote reconciliation and encourage and facilitate the settlement in an amicable way,
and without recourse to litigation, of matters in difference between British subjects, or between British subjects and foreigners in China or Core..
16. "The China, Japan, and Corea (Patents) Order in Council, 1899," "The China and Corea (Supreme Court) Order in Council, 1900," and the following Articles of the Principal Order are hereby repealed, viz. Articles 27, 69, 75, 84, 108, 114, 151 (1), 155 (3), 157; but this repeal shall not (a) affect the past operation of such Orders or such Articles, or any right, title, obligation, or liability thereunder, or (b) interfere with the institution or prosecution of any legal proceed- ings thereunder.
And the Right Honourable Sir Edward Grey, Bart., one of His Majesty's Principal Secre aries of State, is to give the necessary direction herein.
A. W. FITZROY,
NOTE. His Majesty having ceased to be represented in Coren by a Minister, 80 amending Order in Council, 1907, directs that all references in the Principal Order to the Minister shall be deemed to be references to the Consul-General,
STATUTORY RULES AND ORDERS, 1909. No. 751.
THE CHINA AND COREA (CONSULAR FEES) ORDER IN COUNCIL, 1909.
At the Court at Buckingham Palace, the 28th day of June, 1909.
PRESENT:
The King's Most Excellent Majesty in Council.
Whereas by "The Consular Salaries and Fees Act, 1891," His Majesty the King is authorized by Order in Council to fix the fees to be taken in respect of any matter or thing done by a Consular officer in the execution of his office, and to vary such fees by way of increase or decrease, and to abolish fees and to create new fees;
And whereas it is expedient that the Table of Fees fixed by the China and Corea (Consular and Marriage Fees) Order in Council, 1906, should, in certain respects, be added to, and that fees should be created in respect of the attendance of Consular officers in the Mixed Court at Shanghai, and in respect of the assistance rendered by Consular officers to British litigants in such Count:
Now, therefore, in pursuance of the before-mentioned Act, His Majesty is pleased, by and with the advice of His Privy Council, to order, and it is hereby ordered, as follows:
1. This Order may be cited as "The China and Corea (Consular Fees) Order in Council, 1909."
2. The several fees set forth in the Table annexed to this Order are hereby established, and the said Table shall be construed as part of this Order.
3. This Order shall come into operation on such date as His Majesty's Consul- General at Shanghai shall appoint.
4. This Order shall extend to all places in China and Corea.
And the Right Honourable Sir Edward Grey, Baronet, one of His Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, is to give the necessary directions herein.
Schedule
A. W. FitzRoy.
TABLE OF CONSULAR FEES TO BE TAKEN IN RESPECT OF ASSISTANCE RENDERED
BY THE ASSESSOR IN THE MIXED COURT AT SHANGHAI.
1. On application to the Assessor for his request for the assistance of the Chinese authorities, including filing Petition:-
Where the amount involved is-
Under 101.
10Z, and under 507.
50%, and under 1007.
1007. or upwards
+4
For each complete 100, not exceeding a total fee of 51.
+
2. Ou each subsequent communication in writing to the China
authorities
3. Hearing fee on each attendance of the Assessor at a sitting
of the Court
70000
3. d.
2 6
5
7
6
10 0
2 6
10 0
11
878
To be taken in China and
Act, 1892, the
TABLES OF CONSULAR FRES
-
TABLES OF CONSULAR AND MARRIAGE FEES.
Corea in pursuance of the Consular Salaries and Fees Act, 1891, the Foreign Marriage
Foreign Marriages Order in Council, 1892, the China and Corea (Shipping
Registry) Order in Council, 1904, and the China and Corea
(Consular and Marriage Fees) Order in Council, 1900.
PART I.
Fees to be taken in respect of Matters in which the Interposition of a Consular Officer is required by Law. Matter in respect of which the Fee is to be taken.
1.-For every declaration taken or recorded£.s.d under the Merchant Shipping Acts, with a view to the registry, transfer und transmission of ships, in- terests in ships, or mortgages on ships.......
2. For endorsing a memorandum of change of master upon the certificate of registry, and tuitial- ing his signature on agreement with crew, if re- quired
.0 6 0
.0
3. For granting a provisional certificate of re- gistry (this foe to be exclusive of fees ou de- clarations)
4. For recording a mortgage of a ship, or shares in a ship
7. For every sale of a ship, or shares in a ship. made before a Consular officer
8. For inspection of the register book of trans- actions in ships, kept in pursuance of Merchaut Shipping Acts
9. For certified copy of extract from register book of transactions in ships...
40
For the inspection of the marking of a ship - £nd
For each visit made to the ship on the appli- cation of the owner, and for each visit made where the provisions of the Merchant Shipping Acts with respect thereto have not been complied with.........0 6.0
Provided as follows:-
(4) The aggregate amount of the fees for any such inspection shall not exceed 10s. whatever be the number of separate visits.
(2) When the marking of a ship is inspected at the same time with the inspection of light and fog signals, no separate fee shall be charged for the
nspection.
[N.B.-Fees 1 to șu are to be taken under the provisions of the Chirin and Corea (Shipping Registry) Order in Council, 1904.1
10. Forevery seaman engaged before aConsular
officer
11.-For every alteration in agreements with seamen mude before a Consular officer..
.0 20
.1 0 0
1
00
5. For recording the transfer of a mortgage of a ship, or shares in a ship
.1 0 0
6. For recording the discharge of a mortgage
of a ship, or shares in a ship...
.1 0 0
00
0 20
12. For every seaman discharged or left behind with the sanction of the Consular offcer
.0 20
0 10
13. For every desertion certifled by a Con- sular officer
0 20
0 2 6
9A. Certificate of registry
I 10 0
14. For indorsing a ship's agreement with re- spect to the death of any person on board
0 2 0
9B.-Certificate of sale or mortgage
0 4 0
certificate
of
registry
0 4:0
15. For attesting a seaman's will (see No. 102)0 20 16. For certification of form of claim for wages, &c., of a deceased seaman
0 10
.0 4 0
.0
10 0
or
17. For examination of provisions or water, to be paid by the party who proves to be in default, in addition to cost of survey.....
0 10 0
0 4 0
9c.-Indorsing ownership on
90. Transfer of registry to another port.. 98.-Pass for ship
9r. Alteration in register of name, rig,
tonnage
Do.-For measurement of tonnage as under :- For ships of 15 tons, and under 500 tons, gross ton.1 10 0
++
500
>>
1,000
25
2 5 0
1,000
2,000
2 14 0
1
"
2,000
JI
3,000
3 3 0
+
3 000
15
4,000
3 12 0
+
+
|
4,000
35
5,000
*
400
5,000
and upwards
[+
4 10 0
0 10 0
9. For the inspection of the berthing or
sleeping accommodation of the crew :-
For each visit to the ship.
Provided as follows:--
(a) The aggregate amount of the fees for any such inspection shall not exceed £1 whatever be the number of separate visits.
(6) When the accommodation is inspected at the same time with the measurement of the tonnage, no separate fee shall be charged for the inspection.
For the inspection of light and fog signals;-
For each visit made to the ship on the appli cation of the owner, and for ench visit made where the lights or littings are found defeative...
Provided that the aggregate amount of fees for any such inspection shall not exceed £1 what- ever be the number of separate visits.
0 10 0
18. For every salvage houd made in pursuance of Section 500 (1) of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1804 to be paid by the master or owner of the property salved...
19. For making endorsement on ship's papers as required by Section 257 of "The Merchant Ship- ping Act, 1894 **.
2 00
.0 24 (To include the fee for Inspection of ship's papers, See No. 46.)
N.B. A payment of £ shall tree the ship from the payment of Tees Nos. 19 and 40 at every port in China daring the following
hree months.
Marriage Fees to be taken by Marriage Officers acting under the Foreign Marriage Act 1893 and the Foreign Marriages Order in Connell 1892.
20. For receiving notice of
marriage
intended
...0 10 0 1 00
21.-For receiving notice of a caveat 22. For every marriage solemuised by or in the presence of a Marriage officer, and registered by him0 10 0 23. For certificate by Marriage officer of notice having been given and posted up, Art. 6 of the Foreign Marriages Order in Conneil 1892
0 50
24. For registration by a Consular officer of a marriage solemnised in accordance with the local law, in addition to the fee for attendance (Fee92) wee Art. 8 of the Foreign Marriages Order in Council 1802,0 100
PART II.
Fees to be taken in respect of Matters in which the Interposition of a Consular Officer is to be given when required
by the Parties interested,
Matter in respect of which the Fee is to be taken.
25. For noting a marine protest and furnish-£. s. d. ing one certified copy if required..........
26.-For every other copy
...0 7 6
.0 2 6
27. For filing a request for survey and issuing order of survey
23. For receiving report of survey, filing original in archives, if not exceeding 200 words, and
0 10 U
furnishing, if required, oue certified copy of request, £.s.d. order, and report of survey
...100
20. For extending marine protest, if not ex- ceeding 200 words, filing original, and furnislung one certified copy if required. This is to be exclusive of fee for oaths or declarations (see No. 51), or for drawing, if required, the body of the protest (ace No. 96)
TABLES OF CONSULAR FEES
379
copy,
30. For any other protest [except bill of€, s. d. exchange (see No. 501], if not exceeding 200 words, liug original, and furnishing one certified if required. This to be exclusive of fee for draw- ing, if required, the body of the protest (see No. 90)1 0 0
31. If the protest or report of survey exceed 200 words, for every additional 100 words or frac tion thereof.
..0 2 0
32. For attesting average, bottomry or arbitra- tion bond, each copy (see No. 95)
38. For preparing a fresh agreement with the crew of a British vessel on new articles of agreement being opened at a foreigu port, and for furnishing the copy which the Merchant Shipping Acts require should be made accessible to the crew
34.-Bill of health..
0 5 0
.0 10 0 ....0 10 0 .0 10 0 5 0
35. Certifying to a foreign bill of health.. 36.-Certificate of origin of goods and fling copy) 37. Certificate of duc landing of goods exported from a British port
60. For each signature to an application for a £.a.d- patent attested by a Consular officer
0 5
01. For attaching Consular signature, and senl if required, to quarterly or monthly declarations for Government-pay, half-pay, or peusion..
62.--For attaching Consular signature to any other declaration of existence
.0 1 0
2 6 5 0
63.-Ditto, if drawn up by a Consular officer ...0 64. For certificate of a person's identity. 50 65. For attesting the signature of a foreign authority
.0 6 0 66. For each signature attested by the Consular officer in any document not otherwise provided for 50
N.B.-No fee is to be charged for attesting a signs. Lee to AP document required for the deposit or withdrawal of money m or fram the Post Office Savings Bank, or in connection with Savings Bank unnuities.
67. For registration of a birth or death (except the death of a scamau)
0 2 8
.0
5 0
08. For any registration not otherwise provided
for
38.-For application addressed to local authori- ties for arrest or imprisonment of a seaman, if granted pursuant to the request of the master
39.-Ditto, for release of a schnau
40. For each certificate granted as to the nam- ber of the crew of a vessel, or as to any other matter required by local authorities for the clear- ance inwards and outwards of a vessel (see Nos. 19 and 41)
0
5 0
50
.0
0 50
N.B-A payment of £5 shall free the ship from the payment of Fees 19 and 40 at every port in China during the following three montius.
41.--For drawing up in form aud language re- quired by local authorities, a muster-roll, or de tailed list, giving the names, &c., of each member of the crew of a vessel (to be charged in addition to No. 40)
...0 2 G
42.-For affixing Consular signature and seal, if required, to a ship's manifest
..0 10 0
43. For affixing Consular seal or signature to any entry in the official log-book of a British vessel,
if not required by the Merchant Shipping Act ........0 5.0
44. For attesting the execution of a bill of sale of a ship, or shares in a ship
.0 5 0
45. For any document required from Consular office by foreigu authorities as a preliminary to the engagement of a British seaman in a foreign vessel, including official scal and signature..
..0 1 0
46. For inspecting ship's papers when their production is required to enable a Consular officer to perform any specific service ou the ship's behalf.0 20 N.B. This Fee not to be charged when Fee No. 19 is leviable, or computed, nor in addition to fee 19, unless the agreement has been withdrawn from the Consular Officer in the interval.
47. For grauting any cortificate not otherwise provided for, if not exceeding 100 words
48. If exceeding 100 words, for every additional 100 words or fraction thereof.
40.-For noting a bill of exchange
0 50
0 50
0
50. For protest of a bill of exchange and copy1 51.-For administering an oath, or receiving a declaration or affirmation without attestation of signature
52. -For administering an oath, or receiving a declaration or affirmation with attestation of signa- turc..
50 0 0
0 26
.0 5 0
53. For each Consular signature attached to an exhibit referred to in an affidavit or declaration... 0 26
54. For each alteration or interlineation initial- ed by the Consular officer in any document not prepared by him.
55. For each signature to a transfer of shares er stock attested by the Consular officer.
56. For each signature to a truusfer of shares erstock attested by the Cousular officer when execut- ed in the presence of one or more witnesses besides the Consular officer
.0 0 0
.0 20
.0 5 0
0 5 0
$1. For each execution of a power of attorney attested by the Consular officer (ser No. 104)
NB-When more than four persona execute a power at the same time a fee ol' El only is to be charged.
58. For attesting the execution of a will of any person not being a British scaman (see Nos. 15& 103j0 10 0
59. For each execution of a deed, bond, or cou- veyance under seal, attested by the Consular officer where the value of the property in question does not exceed £1
A
Ditto, litto, žá
Ditto, exceeds, tā
..0 2 0 N.B. No fee is to be charged for the registration of a British sub- Jeet at a Consular ofbles, where such registration is not compulsory under Order la Council.
60. For issue of certificate of British registra- tion, when such registration is not compulsory under Ordor in Concil.
70. For each search in the register books of births, marriages, or deaths kept at the Cousulato provided no other fee is chargeable...
71. For furnishing a certified copy of an entry in register books of births, marriages, or deaths (see No. 70)
0 2 6
0 10
0 2 6
72. For certifying to a copy of any document or part of a document, if not exceeding 100 words...0 50
78. If exceeding 100 words, for every additional 100 words or fraction thereof...
.0 10 N.B.-An additional fee in to be charged when the copy is made by the Consular ofbeer [see No. 99).
74.-Pussport
75.-Visa of a passport
.0 5 0
..0 20
2 6
20
......0
3 0
76. For issue of certificate of nationality.. ..0 77.-Consular request to local authorities for a
passport, pass, or visa
77.-For transit pass
78. Opening the will of a British subject, not being a semunu, including Consular signature to minute of proceedings....
1 0 0
79. For the administration and distribution, or for either administration or distribution, of 23 per the property, situate in the country of the Consular ceut. officer's residence, of a British subject, not being a Yon seaman, dying intestate, or if not intestate, when gross undertaken in the absence of legally competent value. representatives of the deceased
80. For uniting documents and attaching Con- sular seal to the fastening.
81. For directing search for, or obtaining from Public Record Office or elsewhere, extracts from local registers, or copies of wills, deeds, or other matters, in addition to expenses incurred and any fees for attestation..
82.--For affixing Congular signature, and seal if required, to any document not otherwise provided for by this Table.
0 2 6
0 50
......0 5 0 N.B. No change is to be made for an order or letter sending a seaman to hospital.
83.-For ench Consular seal affixed to a docu- ment, packet, or article, when no signature is re- quired......
........0 26
834. For new title-deeds of land, including re- gistration, per cent. on value of the property, with amininnan fee of £1 10s. and a maximum of £10.
83. For notifying to authorities loss of owner's copy of title-deed, and requesting issuo of copy to replace it
...1 0 0
83c. For transfer of land, 1 per cent, on value of the property, with a minimum fee of £1 108. and a maximum of £10.
....1 00
83D. For cancelment of title deeds... 8KE. For registration of title-deeds issued by local authorities....
.......100 83F. For registration or discharge of mortgage) 0 0 $34. For registration of foreclosure of mort-
2 0 0
gage
0 10 .0 26
83. For any entry, not otherwise provided for, made in laud register at the request of the par-
ties interested.......
0 0 0
76
N-When more than four persons excente na instrument at the fie, the fee must not be more than four thurs 15., . 61,, ur *. 6, us the case may be.
831. -For reference to land, mortgage, or other registers (except those under Nos. 8 and 70) ......9 6 0
11*
F
I
380
TABLES OF CONSULAR FEES
PART III.
Foes to be taken for certain Attendances in addition to any other Fee chargeable under the present Table, and to travelling
and other Expenses (See Notes 3 and 4)
Attendance in respect of which the Fee is to be taken.
84. Ata shipwreck, or for the purpose of assist-£. 8, d. ing a ship in distress, per day
20 0
85.-At a shipwreck, at request of parties in- terested, to assist or advise as to salvage, per day.. 3 0 0
96. At request of parties interested, or of local authorities, at the affixing or removing of seals on property of deceased persons, if absent less than two hours
1 0 0 87.-Ditto, ditto, for each additional hour, or fraction thereof, 10s. with a maximum per day of.. 4. 00
88.-At request of parties interested, or of local authorities, at a valuation, if absent less than two hours.
....1 00 89.-Ditto, ditto, for each additional hour, or fraction thereof, 10s. with a maximum per day of...4 0 0
90.-At roquest of parties interested, or of local authorities, at a sale, if absent less than two hours2
0
4 0 0
91.-Ditto, ditto, or each additional hour, or£ s.d. fraction thereof, 10s, with a maximum per day of...4 0 0
92. At request of parties interested, or of local anthorities, for the transaction elsewhere than at the Consular Office of any of the duties for which a fee is provided in the Table of Consular Fees, for each hour, or fraction thereof, 108. with a maximum per day of
924. At request of parties interested, or of local anthorities, at a measurement of land, for each hour, or fraction thereof, 10s., with a minimum of.....I 00 93. At the request of parties interested, for the transaction of any duty for which a fee is leviable under this order, whether at the Consular office or at the Consular officer's residence, in addition to such fee, for each half-hour, or fraction thereof, if in the daytime, that is to say, between the hours of 6 a.m. and 9 p.m, but not during the customary business hours of the place
.0 E O N.B. This fee is levlable for any attendance on Sundayı
PART IV.
Fees to be taken in respect of certain other Services which may berendered by a Consular officer at his discretion at the
request of Parties interested
Service in respect of which the Fee is to be taken.
94. For the transaction of any duty for which€, s. d. a fee is leviable under this Order, whether at the Consular office or at the Consular officer's re- sidence, in addition to such fee, for each ball- hour, or fraction thereof, if in the night time, that is to say, between the hours of 9 p.m. and 6 &.m. ...0 10 0
95. For preparing average, bottomry or ar- bitration bond (see No. 32)
.1 0 0
96. For drawing a declaration or other doen- ment, or the body of a protest, or for taking down in writing verbal declarations or depositions of per- sous made before & Consular officer or for reduc- ing into writing agreements made before him by contracting parties, exclusive of fees for attesta- tion, &c. (see Part II.), if not exceeding 100 words0
07. If exceeding that number, for each subse- quent 100 words, or fraction thereof
50
0 2 6
98. For assisting in drawing up petitions, ap- plications, or other documents not specified, ench 0 5 0
99. For making a copy of a document, if not exceeding 100 words, exclusive of fee for certificate (see No. 72)..
....0 1 0 100. If exceeding that number for every subse- quent 100 words, or fraction thereof
0 1 0 N.B.-If the copy is in any foreign language double the above fees (99 and 100) are to be charged,
101. For making or verifying a translation of a document, in any European language, for overy 100 words, or fraction thereof, exclusive of fee for certificate (sce No. 47)
101A. For making or verifying a translation of a document in the Chinese, Corean or other Oriental language, for first 100 characters
1010. For making or verifying a translation of a document in the Chinese, Corean or other Oriental language, for every subsequent 100 characters, or fraction thereof
102.-For drawing a will, if not exceeding 200 words (nee Nos. 15 and 58)
103. If exceeding that number, for every subse- quent 100 words, or fraction thereof
0 5 0
.2 10 0
0 15 0
1 00
exceeding 200 words (see No. 57
104. For drawing a power of attorney, if not
0 50
****0 10 0
105. If exceeding that mumber, for every sub- ad sequent 10 words, or traction thereof
0 50
108.-In cases where one or more attesting wit- nesses, besides a Consular officer are required, for each witness supplied by him at the request of the parties interested
107. Attendance elsewhere than at Consular offee, at the request, and on behalf, of private persons, for the transaction of business which a Consular officer is permitted, but is not bound, to undertake under the Consular Regulations, for each hour, or fraction thereof, 10s. with a maximum per day of (see Notes 3 and 4 and Form A)
108. In cases where a Consular officer nots as arbitrator, provided the parties interested declare in writing in the reference to arbitration that they are aware of the nature and rate of the fee charge- able for such service, and agree to pay the same, a commission on the value of the property or amonat in dispute of 21 per cout., with a minimum of
0 26
4 00
2 00 N.B. The value of the property or amount in dispate must be Ascertained and agreed by the parties to the arbitration, and stated ja the reference to arbitration.
Nor-1.-If the Consular officer shall be named Commis- sinner to examine witnesses under a Commission issued by a British Court of Justice be is allowed to not as such, charging and retaining the customary fees for so doing. A Consular vilicer should, however, before undertaking the office, conie to an arrangement with the parties at whose instance the Commission is belag Issued as to the exact scale of tees to be charged.
2. No fee is to be charged for drafting or receiving depositions, &c., taken oficio under the Merchant Shipping Acta, except in cases specially provided for.
3.In cases of attendances (Parts III and IV.) the fee per day is to cover a period not exceeding twelve hours.
4.-In cases of attendances away from the Consular office or the Consular ofleer's residence (Parts II. and IV.), if the Consulat officer finds it necessary to be accompanied by n clerk, the fee will be increased by one-haff, or it a clerk only is sent, half the fees ar to be charged.
5-The shave fees, if not paid in British gold, are to be paid la Chink it Mexican dollars or the rate of exchange fixed periodically by the Treasury; in Cores, in Japanese currency at the rate of 10 yen to the sterling.
RULES OF HIS BRITANNIC MAJESTY'S SUPREME
COURT IN CHINA AND COREA
CONTENTS
Rule.
Page
Aule.
1.-GENER L...
382
148 Witnesses
6 Evidence and Witnesses
380
150 Change of Parties
Page
...411
412
25 Cases reported or transferred to Supreme Court 387
754 Trial
BIL
--
26 Juries and Assessors
... 887
102 Amendments...
31 Legal practitioners
398
166 Judgments and Orders
II-CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS
...359
-32 Euforcing appearance
389
186 Enforcement of Judgments and Orders
189 Extension of Judgment
...413
414
...414
418
53 Trial
-
41 Preliminary Examination
63 Provisions Applicable to both preliminary Examina-
392
--
180 Summons to Judgment Debtor
**
...418
419
---
JLI
399
203 Interpleader
F
++
...421
212 Arbitration ....
ILI
tion and Trial
Pl
...000
219 Attachment of Debts
423
...424
67 Appeal & Reserved Case (order, Article 85)
307
225 Appeal to Supreme Court...
425
11.-CIVIL PROCEDCER
...307
238 Re-hearing in Supreme Court
...127
70 General...
397
200 Security
427
75 Entry of Action
309
242 Costs
...427
79 Parties
308
250 Practice ...
423
03 Joinder of causes of Action...
...40L
201 Deţinue
...420
90 Writ of Summons and Procedure
401
203 Special Case
430
107 Service
Irr
ILL
117 Special Defence
120 Pleadings and Issues
403
200 Bankruptcy Proceedings
...480
405
275 Probate and Administration
#31
...400
131 Admissions
L
12 Interlocutory and Interim orders & Proceedings 407
19 Discontinuance and Disclaimer...
136 Payment into Court
138 Discovery and Inspection...
298 Wills
...435
304 Intestacy
496
...408
408
305 The Registrar
...420
...-109
307 The Marshal
436
410
IV. GENERAL:-
437
Interpretation.
Application.
Computation of rime.
RULES OF HIS BRITANNIC MAJESTY'S
SUPREME COURTS IN CHINA
AND COREA
PART 1.-GENERAL.
1. The interpretations contained in Article 3 of the Principal Order shall apply to these Rules, with the following additions:-
44
'Clear days" shall mean that in all cases in which any particular number of days is prescribed for the doing of any act, or for any other purpose, the same shall be reckoned exclusively both of the first and the last days.
"Marshal" means any officer of the Court discharging for the time being the duties of that office.
"Mutter" means every proceeding commenced otherwise than by writ of summons, and whether in an action or not.
"Official Seal" means a seal authorized to be used in the particular Court, or by the particular officer.
Ordinary summons" means a summons which is not required by Statute to be served personally.
"Party" means party to any action or matter, or a person served with a notice of or in any action or matter, and shall include body politic or corporate.
1904.
C4
Principal Order" means the China and Corea Order in Council,
"Proper Officer" means such officer as may from time to time be directed by the Court to discharge any duty.
"Registrar" includes any officer discharging for the time being the duties of Registrar.
**
'Resident" means having a fixed place of abode in China or Corea. "Return day" means the day appointed in any summons for the appearance of the defendant, or any other day fixed for the trial of any
action or matter.
"Statute" includes Imperial Act and Order in Council applicable to China or Corea as the case may be.
"Trial" means any trial of the action, or the hearing of any matter before the Court.
+
Any references to " the Rules sball include a reference to any Rules of Court made in addition to these, or in substitution for any of them.
2. The Rules in this Part, unless where otherwise expressly pro- vided, apply to all proceedings, whether civil or criminal.
3. Where by the Principal Order or these Rules auy limited time from or after any date or event if appointed or allowed for the doing of any act, or the taking of any proceeding, and the time is not limited by hours, the following Rules shall apply:-
(i.) The limited time does not include the day of the date or of the happening of the event, but commences at the beginning of the day next following that day;
(ii) The act or proceeding must be done or taken at latest on the last day of the limited time;
RULES OF SUPREME COURT IN CHINA AND COREA
(iii) Where the limited time is less than 6 days, the following days shall not be reckoned as part of the time, namely, Sunday, Good Friday, Monday and Tuesday in Easter week, Christmas Day, and the day next before and the day next after Christmas Day;
(iv.) Where the time expires on one of those days, the act or proceeding shall be considered as done or taken in due time if it is done or taken on the next day afterwards not being one of those days.
4. (1.) Summonses, orders, and other documents issuing from the Sealing of
Supreme Court, shall be sealed with the seal of that Court.
(2.) Those issuing from a Provincial Court shall be sealed with the official seal of that Court or of the Consular officer by whom they are issued.
Evidence and Witnesses.
documents.
declarations,
5.-(1.) All witnesses (except those objecting or incompetent to Oaths and take an oath) shall be examined upon oath, which shall be administered by the Court in the following form:-
"The evidence you shall give touching this charge [or this case or the matter in question, or as the case may be] shall be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
"So help you God."
(2.) If any witness shall object to take an oath, or shall be objected to as being incompetent to take an oath, the Court may administer a declaration in the following form:-
--
"I, A. B., solemuly promise and declare, &c."
(8.) These forms may be varied in conformity with the religious belief of the witness into any form which he shall declare or admit to be binding on his conscience.
of witueas.
6.--(1) Every witness is first examined-in-chief by the party calling Bramistion him, during which examination uo leading questions are admissible. If, however, the witness appears to be hostile to the party who has called him, he may, by leave of the Court, be asked leading questions as in cross-examination.
(2.) After the conclusion of the examination-in-chief, the other side has a right to cross-examine the witness. In cross-examination leading questions may be asked.
(3.) After the cross-examination, the party who called the witness has the right to re-examine him if any new fact arises out of the cross- examination, or in explanation of any part of his cross-examination, but the re-examination must be strictly confined to matters arising out of the cross-examination.
(4.) After the re-examination no further questions shall be asked of any witness, except by leave of and through the Court; but the Court is at liberty, at any stage of the proceedings, to put all such questions to any witness as may be necessary, in order to elicit all the facts of the case.
983
7. Written evidence, such as affidavits, depositions, and docu- Written ev d- ments of any description inay be read at any convenient time before the pace, when to conclusion of the case of the party by whom it is produced.
be read.
orrer a witness
8. In civil cases, when a person summoned as a witness appears in Court may Court, the Court may order him to give evidence, although his expenses to give evidence may not have been tendered or paid to him; but the Court may, if it without tender thinks fit, order the proper allowances to be paid to any witness by the party calling him.
of expenses.
pers u danger.
9. When the Court is satisfied in a criminal case that some person Deposition of dangerously ill and unlikely to recover is able and willing to give ously ill and evidence, it shall cause reasonable notice in writing to be served upon the unable to travel.
884
To ense of death, &c.. of witness, bis deposition
may be read at the trial.
Dring declara- tion.
Evidence in civil case of person dead or insane.
Statements of socused: evid- ence against himself.
Evidence in civil
danes before
trist.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
accused of its intention to take such person's statement, in order that such accused (who, if in prison, is to be brought to the place), or his legal practitioner, may have full opportunity of attending and cross- examining; and shall, at the appointed time and place, take down the statement on oath of such sick person, and sign it, and add thereto by way of heading a statement of the reason for taking the deposition. Then, if at the trial of the offender or offence to which the statement relates, the deponent is proved to be dead, or that there is no reasonable probability of his ever being able to attend and give evidence, and that the defendant had notice and the opportunity of cross-examination, the statement may be read in evidence, either for or against the accused, without further proof.
10. When a witness has been examined and his deposition taken down and signed, as prescribed by these Rules, and it shall be proved the trial, by the oath of any credible witness, that such witness is upon dead, or out of the jurisdiction, or so ill as not to be able to travel, and if it also be proved that the deposition was taken in the presence of the accused, and that he or his legal practitioner had a full opportunity of cross-examining the witness, then if the deposition purport to be signed. by the Court before which it was taken, it shall be lawful to read such deposition as evidence at the trial, without further proof, unless it shall be proved that the deposition was not in fact signed by the Court. purporting to have signed the same.
11. In any case in which a person is dying, in consequence of injuries received from another, he may make a declaration orally or in writing to any officer of the Court, surgeon, minister of religion, or other competent person, who may subsequently prove the declaration, which may theu, in case of the death of the declarant, be used as evidence in any trial arising out of the injuries inflicted on him.
In order to render this declaration admissible, three material points must be insisted on, viz:-
(1.) The inquiry must relate to the cause of the death of the declarant;
(2.) The circumstances leading to the death must be the subject of the declaration; and
(3.) At the time of making the declaration, the declarant must be perfectly aware of his danger, and entertain no hope of recovery.
Such a declaration is not to be on oath.
12. In a civil case, where a person whose evidence would have been admissible is dead or insane, or for any reason appearing sufficient to the Court is not present to give evidence, the Court may, if it thinks fit, receive proof of any evidence given by him in any former judicial proceeding; provided that the subject-matter of the former proceeding was substantially the same as that of the pending proceeding, and that the parties to the pending proceeding were parties to the former proceed- ing or bound by it, and had an opportunity in it of cross-examining the person of whose evidence proof is so to be given.
13. In a criminal case, any statement made by the accused at a preliminary examination, in answer to the questions put to him by the Court, as prescribed by these Rules, may be given in evidence against him at the trial; but nothing in these Rules shall prevent the prosecutor from giving in evidence at the trial any admission or confession, or other statement of the accused made at any time, which would, by law, be admissible as evidence against him.
14.-(1.) In a civil case, where the circumstances of the case appear to the Court so to require, for reasons recorded in the Minutes, the
IN CHINA AND COREA
Court may, when an action is pending, take the evidence of any witness at any time as preparatory to the hearing, and the evidence so taken may be used at the hearing, subject to just exceptions.
(2.) Any Court or Consular officer shall, on the request in writing of any Court before which an action is pending, so take evidence for
of the action, purposes
(8.) The evidence shall be taken in like manner, as nearly as may be, as evidence at the hearing of an action is to be taken, and then the note of the evidence shall be read over to the witness and tendered to him for signature, and if he refuses to sign it the Court or officer shall add a note of his refusal, and the evidence may be used as if he had signed it.
(4.) Evidence may be taken in like manner on the application of any person, although no action is pending, where it is proved that the persou applying has good reason to apprehend that a proceeding will be taken against him in the Court, and that some person within the particular jurisdiction at the time of application can give material evidence respecting the subject of the apprehended proceeding, but that he is about to leave the particular jurisdiction, or that from some other cause the person applying will lose the benefit of his evidence if it is not at once taken.
affidavite.
385
15.-(1.) All affidavits are to be expressed in the first person, and Mode of drawing drawn up in numbered paragraphs, and shall be entitled in the action or matter in which they are sworn.
(2) All affidavits, other than those for which forms are given in the Second Schedule, are to state the deponent's age (if he is not of full age), his occupation, quality, and place of residence, and also what facts or circumstances deposed to are within the deponent's own knowledge, and what facts or circumstances deposed to are known to or believed by him, by reason of information derived from other sources than his own knowledge.
(3.) The costs of affidavits not in conformity with the last two preceding sections shall be disallowed on taxation, unless the Court shall otherwise direct.
of affidavits,
16. (1.) The officers before whom affidavits may be sworn are Requirements Judges of Courts, Consular officers, and the Registrar of the Supreme Court.
(2.) The affidavit when sworn shall be signed by the witness (or, if he cannot write, marked by him with his mark) in the presence of an officer authorized as aforesaid.
(3.) The jurat shall be written without interlineation, alteration, or erasure, immediately at the foot of the affidavit, and towards the left side of the paper, and shall be signed by the officer, and be sealed by him with the official seal.
(4.) The jurat shall state the date of the swearing, the place where it is sworn, and shall name or designate the officer before whom it
is sworn.
(5.) Where the witness is blind or illiterate, the jurat shall state that fact, and that the affidavit was read over to him in the presence of the officer, and that the witness appeared to understand it.
(6.) Where the witness makes a mark instead of signing, the jurat shall state that fact, and that the mark was made in the presence of the officer.
(7) Where two or more persons join in making an affidavit, their several names shall be written in the jurat, and it shall appear by the jurat that each of them has been sworn to the truth of the several matters stated by him in the affidavit.
896
Alteration of afidavit,
Affidavits made out of the
jurisdiction and by foreigners.
Rules for neiug sfildavits,
Documentary pridence.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(8.) An affidavit shall not be admitted if it is proved that it bas been sworn before a person on whose behalf it is offered, or before his legal practitioner, or before a partner or clerk of his legal practitioner.
(9.) Au affidavit may be used, notwithstanding any defect in form, if it is proved that it has been sworn before a person duly authorized, and that the form thereof and that of the attestation thereto are in accordance with the law and custom of the place where it has been
sworn.
(10.) A defective or erroneous affidavit may be amended and re-sworn, by leave of the Court in which it is to be used.
(11.) The Court may, if it thinks fit, for reasons recorded in the Minutes, admit an affidavit in evidence, although it is shown that the party against whom the affidavit is offered in evidence had no oppor- tunity of cross-examining the person making the affidavit.
(12.) No affidavit or other document which is blotted so as to obliterate any words, and which is illegibly written or so altered as to cause it to be illegible, nor any affidavit in which there is any inter- lineation (unless the person before whom the same is sworn shall have duly initialled such interlineation), nor any affidavit in which there is a knife erasure (unless the person before whom such affidavit is sworn shall have rewritten and initialled in the margin the words or figures appearing to be written on the erasure), nor any affidavit or other document which is so imperfect upon the face or by reason of having blanks thereon that it cannot easily be read or understood, shall be filed or used in any action or proceeding, unless the Court shall otherwise order.
17.-(1.) The officer before whom an affidavit is sworn shall not allow an affidavit, when sworn, to be altered in any manner without being re-sworn.
(2.) If the jurat has been added and signed, he shall add a new jurat on the affidavit being re-sworn; and in the new jurat he shall mention the alteration.
(8.) He may refuse to allow the affidavit to be re-sworn, and may require a fresh affidavit.
18. An affidavit sworn before a Consular officer of His Majesty authorized to take affidavits in any country, or before a Judge or other person in the United Kingdom or in a British possession authorized to take affidavits, or before a Mayor or other Magistrate in a foreign country authorized to administer an oath, or in the case of a foreigner in China or Corea before his own proper Consular authority, may be used in the Court, subject to the rules of evidence.
19.-(1) Before any affidavit is used it shall be filed in the office of the Registrar, but the Court may make an order in an urgent case, upon the undertaking of the applicant to file any affidavit sworn before the making of the order, provided that the order be not issued until after the affidavit has been filed.
(2.) The original affidavit or an office copy shall alone be recognized. for any purpose in the Court.
20. In a civil case-
(1.) Every document offered as evidence, and not objected to, shall be put in and read, or taken as read by consent.
(2.) Every document put in evidence shall be marked by the Court at the time, and shall be retained by the Court during the hearing and returned to the party who put it in, or from whose custody it came, immediately after the judgment, unles it is impounded by order of
the Court.
IN CHINA AND COREA
evidence,
21. All objections to the reception of evidence shall be made when objections to the evidence is offered, and shall be argued and decided at the time, and the Court shall, unless it shall consider it to be frivolous, take a note of every objection and the decision thereon.
387
Wituemes may
22. In every case the Court may order witnesses to be kept out of be kept out of Court and out of hearing; this, however, does not apply to the parties in Court. any case.
ence of souls and
23. Every signature or seal affixed to any instrument purporting to Validity in all- be the signature of the Judge of any Court, or of any Consular officer, signatures, or to be the seal of any of His Majesty's Courts in China or Corea, shall, without any proof thereof, be presumed to be genuine, and shall be taken as genuine until the contrary is proved.
evidence,
24.-(1.) Notes of evidence should generally be taken by the Court Notes of in a narrative form, but any question and answer may be set down at length if it appear necessary to do so.
(2.) No person is entitled as of right, at any time or for any purpose, to inspect or to take a copy of the notes of evidence of the Court.
But the Court may give permission for this to be done if
it thinks fit.
Cases reported or transferred to Supreme Court.
Documents to be transmitted on
25. Where a civil case is reported or transferred to the Supreme Court, the following documents, or certified copies thereof, are to be report or forwarded under cover to the Registrar of the Supreme Court:-
The Summons.
Minutes of Evidence (if any) taken by the Provincial Court. Notes of any interlocutory proceedings, accompanied by a short statement under the hand of the Court of the reasons (if any) for which it is deemed necessary to report the case, and, if possible, a suggestion of the time when it may be most convenient for parties and witnesses to attend the Supreme Court.
Juries and Assessors.
transfer of саве.
26.-(1.) The jury list for each district shall be revised and settled Jary lists, in the month of January in each year, and when settled shall be affixed in some conspicuous place in the Court, and be there exhibited during not less than two months.
(2.) The list, as settled, shall be brought into use in every year on the 1st of February and shall be used as the jury list of the district for the twelve months then next ensuing.
(8.) The rate of gross income for a juror's qualification shall be 507.
per annum.
27--In trials for capital offences before the Supreme Court at Number of Jury. Shanghai the jury shall consist of twelve jurors; in all other cases, civil and criminal, five jurors.
Number of
28. When there is to be a hearing with a jury, the Court shall jurors to be summon such number of persons comprised in the jury list, not less summoned. than thirty if the trial is at Shanghai for a capital offence, nor less than twelve in any other case, as may seem requisite.
actiona.
29.--(1.) The remuneration of each juryman in a civil action shall Jarics in civil ordinarily be at the rate of 10s. for cach day, but the Court, if it thinks that owing to the importance of the case or the length of time occupied. at each sitting a larger sum ought to be paid, may order a sum not exceeding 11. a day to be paid to each juryman.
(2.) In a civil action to be tried before the Supreme Court, a party demanding a jury shall, on filing the demand, deposit in Court for the
388
Assessors.
Admission to practice,
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
first day's attendance of jurors such sum, not exceeding 57., as the Court may require, and in default thereof his demand shall have no effect.
(3.) If the Court of its own motion orders that and action be heard with a jury, the plaintiff shall make the deposit.
(4.) Where a trial with a jury is begun and adjourned, the party who has made the deposit shall, on each successive day of the trial, and before the trial is proceeded with, make a further deposit of 21. 10s, or such larger sum, not exceeding 5., as the Court may require.
(5.) In default of any successive deposit being so made, the other party may make the deposit; but if neither party makes it, the trial may, if the Court thinks fit, be adjourned generally.
(6.) The costs of remuneration of jurors shall be costs in the cause. 30. (1.) The Consular officer in each district shall, in the month of January in each year, make a list of the persons within his district qualified under the Principal Order to be Assessors, and shall be at liberty from time to time to add any name thereto, or to expuuge any name therefrom.
(2.) When Assessors are required the Court shall, from its list of Assessors, select a sufficient number of competent persons, and shall give the selected persons notice in writing of their selection, and may, for cause appearing to be sufficient, excuse any person so selected, and select another person in his stead.
(3.) The names and addresses of the persons selected shall in civil cases be communicated to the parties three days, and in a criminal case to the accused one day, before the day fixed for the trial.
(4.) If either party or the accused object to an Assessor so selected by the Court, he shall forthwith signify his objection, with the grounds. thereof, to the Court, and the Court, if it sustains the objection, shall select another duly qualified person to sit as Assessor in place of the person objected to.
(5.) If any selected person dies or becomes unable to act, the Court shall select another duly qualified person.
(6.) The remuneration of an Assessor for sitting in the Court shall be at the rate of 21. a day in civil cases, and 1. a day in criminal cases. Where the sitting in a civil case does not exceed one bour, the Court may reduce the remuneration for such sitting to 17. In civil cases the remuneration shall be costs in the cause.
Legal Practitioners.
31-(1.) A persou desiring to practise as a legal practitioner with- in the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall make a written application to that Court, stating his qualifications. The Supreme Court may require proof of the qualifications to be submitted, and may grant or refuse the application. The Supreme Court may at any time for good cause revoke any such grant.
(2.) A person admitted to practise in the Supreme Court may practise in any Provincial Court.
(3.) The Supreme Court may in its discretion in the case of any person who, at the coming into operation of these Rules, is enrolled as a practitioner in that Court, dispense with the application and proof of qualifications.
(4.) Foreign legal practitioners admitted to practise in a foreign Consular Court in China or Corea may be allowed to appear in any case before the Court, if the Court is satisfied that qualified British legal practitioners would be allowed in similar circumstances to appear before the foreign Court.
IN CHINA AND COREA
PART II. CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS,
Enforcing Appearance.
Form 1.
32. (1.) A prosecution for an offence shall be commenced by a Complaint. complaint made to the Court, or by the issue of process by the Court itself.
(2.) When a complaint is made, the Court shall at once examine the complainant on oath or not on oath as it thinks fit, and the substance of the examination shall be reduced to writing, and be signed by the complainant and also by the Court.
33.--(1.) The appearance of a person accused of an offence is Ise of enforced by summons or warrant of arrest issued by the Court.
(2.) The Court before issuing a summons may, and before issuing a warrant of arrest must, require the complaint to be made on oath.
(3.) If the Court sees reason to distrust the truth of a complaint, it may, for reasons recorded in the Minutes, postpone the issue of process, and make such inquiry by itself or any officer of the Court as seems fit for the purpose of ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the complaint.
(4.) After examining the complainant, and considering the result of such inquiry (if any), the Court may, if in its judgment there is no sufficient ground for a prosecution, dismiss the complaint, recording its reasons in the Minutes.
process.
34-(1.) A summons shall be under the hand and seal of the Summons, Court addressed to the accused; it shall shortly set out the nature of Form 8 the offence complained of, and require the accused to appear at a certain time and place before the Court to answer the same, and to be dealt with according to law.
(2.) No objection shall be allowed to any summons for any defect in substance or form, or for any variance therein with the evidence adduced in support thereof, unless the Court considers that the accused has been deceived or misled thereby, in which case it may adjouru the hearing on any terms it shall think fit.
Summor.
35. (1.) Every summons, notice, or other like document shall, Service of unless the Court shall otherwise direct, be served by an officer of the Court, who shall deliver a copy to the person to whom it is directed, at the same time showing the origi al, or, if the person is not conveniently to be found, shall leave a copy at his usual place of abode, or at his place of business, with some person apparently not less than 15 years of age, who undertakes to deliver it to the person to whom it is addressed.
(2.) When the person to whom the document is directed is on board any vessel, such document may be delivered to any person on board who is apparently in charge of the vessel.
(8.) When such person is in prison, the document may be delivered to the Governor, or any one seeming to be head officer.
(4) When such person is in a bospital or public asylum, the document may be delivered to the gate-keeper or lodge-keeper.
(5.) When such person keeps his house or place of business closed in order to prevent service, it is sufficient to affix the document to the door. (6.) When such person, or another with him, uses violence or threats to prevent service, the document may be left as near to him as practicable.
(7) Service on a Company may be effected by delivering the document to a clerk or employé at the office of the Company.
(8.) The person who serves any document shall indorse on the orginal the time, date, and manner of service before returning it to the Registrar.
389
1
+
+
·
J
H
390
Rules for sue of warrant.
Forms 3 and 4.
Warrant of arrest.
Form 6.
Form 7.
Form $4.
Non-appesranes of accused, or complainant,
Form 3.
KULES OF SUPREME COURT
36. When there is a complaint on oath the Court may issue a warrant to arrest the accused, and to bring him before the Court.
(a.) in the first instance, without any previous summons:
(b.) at any time before or after the time mentioned in the summons for appearance:
(c) if the accused does not appear according to the summons, and it appears to the satisfaction of the Court that the summons has been duly served, or that the accused is evading service.
37. (1.) Every warrant of arrest inust be under the band of a Judge or the Registrar, and under the seal of the Court, and directed to the person or persons who are to execute the same.
It shall state shortly the matter on which it is founded, and name or otherwise describe the person against whom it is issued.
(2.) It shall order the person to whom it is directed to arrest the accused and bring him before the Court to answer the complaint, and be dealt with according to law.
(8.) Every warrant shall remain in force until it is executed. A warrant of the Supreme Court may be executed at any place within the limits of the Principal Order. A warrant of a Provincial Court may be executed at any place within its jurisdiction, but in case of fresh pursuit may be executed at any place in another district; in cases other than that of fresh pursuit, the warrant must be indorsed by the Consular officer of the district in which it is executed, and on arrest the accused must be brought before the Court for that district, and that Court shall, on being satisfied that the prisoner is the person named in the warrant, remand him to the issuing Court.
(4.) No objection shall be allowed to any warrant for any defect in substance or form, or for any variance therein with the evidence adduced in support of the charge, unless the Court considers that the accused has been deceived or misled thereby, in which case it may adjourn the bearing, and in the meantime commit the accused by war- rant into such custody as it may think fit, or discharge him on his entering into a recognizance, with or without sureties, to appear at the time and place to which the hearing is adjourned.
(5.) In all cases where an accused, having been discharged on recognizances, does not appear as aforesaid, the Court may, in addition to issuing a fresh warrant, certify the non-appearance on the back of the recognizance.
(6.) A warrant may be issued and executed as well upon Sundays. or holidays as upon any other day, and at night as well as by day.
38. (1.) If at the trial for any offence punishable with fine, or where if convicted the accused may be ordered to pay money, or at any at the hearing. adjournment of such trial, the accused does not appear, the Court may either go on with the case in his absence (after being satisfied that the summons has been duly served), or may issue a warrant to compel his attendance in the manner above mentioned. But at the trial of every other offence and at every preliminary examination the accused must always be present.
Form 16.
Forms 6, 7. 8.
(2.) If in like case the complainant, after having received notice of the hearing, does not appear, either in person or by a legal practitioner, and the accused does, the Court shall dismiss the case, unless for some reason it thinks fit to adjourn the hearing to anther day upon such terms as it may think fit to impose; and may in either case, if it think proper, make an order against the complainant for the costs of the day and such reasonable expenses as the accused may have been put to. If the hearing is so adjourned, the Court may either let the accused go at
IN CHINA AND COREA
large or remand him back to custody until the further day appointed for the bearing, or may discharge him on recognizances to appear on such day
(3.) But if on the day appointed for the hearing both parties appear by themselves or by a legal practitioner, the Court shall proceed to hear and determine the case.
391
appearance of
39. (1.) Whenever it is made to appear to the Court that any one Compelling subject to the jurisdiction of the Court is likely to be able to give witness. material evidence on either side, but will not voluntarily appear to be Form 9. examined, the Court may issue a summons under its hand and seal requiring such person to appear at the hearing of the case for the purpose of giving evidence, or to bring with him and to produce for examination such accounts, papers, or documents as he may have in his power. If the person so summoned omits, without a valid excuse, to appear at the appointed time and place, and it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that the summons was served upon him personally or by leaving it with some person at his last or most usual place of abode, and that a reason- able sum was tendered him for his costs and expenses (if any), the Court may issue a warrant to bring such witness before the Court to give evidence.
(2.) When from any cause a summons cannot be served personally on a witness, a notice may be left with the summons, to the effect that a sum sufficient for the reasonable expenses of the witness will be paid to him on application at an address to be set out in the notice, and such notice shall have all the effect of a tender.
Form 10.
(3.) Or if the Court is satisfied on oath that a person able to give evidence on either side will not appear, or will not bring with him any Form 11. accounts, papers, er documents, unless compelled to do so, it may issue a warrant in the first instance.
(4.) And if on the appearance of a witness, whether in obedience to Form 15. a summous or on a warrant, such witness sball, without just excuse, refuse to be examined or to take an oath, or having taken the oath, to reply to such questions as may be put to him, or shall neglect or refuse to produce any accounts, documents, and papers as aforesaid, the Court may adjourn the proceedings for any period not exceeding seven days, and may in the meantime by warrant commit the witness to prison, unless he shall sooner consent to be examined and to answer, or to produce such accounts, papers, or documents as aforesaid; and if Opon the adjourn- ed hearing he shall still refuse, the Court ay again adjourn and commit the witness for a like peri d, and so again from time to time until he consent, provided that such imprisonment shall not exceed one month in the whole.
(5.) But the Court may, notwithstanding, proceed with and dispose of the case, or send it for trial without the examiua- tion of the witness, if it has received sufficient evidence. But in such case, when the case is to be sent up to another Court, the name of such witness, with particulars of his default, shall accompany the depositions.
warrants.
40.-(1.) When any credible witnesses shall prove on oath before Search the Court à reasonable cause to suspect that any person, subject to the provisions of the Principal Order, has in his possession or on his premises Form 38. any property that has been stolen, or any property whatever ou or with respect to which any offence, punishable either upon indictment or upon summary conviction, shall have been committed, or upon a representation by any Chinese, Corean, or foreign Tribunal, of competent jurisdiction in China or Corea, that a person accused of an offence of a non-political
392
Form 30,
Presence of
accused
pereuu.
Preliminary examination need not be in open Court,
Depositions to be taken.
Form 28.
Discharge or commutal on conclusion of evidence.
Statement of the accused,
Form 29.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
character is concealed on the premises of a person subject to the provisions of the Principal Order, the Court may grant a warrant to search for such property or person.
(2.) A search-warrant may be issued and executed as well on Sun- days and holidays as on other days, and by night as well as by day.
(3.) The person to whom a search-warrant is addressed alone has the power to execute it, but may take with him as many persons as are necessary to assist him.
(4.) If the house or place is kept closed after the person executing the warrant has demanded admission and declared his authority and the object of his visit, he may break it open.
(5.) When the alleged offence is one within Article 70 (as to Smuggling) of the Principal Order, a search-warrant may be granted by the Court of its own motion, without a sworn information.
Preliminary Examination.
41. At every preliminary examination the accused person must be present.
42. A preliminary examination may be held in any convenient place' and such place shall not be deemed an open Court, and the Court may, at its discretion, for reasons to be recorded in the Minutes, order that no person shall be admitted or allowed to remain without permission, except the witnesses of the prosecutor and accused and their legal practitioners.
43. At a preliminary examination the Court shall take down in writing, and in the presence of the accused, the depositions on oath of those who know anything of the facts of the case, and the cross- examination of such witnesses by or on behalf of the accused, and the re-examination, and either at the completion of each deposition or at any time before committing the accused for trial, the depositions must be read over to the several deponents, who are to sign them. If after hear- ing them read they desire to add to or to vary their deposition in any way, they must do so before signing and in the presence of the accused, who, in the event of any material alteration being made, may cross examine upon that particular point. The Court must initial every alteration, and sign and date each deposition on completion.
44. At the conclusion of the evidence of the witnesses for the prosecution, if the Court is of opinion that it is not sufficient to put the accused party on his trial for any indictable offence, it shall forthwith order the accused to be discharged as to the complaint then under inquiry; but if the Court is of opinion that there is sufficient evidence, it shall frame in writing a charge against the accused, which shall be read over to him.
45. After the charge is read to the accused the Court must address him to the following effect: "Having heard the evidence, do you wish to say anything in answer to the charge? You are not obliged to say any thing unless you desire to do so, but whatever you say will be taken down in writing, and may be given in evidence against you upon your
trial. You have nothing to hope from any promise of favour, and nothing to fear from any threat that may have been held out to you to induce you to make any admission, but whatever you may say will be taken down, and may be used as evidence against you
at your trial." And whatever the accused may say in reply must be written down and read to him, and afterwards signed by the Court and kept among the depositions. And the fact of the caution having been administered and the words used
IN CHINA AND COREA
must always appear before the statement of the accused. If the accused declines to make any statement the fact of his doing so must be recorded
in the same way,
witnesson for
393
46. After hearing the statement of the accused (if any), the Court Depositions of shall inquire if he desires to call any witnesses, and if he does their the defence. depositions must be taken in the same way as prescribed for witnesses for the prosecution, and if the accused himself is called as a witness the provisions of the Criminal Evidence Act, 1898, shall be observed.
the sccused.
Form 30.
47. If the Court is of opinion on the evidence that the accused Committal of should be put upon his trial, the Court will proceed to commit the accused by warrant to prison to await his trial, or may admit him to bail in the manner described in the Principal Order.
Form 51.
Prosecutor and witnesses
Form 32.
48. (1) After the accused has been committed for trial the Court shall, if it has not been done at the conclusion of each deposition, bind bound over to by recognizance the complainant and every witness to appear at the Court Prosecute, &u. at which the trial is to take place, to prosecute, or to prosecute and give evidence, or to give evidence, as the case may be, for the prosecution or defence; and after the recognizance has been duly acknowledged by the person entering into it, it must be signed by the Court, and a notice of it, also signed by the Court, must be given at the same time to the Form 33. person bound by it.
the
and 36.
(2.) If any witness or the prosecutor refuses to be bound over, Form 35 Court may by warrant commit him to prison until the trial, unless in the meantime he shall consent to be bound over, or unless in the meantime the Court shall decide not to commit the accused for trial.
recognizances,
Ave.
49. The several recognizances so taken, together with the written Forwarding of information (if any), the depositions, the statement of the accused, and depositions, the recognizance of bail of the accused (if any), are to be at once for- warded to the Registrar or other proper officer of the Court of trial, and as soon as the day of trial is fixed that Court shall give notice thereof to the Court of examination; the latter Court will then take such steps as may be necessary to insure the attendance of all parties concerned.
entitled to
50. A person who has been committed for trial shall be entitled to Accused receive on application, and on prepayment at the rate of sixpence per folio, copy of the or, if the Court thinks fit, without payment, copies of the depositions on depositions, which he has been committed. The Court, at the time of committing him. for trial, shall inform him of this provision.
evidence.
51. When new evidence is obtained against an accused person after Subsequent the completion of the depositions, the prosecutor should give notice to the accused or his solicitor of the names of the witnesses and the sub- stance of their proof, but the Court by whom the preliminary examination was held has no power to administer an oath or take an examination after the accused has been committed.
sent to Court
52. On receiving notice of the day appointed for the trial, the Court Accused to be shall do all that is necessary to insure the attendance of the prosecutor of trial. and his witnesses and the accused and his witnesses (when they have been bound over) at the Court of trial on that day. When the accused is in custody, he must be sent in custody to the Court of trial, and there handed over to the keeper of the prison (if any) or to the Consular officer, who will give a receipt for him.
Trial.
Form 37.
an open
53. At every trial of a criminal offence, the Court shall be deemed Court of trisl an open Court, and shall be held in a room or place to which the public court. generally may have access so far as it will conveniently coutain them.
394
Charge to be framed.
Form 5.
Procedure of trial.
Forms 10 and 17,
Fines and orders for pay. ment of money,
Form 19.
Form 13.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
54. The charge upon which the accused shall be tried may be amended at any time before the trial by leave or direction of the Court. After the commencement of a trial the charge shall not be altered except in manner provided by the Principal Order.
When the accused appears or is brought before the Court for trial, and no formal charge has already been framed, the Court shall frame in writing a charge against the accused.
55.-(1.) At the trial the charge is in the first instance to be read over to the accused, who is then to be asked whether he is guilty or not guilty.
(2.) If he pleads guilty the Court may proceed to sentence him or make an order against him."
(3.) If the accused pleads not guilty the Court shall proceed to hear the complainant and such witnesses as he may call and their cross- examination (if any) by the accused, and re-examination by the com- plainant, and such other evidence as he may adduce in support of the charge.
(4.) After the case for the prosecution is concluded, the accused is asked if he calls witnesses; if he does not, or only to character, the com- plainant may sum up, and the accused may reply on the whole case.
(5.) If the accused calls witnesses, he may open his case, call his witnesses, and then sum up, after which the complainant may reply.
(6.) If the accused himself is called as a witness, the provisions of the Criminal Evidence Act, 1898, shall be observed.
(7.) The Court will then, if sitting alone, consider and determine the whole matter, or if sitting with Assessors consult the Assessors, or if sitting with a jury sum up the case to the jury and take their verdiet, and then proceed to sentence the accused or inake an order against him, or dismiss the charge (as the case may be).
(8.) When a charge is dismissed the Court shall, if desired by the accused, make out an order of dismissal and give the accused a certificate thereof, which without further proof shall be a bar to any subsequent proceedings in the same matter.
(9.) In the Supreme Court the prosecution shall be conducted by the Crown Advocate. No other legal practitioner shall take part therein without the consent of the Crown Advocate, and no prosecution shall be withdrawn or abandoned without his consent, given in open Court.
56.-(1.) In every case in which the Court is authorized to order the accused to pay a fine or other sum of money, it may either order it to be paid forthwith, or at such time as the Court may fix, whether by instal- ments or otherwise, and if by instalments the accused shall enter into such security, whether with or without sureties, for the payment of such instalments as the Court may think fit.
(2.) Where the Court imposes a fine or orders a sum of money to be paid, and the enactment under which the conviction or order is made provides no statutory mode of raising, levying, or enforcing the payment of such fine or sum, the Court may issue a warrant of distress under its hand and seal, for the purpose of levying the same.
(3.) But if it appears to the Court that the issuing of a warrant of distress would be ruinous to the accused and his family, or that the accused has no goods or chattels on which to levy, the Court may, instead of issuing the distress, commit the accused, with or without hard labour, for a term in accordance with the scale set out in this Rule, unless the amount be sooner paid.
(4.) When, at the return time of the warrant of distress, the officer charged with the execution of it returns that he could not find any
IN CHINA AND COREA
or sufficient goods and chattels to satisfy the distress and costs, the Court may commit the accused to prison, with or without hard labour, for a term in accordance with the scale set out in this Rule unless the amount Form 24- be sooner paid.
(5.) No warrant of distress may issue when the enactment under which the fine is imposed or order made on a conviction does not allow of the amount being levied by distress, but prescribes a sentence of imprisonment if the same is not paid. In that case, if the amount is not paid forthwith, or within such time as the Court may prescribe, the Court Form 25. may issue a warrant of commitment for a term in accordance with the following scale, unless the money be sooner paid:-
For any Fine or Sum.
Not exceeding ten shillings.
Exceeding ten shillings and not exceeding one
pound
Imprisonment not to exceed-
Seven days.
Fourteen days.
Exceeding one pound and not exceeding two
pounds...
One month.
+
Exceeding two pounds and not exceeding five
pounds...
Two months.
395
Exceeding five pounds and not exceeding twenty
pounds
Three months.
where pre-
Imprisonment
57.-(1.) When the enactment under which a conviction is made Conviction does not prescribe any fine, but orders the accused to be imprisoned, scribed punish- with or without hard labour, or when an order is made directing the mentis performance of any act other than the payment of money, and ordering without option the accused to be imprisoned in default of performance of such act, and the accused neglects or refuses to obey such order, the Court may
issue a warrant of committment for such time as is prescribed by the enactment under which the conviction or order is made.
of flue,
Forms 14 and 15.
(2.) If, in a conviction or order such as above described, a sum for costs is adjudged to be paid by the accused to the complainant, the Court may issue a warrant of distress for the amount of such costs, and, in Form 22. default of distress, may further commit the accused to prison for a term of one month, to commence at the termination of the former sentence, unless the amount due for costs, and all costs and expenses of the distress and of the commitment, and conveying the accused to prison, be sooner paid.
Coats upon the informa- a
dismissal of
tion. How levied.
58. When any charge is dismissed with costs, the amount of costs may be levied by distress on the complainant's goods, and in default of distress or payment, the complainant may be committed to prison for term of one month, unless the amount due for costs, together with all costs and charges of the distress, and of the commitment and conveying 27. the complainant to prison (which charges are to be assessed by the Court, and stated in the warrant), be sooner paid.
Forma 26 and
Impr
for a second
59. If the Court adjudges any accused to be imprisoned, and the accused is at the time undergoing imprisonment on another conviction, offende. Front the warrant of commitment for the second conviction shall be delivered
what time to date.
296
On payment of the penalty, &o, the dis-
tress nut to be levied, or the defendant, if in
prison, to be discharged therefrom.
Provisions of Article 03 of the Order are
to apply to cases under Article 89.
Conviction for
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
to the keeper of the prison in which the accused is at the time confined, and the Court may, if it thinks fit, order in the warrant that the imprison- ment under it shall begin at the expiration of the former term.
60. When a person against whom a warrant of distress has been issued tenders to the officer executing the warrant the sum named therein, together with the amount of the expenses up to the time of tender, to be named in the warrant, the officer shall cease to execute the same.
When any person is imprisoned for non-payment of any penalty or sum of money he may tender to the keeper of the prison the sum named in the warrant of commitment, together with the amount of all costs, charges, and expenses also mentioned therein, and the keeper shall receive and give a receipt for the same, and forthwith discharge the prisoner.
61. In every case in which a person shall be accused under Article 83 (as to Deportation) of the Principal Order, the provisions of Article 63 of the Principal Order as to payment of expenses, malicions charges,. payment of expenses to parties, and Minutes, shall apply.
62. If, upon the hearing of any case, the Court think that, though trivial offences. the charge is proved, the offence was in the particular case of so trifling a nature that it is inexpedient to award any punishment, or any other than a nominal punishment:-
Conduct of prosecution and defence.
Minutes to be kept by Court.
Disposal of
accused on adjournment or remand,
Form 6.
1. The Court, without proceeding to conviction, may dismiss the charge, and, if the Court think fit, may order the accused to pay such damages, not exceeding 40s., and such costs of the proceeding or either of them as the Court thinks reasonable; or
2. The Court, upon convicting the accused, may discharge him conditionally on his giving security, with or without sureties, to appear for sentence when called upon, or to be of good behaviour, and either without payment of damages or costs, or subject to the payment of such damages and costs, or either of them, as the Court may think reasonable.
Provisions applicable to both Preliminary Examination and Trial.
63. In all proceedings the complainant and accused respectively shall be at liberty to conduct their own cases and examine and cross- examine the witnesses, or to employ a legal practitioner to conduct their cases and examine and cross-examine the witnesses on their behalf.
for
Provided that where a legal practitioner is mstructed to appear the Crown the prosecution shall be conducted by him and not by any complainant.
Subject to the foregoing provision, the prosecution may be conducted by the Registrar or any other officer of the Court.
64. Careful Minutes are to be kept by the Court, in which are to be entered the issue of all summonses and warrants, the appearances there- upon, all adjournments, remands, recognizances, convictions, and orders, with notes of the evidence taken in each case, statements of objections, rejection of evidence, and all the matters material to the issues. All such entries shall be dated the date of the issue of any document or the occurrence of the proceeding to which they refer, and those relating to each particular case are to be kept together so as to form a history of
the case.
65.-(1.) If from the absence of a witness or other reasonable cause it is necessary or advisable to postpone or adjourn the hearing of any charge, the Court may either admit the accused to bail, or remand him to prison by warrant for such time not exceeding such period as is provided for by Article 41 of the Principal Order as may be expedient.
IN CHINA AND COREA
(2.) In any case the Court may order the accused to be brought before it at any time before the expiration of the period for which he shall have been remanded.
66. In all cases in which recognizances, whether conditioned to Forfeited
recognizance, appear, to keep the peace, or for any other purpose, are forfeited, the Forms 18, 20 non-appearance or other default shall be certified by the Court on the back of the recognizance, which shall then be estreated and recovered by distress.
Appeal and Reserved case (Order, Article 85.)
21.
under article
Order.
67. Any application under Article 85 of the Principal Order by a Applications person convicted must be given in writing to the Court within four days 85 of the after the conviction. Such notice must set forth generally the grounds on which the applicant considers the conviction erroneous in point of law, and may contain an application that time be allowed for filing an argument in support of the application. When the person convicted declares his intention of appealing within the four days, but from any cause is unable to make out an application in writing, the application shall be prepared for him by an officer of the Court.
be forwarded
Court, who
hearing,
397
68. The case stated, together with all necessary documents, including Documents to any argument, shall be forwarded or delivered to the Registrar of the to Registrar of Supreme Court within fourteen days after the recognizances shall have the Supreme been completed, and shall thereupon be set down for hearing; and the shall give Registrar of the Supreme Court shall give notice of the day appointed for notice or the hearing to the person convicted and other proper parties (if any), either directly or through the proper Provincial Court as the case may require.
69. Where, on a case stated, a conviction has been affirmed, the Warrant of Court may issue a warrant of distress or commitment, as the case may commitment. be, as though no appeal had been brought, and if the Supreme Court. orders any party to pay costs, the order shall state to whom and within Costa, what time the costs are to be paid, and if such costs are not paid within the time so limited, the Court may enforce payment by warrant of distress.
distress or
PART III.--CIVIL PROCEDURE.
General.
70.-(1.) The sittings of the Court for the hearing of actions shall, sittings for where the amount of business so requires, be held on stated days.
bearing ef actions.
(2) The sittings shall ordinarily be public, but the Court may for reasons recorded in the Minutes, hear any particular case in the presence only of the parties and their legal advisers and the officers of the Court,
71. The evidence on either side may, subject to the direction of the Modes of Court, be wholly or partly oral, or on affidavit, or by deposition.
taking evidence,
72. Every application in the course of an action may be made to the Application. Court orally, and without previous formality, unless in any case the Court otherwise directs.
menia,
73.-(1,) The Court (for reasons recorded in the Minutes) may at As to amend any time do any of the following things as the Court thinks just:- adjournments, (i) Defer or adjourn the bearing or determination of any action, orrors, do, proceeding, or application;
898
Orders of the Court,
Entry of action
in Action Book.
Infant suing.
Form 40.
Married women suing,
Report of Ration Or
difficult points of law.
Plaintiffs and Defendants,
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(i.) Order or allow any amendment of any pleading or other document;
(iii) Appoint or allow a time for, or enlarge or abridge the time appointed or allowed for, or allow further time for, the doing of any act or the taking of any proceeding.
(2.) No action or proceeding shall be treated by the Court as invalid on account of any technical error or mistake in form or in words.
(3.) All errors and mistakes may be corrected and times may be extended by the Court in its discretion.
74. Any order within the discretion of the Court may be made on such terms respecting time, costs, and other matters, as the Court thinks fit.
Entry of Action.
75.-(1.) Upon the application of any person desirous of bringing an action, the Registrar shall enter, in a book to be kept for the purpose, the names, descriptions and places of residence of the parties, and address for service of the plaintiff.
(2.) Each action shall be numbered consecutively in every year. (3) The Registrar shall issue all summonses (in duplicate) forth-
with after the actions are entered.
76. When a person under the age of 21 years desires to commence an action (other than for wages, or piece-work, or for work as a servant) he must secure the attendence of a next friend" before the Registrar at the time of entering the action, who shall undertake (by signing a Memorandum to that effect, or, if a foreigner, by complying with the requirements of Article 151 (2) of the Principal Order) to be responsible for costs.
On entering into this undertaking, the "next friend" becomes liable in the same manner and to the same extent as if he were a plaintiff, and the action shall proceed in the name of the infant "by X. Y., his next friend," and, in the event of the infant becoming liable for costs, proceedings may, in default of payment, be taken for the recovery of the amount against the "next friend."
77.-When an action is entered by a married woman in which her husband is not joined she shall state the name, and, as far as she can, the address and description of her husband: and, except in those cases to which the Married Women's Property Act, 1882, applies, shall, unless the Court shall otherwise order, also procure the attendance of a "next friend," who shall give the undertaking and incur all the liability provid ed in the case of an infaut plaintiff in the last preceding Rule.
78. Where an action is commenced in a Provincial Court, and in- volves an amount in dispute of more than 500., or appears to involve difficult questions of law, the Court shall forthwith report the commence- ment and nature of such action to the Supreme Court.
Parties.
79.--(1.) All persons may be joined as plaintiffs in whom the right to any relief claimed is alleged to exist, whether jointly, severally, or in the alternative, and judgment may be given in favour of one or more of the plaintiffs for such relief as he or they may be found entitled to without any amendment,
(2.) All persons may be joined as defendants against whom any relief is sought, whether jointly, severally, or in the alternative, and judgment may be given against one or more of the defendants, according to their respective liabilities, without any amendment.
1
IN CHINA AND COREA
399
(3.) Trustees, executors, and administrators may sue and be sued on Trustees, &c. behalf of or as representing the property or estate in which they are so interested without joining any of the persons beneficially interested in the trust or estate, and shall be considered as representing such persons ; but the Court may at any stage of the proceedings order such persons to be made parties either in addition to or instead of the previously existing parties.
same interest.
80. Where many persons have the same interest in one action, one Persons having or more of such persons may sue or be sued on behalf of all persons so interested.
of parties.
81. No action shall be defeated by reason of the mis-joinder or non- Non-joinder joinder of parties, and the Court may in any case either (a) deal with the mis jouder issues raised so far as regards the rights and interests of the parties before it; or (b) strike out the names of parties improperly joined; or (e), with a view to effectually settling all questions involved, add parties, whether as plaintiffs or defendants.
new defendant,
82. Where a defendant is added or substituted the plaintiff shall, Service on unless otherwise ordered by the Court, take ont an amended writ of summons and file a copy thereof, and shall serve such writ upon the new defendant in the same manner as if he were an original defendant, but the proceedings as against such new defendant shall be deemed to have commenced only with the service of such writ.
83.-(1.) An infant may sue as plaintiff by his next friend, and may lufauts, defend by his guardian appointed for that purpose,
married women, and
(2.) A married women may sue and be sued as provided by the lunatică, Married Women's Property Act, 1882.
(3) A person of unsound mind may sue as plaintiff by his committee or next friend, and may defend by his committee or guardian appointed. for that purpose.
ipient deten.
84. Every infant defendant served with a summons in an action Guardian for shall appear at the hearing by a guardian ad litem in all cases in which ៥៥. the appointment of special guardian is not provided for. An order for the appointment of such guardian is nunecessary; but the guardian must file a consent in writing to act as guardian, and the Court may require to be satisfied by affidavit or otherwise that he is a fit and proper person to act as guardian.
85. Before the name of any person is used in any action as next Next friend. friend of any infant or other party, such person shall sign a written consent to act as next friend, which consent shall be filed in the Court.
sent of next
86. Any consent as to the mode of taking evidence or to any other Effect of con. procedure, given with the consent of the Court by a next friend, guardian, friend, &c. committee, or other person acting on behalf of a party under disability, shall be of the same effect as if the party were under no disability and had given such consent.
interested.
87. Where any class of persons shall be interested in an action the Class of person Court, if having regard to the nature and extent of the interest of such persons it appears expedient on account of the difficulty of ascertaining such persons or in order to save expense, may appoint one or more persons to represent the class, and the judgment of the Court shall be binding upon the persons so represented.
Administra. tion action
88. An action for administration of an estate or for the execution of
bay
be brought against any one legatee, next of kin, or cestui against
trusts
representative.
judgment or
que trust.
89. Where, in an action for administration or the execution of the Service of trusts of any instrument, a judgment or order has been made affecting order on the rights or interests of persons not parties to the action, the Court may interested,
persons
400
Third party procedure. Form 48.
Actious by and against firms.
Form 47.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
direct that any persons whose rights or interests are so affected shall be served with notice of the judgment or order; and after such notice such persons shall be bound by the proceedings in the same manner as if they had been originally parties, and shall be at liberty to attend the proceed- ings under the judgment or order. Any person so served may within one month after such service apply to the Court to discharge, vary, or add to the judgment or order.
90.-(1.) When a defendant claims to be entitled to contribution or indemnity against any person not a party to the action, he may at any time before the hearing apply to th: Court for leave to serve such person with a summons requiring him to appear before the Court to show cause why he should not be made a party, and also with a copy of the original summons and statement of claim (if any).
(2.) On grauting such leave the Court may make such order for the postponement of the trial and for notifying the same to the plaintiff as it thinks fit.
(3.) If the third party does not appear pursuant to the summous, or fails to show cause, the Court may give such directions as it thinks fit for the trial of the question as to the hability of the third party, either at or after the trial of the action, and may by such directions give leave to the third party to defend the action or appear and take part at the hearing in such manner as may appear to be just or otherwise order in what manner the liability of the third party is to be determined.
(4.) The Court may decide all questions of costs as between a third party and the other parties to the action, and may order any one or more to pay the costs of any other or give such directions as to costs as the justice of the case may require.
(5.) Where a defendant claims to be entitled to contribution or indemnity against any other defendant to the action, the same procedure, as nearly as may be, shall be adopted for the determination of such questions as in the case of third parties.
91(1.) Any two or more persons claiming or being liable as co- partners, and carrying on business within China or Corea, may sue or be sued in the name of the firms whereof they were partners at the time of the acerning of the cause of action.
(2.) When au action is brought in the name of a firm, and the defendant desires to kuow the names of the persons who are co-partners in the firm, he may give notice in writing to the plaintiff within three days after service of the summons that he requires such names, and the plaintiff shall forthwith send the names and addresses of the co-partners to the defendant and to the Registrar. The Court may at any time order the plaintiff to give to the defendant the names of the co-partners without such notice.
(8.) If, owing to the plaintiff not giving the names of the co- partners before entering the action, or from any delay in furnishing them after the notice above-mentioned, the defendant is prevented or unduly delayed in making his defence, the Court may adjourn the hearing upon such terms as it may think fit,
(4.) The Court may, on the application of a plaintiff, require a defendant firm to give to the plaintiff the names of the co-partners of the defendant firm.
(5.) The names of partners to be given under this rule are the names
of the partners in the firm at the time of the accruing of the cause of action.
(6.) Notwithstanding the disclosure of partners' names under this rule, all subsequent proceedings in the action shall be in the name of the firm.
IN CHINA AND COREA
92.-(1.) The Court may admit a person to sue or defend as a Paupers, pauper on his poverty being proved; when he is plaintiff he must show that he has a proper case for relief.
(2.) The Court may by order assign a legal practitioner to appear on behalf of such pauper, and such legal practitioner is not entitled to refuse his services unless he satisfies the Court of some good reason for refusing.
(3.) If any such pauper gives or agrees to give any fee, profit, or reward for the conduct of his business in Court, he shall be guilty of a contempt of Court, and shall also be forthwith dispaupered, and shall not be afterwards admitted to sue or defend as a pauper in the same proceed- ings or action.
(4.) A person admitted as a pauper may be dispaupered by order of the Court, on its being proved that he was not when admitted, or no longer is, of sufficient poverty, or that he is abusing his privilego by vexatious proceedings.
Joinder of Causes of Action.
401
93. A plaintiff may unite in the same action several causes of action Several causes without leave of the Court, except in the following case, in which leave of tinmay
be joined. the Court is required, viz., the joinder of claims by a trustee or assignee in bankruptcy with any claim by him in another capacity.
94.-(1.) Claims by or against husband and wife may be joined with Claims by or claims by or agaiust either of them separately.
gainst
separate
(2.) Claims by or against an executor or administrator as such may persons. be joined with claims by or against him personally, if the last-mentioned claims are alleged to arise with reference to the estate in respect of which he sues or is sued as executor or administrator.
(3.) Claims by plaintiffs jointly may be joined with claims by them,
or any of them separately, against the same defendant.
ordered,
95. If at any time it appears to the Court that the causes of action Separate trials or claims joined in any action cannot couveniently be tried and disposed may be of together, it may order separate trials or may exclude any such cause of action or claim, and may order the proceedings to be amended accord- ingly, and may make such order as to costs as may be just.
Writ of Summons and Procedure.
SLOWODA,
96. Every action shall be commenced by a writ of summons, the Form of formal parts of which shall be filled up in duplicate by the Registrar at Form 41. the time of entering the action. Every summons, except where other- wise specially provided, shall bear date on the day of issue, and shall be tested in the name of the member of the Court by which it is issued.
of claim,
97. Every writ of summons shall be indorsed with a statement Indarrement sufficient to give notice of the nature of the claim or of the relief or remedy required in the action, and, when damages are claimed, with a statement of the amount of such damages. Such indorsement shall be made and signed by one of the persons mentioned in Article 121 (1) of the Principal Order.
Capacity of
plaintiff and
iefendant to
98. If a plaintiff sues or a defendant is sued in a representative capacity, the indorsement shall show in what capacity the plaintiff or be stated. defendant sues or is sued.
Form 42,
99. Where a plaintiff suing out a writ of summons, either alone or plaintiff out of jointly with any other person, is ordinarily resident out of the particular jurisdiction. jurisdiction (or in the case of an action in the Supreme Court, out of the district of the Consulate of Shanghai), he shall file in the Court, at or
402
Special indorsement.
Summary
judgment on specially
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
before the issue of the summons, a written statement of a fit place within the particular jurisdiction (or within such district as aforesaid), where notices and other papers issuing from the Court may be served on him.
He shall also give security for costs by deposit of a sum not exceed- ing 50%, or by bond in a penal sum not exceeding 1007.
The Court may at any time, either of its own motion or on the application of any defendant, order the plaintiff to give further or better security to the amount aforesaid for costs, and may direct proceedings to be stayed in the meanwhile.
100.--(1.) In all actions where the plaintiff seeks only to recover a debt or liquidated demand in money payable by the defendant with or without interest, arising-
(a.) Upon a contract expressed or implied (as, for instance, on a bill of exchange, promissory note or cheque, or other simple contract debt); or
(b.) On a bond or contract under seal for payment of a liquidated amount of money; or
(c.) On a Statute where the sum sought to be recovered is a fixed sum of money, or in the nature of a debt other than a penalty; or
(d.) Ou a guaranty, whether under seal or not, where the claim against the principal is in respect of a debt or liquidated demand only; or
(e.) On a trust;
he may, besides stating the nature of the claim, state the amount claimed for debt or in respect of such demand and for costs respectively, and shall further state that upon payment thereof within four days after service further proceedings will be stayed.
(2.) The defendant may notwithstanding such payment have the costs taxed, and if more than one-sixth shall be disallowed the plaintiff shall pay the costs of taxation.
101. Where the plaintiff proceeds under Rule 100, he may, on the return day, and whether the defendant appears or not, on affidavit made indorsed writ. by himself or by any other person who can swear positively to the facts verifying the cause of action and the amount claimed, and stating that in his belief there is no defence to the action, apply to the Court for final judgment for the amount indorsed upon the writ of summons, together with interest, if any, and costs. The Court may thereupon, unless the defendant shall by affidavit or by viva voce evidence on oath satisfy the Court that he has a good defence to the action on the merits, or disclose such facts as may be deemed sufficient to entitle him to defend, give final judgment for the plaintiff accordingly.
In cases of account.
Where
assignee sues.
Form 42.
Where more
that one
102. In all cases where the plaintiff in the first instance desires to have an account taken, the indorsement shall contain a claim that such account be taken.
103. In all cases where the assignee of any debt or other legal chose in action sues, he shall state in the indorsement the name and description of the assignor.
104. Where the plaintiff seeks to obtain redress upon more than one cause of action, cause of action or claim, he shall state in the indorsement the grounds of each claim separately, and shall also state separately the redress he claims in respect of each,
Duration of summung,
105.-(1.) An original summons shall not be in force for more than twelve months from the day of its date (including that day).
(2.) If any defendant named therein is not served therewith, the plaintiff may, before the end of the twelve months, apply to the Court for renewal thereof.
(3.) The Court, if satisfied that reasonable efforts have been made
IN CHINA AND COREA
to serve the defendant, or for other good reason, may order that the summons be renewed for six months from the date of renewal, and 50, from time to time, during the currency of the renewed summons.
(4.) The summons shall be renewed by being resealed with the seal of the Court, and a note being made thereon by the Registrar, stating the renewal and the date thereof.
(5.) A summons so renewed shall remain in force and be available to prevent the operation of any statute of limitation, and for all other purposes, as from the date of the original summons.
(6.) The production of a summons purporting to be so renewed shall be sufficient evidence of the renewal and of the commencement of the action, as of the date of the original summons, for all purposes.
may, if
non-prosecu- Lion.
403
106. If an action is not proceeded with and disposed of within Dismissal for twelve months from service of the original summons, the Court it thanks fit, without application by any party, order the same to be dismissed for failure to proceed.
Service.
107. Every summons shall be returnable at a Court to be held not less than seven clear days after the service.
But a summons may be issued returnable at any shorter period on the production to the Registrar of an affidavit by the plaintiff or some ouc aware of the fact that the defendant is about to remove ont of the jurisdiction of the Court, and the Court may, on the return day, on the proof of the service of the writ of summons, proceed with the trial of the action.
When returnable.
108.-(1.) With the original summons the Registrar shall issue a Mode of copy for service, which shall also bear the seal of the Court.
(2.) Service of a summons shall be made by an officer of the Court, unless in any case the Court thinks fit otherwise to direct.
(3.) Service shall not be made except under an order of the Court indorsed on or subscribed or annexed to the summons, which order is part of the summons to be served.
(4) Except as otherwise provided in these Rules, and unless the Court thinks it just and expedient otherwise to direct, service shall be personal, that is, the summons shall be delivered to the person to be served himself.
(5.) An order for service may be varied from time to time with respect to the mode of service directed by the order.
(6.) Service not required to be personal shall be made before 5 o'clock in the evening; if made after that hour it shall be considered as made on the following day, and if after that hour on Saturday as made on the following Monday.
(7) Service shall not be made on Sunday, Christmas Day or Good Friday.
(8.) Ordinarily service shall not be made out of the particular jurisdiction, except under an order for that purpose made by the Court within whose jurisdiction service is to be made, which order may be made on the request of the Court issuing the summons.
(9.) Where, however, the urgency or other peculiar circumstances of the case appear to any Court so to require (for reasons recorded in the Minutes), the Court may order that service be made out of its particular jurisdiction.
109. When the summons is addressed to:- 1. An infant-service shall be effected by delivering the summons to his father or guardian, or, if none, to the person with whom he
service.
Service on repre-cutatives and others.
404
When service prevented.
Substituted service.
Forms 43-45,
Where service has not beei personal.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
resides, or under whose care he is. But the Court may order the service on the infant himself shall be good service.
2. A lunatic service shall be effected by delivering the summons to his committee, if he has one, or, if not, to the person with whom he resides or under whose care he is.
3. Partners sued in the name of their firm-service shall be effected either upon any one or more of the partners, or by delivering the sum mons to any person at the principal place of business of the partnership, who, at the time of the service, apparently has the control or management of the partnership business there; but if the partnership has to the knowledge of the plaintiff been dissolved before the commencement of the action, service must be effected upon every person within the juris- diction sought to be made liable.
4. A person living or serving on board any ship, or vessel, or hulk- service shall be effected by delivering the summons to any person on board, who, at the time of service, is apparently in charge of the ship, vessel, or hulk.
5. A prisoner in gaol-service shall be effected by delivering the summons to the Governor, or any person appearing to be head officer in charge.
6. A corporation-service shall be effected by delivering the sum- mons to a secretary or clerk of the defendants within the ordinary juris- diction of the Court.
110(1.) When a defendant keeps his house or place of dwelling or of business closed in order to prevent the service of the summons, it shall be sufficient service to affix the summons on the door of the house. or place of dwelling or of business.
(2.) When the Marshal is prevented by the violence or threats of the defendant, or of any other persons in concert with him, from person- ally serving the summons, it shall be sufficient service to leave the sum- mons as near to the defendant as practicable.
111. Where it appears to the Court (either after or without an attempt at personal service) that for any reason personal service cannot be conveniently effected, the Court may order that service be effected, either--
(a.) By delivery of the summons to some adult inmate at the usual or last known place of abode or business of the person to be served: or
(b.) By delivery thereof to some person being an agent of the person to be served or to some other person within the jurisdiction of the Court on its being proved that there is reasonable probability that the document will, through that agent or other person, come to the knowledge of the person to be served: or
(c.) By advertisement in such newspaper as the Court may order: or (d.) By notice put up at the Court or at some other place of public resort within the jurisdiction of the Court.
Provided that where the person to be served is not within the limits of the Principal Order, an order under this Rule shall not be made by a Provincial Court, except such order as is authorized by paragraph (b).
112. When the summons, though not served personally, has been delivered at the house or place of dwelling or business of the defendant, and he does not appear in person or by his legal practitioner or agent on the return day, the action may proceed, if the Court is satisfied on the
IN CHINA AND COREA
evidence before it that the service has come to the knowledge of the de- fendant before the return day, but no such evidence shall be necessary in the cases mentioned in Rules Nos. 109 (sections 4, 5, and 6) and 110.
pursuance of
113. Whenever, by any Statute, provision is made for service of any Service in summons or other process upon any corporation, society, fellowship, or gu any body or number of persons, whether corporate or otherwise, the sum- mons may be served in the manner provided.
sumaczona laas
405
114. When a summons has been served in one of the modes before where defen- mentioned, but is proved to have come to the knowledge of the defendant dant knows of less than five clear days before the return day, the action may, at the than five clear discretion of the Court, proceed or be adjourned, whether the defendant days bedure appears or not.
return day.
115. The foregoing Rules as to the mode, but not those as to the Service of time of service of summonses to appear to an action, shall apply to the minones
generally, mode of service of all summonses or other process whatsoever, except where otherwise directed by Statute or by these Rules.
116. No summons shall be renewed if the non-service has been caused Renewal of by the fact of the defendant having removed before the entry of the summons. action from the aldress given, or of the plaintiff having given a wrong or insufficient address; but in every such case a fresli action must be entered and a new summons issued.
Special Defences.
of others,
117. Where a plaintiff sues on behalf of others having the same in- Where plaintiff terest, the defendant may avail himself of any defence in respect of each sues on behalf of the persons on whose behalf the plaintiff is suing, which he would have had had such person been plaintiff.
dant desires to
others.
118.(1.) When a defendant desires to defend on behalf of others Where defen- having the same interest, he shall, within seven clear days of the service defend on of the summons, apply to the Court for leave so to defend, and shall file behalf of an affidavit of the facts on which he relies to obtain such leave, together with the names, addresses, and occupations of such persons, and the Court may thereupon make an order for the defendant so to defend, and shall add the names to that of the defendant, and a copy of the order shall be personally served on each of such persons, and notice sent to the plaintiff.
(2.) The plaintiff, or any of the persons whose names have been so added, may at the trial object to the defendant defending on behalf of the persons included in the order, and the Court may, if it thinks fit, strike the name of all or any of such persons out of the proceedings, and order the defendant to pay such costs as it shall think fit.
special defence. Form 46.
119.-(1.) When the defendant intends to rely upon any of the Notice of grounds of defence hereinafter mentioned, or upon any counterclaim,
he sball file a notice stating therein his name and address together with a concise statement of such grounds two days before the return day of the summons; the Registrar shall thereupon send a copy of such notice and particulars to the plaintiff.
(2.) If this rule has not been complied with, and the plaintiff docs not consent at the hearing to allow the defendant to avail himself of the special defence, the Court may adjourn the trial on such terms as it may think fit to enable the defendant to give the required notice.
400
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(3.) The notice to be given by the defendant under this Rule shall ontain particulars as stated below:-
No.
Nature of Special Defence.
Particulars required in the Notice.
Counter claim against Particulars of counter-claim.
plaintiff's claim
Counter-claim. 1
Infancy.
2 Infancy
+
Coverture.
Statute of limitations,
3 Coverture
4 Statute of Limitations
Relcase.
5
Statutory defence.
Release under any Statute relating to bankrupts or for the relief of insolvent debtors
6 Statutory defence in an
action of tort
Tender.
7
Tender
Equitable estate.
Pleadings.
Particulars in certain cases
8 Any equitable estate, or right of relief on any equitable ground
The place and date of birth as far as he
is able.
The place and date of marriage, together with the Christian and surname of her husband, and his address and description so far as known.
The date from which he relies that the
Statute begins to run.
The date of his certificate, discharge, or final order, and the Court by which such certificate, discharge, or final order was grantede omade.
The year, chapter, and section of the Statute on which he relies, or the short title thereof.
Amount of tender, and in respect of
what portion of the claim.
NOTE. This defence is not avail. able unless at the time of filing the notice the defendant pays into Court (which may be without costs) the amount alleged to have been tendered,
The circumstances which give rise to
such defence,
defence, and each of the grounds of equitable defence set forth separately.
Pleadings and Issues.
120. There shall ordinarily be no written pleadings; but the Court may at any time, if it thinks fit, order the plaintiff to put in a written statement of his claim, or a defendant to put in a written statement of his defence.
12. In all cases in which the party pleading relies on any misre presentation, fraud, breach of trust, wilful, or undue influence, par ticulars thereof shall be delivered to the other side before the return day, or such other day as the Court may fix.
11
IN CHINA AND COREA
122-(1.) On the return day or on the day when the parties are first Order for
pleadings or before the Court, on the application of either party or of its own motion, particulars.
make an order for
may
(a.) Pleadings;
(b.) Particulars of the plaintiff's claim or of the defendant's counter- claim or special defence raised under Rule 119.
(2.) Either party may at any time apply by motion to the Court for an order for pleadings or particulars.
(3.) When the Court makes an order for pleadings or particulars, then, unless the Court otherwise order, the pleadings or particulars which in ordinary course should be first delivered shall be delivered within fifteen days of the making of the order, and subsequent pleadings or particulars within fifteen days of the delivery to the opposite party of the previous pleadings or particulars.
(4) Copies of pleadings or particulars, with a statement of the day on which they were delivered to the opposite party, shall be forthwith filed.
407
123. When, in any action, it appears to the Court that the issues of settlement of fact in dispute are not sufficiently defined, the parties may be directed to issues. prepare issues, and such issues shall, if the parties differ, be settled by the Court.
Interlocutory and Interim Orders and Proceedings.
124. When any party desires before trial an order upon any of the matters following, viz.:-
(1.) For the production of any deed;
Mode of application for interlocu- tory and
(2.) To secure the possession, detention, or preservation of any interim order. property;
(3.) To obtain security from any person for any moneys in his possession, or to enforce the payment into Court or deposit thereof pend- ing litigation;
(4) The sale of any goods, wares, or merchandize which may be of a perishable nature, or which the Court may think desirable to be sold at once, and the payment of the price thereof into Court;
(5.) The inspection or taking samples of any goods, wares, or merchandize;
(6) For measuring, weighing, or making any experiment upon any goods, wares, or merchandize by some person named in the order;
(7.) For surveying, measuring, or making any plan, model, level, or section of any building or place;
(8.) For a view of any premises that may be in dispute;
(9.) The taking of any accounts, or making any inquiries, or for any other interlocutory or interim order or proceeding;
he may file an application for such order, and apply ea parte (ie. with- out notice to the other side) to the Court, with affidavits showing the facts ren lering such order immediately necessary, and upon this applica- tion the Court may either make an order absolute in the first instance, or make an order to become absolute at any period to be named by the Court, unless before that period cause is shown to the contrary, or may make such other order, or give such other directions in the matter as the Court inay think fit, and may order immediate execution. But affidavits are not necessary in the first instance unless the Court so orders.
than is
125. Where an action is brought to recover, or a defendant in his Where specific defence seeks to recover by way of counter-claim, specific property other properly other than land, and the party from whom it is claimed does not dispute the sought to be title of the claimant, but claims to retain the property by virtue of a lien recovered.
408
Draft order to be settled by Court.
Orders under Rule 124, sections 6, 0, and 7.
Orders under Rule 124, section 7.
scontinu- ance of action.
form 49.
Disclaimer, admission, and other state- ments by defendant.
Form 50.
Admission of Truth of plain- til's late. mcot.
orm 51.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
or otherwise as security for any sums of money, the Court, upon being satisfied by affidavit or otherwise of the existence of such lien or security, may order that the claimant shall be at liberty to pay into Court, to abide the event of the action, the amount of money in respect of which the lien or security is claimed, and such further sum (if any) for interest and costs as the Court shall direct, and that upon such payment being made into Court the property shall be given up to the party claiming it.
126. The drafts of all orders under the two preceeding Rules shall be prepared beforeband by the party applying, and if the Court approves of the application it shall settle and sign the draft, which shall be delivered by the applicant to the Registrar, who shall draw up the order in conformity with the draft, and seal and file same, and issue a copy under the seal of the Court to the Marshal for service.
Where from any cause the party is unable to prepare the draft order, it shall be prepared by the Court.
127. When orders under sections 5, 6, and 7 of Rule 124 specify the performance of an act by a person named in the order, they may include an order for the Registrar, or some other person named in the order, to examine upon oath and take the deposition of the person first named as to the measure, weight, or inspection, or the correctness of the survey, or the result of the experiment, or the fairness of the samples, or the accuracy of the plau or model, and such order may also empower any or either party to give the deposition so taken in evidence upon any trial or proceeding.
128. An order under Rule 124, section 7, may also give authority to a person to be named in the order to enter, with such persous as may le necessary for his assistance, upon any lands or tenements to be described in the order in the possession of any party to the action for the purpose of executing the order.
Discontinuance and Disclaimer.
129. A plaintiff who desires to discontinue the action or matter against all or any of the parties thereto shall give written notice to the Registrar and to the parties as to whom he wishes to discontinue the action or matter, and thereupon the party may apply ex parte for an order against the plaintiff for the costs incurred before the receipt of the notice and of attending to obtain the order.
180. A defendant may file a statement-
(1) Disclaiming any interest in the subject-matter of the action; (2.) Admitting or denying any of lie statements in plaintiff's
particulars;
(3.) Raising any question of law in any such statement without
admitting its truth;
(4.) Sating concisely any new fact or document upon which he intends to rely as a defence or to bring to the notice of the Court; and a copy thereof shall be transmitted by the Rigistrar to the plaintiff.
The fact of a defendant having or not having availed himself of this Rule shall be taken into account in the consideration of the question of costs.
Admissions.
131. When a defendant desires to admit the truth of the statement in the plaintiff's particulars and to submit to the judgment of the Court thereon, he may, at any time before the return day, sign an admission in the presence of the Registrar, and such admission shall be filed at least
IN CHINA AND COREA
two clear days before the return day, and the Registrar shall transmit a copy thereof to the plaintiff or his legal practitioner.
Unless by order of the Court, the plaintiff shall not be allowed any costs incurred in relation to the proof of the matter so admitted, after the service upon him of such admission.
adm't docu-
132. Either party may call upon the other party to admit any Notice to document saving all just exceptions; and if the other party refuses or ments. neglects to admit after this notice he shall pay the costs of proving the Fona 59. document in any event unless the Court certifies that the refusal to admit. was reasonable. And no costs of proving any document shall be allowed unless such notice be given, except in cases where the omission to give the notice is, in the opinion of the taxing officer, a saving of expense.
admit facts.
133.-(1.) Any party may give notice to another party by his plead. Notice to ing, or otherwise in writing, that he admits the truth of the whole or any part of the case of that other party.
(2.) Any party may, by notice in writing, at any time not less than Form 60. three clear days before the hearing, call on any other party to admit for
the
purpose of the action or matter only any specific fact mentioned in the notice. In case the other party refuses or neglects to admit the fact within three days, or such further time as the Court may allow, he shall pay the costs of proving the fact in any event, unless at the bearing the Court certify that the refusal was reasonable or otherwise order.
409
134. At any stage of an action or matter where admissions of facts Judgment on have been made any party may apply to the Court for such judgment or admissions. order as upon such admissions he may be entitled to, without waiting for the determination of any other question between the parties. And the Court, upon such application, may make such order or give such judgment as it may think fit.
duen docu-
135. Any party may, by notice in writing, at any reasonable time Notice to pro before the trial of an action or matter, call upon any other party to pro- ments, duce any document at the trial, and if after receipt of such notice the Form 61. other party does not produce the document required, the party requiring it may, on proof of service of the notice and that the document is in the possession of the other party, give secondary evidence respecting it.
Payment into Court.
136.-(1.) When a defendant desires to pay money into Court on an Payment into ordinary summons, except under a defence of tender, he shall do so at url be re
judgment; least two clear days before the return day with Court fees proportionate to how made. the amount paid in and the legal practitioner's costs, if any, and the Registrar shall immediately send to the plaintiff notice thereof.
(2.) When such payment is made less than two clear days before the return day or without the costs, the Registrar shall in the same way send notice to the plaintiff, but the Court may order the defendant to pay such fees and costs as the plaintiff shall have incurred in issuing the summons, pr paring for trial and attending the Court, but no hearing fee shall be charged.
Form 52.
(3) If the plaintiff elects to accept the money paid into Court in Form 58. full satisfaction of his claim including costs, and gives the Registrar and defendant notice before the return day, within reasonable time after the payment, the action shall abate and the plaintiff shall not be liable to further costs; but if he does not give such notice the action may proceed. (4.) When a defendant pays into Court any sum admitted by him to be due after deducting any amount claimed by him as a counter-claim, he shall pay therewith Court fees proportionate to the total amount of the sma
paid in and the sum claimed as counter-claim.
12
410
Paying modey into Court and searches,
Interroga- tories,
Form 64,
Answer to in- terrogatories.
Form 55.
Form 56.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(5.) When a defendant pays into Court in part payment of the amount claimed, or under the defence of tender, and the plaintiff does not accept the sum paid in satisfaction of the action, the money shall not be paid out until after the judgment, and then, if any costs have been awarded to the defendant, the amount of such costs shall be deduct- ed from the amount paid in and delivered to the defendant.
137. (1.) Money to be paid into Court under an order of the Court, or otherwise, may be so paid during office bours, on every day on which the office is open.
(2.) Whenever money is paid into or deposited in Court, whether before or after judgment, an acknowledgment in print or in writing, signed by the proper officer, of such payment or deposit shall be given to the person by whom the money is paid or deposited.
(3.) Searches may be made and the money to which suitors are entitled shall be paid out on demand on two days at least in each week, such days to be fixed by the Court and to be printed or written on the
summons.
(4.) No officer of the Court shall on account of suitors, sign the ledger or any other book, or receive money, or otherwise act as an agent.
Discovery and Inspection.
138. (1.) In any action either party may, by leave of the Court, deliver interrogatories in writing for the examination of the opposite parties, or any one or more of such parties, in which latter case they shall have a note at the foot stating which of the interrogatories each person required to answer.
(2.) Neither party shall deliver more than one set of interrogatories to the same party without an order of the Court.
(3.) No interrogatory which does not relate to any matter in question. in the action or matter shall be allowed,
(4.) On an application for leave to deliver interrogatories the particular interrogaties proposed to be delivered shall be be submitted to the Court. In deciding upon such application the Court shall take into account any offer which may be made by the party sought to be inter- rogated to deliver particulars, or to make admissions, or to produce documents, and leave shall be given to deliver only such interrogatories as seem necessary.
(5.) When the party sought to be interrogated is a company, partner- ship, or other body of persons, the name of the officer, member, or per son by whom it is proposed that the interrogatories shall be answered must be inserted in the interrogatories, and an order allowing the inter rogatories may be made accordingly.
(6.) Any interrogatories may be set aside on the ground that they are unreasonable or vexatious, or struck out on the ground that they are prolix, oppressive, unnecessary or scandalous.
139. (1.) Interrogatories shall be answered by affidavit within eight days, or such time as the Court nay allow.
(2.) Any objection to answering any interrogatory, on the ground that it is scandalous or irrelevant, or not bona fide for the purpose of the action or matter, or on any other ground, may be taken in the affidavit in answer.
(3.) If any person interrogated omits to answer, or answers in- sufficiently, the party interrogating may apply to the Court for an order requiring him to answer or to answer further, as the case may be.
(4.) Such answer or further answer may be either by atidavit or in vivá voce examination, as the Court shall direct.
IN CHINA AND COREA
documents.
Form 57.
140.-(1.) Any party may, without affiavit, apply to the Court for Discovery of an order directing any other party to an action or matter to make dis- covery on oath of the documents which are or have been in his possession or power relating to auy matter in question. On the hearing of the application the Court may adjourn or refuse the same, if it is satisfied that this discovery is unnecessary, or not necessary at that stage of the cause or matter, or make such order either generally or limited to certain classes of documents as may in its discretion be thought fit,
(2.) The affidavit to be made by a party against whom such an order Form 59. of discovery has been made shall specify which (if any) of the documents he objects to produce and the grounds for his objection.
(3.) At any time during the pendency of an action or matter the Court may order the production on oath, by any party thereto, of such of the documents in his possession or power relating to any matter in ques- tion in the action or matter as the Court may think right, and may deal with such documents, if produced, in such manner as shall appear just.
to order.
141.-(1.) If any party fails to comply with an order to answer Disobedience interrogatories or for discovery or inspection of documents, he shall be liable to attachment under Rule 176.
liable to have his action defendant, to be placed in And the party interrogat-
(2.) He shall also, if a plaintiff, be dismissed for want of prosecution, and if a the same position as if he had not defended. ing may apply to the Court for an order to that ellect, and the order may be made accordingly.
411
ur portions of
142. Any one or more of the answers, or any part of an answer, to Single apawers, interrogatories, may be used by the opposite party in evidence without answers, may putting in the others or the whole of the answer. But in any case the be used. Court may look at the whole of the answers, and may direct others to be put in, if it be of opinion that any of them are so connected with those already put in that they should not be left out.
Witnesses.
witnesses.
143.-(1) Summonses to witnesses may be issued by the Registrar Summonses to without leave of the Court, and may, by leave of the Court, be issued in Forms 62 and 63. blank and served by the party applying for them or his legal practitioner,
but only one name shall be inserted in each summions.
(2.) It shall be sufficient if a summons to a witness be served a reasonable time before the return day.
taken cira core,
144. Except where otherwise provided by the Principal Order or Evidence to he these Rules, the evidence of witnesses shall be taken viva voce on oath, except where Where evidence is permitted to be taken by affidavit, such evidence may be taken viva voce in oath if the Court shall so direct.
145.-(1.) When a witness served with a summons to produce does not at the trial produce the document required, the Court, upon admission or proof of the service of the summons within a reasonable time, and that the documents are in the possession or power or under the control of the witness, and that they relate to the matter then pending before the Court, may make an order for their production by the witness, and may deal with them when produced and with all costs occasioned by their · non-production as may seem just.
(2) Nothing in this Rule shall prevent the Court form receiving secondary evidence, where admissible, of any document the production of which has been required as above.
utiler wise provided,
here doco.
nents not produced order or production Just be win de.
Ferm 64.
146. When any document is produced to the Court from proper Documents custody, it shall be read without further proof if no objection be taken proper stredy and if it appears genuine; if the admission of any document so produced to be read,
12*
custody
412
Notice of desire to use affidavit.
Form 65.
Evidence by
deposition or de bene case,
Form 66.
Aldavite; evidence of
Persons using them.
Notice to be
given of change of party.
Form 67.
Form 68.
Abatement.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
be objected to, the Court may adjourn the hearing for the proof of the document, and the party objecting shall pay the costs caused by the objection in case the document shall be afterwards proved, unless the Court shall otherwise order.
147. When a party desires to use at the trial an affidavit by any particular witness or regarding any particular facts, he may, five clear days before the hearing, give a notice, with a copy of the affidavit annexed, to the party against whom the affidavit is to be used, and unless the last-named party sball, within two clear days, give notice to the other party that he objects to the use of such affidavit, he shall be taken to have consented to the use of it, unless the Court otherwise order.
But the Court may allow an affidavit to be used in any case.
148(1.) Whenever it shall be made to appear to the Court upon the affidavit of any party to an action or matter, or of any credible person, that it is likely that any witness or person by reason of great age and infirmity, illness, or any other sufficient cause may not be able to appear to give evilence at the trial, the Court may make an order, notice of which shall be served on the other side, for the examination on oath of such witness or person by the Court at any place, and may empower any party to the action or matter to give the deposition so taken in evi- dence on such terms, if any, as the Court may direct.
(2.) Such deposition shall not be used at the trial if it shall then be made to appear to the Court that the witness is able to appear and be examined vivá voce.
149. All affidavits and depositions shall he read as the evidence of the person by whom they are used.
Change of Parties,
The
150.-(1.) When by reason of any event occurring after the commencement of any action or matter, there shall be any assignment, creation, or transfer of the interest, estate, or title of any plaintiff before judgment, the person to or upon whom the interest estate, or title bas come may give notice of the fact to the Registrar, with his name and address, together with an affidavit of the truth of the fact. Registrar shall at once cause a copy of the notice to be served upon the defendant in the action or matter, and a further notice stating that unless by a certain date he appears and shows cause against it the person to or upon whom the interest, cslate, or title has come will be substituted for or made ajoint plaintiff with the original plaintiff.
(2.) In the same manner with regard to any defendant such defendant may give a similar notice to the Registrar, who shall take the like proceedings, and a defendant may be substituted or added, as the case may be, in the same manner as in the case of the substitution or addition of a plaintiff.
(3.) When a plaintiff or defendant is substituted or added under this Rule the title of the action shall be altered, and all subsequent proceedings carried on under the altered title.
151. No action or matter shall abate on account of the marriage, death, or bankruptcy of any of the parties, if the cause of action survives or continues, and no action or mater shall become defective on account of the assignment, creation, or transfer of any estate or title while the action or matter is proceeding. And whether the cause of action survives or not, there shall be no abatement if either party die between the verdict or the finding of the issues of fact and the judgment may cutered in such case notwithstanding the death.
be
IN CHINA AND COREA
of interest.
413
152. When by reason of marriage, death, or bankruptcy, or any Power to add parties owing other event occurring after the commencement of an action and causing to change or a change or transmission of interest or liability, or by reason of any transmi sien person coming into existence after such commencement, it becomes necessary or desirable that any person not already a party should be made a party, the Court may où application make au order that the action shall be carried on between tlie continuing parties and the new party or parties.
poranis not
153(1.) By leave of the Court, execution on any judgment may Execution by issue to any person not a party to the action, if such person proves his and est title to the benefit of the judgment. The Registrar shall substitute the parties. name of such person for that of the original plaintiff with a statement of his title, and shall give notice of having done so to the defendant, and execution shall not issue upon the judgment until three clear days after the service of the notice.
(2.) When execution is required of any judgment against any person not a party to the action, the plaintiff shall take out a summons on the judgment directed to the person against whom it is proposed to issue execution, calling upon him to show cause why the judgment should not be enforced against him under the circumstance stated in the
summons,
(3.) When a judgment has been given against a deceased person, his executors or administrators may be sued upon the judgment in the manner provided by this Rule.
Trial.
or any
fonoaut does
154.--(1.) If at the hearing the plaintiff appears but the defendant When de-
of the defendants does not appear, the Court shall, before hearing not appear. the action, inquire into the service of the summons and of notice of hearing on the absent party.
(2.) The Court, if not satisfied as to the service, may order further service to be made as the Court direcis, and in that case shall adjourn the hearing for the purpose, but, if so satisfied, may proceed to hear the action notwithstanding the absence of the defendant or any defendant.
(3) If the Court hears an action in the defendant's absence the Court may afterwards, on proof that the absence was excusable and that the defendant has a defence on the merits, re-hear the action on such terms as it thinks fit.
does not appear.
155. If at any trial or at any continuation or adjournment the when plaintif plaintiff does not appear and the defendant docs appear and does not admit the plaintiff's claim, the Court may in its discretion dismiss the action and award to the defendant costs in the same manner and to the same amount as if the action had been tried, but no hearing fee shall be charged. The plaintiff may subsequently commence a fresh action on such terms as to costs and otherwise as to the Court shall seem fit.
of guardian ad
156. When an infant defendant appears at the trial and names & Appointment person who then consents to act as guardian, such person shall be item for alant appointed guardian accordingly, but, if the defendant does not name a defendant, guardian, the Court may appoint any person in Court willing to become guardian, or if there is no such person, the Court shall appoint the Registrar to be guardian, and the name of the guardian so appointed shall be entered, and the action shall then proceed, but no responsibility shall attach to any person appointed guardian at the instance of the
Court.
in another Court
157. When at the trial it appears that an action by the same Action perding plaintiff for the same cause is pending in any other Court, whether for same cause.
414
General juris-
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
within or without the jurisdiction, the Court shall order the action to be struck out unless the plaintiff undertakes to discontinue the action in the other Court before a certain date to which the trial shall be adjourned, and if the action in the other Court has not been discontinued by that date, the action shall then be struck out.
158. At the trial the Court may try the whole matter of the action diction of Court and give judgment thereon, or grant any relief, redress, or remedy, or may make any order and give any direction it may consider necessary to enable it to give a final judgment upon a future day (to which the trial shall be adjourned), and may also make such order as to costs as shall be authorized by these Rules and as the Court may think fit.
Absent parties may be added
159. When at the trial the Court considers that the action cannot be at the hearing adjudicated upon by reason of all the proper parties not being before the Court, it may order such parties to be made plaintiffs or defendants upon such terms as to adjournment notices and costs as it shall think fit.
Separate judg ments against
160. When two or more defendants are joined, and judgment is more then one given separately against each with costs, the costs shall be apportioned according to the respective amounts of each judgment, unless the Court shall otherwise order.
defendant.
Judgment ou counter-claim may be given for balance.
Amendment,
Neglect to amend within lime.
Amended documents to be marked,
161. When a counter-claim is established against a plaintiff's claim, the Court may, if the balance is in favour of the defendant, give judgment for the defendant for such balance, or may adjudge to the defendant otherwise such relief as he may be entitled to on the merits of the case.
Amendments.
162. The Court may at any stage of the proceedings and in such manner and on such terms as may be just, allow all such amendments to be made as may be necessary for the purpose of determining the real questions in controversy between the parties.
163. If a party who bas obtained leave to amend does not amend accordingly within the time limited for that purpose, or, if no time is specified, within eight days from the date of the order, the order shall become ipso facto void, unless the Court shall think fit to extend the time.
164. Whenever any document is amended it shall be marked with the date of the order of amendment, and of the day on which the amendment is made, in manner following, viz. :-
Amended
dated the
+
day of
day of
}
pursuant to order of
19
+
Time for delivery.
Formal orders.
165. Whenever any document is amended it shall be delivered to the opposite party within the time allowed for the amendment, and when the document is one which is required to be filed the amended document shall be filed also in the same maner.
Judgments and Orders.
166.(1.) A Minute of every order, whether interlocutory or final, shall be made by the Court in the Minutes of Proceedings at the time when the judgment or order is given or made.
(2.) Every such Minute shall have the full force and effect of a formal order, and shall form part of the Record.
(3.) The Court may at any time order a formal order to be drawn up on the application of any party.
(4.) Where the Court delivers a decision in writing, the original or a copy thereof signed by the Judge or officer holding the Court shall be filed in the proper office of the Court with the papers in the action.
IN CHINA AND COREA
(5.) An order shall not be drawn up in form except on the application of some party to the action, or by direction of the Court, and shall than be passed and be certified by affixing thereto the seal of the Court, and it shall then be deemed to form part of the record in the action. (6.) An order shall not be enforced or appealed from nor shall an office copy of it be granted until it forms part of the record,
(7.) An order shall bear the date of the day of the delivery of the decision on which the order is founded,
(8.) Any party to an action or proceeding is entitled to have an office copy of any order made therein.
167. All orders of adjournment or for the payment of costs and all Entry of judgments for the payment of any debt or damages or costs shall be judgment, entered by the Registrar in the Minutes; but all special judgments or orders in the nature of Decrees shall be settled by the Court and shall be sealed with the seal of the Court and filed with the rest of the documents in the action or matter, and the Minute of the filing, with an 70. abstract of such judgment or order and the date thereof, shall be entered in the Minutes.
Forms 60 and
415
lor payment of
168. Orders for payment of money or costs or both and orders of Service of order adjournment when directed to be served shall in all cases be prepared by money or of the Registrar, and, unless the Court shall otherwise order, shall be adjournment. delivered to the Marshal, who shall immediately send them to the parties on whom they are directed to be served. But it shall not be necessary for a party in whose favour any order has been made to prove, previously to his taking proceedings thereon, that it has reached the other party.
169. Any consent in writing signed by or on behalf of the parties may, by leave of the Court, be filed, and shall thereupon have the effect of an order of the Court,
Consents.
Orders for pay-
170. (1.) When the Court orders the payment of a sum of money ment of money. such money shall, unless the Court otherwise orders, be payable forthwith.
(2.) The Court may order the amount of a judgment and the costs to be paid by instalments as it may think fit.
(8.) When the amount in dispute does not exceed 50%. the Court may at the time of giving judgment award a lump sum for costs, not exceeding 51. and Court fees, and such sum shall become payable forth- with unless the Court otherwise orders.
(4.) The rate of interest on judgment debts shall be 5 per cent. (5.) All payments may be made into Court.
(6.) The Registrar shall give notice to the party in whose favour it is made of every payment made into Court when the payment exceeds 108. 171. In any action or matter in which an injunction has been or might have been claimed the plaintiff may, before or after judgment, apply for an injunction to restrain the defendant from the repetition or continuance of the wrongful act or breach of contract complained of, or from the commission of any wrongful act or breach of contract of a like kind relating to the same property or right, or arising out of the same contract, and the Court may, in addition to giving judgment for such damages and costs as the plaintiff may be entitled to, grant the injunction either upon or without terms as may be just.
Form 71
Injunction.
Form 72.
Where an order
172. Where a judgment or order directs any deed to be prepared direc's a desa to and executed, it shall state by what party the deed is to be prepared and be prepared. to whom it shall be submitted for approval, and if the parties cannot agree upon the form of it the Court may, upon the application of either party, either settle the deed itself, or name à competent person by whom he deed shall be settled subject to the final approval of the Court.
416
Bale of personal property.
Urgent ordera.
Order to hold to buil.
Ordurs other
than for y-
ment of money.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
173. Where au order directs any personal Property to be sold, it shall be sold by public auction under the superintendence of the Marshal, unless the Court shall otherwise direct.
174.-(1) On proof of great urgency or other peculiar circum- stances, the Court may, if it thinks fit, before service of a writ of summons in an action, and without notice, make an order of injunction, or an order to sequester money or goods, or to stop the clearance of a vessel, or to hold to bail, or to attach property,
(2.) Before making the order the Court shall require the person applying for it to enter into a recognizance, with or without a surety or sureties, as the Court thinks fit, as security for his being answerable in damages to the person against whom the order is sought.
(3.) The order shall not remain in force more than twenty-four hours, and shall at the end of that time wholly cease to be in force, unless within that time an action is regularly brought by the person obtaining the order.
(4.) The order shall be dealt with in the action as the Court thinks fit. 175.-(1.) Where an action is brought for the recovery of a sum exceeding 5., and it is proved that the defendant is about to abscond for the purpose of defeating the plaintiff's claim, the Court may, if it thinks fit, order that he be arrested and delivered into safe custody to be kept until he gives bail or security with a surety or sureties in such sum, expressed in the order, as the Court thinks fit not exceeding the probable amount of debt, or damages, and costs to be recovered in the action, that he will appear at any time when called on, while the action is pending, and until execution or satisfaction of any order made against him, and that, in default of appearance, he will pay any money and costs which he is ordered to pay in the action.
(2.) The expenses incurred for the subsistence of the defendant while under arrest shall be paid by the plaintiffs in advance at such rate and in such amounts as the Court directs; and the total amount so paid may be recovered by the plaintiff in the action, unless the Court otherwise directs.
(3.) The Court may at any time, on reasonable cause shown, discharge or vary the order.
(4.) An order to hold to bail shall state the amount, including costs, for which bail is required.
(5.) It shall be executed forthwith.
(6.) The person arrested under it shall be entitled to be discharged from custody under it on bringing into Court the amount stated in the order to abide the event of such action as may be brought, or on entering into a recognizance, without or with a surety or sureties as the Court thinks fit, as security that he will abide by the orders of the Court in any action brought.
(7.) He shall be liable to be detained in custody under the order for not more than seven days, if not sooner discharged; but the Court may from time to time, if it thinks fit, renew,the order.
(8.) No person, however, shall be kept in custody under any such order and renewed order for a longer time than thirty days.
176-(1.) Where the order of the Court is one ordering some act to be done other than payment of money, there shall be indorsed on the copy of it served on the person required to obey it a memorandum in the words or to the effect following:-
If you, the within-named A. B., neglect to obey this order withiu the time therein appointed, you will be liable to be arrested and your property may be sequestered.
(2.) Where the person directed to do the act fails to do it according
IN CHINA AND COREA
to the order, the person prosecuting the order may apply to the Court for another order for the arrest of the disobedient person.
(3.) Thereupon the Court may make an order ordering and em- powering an officer of the Court therein named to take the body of the disobedient person and detain him in custody until further order.
(4.) He shall be liable to be de1ained in custody until he has obeyed the order in all things that are to be immediately performed, and given such security as the Court thinks fit to obey the order in other respects (if any) at the future times thereby appointed.
177.-(1.) Where it is proved that the defendant, with intent to Removal of obstruct or delay the execution of any order obtained or to be obtained property. against him, is about to remove any property out of the jurisdiction of the Court, the Court may, if it thinks fit, on the application of the plaintiff order that property to be forthwith seized and secured,
(2.) The Court may at any time on reasonable cause shown discharge or vary the order.
I
417
Compensation
obtained,
178, (1.) If it appears to the Court that any order made under any in case order of the last four foregoing Rules was applied for on insufficient grounds, improperly or if the plaintiff's action fails, or judgment is given against him by default or otherwise, and it appears to the Court that there was no sufficient groun for his bringing the action, the Court way, if it thinks fit, on the application of the d fendant, order the plaintiff to pay to the defendant such amount as appears to the Court to be a reasonable compensation to the defendant for the expense and injury occasioned to him by the execution of the order.
(2.) Payment of compensation under this Rule is a bar to any action for damages in respect of anything done in pursuance of the order, and any such action, if begun, shall be stayed by the Court in such manner and on such terms as the Court thinks fit.
179. Where money ordered by the Court to be paid is due for Beamen's wages. senmeu's wages, or is other money recoverable under the Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, or other law relating to ships, and the person ordered to pay is was'er or owner of a ship, and the money is not paid as ordered, the Court, in addition to other powers for compelling payment, shall have power to direct that the amount unpaid be levied by seizure and sale of that ship.
Accounts, how
180. When a judgment or order directs that any account be taken be taken. or inquiry made, such account shall be taken and inquiry made by such person as the Court shall direct, and all parties shall have the same power of summoning witresses, including as witnesses any party in the action, and of examining them on such accounts or inquiries, and of com- pelling the production of documents, as they would have upon the trial of an action, and all Rules as to summoning, swearing, and examining of witnesses and the production of documents at the trial, shall be applicable (so far as may be) to the summoning, swearing, examining, and produc- tion on taking any such accounts or prosecuting any such inquiries. The Registrar to
181. Where an order is issued for making inquiries or taking appont time accounts, the Registrar shall direct all parties entitled to attend at the ang appointed place for the purpose of proceeding with such inquiries or taking accounts. accounts by summons returnable not less than tree days after date; and upon the day appointed and at auy adjourned sitting the person appointed shall sit at the time and place appointed and Lear all parties interested, or their legal practitioners.
inquiries
scount to be
182. Where an order directs accounts to be taken, any book of Books of account in which the accounts required to be taken or any or them have taken as prima been kept shall, unless the Court shall otherwise direct, be taken as facte evidence prima facie evidence of the truth of the matters therein contained, with
418
Registrar's certificate,
Further directions.
Warrant of sequestration. Form 73.
In case of dofault execu-
Hay issue.
tion
Indorsement on warrant,
Form 74.
Date and duration of warrant.
Form 75.
Extension of judgment.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
fiberty to the parties interested to take such objection thereto as they may be advised.
183. (1.) Where the Registrar or any other person has be-n ordered to certify to the Court any matter he shall present to the Court a certificate in writing signed by him; such certific.te shall be prepared seven days before the day appointed for presenting the same, and the Registrar shall give notice to a 1 parties to the action that the certificate lies in his office for the inspection of any parties intere ted therein or affected thereby; and he shall deliver a copy thereof to any person requiring the same upon payment of the costs of such copy at the rate of sixpence per folio of seventy-two words.
(2.) Where any person interested in or affected by the certificate of the Registrar or person appointed under Rule 180 desires to have the same varied, he stall apply to the Court on the day appointed for present- ing the certificate, and the Court shall thereupon bear and determine such application, and shall confirm or vary the certificate, and nake such further order thereupon as it may think fit.
(3.) If no application shall be tnade to vary the certificate it shall be confirmed by the Court, unless the Court thinks fit to otherwise order.
184. Where the Registrar, Marshal, or any other person, has by any order been directed to do any act, and it may be found necessary to have further directions or an order of the Court for carrying the same into effect, he may apply to the Court for such direction or order, and there- upon the Court may give such directions or make such order as it may think fit, or may appoint a time to hear all parties, and if the Court shall made such appointment for hearing, it shall operate as a stay of proceedings in the action until the day so appointed, if the Court shall so direct.
Enforcement of Judgments and Orders.
185. When a person against whom a warrant of arrest is issued cannot be found, or being in custody, refuses or neglects to comply with the order made against him, a warrant of sequestration may be issued against his goods on the application of the other party.
186. When a defendant has made default in payment of the amount awarded by the judgment or of any instalment thereof, a warrant of execution may issue without leave of the Court for the whole amount of the judgment and costs then remaining unsatisfied, unless, in the case of instalments, the Court shall otherwise specially direct.
187. The Registrar shall indorse on every warrant of execution the amount to be levied, distinguishing the amount adjudged to be paid and the amount of the fee for issuing the warrant, and shall prepare and deliver to the Marshal a notice in the proper form, and the Marshal, when he levies, shall deliver such notice to the party against whom the execution has been issued or leave it at the place when the execution is lovied.
188. Every warrant of execution against the goods shall bear date on the day which it was issued and shall continue in force for twelve calendar months from such date and no longer.
Extension of Judgment.
189. (1.) Whero a judgment has been obtained for any debt, damages or costs the Court, after the expiration of the time limited for appealing against such judgment or if, on appeal, the judgment is not reversed or execution is not stayed, may, on the application of the
IN CHINA AND COREA
judgment creditor, and upon proof that the judgment has not been satisfied, grant a certificate under the official seal of the validity of the judgment.
(2.) On
the production of the certificate to any other Court Form 76. established under the Principal Order it shall be registered in that Court, and all reasonable costs and charges attendant upon such registration shall be added to and recovered in like manner as if they were part of the original judgment.
(3.) When a certificate has been registered in a Court under this rule, procce lings may be taken in execution or by judgment summons in like manner as if the judgment had been obtained in that Court.
(4.) On proof of the setting aside or satisfaction of a judgment of which a certificate has been registered the Court in which the certificate has been registered may order the registration to be cancelled.
Summons to Judgment Debtor.
ARMMONS,
419
Forms 77 and 78.
190.-(1.) Where an order ordering payment of money remains Judgment wholly or in part unsatisfied, whether an execution order has been made or not, the person prosecuting the order (in these Rules called the judgment creditor) may apply to the Court for a summons ordering a person by whom payment is to be made (in this Order called the judgment debtor) to appear and be examined respecting his ability to make the payment; and the Court shall, unless it see good reason to the contrary, grant a summons accordingly.
(2.) Every judgment summons under this Rule shall he issued and be served personally five clear days at least before the day on which the judgment debtor is require judgment debtor is required to appear, except in the case provided for by section (3) of this Rule.
(3.) Where the applicant shall state to the Registrar that the judgment debtor is about to remove from his dwelling or place of business, or is keeping out of the way to avoid service, then the judgment summons may be issued and served at any time before the hearing. But the Court shall not act upon a summons issued under this Rule unless at the hearing it is satisfied by evidence on oath that at the time of the application the facts were as stated by the applicant.
(4) A judgment summons may issue without leave of the Court, except where the judgment is more then six years old.
(5.) The hearing of a judgment summons may be adjourned from time to time.
(6.) Upon the issue of a judgment summons against a party, the Marshal shall return into Court any warrant of execution against the goods of such party which may have been issued in the action,
(7.) Any witness may be summoned to prove the means of a judg- ment debtor in the same manner as witnesses are summoned to give evidence at a trial.
debtor,
191. (1.) On the appearance of the judgment debtor, he may be Examination of examined on oath by or on behalf of the judgment creditor and by the judgment Court respecting his ability to pay the money ordered to be paid, and for discovery of property applicable thereto, and respecting his disposal of any property.
(2.) He shall produce, on oath or otherwise, all books, papers and documents in his possession or power relating to any property applicable to payment.
(3.) Whether the judgment debtor appears, or not, the judgment creditor and any witness whom the Court thinks requisite, may be examined on oath or otherwise, respecting the same matters.
420
Committal for non-payment.
Amendment of order.
Bankrupt not to be committed.
Commitment of debtor.
Forms 79 and 80.
Form 81.
Costs on default of appearance of judgment Breditur,
Prison
expenses of debtor.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(4.) The Court may, if it thinks fit, adjourn the examination from time to time and require from the judgment debtor such security for his appearance as the Court thinks fit; and, in default of his finding security, may, by order, commit him to the custody of an officer of the Court, there to remian until the adjourned hearing unless sooner discharged.
192. If it appears to the Court, by the examination of the judgment debtor or other evidence, that the judgment debtor then has sufficient means to pay the money directed to be paid by him, and he refuses or neglects to pay the same according to the order, then an in any such case the Court may, if it thinks fit, by order, commit him to prison for any time not exceeding forty days.
193. On the examination, the Court, if it thinks fit, whether it makes an order for commitment or not, may rescind or alter any order for the payment of money by instalments or otherwise, and may make any further or other order, either for the payment of the whole amount forth- with, or by instalments, or in any other manner, as the Court thinks fit...
194. When on the return day of a judgment summons the judgment debtorshall satisfy the Court that he has been adjudicated a bankrupt and that the debt was provable in the bankruptcy, or that, in respect of the debts, resolutions have been duly registered under any bankruptcy law for the time being in force, no order of commitment shall be made.
Where, after commitment, the judgment debtor shall file in Court an affidavit to the saine effect and at the same time give notice to the judgment creditor of the filing of the affidavit, the order of commituent shall not issue or, if issued, shall be recalled.
195. (1.) An order of commitment of a judgment debtor shall bear date on the day on which it was made, and shall continue in force from one year from such date and no longer, unless the Court thinks fit to enlarge the time by an extension indorsed on the order of commit- ment.
(2.) When an order of commitment for non-payment of money is issued, the deferdant may
(a.) Before being delivered into the custody of the gaoler pay to the Marshal the amount indorsed on the order, ou receipt of which the Marshal shall discharge the defendant, and shall, within twenty-four hours, pay over to such person as the Court may from time to time ap- point the amount received; or
(b.) After being delivered into the custody of the gaoler, pay the amount indorsed on the order of commitment into Court or to the gaoler in whose custody he is. When the money is paid into Court, the Registrar shall sign and seal a certificate of payment, upon receipt of which the gaoler shall forthwith discharge the judgment debtor; when it is paid to the gaoler he s all sign a certificate of payment, and forthwith discharge the judgment debtor, and shall pay over the amount so received to the proper officer within twenty-four hours.
196. If a judgment debtor appears on the return day of a judgment summons but the judgment creditor fails to appear, the Court may award costs to the judgment debtor.
197. (1.) The expenses of the judgment debtor's maintenance in prison shall be defrayed in the first instance by the judgment creditor, and may be recovered by him from the judgment debtor, as the Court directs.
(2.) The expenses shall be estimated by the Court, and shall be paid by the judgment creditor at such time and in such manner as the Court directs.
(3.) In default of payment the judgment debtor may be discharged,
if the Court thinks fit.
IN CHINA AND COREA
421
Imprisonment
198. Imprisonment of a judgment debtor under the foregoing Effect of provisons does not operate as a satisfaction or extinguishment of the debt of debtor or liability to which the order relates, or protect the debtor from being anew imprisoned for any new default making him liable to be imprisoned, or deprive the judgment creditor of any right to have execution against his goods as if there had not been such imprisonment.
teblor.
199. The judgment debtor, on paying at any time the amount Discharge of ordered to be paid and all costs and expenses, shall be discharged.
• ufurcing a
200. All costs incurred by a plaintiff in endeavouring to procure or Costs of euforce an order or judgment, shall be deemed to be due in pursuance payment. of such order or judgment, unless the Court shall otherwise order.
201. No warrant against the goods or judgment summons shall issue on a judment more than six years old, unless some payment has been made by the judgment debtor into Court within twelve calendar months previously, or unless by leave of the Court; but no notice need be given to the debtor before applying for such leave, and such leave shall be expressed on the warrant or judgment summons under the seal of the Court.
o procedings judgun it alter
years with-
1. be taken on
out leave.
202.-(1.) Ordinarily, an order of a Provincial Court shall not be Orders within locul jurisdic- enforced out of the Consular district of the Consular officer making the order.
(2.) Where, however, a Provincial Court thinks that the urgency or other pecular circumstances of the case so require, that Court may, for reasons recorded in the Minutes, order that any particular order be enforced out of the particular district.
tion,
Interpleader.
Annons,
Form 82.
203. Where a person seeking relief is under liability for any debt, Enterploader money, goods or chattels, for or in respect of which he is or expects to be sued by two or more partics making adverse claims thereto, he may apply for an interpleader summons calling on the claimants to appear and state the nature and particulars of their claims and either maintain or relinquish them.
Before issuing the summons the Court must be satisfied by affidavit or otherwise
(a.) that the applicant claims no interest in the subject-matter in
dispute other than for charges and costs;
(b.) that the applicant does not collude with any of the claimants; (c) that the applicant is willing to pay or transfer the subject-
watter into Court or dispose of it as the Court may direct. On the return day of the sunimons, whether the claimants appear or not, the Court may direct in what manner the dispute between the claimants shall be tried, and shall proceed to or adjourn the trial as may seem most expedient.
If the original applicant is the defendant in an action which has already been commenced, the Court may stay all future proceeding in such action.
in exeuniton
204. Where any claim is made to or in respect of anything taken Interleader in execution under the process of the Court or in respect of the proceeds proceedings. or value thereof, the Marshal shall apply to the Court for an interpleder Form 83, summons, and the Registrar shall issue such summons without leave of the
Court.
The case shall then proceed as if claimant were the plaintiff and the execution creditor the defendant.
205. Two clear days before the return day of the summons under Particula the preceding Rule the claimant shall deliver to the Marshal or leave at of claim.
and grounds
122
Claim for damages.
Payment into
Court of damages clanned,
Marshal's costs where decision against claimant
Bervice of interpleader
summons.
Where
asıgnor dis- putes an assigument.
Defeodent in an action by
signee may pay money juto Court.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
the office of the Registrar particulars of the goods or chattels he alleges to be his property and the ground of his claim, or, in case of a claim for rent, of the amount of such rent, and for what period and in respect of what premises the rent is claimed to be due, an the name, address, and description of the claimant shall be fully set out in such particulars, and any money paid into Court under the execution shall be retained by the Registrar until the claim has been adjudicated upon; but by order of the Court or with the consent of all parties an interpleader claim may be tried although this Rule has not been complied with.
206. Where a claimant to goods taken in execution claims damages from the execution creditor or from the Marshal for or in respect of the seizure of the goods, he shall, in the particulars of his claims, state the amount he claims for damages, and the ground upon which he claim, such damages. And where he claims damages from the Marshal arising out of the execution of any process, he shall, three clear days before the return day, deliver to the Marshal a notice of his claim stating the grounds for and the amount of such claim.
207. Where a claim for damages is made against the Marshal and execution creditor, or either of them, they or either of them may pay into Court an am unt in full satisfaction of such claim, and such payment into Court shall be made in the same manner, and have the same effect, and the parties respectively shall have the same rights and remedies as they would have by the practice of the Court if the proceedings had been an action in which the claimant was plaintiff and the Marshal and judgment creditor were defendants.
208. Where the claim under any interpleader summons shall be decided against the claimant, the costs of the Marshal allowed by the Court shall be retained by the Marshal out of the amount levied, unless the Court shall otherwise order, but without prejudice to the right of the execution creditor against the claimant for the sum so retained.
209. An interpleader summons shall be served in the same time and mode as has been directed for the service of a summons in an action.
ΟΙ
210. Where the defendant in an action bronght by assignee of a d. bt or chose in action has had notice that the assignment is disputed by the assignor or any one claiming unler him or has had notice of any other opposing or
or conflicting elain to such debt or chose in action, he may, within five days after service of the summons, apply to the Registrar for a summons against the assignor, the person making such conflicting claim, and the Registrar shall there- upon issue an interpleader summous, returnable as soon as conveniently may be, and upon the return day the Court shall hear the case of the defendant and of the plaintiff in the action, and also of the assignor disputing such assignment, or of the person making such opposing or conflicting claim, and shall give such judgment therein as shall finally determine the rights and claims of all parties as if the same bad been an ordinary action into which a third party had been introduced by counterclaim.
211. Where the defendant in an action brought by the assignee of a debt or chose in action has had notice as in the last preceeding Rule mentioned, a d thinks fit to pay the debt and costs into Court to abide its decision, he shall, upon such payment into Court, give to the Registrar the name of the person against whose dispute of th assignment or con- flicting claim he desires to be protected, and the Registrar shall thereupon give notice to such person, and on the return day The Court shall deter- mine the rights of the parties, and may, if it thinks fit, order the defendant to pay all or any part of the costs.
IN CHINA AND COREA
Arbitration.
4.23
212.- (1.) Unless the submission otherwise provides the reference Arbitrators shall be to a single Arbitrator,
(2.) If the reference is to two Arbitrators, the two Arbitra'ors may appoint an Umpire at any time within the period during which they have power to make an award.
(3). When the parties do not concur in the appointment of a single Arbitrator, or when one party makes default in appointing one or two Arbitrators, or when an Arbitrator or Umpire refuses to act or becomes incapable of actin, or dies, any party may serve the other parties or the Arbi rators (as the case may be) with notice to make such appointment or supply such vacancy, and if the appointment is not made within seven clear days after the service of the notice, the Court may, on application by the party who gave the notice, appoint an Arbitrator or Umpire, who shall act in like manner as if he had been appointed by consent of all parties.
(4) The parties to the reference, and all persons claiming under them, shall, subject to any legal objection, submit to be examined by the Arbitrators or Umpire in relation to the matters in dispute, and shall, subject as aforesaid, produce all such books, papers, and other documents as may be required of them.
and Umpires.
From 84.
213. (1) The Arbitrators shall make their award within three Award. months after entering on the reference or being called on to act by a notice Form 85. in writing, unless the order for reference contains a different limit of time.
(2.) The Court may, if it thinks fit, on application, enlarge the time for making an award, the reasons for enlargement being on each occasion entered in the Minutes.
(8.) If the Arbitrators have allowed their time to expire without making an award or cannot agree, an Umpire may enter on the reference in lien of the Arbitrators.
(4) The Umpire shall make his award within one month after the expiration of the time fixed for the making of award at the time when he entered on the reference. The award shall be in writing, signed by the Arbitrators or Umpire making it.
(5.) It shall contain a conclusive finding, and not find on the con- tingency of any matter of facts afterwards substantiated or deposed to.
(6.) It shall comprehend a finding on each of the several matters referred.
(7.) The award shall be final and binding on the parties and the persons claiming through them respectively.
214.-(1.) Where it appears to the Arbitrators or Umpire that any difficult question of law is involved in or raised by the facts as finally ascertained by them or him, they or he may, if it seems to them or bim fit, state the award as to the whole or any part thereof in the form of a case for the opinion of the Court.
(2.) The Court shall consider and deliver jugment of the case as with any other special case.
Questions of
215.-(1.) The Arbitrators or Umpire shall have power to award the Costs. costs of the reference in the whole or in part.
(2.) But an award respecting costs shall not preclude a party against whom costs are awarded from applying to the Court to tax the costs, and on that application the costs, including the remuneration (if any) of the Arbitrators and Umpire or any of them, shall be taxed at a reasonable rate by the Court, and the Court shall make such order respecting the costs of taxation as the Court thinks fit.
42.1
Confirmation of award.
From 80.
Matter may 18 remitted for reconsidera- tion.
Irregularity
Examination
of the defen. dant as to
debis owing to him.
Order for
examination o defendant as
to debts due to him,
Form 87.
Proceedings agaiost garnishee.
Forma 88.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
216.-(1.) The Aroitrators or Umpire making an award shall, within the time limited, deposit the award in the proper office of the Court incl "sel in a sealed cover and indorsed with the names of the parties to the reference an with a note of the amount claimed by the Arbitrators and Umpire for 1emuneration.
(2.) Notice of the award having been deposited shall be served by the Court on the parties, who shall be at liberty to read the award and to have copies of it.
(3.) Any person interested may, within fourteen days after notice of the award, apply to the Court to prevent the execution of the award or of any specified part of it.
(4.) In default of any such application the award shall be entered as the judgment in the cause, and shall be as binding and effectual to all intents as if given by the Court, and execution may issue and all things be done thereupon as upon a judgment of the court.
217. The Court may at any time remit the matters referred or any of them to the reconsideration and redetermination of the Arbitrators or Umpire, or may, in case the arbitrators relusing or neglecting to act, or with the consent of both parties, revoke the reference, or order another reference to be made in the same manner on such terms as to costs and other matters as the Court thinks fit.
218. The Court shall not refuse to execute an award merely on the ground of irregularity in the submission or during the reference, where the irregularity has not been substantially prejudicial to any party objecting.
Attachment of Debts.
219. Where a plaintiff is desirous that the defendant shall be orally examined after judgment has been given against him as to what debts are due and owing or accruing to him, the plaintiff shall, before such examination, give the Registrar a statement in writing of the name, adress, and description of the persons within the jurisdiction of the Court whom he considers to be indebted to the defendant.
220. When such a statement has been lo iged, the defendant, after judgment has been given against him, may be examined before the Court as to any debts due, owing, or accruing to him from any persons men- tioned in the statement, and if any such person be then present, he may be required forthwith, if he admits the debt, to show cause why be should not be ordered to pay into Court for the benefit of the judgment creditor the amount of such debts or such portion of it as will satisfy the judgment debt, and the Court may make an order for the payment of such debt or such portion as will satisfy the judgment debt, and such order may be enforced in the same order of the Court, and when such person pays the money so ordered he shall not be liable for any costs. A receipt shall be given for the same to the person paying the same, which shall be a sufficient discharge and acquittance tor such amount as between the person paying and the judgment debtor.
manner as any
other
221. A plaintiff who has not previously lodged such a statement as required by Rule 219, and who has obtained a judgment or order for the recovery and payment of money, or a defendant who has obtained such judgment against the plaintiff, may at any time lodge with the Registrar an affidavit that the judgment or order is unsatisded, and that a third person (hereafter alluded to as the Garnishee) is indebted to the judgment debtor, and is within the jurisdiction of the Court as regards such debt, and the Registrar shall thereupon issue a mons to the garnishee at the suit of the judgment creditor for the
Bum-
IN CHINA AND COREA
amount due by the garnishee to the judgment debtor or such portion of it as may be sufficient to satisfy the judgment or order.
garnisbee
222. The summons shall be personally served on the garnishee, and service of shall have the effect of preventing his parting with or disposing of any gam debt due, owing or accruing from him to the judgment debtor.
summons.
No conts where gar-
223. Where the garnishee shall pay into Court three clear days before the return day of the summons the amount due from him to the nishee pays. judgment debtor or an amount equal to the judgment or order, he shall not be liable for any costs.
Order on
224. Upon the return day of the summous the Court shall determine garnishec as to the liability of the garnishee and as to the party by whom the costs summons. of the proceedings shall be paid, and make an order in accordance with such decision.
Appeal to Supreme Court.
225. Where an application for leave to appeal is male in a Provincial Applications Court or in the Supreme Court it shall be made by motion in open Court, appeal, and if leave is given the appellant shall file his motion-paper of appeal in the Provincial Court within seven days after leave given by the Pro- vincial Court, and within fourteen days after leave given by the Supreme Court, as the case my be.
appeal.
226. (1.) An appeal to the Supreme Court shall not lie from an order Notice of of a Provincial Court made on the application of one party without notice to the other party.
(2.) But, if any person thinks himself aggrieved by such an order, he may, on notice to the other party, apply to the Provincial Court to vary or discharge the order, and an appeal shall lie from the decision on that application.
costs.
227--(1.) The appellant shall give security to the satisfaction of Security for the Provincial Court to an amount not exceeding 50, for prosecution of the appeal, and for payment of any costs that may be ordered by the Supreme Court on the appeal to be paid by the appellant to any person;
(2) The appellant shall pay to the Provincial Court such sum as the Provincial Court thinks reasonable to defray the expense of the making up and transmission of the record to the Supreme Court.
228.- (1.) After three months from the date of a decision of the Time for Provincial Court an appeal against it shall not lie except by leave of the appeal. Supreme Court.
(2) After six months from the date of a decision of the Provincial Court application for leave to appeal against it shall not be entertained by the Supreme Court.
425
229. (1.) Where a person ordered to pay money or to do any Execution other thing appeals, the Provincial Court shall direct either that the pending appeal decision appealed from be carried into execution or that the execution thereof be suspended pending the appeal, as that Court thinks fit,
2.) If the Provincial Court directs the decision to be carried into execution the person in whose favour it is given shall, before the execu- tion of it, give security to the satisfaction of the Court for perfor- mance of any order to be made on appeal.
(3.) If the Provincial Court directs the execution of the decision to be suspended, the person against whom it is given shall, before an order for suspension is made, give security to the satisfaction of the Provincial Court for performance of such order as shall be made on appeal.
230-(1.) In every appeal the appellant shall file an appeal motion. Appeal paper in the Provincial Court.
(2.) He may at the same time file any argument which he desires to submit to the Supreme Court in support of the appeal.
motion.
426
Cross appeal.
Record of appeal.
Exclusive
powers of
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(3.) Copies of the motion-paper and the argument (if any) shall be served on such persons as respondents as the Provincial Court directs.
231.-(1.) A respondent may, within fourteen days after service of the motion-paper, file in the Provincial Court a motion-paper of cross- appeal and such argument as he desires to submit to the Supreme Court on the appeal and cross-appeal, if any.
(2.) Copies thereof shall be furnished by the Provincial Court to to such persons as that Court thinks fit.
232-(1.) On the expiration of the prescribed time last referred to the Provincial Court shall, without the application of any party, make up the record of appeal, which shall consist of the writ of summons, particulars, statements of claim and defence (if any), orders, and proceed- ings, all written and documentary evidence admitted or tendered or a certified copy thereof, and the notes of the oral evidence, the appeal and cross-appeal motion paper, and the arguments (if any.)
(2.) The several pieces shall be fastened together, consecutively numbered; and the whole shall be secured by the seal of the Court, and be forthwith forwarded by it to the Supreme Court.
(3.) The Provincial Court shall not, except for some special cause, take on itself the responsibility of the charge or of the transmission to- the Supreme Court of original letters or documents produced in evidence. They shall be returned to the parties producing them; and those parties shall produce the originals, if required by the Supreme Court, at or before the hearing of the appeal.
233.-(1.) After the record of appeal is transmitted, until the Bupreme Court appeal is disposed of, the Supreme Court shall be in exclusive possession
of the whole action as between the parties to the appeal.
after record
transmitted.
Appointment
of day for
(2.) Every application in the action, as between the parties to the appeal, shall be made to the Supreme Court and not to the Provincial Court; but any application may be made through the Provincial Court.
234-(1.) The Supreme Court shall, after receiving the record of hearing appeal. appeal, fix a day for the hearing of the appeal, and shall give notice thereof through the Provincial Court to the parties to the appeal, such a day being fixed as will allow of the parties attending in person or by a legal practitioner, if they so desire.
Personal appearance.
New evidence.
General powers f
on appeal,
(2.) But if all the separate parties to an appeal appear in person before the Supreme Court, or appoint persons there to represent them as their legal practitioners in the appeal, and cause the appearance or appointment to be notified to the Supreme Curt, the Supreme Court may dispose of the appeal without being required to give notice through the Provincial Court to the parties to the appeal of the day fixed for the hearing toereof,
235. The Supreme Court may, if it thinks fit, require a party to an appeal to appear personally before it on the hearing of the appeal or ou any occasion pending the appeal.
286. It is not open, as of right, to a party to an appeal to adduce new evidence in support of his original case, bu a party may allege any material facts that have come to his knowledge after the decision of the Provincial Court, and the Supreme Court may in any case, if it thinks fit, allow or require new evidence to be adduced.
237.--(1.) The Supreme may make any orders necessary for deter- Supreme Court mining the real question in controversy in the action as among the parties to the appeal, and for that purpose may amend any defect or error in the record of appeal, and may enlarge the time for any proceed- ing except as otherwise by this Order expressly provided.
(2.) The Supreme Court may direct the Provincial Court to inquire into and certify its finding on any question as between the parties to the
IN CHINA AND COREA
appeal or any of them, which the Supreme Court thinks fit to determine before final judgment is given in the appeal.
(3.) Generally, the Supreme Court shall, as among the parties to the appeal, have as full jurisdiction over the whole action as if it had been originally instituted and prosecuted in the Supreme Court by parties subject to the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.
(4.) The Supreme Court may, if it thinks fit, remit the action to the Provincial Court to be re-heard or to be otherwise dealt with as the Supreme Court directs.
(5.) The powers of the Supreme Court may be exercised notwith- standing bar the appeal is brought against part only of the decision of the Provincial Court.
(6.) Those powers may be exercised in favour of all or any of the parties to the action, although they have not appealed from or complained of the decision.
Re-hearing in Supreme Court.
427
238. Where a final order has been made, an application for a re- Time for hearing in the Supreme Court shall he made within fourteen days after appcation for the making of the final order.
Security.
re-hearing.
bond.
Forms 89 and
90,
239.-(1.) In all cases where a party proposes to give a bond by Security by way of security, he shall serve on the opposite party and on the Registrar at his office notice of the proposed sureties in the proper form; and the Registrar shall forthwith give notice to both parties of the day and hour on which he proposes that the bond should be executed, and shall sate in the notice to the person in whose favour the security is given that he must at that time be prepared to make any valid objection he may have to the sureties or either of them.
(2.) The sureties shall make an affidavit of their sufficiency when- Form 91. ever the opposite party shall give notice that the same is required.
(3.) The bond shall be executed in the presence of the Court or of the Registrar, and shall be deposited with the Registrar until the cause is finally disposed of.
(4.) No officer of the Court shall, under any circumstances, become surety in any case where by the practice of the Court security is required.
of hond.
240 Where a party makes a deposit of money in lieu of giving a Deposit in lieu bond, he shall forthwith give notice to the opposite party of such a deposit having been made.
evala toreign
241. When a foreign plaintiff has made a deposit or given security Security for for costs, he may give notice to the defendant, if successful, to tax costs, plaintiff. within a certain time to be named in such notice, being not less than seven clear days after judgment, and if the defendant fails, without good reason, to send in bis bill of costs for taxation by the time named in the notice, the deposit shall be returned to the plaintiff or the security cancelled.
But the return or cancellation shall not derogate from the right of the defendant to recover such costs from the plaintiff in such manner
be open to him.
as may
Costa.
242.-(1,) All costs shall be taxed by the Registrar subject to revision by the Court.
(2.) On receipt of the bill of costs of the party entitled thereto the Registrar shall fix a day for taxation, and give notice thereof to the parties.
Taxation of
428
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(3.) At the appointed time the Registrar shall proceed to tax the costs according to the Rules and the Schedules of costs, setting down in the column reserved for that purpose against each item the amount (if any) which he disallows. At the conclusion of the taxation the dis- allowance column is to be added up, and the sum deducted from the original amount of the bill; the difference so obtained is the sum at which the bill is taxed. The Registrar shall make a Memorandum at the foot of the bill as follows:-
"Taxed at
**
A. B.,
"Registrar."
Costs of witnesses.
Appropriation of moneys paid into Court,
Costs of war. rant against goods.
No costs of judgment summong
unless order made.
Coste of commitment.
Possession fee.
Appraisement,
Charge of legal practitioner.
1)
"
(4) All bills of costs are to be dated and entitled in the action to which they refer, and are to be distinguished as "plamtiff's costs or defendent's costs as the case may be. They must be ruled on the right-hand side with double money columns, only one of which is to be filled up, the other being reserved for the entry by the Registrar of his disallowance.
243. The costs of witnesses, whether they have been examined or not, may be allowed though they have not been summoned, unless the Court otherwise orders. In such cases the Court shall give special directions as to the amounts to be allowed.
244. Money paid into Court on a judgment shall be appropriated. first in satisfaction of the Court fees and costs, and afterwards in satis- faction of the original demand.
245.-(1.) Costs of warrants against the goods, whether executed or unexecuted or unproductive, shall be allowed against the party against whose goods the warrant is issued, unless the Court shall otherwise direct.
(2.) On the hearing of a judgment summons, where a warrant against the goods has been issued, the costs of such warrant shall not be allowed against the judgment debtor unless the Court is satisfied that there was a reasonable cause for issuing the warrant.
246. The costs of a judgment summons shall not be allowed against the judgment debtor unless some order shall have been made thereon ; but where an order is made on a judgment summons the Court may, in its discretion, allow the costs against the judgment debtor of any previous judgment summonses which have not been served through the judgment debtor having evaded service.
Or
247. Costs of warrants of commitment, whether executed unexecuted, shall be allowed against the defendant, unless the Court shall otherwise order.
248. No possession fee shall be payable where an execution is paid out at the time of the levy; but if the officer shall necessarily remain in possession more than half-an-hour and the execution shall be paid out on the day of levy, the possession fee for that day shall be charged.
249. No appraisement is to be made until the fifth day of the Marshal holding possession of the goods under an execution unless where the goods are of a perishable nature, or are sold at the request of the party before the expiration of four days, or unless the goods are removed.
Practice.
250. Where any party changes his legal practitioner he shall give notice in writing of such change to the Registrar, stating the name and place of business of the new legal practitioner, and the Registrar shall
file the notice.
IN CHINA AND COREA
documents,
251. Copies of all proceedings or documents to be prepared by the Copics of Registrar shall be prepared by him for any party requiring the same upon prepayment of the costs of such copies.
252. A folio is to comprise seventy-two words; every figure or unin- Folios. terrupted group of figures being counted as one word.
Practitioner
429
253. Where a party acts by a legal practitioner, service of any pro- Service on legal ceeding or document upon such legal practitioner, or delivery of the deemed service same at his office, shall be deemed to be good service upon the party on party. for whom the legal practitioner acts except in cases where personal service is required.
254. Where a party or his legal practitioner undertakes a service of Practice on
service by any process, he shall make the necessary copies of such process legal and deliver them to the Registrar with the amount of the fees practitioner. payable thereon, and the Registrar shall seal the process and return them to the legal practitioner for service.
by party.
255. Any notice relating to any interlocutory proceedings may, by Notice of
interlocutory leave of the Registrar, be served by the party or his legal practitioner procee sings requiring to effect such service, but the costs of such service and they be served proof thereof shall not be allowed except by the order of the Court.
256. Where any action is adjourned no order of adjournmentshall be No service served on either party unless by direction of the Court.
of order of adjournment.
of trial.
257. Where it appears to the Court that, from the course of Postponement proceedings in any action, the trial cannot be held on the return day of the summons, the Court may postpone the trial until such other day as the state of the proceeding requires, and give notice of such postponement to all parties and persons interested.
documents.
258. Where any particulars or other documents are directed to be Filing of filed they shall be filed with the Registrar, together with as many copies thereof as there are parties to be served, and the names, addresses, and description of such parties, and an additional copy for the use of the Court if required.
Issue of
259. Before any summons, notice, or other document, or any copy documents. thereof shall be issued by the Registrar, the fees shall be fully paid by the party requiring the same, and the document shall be sealed with the seal of the Court.
of period of time,
260. In all cases where anything is required by the rules of practice Computation to be done within a period of twenty-four hours, or within a period of forty-eight hours, no part of Sunday or any day on which the offices of the Court shall be lawfully closed shall be included in the computation of such period.
Detinue.
detiune,
261. The judgment in detinue, if for the plaintiff, shall be for the Jodgment in value of the goods detained together with the sum to be stated in the Form 92. judgment by way of damages for the detention and costs, but it may be made part of the order that, on the payment of damages for the detention and costs and return of the goods on or before a date to be named, satisfaction shall be entered.
delivery of
262. Where it is sought to enforce a judgment or order for the Execution for recovery of any property other than land or money the Court may, upon property. the application of the plaintiff, order that a warrant of delivery shall Form 93. issue for the delivery of the property, and that if the property cannot be found the Marshall shall distrain the defendant of all his goods and chattels within the jurisdiction of the Court till the defendant deliver the property, or, at the plaintiff's option, that the Marshal shall cause to be made of the defendant's goods the assessed value (if any) of the property,
430
Special case. Forni 94.
Special case
for the opinion
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
Special Case.
263. The parties to an action may, at any time after the summons has been issued, agree in stating any questions of law in the form of a special case for the opinion of the Court, and may agree in writing that on the judgment of the Court being given in the affirmative or negative of the question of law raised, a sum of money, agreed upon by the parties. or to be ascertained in such manner as the Court may direct, shall be paid by one of the parties to the other of them either with or without costs, and the judgment of the Court may, on the decision of the special case, be entered for the sum so agreed or ascertained, with or without costs, as the case may be, and execution may issue thereupon.
264. If the action is in a Provincial Court, the parties may by of the Supreme Agreement state the question in the form of a special case for the
opinion of the Supreme Court, and Rule 263 shall apply.
Court.
Reference of o point of law to the Suprome Court.
Mode of
drawing case.
When settle-
ment of case
with, Court to settle it.
265. When during the hearing of any case a difficulty in point of law arises which a Provincial Court deems expedient to refer to the Supreme Court the Provincial Court is to decide upon the facts and enter its verlict thereon subject to a special case to be determined by the Supreme Court,
266.-(1.) When the parties are represented by legal practitioners, the case should be drawn by the legal adviser of the plaintiff, aut settled by the legal adviser of the defendant, and if any difference arises between them as to the form of the case the Court will finally settle it.
(2.) If the plaintiff and defendant are unrepresented, and from any reason are unable to draw a case, the Court will do so in consultation with the parties.
(8.) Every special case shall be divided into paragraphs numbered consecutively, and shall concisely state such facts and documents as may be necessary to enable the Court to decide the questions raised thereby, and shall be signed by the parties. The argument of the case shall be subject to the Rules on that behalf for the time being in force in the Supreme Court.
267. If either party refuses to proceed with the settlement of the not proceeded special case, the party desirous of proceeding shall prepare the case and serve a copy of it on the other side, and if he refuses or neglects to proceed with the settlement of it within seven days, a summons may be taken out by the proceeding party calling on the other party to show cause why the Court shall not settle the case. On the return day of the summons the Court shall settle the case whether the opposite party be present or not.
Transmission
of special case for Supreme Court.
Commence ment of proceedings.
268. When a special case for the opinion of the Supreme Court is ready, the Provincial Court shall, on receipt of the legal fees, forward it under cover to the Registrar of the Supreme Court together with all documents alluded to in the case, and the Supreme Court will, upon receipt of the case, fix a day for the argument and give notice thereof to the Provincial Court, and thereupon that Court shall take all requisite steps to acquaint the parties.
The Provincial Court may, if it considers it necessary to do so, before forwarding the case to the Registrar of the Supreme Court, cause either or both parties to enter into recognizance to abide the decision of the Supreme Court and to pay all costs arising out of the special case.
Bankruptcy Proceedings.
269. Proceedings in bankruptcy subsequent to an act of bankruptcy are originated by a bankruptcy petition presented either by a creditor or
IN CHINA AND COREA
431
by the debtor under the provisions of the Bankruptcy Acts, 1883
and 1890.
Receiver.
270.-(1.) On the hearing of a bankruptcy petition the Court may Appointment make a receiving order and appoint a Receiver of the property of the debtor, and duties of
(2.) The Receiver, unless he is an officer of the Court, shall give such security as the Court may direct.
(3.) Save as provided by these Rules the Receiver shall exercise the power and perform the duties of an Official Receiver under the Bank- ruptcy Acts, 1883 and 1890. He may be removed by the Court.
(4.) In the case of the death, incapacity, or removal of a Receiver the Court shall appoint another Receiver in his place.
(5.) The remuneration of the Receiver shall be fixed at the first meeting of creditors, and shall be approved by the Court. If it is not so fixed or if it appears to be inadequate, the Court may, on the application of the Receiver, fix his remuneration.
of Special
271. The powers of an Official Receiver with respect to the appoint- Appointment ment of a Special Manager under section 12 of the Bankruptcy Act, ange 1883, shall be exercised by the Court, and any Special Manager may bo removed by the Court.
duties
Trustee.
272. (1.) The appointment by the creditors of a Trustee under Appointment section 21 of the Bankruptcy Act, 1883, shall be subject to the approval and les of of the Court, and if the Trustee is so approved he shall give security to the satisfaction of the Court.
(2.) The Receiver may be appointed Trustee.
(3.) The Court may disapprove the appiontment on any ground on which the Board of Trade may object to the appointment of a Trustee under section 21 (2) of the Bankruptcy Act, 1883.
|
(4) The Trustee shall furnish to the Court such a report with respect t the bankrupt's conduct and affairs as is required to be made by the Official Receiver under section 8 (2) of the Bankruptey Act, 1890. The report shall be filed in the Registry, and shall be considered by the Court at the hearing of the bankrupt's application for discharge.
(5.) If a vacancy occurs in the office of Trustee, the Court may appoint a fit person, who may be an officer of the Court, to act as Receiver and Manager until another Trustee is appointed. The person so appointed shall forthwith call a meeting of creditors for the purpose of filling the vacancy,
duct and
273. Save as provided in these Rules it shall be the duty of the Duties as to Receiver or Trustee, as the case may be, to perform the duties of the debtor's con- Official Receiver under sections 69 and 70 of the Bankruptcy Act, 1883. estate.
274(1.) The powers of the Board of Trade or of the Court on the Modification application or representation of the Board of Trade shall in China and of Bankruptcy Corea be exercised by the Court itself.
(2.) Any notice required under the Bankruptcy Acts or Rules to be published in the London Gazette shall be deemed to be duly published if it is published in such manner as the Court may direct in China or Corea, Hongkong, the United Kingdom, or elsewhere.
Probate and Administration.
of provisions
Acts.
275. Probate may be granted to the executors of any person having Probate. property within the jurisdiction of the Court who shall die leaving a will.
276. Letters of administration may be granted to the next-of-kin Administration, being of the age of 21 years of any person having property within the jurisdiction of the Court, or, failing the next-of-kin or if the next-of-kin shall not appear on citation, then to the Registrar or some other person to be appointed by the Court.
432
Administra
tion with will annexed.
Form 106.
Power of
revocation to be reserved.
Limitations,
Petition for probate or
Forins 95, 96, 102, and 103.
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
277. Letters of administration with will annexed may be granted in the case of persons who shall die leaving a will in which no executor is named resident within the jurisdiction of the Court, or where the executors shall not appear on citation, or s all renounce or from any legal disability are not competent to take out probate.
is
278. When administration with will annexed is granted, full
power to be reserved to revoke the administration and grant probate to any executor who shall appear and demand it.
279. All probates and administrations must be limited to property of the deceased existing within the limits of the Principal Order.
280. As soon as convenient after the deat the executor or exccutors administration, named in the will or the next-of-kin or other person desiring administration may file a petition in the Court, and thereupon the Court shall issue a citation, which may either be posted up in some public place, or advertised in such newspapers in China or Corea or elsewhere as the Court shall think necessary to insure due publicity.
If no appear- ance to citation grant may
189114.
Forms 104 and 105.
Appearance to citation.
Notice to
executors to come in aud prove.
Reference to Supreme Court.
Administra- tion bond.
Form 103,
Time for passing accounts.
Commission to executors and
281. If no person appears to the citation, the Court may, after the expiration of ten days from the date of publication of the citation if in China or Corea, or if elsewhere then within such reasonable time as the Court shall appoint, proceed to grant probate or administration, as the case may be.
282. If any person appears to the citation, the Court shall fix a day for te consideration of the claims of the several applicants.
283. The Court may, of its own motion or on the application of any person claiming an interest under a will, give notice to the executors (if any) therein name:l to come in and prove the will or to renounce probate, and they, or some or one of them, shall within fourteen days notice come in and prove or renounce accordingly
284. Where in a Provincial Court a dispute or question arises in relation to the grant or the application for it, or it appears to the Court doubtful whether or not the grant should be made, the Court shall communicate with the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court shall either direct the proceedings of the Provincial Court in the matter, or shall by order remove the matter to the Supreme Court.
285. Before any administration is granted the person to whom it is to be committed shall enter into a bond, with or without sureties, in double the amount of the sworn gross value of the estate, unless the Court shall think fit for any reason to diminish the amount. The bond shall be conditioned to make an inventory of the property of the deceased, to exhibit such inventory in the Court, to well and truly administer the estate, and to make an account of the administration when required to do so; such bond is to be deposited with the Court.
286. The Court, un granting lettera of administration, may fix a certain time for the administrator to pass his accounts.
per cent.
287. The Court may, in its discretion, allow to any executor or administrators. administrator such a commission, not exceeding in the whole 5
calculated on the assets, as may be a reasonable compensation for his loss of time and trouble, but no allowance shall, under any circumstances, be made to any executor or administrator who shall neglect to file his accounts or to perform any other duty attaching to his office as such executor or administrator within the time fixed by the Court.
Interest to be charged to negligent
executors and
288. In the event of any executor or administrator neglecting to file bis accounts or to perform any duty within the time fixed by the Court, administrators. the Court may charge him or them with interest at the current rate on
all moneys belonging to the estate then in his or their hands.
Application for probate, Ec., after
three years.
289. Where application for probate or administration is, for the first time, made to a Provincial Court after three years from the death of the
IN CHINA AND COREA
deceased, a grant shall not be made except under the direction of the Supreme Court.
Court.
433
290.--(1.) A Provincial Court, before proceeding on an application Evidence to shall ascertain where the deceased was resident at the time of his death, required by and whether he was possessed of property within the jurisdiction of the Court, and shall not for this purpose consider itself bound to rest satisfied with the evidence offered by the applicant.
(2) The Court shall require evidence, in addition to that offered by the applicant, of the identity of the deceased, or of the applicant, where additional evidence in that behalf seems to the Court necessary desirable.
or
(3.) The Court shall ascertain the value of the property of the deceased as correctly as circumstances allow.
(4.) In no case shall the Court issue probate or letters of adminis- tration until all inquiries which the Court sees fit to iustitute have been auswered to its satisfaction.
(5.) The Court shall, however, afford as great facility for the obtain- ing of probate or administration as is consistent with due regard to the prevention of error and fraud,
291. In the following cases a grant shall not be made by a Provincial Court, except under the direction of the Supreme Court, namely:-
(a.) Probate or administration with will annexed, where the will is the will of a married woman;
(b.) Administration for the use or benefit of a minor or infant or of a lunatic;
(c.) Administration (with or without will annexed) of the property of a bastard dying either a bachelor or a spinster, or a widower or widow without issue, or of a person dying without known relative;
(d) Administration to be granted to a person not resident.
(e) Probate or administration in the case of a person dying else- where than in China or Corea.
(f) Probate or administration in the case of a person who at the time of his death was not ordinarily resident within the particular jurisdiction.
(g) Probate or administration limited to specified property of the deceased or for a special period.
when grant
not to inste from Fro-
vincial Court,
alteration of
grant by Pro-
292. Revocation or alteration of a grant of probate or administration Revocation or shall not be made by a Provincial Court except under the immediate direction of the Supreme Court.
293.-(1.) A notice to prohibit a grant of probate or administration may be filed in the Supreme or a Provincial Court,
vincial Court.
bertions to
grant of pro- bate.
(2) Immediately on such a notice being filed in the Supreme Court, Form 112, a copy thereof shall be sent to the Court of the district (if any) in which it is alleged the deceased was resident at his death, and to any other Court to which it appears expedient to send a copy:
(3.) Immediately on such a notice being filed in a Provincial Court that Court shall send a copy thereof to the Supreme Court, and also to the Court of any other district in which it is known or alleged the deceased bad at his death place of abode.
(4.) The notice shall remain in force for three months only from the
day of diling, but it may be renewed from time to time.
(5.) The notice shall not affect a grant made on the day on which the notice is filed or on which a copy thereof is received, as the case may be.
(6.) The person filing the notice shall be warned by a warning in Form 113, writing under the seal of the Court delivered at the place mentioned in the notice as his address
431
Administra- tion under direction of Court.
Grant of
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(7.) After the notice has been filed in, or a copy thereof has been re- ceived by, a Provincial Court, a grant of probate or administration shall be made only by the Supreme Court.
294.-(I.) A person claiming to be a creditor or legatee, or the next- of-kin, or one of the next-of-kin, of a deceased person may apply for and obtain a summons from the Court requiring the executor or administrator (as the case may be) of the deceased to attend before the Court and show cause why an order should not be made for the administration of the property uuder the direction of the Court.
(2.) On proof of service of the summons, or on appearance of the executor or administrator, and on proof of all such other things as the Court thinks fit, the Court may make an immediate order for such administration.
(3.) The Court shall have full discretionary power to make or refuse any such order, or to give any special directions respecting the carriage or execution of it, and in the case of applications for such an order by two or more different persons or classes of persons, to grant the same to such one or more of the claimants or classes of claimants, as the Court thinks fit.
(4.) The carriage of the order may subsequently be given to such person, and on such terins, as the Court thinks fit.
(5.) On making such an order, or at any time afterwards, the Court may make any further or other order for compelling the executor or administrator to bring into Court for safe custody all or any part of the money, or securities, or other property of the decease from time to time coming to his hands, or otherwise for securing the safe keeping of the property of the deceased or any part thereof.
(6.) If the extreme urgency or other peculiar circumstances of the case appear to the Court so to require (for reasons recorded in the Minutes), the Court may of its own motion issue such a summons, and make such an order or such orders and cause proper proceedings to be
taken thereon.
295.-(1.) In a case of apparent intestacy, where the circumstances administration of the case appear to the Court so to require (for reasous recorded in the Minutes), the Court may, of its own motion, grant administration to an officer of the Court.
to officer of -Court.
Original will and probate
(2.) The officer so appointed shall act under the direction of the Court, and shall be indemnified thereby.
(3.) He shall publish such notices as the Court thinks fit, in China, Corea, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere.
(4) The Court shall require and compel him to file in the Court accounts of his administration at intervals not exceeding three mouths.
(5.) The accounts shall be in all cases audited by the Supreme Court; for which purpose every Provincial Court shall, during the months of January and July in every year, send to the Supreme Court all accounts so filed in the then last preceding half-
[-year.
(6.) A commission of 5 per cent., or such less amount as the Secret- ary of State directs, may be charged on an estate administered under this Rule, and the amount thereof shall be calculated and applied as the Secretary of State directs.
(7.) All expenses incurred on behalf of the Court in the execution of this Rule and the said commission shall be the first charge on the pro- perty of the deceased in China or Corea, and the Court shall, by ale of part of that property or otherwise, provide for the discharge of those expenses and the payment of the said commission.
296. (1.) Every original will, of which probate or administration. with will annexed is granted, shall be filed and kept in the public office
IN CHINA AND COREA
of the Court from which the grant issues, in such manner as to secure at once the due preservation and the convenient inspection of the same.
(2.) No original will shall be delivered out for any purpose without the direction in writing of a Judge of the Supreme Court.
(3.) An office copy of the whole or of any part of a will, or an official certificate of a grant of administration, may be obtained from the Court where the will is proved or the administration granted on payment of the proper fees.
297. During the months of January and July in every year, every Lists and Provincial Court shall send to the Supreme Court--
A list of the grants of probate and administration made by the Provincial Court up to the last preceeding 31st of December and 30th of June respectively not included in any previous list;
And a copy, certified by the Court to be a correct copy, of every will to which each probate or administration relates.
Wills.
dopies of grants,
dopies to be
298. Every will or copy of a will to which an executor or adininis- Wills and trator with will annexed is sworn shall be marked by the exccutor or marked, administrator and by the person before whom he is sworn.
ikiterato
299 -(1.) Where the testator was blind or illiterate the Court shall Blind or not grant probate or administration with will annexed, unless the Court teststor. is first satisfied, by proof or by what appears on the face of the will, that the will was read over to the deceased before its execution, or that he had at that time knowledge of its contents.
435
(2.) Where in a Provincial Court this information is not forthcoming, the Court shall communicate with the Supreme Court for directions.
300.-(1.) The Court, on being satisfied that the will was duly interlineations, executed, shall carefully inspect it to see whether there are any interline- ations or alterations or erasures or obliterations appearing in it and requiring to be accounted for.
(2) Interlineations, alterations, erasures, and obliterations are in- valid, unless they existed in the will at the time of its execution, or unless, if made afterwards, they have been duly signed and witnessed in the mode required for a will, or unless they have been made valid by the re- execution of the will, or by the subsequent execution of some codicil thereto
(3.) Where interlineations, alterations, erasures, or obliterations appear in the will unless they are duly signed and witnessed, or recited in or otherwise identified by the attestation clause, an affidavit, in proof of their having existed in the will before its execution, shall be filed.
(4.) If it is not proved at what time an erasure or obliteration was made, and the words erased or obliterated are not entirely effaced, and can, on inspection of the will, be read, they shall form part of the probate. (5.) Where words have been erased which might have been of im- portance, an affidavit shall be required.
(6.) If a Provincial Court has any doubt in regard to any interline- ation, alteration, erasure or obliteration, the Court shall communicate with the upreme Court for directions.
erusuren, &e,
documents.
301-(1.) Where a will contains such a reference to some other Collateral paper as to raise a question whether that paper is not a constituent part of the will, the Court shall require the production of the paper with a view to ascertain whether or not it is entitled to probate, and if it is not produced a satisfactory account of its non-production shall be proved.
(2.) A paper cannot form part of a will unless it was in existence at the time when the will was executed.
+
436
Fair copies of willk.
Deposit wills.
Application by one of several
equally entitled.
Registrar to keep books,
&c.
Registrar to keep a special bok for deu-
RULES OF SUPREME COURT
(3.) If there are vestiges of sealing-wax or wafers or other marks on the will leading to the inference that some paper has been at some time anuexed or attached thereto, a satisfactory account of those marks shall be proved, or the production of the paper shall be required; if it is not produced, a satisfactory account of its non-production shall be proved.
(4.) If a Provincial Court is in doubt whether or not a particular paper is entitled to probate us a constituent part of a will, the Court shall communicate with the Supreme Court for directions.
302. The Court shall take care that the copies of wills to be annexed to probates or letters of administration are fairly and properly written, and shall reject any not so written.
303. A British subject may in his lifetime deposit for safe custody in the Court his own will sealed up under his own seal and the seal of the Court.
Intestacy.
304. When administration is applied for by one or some only of the next-of-kin, there being another or others equally entitled thereto, the Court shall require proof that notice of the application has been given to such other or others.
The Registrar.
305. (1.) The Registrar shall keep books in such forms as may be appointed by the Supreme Court; and every entry in such books shall have a number prefixed corresponding with the number of the action or matter to which the entry relates.
(2.) He shall file all relevant documents delivered to him in any action or matter, and shall distinguish them by the number of the action or matter in respect of which they are filed.
(3.) He shall, subject to the directions of the Court, keep Minutes of all proceedings in the Court.
(4.) When, under these Rules, any application is to be made to, or any notice or other document is to be delivered to, filed with, or served on the Registrar, such application, delivery, filing, or service shall be effected by leaving during office hours the application in writing or the document in the Registry, and not otherwise.
306.-(1.) The Registrar of a Provincial Court shall keep a special book for the entry of documents and warrants for service and execution ments issuing proceeding from the Supreme Court. On the receipt of any such docu- from Supreme Court.
ment or warrant he shall enter in his book its number and nature together with the date of its receipt and of its delivery to the Marshal for service or execution; also whether any special instructions have been given by the Supreme Court respecting the service or execution and the nature of such instructions. He shall also enter from time to time in the book what has been done respecting the service or execution as reported to him by the Marshal and the date of its return to the Registrar of the Supreme Court.
Service of
process by Marshal.
(2.) On receipt from the Marshal of the indorsed original he shall forward it to the Registrar of the Supreme Court forth with together with an extract from the entries in his book respecting it.
The Marshal.
307. The Marshal is the officer of the Court for serving all such suinmonses, warrants, notices, or other documents as are required, by or under the Principal Order, to be served by an officer of the Court, but
IN CHINA AND COREA
the Court may direct service by any other officer or person, and in that case the provisions of these Rules shall apply to service by such other officer or person.
308. The Marshal shall keep books and make Returns to Court in Marshal to keep books such forms as shall be appointed by the Supreme Court; and every entry and make in such books shall have a number prefixed corresponding with the numi- returns, ber of the action or matter to which it relates.
payment of
309.-(1.) The Marshal shall enter in an Order Book all orders for Order for the payment of money or costs or both which he shall have received from money. the Registrar, and the date on which he shall have caused them to be served.
(2.) The Marshal shall, within twenty four hours from the receipt of the same, pay over to such person as the Court shall designate any money which he shall have levied or received by virtue of any process issued out of the Court, and the proper officer shall indorse upon the warrant a memorandum of having received the same, and deliver to the Marshal a copy of the memorandum under the seal of the Court, and the Marshal shall file such copy and retain the same in his custody as his voucher.
310. The Marshal shall oxecute every warrant issued to him as soon as possible, and enter in the proper book every warrant which he has been required to execute with the date and hour of its delivery to him, and shall state from time to time therein what he shall have done under cach warrant, and, if the same is not executed within one month from the day of its delivery to him, why it has not been executed; and shall at all reasonable times give to a suitor, his legal practitioner or agent every information he may reasonably require as to the execution or non-execu- tion of any warrant issued at the instance of such suitor.
Execution of
warrants.
detention of
311. (1) Where any personal property is directed to be sold by Sales and auction, detained, or preserved, the Marshal shall, if the Court shall so goods. direct, superintend such sale, detention, or preservation, and where the property is to be sold by private contract he shall carry out the directions of the Court in respect of such sale.
(2.) Where a warrant directs the Marshal to detain and
preserve any goods or chattels he shall take and retain possession of them until he receives further orders from the 'ourt concering them.
(3.) Where a warrant directs the Marshal to take possession of any goods and chattels until good security is given by some party for the safe keeping or for the payment of the value of them in default of safe keeping, but shall not specify the amount of the security, he shall make, or cause to be made, an inventory or appraisement of the goods or chattels which he may take into his possession, and upon receiving as a deposit the amount of the appraisement or sufficient security, to be approved by the Court, for the safe custody and for delivery up of possession, upon request, of the goods and chattles, he may relinguish the possession of them on condition that they shall be redelivered to him or held to abide the order of the Court. If the warrant specifies the amount of security, no less deposit or security shall be sufficient.
to service of
312. In the service of documents and execution of warrants proceed. Rules to apply ing from the Supreme Court in the district of a Provincial Court these documents, Rules shall be observed, unless any special directions are given by the g Supreme Court, in which case such directions are to be strictly followed. Court.
437
out of Supreme
PART IV.-GENERAL
813. The fecs specified in the First Schedule to these Rules shall be Fees. paid.
438
Forms.
Where no pro. vision made, English pro- cedure to be observed,
Annual reports to Supreme Cowt.
Forms 116
and 117.
Scale of expenses of witnesses, &o,
Report of cases under Article
47 (2).
Repeal.
Short title.
IN CHINA AND COREA RULES OF SUPREME COURT
314. The forms set forth in the Second Schedule to these Rules, or forms to the like effect, shall be used with such variations as circum- stances may require.
315, Where in regard to any matter of practice or procedure no provision is made in the Principal Order or these Rules, the practice and procedure of the High Court and other Courts in England in regard to similar matters shall be observed, as far as circumstances admit.
316. The annual reports mentioned in Article 167 of the Principal Order shall be presented to the Supreme Court in the month of February of each year, and shall be in the form given in the Second Schedule to these Rules.
317. The expenses of a complainant and of witnesses and of juries and of assessors that may be ordered by a Court under Article 52 of the Principal Order shall be according to the scale specified in the First Schedule to these Rules.
318. The report mentioned in Article 47 (2) of the Principal Order shall in every case be sent to the Supreme Court within one month after the passing of the sentence, with a full copy of the Minutes of the trial and of the notes of evidence.
319. The following Rules and Tables of Fees are hereby repealed except as to pending proceedings, that is to say:-
Rules of the Supreme Court of the 4th May, 1865.
Rules of the Supreme Court in Criminal Cases of the 7th
November, 1878.
Table of Fees of the 13th March, 1899.
Rules of the Supreme Court of the 25th April, 1905.
320. These Rules may be cited as "The China and Corea Rules of Court, 1905."
Approved:
LANSDOWNE,
His Majesty's Principal Secretary of State
for Foreign Affairs.
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURTS IN
CHINA AND COREA
NOTES
(i) Article 164 of the Principal Order provides that all fees and other sums of money which, in any Rules of Court made under that Order, are stated in British currency shall, if not paid in British gold, be paid in China in British or Mexican dollars at the rate of exchange fixed periodically by the Treasury; in Corea, in Japanese currency at the rate of 10 yen to the £ sterling. In making such payments in China, all fractions of 25 cents shall be counted as 25 cents, and in Corea all fractions of 25 sen shall be counted as 25 sen.
(ii) The same Article provides that the said rates of exchange shall apply to the ascertainment of the value of any property for the purpose of any limitation or security, in any case where the Order or any Rules contain a reference to British
currency.
(i) In estimating the sterling value of the estate of a deceased person for the payment of any fee on probate or administration, taels or dollars shall be estimated at the sight rate of exchange on London at the time when the fee is paid.
(iv) 75 Shanghai taels shall be reckoned as equivalent to 100 British or Mexican dollars.
(v) For the purpose of calculating poundage or percentage, any fraction of a £ shall be treated as an entire £.
(vi) All poundage or percentage, except where otherwise herein specified, shall be estimated upon the amount or value of the subject-matter of the proceeding upon which it is payable. In any case where any poundage or percentage cannot be estimated by these Rules, it shall be estimated on 501.
(vi) The bearing fees in interpleader shall be estimated on the amount of the money or the value of the goods claimed, which value, in case of dispute, shall be assessed by the Court, who at the hearing shall direct by whom and when and how such fee shall be paid.
(vii) Poundage on judgment summonses under Rule 190 is to be calculated on so much of the amount of the original demand as, under the order of the Court, is payable at the time of the issue of the summnons.
(ix) All fractions of 6d. in the amount of a fee shall be treated and charged as 6d.
Special Case
On summons or application by party for special case
On special case where stated or settled by the Court
On hearing
+
++
Fee No. 3 is not to be levied when Fee No. 55 exceeds 11, and is levied.
Summary Orders before Suit, Rule 174)
***
--
£ s. d.
1
0 0
+
0 10 0
1 0 0
+++
0 10 0
On application for order
On recognizance
On order
++
On a summons
On taking possession
+++
H
Bankruptcy Proceedings
On making an inventory, per hour
On a bond with sureties
On filing an affidavit other than proof of debts
***
On a subpoena or summons under section 27 of the Bankruptcy Act. 1883
On every proof of debt over 21
TH
++
---
--
H
On the appointment of a Receiver or Manager In ad·lition to fee No. 14, when an Officer of the Court is appointed Receiver, such
further sum as the Court directs, not exceeding
H
0 10 0
0
5 0
1
+
0 0
+++
0 10 0
+
0 5 0
+
0 10 0
0
20
0
1 0
0
1 0
1
0 0
+4
5 0 0
440
FEES IN H.B.M. COURTS IN CHINA AND COREA
On the approval or appointment of a Trustee by the Court
On application for an order of discharge
£ s. d.
A
0 10 0
1 0 0
And in addition the cost of such advertisements as the Court directs In addition to fee No. 17, for every creditor to be notified by the Court On every application to the Court to approve a composition, a fee computed at the following rate on the gross amount of the composition, viz., 17. on every 1007, or fraction of 100%, up to 5,000%, and 10s, on every 1001. or faction of 1007. beyond 5,0001.
On every application to the Court to approve a scheme of arrangement, a fee computed at the following rates on the gross amount of the estimated assetz (but not exceeding the gross amount of the unsecured liabilities), viz., 17, on every 1001, or fraction of 100%, up to 5,000, 108, on every 100, or fraction of 1002. beyond 5,000%. Provided that where a fee has been taken on a previous application to the Court to approve a composition or scheme, seven-eighths of the amount thereof shall be deducted from the fee payable on an application to approve a composition or scheme.
Probate and Administration
In all case (except under Article 106 or under Article 112 of the Principal Order) where the value of the estate does not exceed 2001, the fees to be taken for probate and administration shall not exceed in the aggregate 5 per cent, on the value of the estate.
In all cases (except those to which Fee No. 21, applies) the fees shall be regulated
according to the following scale:-
On application for probate or administration
On oath for every executor and administrator and surety
On every security
On probate or administration
Where the value of the estate is-
From 100l. to 500Z., for every 502, or fraction thereof From 5001, to 1,000, for every 507, or fraction thereof Above 1,000, for every 1001, or fraction thereof
Where the Court appoints as administrator
an officer of the Court
++
+
On registering a will under Rule 296 On sealing summons under Rule 294 On order under Rule 294
H
{
Registering probate or letters of administration Copy of Decree (if required) ...
In addition to the foregoing 2
per cent. on the value of the estate and effects,
Copy of Decree, if above six folios, per folio beyond six
+
+
A
++
*
0 10
1 00 0 10 0
1
0 0
1 0 0
5 0
3 0
0 10 0
d
J 00
1 00
0 10 0
0 10 0
...
HI
0 10
+
Certificate under seal
Filing bond
In the case provided for in Article 106 of the Principal Order fees Nos. 22, 23, 24,
36, 37 are also payable, so far as they are applicable
T
***
+
***
0 10 0
0 50
Filing any account
Passing any account
...
0 10 0-
*
1 00
Ordinary Suits
On sealing a writ of summons for the commencement of an action:-
6d. in the £, not exceeding a total fee of 251, but in no case less than 2s. 6d. On sealing every judgment summons nader Rule 190, 2d. in the on so much of the amount of the original demand as, under the order of the Court, is payable at the time of issue of the summons, not exceeding a total fee of 10s., but in no ense less than 2s. 6d.
On sealing a concurrent, renewed, or amended writ of summons for the commence-
ment of an action ...
HE
++
On sealing a third party notice under Rule 90
On sealing a writ of naudamus
On sealing a writ of subpoena for witnesses, not exceeding three persons
On sealing a subpoena pursuant to the Court of Probate Act. 1858, section 23, and
every writ not otherwise specified
On sealing a writ of execution against goods for less than 50%. On sealing a writ of excution against goods for 607, and upward
+4
0 20
0 26
0 10 0
0 5
0 50
0 5 0
FEES IN H.B.M. COURTS IN CHINA AND COREA
On sealing any originating summons
On amending zame
On motion for a new trial
H
+
441
£ s. d. 0 10 V
50
1 0 0
2 6
On sealing or issuing any summons not particularly charged, or Registrar's warrant (
No fee shall be payable on any application for or ou the hearing of any
application to set aside proceedings, or for a summons in interpleader.
Examination of Witnesses
On every witness examined in Court
+I
+++
W
+++
On every memorandum of appointment for an examination On every witness sworn and examined by an officer of the Court in his office, unless
otherwise provided, including oath, for each hour or part of an hour
*
0
20
0 5 0
0 10 0
On an examination of witnesses by any such officer away from the office (in addition
to reasonable travelling and other expenses) for each hour or part of an hour 1 0 0 The officer may, before going to the place of examination, require a deposit, or an undertaking in writing to pay any fees and expenses which may become payable, and, in case of a deposit, sball make a memorandum thereof and deliver the same to the party making the deposit.
Hearing
On entering or setting down, or re-entering or re-setting down any cause, including hearing, whether on summons adjoured from Chambers to Court, or otherwise, and including special case or matter by which a proceeding is commenced, 6d. in the £, not exceeding a total fee of 25%., but in no case less than 2s. 6d.
This fee is not to be levied when Fee No. 3 is levied, unless the total fee leviable
under Fee No. 55 exceeds 17.
On an order for adjournment of hearing rendered necessary by default or request of
either party (to be paid by that party)
---
In all cases where the defendant shall, either personally or by his legal practitioner or agent, admit the claim, one-half of the hearing fee paid by the plaintiff shali be returned to him by the Registrar, though the Court may have been required to decide upon the terms and conditions upon which the claim is to be paid An addititional hearing fee shall be taken for every new trial,
On the hearing of a judgment summons under Rule 190, 3d, in the £ on the amount on which the fee for the summons is calculated, not exceeding a total fee of 10s. but in no case less than 2s. 6d.
On the hearing of any summons in Chambers other than an originating summons
Interlocutory Proceedings, Orders
On drawing up any Order
On filing any motion where not otherwise provided
+1
TH
Order for accounts, on every 100%. or fraction thereof found to have been received,
without deducting any payment
H
0 7 6
+
0 5
0
5 0
0
5 0
0
10
0 10 0
-
On a certificate of the Registrar of the result of any proceeding or taxation of costs
before him, including one or any number of matters
Judgments, Decrees, and Orders
On entering any order in the Order Book
0
2 6
If made in Court on the original bearing or hearing on further consideration of a
cause, or on the hearing of a special case or petition, unless otherwise provided... 0 50 Judgment by consent, or default judgment, 3d, in the £ on the amount claimed
in the summons, but in no case less than 2s. 6d.
Order for sale,or purchase of lands, for every 100% or fraction thereof involved Order for accounts, on every 1001, or fraction thereof found to have been received,
without deducting any payment
0 2 6
0 10
On a certificate of the Registrar of the result of any proceeding or taxation of costs
before him, including one or any number of matters
0 10 0
•
On motion for leave to appeal or for a re-bearing
Appeal to Supreme Court
On motion for leave to appeal against adjudication of bankruptcy
10 0
***
+
On motion for leave to appeal against allowance, suspension, or refusal of order of
discharge in bankruptcy
5
0 0
5
00
A
+
13
442
FEES IN H.B.M, COURTS IN CHINA AND COREA
On every security
On order for leave to appeal or for re-hearing
On hearing of-
+++
(a) Any appeal or on any re-hearing in the Supreme Court, per cent, on
the amount involved, not exceeding a total fee of 251,
(b) Any appeal referred to in No. 71 or No. 72...
(c) Any other appeal, where the recovery of money is not involved...
Appeal to His Majesty in Council
£ s. di 0 10 0
J
0 0
2 00
3 0 0
H
2 0
2
0 0
5
00
On motion for leave to appeal
On every security
J
On order for leave to appeal
For preparing record of appeal, such sum as the Court directs (not exceeding 6d.
per folio)
For certifying record of appeal, per folio
Filing
0 0 6
On filing or transmitting to the Supreme Court a special case On filing any document
+++
F
+++
+
On depositing, pursuant to an order in any cause or matter, any documents for safe
custody or production, if the number does not exceed five...
If exceeding five...
1
0 0
0
50
0 50
+
0 10 0
On a receipt for any document or documents to which the last two fee apply, when
delivered out
0 28
Copies
On making a copy of any document, or extract therefrom, for each folio On examining a written or printed copy, and making or sealing same as an office
copy, for each folic
0 10
T
0 0 6
-
++
0 76
0 6
On a copy in a foreign language, doubt the above fees For an official certified translation of any document, for first folio For every further folio...
On a copy of a plan, map, section, drawing, photograph, or diagram, the actual cost.
Attendances
On an application for any officer to attend a foreign Court as a witness, or to produce rec rds or documents to be given in evidence (in addition to the reasonable expenses of the flicer), for each day or part of a day he shall necessarily be absent from his office, not exceeding two hours
For every additional hour or part of an hour
(Not exceeding a total fee of 41.)
HA
+
The officer may, before leaving his office, require a deposit or a guarantee in
writing to pay any fees or expenses which may become payable.
On a verbal application to a local authority, for any purpose whatever relating to
any proceeding under the Principal Order
For al tendance at a sale-
1 0 0
0 10 0
0 10 0
At request of parties interested or of local authorities, if absent less than two hours 2 00 At request of parti a intereste 1, for each additional hour or fraction thereof,
108., with a maximum per day of
For attendance of interpreter at Consular Court,
if required by a party in an action
4 00
-
Such sum as the Courtdirects, not
exceeding 31. per diem
Oaths, ft..
0 50
For taking an affidavit or an affirmation, or an attestation upon honour in lieu of
an affidavit or declaration And in addition thereto, for every exhibit therein referred to and required to be marked 0 26
On a certificate of an affidavit or proceeding having been entered, filed, or taken,
Certificate
or of the negative thereof unless otherwise provided
Or if required for use in a foreign country...
0 20 0 10 0
FEES IN H.B.M. COURTS IN CHINA AND COREA
Searches and Inspections
...
+4
On an application to search for an affidavit and inspecting the same On an application to search an index. and in pect a Judgment, Decree. Order or other record, or will or copy of a will, and to inspect scripts filed, or documents deposited pursuant to an order for safe custody or production, for each hour. or part of an hour occupied
Not exceeding in one day
On reference to archives
C
---
H
Registration of Documents, &c.
---
+
443
2 s. d.
0
10
0
5 0
00
HI
U
2 6
On registering bill of sale and affidavit therewith when the consideration (including
further advances) does not exceed 100%.
When the consideration exceeds 100, for every 1007. or part thereof...
+
++
0
5 0
0 50
On filing under the Bills of Sale Acts, 1878 and 1882, any other documents to which
the Fees Nos. 105 and 106 do not apply Registering any mortgage deed, conveyance, letters patent, will or document requiring registration (other than a bill of sale), and comparing and certifying the same under seal, in addition to the certificate fee of 10s.
0 10 0
0 15 0
Ditto, if above ten folios, for every folio of seventy-two words above that number 0
Taxation of Costs,
Taxation of practitioner's bill of costs, not exceeding ten folios For every folio beyond ten
Taxation of Marshal's bill of fees
Acknowledgments by Married Women to Deeds. Taking the acknowledgment of a married woman to any deed Filing certificate...
On taking an inventory, per diem
+
Miscellaneous
+
For communications between two Consular Courts
For communications in writing to foreign or local authority and filing reply For application to local authority for permission to sell or purchase realty Application to local authority for any other purpose
For despatch to accompany same
+
+H
A
On deposit of will for safe custody (including receipt for same)
+
1 0
0 10 0
0
1 0
0
5 0
I 00
H
0
5 0
HO
1
00
---
0 10 0
0 15 0
1
0 0
0 10 0
++
0 10 0
◊ 10 0
On deposit of money (other than in pursuance of a Judgment or Order) 1 per cent. Poundage on moneys puid into Court for care, risk or responsibility, 1 per cent. For any service performed under any Act of Parliament, the like fee as is chargeable
in England
References to the Registrar
On every reference, investigation, or inquiry (other than in Admiralty causes), includ-
ing the examination of witnesses, for every hour or part of an hour occupied ... 0 10 0
Interpreter
For interpreting in any language in the Court, per day or part of a day
+++
0 10 0
For attendance at Supreme Court, if required by a party to the suit (in addition to
reasonable expenses, such sum as the Court shall allow, not exceeding per day 3 0 0
Marshal
Service of summons, orders, or other documents not otherwise specified, if within e
mile of the Court
+11
Every additional mile or part of a mile
Arresting any party, and taking bail to appear
LAR
Drawing an assigning (where required) bail bond
ITT
0
2 6
0
1 0
0
5 0
0
5 0
+1
5 0
Where parties settle action without bail, and defendant is discharged on payment
of the debt...
++
For copy of warrant of arrest when required by defendant
Executing warrant of arrest, attachment, or execution on property If execution be withdrawn before sale
Attending trial of each cause...
Issuing and serving each subpoena, including copy for service Serving notice on jurors or assessors, each...
HE
++
For overy prisoner discharged by consent indorsed on bail bond
:
HI
-
*
0 20
5 0 7 6
0
26
2 6
0 6 0
13*
444
FEES IN HBM, COURTS IN CHINA AND COREA
+.
For sale of personal property under execution when amount under 101. For sale of personal property under execution when amount above 10, for every
additional 101. or part thereof
W
In every case when the duty to be performed is more than 1 mile from the
Court, an additional fee of 1s. per mile is to be charged
Keeper of the Gaol
For attending Court with a prisoner as a witness...
For every prisoner discharged by consent indorsed on bail bond
On every summons or warrant
On hearing in summary case On warrant of commitment
On recognizance...
Criminal Matters
---
HE
For service of notice on each juror or assessor On trial with a jury
On record of sentence on trial with a jury
+
£ . d.
0 10 0
0 2 6
0 50 0 5
0
2
I
0 2 6
0 1 6
0 10
0
2 6
The Court may suspend or remit any of the above fees (in criminal matters).
when it shall deem it to be in the interest of justice to do so
Scale of Allowances under Article 52 of the Principal Order
Assessors, not exceeding 21. per diem, for each day or part of a day on which they
attend
Jurors, for each day or part of a day on which they serve, such sum as the Court
way direct, not exceeding
Witnesses and complainants. For professional men, merchants, and the like, not
exceeding per day...
For other persons, not exceeding per day
Travelling expenses for assessors, jurors, complainants, and witnesses, and fees to medical practitioners for analysis, &c., may be allowed in addition to the above.
0 10 0
0 10 0
0 10 0
1 00 0 10 0
RULES OF THE VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN HIS
MAJESTY'S POSSESSIONS ABROAD
1. In the construction of these rules, the following terms shall (if not inconsistent with the context or subject matter) have the respective meanings hereinafter assigned to them; that is to say,-
"Possession" shall mean any colony, plantation, settlement, island or territory, being a part of His Majesty's dominions, but not being within the limits of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland;
A
Court" shall mean any Vice-Admiralty Court now existing or which shall
hereafter be established in any Possession;
Registry" shall mean registry of the Court, or any district registry thereof; "Judge" shall mean the judge of the Court, or any person lawfully authorised to
act as judge thereof;
"Registrar" shall mean the registrar of the Court, or any deputy or assistant
registrar thereof;
Marshal" shall mean the marshal of the Court, or any deputy or assistant
marshal thereof;
"Action" shall mean any action, cause, suit, or other proceeding insituted in
the Court;
"Counsel" shall mean any advocate, barrister-at-law, or other person entitled
to practise in the Court;
"Solicitor" shall mean any proctor, solicitor, or attorney entitled to practise
in the Court;
"Plaintiff" shall include the plaintiff's solicitor, if he sues by a solicitor;
14
4
"Defendant" shall include defendant's solicitor, if he appears by a solicitor;
Party" shall include the party's solicitor, if he sucs or appears by a solicitor; 'Ship" shall include every description of vessel used in navigation not propelled.
by oars only;
Month" shall mean calendar month.
ACTIONS
2. Actions shall be of two kinds, actions in rem and actions in personam.
3. Actions for condemnation of any ship, boat, cargo, proceeds, slaves, or effects, or for recovery of any pecuniary forfeiture or penalty, shall be instituted in the name
of the Crown.
4. All actions shall be numbered in the order in which they are instituted, and the number given to any action shall be the distinguishing number of the action, and shall be written or printed on all documents in the action as part of the title thefore.
|
416
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
WRIT OF SUMMONS
5. Every action shall be commenced by a writ of summons, which before being issued, shall be indorsed with a statement of the nature of the claim, and of the relief or remedy required, and of the amount claimed, if any.
6. In an action for seaman's or master's wages, or for bottomry, or in any action in which the plaintiff desires an account, the indorsement on the writ of summons may include a claim to have an account taken.
7. The writ of summous shall be indorsed with the name and address of the plaintiff, and with an address, to be called an address for service, not more than three miles from the registry, at which it shall be sufficient to leave all documents required to be served upon him.
8. The writ of summons shall be prepared and indorsed by the plaintiff, and shall be issued under the seal of the Court, and a copy of the writ and of all the indorsements thereon, signed by the plaintiff, shall be left in the registry at the time of sealing the writ.
9. The judge may allow the plaintiff to amend the writ of summons and the indorsements thereon in such manner and on such terms as to the judge shall seem fit,
SERVICE OF WRIT OF SUMMONS
10. In an action in rem, the writ of summons shall be served-
(a) Upon ship, or upon cargo, freight, or other property, if the cargo or other property is on board a ship, by attaching the writ for a short time to the mainmast or the single mast, or to some other conspicuous part of the ship, and by leaving a copy of the writs attached thereto.
(b) Upon cargo, freight, or other property, if the cargo or other property is not on board a ship, by attaching the writ for a short time to such cargo or property, and leaving a copy of the writ attached thereto.
(c) Upon freight in the hands of any person, by showing the writ to him and by
leaving with him a copy thereof.
(d) Upon proceeds in Court, by showing writ to the registrar and by leaving
with him a copy thereof.
11. If access cannot be obtained to the property on which it is to be served, the writ may be served by showing it to any person appearing to be in charge of such property, and by leaving with him a copy of the writ.
12. In an action in personam, the writ of summons shall be served by showing it to the defendant, and by leaving with him a copy of the writ.
13. A writ of summons against a firm may be served upon any member of the firm, or upon any person appearing at the time of service to have the management of the business of the firm.
14. A writ of summons against a corporation or a public company may be served in the mode, if any, provided by law for service of any other writ or legal process upon such corporation or company.
15. Where no such provision exists, a writ of summons against a corporation may be served upon the mayor or other head officer, or upon the town clerk, clerk, treasurer, or secretary of the corporation, and a writ of summons against a public company may be served upon the secretary of the company, or may be left at the office of the company.
16. If the person to be served is under disability, or if for any cause personal service cannot, or cannot promptly, be effected, or if in any action, whether in rem or in personam, there is any doubt or difficulty as to the person to be served, or as to the mode of service, the judge may order upon whom, or in what manner service is to be made, or may order notice to be given in lieu of service.
17. The writ of summons, whether in rem or in personam, may be served by the plaintiff or his agent within six months from the date thereof, and shall, after service, be filed with a certificate of service indorsed thereon.
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD 447
18. The certificate shall state the date and mode of service, and shall be signed by the person who served the writ.
APPEARANCE
19. A party appearing to a writ of summons shall file an appearance at the place directed in the writ.
20. A party not appearing within the time limited by the writ may, by consent of the other parties or by permission of the judge, appear at any time on such terms as the judge shall order.
21. If the party appearing has a set-off or counterclaim against the plaintiff, he may indorse on his appearance a statement of the nature thereof, and of the relief or remedy required, and of the amount, if any, of the set-off or counterclaim. But if in the opinion of the judge such set-off or counterclaim cannot be conveniently disposed of in the action, the judge may order it to be struck out.
22. The appearance shall be signed by the party appearing, and shall state his name and address, and an address, to be called au address for service, not more than three miles from the registry, at which it shall be sufficient to leave all documents required to be served upon him.
PARTIES
23. Any number of persons having interests of the same nature arising out of the same matter may be joined in the same action whether as plaintiffs or as defendants.
24. The judge may order any person who is interested in the action, though not named in the writ of summons, to come in either as plaintiff or as defendant.
25. For purposes of the last preceding rule an underwriter or insurer shall be deemed to be a person interested in the action.
26. The judge may order upon what terms any person shall come in, and what notices and documents, if any, shall be given to and served upon him, and may give such further directions in the matter as to him shall seem fit.
CONSOLIDATION OF ACTIONS
27. Two or more actions in which the questions at issue are substantially the same, or for matters which might properly be combined in one action, may be consolidated by order of the judge upon such terms as to him shall seem fit.
28. The judge, if he thinks fit, may order several actions, to be tried at the same time, and on the same evidence, or the evidence in one action to be used as evidence in another, or may order one of several actions to be tried as a test action, and the other actions to be stayed to abide the result.
WARRANTS
29. In an action in rem, a warrant for the arrest of property may be issued by the registrar at the time of, or at any time after the issue of the writ of summons, on an affidavit being filed, as prescribed by the following rules.
30. The affidavit shall state the nature of the claim, and that the aid of the
•Court is required.
31. The affidavit shall also state--
(a.) In an action for wages, the national character of the ship, and if the ship is foreign, that notice of the action has been served upon à consular officer of the State to which the ship belongs, if there is one resident in the Possession: (b.) In an action for necessaries, or for building, equipping, or repairing any ship, the national character of the ship, and that, to the best of the deponent's belief, no owner or part owner of the ship was domiciled in the Possession at the time when the necessaries were supplied or the work was done:
448 RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
(c.) In an action between co-owners relating to the ownership, possession, employment, or earnings of any ship registered in the Possession, the port at which the ship is registered and the number of shares in the ship owned by the party proceeding.
32. In an action for bottomry, the bottomry bond in original, and, if it is in a foreign language, a translation thereof, shall be produced for the inspection and perusal of the Registrar, and a copy of the bond, or of the translation thereof, certified to be correct, shall be annexed to the affidavit.
33. The Registrar, if he thinks fit, may issue a warrant, although the affidavit does not contain all the prescribed particulars, in an action for bottomry, although the bond had not been produced; or he may refuse to issue a warrant without the order of the judge.
34. The warrant shall be prepared in the registry, and shall be signed by the Registrar, and issued under the seal of the Court.
35. The warrant shall be served by the Marshal, or his officer in the manger prescribed by these rules for the service of a writ of summons in an action in rem and thereupon the property shall be deemed to be arrested.
36. The warrant may be served on Sunday, Good Friday, or Christmas Day, as well as on any other day.
37. The warrant shall be filed by the Marshal within one week after service thereof has been completed, with a certificate of service indorsed thereon.
38. The certificate shall state by whom the warrant has been served, and the date and mode of service, and shall be signed by the Marshal.
BAIL
39. Whenever bail is required by these rules, it shall be given by filing one or more bail bonds, each of which shall be signed by two sureties, unless the judge shall, on special cause shown, order that one surety shall suffice.
40. Every bail bond shall be prepared in the registry and shall be signed before the registrar, or by his direction before a clerk in the registry, or before a commissioner appointed by the Court, to take bail.
41. Sureties may attend to sign a bond either separately or together.
42. If bail is taken before a commissioner, the sureties shall justify by affidavit. 43. The commission to take bail and the affidavits justification shall be prepared in the registry, and issued with the bail bond, and shall with the bail bond, when executed, be returned to the registry by the commissioner.
44. No commissioner shall be entitled to take bail in any action in which he, or any person in partnership with him, is acting as solicitor or agent.
45. Before filing a bail bond, notice of bail shall be served upon the adverse party, and a certificate of such service shall be indorsed on the bond by the party filing it.
46. If the adverse party is not satisfied with the sufficiency of any surety, he may file a notice objecting to such surety, or requiring him to justify, if he has not already done so.
RELEASES
47. A release for property arrested by warrant may be issued by order of the judge.
48. A release may also be issued by the registrar, unless there is a caveat outstanding against the release of the property-
(a.) On payment into court of the amount claimed, or of the appraised value of the property arrested, or, where cargo is arrested for freight only, of the amount of the freight verified by affidavit:
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD 449
(b.) On one or more bail bonds being filed for the amount claimed, or for the appraised value of the property arrested; and on proof that twenty-four hours' notice of the names and addresses of the sureties has been previously served on the party at whose instance the property has been arrested: (c) On the application of the party at whose instance the property has been
arrested:
(d) On a consent in writing being filed signed by the party at whose instance.
the property has been arrested :
(e.) On discontinuance or dismissal of the action in which the property has
been arrested.
49. Where property has been arrested for salvage, the release shall not be issued under the foregoing rule, except on discontinuance or dismissal of the action, until the value of the property arrested has been agreed upon between the parties or determined by the judge."
50. The registrar may refuse to issue a release without the order of the judge. 51. The release shall be prepared in the registry, and shall be signed by the registrar; and issued under the seal of the Court.
52. The release shall be served on the Marshal, either personally, or by leaving it at his office, by the party by whom it is taken out.
53. Ou service of the release and on payment to the Marshal of all fees due to and charges incurred by him in respect of the arrest and custody the property shall be at once released from arrest.
PRELIMINARY ACTS
54. In an action for damage by collision, each party shall, within one week from an appearance being entered, file a Preliminary Act, sealed up, signed by the party, and containing a statment of the following particulars :-
(1.) The names of the ships which came into collision, and the names of their masters;
(2.) The time of the collision;
(3.) The place of the collision;
(4.) The direction and force of the wind;
(5.) The state of the weather;
(6.) The state and force of the tide;
(7.) The course and speed of the ship when the other was first seen;
(8.) The lights, if any, carried by her;
(9.) The distance and bearing of the other ship when first seen;
(10.) The lights, if any, of the other ship which were first seen;
(11.) The lights, if any, of the other ship, other than those first seen, which came
into view before the collision;
(12.) The measures which were taken, and when, to avoid the collision;
(13.) The parts of each ship which first came into collision;
(14.) What fault or default, if any, is attributed to the other ship.
PLEADINGS
55. Every action shall be heard without pleadings, unless the judge shall
otherwise order.
56. If an order is made for pleadings, the plaintiff shall, within one week from the date of the order, file his petition, and, within one week from the filing of the petition, the defendant' shall file his answer, and within one week from the filing of the answer the plaintiff shall file his reply, if any; and there shall be no pleading beyond the reply, except by permission of the judge.
But
57. The defendant may, in his answer, plead any set-off or counterclaim. if, in the opinion of the judge, such set-off or counterclaim cannot be conveniently disposed of in the action, the judge may order it to be struck out.
450
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
58. Every pleading shall be divided into short paragraphs, numbered consecutively, which shall state concisely the facts on which the party relies; and shall be signed by the party filing it.
59. It shall not be necessary to set out in any pleading the words of any document referred to therein, except so far as the precise words of the document are material,
60. Either party may apply to the judge to decide forthwith any question of fact or of law raised by any pleading, and the judge shall thereupon make such order as to him shall seem fit.
61. Any pleading may at any time be amended, either by consent of the parties or by order of the judge.
INTERROGATORIES
62. At any time before the action is set down for hearing any party desirons of obtaining the answers of the adverse party on any matters material to the issue, may apply to the judge for leave to administer interrogatories to the adverse party to be answered on oath, and the judge my direct within what time and in what way they shall be answered, whether by affidavit or by oral examination.
63. The judge may order any interrogatory that he considers objectionable to be amended or struck out; and if the party interrogated omits to answer or answers insufficiently, the judge may order him to answer further, either by affidavit or by oral examination.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION
64. The judge way order any party to an action to make discovery, on the oath, of all documents which are in his possession or power relating to any matter in question therein.
65. The affidavit of discovery shall specify which, if any, of the documents therein mentioned the party objects to produce.
66. Any party to an action may file a notice to any other party to produce, for inspection or transcription, any document in his possession or power relating to any matter in question in the action.
67. If the party served with notice to produce omits or refuses to do so within the time specified in the notice, the adverse party may apply to the judge for an order to produce.
ADMISSION OF DOCUMENTS AND FACTS
68. Any party may file a notice to any other party to admit any document or fact (saving all just exceptions), and a party not admitting it after such notice shall be liable for the costs of proving the document or fact, whatever the result of the action may be, unless the taxing officer is of opinion that there was sufficient reason for not admitting it.
69. No costs of proving any document shall be allowed, unless notice to admit shall have been previously given, or the taxing officer shall be of opinion that the mission to give such notice was reasonable and proper.
SPECIAL CASE
70. Parties may agree to state the question at issue for the opinion of the judge in the form of a special case.
71. If it appears to the judge that there is in any action a question of law which it would be convenient to have decided in the first instance, he may direct that it shall be raised in a special case or in such other manner as he may deem expedient.
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD 451
72. Every special case shall be divided into paragraphs, numbered consecutively, and shall state concisely such facts and documents as may be necessary to enable the judge to decide the question at issue.
73. Every special case shall be signed by the parties, and may be filed by any party.
MOTION
74. A party desiring to obtain an order from the judge shall file a notice of motion with the affidavits, if any, on which he intends to rely.
75. Notice of motion shall state the nature of the order desired, the day on which the motion is to be made, and whether in Court or in Chambers.
76. Except by consent of the adverse party, or by order of the judge, the notice of motion shall be filed twenty-four hours at least before the time at which the motion is made.
77. When the notion comes on for hearing, the judge, after hearing the parties, or, in the absence of any of them, on proof that the notice of motion has been duly served, may make such order as to him shall seem fit.
78. The judge may, on due cause shown, vary or rescind any order pre- viously made.
TENDERS
79. A party desiring to make a tender in satisfaction of the whole or any part of the adverse party's claim, shall pay into Court the amount tendered by him, and shall file a notice of the terms on which the tender is made.
80. Within a week from the filing of the notice the adverse party shall file a motion, stating whether he accepts or rejects the tender, and if he shall not do so he shall be held to have rejected.
81. Pending the acceptance or rejection of a tender, the proceedings shall be suspended.
EVIDENCE
82. Evidence shall be given either by affidavit or by oral examination, or partly in one mode, partly in another.
83. Evidence on a motion shall in general be given by affidavit, and at the bearing by the oral examination of witnesses; but the mode or modes in which evidence shall be given, either on any motion or at the hearing, may be determined either by consent of the parties, or by order of the judge.
84. The judge may order any person who has made an affidavit in an action to attend for cross-examination thereon before the judge, or the registrar, or a commissioner specially appointed.
85. Witnesses examined orally before the judge, the registrar, or a commissioner, shall be examined, cross-examined, and re-examined in such order as the judge, registrar, or commissioner may direct; and questions may be put to any witness by the judge, registrar, or commissioner, as the case may be.
86. If any witness is examined by interpretation, such interpretation shall be made by a sworn interpreter of the Court, or by a person previously sworn according to the prescribed form.
OATHS
87. The Judge may appoint any person to administer oatlis in Vice-Admiralty proceedings.
88. If any person tendered for the purpose of giving evidence objects to take an oath, or is objected to as imcompetent to take an oath, or is by reason of any defect of religious knowledge or belief incapable of comprehending the nature of an oath, the judge or person authorised to administer the oath shall, if satisfied that the taking of an oath would have no binding effect on his conscience, permit him, in Lieu of an oath, to make a declaration.
452
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
AFFIDAVITS
89. Every affidavit shall be divided into short paragraphs numbered consecutively, and shall be in the first person.
90. The name, address and, description of every person making an affidavit shall be inserted therein.
91. The names of all the persons making an affidavit, and the dates when, and the places where it is sworn, shall be inserted in the jurat.
92. When an affidavit is made by any person who is blind, or who from his signature or otherwise appears to be illiterate, the person before whom the affidavit is sworn shall certify that the affidavit was read over to the deponent, and that the de- ponent appeared to understand the same, and made his mark or wrote his signature thereto in the presence of the person before whom the affidavit was sworn.
93. When an affidavit is made by a person who does not speak the English language, the affidavit shall be taken down and read over to the deponent by interpre- tation either of a sworn interpreter of the Court, or of a person previously sworn faithfully to interpret the affidavit.
94. Affidavits may, by permission of the judge, be used as evidence in an action, saving all just exceptions:
(1.) If sworn to, in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or in auy Possession, before any person authorised to administer oaths in the said United Kingdom or in such Possession respectively;
(2.) If sworn to, in any place not being a part of Her Majesty's dominious before a British minister, consul, vice-consul, or notary public, or before a judge, or magistrate, the signature of such judge or magistrate being authenticated by the official seal of the Court to which he is attached.
95. The reception of any affidavit as evidence may be objected to, if the affidavit has been sworn before the solicitor for the party on whose behalf it is offered, or before a partner or clerk of such solicitor.
EXAMINATION OF WITNESS BEFORE TRIAL
96. The judge may order that any witness, who cannot conveniently attend at the trial of the action, shall be examined previously thereto, before either the judge, or the registrar, who shall have power to adjourn the examination from time to time and from place to place, if he shall think necessary.
97. If the witness cannot be conveniently examined before the judge or the registrar, or is beyond the limits of the Possession, the judge may order that he shall be examined before a commissioner specially appointed for the purpose.
98. The commissioner shall have power to swear any witnesses produced before him for examination, and to adjourn, if necessary, the examination from time to time. and from place to place.
99. The parties, their counsel and solicitors, may attend the examination, but, if counsel attend, the fees of only one counsel on each side shall be allowed ou taxation, except by order of the judge.
100. The evidence of every witness shall be taken down in writing, and shall be certified as correct by the judge, or registrar, or by the commissioner, as the case may be.
101. The certified evidence shall be lodged in the registry, or, if taken by commission, shall forthwith be transmitted by the commissioner to the registry, together with his commission.
102. As soon as the certified evidence has been received in the registry, it may be used as evidence in the action, saving all just exceptions.
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
SHORTHAND WRITER
453
103. The judge may order the evidence of the witnesses whether examined before the judge, or the registrar, or a commissioner, to be taken down by a shorthand writer, who shall have been previously sworn faithfully to report the evidence, and a transcript of the shorthand writer's notes, certified by him to be correct and approved by the judge, registrar, or commissioner, as the case may be, shall be lodged in от transmited to the registry as the certified evidence of such witnesses.
PRINTING
104. The judge may order that the whole of the pleadings and written proofs, or any part thereof, shall be printed before the trial; and the printing shall be in such manner and form as the judge shall order.
105. Preliminary Acts, if printed, shall be printed in parallel columns.
ASSESSORS
106. The judge, on the application of any party, or without any such application. it he considers that the nature of the case requires it, may appoint one or more assessors to advise the Court upon any matters requiring nautical or other professional knowledge.
107. The fees of the assessors shall be paid in the first instance by the Plaintiff, unless the judge shall otherwise order.
SETTING DOWN FOR TRIAL
108. An action shall be set down for trial by filing a notice of trial.
109. If there has not been any appearance, the Plaintiff may set down the actiou for trial, on obtaining from the judge leave to proceed ex-parte-
(a.) In an action in personam, or an action against proceeds in Court, after the
expiration of two weeks from the service of the writ of summons;
(b) In an action in rem (not being an action against proceeds in court),
after the expiration of two weeks from the filing of the warrant.
110. If there has been an appearance, either party may set down the action for trial-
(a.) After the expiration of one week from the entry of the appearance, unless an order has been made for pleadings, or an application for such an order is pending;
(b.) If pleadings have been ordered, when the last pleading has been fled, or when the tin allowed to the adverse party for filing any pleading has expired without such pleading having been filed.
In colision cases the Preliminary Acts may be opened as soon as the action has been set down for trial.
111. When the writ of summons has been indorsed with a claim to have an account taken, or the liability has been admitted or determined, and the question is. simply as to the amount due, the judge may, on the application of either party, fix a time within which the accounts and vouchers, and the proofs in support thereof, shall be filed, and at the expiration of that time either party may have the matter set down
for trial.
TRIAL
112. After the action has been set down for trial, the registrar shall send notice to the parties of the day on which it will be tried.
But
113. At the trial of a contested action the Plaintiff shall in general begin. if the burden of proof lies on the Defendant, the judge may direct the Defendant to begin.
454
RULES OF VICE-ADMIKALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
114. If there are several Plaintiffs or several Defendants, the judge may direct which Plaintiff or which Defendant shall begin.
115. Th party beginning shall first address the Court, and then produce his witnesses, if any. The other party or parties shall then address the Court, and produce their witnesses, if any, in such order as the judge may direct, and shall have a right to sum up their evidence. In all cases the party beginning shall have the right to reply, but shall not pro luce further evidence except by permission of the judge. 116. Only one counsel shall in general be heard on each side; but the judge, if he considers that the nature of the case requires it, may allow two counsel to be heard on each side.
117. If the action is uncontested, the judge may, if he thinks fit, give judgment on the evidence adducel by the Plaintiff.
REFERENCES
118. The judge may, if he thinks fit, refer the assessment of damages and the taking of any account to the registrar either alone, or assisted by one or more merchants as assessors.
119. The rules as to evidence, and as to the trial, shall apply mutatis mutandis to a reference to the registrar, and the registrar may aljourn the proceedings from time to time, and from place to place, if he shall think necessary.
120. Counsel may attend the hearing of any reference, but the costs so incurred shall not be allowed on taxation unless the registrar shall certify that the attendance of counsel was necessary.
121. When a reference has been heard, the registrar shall draw up a report in writing of the result, showing the amount, if any, found due, and to whom, together with any further particulars that may be necessary.
122. When the report is ready notice shall be sent to the parties, and either party may thereupon take up and file the report.
123. Within two weeks from the filing of the registrar's report, either party may file a notice of motion to vary the report, specifying the items objected to.
124. At the hearing of the motion the judge may make such order thereto as to him shall seem fit, or may remit the matter to the registrar for further inquiry or report, 125. If no notice of motion to vary the report is filed within two weeks from filing the registrar's report, the report shall stand confirmed.
COSTS
126. In general costs shall follow the result; but the judge may in any case make such order as to the costs as to him shall seein fit.
127. The judge may direct payment of a lump sum in lieu of taxed costs.
128. If any Plaintiff (other than a seaman suing for his wages or for the loss of his clothes and effects in a collision), or any Defen lant making a counterclaim is not resident in the Possession, the judge may, on the application of the adverse party, order him to give bail for costs.
129. A party claiming an excessive amount, either by way of claim, or of set-off or counterclaim, may be condemned in all costs and damages thereby occasioned.
130. If a tender is rejected, but is afterwards accepted or is held by the judge to be sufficient, the party rejecting the tender shall, unless the judge shall otherwise order, he condemned in the costs incurred after tender made.
131. A party, who has not admitted any fact which in the opinion of the judge he ought to have admitted, may be condemned in all costs occasioned by the non-admission.
132. Any party pleading at unnecessary length or taking any unnecessary proceeding in an action may be condemned in all costs thereby occasioned.
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN II.B.M. POSSESSIONS AUROAD 455
TAXATION Or Costs
183. A party desiring to have a bill of costs taxed, shall file the bill, and, as soon as conveniently may be, the registrar shall send to the parties notice of the time at which the taxation will take place.
134. At the time appointed, if either party is present, the taxation shall be proceeded with.
135. Within one week from the completion of the taxation application may be made to the judge to review the taxation,
186. Costs may be taxed either by the judge or by registrar, and as well between solicitor and client, as between party and party.
137. If in a taxation between solicitor aud client more than one-sixth of the bill is struck off, the solicitor shall pay all the costs attending the taxation.
APPRAISEMENT AND SALE, &c.
138. The judge may, either before or after final judgment, order any property under the arrest of the court to be appraise I, or to be sold with or without appraisement, and either by public auction or by private contract.
139. If the property is deteriorating in value, the judge may order it to be sold forthwith.
140. If the property to be sold is of small value, the judge may, if he thinks fit, order it to be sold without a commission of sale being issued.
141. The judge way, either before or after final judgment, order any property under arrest of the Court to be removed, or any cargo under arrest on board ship to be discharged.
142. The appraisement, sale, and removal of property, the discharge of cargo, and the demolition and sale of a vessel condemned under any Slave Trade Act, shall be effected under the authority of a commission addressed to the marshal.
143. The commission shall, as soon as possible after its executi n, be filed by the marshal, with a return setting forth the manner in which it has been executed.
144. As soon as possible after the execution of a commission of sale, the marshal shall pay into Court the gross proceeds of the sale, and shall with the commission file his accounts and vouchers in support thereof.
145. The registrar shall tx the marshal's account, and shall report the amount at which he considers it should be allowed; and any party who is interested in the proceeds may be heard before the registrar on the taxation.
146. Application may be made to the judge on motion to review the registrar's taxation.
147. The judge may, if he thinks fit, order any property under the arrest of the Court to be inspected.
DISCONTINUANCE
148. The Plaintiff may, at any time, dis ontinue his action by filing a notice to that effect, aud the Defendant shall thereupon be entitled to have judgment entered for his costs of action on filing a notice to enter the same. The discontinuance of an action by the Plaintiff shall not prejudice any action consolidated therewith or any counterclaim previously set up by the Defendant.
CONSENTS
149. Any consent in writing signed by the parties may, by permission of the registrar, be filed, and shall thereupon become an order of Court.
456
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
APPEALS*
150. A party desiring to appeal shall, within one month from the date of the decree or order appealed from, file a notice of appeal, and give bail in such sum, not exceeding 30002, as the julge may order, to answer the costs of the appeal.
151. Notwithstan ling the filing of the notice of appeal, the judge may, at any ti re before service of the inhibition, proceed to carry the decree or order appealed from into effect, provided that the party in whose favour it has been made gives bail to abide the event of the appeal, and to answer the costs thereof, in such sum as the judge may order.
152. An appellant desiring to prosecute his appeal is to cause the registrar to be served with an inhibition an I citation, and a monition for process, or is to take such other steps as may be required by the practice of the Appellate Courts.
153. On service of the inhibition and citation all proceedings in the action
will be stayed.
154. On service of the mouition for process, the registrar shall forthwith prepare the process at the expense of the party ordering the same.
155. The process, which shall consist of a copy of all the proceedings in the action, shall be signed by the registrar an sealed with the seal of the Court, and shall be transmitted by the registrar to the registrar of the Appellate Court.
PAYMENTS INTO COURT
156. All money to be paid into Court shall be paid, upon receivable orders to be obtained in the registry, to the account of the registrar at some bank in the Possession to be approved by the judge, or, with the sanction of the local govern ment, into the Treasury of the Possession.
157. A bauk receipt for the amount shall be filed, and thereupon the payment iuto Court shall be deemed to be complete.
PAYMENTS OUT OF COURT
158. No money shall be paid out of Court except upon an order signed by the judge. On signing a receipt to be prepared in the registry, the party to whom the money is payable under the order will receive a cheque for the amount, signed by the registrar, upon the bank in which the money has been lodged, or an order upon the Treasury in such form as the local government shall direct.
CAVEATS
159. Any person desiring to prevent the arrest of any property may file a motion undert king, within three days after being required to do so, to give bail to any * Under the Act, 26 & 27 Vict, c. 24. by S. 22. "The appeal from a decree or order of a Vice- Admiralty Court lies to His Majesty in Council; but no appeal shall be allowed, save by permission of the judge, from any decree or order not having the force or effect of a definitive Bentenc or final order,"
rc
By S, 23. The time for appealing from any decree or order of a Vice-Admiralty Court shall, notwithstanding any existing enactment to the contrary, be limited to six months from the date of the decree or order appealed from; and no appeal shall be allowed where the petition of appeal to Her Majesty shall not have been lodged in the registry of the High Court of Admiralty and of Appeals within that time, unless His Majesty in Council shall, on the report and recommendation of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, be pleased to allow the appeal to be prosecuted, notwithstanding that the petition of appeal has not been lodged within the time prescribed.
Rules (Nos. 148-53) relate only to the proceedings to be taken in the Vice-Admiralty Courts. The procedure in the Appellate Court is regulated by the Rules for appeals in ecclesiastical and maritime causes established by Order in Council of the 11th December
1865.
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD 467
action or counter claim that may have been, or may be, brought against the property, and thereupon the registrar shall enter a caveat in the caveat warrant book herein- after mentioned,
160. Any person desiring to prevent the release of any property under arrest, shall file a notice and thereupon the registrar shall enter a caveat in the caveat book hereinafter mentioned.
161. Any person desiring to prevent the payment of money out of court shall file a notice, and thereupon the registrar shall enter a caveat in the caveat payment book hereinafter mentioned,
162. If the person entering a caveat is not a party to the action, the notice shall state his name and address, and an address within three miles of the registry at which it shall be sufficient to leave all documents required to be served upon hini.
163. The entry of a caveat warrant shall not prevent the issue of a warrant, but a party at whose instance a warrant shall be issued for the arrest of any property in respect of which there is a caveat warrant outstanding, shall be condemned in all costs and damages occasioned thereby, unless he shall show to the satisfaction of the judge good and sufficient reason to the contrary.
164. The party at whose instance a caveat release or caveat payment is entered shall be condemned in all costs and damages occasioned thereby, unless he shall show to the satisfaction of the judge good and sufficient reason to the contrary.
165. A caveat shall not remain in force for more than six months from the date
of entering the same.
166. A caveat may at any time be withdrawn by the person at whose instance it has been entered, on his filing a notice withdrawing it.
167. The judge may overrule any caveat.
SUBPOENAS
168. Any party desiring to compel the attendance of a witness shall serve him with a subpana, which shall be prepared by the party and issued under the seal of the Court.
169. A subpoena may contain the names of any number of witnesses, or may be issued with the names of the witnesses in blank.
170. Service of the subpoena must be personal, and may be made by the party or his agent, and shall be proved by affidavit.
ORDERS FOR PAYMENT
171. On application by a party to whom any sum has been found due, the judge may order payment to be made out of any money in Court applicable for the
purpose.
If there is no such money in Court, or if it is insufficient, the judge may order that the party liable shall pay the sum found due, or the balance thereof, as the case may be, within such time as to the judge shall seem fit. The party to whom the sum is due may then obtain from the registry and serve upon the party liable an order for
payment under seal of the Court.
ATTACHMENTS
172. If any person disobeys an order of the Court, or commits a contempt of Court, the judge may order him to be attached.
173. The person attached shall without delay be brought before the judge, and if he persists in his disobedience or contempt, the judge may order him to be
committed.
458
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN II.B.M.'POSSESSIONS ABROAD
The order for committal shall be executed by the marshal.
EXECUTION
174. Any decree or order of the Court may be enforced in the same manner as a decree or order of the Supreme Court of the Possession may be enforced.
INSTRUMENTS, &c.
175. Every warrant, release, commission, attachment, and other instrument to be executed by any officer of, or commissioner acting under the authority of the Court, shall be prepared in the registry and signed by the registrar, and shall be issued under the seal of the Court.
176. Every document issued under the seal of the Court shall bear date on the day of sealing, and shall be deemed to be issued at the time of the sealing thereof,
177. Every document requiring to be served shall be served within six months from the date thereof, otherwise the service shall not be valid.
178. Every instrument to be executed by the marshal shall be left with the marshal by the party at whose instance it is issued, with written instructions for the execution thereof.
NOTICES FROM THE REGISTRY
179. Any notice from the registry may be either left at, or sent by post to the address for service of the party to whom notice is to be given.
FILING
180. Documents shall be filed by leaving the same in the registry, with a minute stating the nature of the document, and the date of filing.
181. Any number of documents in the same action may be filed with one and the same minute.
182. No document, except preliminary acts, bail bonds, documents issued from the registry, and minutes, shall be filed without a certificate indorsed thereon, signed by the party filing the same, that a copy thereof has been served upon the adverse party, if any.
TIME
183. If the time for doing any act or taking any proceeding in an action expires on a Sunday, or on any other day on which the registry is closed, and by reason thereof such act or proceeding cannot be done or taken on that day, it may be done or taken on the next on which the registry is open.
184 Where, by these rules or by any other made under them, any act or proceeding is ordered or allowed to be done within or after expiration of a time limited from or after any date or event, such time, if not limited by hours, shall not include the day of such date or of the happening of such event, but shall commence on the next following day.
185. The judge may, on the application of either party, enlarge or abridge the time prescribed by these rules or forms or by any order made under them for doing any act or taking any proceeding, upon such terms as to him shall seem fit, and any such enlargement may be orderet although the application for the same is not made until after the expiration of the time prescribed.
SITTINGS OF THE COURT
186. The judge shall appoint proper and convenient times for sittings in Corut and in Chambers, and may adjourn the proceedings from time to time and from place be place as to him shall seem fit.
T
RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURT'S IN H.B.V. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
REGISTRY
459
187. The registry shall be open to suitors during fixed hours to be appointed by the judge.
188. The registrar shall obey all the lawful directions of the judge. He shall attend all sittings whether in Court or in Chambers, and shall take minutes of all the proceedings. He shall have the custody of all records of the Court. He shall collect for the judge's use the fees payable to lim. He shall not act as counsel or solicitor in the Court.
MARSHAL
189. The marshal shall execute by himself or his officer all instruments issued from the Court which are addressed to him, and shall make returns thereof.
190. Whenever, by reason of distance or other sufficient cause, the marshal cannot conveniently execute any instrument in persou, he shall employ some com- petent person as his officer to execute the same.
HOLIDAYS
191. The registry and the marshal's office shall be closed on Sundays, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Easter Tuesday, and Christmas Day, and on such days as are appointed by law or by the Governor of the Possession to be kept as holidays or fast days.
RECORDS OF THE COURT
192. There shall be kept in the registry a book, to be called the minute book, in which the registrar shall enter in order of date, under the head of each action, and on a page numbered with the number of the action, a record of the commencement of the action, of all appearances entered, all documents issued or filed, all acts done, and all orders and decrees of the Court, whether made by the judge, or by the registrar, or by consent of the parties in the action.
193. There shall be kept in the registry a caveat warrant book, a caveat release book, and a caveat payment book, in which all such caveats respectively and the withdrawal thereof shall be entered by the registrar.
194. Any solicitor may, free of charge, inspect the minute and caveat books. 195. The parties to an action may, while the action is pending, and for one year after its termination, inspect, free of charge, all the records in the action.
196. Except as provided by the two last preceding rules, uo person shall be entitled to inspect the records in a pending action without the permission of the registrar.
197. In an action which is terminated, any person may, on payment of a search. fee, inspect the records in the action.
COPIES
198. Any person entitled to inspect any document in an action shall, on payment of the proper charges for the same, be entitled to an office copy thereof under seal of the Court.
FORMS
199. The forms to these rules shall be followed with such variations as the circumstances may require, and any party using any other forms shall be liable for any costs occasioned thereby.
FEES
200. Subject to the following rules the prescribed fees shall be allowed on
taxation.
460 RULES OF VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS IN H.B.M. POSSESSIONS ABROAD
201. Where the fee is per folio, the folio shall be counted at the rate of 72 words, and every numeral, whether contained in columns or otherwise written, shall be counted and charged for as a word.
14
202. Where the sum in dispute does not exceed 50%, or the value of the res does not exceed 1007, one half only of the customary fees shall be charged and allowed.
203. Where costs are awarded to a Plaintiff, the expression sum in dispute" shall mean the sum recovered by him in addition to the sum, if any, counter-claimed from him by the Defendant; and where costs are awarded to a Defendant, it shall mean the sum claimed from him in addition to the sum, if any, recovered by him.
204. The judge may in any action order that half fees only shall be allowed, 205. If the same practitioner acts as both counsel and solicitor in an action, he shall not for any proceeding be allowed to receive fees in both capacities, nor to- receive a fee as counsel where the act of a solicitor only is necessary.
REPEALING CLAUSE
206. From and after the 1st day of January, 1884, except in regard to actions commenced before that day, the under-mentioned rules and regulations, together with all forms thereto annexed, and all tables of fees now in force in any Court shall be repealed; viz.:
(a.) The rules and regulations touching the practice to be observed in suits and proceedings in the several Courts of Vice-Admiralty abroad, established by an Order in Council of the 27th June, 1832.
(b.) Twenty-fifth section of rules and regulations touching the practice to be observed in suits and proceedings in the several Courts of Vice-Admiralty abroad, substituted in lieu of Section 25 in the former rules and regulations, and established by an Order in Council of the 25th June, 1861.
(c.) The additional rules and regulations for the several Courts of Vice- Admiralty abroad, established by an Order in Council of the 6th July, 1859.
(d.) Any of the above-mentioned Rules and Regulations, as extended by subsequent Orders in Council to other Vice-Admiralty Courts.
CASES NOT PROVIDED FOR
207. In all cases not provided for by these Rules the practice of the Admiralty Division of the High Court of Justice of England shall be followed.
COMMENCEMENT OF RULES
208. These rules shall come into operation on the 1st day of January, 1884, and shall apply to all actions commenced on or after that day. Actions commenced before that day may, by consent of parties, and with permission of the judge, be continued under these rules on such terms as to the judge shall seem fit.
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
Order Made Brd April, 1903
SCHEDULE 1
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION
Writ of Summons, Subpoenas, and Appearance
Sealing every Writ of Summons for commencement of a Cause (except a con- current, renewed, or amended Writ) and sealing a Writ of Injunction, Certiorari, Mandamus, or Habeas Corpus
Interpleader Summons
---
Sealing a concurrent, renewed or amended Writ of Summons... Sealing a Subpoena
Sealing a Subpoena for each Witness in addition to the first Entering an Appearance (each Defendant)
Certificate of Non-Appearance
++
$ cts.
00 5 00
1 50
3
00
50
50
50-
Writs of Execution, &c.
Each Copy, Prohibitory Order
LIE
Foreign Attachment
Sealing a Warrant for arrest of a Defendant, or for arrest and detention of a Ship
or for Attachment of Property before Judgment
Sealing a Writ of Execution or Writ of Possession Order for Release of Defendant from Custody
Sealing a Prohibitory Order...
Sealing a Writ of Foreign Attachment
+
15
15
+I
---
10 15-09-
00
00
00
+
+
3 00
50
+
15 00
Settling Bond
4 00
+
+
Filing same
2 00
+.+
Certificate of Dissolution of Foreign Attachment or Satisfaction of the Judgment.. Registrar's Order for seizure of Property ...
5 00
5 00
Pleadings, Issues, References, &c.
Filing any Pleading and Sealing Copy
Filing any amended Pleading and Sealing Copy... Filing any Petition of Right or Special Case
Filing any issue
Filing any Agreement under Section 239 of Code Order of Reference of Accounts, &c.
6 00
3 00
10 00
-
15 00
15 00
10 00
++
Filing same
1
50-
+++
Order of Reference to Arbitration
5 00
Filing same
1 50
Application to file Award in Court, when Arbitration has been without the inter-
vention of the Court
7 50
Taking Evidence, Affidavits, &c.
Administering any Oath or taking any Declaration in the Registry...
Filing any Advait or Declaration
+
Administering any Oath or taking any Declaration outside the Registry (other
than Oath or Declaration of Debtor in Gaol)
Marking every Exhibit
++
+
1
1
10 00
0
For every Witness examined de bene esse by the Judge, Registrar or other Officer,
outside the Court House, including Oath
For every Witness examined de bene esse by the Judge, Registrar or other Officer,
in the Court House, including Oath
10 00
--
20 00
88 83 8 8
60
462
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
Attendance of any Officer of Court to give evidence in the Supreme Court or to
produce any record or document
Attendance by the Registrar or Officer outside the Supreme Court Commission to examine Witnesses and Seal
Setting down Hearing, Decree, Order, &u.
$cts,
5 00
10 00
+
10 00
Setting down every Cause or Issue or set of Issues for Trial or Hearing including Order 15 00 Setting down every Appeal for hearing before the Full Court Setting down every Appeal from a Magistrate or Magistrates Application for Review of Judgment or for a new Trial Issuing Judge's Summons, filing ex-parte Application or Notice of Motion Order for Judgment or Decree under Sub-sections 22, 23, or 24 of the Code Drawing up and entering a Judgment or Decree or Decretal Order, whether on the
orignal hearing of a cause or on further consideration
+
15 00
15 00
5 00
3 00
15 00
5 00
4 00
10 00
+10
0 40
1 00
0 50
0 25
1
Drawing up and entering any other Order, whether made in Court or in Chambers Report or Certificate by Registrar or other Officer
11
Copies, Translations, Receipts and Searches
Copy of any Document made in Registry and certifying same per folio Translation of any Document made in the Registry and Certificate, per folio Cortifying Translation made elsewhere, per folio
Every Receipt for a Document or Documents
Every Search in the Registry, for each file or document referred to or required
Service
Each Service of any Document by Bailiff...
1 00
3 00
5 00
Arresting any person
++
Arresting a ship
++
Juries
Summoning Special or common Jury including Service
15 00
++
F
Copy Panel
.5 00
Bailif's Expenses
Possession Money, per diem (to be paid in cash) When more than one man in possession if directed by Registrar or Party, per diem
(to be paid in cash)
1 50
1 50
Ricksha, Launch or Boat-hire, according to distance (to be paid in cash),
Taxation of Costs
Signing Appointment to tax Bill of Costs,
Taxing every Bill of Costs not exceeding $100
On every $100 or part of 100 charged in such Bill in excess of the first 3100
Miscellaneous
Filing any Notice or Document not hereinbefore referred to Sealing any Document not hereinbefore referred to Settling any Bond for Security for Costs or otherwise
+
Settling any Notice or Advertisement, per folio...
Bills of Sale
1 60
L
3 00
00
Fees in addition to those provided by Section 25 of the Bills of Sale Ordinance, 1886. Petition to enter Satisfaction
Memorandum of Satisfaction
+
SCHEDULE II
SUMMARY JURISDICTION
Writ of Summons, Subpænas, &c.
Writ of Summons (including service, setting down and hearing) :-
Where Claim does not exceed $50
Whore Claim exceeds $50 but does not exceed $100 Where Claim exceeds $100 but does not exceed $500 Where Claim exceeds $500..
-
In any Suit in Equity within Section 19 of Ordinance 14 of 1873
I 00
2 00
5 00
0 50
1 00 1 00
1 30
2 50
3 55
4 00
*
00
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
Interpleader Summons (including service, hearing and Order)--
Where the value of the property claimed does not exceed $50...
Where the value of the property claimed exceeds $50 but does not exceed $100 Where the value of the property claimed exceeds $100 but does not exceed $500 Where the value of the property claimed exceeds $500...
Subpoena and Copy, including Service, each Witness, where the claim does not
exceed $50
Subpœna and Copy including service, each Witness, where the claim exceeds $10
but does not exceed $100
463
$cts,
50
2 00
23
60
50
888 8 88
1 00
1
Subpoena and Copy including Service, euch Witness, where the Claim exceeds 100 2
Writ of Execution, &c.
Any Writ of Execution (including service)-
Where the Judgment Debt does not exceed $50...
Where the Judgment Debt exceeds $50 but does not exceeds $100
Where the Judgment Debt exceeds $100 but doos not exceed $500 Where the Judgment Debt exceeds $500...
Each additional Copy
Order for release of a defendant from Custody
50
50.
00
4 50-
8 00
Go to 3 - -
Probibitory Order and Copy (including service)...
3 00
1
50
1
00
Warrant before Judgment for Arrest of a defendant or for arrest and Detention of
a Ship or for Attachment of property, including Service...
+
OG HANN
5
00
4
00
1
60-
1
60
2 00
00
Writ of Foreign Attachment and Copy, including Service (one Garnishee)... Each additional Garnishee
Bettling and filing Bond
Certificate of Dissolution of Foreign Attachment on Satisfaction of the Judgment Registrar's Order for Seizure of Property...
Application, Order, &c.
Issuing Judge's Summons, filling ex parte Application or Notice of Motion includ-
ing Service when necessary, and Order
Application to Judge for review of Judgment or for a new Trial Drawing up and entering any Decree or Order, including Copy
Pleadings, Issues, References, &c.
Half the Fees charged under this head in Schedule I, but such Half Fees to
include Service when required.
Notice of Equitable or Special Defence) including Service,
Taking Evidence, Afidavits,
c.
Half the Fees charged under this head in Schedule I.
Copies, Translations, Receipts, Searches.
The same Fees as are charged under this head in Schedule I, except that Transla- tions ordered by the Judge may be made without Fee if the Judge shall so order.
Juries
Summoning Special or Common Jury including Service
Striking and reducing
Copy Panel
3
00
3
00
2 00
1 00
8 00
4 00
1 00
2 50
1 00
Bailif's Expenses
The same Fees as are charged under this head in Schedule I.
Taration of Costs
Taxing every Bill including Appointment- if Bill does not exceed $100 For every $100 or part of $100 charged in excess of the first $100
Miscellaneous
Filing any Notice or Document not hereinbefore mentioned or referred to Sealing any Document not hereinbefore mentioned or referred to
Settling any Notice or Advertisement, per folio
Any other Matter or Proceeding not hereinbefore mentioned or referred to-
Half the Fees charged in respect of a similar Matter or Proceeding in the Original Jurisdiction.
1
00
2
0
888
00-
464
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
III. SCHEDULE
PROBATE
JURISDICTION
Filing Petition for Probate or Letters of Administration
If the Personal Estate is sworn under the value of
2 00
#8
cis,
Grants of Probate or Letters of Administration (other than Grants under Section 61 of Ordinance of 1897):
+
---
500... 1,000...
2 00
**
}}
15
P
**
JJ
J
J
FJ
*
Ja
JJ
>>
J
**
>>
27
39
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3 00
1,500...
4 00
2,000...
5 00
3,000...
8 00
4,000... 12 00
5,000... 16 00
6,000... 20 00
7,000... 24 09
8,000... 28 00
9,000...
34 00
13
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10,000...
40 00
>>
-
12,000...
44 00
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**
15
++
14,000... 48 00
16,000...
52 00
21
**
1
18,000.
56 00
77
20,000... 60 00
J
A1
31
25,000... 64 00
**
JA
30,000... 68 00
+
JE
JJ
86,000... 72 00
40,000...
76 00
→
45,000...
80 00
+
50,000...
84 00
**
60,000...
98 00
--
70,000...
92 CO
80,000...
96 00
++
90.000... 98 00
FE
31
*
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35
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23
+
33
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2.
*
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J
+
+
100,000... 100 00 120,000... 110 00
140,000...
++
120 00 160,000... 130 00
180,000... 140 00
200,000... 150 00
250,000... 170 00
300,000... 190 00
350,000... 210 00
400,000... 240 00
500,000... 280 00
600,000... 320 00
800,000... 360 00 1,000,000...
FJ
And $40 for every additional $100,000 or fractional part of $100,000. Double or Cessate Probate or Letters of Administration de bonis non or Cessate and duplicate and triplicate Probates or Letters of Administration when the Personal Estate is under$3,000-The same Fees as on a first grant under the same sum.
When the Personal Estate is of the sum of $3,000 and over Probate of a Codicil or Letters of Administration with a Codicil annexed being a Codicil to a Will already proved-Same Fees as on a duplicate or triplicate Probate or Letters of Administration with the Will annexed. Exemplification of a Probate or Letters of Administration, in addition to the Fees
for engrossing,
Engrossing Wills and other Documents, per folio,
-
Commission of Appraisement,
Every Search,
Caveat, each,
Warning to Caveat,
Service of Warning,
H
Removing Caveat,
Settling Administrator's Bond and filing,
Making alteration in grant pursuant to Order, Every Citation...
+
+
+1
++
400 00
10 00
10 00
0 40
1 00
2 00
2 00
4 00
2 00
1 00
200
2 00
*
2 00
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
Settling Citation or Abstract of Citation for Advertisement, per folio,
Filing Inventory,
Writ of Attachment,
Writ of Sequestration,
Writ of Fi Fa,
+
Commission of Official Administrator including Appraisement if necessary, 5 per
cent. of the gross value of the Estate (to be deducted therefrom).
Any other Matter or Proceeding not herein specified-The same Fee as is charged
in the Original Jurisdiction in respect of a similar Matter or Proceeding.
465
$ cts. 0 40
2
00
4 00 20 00
20
00
SCHEDULE IV
BANKRUPTCY
In addition to the Fees mentioned in the Scale contained in Schedule B of the Bankruptcy Ordinance, 1891:-
In any Matter or Proceeding not mentioned in the said last mentioned Scale-The same Fee as is provided for a similar Matter or Proceeding in the Original Jurisdiction.
Instructions
$ cts. $ cts.
•
Special Case...
1. To sue or defend ... 2. To retain Counsel
3. For a Statement of Claim not indorsed on Writ, Petition or
4. For Statement of Defence
5. For Counter Claim
600 to 10 00
471
5 00
++
7
H
00 to 20 00
10
00
10
00
+
6. For Reply...
10 00
+
HR
7. For Interrogatories for examination of any party or witness 8. To amend any pleadings
7
00 to 12 00
7
00 to 12 00
9. For Affidavit in answer to Interrogatories, or any other affidavit. 4 00 to 6 00 10. To appeal against any Order of Court or Judge and to appear
thereon
11. For Counsel to advise on evidence
+
+4
12. For Counsel to make any application to a Court or Judge where
no other brief
13. For brief on motion for injunction
++
+
14. For brief on the hearing of an action or appeal
6
00 to 10 00
6
00 to 14 00
6
00
12
50 to 20 00
16
00 to 75 00
15. Any other necessary instructions
6
00 to 10
00
L
Drawing Pleading and other Documents including printed portion
16. Engrossing any proecipe...
ૐ
00
17. Writ of Summons for commencement of action
6 00
18. Special endorsement, per folio...
0 75
19. Subpoena ad test, or duces tecum
6 00
20. If more than four folios, for each folio beyond four...
0 75
27. Drawing any pleading if not settled by Counsel
21. Writ of Execution to enforce any Judgment or Order or Decree, Prohibitory Order, Foreign Attachment, Habeas Corpus, In- terim Prohibitory Order, Injunction, Registrar's Certificate. 5 00
22. If more than four folios, for each folio beyond four
23 Endorsing service on writ
24. Summons to attend Judge's Chambers,
+
25. If more than four folios, for each folio, beyond four 26. Originating Summons, per folio
28. If by Counsel, per folio
0 75
200
75
T
W
0 76
25
00 to 35 00
0
75
+1
29. Brief. Particulars, Instructions to Couneel, Bills of Costs and any
other necessary documents, per folio
0 75
++
+
80. Marking any exhibit
1 50
Appearances
31. Appearance...
32. For every defendant beyond the first...
4 00
*
1 00
466
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
Services and Notices
33. Service of any Writ of Summons, Warrant, Interrogatories, Peti- tion, Order, or Notice, or any other document, on a party, where no Solicitor employed at time of service
34. For service out of the jurisdiction, such allowance as the
Registrar shall think proper
35. Service where appearance has been entered, on the Solicitor or
party, where an address for service has been given 36. As to Writs and Notice of Writ, for each copy for service, per folio 87. As to Summons to attend at Judge's Chambers, for each copy to
serve
38. Or per folio
--
+
39. For preparing notice to admit, or produce documents
40. Or per folio
41. And for each copy, per folio
42. For drawing any notice to admit facts
43. Or per folio
44. And for each copy, per folio
45. For drawing notice of motion
46. Or per folio
47. And for each copy, per folio
Copies
$cts $cts.
4 00
3 00
0 35
-+ |
1 0 0 35
5
00
75
35
5
00
0
75
0 35
00
0 75
0 35
48. Of Pleadings, Briefs, and other documents, where no other provi-
sion is made, per folio
Perusals
49. Statement of Claim, Statement of Defence, Reply and other Pleadings, by the Solicitor of the party to whom the same are delivered
50. Or per folio...
52. Or per folio
+
51. Of amendment of any such Pleading in writing
+
53. Of Interrogatories to be answered by a party or by his Solicitor... 54. Or per folio
55. Of special case, by Solicitor of any party except the one by whom
it is prepared...
56. Or per
folio...
58. Or per folio....
+
57. Of copy of any Order or Interlocutory proceedings...
+1
0 35
+1
+11
8 00 0'40
++
5 00
0
40
8
00
0
40
8 00
0 40
1 50
0 40
5 00
0 40
+
0 75
40
59. Of notice to produce or admit documents, by Solicitor of a party
served...
60. Or per folio
+
61. Of notice to admit facts, per folio
+
62. Of any other document or writing, per folio...
Attendances
63. To issue writ or other process
66. Or per hour
67. To search
64. To deliver or serve any pleading, or special case
65. To inspect or produce for inspection documents, pursuant to notice to admit or order for discovery or referred to in any pleading or affidavit...
++
68. Attending being served with any document...
+
3 00
4 00
7 00
6
00
3
69. Attending receipt of order from Court for approval
73. If with Counsel, per day...
70. To obtain or give any necessary or proper consent... 71. On vouching accounts before the Registrar, per day 72. On examination of witness before the Registrar, Commissioner or
other person, if without Counsel, per day, not exceeding
00 to 7 00
3 00
2 00
5 00
+++
10
00 to 30 00
M
50 00 30 00
74. On deponent being sworn, or by a Solicitor or his clerk to be
sworn to any affidavit
4 00
75. Ditto.
Outside the Court
7 00
76. On each necessary witness, for the purpose of taking his statement 6 00 77. Or if the attendance exceeds 1 hour, for every or part of hour
6
00
++
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
78. On any summons, motion, or other proceeding at Chambers with
or without Counsel (order made or adjourned) 79. To file Registrar's Certificate or Affidavit, Order or other docu-
ment in Court
TH
80. To inspect any premises or ship, with or without Jury, or with or
without Solicitor of opposite party, or attending sale...
81. On Counsel with Brief or other papers
82. On consultation or conference with Counsel
83. To get a day specially fixed for hearing of suit
467
$ cts,
6 00 to 16 00
4 00
7
50 to 30 00
6
00
7
00 to 15 00
4
0)
84. On hearing of any trial of any cause or matter or motion or peti- tion or issue of fact, whether before a Judge or before the Full Court or referee, or on assessment of damages, per day.. 20
85. To hear Judgment when same reserved
86. On taxation of Bill of Costs, per hour
87. To obtain or give an undertaking to appear
88. On printer to insert advertisement in any newspaper that may be
necessary
89. For obtaining and drawing up any order made at Chambers 90. To issue execution
+
++
91. Every other attendances not hereinbefore referred to and which
shall, in the opinion of the Registrar, be necessary, such sum as the Registrar may think proper.
Miscellaneous.
92. Translating any documents or writing from any language into
English, per folio
THE
93. Attending Court Translator to certify
94. Writing any necessary letter
H+
95. Or according to circumstances, per folio
00 to 45
00
15 00 10 00
5 00
5 CO
10 10 10
5
00
00
L
1 50
3 00
2
50
0
75
96. The Registrar may allow such fee as he thinks proper in respect of every other matter or thing not hereinbefore specifically mentioned.
3888
RULES MADE BY THE CHIEF JUSTICES UNDER SECTION 24 OF THE SUPREME
COURT ORDINANCE 1873 (NO. 12 OF 1873) FOR TAXING OF COSTS IN THE
SUMMARY JURISDICTION OF THE SUPREME COURT
1. In the following Rules the expressions "exceeding" and "not exceeding" refer in the case of a plantiff to the amount recovered, and in the case of a Defendant to the amount claimed. 2. In actions or proceedings other than those for the recovery of money, and in actions where claims for the recovery of money are joined with other claims, the Judge, having regard to the value and nature of the subject matter of the action or proceeding, shall direct under which of the scales hereinafter set forth the costs (if any) shall be taxed.
3. Notwithstanding anything in these Rules to the contrary, the Judge, if of opinion that the action involved a novel or difficult point of law, or that the question litigated was of importance to some class or body of persons, or of general or public interest, may award costs under Scale III to the Plaintiff on any amount recovered however small, or to the Defendant who successfully defends an action brought for any amount however small; and in actions other than those for the recovery of a debt or liquidated demand in money the Judge, if he shall think that the preparation or conduct of the case has involved unusual trouble or difficulty, or for other good cause shown, may, in awarding costs, direct that they shall be taxed on any scale bigher than that hereinafter made applicable.
4. Subject as aforesaid, no costs shall be allowed in actions not exceeding ten dollars, and in other actions costa shall be taxed and allowed in accordance with the following scales as well between solicitor and client as between party and party; Provided that where a client shall have paid or agreed to pay a sum of money for the conduct of any suit or proceeding, or has agreed to pay costs and charges beyond those provided for in these Rules, the taxing officer may, in his discretion, as between solicitor and client, allow any costs or charges not exceeding the amount which may have been paid or agreed to be paid.
5. Occasional costs shall only be allowed where from the nature of the case it was reasonable and necessary that they should be incurred.
6. In awarding the costs of any action or proceeding, the Judge may at the hearing, for good cause shown, disallow the costs of any particular matter in connection with such action or proceeding.
468
FEES IN H.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
7. These Rules shall come into force on the 1st day of June, 1903, and shall apply only to actions and other proceedings brought and commenced on or after the said date.
SCALE I
Actions exceeding $10, but not exceeding $50
$ cts. $cia.
1. Instructions for and preparing Summons, attending and entering 2 00 2. Each copy for service
3. Instructions to defend
4. Attending in Court and conducting case
0
50
2
00
+
5
00 to 20 00
5. Attending Court when Judgment entered by consent without
hearing
5 00
+++
+
6. Costs of the day on adjournment of hearing (if certified by Judge) 5 00 7. Attending to hear Judgment
8. Taxing (including all costs connected therewith)
2 00
4 00
SCALE II
Actions exceeding $50 but not exceeding $200
9. Letter before action
LIL
2 00
10. Instructions for, and preparing Summons, attending and entering 4 00 11. Each copy for service
HI
TH
12. Instructions to defend
0 50 2
+
00
13. Attending in Court if Counsel instructed, per day 14. Drawing Brief for Counsel, per folio (if Counsel certified for by
Judge)
... 10
00 to 20 00
0
50
FIL
15. Attending in Court if Counsel not instructed, per day (of 5 hours) 15 16. Counsel (if certified for by Judge)
17. Refresher, after every 5 hours of hearing
18. Attending Court when Judgment entered by consent without
-
C19. osts of the day on adjournment of hearing (if certified for by
hearing
Judge)
20. Attending to hear Judgment
21. Taxing (including all costs connected therewith)
00 to 30
00
60
00
15
00 to 25
00
10 00
-
7 00
+
3 00
5
00
SCALE III
Actions exceeding $200
22. Letter before action
23. Instructions to sue or defend
+
24. Preparing Writ of Summons and attending issuing
25. Drawing Brief for Counsel, per folio
26. Attending Counsel therewith
27. Fee for Counsel (if certified by Judge)
28. Conference fee to Counsel
+
*
2 00
+
4 00
6 00
H
0 50
2 00
25
00 to 80 00
10
00 to 20 00
35
00
29. Attending Court on trial with Counsel per day (5 hours) 30. Attending Court and conducting case where no Counsel employed,
per day (5 hours)
+1
20 00 to 50 00
31. Attending Court when Judgment entered by consent without trial 15 00 32. Costs of the day on adjournment of hearing if certified for by the
Judge...
33. Attending to hear Judgment
Solicitor Counsel
34. Taxing Costs (including all costs connected therewith}
or where the bill exceeds 8 folios, per folio extra
Occasional Costs applicable to all the above Scales
10 00
4
00
10 00
++
6 00
35. Drawing and Engrossing Application for substituted service of
service out of jurisdiction...
36. Drawing and Engrossing Affidavit of service
+
0 50
88
50
2 50
NN
38. Drawing and Engrossing Notice of special defence
FEES IN II.B.M. SUPREME COURT IN HONGKONG
37. Attending to file same
469
$cts.
$ ctx,
00
4 00
39. Attending taking Minutes of evidence of each witness 40. If more than 6 folios, every additional folio 41. Conference with Counsel
+
3 00
0 50
7
00
00
42. Serving any notice or other document 43. Drawing and Engrossing Notice to produce, notice to admit, notice of application for a new trial or to set aside proceed- ings including copies, service and attending the Registrar therewith
P
44. Receiving any of the above notices and advising thereon... 45. All attendances in Court on applications, or motions, or on sum-
mons in Chambers, or per bour
46. Drawing and Engrossing all necessary Affidavits not exceeding 5
folios including filing
47. For every additional folio
48. Any necessary attendances at the Registry or upon the opposite
party or on client
49. All necessary letters
50. Drawing and Engrossing Pleadings signed by party
51. Or per folio
52. Counsel's fee for any pleading
53. Perusal of document, per folio
+
5
88
00 to 4:00
4 00
NO
8 88
2 0 50
50
2 00
2
00
15
00
50
20
00
0
25
0 50
40
20
2
00
0
50
+
54. Certified translations including obtaining certificate, per folio 55. Drawing accounts and other documents not included in the foregoing costs but allowed upon taxation of costs to be necessary, per folio 0 56. Engrossing or copying, per folio, 67. Judge's Summons or ex-parte application
+58 Or per folio
IT
Any other matter or proceeding
---
Half the costs allowed for Selictor's charges in respect of a similar matter or proceeding in
Original Jurisdiction.
Expert witnesses-Half the Allowance in Original Jurisdiction.
THE UNITED STATES COURT FOR CHINA
(Chapter 3934, Prescribing the Jurisdiction of the Court.)
Be it Enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress Assembled, That a Court is hereby established, to be called the United States Court for China, which shall have exclusive jurisdiction in all cases and judicial proceedings whereof jurisdiction may now be exercised by United States Consuls and Ministers by law and by virtue of treaties between the United States and China, except in so far as the said jurisdiction is qualified by section two of this Act. The said Court shall hold sessions at Shanghai, China, and shall also hold sessions at the cities of Canton, Tientsin, and Hankow at stated periods, the dates of such sessions at each city to be announced in such manner as the Court shall direct, and a session of the Court shall be held in each of these cities at least once annually. It shall be within the power of the judge, upon due notice to the parties in litigation, to open and hold Court for the hearing of a special cause at any place permitted by the treaties, and where there is a United States Consulate, when, in his judgment, it shall be required by the convenience of witnesses, or by some public interest. The place of sitting of the Court shall be in the United States Consulate at each of the cities, respectively.
That the seal of the said Unitel States Court for China shall be the arms of the United States, engraved on a circular piece of steel of the size of a half dollar, with these words on the margin, "The Seal of the United States Court for China."
The seal of said Court shall be provided at the expense of the United States. All writs and processes issuing from the said Court, and all tran-cripts, records, copies, jurats, acknowledgments, and other papers requiring certification or to be onder seal, may be authenticated by said seal, and shall be signed by the clerk of said Court. All processes issued from the said Court shall bear test from the day of such issue.
Sec. 2. The Consuls of the United States in the cities of China to which they are respectively accredited shall have the same jurisdiction as they now possess in civil cases where the sum or value of the property involved in the controversy does not exceed five hundred dollars United States money, and in criminal cases where the punishment for the offence charged can not exceed by law one hundred dollars fine or sixty days' imprisonment, or both, and shall have power to arrest, examine, and discharge accused persons or commit them to the said Court. From all final judg. ments of the Consular Court either party shall have the right of appeal to the United States Court for China: Provided, Also, That appeal may be taken to the United States Court for China from any final judgment of the Consular Courts of the United States in Korea so long as the rights of extra-territoriality shall obtain in favour of the United States. The said United States Court for China shall have and exerci e supervisory control over the discharge by Consuls and Vice-Consuls of the duties prescribed by the laws of the United States relating to the estates of decedents in Chinn. Within sixty days after the death in China of any citizen of the United States, or any citizen of any territory belonging to the United States, the Consul or Vice-Consul whose duty it becomes to take possession of the effects of such deceased person under the laws of the United States shall file with the clerk f said Court a sworn inventory of such effects, and shall as additional effects come from time to time into his possession, immediately file a supplemental inventory or inventories of
•
THE UNITED STATES COURT FOR CHINA
471
the same. He shall also file with the clerk of said Court within said sixty days a schedule under oath of the debts of said decedent, so far as known, and a schedule or statement of all additional debts thereafter discovered. Such Consul or Vice- Consul shall pay no claims against the estate without the written approval of the judge of said Court, nor shall he make sale of any of the assets of said estate without first reporting the same to said judge and obtaining a written approval of said sale, and he shall likewise within ten days after any such sale report the fact of such sle to said Court, and the amount derived therefrom. The said judge shall have power to require at any time reports from Consuls or Vice-Consuls in respect of all their acts and doings relating to the estate of any such deceased person. The said Court shall have power to require where it may be necessary a special bond for the faithful performance of his duty to be given by any Consul or Vice-Consul into whose possession the estate of any such deceased citizen shall have come in such amount and with such sureties as may be deemed necessary, and for failure to give such bond when required, or for failure to properly perform his duties in the premises, the Court may appoint some other person to take charge of said estate, such person having first given boud as aforesaid. A record shall be kept by the clerk of said Court of all proceedings in respect of any such estate under the provisions hereof,
Sec. 3. That appeals shall lie from all final judgments or decrees of said Court to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of the ninth judicial circuit, and thence appeals and writs of error may be taken from the judgments or decrees of the said Circuit Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court of the United States in the same class of cases as those in which appeals and writs of error are permitted to judgments of said Court of Appeals in cases coming from District and Circuit Courts of the United States. Said appeals or writs of error shall be regulated by the procedure govern- ing appeals within the United States from the District Courts to the Circuit Courts of Appeal, and from the Circuit Courts of Appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, respectively, so far as the same shall be applicable; and said Courts are here. by empowered to bear and determine appeals and writs of error so taken.
Sec. 4. The jurisdiction of said United States Court, both original and on appeal, in civil and criminal matters, and also the jurisdiction of the Consular Courts in China, shall in all cases be exercised in conformity with said treaties and the laws of the United States now in force in reference to the American Consular Courts in China, and all judgments and decisions of said Consular Courts, and all decisions, judgments, and decrees of said United States Court, shall be enforced in accordance with said treaties and laws. But in all such cases when laws are deficient in the provisions necessary to give jurisdiction or to furnish suitable remedies, the common law and the law as established by the decisions of the Courts of the United States shall be applied by said Court in its decisions and shall govern the same subject to the terms of any treaties between the United States and China.
Sec. 5.-That the procedure of the said Court shall be in accordance, so far as practicable, with the existing procedure prescribed for Consular Courts in China. in accordance with the Revised Statutes of the United States: Provided, However, That the judge of the said United States Court for China shall have authority from time to time to modify and supplement said rules of procedure. The provisions of sections forty-one hundred and six and f rty-one hundred and seven of the Revised Statutes of the United States allowing Consuls in certain cases to summon associates shall have no application to said Court.
Sec. 6.-There shall be a district attorney, a marshal, and a clerk of said Court with authority possessed by the corresponding officers of the District Courts in the United States as far as may be consistent with the conditions of the laws of the United States and said treaties. The judge of said Court an! the district attorney, who shall be lawyers of good standing and experience, marshal, and clerk shall be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive as salary, respectively, the sums of eight thousand dollars per annum for said judge, four thousand dollars per annum for said district attorney, thousand dollars per annum for said marshal, and three thousand dollars per annum
three
472
THE UNITED STATES COURT FOR CHINA
for said clerk. The judge of the said Court and the district attorney shall, when the sessions of the Court are held at other cities than Shanghai, receive in addition to their salaries their necessary expenses during such sessions not to exceed ten dollar per day for the judge and five dollars per day for the district attorney.
Sec. 7-The tenure of office of the judge of said Court shall be ten years, unless sooner removed by the President for cause; the tenure of office of the other officials of the Court shall be at the pleasure of the President.
Sec. 8. The marshal and the clerk of said Court shall be required to furnish bond for the faithful performance of their duties, in sums and with sureties to be fixed and approved by the judge of the Court. They shall each appoint, with the written approval of said judge, deputies at Canton and Tientsin, who shall also be required to furnish bonds for the faithful performance of their duties, which bonds shall be subject, both as to form and sufficiency of the sureties, to the approval of the said judge. Such deputies shall receive compensation at the rate of five dollars for each day the sessions of the Court are held at their respective cities. The office of marshal in China now existing in pursuance of section forty-one hundred and eleven of the Revised Statutes is hereby abolished.
Sec. 9 The tariff of fees of said officers of the Court shall be the same as the tariff already fixed for the Consular Courts in China, subject to amendment from time to time by order of the President, and all fees taxed and received shall be paid into the Treasury of the United States.
Approved, June 30, 1906.
SIXTIETH CONGRESS. SESS. II. 1909. CHAP. 235.
Extract.
The judicial authority and jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases now vested in and reserved to the Consul-General of the United States at Shanghai, China, by the Act of June thirtieth, nineteen hundred and six, entitled, "An Act creating a United States Court for China and prescribing the jurisdiction thereof," shall, subsequent to June thirtieth, nineteen hundred and nine, be vested in and exercised by a Vice- Consul-General of the United States to be designated from time to time by the Secretary of State, and the Consul-General at Shanghai shall thereafter be relieved of his judicial functions.
RULES OF PROCEDURE FOR THE COURT OF CONSULS, SHANGHAI
APPROVED BY THE CONSULAR BODY, 10TH JULY, 1882
RULE 1. Every petition and other pleading filed in the Court and all notices and other documents issuing from the Court shall be entitled "In the Court of Consuls.'
RULE 2.-The Court will appoint a Secretary whose name and address will be made public and who shall hold the office until the Court otherwise directs. The Secretary shall have charge of all records aud, under the direction of the Court, issue and serve or cause to be served all notices and other documents. He shall also bo the medium of all correspondence.
RULE 3-Suits shall be commenced and proceeded with in person or by attorney, and suitors may be heard with or without counsel.
RULE 4. The language of the Court will be English.
-
RULE 5.-All proceedings shall be commenced by a petition to the Court, to be filed in quadruplicate and to state all facts material to the issue in distinct paragraphs. RULE 6. The petition will be served upon the defendant with notices to file an answer in quadruplicate within fourteen days from the date of service. A copy of the answer will be served on the plaintiff or his counsel under the direction of the Court.
RULE 7. Amendments and other proper pleadings will be admitted upon such terms as the Court may impose, and such interim order may be made prior to the hearing of the cause as the Court may consider necessary.
RULE 8. When it appears to the Court that a cause is ready to be heard such cause will be set down for liearing, and notice of the date and place of hearing will be given to the parties.
RULE 9.-Sittings of the Court will be public and its proceedings recorded by the Secretary.
RULE 10. The ouus of producing witnesses shall be with the parties, but the Court will, as far as practicable, aid in procuring the attendance of witnesses. Evidence will be taken on oath or otherwise as the witness may consider binding. The examination of witnesses will be conducted as the Court may direct.
RULE 11-A failure to respond to any order or notice issued by the Court will entitle the adverse party to judginent by default, and the Court shall be empowered to give judgment accordingly.
RULE 12. In any case upon application within sixty days after judgment the Court may order re-bearing upon such terms as seem just.
RULE 13.-Special cases where the facts are admitted may be submitted in writing to the Court for decision without appearance of the parties.
RULE 14.-A minute of all orders shall be drawn up and shall be signed by the Consuls forming the Court or a majority of them, and all orders shall be expressed to be made "By the Court" and shall be signed by the Secretary.
RULE 15. Judgments will be given in writing by the Judges of the Court, and either read in Court after notice or served upon the parties.
RULE 16.-The fee shall be for hearing $10 for each notice issued and served $3-an 1 such fees for recording the proceedings shall be allowed as the Court may direct. A deposit in such sum as the Court may think sufficient to secure payment of fees will be required of each petitioner. The costs, including those of counsel, in the discretion of the Court, shall be paid as the Court directs.
RULE 17.-All fees shall be at the disposal of the Court for the remuneration of the Secretary.
14
RULES OF THE SHANGHAI MIXED COURT
The following Provisional Rules for defiuing the respective jurisdictions of the Mixed Courts of the International aud French Settlement adopted by the Consular Body of Shanghai 10th June, 1902, for reference to the Diplomatic Body at Peking were approved by the Diplomatic Body at Peking on 28th June, 1902.
1.-Iu all civil cases between Chinese the plaintiff will follow the defendant, and
will sue him before the Mixed Court of his, the defendant's residence.
2.--In all criminal cases where foreigners are not concerned and in all police caseg against Chinese residents in the Settlements the Mixed Court of the Settlements in which the crime of contravention has been committed is alone competent.
N. B. The above two clauses include clauses where the defen lant or accused is in the employ of a foreigner, the countersignature of the Consular representative of the national concerned being as heretofore to be obtained.
3. In Mixed Civil cases
a.-If the plaintiff is a foreigner-not of French nationality-and the Chinese defendant is a resident of the International Settlement, he is to be sued before the Mixed Court of the International Settlement.
L
b. If the plaintiff is French and the Chinese defendant is a resident of the French S ttlement, he is to be sued before the Mixed Court of the French Settlement. e-If the plaintiff is a foreigner-not of French nationality-and the Chinese defendant is a resilent of the French Settlement, the latter shall be sued before the Mixed Court of the International Settlement, whose warrant or summons for his appearance after countersignature by the French Consul-General will be executed or served by the runners of the International Mixed Court with the assistance of the Police of the French Settlement, without previous hearing in the Mixed Court of the French Settlement.
d. If the plaintiff is French and the Chinese defendant is a resident of the International Settlement the latter shall be sued before the Mixed Court of the French Settlement, whose warrant or summons for bis appearanc- after countersignature by the Senior Consul will be executed or served by the runners of the French Mixed Court with the assistance of the Police of the International Settlement, without previous hearing in the Mixed Court of the International Settlement.
4. Incriminal cases where a foreigner not of French nationality-is complainant the Mixed Court of the International Settlement is competent; if a Frenchman is the complainant the Mixed Court of the French Sttlement is competent.
The provisions under Clause 3, c and d, as to executiug warrants, also apply under this clause,
This does not affect or change in any way the present system whereby all warrants of the Mixed Court of the International Settlement are to be countersigned by the Senior Consul before their execution by the yamen runners with the assistance of the Police.
JOHN GOODNOW,
Senior Consul.
FEFS FOR THE CONSULAR COURTS OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA IN CHINA
98-In Consular Court.
In all cases and estates where the amount in question is not more than $800
In all cases and estates where it is over $500
In all cases where no specific damages are sought the fee shall be $5 for minor and $15 for greater cages.
94-Clerk's Fees.
For inaming all write, warrants, attachments, or other compulsory process
For docketing every suit commenced
For executions
For all saw onses
For all subpoenas and notices
For fling and entering every declaration, plea, or other paper
For administering an oath or affirmation, except to an associate
For taking an acknowledgement
For taking and certifying depositions to file (for each folio of 100 words): for the first 100 words,
esch aucceeding tolio
-
+
Th
... 5,00 15.00
E
1,50
Fud
Ful
1 00 1.00
25
2880 RA 24 42
50 cents;
for
20
...
-
For a copy of such deposition, furnished to a party on request, per follo For entering any return, rule, order, continuance, judgment, decree, or recognizance, or drawing any bund, or
making any rec rd, certificate, return, or report: for each folio For erpy of Lay entry or of any paper où file for each tolio... The docket Jee of $1, fiereinbefore allowed, shall cover all charges for making dookets and indexes issuing venire for associates, axing costs, and all other services not specified herein, in all cases where the amount involved 50 or less; where the amount involved exceeds $0 the clerk shall be allowed for the services specifted in the foregoing paragraph, in all cases up to $500, inclusive, a fee of
In all cases involving more than 350 the clerk shall be abowed for like services
---
For causes where issue is joined but no testimony is given, tor causes, dismissed or discontinued, the clerk sball be
allowed, for like services, one-half of the above fees, respectively For affixing the seal of the court to any instrument, when required For every search for any particular mortgage, or other lien
be made
---
per
2.00
3,00
---
20
*
15
For searching the recor is of the court for judgments, decrees or other instruments constituting a lien on any property and certifying the result of such search for each person against whom such search is required to For receiving, keeping, and paying out money in pursuance of any statute or order of court, I centum of the
amounts received, kept. and paid. For travelling made necessary by the duties of his office for gong, 5 cents a mile, and 5 cents a mile for returning. All books in the clerk's office conta ning public records shall, during office hours, be open to the inspection of any
person desiring to examine the same without any lees or charge therefor. In case of excheat the clerk shall receive for publication to heirs
1,00
++
For service ng escheator
TH
For every office found
***
For recording proceedings of inquest, per folio
H
*++
For an affidavit in attuobment
114
For approving bond in attachment
P
For affidavit in distress cases
THE
For affidavit in reolevia caSÇS
+
II
For approving replevia bond
---
2,00 *** 10.00
2.50
15
***
60
H
1.00
+
50
50
1,00
For atidavit in trials of right of property
Where boni is given in trial of right of property, for approving it
50
1.00
100-Marahul's Fees.
LJ
For apprehending a descrter and delivering him on board the vessel deserted from, to be paid by the vessel before
leaving port
6.00
For caching for the same, and, if not found, to be certifled by the consul, and on his order to be paid by the ship 200 For serving any writ, warrant, attachment, or other compulsory process, each person... For serving summonses
For returning all notices, writs, attachments, warrants, and summonses, each
For each bail bond
On every commitment or discharge of Prisoner
For subpoenas, for each witness summonerl
For returning subpona
LI
For each day's attendance upon court
For levying execution
For advertising property for sale
For releasing property under execution by order of plaintif
IPL
For selling property under execution, when the amount collected does not exceed $1,000
If over $1,000 and not exceeding $5,000
It over $5,000
For making collections under $200, in cases where no adjudication has taken place
If the amount exceeds $200
For travelling fees in serving all processes, each mile
For serving every notice not heretofore provided for, in addition to the usual travelling fees...
+++
+
$2.00
1.00
H4
.50
1.00
2.00
.EO
.26
3.00
1.00
2.00
3,00
5 per cent.
...2 ...2
per cent.
...5 per cent.
++
24 per cent.
bud
.10
.50
per cent.
If an execution he paid and satisfied while in the hands of the marshal, and after he has made a levy on property
to satisfy the same, be shall receive one-half the fees fixed for selling property nuder execution or attachment. For executing a deed prepared by a party or his attorney
For drawing and executing a deed
For copies of writs or papers, furnished on request, per folio
For every proclamation in admiralty.
For serving an attachment in rem, or a libel in admiralty
For the necessary expenses of keeping boats, vessels, or other property, attached or libelled in admiralty, a coni-
pensation to be fixed by the court.
When the debt, or claim in admiralty, is settled by the parties, without a sale of the property, the marshal shall be entitled to a commission of 1 per cent. on the first $500 of the claim or decree, and oue-half of 1 per cent, on the excess of any sum over 3500; Provided, that when the value of the property is less than the claim such commission shall be allowed on the appraised value thereof.
For sale of vessels, or other property, under process in admiralty, or under the order of a court of admiralty, and for receiving and paying over the moncy, 24 per cent. on any sum under $500, and 14 per cent, on the excess of any guin over $500,
101-Interpreter's Fees.
For each day's attendance upon court...
For making translations-..
If more than 200 words or each additional 100
+ ||
T
---
H
HI
Seate robotituted for the original vente, 15th March, 1229,
1.00
5.00
25
.30
2.00
F
---
*
3.00 2.00
***
1.00
14*
176
102-Witnesses' Feer,
UNITED STATES CONSULAR REGULATIONS
For each day's attenlauce upon court...
For each mile travelled in going to and returning from court
103-Crier's Feex.
On trial of every suit
トト
104--Chitizen Associates' Fers.
Fer each day's attendance...
105-Costs for Prevailing Party,
All necessary Court fees paid out.
100 Conanda Pees.
The following fees shall be allowed in arbitration proceedings:
Where the amount in question is $500, or less
Where it exceeds $500, and up to $1,000.......
Where it exceeds $1,010, for each $1,000 or fraction thereol
In cases of libel, slauder, and all proceedings not requiring mouey judgments
E
In all arbitration proceedlings judgment may be eutered for costs, nud execution issued thereon. For issuing a search warrant
For holding an inquest
Fees for inquests are payable out of the estate of the descendent.
101-Fees in Probuté Matters.
F
1.50
.16
1,00
T
301
5.00
10.00
10.00
. 10,00
3.08
... 10.00
(1) The administrator shall present to the court a bill of particulars of the services rendered by him, and the
court shall allow him a reasonable compensation, to be determined by the court.
(2) The cousul, when sal ried officer (drawing fixed compensation), shall not be allowed any fees in any judicial
proceeding whatsover appertaining to próbate matters heard and decided by him as a consular court,
(3) If, in any case, a consul shall be appointed for any of the open ports of China and Japan, to whose office there is no fixed salary, and whose compensation depends on collection of consular fees, and who is vested with judical authority (as the cousuls who have fixed compensation) then such consul shall be allowed the following fees:
For passing on current reports of executor, administrator, or guardian
For passing ou final reports of same
For à fiual order of discharge
For hearing application for distribution of estates..
For making order of distribution
The clerk shall receive the following fees:
For a citation in administration
P
For preparing and administering the oath to an execntor, administrator, or guardian
For issuing and recording letters of achninistration and guardian's certificate
For docket fee
For filing papers
+
For seal to letters of appointment of appraisers of estate...
For seal to letters of administration
PIL
5.00
5.00
5.00
5.00
5,00
.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
25
1.00
For all other services, such as entering orders, copying and recording orders, etc., and such like acts, the clerk shall receive the same fees as are allowed under the general schedule for like services, sud subject to Buch reasonable compensation as may be allowed by the consular court.
The marshal shall receive for any services rendered by him in matters of probate, the same fees that are
provided in the general schedule for services of the same mature. 10s-Fees in Ministerial Court,
1.00
15,00
The fees of the court and its officers shall be the same as hereinbefore prescribed for the consolar courts,
except in cases brought before said court upon appeal, in all of which cases a court fee shall be charged of In addition to which, the same fees as consuls are allowed to charge shall be allowed for the issuance, filing, etc., of all
papers and process, and also administering onths, etc. The fees of the clerk, uiarshal, interpreters, etc., in a ministerial court, shall be the same in appellate as in other cases.
UNITED STATES CONSULAR COURT REGULATION,
(EMBEZZLEMCNT, VAGRANCY) APRIL 13, 1907.
Whereas, defects and deficiencies exist in the laws to be euforced by the judicial authorities of the United States in China as regards embezzlement and vagran ey,
Now therefore, by virtue of the power vested in me by Section 4086 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, I, William Woodville Rockhill, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States of America at Peking, China, do hereby decree:
1. If any agent, attorney, clerk, or servant of a private person or co-partnership, or any officer, attorney, agent, clerk, or servant of any association or incorporated company, shall wrongfully convert to his own use, or fraudulently take, make away with, or secrete, with intent to convert to his own use, anything of value which shall come into his possession or under his care by virtue of his employment or office, whether the thing so converted be the property of his master or employer or that of any other person, co-partnership, association, or corporation, he shall be deemed guilty of embezzlement, and shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one thousand doilars, or by imprisonment for not more then ten years, or both.
2. All persons having no visible means of honest and reputable support, or who lead an idle and dissolute life; and all persons living by stealing or by trading 1, bartering for, or buying, stolen property, shall be deemed and considered vagrants. and upon conviction thereof shall be purished by a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not exceeding sixty days, or both.
American Legation,
Peking, China, April 18, 1907.
W. W. ROCKHILL.
CHARTER OF THE COLONY OF HONGKONG
Letters Patent passed under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom, constituting the office of Governor and Commander-in-chief of the Colony of Hongkong and its dependencies.
Janeury, 1488.
Preamble.
of5th April, 1843.
Victoria, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain Dated 19th
and Ireland, Queen, Defender of the Faith, Empress of India: To all to whom these Presents shall come, Greeting. Whereas, by our Charter under the Great Seal of our United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, bearing date at Westminster the fifth day Recites Charter of April, 1843, we did erect our Island of Hongkong and its dependencies into a separate Colony, to be known and designated as the Colony of Hong. kong, and did make provision for the Government of our said Colony:
And whereas by our Order in our Privy Council, bearing date the Bontender in fourth day of February, 1861, in the twenty-fourth year of our reign, it February, 1861. was ordered that the Kowloon district therein described should be part and parcel of our said Colony:
And whereas we did, by certain Letters Patent nuder our said Great Seal, bearing date Westminster the ninth day of April, 1877, constitute, order, and declare that there should be a Governor and Commander-in- chief in and over our Colony of Hongkong and its dependencies:
And whereas we are minded to make further provision for the govern- ment of our said Colony:
Council of th
rites Letters
Patent of 9th
April, 1977.
Reroles Charter
Office of Gover- Dor constiluted,
Now we do by these presents revoke our said Charter and our said and Letters Pa- Lelters Patent, but without prejudice to anything lawfully done there- tent recited. under.
II. We do declare that there shall be a Governor and Commander- in-chief in and over our Colony of Hongkong and its dependencies (therein. after called the Colony), and that appointments to the said office shall be made by Commission under our sign manual and signet.
Governor's
powers and
Instractions,
III-We do hereby authorize, empower, and command our said Go- vernor and Commander-in-chief (hereinafter called the Governor) to do inthorities, and execute all things that belong to his said office, according to the tenor of these our Letters Patent and of such Commission as may be issued to him under our sign manual and signet, and according to such instructions. as may from time to time be given to him under our sign manual and signet, or by our Order in our Privy Council, or by us through one of our principal Secretaries of State, and to such laws as are now or shall here- after be in force in the Colony.
IV. And we do by there our Letters Patent declare our will and pleasure as follows:-
Governor's Com-
Oaths to be taken
V.-Every person appointed to fill the office of Governor of the Publicain •f Colony shall with all due solemnity, before entering upon any of the duties mission. of his office, cause the commission appointing him to be Governor to be read and published in the presence of the Chief Justice or other judge of the Supreme Court, and of such members of the Executive Council of the Colony as can conveniently attend; which being done he shall then and there take before them the Oath of Allegiance in the form provided by an by Governor. Act passed in the session holden in the thirty-first and thirty-second years Imperial Act 32 of our reign, intitled "An Act to amend the law relating to Promissory & Vict., esp. Oaths"; and likewise the usual oath for the due execution of the office of ' Governor, and for the due and impartial administration of justice; which oaths the said Chief Justice or judge, or if they be unavoidably absent, the senior member of the Executive Council then present, is hereby required. to administer.
478
Public Seal.
Constitution of Executive Coun- ail.
Constitution of
Legislative Conncil.
Governor, with
advice and con-
sent of Council, to make Luwe.
Disallowance of LAWS,
Power of Legis- lation reserved to the Crown.
Land grants,
Governor em- powered to ap- point Judges and other officers
Grant of pardon.
CHARTER OF THE COLONY OF HONGKONG
VI. The Governor shall keep and use the public seal of the Colony for sealing all things whatsoever that shall pass the said public seal.
VII. The Executive Council of the Colony shall consist of such persons as we shall direct by any instructions under our sign manual and signet, and all such persons shall hold their places in the said Council during our pleasure.
VIII. The Legislative Council of the Colony shall consist of such persons as we shall direct by any instructions under our sign manual and signet, and such persons shall hold their places in the said Council during our pleasure.
IX. The Governor, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council, may make laws for the peace, order, and good govern- ment of the Colony.
X. We do hereby reserve to ourselves, our heirs and successors, full power and authority to disallow, through one of our principal Secretaries of State, any such law as aforesaid. Every such disallowance shall take effect from the time when the same shall be promulgated by the Governor in the Colony.
XI. We do also reserve to ourselves, our heirs and successors, our and their undoubted right, with advice of our or their Privy Council, to make all such laws as may appear necessary for the peace, order, and good government of the Colony.
XII. The Governor, in our name and on our behalf, may make and execute, under the public seal of the Colony, grants and dispositions of any lands which may be lawfully granted or disposed of by us. Provided that every such grant or disposition be made in conformity either with some law in force in the Colony or with some instructions addressed to the Governor under our sign manual and signet, or through one of our principal Secretaries of State, or with some regulations in force in the Colony.
XIII. -The Governor may constitute and appoint all such judges commissioners, justices of the peace, and other necessary officers and ministers in the Colony, as may lawfully be constituted or appointed by us, all of whom, unless otherwise provided by law, shall hold their offices during our pleasure.
XIV. When any crime has been committed within the Colony, or for which the offender may be tried therein, the Governor may, as he shall see occasion, in our name and our behalf, grant a pardon to any accom- plice in such crime who shall give such information as shall lead to the conviction of the principal offender, or of any one of such offenders, if more than one; and further, may grant to any offender convicted in any Court, or before any judge, or other magistrate within the Colony, a pardon either free or subject to lawful conditions, or any remission of the sentence passed on any such offender, or any respite of the execution of such sentence for such period as the Governor thinks fit, and may remit the payment of any fines, penalties, or forfeitures due or accrued to us. Provided always that the Governor shall in no case, except when the offence Political offences has been of a political nature unaccompanied by any other grave crime, make it a condition of any pardon or remission of sentence that the offender shall be banished from or shall absent himself or be removed from the Colony.
And remission of fines.
Proviso. Banish- ment prohibited.
Suspension of officers.
XV.---The Governor may, upon suflicient cause to him appearing, suspend from the exercise of his office any person holding any office within the Colony, whether appointed by any commission or warrant from us or in our name, or by any other mode of appointment. Every such suspen- sion shall continue and have effect only until our pleasure therein shall be siguified to the Governor. In proceeding to any such suspension the
CONSTITUTION OF COUNCILS-HONGKONG
Governor is strictly to observe the directions in that behalf given to him by any instructions as aforesaid.
Government.
479
XVI-Whenever the office of Governor is vacant, or if the Governor Succession to become incapable, or be absent from the Colony, our Lieutenant-Governor of the Colony, or if there shall be no such officer therein, then such person or persons as we have appointed or may hereafter appoint under our sign manual and siguet, and in default of any such appointment, the person lawfully discharging the functions of Colonial Secretary, shall, during our pleasure, administer the government of the Colony, first taking the oaths Proving. Oaths herein before directed to be taken by the Governor and in the manner herein prescribed; which being done, we do hereby authorize, empower, and command our Lieutenant-Governor, or any other such administrator Powers, &c., of as aforesaid, to do and execute, during our pleasure, all things that belong to the office of Governor and Commander-in-chief, according to the tenor of these our Letters Patent, and according to our instructions as aforesaid, and the laws of the Colony.*
of oflea,
Administrator.
Offices and
XVII.-And we do hereby require and command all our officials and others to obey ministers, civil and military, and all other inhabitants of the Colony, and at Go- to be obedient, aiding and assisting unto the Governor and to any person for the time being administering the Government of the Colony.
XVIII. In these our Letters Patent the term "the Governor" shall include every person for the time being administering the government of the Colony.
XIX. And we do hereby reserve to ourselves, our heirs and successors, full power and authority, from time to time, to revoke, alter, or amend these Letters Patent as to us or them shall seem meet.
vernor.
Term ** Gover.
explained.
bür''
to Her Majesty to revoke, ulter
Power reserved
Or Morend prevent Letters Patent,
Letters Patent.
XX.-And we do further direct and enjoin that these our Letters Fabiontion of Patent shall be read and proclaimed at such place or places within the Colony as the Governor shall think fit,
In witness whereof we have caused these our Letters to be made Patent. Witness ourself at Westminster, the nineteenth day of January in the Fifty-first year of our Reign.
By Warrant under the Queen's Sign Manual,
MUIR MACKENZIE,
CONSTITUTION OF THE EXECUTIVE AND
LEGISLATIVE COUNCILS
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
18th Fapuney,
The Executive Council of the Colony consists of such persons as letters l'atent, may be directed by the Queen by any instructions under Her Majesty's 1988, Art. VII. sign manual and signet, and they hold their places in the Council during Her Majesty's pleasure.
According to the Queen's recent Instructions the Council is to The Governor's consist of-
The Governor (President).
The Lieutenant-Governor (if any).
A dormant commission passed under the Royal Sign Manual and Signct, dated 31st January 1994, appoints the Senior Military Officer in command of the regular forces in the Colony to administer the Government when the office of Governor is vacant or the Governor is incapacitated or absent, and there is no Teutonaut-Governor in the Colony.
instructiona, 19th January, 1989, art. III,
480
Instructions, 29th May, 1998,
CONSTITUTION OF COUNCILS-HONGKONG
The Senior Military Officer for the time being in command of Her Majesty's regular troops.
The persons for the time being lawfully discharging the functions of
Colonial Secretary,
Attorney-General,
Colonial Treasurer,
and of such other persons as, at the date of the receipt of the Instrue- tions in the Colony, are members of the Council, or as Her Majesty may from time to time appoint.
At present (1910) the Council consists of-
The Governor (ex-officio).
The Senior Military Officer in Command (ex-officio). The Colonial Secretary (ex-officio).
The Attorney-General (ex-officio).
The Colonial Treasurer (ex-officio).
The Director of Public Works (ex-officio).
The Principal Civil Medical Officer (ex-officio). Hou. Sir C. P. Chater, Kt., C.M.G.
Hou. Mr. E. A. Hewett.
LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
The constitution of the Legislative Council is fixed by the fol lowing instructions:-
VICTORIA R. Additional Instructions to our Governor and Commander-in-Chief in and over Our Colony of Hongkong, and its Dependencies, and to Our Lieutenant Governor or other Officer for the time being administer- ing the Government of Our said Colony and its Dependencies.
Given at Our Court at St. James's this Seventh day of July, 1896, in the Sixtieth year of Our Reign.
Whereas by certain Letters Patent under the Great Seal of Our United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, bearing date at West- minster the Nineteenth day of January, 1888, constituting the office of Governor and Commander-in-Chief in and over Our Colony of Hong. kong, and its Dependencies, We did, amongst other things, declare that the Legislative Council of the Colony should consist of such persons as We should direct by any Instructions under Our Sign Manual and Signet ;
And whereas by the Thirteenth Clause of Our Instructions under Our Sign Manual and Signet, bearing date the Nineteenth day of Jan. uary, 1888, accompanying Our said Letters Patent, We did constitute Our said Legislative Council as therein is set forth; and by the Six- teenth Clause of Our said Instructions We did provide for the prece- dence of the Members of Our said Legislative Council;
And whereas We are minded to reconstruct Our said Legislative Council:
I.--Now therefore We do, by these Our Additional Instructions under Our Sign Manual and Signet, revoke the aforesaid Thirteenth and Sixteenth Clauses of Our said Instructions of the Nineteenth day of January, 1888, but without prejudice to anything lawfully done there- under, and instead thereof We do declare Our pleasure as follows:-
II.----The Legislative Council of the Colony shall consist of the Gov- ernor, the Lieutenant Governor (if any), the Senior Military Officer for the time being in command of Our Regular Troops within the Colony, the persons for the time being lawfully discharging the functions of Colonial Secretary, Attorney-General, and Treasurer of the Colony, and such other persons holding offices in the Colony, and not exceeding three in number at any one time, as at the time of the receipt of these Our
CONSTITUTION OF COUNCILS-HONGKONG
additional Instructions in the Colony are Official Members of the said Council, or as We may from time to time appoint by any Instructions or Warrants under Our Sign Manual and Signet, and all such persons shall be styled Official Members of the Legislative Council; and further of such persons, not exceeding six in number at any one time, as at the time of the receipt of these Our Additional Instructions in the Colony are Unofficial Members of the said Council, or as the Governor, in pursuance of any Instructions from Us, through one of Our principal Secretaries of State, may from time to time appoint by any Instrument under the Public Seal of the Colony, and all such persons shall be styled Unofficial Members of the Legisative Council.
Every person who at the time of the receipt of these Our Additional Instructions in the Colony is an Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council may retain his seat until the end of six years from the date of his appointment, and every Unofficial Member appointed after the receipt of these Additional Instructions shall vacate his seat at the end of six years from the date of the Instrument by which he is appointed.
III.-The Official Members of the Legislative Council shall take precedence of the Unoffical Members; and among themselves shall take precedence as We may specially assign, and, in default thereof, first the above-mentioned Officers in the Order in which their offices are mentioned (except the Senior Military Officer, if below the rank of Lieutenant- Colonel in Our Army, shall take precedence after the person lawfully discharging the functions of Attorney-General), then other Official Mem- bers according to the priority of their respective appointments, or if ap- pointed by the same Instrument according to the order in which they are named therein.
APPOINTMENT OF MEMBERS
481
By a Despatch from the Secretary of State, the following course is 0. o. Despatch followed in the appointment of unofficial members:--
Appointed by the Governor (one at least of whom being a member of the Chinese community).. Elected by the Chamber of Commerce.. Elected by the Justices of the Peace..
4
1
1
Total..
6
7th August, 1839 and 20th May, 1890.
Ordinary meet- ings.
Special meet- ings.
Notice of special meetings.
Council may transact busi- ness notwith-
standing vacan cies.
Adjournments.
Governor to pre- side at all meet- inge.
Suspension or adjournment of of meeting.
Confirmation Miuntes.
Order of basi.
Desa.
Petitions.
STANDING RULES AND ORDERS
OF
THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL OF HONGKONG
Passed in pursuance of Article XIX. of the Royal Instructions of the 19th day of January, 1888, and agreed to by the Legislative Council on the 9th day of June, 1890
MEETINGS
1. The ordinary meetings of the Legislative Council shall be held on Mondays at 3 p.m.; but this shall not prevent the adjournment of the Council for more than one week or to any other day or hour.
2.--Special meetings of the Council shall be held when summoned by order of the Governor.
3.-Notice of a special meeting shall be given by the Clerk to each Member of the Council, at least two clear days before the day of meeting; except in case of emergency, when as long notice as possible shall be given.
4.-The Legislative Council shall not be disqualified from the transaction of business on account of any vacancies among the Members thereof; but the said Council shall not be competent to act in any case unless (including the Governor or the Member presiding) there be present at and throughout the meetings of the Council five Members at the least.
5.-At any time during a meeting, the Council may, on motion to that effect being carried, adjourn to any other hour or day; and, should the adjournment be to another day, notice of such adjournment shall be given to the Members by the Clerk.
6. The Governor shall preside at all meetings of the Legislative Council unless prevented by illness or other grave cause, and in his absence that Member shall preside who is first in precedence of those present.
7.--The President may at any time suspend or adjourn any meeting.
8.-When a quorum has been formed, the minutes of the last pre- ceding meeting shall be read, and the question of their confirmation shall be put; but no debate shall be allowed thereupon, except as to any proposed amendment or as to the accuracy of the minutes.
9. The minutes having been confirmed, the order of business shall be as follows:-
(a.) Messages or Minutes of the Governor ;
(b.) Reports from Committees;
(c.) Petitions and written observations;
(d.) Notices;
(e.) Questions,
After which the orders of the day shall be read by the Clerk, and business shall be proceeded with accordingly.
10.-Petitions addressed to the Council may be sent to the Clerk of the Council, or they may be presented by any Member of the Council.
No Petition shall be received which is not properly and respectfully worded, or which does not relate to matters of Legislation.
RULES OF LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL-HONGKONG
It shall be the duty of the Clerk of the Council, or of the Member presenting a Petition, to inform the Council if there be any doubt as to a Petition coming under these prohibitions.
Petitions not coming within the above prohibitions shall be received of course without question.
Petitions relating to any Bills before a Committee shall be referred by the Clerk on receipt to the Committee, by whom they will be presented to the Council with their Report. Other petitions after being received, if it be so resolved, may be read, or may be printed, or may be referred to a Committee for consideration and report.
483
11.-Messages or Minutes of the Governor may be read any time governor's Mes- during a meeting.
Bagesor Minutes.
12.-A Member may give notice of motion, during a meeting Notice of motion mentioning the day or the meeting on which it is intended to bring at meeting, forward the motion.
not given at a mceling.
13.-Notice of motion, if not given at a meeting, must be sent in Notice of motion writing to the Clerk of the Council at least three days before the meeting at which it is intended that the motion should be brought forward. 14-The following motions may be made without notice:
(a.) Any motion for the confirmation or amendment of the minutes of the Council, or for the adoption, modification, or rejection of the report of any Committee.
(b.) Any motion that a petition, or order paper, do lie on the
table, or be printed.
(c.) Any motion for the adjournment of the Council, orofa debate. (d) Any motion for the suspension of the Standing Orders. (e) Any motion for the reference of any matter to a Committee. (f) Any motion for the withdrawal of Strangers.
(g) Any motion made when the Council is in Committee.
(.) Any motion the urgency of which is admitted by the Pre-
sident and two-thirds of the Members present.
Motions without notice,
15.--Notice of intention to ask a question of any Member, if uot Notice of Ques given at a meeting, must, at least three clear days before the meeting of tion. the Council at which such question is to be asked, be sent in writing to the Clerk, who shall communicate the same to the President and to the Member of whom the question is to be asked two clear days before the question is asked. Nothing in this rule shall prevent a member from putting a question without full notice, if the President so permit.
RULES OF DEBATE
16. It shall be competent for any Member of the Legislative Questions, &c., Council to propose any question for debate therein; and such question, if seconded by any other Member, shall be debated and disposed of according to the standing Rules and Orders. Provided always, that every ordinance, vote, resolution, or question, the object or effect of which may be to dispose of or charge any part of the revenue arising within the Colony, shall be proposed by the Governor, unless the proposal of the same shall have been expressly allowed or directed by him.
17-Every Member shall speak standing, and shall address himself
to the President.
18. No Member shall refer to any other Member by name except the case of reference to an un-official Member and then only where it necessary for the purpose of the debate.
Members "peak-
ing to addres President.
in
No Member to be
is
name,
referred to by
19.-No Member shall interrupt another when speaking except by Interruptions. rising to order. A Member rising to order shall simply direct attention to the point which he desires to bring to notice, and submit it to the decision of the President.
484
Precedence
when two Mem- hers rise to- gether.
RULES OF LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL-HONGKONG
20. If two Members rise to speak at the same time, the President shall call upon one of them to address the Council.
A Member may not read his speech, but he may read extracts from
Speech not to be written or printed papers in support of his argument.
read.
President's all- thority.
21.-It shall be the duty of the President on his own authority to enforce all these Rules: and when the President addresses the Council, any Member speaking shall immediately resume his seat.
22.--No speech shall be made on presenting a petition, beyond Speech on peti- such as may be necessary to explain its nature and object.
No debate on question an- swered.
How often Mem-
23.-When a question has been asked and answered, no further de- bate thereon shall be permitted.
24.-No Member may speak more than once on any question, except
hers may speak. When the Council is in Committee.
Motion or am-
be seconded.
The Mover of any motion may, however, reply at the close of a debate, and any Member may explain himself if he has been misappre- hended in any essential statement.
25. The Mover of any motion or amendment may speak in support endment should thereof; but no further debate shall be allowed, whether the Council be
in Committee or not, until the motion or amendinent be duly seconded.
26. If any amendment be proposed and seconded, it shall be con- sidered before the original question.
Order in which amendments should be enter. tained.
Proposed amend-
ments to be committed to writing.
Clauses of Bills.
Filling Blanks.
Question to be
jority.
If any amendment of a proposed amendment be moved and duly seconded, it shall be considered as if such previous amendment were an original question.
27. Any amendment moved and seconded may be required by the President to be committed to writing by the Mover and delivered to the Clerk.
28. When a Bill is in Committee each Clause shall be read by the Clerk and shall then be put from the Chair, without Motion, by this Question: "That this Clause shall stand part of the Bill," and the Clause shall be treated as a Motion, except that a Clause may be amended portion by portion, the earlier amendments having precedence of the later.
29. In filling up blanks in Bills, and in putting Questions of Amendment respecting Amounts of Money, or Periods of Time, the Question of the lowest Amount of Money or shortest Period of Time proposed shall be first put.
30.-All questions proposed for debate in the Legislative Council decided by ma- shall be decided by the majority of votes, and the Governor or the Governor to have Member presiding shall have an original vote in common with the other original and cast- Members of the Council, as also a casting vote, if upon any question the
rotes shall be equal.
ing vote.
Manner of vot- Ing.
Dissent.
No discussion after question
put.
Suspension
of
Standing Orders
31.-On a division, the votes shall be taken by the Clerk.
The roll of Members present shall be read by the Clerk, beginning with the Junior Member.
Each Member shall in his turn declare whether he is for or against the motion made.
The Clerk shall then read out the result, mentioning the total number of votes for and against respectively.
32. If any Member dissenting from the opinion of the majority wish to have his dissent recorded, he shall state so forthwith; and the reasons of his dissent may be laid on the table either at the same or at the following ordinary meeting.
38.-After a question has been put by the President no further discussion thereupon shall be allowed.
34.-The Standing Orders of the Council may be suspended by the consent of the President and a majority of the Members present.
RULES OF LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL-HONGKONG
485
35.-The matter under discussion and any business not disposed of Business not dis- at the time of any adjournment shall stand as An Order of the Day for posed of, the next meeting of the Council.
36.-Strangers may be present in the Council Chamber during Strangers. debates; but must withdraw when called upon to do so by the President on any Member taking notice of their presence.
Any stranger expressing approbation or disapprobation shall be immediately removed.
ORDINANCES
Rules and Regu-
37. In the making of Laws the Governor and the Council shall der observe, as far as practicable, the following Rules:-
whieb Ordin- ances are to be evuclei.
1. All Laws shall be styled "Ordinance," and the enacting Form of ennet
words shall be, "enacted by the Governor of Hongkong ing Ordinances. with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council thereof."
runged.
2. All Ordinances shall be distinguished by titles and shall be Ordinances to be
divided into successive clauses or paragraphs, numbered numbered and consecutively, and to every such clause there shall be methodically ar- annexed in the margin a short summary of its contents. The Ordinances of each year shall be distinguished by consecutive numbers, commencing in each year with the number one,
38-A printed copy of every Bill shall, if possible, be sent to each Bills to be sent to Member by the Clerk at least two clear days before it is read a first time. Members.
39. After having been read a first time, every Bill shall be published Publication alter in the Government Gazette for general information.
to l'ommittee after second
first reading. 40.--When a Bill has been read a second time, the Council shall Council to go in resolve itself into Committee to consider it clause by clause, and amend it as may be deemed necessary, unless at this stage of the proceedings reading. the Bill be referred to a Special or Standing Committee.
mittee.
41. When a Bill shall have been referred to, and reported on by, Bill reported by one of the Standing Committees appointed under Rule 48, and it shall Standing Com- be certified by the Chairman of such Standing Committee that such Bill has been considered clause by clause in the presence of all the Members of such Standing Committee at least, and that, in the opinion of the Committee, such Bill may be dealt with by the Council in the same manner as a Bill reported on by a Committee of the whole Council, such Bill may be dealt with accordingly if no Member object, but if any Member object the Bill shall be dealt with in the same manner as a Bill reported on by a Special Committee.
42.-If no material alteration be made in any Bill so committed, it Third reading. may be read a third time, and passed, at the same meeting, if no Member object; but, if any material alteration be made, or any Member object to proceed immediately with the third reading, it shall be postponed "till the next ensuing meeting.
43.-If on the third reading any Member desire to omit or amend Recommittal on any provision contained in the Bill, or to introduce any fresh provision third reading. thereinto, he may move that the Bill be recommitted; and if the motion be carried, marginal notes of the different clauses of the Bill shall be read seriatim by the Clerk, and any alteration proposed shall be discussed in its proper place; after which the Council shall resume, and the third reading may be moved.
44-A Bill may be referred either to a Special Committee, or to a Reference of Bill Standing Committee at any stage of its progress.
to a Committee,
45. When a Bill has been read a third time, the question "that Passing of Bills, this Bill do pass" shall immediately be put.
486
Nomination of
RULES OF LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL-HONGKONG
COMMITTEES
46. The Members of the Special Committees shall be chosen by the Special Commit. Council.
tees.
Number of Mem-
bera.
Nomination of
47. Every Special Committee shall consist of at least three Members.
48. At the first Meeting of the Council subsequent to the first day. Standing Com. of October in each year, the President may appoint the following Stand
ing Committees :---
mittees.
Committees to be open.
Quorum of Spo. cial and Standing Committees.
Report by whom to be signed.
Petition to bo heard.
Examination Witnessee,
Private Bill in the Gazette.
a. A FINANCE COMMITTEE Consisting of the Colonial Secretary (Chairman), and the other Members of Council except the Governor.
b. A LAW COMMITTEE consisting of the Attorney-General
(Chairman), and four other Members.
c. A PUBLIC WORKS COMMITTEE-Consisting of the Surveyor-
General (Chairman), and four other Members.
49.-The Standing Committees of Council shall be open to all Members.
50.-No Special or Stauding Committee shall be competent to act unless at least three of its Members be present.
51. The report of every Committee shall be signed by the Chairman, or, in his absence, by the Senior Member present.
PRIVATE RIGHTS
52. In any case where individual rights or interests of property may be peculiarly affected by any proposed Bill, all parties interested may, upon petition for that purpose, and on motion made, seconded, and carried, he heard before the Council, or any Committee thereof, either in person, or by Counsel.
53When it is intended to examine any Witnesses, the Member, or the Petitioner, requiring such Witnesses, shall deliver to the Clerk a list containing the names and residences of such Witnesses, at least two days before the day appointed for their examination. The evidence of every such witness shall be taken down by the Clerk and be signed by the Witness.
Notification of 54. Before any Private Bill, whereby the property of any private person may be affected, is introduced, notification of the intention of the parties to apply for such Private Bill shall be given by the parties, by two advertisements in the Gazette, and two in some daily Newspaper circulating in the Colony, and in one Chinese Newspaper, and by publication of the proposed Bill once at least in the Gazette. No Private Ordinance shall be passed whereby the property of any private person may be affected in which there is not a saving of the rights of Her Majesty the Queen, Her Heirs and Successors, and of all bodies politic or corporate and of all other persons except such as are mentioned in the Ordinance and those claiming by, from, and under them. (Art. XXIII., Royal Instructions.)
Order Book.
Minate of pro- ceedings.
Order of the day.
Attendance on Committees.
CLERK OF THE COUNCIL
55.-The Clerk of the Council shall keep an Order Book, in which be shall enter and number in succession the subjects intended to be brought under discussion at each meeting.
56. The Clerk of the Council shall also keep Minutes of the pro- ceedings of the Council; and shall, two clear days at least before each meeting, send a copy of the Minutes of the previous meeting to each
Member.
57.-The Clerk shall also send to each Member, two clear days at least before each meeting, a copy of the Order of the Day for such meeting. 58.-The Clerk of the Council shall attend upon any Special or Standing Committee if required to do so.
CHINESE EMIGRATION IN BRITISH SHIPS
EMIGRATION
Under the Imperial Chinese Passengers' Act, 1855, any vessel clearing with more than twenty Asiatics on a voyage of more than seven days' duration is a Chinese passenger ship.
Proclamations of 26th January, 1856, and 17th November, 1858, declare the length of certain voyages.
Ordinance 1 of 1889, Sections 3 and 4, give the legal definition of a voyage. Section 46 of the same Ordinance provides that all ships proceeding on a voyage of not more than thirty days' duration shall be subject to the regulations contained in the following Schedule:---
1. No ship shall clear out or proceed to sea unless the master thereof shall have received from an Emigration Officer a copy of these regulations and a certificate in the form contained in schedule K, nor until the master shall have entered into the bond prescribed by Section IV. of "The Chinese Passengers' Act, 1855."
2. No Emigration Officers shall be bound to give such certificate till seven days. after receiving an application in writing for the same from the owners or charterers of the ship, or if absent, from their respective agents, specifying the name of the ship, her tonnage, the port of destination, the proposed day of departure, the number of passengers intended to be carried, and whether such passengers or any of them are under contracts of service.
3. After receiving such application, the Emigration Officer, and any person authorized by him in that behalf shall be at liberty at all times to enter and inspect the ship, and the fittings, provisions, and stores therein, and any person impeding such entry or inspection, or refusing to allow of the same, shall be liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars for each offence.
4. The following conditions as to the accommodation of passengers shall be observed to the satisfaction of the Emigration Officer:-
(1.) The space appropriated to the passengers between decks shall be properly ventilated, and shall contain at the least 9 superficial and 54 cubical feet of space for every adult on board; that is to say, for every passenger above twelve years of age, and for every two passengers between the ages of one and twelve years. The height between decks shall be at least six feet.
(2.) The accommodation for female passengers between decks shall be separate
from that provided for male passengers.
(3.) A space of four superficial feet per adult shall be left clear on the upper
deck for the use of the passengers.
(4.) A reasonable space shall be set apart properly divided and fitted up as a sick bay, and sufficient latrines, both as to condition and number, shall be provided in suitable parts of the ship.
5, The Emigration Officer may, in his discretion, permit deck passengers to be carried, upon such conditions as may, from time to time, be prescribed under instructions from one of Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, and until and subject to such instructions, upon the conditions following:-
(1.) A suitable awning with screen shall be provided on deck, sufficient for
the protection of the passengers from the sun and from rain.
489
CHINESE PASSENGERS' ACT
say, for
every
(2.) The space appropriated to such deck passengers shall contain at the
least sixteen superficial feet for every adult, that is to passenger above twelve years
of age, and for every two passengers between the ages of one and twelve, (3) In case deck passengers shall be carried in addition to other passengers fr whom accommodation between decks shall be provided, the space to be appropriated for deck passengers shall be reckoned exclusively ofthe space of four superficial feet per adult requiredto be left clear on the upper deck for the use of such other passenger.
6. The following conditions as to provisions shall be observed to the satisfaction of the Emigration Officer:-
(1.) Provisions, fuel, and water shall be placed on board of good quality, properly packed and sufficient for the use and consumption of the passengers, over and above the victualling of crew during the intended voyage, according to the following scale:
For every Passenger per diem:-
Rice or Bread Stuff
Dried and/or Salt Fish
Chinese Condiments and Curry Stuffs
ih. l.
th. 01.
OZ. 1.
Fresh Vegetables which will keep for short voyages, such as Sweetth. 18.
Potatoes, Turnips, Carrots, and Pumpkins
Fire wood......
. 1. 1 gallon.
Water (to be carried in tanks or sweet casks). (2) The last preceding condition as to provisions shall be deemed to have been complied with in any case where by the special authority of the Emigration Officer any other articles of food shall have been substi tuted for the articles enumerated in the foregoing scale, as being equivalent thereto.
(3.) The passengers may supply their own provisions for the voyage and proper accommodation for the stowage and sufficient cabooses for the cooking of such provisions must be allowed.
7. The sa tisfied:-
(1)
Emigration Officer shall not give his certificato unless he shall been
That the ship is seaworthy, and properly manned, equipped, fitted, and ventilated, and has not on board any cargo likely, from its quality, quantity, or mode of stowage, to prejudice the health or safety of the passengers.
(2.) That suitable medicines and medical stores, provisions, fuel and water have been placed on board, of good quality, properly packed and suffi- cient in quantity to supply the passengers on board during the intended
voyage.
(3.) That all the requirements of Section 46 of this Ordinance have been
complied with.
8. The Emigration Officer may, in his discretion (subject in Hongkong to au appeal to the Governor) withhold his certificate in all cases where the intended pas- sengers or any of them are under contracts of service, and he shall in no case give bis certificate until he shall have mustered the passengers, and have ascertained to the best of his power that they understand whither they are going, and in case they shall have made any contracts of service that they comprehend the nature thereof; he shall also take care that a copy of the form of any such contracts, or an abstract of their substance, signed by himself, is appended to the said certificate: if any of the pas- sengers are in bad health, or insufficiently provided with clothing, or if any contracts are unfair, or if there is reason to suspect that fraud and violence have been practised in their collection or embarkation, he may detain the ship, and if he shall think fit, may order all or any of the passengers to be re-lauded.
CHINESE PASSENGERS' ACT
489
9. The Emigration Officer may, if he shall think fit, before granting bis certificate employ any duly qualified medical practitiouer, master mariner, marine surveyor, or other person whose professional assistance and advice he may require for the purpose of ascertaining whether the requirements of Section 46 of this Ordinance have been duly complied with, and the costs and charges of obtaining such assistance and advice shall be defrayed by the owners or charterers of the ship, whether the Emigration Officer shall grant his certificate or not.
10. The Emigration Officer shall, from time to time, fix a reasonable scale of fees and charges to be approved by one of Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, for the remuneration of any professional persons who may be employed by him under the last preceding regulation, and pending the approval or disapproval of such scale, the fees and charges therein specific shall be payable, as if the same had been approved in manner aforesaid.
11. The owners or charterers of every ship shall pay such fees for the remuneration of the Emigration Officer as may, from time to time, be ordered under the instructions from one of Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, and until and subject to such instructions, the following fees shall be payable in addition to all fees charge- able under Regulation 10:-
Upon the application for a Certificate Upon the granting of the Certificate...
.$25
-$25
Provided always that no fees shall be payable to the Emigration Officer of Hongkong, but in lieu thereof the following stamp duties are hereby imposed, that is to say:
Upon every application for a certificate under Regulation 2 contained in this
schedule, a stamp duty of
Upon every Certificate granted under Regulation 1 of this schedule, a stamp
duty of.....
$1
.....$1
And the Stamp Ordinance, 1886, shall be read as if the stamp duties hereby imposed were inserted in the schedule thereof.
12. In case default shall be made by the owners or charterers of the ship in the payment of any fees and charges to which they may be liable under Section 46 of this Ordinance and this Schedule, the ship may be detained by the British Consul, or if in Hongkong by the Governor, until such fees and charges shall have been paid.
18. The Emigration Officer may withhold his certificate or revoke the same at any time before the departure of the ship, if it shall appear to his satisfaction that any particulars contained in the application in writing which shall have been made or the same or any other particulars which may have been furnished to him by or on behalf of the owners, charterers, or master of the ship in relation thereto, are untrue, and that the conditions of Section 46 of this Ordinance bave not been complied with and in every such case it shall be lawful for the British Consul, or if in Hongkong or the Governor, to seize and detain the ship until the certificate, if already granted, shall have been delivered up to be cancelled.
14. The master of every British ship shall, during the whole of the intended voyage, make issues of provisions, fuel, and water, according to aforesaid dietary scale, to all the passengers except such as shall have supplied themselves therewith, and shall not make any alteration except for the manifest advantage of the passengers, in respect of the space allotted to them as aforesaid, or in respect of the means of ventilation, and shall not ill-use the passengers, or require them (except in case of necessity) to help in working the vessel; and shall issue medicines and medical comforts, as shall be requisite, to the best of his judgment, and shall call at such ports as may be mentioned in the Emigration Officer's clearing certificate for fresh water and other necessaries; and shall carry the passengers without unnecessary delay to the destination to which they have contracted to proceed.
15. The master of every British ship shall, within 24 hours after his arrival at the port of destination and at any port of call, produce his emigration papers to the British Consul (if any) at such port, or in case such port shall be in her Majesty's
490
IMPERIAL ORDINANCE RELATING TO FOREIGN INSCE. COS. IN JAPAN,
dominions to any officer appointed or authorized by the local Government in that behalf. It shall be lawful for such Consul or other officer to enter and inspect such ship, and in case the master shall obstruct or refuse to assist him in the discharge of such duty, or shall without reasonable cause fail to produce his emigration papers as aforesaid, he shall be liable to a fine of five hundred dollars, and the ship may be detained by the British Consul, or if in Her Majesty's dominions, by the local Government, until such fine shall have been paid and the emigration papers shall have been given up.
16. In all ports and places where no Emigration Officer shall have been appointed, the British Consul shall, until such appointment, and at all times pending the vacancy of such office, be deemed to be the Emigration Officer for the purposes of these Regulations.
Section 21 of Ordinance 1 of 1889 provides that the Goveruor in Council may grant a special licence for any period not excceding twelve months, to first class steamers, to carry a limited number of free Chinese passengers upon voyages of not more than thirty days' duration between ports to be specified in the licence, and subject to certain regulations which, as regards dietary, space, and accommodation are the same as those given above.
Vessels proceeding on voyages of more than thirty days' duration are subject to rules made under the Chinese Passengers' Act, 1855.
IMPERIAL ORDINANCE RELATING TO FOREIGN
INSURANCE COMPANIES IN JAPAN
!
1.-If a Foreign Company establishes an agency in Japan and carries on insurance business, it must have a representative in Japan.
2. The said Foreign Company must report to the Government the name and the residence of its representative.
3. Articles 95 and 97 to 101 of the Commercial Code shall be applicable to Foreign Companies.
4.If the Government recognizes that a Foreign Company has difficulty in continuing in business (is insolvent?), or if the Company violates the instructions of the Government, the Government may suspend the business or order that its representative be changed.
5. When the Foreign Company makes up its balance-sheet, a written report of the business, together with the balance-sheet showing profit and statement of the dividend, must be produced to the Government.
6.--A Foreign Company which has established a branch office or agency in Japan previous to the operation of the Commercial Code must obtain a license from the Government within six months from the date of the operation of the Commercial Code.
7. Articles 1, 2, 4, and 5, and Articles 98 to 101 in the Commercial Code shall be applied to the Company which has established a branch office or agency in Japan previous to the operation of the Commercial Code.
This Imperial Ordinance will take effect from the day of the operation of the Commercial Code.
HONGKONG PORT REGULATIONS
ABSTRACT OF ORDINANCE 26 of 1891
III.-No' British owned vessel without a Register to use the waters of the Colony.
IV. British ships to be provided with boats and life-buoys.
2. Penalties for non-compliance: not exceeding five hundred dollars.
V.--British and Foreign steamships of 60 tons and upwards carrying more than 12 passengers to possess Survey Certificates.
VI-Harbour Master may refuse clearances to ships carrying more passengers than allowed by certificate.
2 and 3.-Penalty for taking excess of passengers not exceeding two hundred dollars, in addition to a penalty not exceeding five dollars for every passenger in excess of the number permitted to be carried by port clearance. Penalty for proceeding to sea without a port clearance: five hundred dollars.
5. Government may prohibit conveyance of deck passengers.
6. Section VI. does not apply to vessels which come under the Chinese Passengers' Act.
VII.-Regulations for steamships under 60 tons.
VIII. Licences may be granted to River steamers, limiting number of passengers to be carried.
IX. Power to detain unsafe ships, and procedure for such detention. X-Application to foreign ships of provisions of Ordinance as to detention. XI-Sending or taking unseaworthy ships to sea a misdemeanour.
3. Prosecution under this section not to be instituted without consent of the Governor.
XII-If any person sends or attempts to send by, or, not being master or owner of the vessel, carries
or attempts to carry in any vessel, British or foreign, any dangerous goods, that is to say: aquafortis, vitriol, naphtha, benzine, guupowder, lucifer matches, nitro-glycerine, petroleum, or any other goods of a dangerous nature without distinctly marking their nature on the outside of the package containing the same, and giving written notice of the nature of such goods and of the name and address of the sender or carrier thereof to the master or owner of the vessel at or before the time of sending same to be shipped, or taking the same on board the vessel, he shall for every such offence incur a penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars: Provided that if such person show that be was merely an agent in the shipment of such goods and had no reason to suspect that the goods shipped by him were of a dangerous nature, the penalty which he incurs shall not exceed fifty dollars. 2. Penalty for misdescription of "dangerous goods: not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars.
3. The master or owner of any vessel, British or foreign, may refuse to take on board any package or parcel which he suspects to contain goods of a dangerous nature, and may require it to be opened to ascertain the fact.
4. Where any dangerous goods, as defined in Paragraph I. of this section, or any goods which, in the judgment of the master or owner of the vessel, are of a dangerous nature, have been sent or brought aboard any vessel, British or foreign, without being marked as aforesaid, or without such notice having been given as aforesaid, the
402
HONGKONG PORT REGULATIONS
master or owner of the vessel may cause such goods to be thrown overboard, together with any package or receptacle in which they are contained; and neither the master nor the owner of the vessel shall, in respect of such throwing overboard, be subject to any liability, civil or criminal, in any Court.
5. Dangerous goods improperly sent may be forfeited.
6. The Court may proceed in absence of the owners.
7. Saving as to Dangerous Goods Ordinance.
XIII. Constitution and powers of Marine Courts and Courts of Survey. XIV.If a shipowner feels aggrieved:-
(a.) By a declaration of a Government Surveyor or Surveyors under Sub- section 8 of Section V. of this Ordinance, or by the refusal of a Surveyor to give the said declaration; or
(b.) By the refusal of a certificate of clearance for au emigrant ship under the "Chinese Passengers' Act, 1855," or the Ordinance relating thereto; or
(c.) By the refusal of a certificate of clearance under this Ordinance,--the owner, charterer, master, or agent may appeal in the prescribed manner to a Court of Survey.
XV.--Examinations shall be instituted for persons who intend to become masters, engineers, or mates of foreign going ships.
3. Applicant to give notice to Harbour Master.
6. Every applicant for a certificate of competency shall, upon lodging his ap- plication, pay to the Harbour Master a fee, if for a master's or first-class engineer's certificate, of twenty dollars. and if for any other certificate, of fifteen dollars.
8. Any applicant who shall have passed a satisfactory examination, and shall have given satisfactory evidence of his sobriety, experience, and general good conduct, on board ship, shall be entitled to receive a certificate of competency.
XVI.--2. The name of a master, first, only or second mate, or first or second engineer shall not be attached to the register, or articles of agreement, of any British or Colonial ship unless such master, mate, or engineer shall possess a certificate of service or competency issued by the Board of Trade or by the proper authority in any British Possession,
3. No British or Colonial ship shall leave the waters of the Colony unless the master thereof, and the first and second or only mate have obtained and possess valid certificates of competency or service appropriate to their several stations in such ship, or of a higher grade, and no such ship, if of one hundred tons burden or upwards shall leave the waters as aforesaid, unless at least one officer, besides the master, has obtained, and possesses, a valid certificate appropriate to the grade of only mate there- in, or to a higher grade.
4. Every British steamship of one hundred nominal horse power or upwards, leaving the waters of the Colony, shall have as its first and second engineers two certificated engineers, the first possessing a "first class engineer's certificate," and the second possessing a "second class engineer's certificate" or a certificate of the higher grade, and every British steamship of less than one hundred nominal horse power shall have as its only or first engineer an engineer possessing a "second class engineer's certificate," or certificate of the bigher grade.
in
7. Every person who, having been engaged in any of the capacities mentioned in Sub-sections 2 and 3, in any such ship as aforesaid goes to sea in that capacity without being at the time entitled to and possessed of such certificate as is required by this section;
and every person who employs any person in any of the above capacities such ship without ascertaining that he is at the time entitled to or possessed of such certificate as is required by this section, shall, for each offence, incur a penalty not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars.
8. No seaman shall, except with the Harbour Master's sanction, be shipped to do duty on board a British ship, or any foreign ship whose flag is not represented by a consular officer resident in the Colony, elsewhere than at the Mercantile Marine Office. Fees to be charged.
PORT REGULATIONS, &c.
493
11. No seaman shall be discharged from a British ship, or any foreign ship whose flag is not represented by a Consular officer resident in the Colony, elsewhere than a the Mercantile Marine Office, and every seaman discharged from a foreign ship so represented shall, within twenty-four hours of being discharged at the office of his Consul or Vice-Consul, produce to the Harbour Master, or some person deputed by him, a certificate of his discharge, signed by such Consul or Vice-Consul, under a penalty not exceeding twenty-five dollars; in default, imprisonment not exceeding twenty-one days,
12. No master of any ship shall discharge in this Colony, under a penalty not exceeding twenty-five dollars, any seaman shipped on board thereof unless on a certificate from the Superintendent of the Mercantilo Marine Office or his deputy, or from the Consul or Vice-Consul, if any, representing the nation to which the ship belongs; and the Superintendent or his deputy, and the Consul or Vice-Consul are empowered to withhold or grant his certificate upon such conditions for the subsistence of the seaman as he shall think fit, and if any seaman shall wilfully or negligently remain in the Colony after the departure of the vessel in which he shall have shipped, such seaman shall, on conviction, be subject to a penalty not exceeding twenty-five dollars, or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding one month with or without hard labour.
13. Penalty for wrongfully leaving behind any seaman or apprentice: Two hundred and fifty dollars or imprisonment not exceeding six months.
XIX. British and Colonial Ships to carry medicines, medical stores, &c. in accordance with scale issued by Board of Trade.
3. Health Officer to approve of lime or lemon juice.
XX. Seamen deserting may be apprehended and put on board the vessels to which they belong, or may be confined in gaol.
2. Ships or houses may be searched for deserters from ships.
3. Penalty on persons harbouring deserters from ships: not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars, or imprisonment with or without hard labour not exceed- ing six months.
4. Harbour Master may require masters of ships to search for suspected deserters. 5. Whenever any seaman engaged in any foreign ship commits any of the following offences within the waters of the Colony, he shall be liable to be punished summarily by a Stipendiary Magistrate as follows, that is to say:
(a.) For wilful disobedience to any lawful command, he shall be liable to imprisonment for any period not exceeding four weeks, with or without hard labour, and also, at the discretion of the Court, to forfeit, out of his wages, a sum not exceeding two days' pay;
(b) For continued wilful disobedience to lawful commands, or continued wilful neglect of duty, he shall be liable to imprisonment for any period not exceeding twelve weeks, with or without hard labour, and also, at the discretion of the Court, to forfeit, for every twenty-four hours' continuance of such disobedience or neglect, either a sum not exceeding six days' pay, or any expenses which have been incurred in hiring a substitute;
(c.) For combining with any other or others of the crew to disobey lawful commands, or to neglect duty, or to impede the navigation of the ship or the progress of the voyage, he shall be liable to imprisonment for any period not exceeding twelve weeks, with or without hard labour: Provided that when there is a Consul, Vice-Consul, or Consular Agent resident at Hongkong of the nation to which the ship belongs the Court shall not deal with the case unless thereto requested by such officer in writing.
6. All expenses incidental to the apprehension, confinement, and removal of any seaman, under this section, shall be paid by the master of the ship to which such seaman may belong, and be recoverable from him at the suit of the Captain Superintendent of Police, as a debt due to the Government of this Colony; and the subsistence money for every such seaman confined in gaol shall be paid in advance
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COLONY OF HONGKONG
to the Superintendent of the Gaol, and in default of such payment, the gaoler may release such seaman: Provided that every seaman imprisoned under this chapter may be sent on board his ship prior to her departure from the waters of the Colony by direction of the committing magistrate.
-
XXI. In the event of the death of any of the passengers, or other persons, occurring on board of any merchant vessel in the waters of the Colony, or on voyage to the Colony, or in case of the death, desertion, or removal of any of the crew, the master of such vessel shall forthwith report the same to the Harbour Master, under a penalty not exceeding twenty-five dollars for every death, desertion, or removal which he shall neglect to report.
XXII-Any seanan, or other person, who shall give a false description of his services, or show, make, or procure to be made, any false character, or shall make false statements as to the name of the last ship in which he served, or as to any other information which may be required of him by any person having lawful authority to demand such infor nation, shall incur a penalty not exceeding fifty dollars.
REGULATION AND CONTROL OF THE WATERS OF THE COLONY AND OF VESSELS NAVIGATING THE SAME
XXIV.
REGULATIONS
Duties of Master
Every master of a merchant ship shall hoist her national colours and number on entering the waters of the Colony; and shall keep such number flying until the ship shall have been reported at the Harbour Master's Office.
2. Harbour Master and Health Officer to be allowed on board at ouce.
3. Every such master shall, within twenty-four hours after arrival within the waters of this Colony, report ti e arrival of his ship at the Harbour Master's Office, and in the case of a British ship, or of a ship which shall not be represented by a Consul, shall deposit there the ship's articles, list of passengers, ship's register, and true copy of manifest if required. In the case of a foreign ship represented by a Consul, the said papers shall be lodged by the master at the proper consulate. Auy master offending against the provisions of this sub-section shall incur a penalty not exceeding two hundred dollars.
4. Subject to the provision of Section 30 every such master arriving in the waters of the Colony shall take up the berth pointed out by the Harbour Master, or by any person sent on board by him for that purpose, and shall moor his ship there properly, and shall not remove from it to take up any other berth, without his permission, except in case of necessity, to be decided by the Harbour Master, under a penalty not exceeding one hundre I dollars; and he shall remove his vessel to any new berth when required so to do by the Harbour Master, under a fine not exceeding twenty dollars for every hour that the vessel shall remain in her old berth after notice to remove under the hand of the Harbour Master, or his deputy, shall have been given on board of her.
5. Every such master shall immediately strike spars, clear hawse, or shift berth, or obey any other order which the Harbour Master may think fit to give, and any master wilfully disobeying or neglecting this regulation shall incur a penalty not exceeding two hundred dollars.
6. Every such master about to proceed to sea shall where practicable hoist a Blue Peter twenty-four hours before time of intended departure, and shall give notice thereof to the Harbour Master, who, if there is no reasonable objection, will furnish a port clearance, and attest the manifest, it necessary; and any master having obtained such clearance and not sailing within thirty-six hours thereafter shall report to the Harbour Master his reason for not sailing, and shall re-deposit the ship's papers. Any master wilfully neglecting or disobeying this regulation, or going to sea without having obtained a port clearance, shall incur a penalty not exceeding fifty dollars.
PORT REGULATIONS, &c.
Quarantine
XXV. Governor in Council may make Quarantine Regulations.
Steamers' Fairway
495
XXVI.--No vessel or boat of any description shall be allowed to anchor within any fairway which shall be set apart by the Harbour Master for the passage of vessels, and the master or other person in charge of any vessel or boat dropping anchor in or otherwise obstructing such fairway shall for each offence incur a penalty not exceeding fifty dollars, and in default thereof imprisonment with or without hard labour not exceeding three months.
Enactments concerning the Safety of Ships and Prevention of Accidents
XXVII. Every master of a ship, hulk, or other vessel, not being a boat propelled by oars, being at anchor in the waters of this Colony, shall, from sunset to sunrise, cause to be exhibited a bright white light at the place where it can be best but at a height not exceeding twenty feet above the hull, and in default, shall incur a penaly not exceeding one hundred dollars.
seen,
3. In case of fire occurring on board any ship or vessel in the waters of the Colony: if at night, three lights shall be hoisted in a vertical position at the highest masthead and a single light at the peak, and guns shall be fired in quick succession until sufficient assistance shall be rendered; if during the day, the ensign Union down with the signal NM, "I am on fire, shall be hoisted at the highest masthead and guns fired as above provided for night time.
+
4. If on board any ship or vessel in the waters of the Colony a disturbance or riot shall occur which the master or his officers are unable to quell: if by day, the ensign Union down shall be hoisted at the peak and the Signal PC. "want assistance; mutiny shall be hoisted at the highest masthead or wherever practicable under the circumstances; guns may also be fired as in Sub-section 2; if by night, three lights shall be hoisted at the peak and a single light at the masthead, and guns may also be fired as before stated.
Offences in the Waters of the Colony
[See also "The Dangerous Goods Ordinance, 1873," and Regulations] XXVIII.- Every person who within the Colony or the waters thereof shall commit any of the following offences shall incur a penalty of not more than fifty dollars, or imprisonment for any term not exceeding three months, with or without hard labour; namely:
Damaging furniture of ship. Throwing into water goods unlawfully obtained. Mooring boats so as to prevent access to wharves. Obstruction of harbour by rubbish. Boarding ship without permission. Making fast to ship under weigh.
2. Except as is hereinbefore directed by Sub-sections 3 and 4 of Section XXVII., or with the sanction of the Harbour Master, no cannon, gun, or fire-arm, or firework of any description shall be discharged within such portions of the waters of the Colony as the Governor may from time to time by regulations prescribe, from any merchant vessel or boat, under penalty not exceeding two hundred dollars.
Removal of Obstructions
XXIX. The Harbour Master may, by written notice, require any person to remove within a reasonable time, to be specified in such notice, any obstruction in the waters of the Colony caused by such person or belonging to him or in his charge or keeping; and if such person fail to remove the obstruction within the specified time, the Harbour Master shall cause the obstruction to be removed, and may recover the expenses of removal from the person named in the notice.
Moorings and Buoys
1. It shall be lawful for the Harbour Master to place in the waters of the Colony such Government moorings and buoys as may be approved by the Governor and to allow the use thereof upon such terms and conditions and for such fees as the Governor in Council may direct.
2. No person shall place moorings or buoys in the waters of the Colony except with the sanction of the Harbour Master and except upon the conditions contained
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COLONY OF HONGKONG
in table Oa of the schedule (rental $5 half-yearly), and such moorings and buoys shall be of such nature as the Harbour Master shall approve,
3. No person shall moor or anchor hulks or vessels of like description within the waters of the Colony without the sanction of the Harbour Master and except upon such conditions and subject to the payment of such fees as the Governor in Council may direct.
4. Moorings and buoys sanctioned by the Harbour Master under Sub-section 2 shall not be made use of by any vessel other than the vessels of the person to whom such sanction has been granted except with the consent of such person. The master of any vessel using any such moorings and buoys without such consent shall be liable to a penalty of twenty dollars per day for every day or part of a day during which he shall so use such moorings and buoys after he has been requested to remove therefrom.
LIGHTHOUSES, BUOYS, OR BEACONS
Light Dues
XXXIII. The owner or master of every ship which enters the waters of the Colony shall pay such dues in respect of the said lighthouses, buoys, beacons, cables and other apparatus as may from time to time be fixed by order of the Governor pursuant to resolution of the Legislative Council, to such officers as the Governor shall from time to time appoint to collect the same, and the same shall be paid by such officers into the Colonial Treasury.
IMPORTATION AND STORAGE OF EXPLOSIVES
[See also "The Dangerous Goods Ordinance, 1873," and Regulations]
XXXVII. The Governor is hereby empowered to provide, at the expense of the Colony, all necessary vessels and buildings for the storage of gunpowder or other explosives, and no gunpowder or other explosives arriving in this Colony shall be stored in any other building or vessel except as provided by Sub-section 10, and subject to the observance of the rules and regulations to be made under Sub-section 12 of this Ordinance.
2. Such vessels or buildings shall for the purposes of this chapter be termed a government depôt or government depôts for the storage of gunpowder, and shall be under the control and management of the Harbour Master subject to such orders as may from time to time be leceived from the Governor; and such vessel or vessels shall be fitted and manned in such manner as the Harbour Master with the approval of the Governor shall deem expedient.
3. The master of every vessel arriving in this Colony having on board thereof any quantity of gunpowder or other explosives exceeding 200 lbs. shall immediately, upon the arrival thereof, and ifore the discharge from the ship of any such gunpowder or other explosives, furnish the Harbour Master with a copy of the manifest of the same, the marks of all the packages, and the names of the consignees, if he shall know the same.
4. The master of every such vessel as in the last preceding section mentioned shall as soon as possible take the same to the place which shall be pointed out to him by the Harbour Master, and the said vessel shall not be removed therefrom without the permission in writing of the Harbour Master.
5. When any quantity of gunpowder or other explosives exceeding 200 lbs. is about to be conveyed out of the Colony, the master of the vessel about to convey the same shall, on producing the written authority of the owners thereof or their agents, receive from the Harbour Master a permit to take on board the packages mentioned in such authority, and the master of such vessel shall thereupon move the same into such anchorage as the Harbour Master may deem expedient, and from such anchorage the master of such vessel shall not remove the saine except for the purpose of proceeding on his voyage or for some other sufficient cause to be approved by the Harbour Master.
PORT REGULATIONS, &c.
497
6. The master of every vessel having on board more than 200 lbs. of gunpowder or other explosives, or whilst engaged in the transhipment of the same,
hall exhibit a red flag at the highest masthead.
7. It shall not be lawful for the master of any vessel to tranship any gunpowder or other explosives between the hours of 6 P.M. and 6 A.M. from October to March inclusive, nor between the hours of 7 P.M. and 5 A.M. from April to September inclusive, without the written permission of the Harbour Master,
8. It shall not be lawful for the master of any vessel, without the written permission of the Harbour Master, to anchor such vessel within five hundred yards of any government depôt for the storage of gunpowder.
9. It shall not be lawful for the master of any vessel having on board gun- powder or other explosives exceeding in quantity 200 lbs. to anchor nearer than five hundred yards to any other vessel.
10. It shall not be lawful for any person, without the permission in writing of the Governor, to keep, except at the Government Depôt, for any time, however short, within any house, store, godown, or other place on land, a larger quantity of gua- powder than 15 lbs. or any quantity of other explosives.
11. It shall be lawful for any justice of the peace, or Police officer duly authorized by warrant, to enter, and if necessary to break into, any house, store, godown, vessel or place either on land or water, within which such justice of the peace shall be credibly informed on oath, or shall have reasonable grounds of his own knowledge to suspect and believe, that gunpowder or other explosives is kept or carried, or is on board of any vessel contrary to the provisions of this chapter.
12. The Governor in Council is hereby empowered to make rules and regulations for the proper carrying out of the provisions of this chapter including storage of gunpowder or other explosives otherwise on land, or its carriage, within the waters of the Colony, and to fix and vary from time to time the sums chargable for the storage of gunpowder or other explosives as herein before prescribed, and every violation or neglect of any such rules or regulations shall render the party so offending liable to the penalties imposed by Sub-section 14 of this section for offences against any provisions thereof.
13. The sums charged in respect of such storage shall be paid monthly by the party claiming to be entitled to such gunpowder or other explosives, and in the event of the same not being paid within twenty-one days after the same shall have become due and payable, it shall be lawful for the Governor to direct the said gunpowder or other explosives to be sold, in order to defray the expense of storage and the proceeds thereof, after deduction of all government charges and the expenses. of sale, shall be paid to the party who shall prove himself entitled thereto to the satisfaction of the Governor.
14. Every person who shall violate or refuse or fail to comply with the provi- sions of this chapter shall incur a penalty not exceeding three hundred dollars, or imprisonment for any period not exceeding six months.
15. Nothing in this chapter contained shall apply to Her Majesty's ships of war or the ships or war of any foreign nation, or to hired armed vessels in Her Majesty's service or in the service of any foreign nation, or to Government stores.
DECK AND LOAD LINE
Grain Cargoes
XL-Ships to be marked with Deck and Load Lines.
XLI. No cargo of which more than one-third consists of any kind of grain, corn, rice, paddy, pulse, seeds, nuts, or nut kernels, hereinafter referred to as grain cargo, shall be carried on board any Colonial ship, unless such grain cargo be contained in bags, sacks, or barrels, or secured from shifting by boards, bulkheads, or otherwise.
General
6. Where under this Ordinance a ship is authorised or ordered to be detained, if the ship after such detention or after service on the master of any notice of or order for such detention proceeds to sea before it is released by competent authority, the
498
GENERAL PORT REGULATIONS FOR BRITISH CONSULATES IN CHINA.
master of the ship, and also the owner or agent and any person who sends the ship to sea, if such owner or agent or person be party or privy to the offence, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars.
7. Where a ship so proceeding to sea takes to sea when on board thereof in the execution of his duty any officer authorised to detain the ship, or any Surveyor or officer appointed by the Governor, the owner and master of the ship shall each be liable to pay all expenses of and incidental to the officer or Surveyor being so taken to sea, and also a penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars, or if the offence is not prosecuted in a summary manner, not exceeding fifty dollars for every day until the officer or Surveyor returns, or until such time as would enable him after leaving the ship to return to the port from which he is taken, and such expenses may be recovered in like manner as the penalty.
16. Whosoever, with intent to defraud, shali forge, or alter, or shall offer, utter, dispose of, or put off knowing the same to be forged or altered, any certificate, ticket, document, matter, or thing named in this Ordinance, or any regulation made there- under, shall be guilty of felony, and being convicted thereof, shall be liable, at the discretion of the Supreme Court, to be kept in penal servitude for any term not exceeding seven years, or to be imprisoned with or without hard labour.
1
GENERAL PORT REGULATIONS FOR BRITISH
CONSULATES IN CHINA
The undersigned, Her Britannic Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary and Chief Superintendent of British Trade in China, acting under the authority conferred upon him by the 85th Section of the China and Japan Order in Council, 1865, hereby declares the following Regulations, made, in pursuance of the above Order in Council, to secure the observance of Treaties and the maintenance of friendly relations between British subjects and Chinese subjects and authorities. to be applicable to all ports which are, or may hereafter become, open to British trade:
I. The British Consulate offices at the several open ports shall be opened for public business from 10 o'clock A.M. to 4 o'clock P.M. daily, excepting Sundays, Christmas Day, Good Friday, Queen's Birthday, Easter Monday, those holidays upon which public offices in England are closed, and Chinese New Year's day, aud such Chinese holidays as the Chinese Customs authorities may observc.
II. On the arrival of any British vessel at the anchorage of any of the oper port, the master shall, within 24 hours, deposit his ship's papers, together with a summary of the manifest of her cargo, at the Consulate office, unless a Sunday or 1. holiday shall intervene.
1
III.-Every British vessel must show her national colours on entering the port or anchorage, and keep them hoisted until she shall have been reported at the Consulate and her papers deposited there.
IV. No British vessel or any vessel the property of a British subject, unless provided with a certificate of registry, or provisional or other pass from the Super- intendent of Trade at Peking, or from the Colonial Government at Hongkong, shall hoist the British ensign within any port or anchorage, or any flag similar to the British ensign or of a character not to be easily distinguishable from it. Nor shall any registered British vessel flying the Red ensign hoist any other ensign or flag (except she be entitled to fly the Blue ensign) in use by Her Majesty's vessels of war, or the national ensign of any foreign State or any ensign or flag not plainly dis- tinguishable from the ensigns used by Her Majesty's ships of war or from those flown by Ships of foreign States.
GENERAL PORT REGULATIONS FOR BRITISH CONSULATES IN CHINA
499
V. Should any seaman absent himself from his ship without permission, the master shall forthwith report the circumstance at the Consulate office, and take the necessary measures for the recovery of the absentee, and it shall be lawful for the Consul, if circumstances shall require it, in his discretion to prohibit leave being given to seamen to come ashore, and any master who shall violate such prohibition shall incur the penalties hereinafter declared.
VI. The discharge of guus or other firearms from vessels in harbour is strictly prohibited, unless permission shall have been granted by the Consul.
VII.-Masters of vessels when reporting their arrival at a port shall notify in writing the names of all passengers and persons not forming part of the articled crew on board, and, previous to leaving, notice must be given of the names of all persons, not forming part of the articled crew, intending to leave the port on board any vessel.
VIII. All cases of death occurring at sea must be reported to the Cousul within 24 hours of the vessel's arriving in port or barbour, and all cases of death on board vessels in harbour, or in the residences of British-subjects on shore, must be imme- diately reported at the Consulate office, and in the event of sudden or accidental death the fullest information obtainable should be given. It is strictly prohibited to throw overboard the bodies of seamen or other persons dying on board of a vessel in harbour. Except in case of urgent necessity, no burial should take place on shore or from any ship in harbour without the license of the Consul first obtained.
IX. Stone or ballast shall not be thrown overboard in any port or harbour, unless permission shall have been first obtained from the local authorities through the intervention of Her Majesty's Consular officer.
X.-All cases of loss of property by theft or fraud on board ships, as well as of assault or felony requiring redress or involving the public peace, must be immediately reported at the Consulate office.
If any Chinese subject guilty of, or suspected of, having committed a mis- demeanour on shore or afloat be detained, information must in such cases be forthwith lodged at the Consulate office, and in no instance shall British subjects be per- mitted to use violence toward Chinese offenders or to take the law into their own hauds.
XI-Any vessel having in the whole above 200lbs. of gunpowder or other explosive material on board shall not approach nearer than a distance of one inile from the limits of the anchorage. On arriving at that distance, she must be forthwith reported to the Consular authority.
Special anchorages or stations will be assigned for such ships in the neighbour- hood of the ports.
XII. No seaman or other person belonging to a British ship may be discharged or left behind at any port or anchorage without the express sanction of the Consul and not then until sufficient security shall have been given for his maintenance and good behaviour while remaining on shore, and, if required, for the expenses incident to his shipment to a port in the United Kingdom or to a British Colonial port, according as the seaman or other person is a native of Great Britain or of any British Colony,
If any British subject left at a port or anchorage by a British vessel be found to require public relief prior to the departure of such vessel from the dominious of the Emperor of China, the vessel will be held responsible for the maintenauce and removal from China of such British subject.
XIII. When a vessel is ready to leave a port anchorage, the master or con- signee shall apply at the Custom-house for a Chinese port clearance, and on his presenting this document, together with a copy of the manifest of his export cargo, at the Consular office, his ship's papers will be returned to him, and he will be furnished with a Consular port clearance, on receiving which the vessel will be at liberty to leave the port. Should any vessel take in or discharge cargo subsequent to the issue of the Customs' clearance, the master will be subject to a penalty, and the ship to such detention as may be necessary to the ends of justice.
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GENERAL PORT,REGULATIONS FOR BRITISH CONSULATES IN CHINA
XIV. When a vessel is ready to leave a port or auchorage, the master shall give notice thereof to the Consul, and shall hoist a Blue Peter at least 24 hours before the time appointed for her departure. The Consul may dispense with the observance of this regulation on security being given that claims presented within 24 hours will be paid.
XV. No British subject may establish or carry on an hotel, boarding or cating- house, house of entertainment, or shop for the sale of liquors within the Consular district without the sanction and license of the Cousul, and payment of such fees in respect of such license, yearly or otherwise, as may be duly authorised The Consul shall require every person so licensed to give security for the good conduct of all inmates and frequenters of his house, and also that he will not harbour any seaman who is a runaway or who cannot produce his discharge accompanied by å written sanction from the Consul to reside on shore.
Every person so licensed will be held accountable for the good conduct of all inmates and frequenters of his house, and in case of their misconduct may be sued upon the instrument of security so given.
XVI. Any British subject desiring to proceed up the country to a greater distance than thirty miles from any Treaty port is required to procure a Consular passport, and any one found without such a passport beyond that distance will be liable to prosecution.
XVII. The term Consul in these Regulations shall be construed to include all and every officer in Her Majesty's Consular service, whether Consul-General, Consul, Vice-Consul, or Consular agent, or other person duly authorized to act in any of the aforesaid capacities within the dominions of the Emperor of China.
XVIII-British vessels are bound as to mooring and pilotage to act in accord. ance with the Harbour and Pilotage Regulations authorized in each port by Her Majesty's Minister for the time being, and any infraction of the same shall render the party offending liable to the penalties attached to these regulations.
XIX. No loading or discharging of cargo may be carried on except within the limits of the anchorage defined by the Consul and the Chinese authorities of each port.
XX. Any infringement of the preceding General Port Regulations or of the Special Regulations referred to in Regulations XVIII, and XIX., shall subject the offender, for each offence, to imprisonment for any term not exceeding three months, with or without hard labour, and with or without a fine not exceeding 200 dollars, or to a fine not exceeding 200 dollars, without imprisonment, and with or without further fines for continuing offences, not exceeding in any case 25 dollars for each day during which the offence continues after the original fine is incurred; such fine to be inflicted, levied, and enforced in accordance with the Order of Her Majesty in Council dated the 9th day of March, 1865.
And in consideration of the urgent necessity for these Regulations, the under signed hereby further declares that they shall have effect unless and until they shall be disapproved by Her Most Gracious Majesty, and notification of such disapproval shall be received and published by me or other of Her Majesty's Ministers in China.
(Signed)
THOMAS FRANCIS WADE.
PEKING, 28th March, 1881.
HONGKONG PILOTS' ORDINANCE, 1904
[Abstracts]
I. This Ordinance may be cited as the Pilots' Ordinance, 1904.
II. The Harbour Master may grant certificates of competency to persons duly qualified, and license under his band Pilots who shall not exceed such number as he from time to time direct, for the purpose of conducting ships within the waters of the Colony provided that-
may
(i.) No person shall be granted a certificate of competency, or be licensed as a Pilot, unless he has satisfied a Board of Examiners appointed by the Governor that he is capable of performing such duties. Application should be accompanied by a declaration to this effect.
(ii) Any person acting as a Pilot upon any ship to which he does not belong, without being duly licensed, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding one hundred dollars for each offence.
Nothing in this Ordinance shall be held to make the employment of Pilots by masters and owners of ships compulsory.
V. (i.) Every licensed Pilot when acting in that capacity shall be provided with his licence and shall produce the same to every person by whom he is employed or to whom he offers his services as Pilot.
(ii) If a licensed Pilot refuses, on the request of any such person, to exhibit his licence and a copy of pilotage dues authorized under this Ordinance, he shall for each offence be liable, on conviction before a Magistrate, to a penalty not exceeding fifty dollars, and shall be subject to the suspension or cancellation of his licence by the Harbour Master.
(iii) If an unlicensed person, for the purpose of making himself appear to be a licensed Pilot, uses a licence which he is not entitled to use, he shall for each offence be liable, on conviction before a Magistrate, to a penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars, or imprisonment with or without hard labour not exceeding six months.
(iv.)-(a.) If a licensed Pilot, when he is not engaged as Pilot, refuses without reasonable excuse to the satisfaction of a Magistrate to take charge of a vessel enter- ing or leaving a harbour;
(b) and if any licensed Pilot when not engaged as a Pilot refuses or neglects without reasonable excuse to the satisfaction of a Magistrate to go and take charge of a vessel flying the signal for a Pilot; or
(c) acts as a Pilot when in a state of intoxication, or is guilty of any violent or disorderly conduct whilst on duty; or
(d) refuses on the request of the Master to conduct the ship which he is piloting into
any water in which he is qualified to conduct the same, except on reasonable ground of danger to the ship; or
(e) quits the ship of which he has the charge without the consent of the Master before the service for which he was hired has been performed, he shall for each offence, in addition to any liability for damages at the suit of the person aggrieved, be liable on conviction before a Magistrate to a penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars, or imprisonment with or without hard labour not exceeding six months, and be shall also be liable after such conviction to have his licence cancelled or suspended by the Harbour Master.
VIII Any licensed Pilot demanding higher rates of pilotage than those authorised by this Ordinance, shall be liable on conviction before a Magistrate to a penalty not exceeding fifty dollars, and shall also be liable to cancellation or suspen- sion of licence by the Harbour Master.
PILOTAGE FEES
For pilotage of a Steamship inside the waters of the Colony in or out of the Ilarbour
For pilotage of a Steamship from or to outside the waters of the Colony, in or out of the Harbour
For each time a Steamship is moved inside the Harbour..
For pilotage of a Sailing ship not under towage inside the waters of the Colony, in or out of the Harbour For pilotage of a Sailing ship not under Lowage from or to outside the waters of the Colony, in or out of thie
Harbour
For each time a sailing ship is noted inside the Harbour not under towage NOTE.-Sailing ships under towage the same scale as for Steamships.
..$10.00
$15.00
..8 5.00
.$15.00
..820.00
..$20.00
-$10.00
JAPAN HARBOUR REGULATIONS
Art. L-The limits of the undermentioned Ports open to foreigu commerce are defined as follows:
At YOKOHAMA: the harbour limits are comprised within a line drawn from the Juniten (Mandarin Bluff) to the light-ship, and thence due north, to a point on the coast east of the mouth of the Tsurumigawa.
At Kors: the harbour limits are comprised within the area bounded by two lines, one drawn from the former mouth of the Ikutagawa due south, and the other running in a north-easterly direction from the point of Wada-no-misaki,
At NIIGATA: the harbour limits are comprised within the are of a circle, the centre being the light-house, and the radius being two and a half nautical miles.
A EBISUMINATO: the harbour limits are comprised within a line drawn from Shiidomari-mura to Isori-mura on the outside, and a line drawn from Minatocho on the east shore of Lake Kamo to Kamomura on the north-west shore of the same lake.
At OSAKA: the harbour limits are comprised within a line drawn from a point (Tree Point) at the mouth of the Mukogawa south by west, and a line from the mouth of the Yamutogawa, the two lines cutting each other at a distance of six nautical miles from a point (Tree Point) and five nautical miles from the mouth of the Yamatogawa.
At NAGASAKI: the harbour limits are comprised within a line drawn from Kanzaki to Megami.
At HAKODATE: the harbour limits are comprised within a line drawn from a point off the coast, half a nautical mile south of Anoma Point, to a point on the east bank of the mouth of the Arikawa, Kamiiso-mura.
Art. II. Every vessel on entering a port shall hoist its ensign and its signal letters. Regular Mail Packets may hoist the Company's flag in lieu of the signal letters.
The ensign and signal letters or Company's flag must not be lowered until the vessel's arrival shall have been duly reported to the Harbour Master.
Such report shall be made within 24 hours after arrival, Sundays and holidays excepted, and no Customs facilities shall be extended to any vessel until such report shall have been made.
Art. III-Every Master on arrival in port shall prevent all communication between his ship and other vessels or the shore until it shall have been admitted to "free pratique."
Art. IV. The Harbour Master's boat will be in attendance near the entrance of the barbour, and the Harbour Master will assign a berth to every ship on enter- ing, which berth it must not leave without special permission, unless forced to do 80. The Harbour Master may cause a vessel to change its berth, should be consider it necessary.
Art. V.The Harbour Master shall always wear a uniform when on duty and his boat shall carry a flag of the pattern prescribed.
The Harbour Master may at any time satisfy himself that his directions as regards anchorage, the movements of ships and the proper condition of moorings are carried out.
Art. VI. No vessel shall anchor in the public fair-way or otherwise obstruct free navigation. Vessels which have run out jib-booms shall rig them in at the request of the Harbour Master, if they obstruct free navigation.
Art. VII.-Every vessel either at anchor or under weigh within the harbour limits shall carry between sunset and sunrise the Lights required by the Laws, Ordinances or Orders relating to the prevention of collisions at sea.
Art. VIII. When bad weather threatens or warning signals are exhibited, vessels shall immediately get ready one or more reserve anchors; and steamships shall, in addition, get up steam.
JAPAN HARBOUR REGULATIONS
503
Art. IX.-Any vessel carrying explosives or highly inflammable materials in excess of ordinary requirements shall come to outside the harbour limits and there await the Harbour Master's orders. Such vessels while so waiting shall, between sunrise and sunset, fly at the foremast head the signal letter "B," and between sunset and sunrise shall hoist in same place a red lantern.
No vessel shall ship or discharge any such materials except at such places as the Harbour Master may indicate.
Art. X.Every ship which is laid up or undergoing repairs, and all yachts, store-ships, lighters, boats, etc., shall be moored in special berths designated by the Harbour Master.
Art. XI.-In case of fire breaking out on board a ship within the harbour limits, the ship's bell shall be rung until the arrival of assistance, and the signal letters "N. M." shall be hoisted between sunrise and sunset or a red lantern shall be continuously hoisted and lowered between sunset and sunrise.
If police assistance be required the signal letter "G" shall be hoisted between sunrise and sunset, and between sunset and sunrise blue or flash lights shall be shown.
All discharging of firearms or letting off of fire-works within the harbour limits is forbidden without permission from the Harbour Master, except in such as above-mentioned for the purpose of signalling.
Art. XII. Any vessel arriving from a place which has been declared by an official declaration of the Imperial Government as being infected with an epidemic or contagious disease (such as cholera, small-pox, yellow-fever, scarlet-fever, or pest) or on board of which any such disease shall have occurred during the voyage, shall come to outside the harbour limits and shall hoist a yellow flag at the foremast head between sunrise and sunset, and shall show a red and a white light one above the other in the same place between sunset and sunrise. Such vessel must undergo inspection by the proper sanitary authorities.
The sanitary authorities shall, on approaching the vessel, be informed whether any cases of any such diseases have actually occurred during the voyage and the nature of such diseases, in order that suitable precaution may be taken.
The said ship must not lower the yellow flag or the above-mentioned lights until, it shall have been admitted to "free pratique," neither shall any person land from it nor shall any communication be held with other ships without the permission of the proper sanitary authorities.
The provisions of the preceding paragraphs apply to vessels anchored within the harbour limits on board of which any of the above-mentioned epidemic or contagious diseases have broken out.
Such vessels must change their berth on receiving an order to that effect from the Harbour Master.
Any vessel arriving from a place infected with cattle-disease or on board of which such disease has broken out during the voyage shall not land or tranship either the cattle, their dead bodies, skins, hides or bones, without the permission of the proper sanitary authorities.
Art. XIII. No carcases, ballast, ashes, sweepings, &c., shall be thrown over- board within the harbour limits.
Whilst taking in or discharging coal, ballast or other similar materials, the necessary precautions shall be taken to prevent their falling into the sea.
If any materials detrimental to the harbour shall have been thrown into the sea or shall have been allowed to fall in through negligence by any ship, they shall be removed by the ship upon receipt of an order to that effect from the Harbour Master; and if not so removed the Harbour Master may cause them to be removed at the ship's expense.
Art. XIV. Any ship intending to leave port shall give notice at the Harbour Master's Office and hoist the Blue Peter.
Steamers which have fixed dates of departure need only make one declaration. on their arrival and departure.
501
JAPAN HARBOUR REGULATIONS
Art. XV. All wreckage or other substances which obstruct the public fairway in a harbour or its approaches must be removed by their owner within the time- indicated by the Harbour Master. If this order is not complied with within the time specified by the Harbour Master, the Harbour Master may cause them to be remved or destroyed at the owner's expense.
Art. XVI. A suitable and sufficient number of buoy moorings for regular Mail Steamers shall be provided by the Harbour Master's Office. A prescribed fee shall be charged for the use of such moorings.
Art. XVII. No chains, ropes, or other gear, sh ill be attached to any lightship, signal, buoy or beacon.
Any vessel running foul of or damaging a light-ship, buoy, beacon, jetty, or any other structure, shall pay the necessary expenses for repairs or replacement.
Art. XVIII.--Any infringement of the provisions of the present Regulations shall render the offender liable to a fine of not less than Yeu 2 and not exceeding
Yen 200.
Art. XIX. The Master of a vessel shall also be held responsible for any fines, fees or expenses which may be imposed or charged on or in respect of the vessel.
Art. XX. No vessel shall be allowed to depart until all fines, fees and expenses imposed or charged under these Regulations shall have been paid, or until security therefor to the satisfaction of the Harbour Master shall have been deposited with the
Harbour Master.
>>
Art. XXI.-The word "Harbour Master" as used in these Regulations is also meant to include the Harbour Master's Assistants and Deputies; and by the word Master is meant any person in command of, or having the direction of, a ship, whatever his designation may be; and by the word "Port or "Harbour" is meaut one of the ports or harbours enumerated in Article I of thess Regulations.
*
Art. XXII-A portion of each harbour shall be reserved as a man-of-war anchorage.
Art. XXIII.-The only provisions in these Regulations which shall apply to men-of-war are those contained in Articles IV., VI., XII. and XXI., and in the first and second paragraphs of Article XIII.
Art. XXIV.-The time when and the localities where these Regulations are to come into operation shall be notified by the Minister of Communications. The Minister of Communications shall also issue detailed rules for the due enforcement of these Regulations.
i
TARIFF OF INVOICE CHARGES AT MANILA
MANILA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Adopted and brought into force 1st July, 1901
Hemp Screwage $1.25 per bale, Landing and shipping, 75 cents per bale. Fire Insurance, ¿ per cent. per month on first cost, plus screwage. Store Rent, 12 cents per bale per month.
Dry Sugar-Boat and coolie hire, receiving and shipping, 25 cents per picul. Wet Sugar-Landing, shipping, bags, and bagging, 75 cents per pioul. Fire Insurance,
cent. per month on first cost. Store Rent, 4 cents per picul per month.
per
nfee. Receiving and weighing, 10 cents per picul. Bags, packing, and shipping, 40 cents per picul. Firo Insurance, per cent. per month on first cost. Store Kent, 8 cents per picul per month,
Copraa. Receiving, weighing, and shipping, 30 cents per picul. Fire Insurance,
per month on first cost. Store Rent, & cents per picul per month.
Soponwood Receiving, loading, and shipping, 40 cents per picul.
Hide Cuttings. Loading and shipping, 30 cents per picul.
Cordage-Loading and shipping, 60 cents per picul.
por cent.
Indigo.-Receiving and packing in pitched cases, P. 2.50 per quintal. Classification, P.1 per
quintal. Loading and shipping, 50 cents per quintal.
Leaf Tobacco. Receiving, packing, and shipping, P. 2.50 per bale of 2 quintals and P. 4.50 per
bale of quintala.
Cigars. Receiving, packing, and shipping, P. 7.50 per case of 10,000.
Charges for Buying and Selling Hemp in force from 1st July, 1902
Screwage to be paid at the following rates, viz. :
P. 1.25 per bale mensuring 11 feet English or under.
P. 1.00 per bale measuring over 11 feet and up to 12 feet English,
P. 0.75 cents per bale measuring over 12 feet English.
In case of dispute 5 per cent, of lot to be measured by buyer and 5 per cent. by seller
and averaged, and the screwage to be paid on basis of the joint result,
Delivery charge to be 15 cents per bale ex ship.
Delivery charge to be 20 cents per bale ex godown.
Tariff on Hemp
Altered by agreement between Shipper and Dealers.
WEIGHTS, MEASURES, MONEY
CHINESE
WEIGHTS
1 liang (tuel)
make I kin
(catty)
16 liang
(tacly
斤
100 bin
(catty) make 1 lan
擔 (picul)
120 kin
1333 oz. avoir., or 37-78 grammes
1.333 lbs. avoir., or 60453 grammes
133:333 lbs. avoir., or 60-453 kilogramme,
(catty, make I shik (stone) = 160 000 lbs. avoir., or 72544 kilogrammes
Four ounces equal three taels; one pound equals three quarters of a catty or twelve taels; one hundredweight equals 8.1 cattics; one ton equals 16 piculs 80 catties.
MEASURE OF CAPACITY
1 koh
✪ (gill)
0·103 litre
10 koli
mako 1 sheng
(pint)
1.031 litre
10 sheng make 1 ton
斗(peck)
10-31 litre
1 fun 分
10 tsun
make 1 chih
10 chih make 1 chang
MEASURE OF LENGTH
10 fun y make tsun f(inch)
-
14 inch English
1J1 inch English
141 inches English
11 ft. 9 inches English
The length of the Chang is fixed by the Treaty of Tientsin at 141 inches.
5 chih ♬ make 1 pú
360 pú
10 li
make 1 li
make 1 tang-sun
about 5 feet English
about English Mile
about 3 English Miles
(foot)
(pole)
米(pace)
F!!
(league)
=
250 li
里
make 1 tu
(degree)
15
506
WEIGHTS, MEASURES, MONEY
LAND MEASURE
1 chih
5 chih
make 1 pů
21 pú
make 1 fun
make 1 kioh
4 kish
make 1 mow
100 mow
make 1 king t
13.126 inches
30-323 square feet
80-862 square yards 202-166 square yards 26.73 square poles 16-7 acres
The Mow, which is the unit of measurement, is almost exactly one-sixth of an acre.
Weights and measures in China vary in every province and almost every district, and differ in the same districts for different kinds of goods. The words picul, catty, tael, mace, and candareen are not Chinese,
MONEY
1 li
(cash)
10 li
make i fén
(candareen)
10 fên
10 ch'ien
牙 wake 1 ch'ien 錢(nace)
make 1 liang (tael)
032 of a penny
-32 of a penny 3.2 pence
The Taol may be taken as worth one and a third silver dollar.
2s. 8d.
The above are weights of silver. Thoy are not represented by any coin except the copper cash, which is supposed to be the equivalent in value of a li of silver, but the value of which differs greatly in different districts and at different times. They have no nuiform intrinsic value, being made large and small and of varying composition. Silver is used uncoined in ingots, usually of fifty taels more or less, in weight, called "shoes," the usual shape being not unlike a Chinese shoe. In the maritime district from Canton to Amoy chopped dollars are the general medium of exchange. In 1890 a mint was established for the coinago of silver dollars and subsidiary pieces, and wore recently mints for silver and copper coinage have been opened at Nanking, Wnchang, and Tientsin, and others are projected. The coins, although supposed to be of equal weight and fineness, are differently inscribed. Some of the foreign banks issue tael and dollar notes of the value of one dollar and upwards at the larger of the Treaty Ports.
HONGKONG AND STRAITS SETTLEMENTS
MONEY:-The legal tendor in Hongkong is British or Mexican Dollars, local 50, 20, 10 and 5 cent silver pieces, to the amount of $2, bronze cents and mils. Chopped dollars of any coinage except British, which it is illegal to deface, and subsidiary coins of the Kwangtung mint are in general use in Hongkong. Some of the banks issue notes from one dollar upwards. Mexican and British dollars were demonetised in the Straits Settlements in 1904 and a Straits dollar sub- stituted. The value of this dollar is fixed at 2s. 4d. In the Straits 50-cent pieces are legal tonder for the payment of any amount; so also are sovereigns.
WEIGHTS AND MEASURES-English, Malay and Chinese in the Straits Settlements, and English and Chinese in Hongkong and the Treaty Ports of China are used.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
The peso, equivalent in value to fifty cents, United States Currency, is legal tender in the Philippine Islands to any amount, So also are the United States gold coins. The media or half peso is legal tender up to ten esos. Though the coinage is on a gold basis, no gold coins are in circulation, Government silver certificates are issued for ten, five, and two pesos, and the Banco Español Filipina of Manila issues bank notes for five, ten, twenty-five, fifty, one hundred and two hundred pesos.
WEIGHTS
The official system is the Metric system, but weights of Spanish origin are still in com- mon use. The picul in the Philippines is 137.9 lbs., 16 piculs going to the ton.
1 Hiyaku-me or
1 Kwam-me or 1,000 Momme 100 Momme
1 Momme
or
10 Fun
Fun
01
10 Rin
1 Rin
OT
10 Mo
1 Mo
Or
U Shi
I Shi
1 Hiyak-kin 다
10 Kin
1 Kin
Or 100 Momme
JAPANESE
WEIGHTS
8.2817077001 lbs. avoir., or 0.8281707709 lbs. avoir., or 0.0082817077 lbs. avoir., or 0.0008281708 lbs. avoir., oi 0.0000828171 lbs. avoir., or 0.0000082817 lbs. avoir., or 0.0000008282 lbs. avoir., or 132.5073232011 lbs. avoir., or 1.3250732320 lbs. avoir., or
3.7565217 kilogrammes 375.65217 grammes 3.756521 grammes 0.375652 grammes 0.03755 grammes 0.003756 grammes 0.000375 grammes 60.1043472 kilogrammes 601.043-172 grammes
APOTHECARIES WEIGHT-1 Riyo or 4 Momme equal 0.0402583013 lbs, troy.
1 Jo
WEIGHTS, MEASURES, MONEY
DRY MEASURE
make 10 Shaku
1 Shaku make 10 Sun
1 Sun
wake 10 Bu
1 Ri
inale 30 Cho
1 Cho
make 60 Ken
1 Ken make 6 Shaku
about 4 yards 5
inches English
-
about 1 foot 2 inches English
about 1 inches English
LAND MEASURE
=
2.4103 English milos
119.305 English yards
59.653 English feet
507
MONEY
On 1st October. 1897, Japan adopted a gold standard, taking the yen (dollar) at 24'59 pence sterling: The coinage is decimal.
2 Solot 2 Atts
or 1 Att
==
2 Pais
01 ! Pai or 1 Seek
2 Seeks
or 1 Fu'ang
2 Fu'ang
or 1 Sálu'ng
SIAMESE
MONEY
$0.0095 $0.019
4 Sali❜ngs
Bits
or 1 Bitorlical or 1 Tämlü'ng
$0-60
$2:40
$0 038
20 Tämlữngs or 1 Ch'äng
$48.00
$0.076
50 Ch'lings
or 1 Hap
$2,400-00
$0.150
100 Haps
or 1 Tara
=$240,000 CO
WEIGHTS
The standard of weight being the coin of the country, weights are designated by the same terms. A Tical weighs 236 grains troy.
The Siamese standard of weight is just double that of the Chinese, and goods are bought and sold in Bangkok more by the Chinese than the Siamese standard.
LONG MEASURE
1 Niw
12 Niws
make
1 K'ü'p
2 K'ú'ps
make
1 Sawk
incl 9 inches 19 inches
+ Sawks
make
1 Wah
78 inches
20 Walis
make
1 Sén
130 feet
490 Sans
make
1 Yot
93 statute miles
Nole. Timber is bought by the Yok, which is 64 Sawk in length by 1 Sawk in width or 36,864 Siamese inches, being equivalent to 169 square feet.
1 Tanan...
20 Tanans make 1 Ting
DRY MEASURE
Į pints 25 Tänans
inake 1 Sat
=
15
pints 100 Tángs or 80 Sat wako 1 Kecau (Coyun.)
A Keean is 20 Piculs, a Picul is 33 1lbs. avoirdupois.
LEGALISED TARIFF OF FARES FOR CHAIRS, JINRICKSHAS,
&c., IN THE COLONY OF HONGKONG
CHAIRS
L-In Victoria, with two bearers. Quarter hour, 10 cents: Half hour, 20 cents; One hour, 25 cents; Three hours, 50 cents; Six hours, 70 cents; Day (6 A.M. to 6 P.M.), 51. If the trip is extended beyond Victoria, half fare extra,
II. Beyond Victoria, with four bearers.-Hour, 60 cents; Three hours, $1 00; Six hours, $1.50; Day,
(6 A.M. to 6 P.M.), $2, 0. III. In the Hill Districts, with two bearers. Quarter hour, 15 cents; Half hour, 20 cents. One hour, 3 cents; Two hours, 50 cents; Three hours, 70 cents; Six hours, $1.00; Day (6 A.M. to 6 P.M.) $1.50. With four bearers.--Quarter hour, 30 cents; Half hour, 40 cents; Que hour, 60 cents; Twó hours, 80 ccnts; Three hours, $1,09; Six hours, $1.50; Day (6 A.M. to 6 P.M.), $2.
NOTE-In the above scale of fare by Victoria and the Hill District are incunt Victoria and the Hill Distriot as defined by Ordinance 15 of 1888. If a vehicle is discharged beyond these limita half fare extra is to be allowed for the roturn Journey.
RICSHAWS
I-In Victoria and beyond Victoria, if engaged in Victoria :-
Ten minutes
Quarter hour
Half hour...
Hour
Every subsequent hour
1st. class
2nd class
5 cents
5 conta
5
1+
15
10
**
20
15
73
+
2,
10
First class jinrickshas have white washable covers and rubber tyres.
NOTE. Victoria extends from Mount Davia to Causeway Bay and up to the level of Robinson Road. If the vehicle is discharged beyond these limits half fare extra is to be allowed for the return Journey. Extra bearers, drawers, or drivers, and extra hours to be paid proportionate sums. I1-In Kowloon,-Quarter hour, 5 cents; Half hour, 15 cents; Hour, 20 cents; Every subsequent hour,
10 cents. Extra bearers, drawers or drivers and extra hours to be paid proportionate sums. III-On the New Tai Po Road beyond New Kowloon.-Twenty cents shall be added for each extra hour
or part of an hour, if the birer canses the journey to take longer than :-
To 4th mile
Beyond 4th to 6th mile
Beyond 6th to 9th mile
Beyond 9th to 11th mile...
single, return,
single,
75 cents,... $1.00 ..$1.20
return,
++
single,
$1.50 ...$1.75
return,
$2.00
TH
single, return,
...52.00 $2.50
1 hour 2 hours. 2
11
11
3
11
11
The
Fares for journeys beyond the 11th mile to be a matter of previous arrangement in each case. fares hore set out to apply to one jiuricksha with three coolies from Tsim Sha Tsui,
CARGO BOATS
1st Class targo Boat of 800 piculs and upwards... 2nd Class Cargo Boat under 800 and not less than 500 piculs
3rd
do.
4th
do.
do. do.
500 do.
do. 100 piculs
100 picula...
PASSENGER ROWING BOATS
per day,
por load
$10.00
5.00
5.00
3:00
3.00
2.00
1.50
1.00
1st Class Boats upwards of 40 feet in length, per day of 12 hours (Class A) 2nd Class Boats from 30 to 40 feet in longth, per day of 12 hours (
All other Boats, per day of 12 hours
L
1st Class Boat, per hour with two passengers
2nd Class Boat, per half hour with two passengers
...k
$1,00
2.00
1.50
NAM
0,8
For each extra passenger 10 cents in a first-class boat, and 5 cents in a second-class boat for half-an- hour. Between sunset and sunrise, 10 cents extra per passenger.
Only first-class boats are permitted to land or take on board passengers at any point of the Praye between Ship Street on the East and New Harbour Office Pier on the West.
FIRE SIGNALS ON SHORE, HONGKONG
1st. Quick alarm Bell for 5 minutes. 1 Stroke for Eastern District, Fast of Murray Barracka. Strokes, Central District from Murray Barracks to the Harbour Office. 3 Strokes, Western District.
HONGKONG TYPHOON SIGNALS
A Cone point upwards indicates a typhoon to the north of the Colony.
A Cone point upwards and Drum below indicates a typhoon to the north-east of the Colony. A Drum indicates a typhoon to the east of the Colony.
A Cone point downwards and Drum below indicates a typhoon to the south-east of the Colony. A Cone point downwards indicates a typhoon to the south of the Colony.
A Cone point downwards and Ball below indicates a typhoon to the south-west of the Colony. A Ball indicatos a typhoon to the west of the Colony.
A Cone point upwards and Ball below indicates a typhoon to the north-west of the Colony. Red Signals indicate that the centre is believed to be more than 300 miles away from the Colony. Black Signals indicate that the centre is believed to be less than 300 miles away from the Colony, The above siguals will as heretofore be hoisted only when typhoons exist in such positions, or are moving in such directions that information regarding them is considered to be of importance to the Colony or to shipping leaving the harbour.
NIGHT SIGNALS
The following Night Signals will be exhibited from the Flagstaff on the roof of the Water Polico Station at Kowloon, the Harbour Office Flagstaff, and H.M.S. Tamar.
I. Three Lights Vertical, Green-Green-Green. Indicates that a typhoon is believed to be situated more than 300 miles from the Colony.
II. Three Lights Vertical. Green-Red-Green.
less than 300 miles from the Colony,
III. Three Lights Vertical, Red-Green-Red,
to full typhoon force at any inoment.
Indicates that a typhoon is believed to be situated
Indicates that the wind may be expected to increase
No. III. Signal will be necompanied by three Explosive Bombs, fired at intervals of ten seconds in the event of the information convoyed by this signal being first published by night.
These Night Signals will be substituted for the Day Siguals at sunset, and will, when necessary, be altered during the night.
SUPPLEMENTARY WARNINGS.
For the benefit of Native Craft and passing Ocean Vessels, a coue will be exhibited at each of the following stations during the time that any of the above Day Signals are hoisted in the Harbour -Gap Rock. Waglan, Stanley, Cape Collinson, Aberdeen, Sai Kung, Tai Po.
This will indicate that, there is a depression somewhere in the China Sea, and that a Storm Warning is hoisted in the Harbour.
LOCAL STORM-WARNINGS
The Colony itself is warned of approaching typhoons by means of the Explosive Bombs which aro fired whenever a strong gale of wind 's expected to blow here.
THE CHINA COAST CODE
From 1st January, 1906, signals according to the China Coast Code will be hoisted on the signal mast on Signal Hill, Kowloon.
SIGNAL STATIONS
(VICTORIA PEAK AND BLACKHEAD'S HILL) HONGKONG
The following Notification was issued from the Harbour Office in January, 1904: -
The Commercial Code of Signals will be used at the Signal Stations.
+
All signals made by vessels in the Offing" will be repeated at Victoria Peak, arrangements can also be made to have them forwarded to the addressee by telephone from the Harbour Master's Office
Signals can also be passed between vessels in the "Offing and anyone prepared to take them in on the harbour side, and "vice versa": The attention" flag for these signals (to be hoisted at the mast bead of the ship and of the Station flagstaff) is the White Ensign in the case of Men-of-war, and Red Ensign over the House Flag in the case of Merchant Vessels.
Vessols approaching the Eastern entrance to the Harbour will be signalled on the Eastern Yard- arm, those approaching the Western entrance on the Western Yard-arm.
When a vessel is sighted from Victoria Peak Station the Compass bearing and symbol at the Yard. arm, and the Distance Signals at the Mast head, will be hoisted. If, when the vessel is made ont. s'e is not a Mail steamer, her House Flag will be substituted for the Compass Signal, and it will be kept flying till she anchors. The Distance Signal will be kept up for fifteen minutes after the vossel in made out. If the vessel is a regular Mail Steamer, a gun will be fired and a Ball over the English, French, American, or German Ensign, or the Canadian Pacific House Flag, with the Distance Signal under, will be hoisted at the Mast head, and the Compass signal and symbol will be hauled down. The Distance signal will be kept flying, and will be changed each successivo half hour. When the vessel is between Green Island and North Point the Code Pendant will take the place of the Distance Signal, and will be kept up till the vessel is at her moorings.
At Blackhead's Hill Station, signals similar to the foregoing will be hoisted to denote vessels passing Cape D'Aguilar and the Gap Rock.
All House Flags, symbols, and distance signals hoisted at Victoria Peak will be repeated at Blackhead's Hill, and "vice versa."
When a mail steamer is reported by telegraph from the Gap Rock or Cape D'Aguilar, the distinguish ing signal will be hoiste at once, the gun will be fired, and the distance symbol hoisted when she in sighted from Victoria Peak Station.
Any special flag hoisted on board an incoming vessel denoting the presence on board of on Officer of high rank will be repeated at the Flag Staff Mast-head.
The approach of Men-of-war will be notified by their proper symbols and National Colours at the Quarter of the Yard.
The approach of British Transports will be notified by the Blue Ensign over the appropriata symbol, hoiated at the Quarter of the Yard.
The Distance signal will denote the distance (estimated at Victoria Peak) of the vessel from Greau Island on the West and Cape D'Aguilar on the East.
SICAWEI OBSERVATORY
TIME SIGNAL SERVICE
In addition to the signal given by the Time-Ball at noon, the exact China-Coast time is given every night by the extinction of the four white lights of the Time-Signal Tower on the French Bund.
The lights are shown about 2 minutes before the first extinction.
Time of the 1st Extinction...
+
+
2nd 3rd
1
4th
H
11
5th
ET]
H
6th
**
*.
A. m.
8 51 0.0
+
8 56 0.0
---
8 57 0.0
8 58 0.0
FI
8 59 0.0
9.00 0.0
In case of error or failure, a red light is shown, or preferably the two white lamps of the yard-arm are lighted up, during a few seconds to annul the Wrong Signal.
MAIL MATTER.
UNIT OF CHARGE.
A. Correspondence.
Letters (2)
International
Postcards-
Each 15 grammes (oz.) or fraction thereof. First unit of 20 grammes or faction thereof. Each successive unit or fraction thereof.
• See Following Page
Single...
Double
Newspapers (e) (g.) Every 50 grammes (2 oz.) (sent singly or
in bulk).
[Limit of weight, 2 kilogrammes (4 lb.).]
Rooks and Printed Up to 100 grammes
(3 oz.).
Matter and Com-From 100 grm, to 250 grm.
(8 oz.).
mercial Papers
H
(e) (9-).
250 500
**
500 1,000
23
(16 oz.).
(32 oz.).
[+]
1,000
2 kilos
*
(64 oz.).
[Limit of weight.]
Samples (f) (g)... Up to 100 grammes
B. Kegistration (a.)
Simple
With Return Receipt
+
C. Parcels (a.) (h.)
From 100 grm, to 250 grm.
250
Up to
From
1
350
J5
kilogramme kilo. to 1 kilo. (
53
2 kilos to 3
(3 oz.) (8 oz.) (12 oz.)
[Limit of weight]
b.)
2 kilos
15.)
4 lb.)
6 tb.)
5
3+
>
>
5
7
J
J
(11 M.) (15 lb.)
10
+
(22.)
D. Money Order
t Parcels over 3 kilos (6 lb.) in weight or over 25 cubic decimetres (1 cubic foot) in volume are not accepted for places only reached by overland couriers.]
Per Dollar
DOMESTIC PLACES.
(a.)
2.
FOREIGN COUNTRIES.
IV.
Japan.
Cents, 3 0.
Hongkong; also Macao and Tsingtau.
Cents, 4 b.
++
I.
II.
III.
Local.
Domestic.
Union.
Cents.
Cents.
Cents,
1
2
10 b.
0 b.
***
4 b.
1
b.
2
8 b.
3
b.
2 c.
I ta
15
-24**
10
15
−2+
2 c. per 50 grm. (2 oz.)| Minimum charge, 10 Cents per
30 packet for Com-
mercial Papers.
2 (c.)
10
per 50 grm. (2 oz.)
Minimum
charge, 4 cents per packet.
10
20
per 4 oz.
Per package wrapped together with two copies or more, for every 2 oz., I cent.
2
per 34 oz.
2
per 34 oz.
7
10
---
1 b. b.
2
2 C. per 2 oz. (50 grammes).
2 G.
per 2 oz. (50 grm.). Minimum charge, 10 cents per packet for Com- mercial Papers. 2 C.
per 2 oz. (50 grm.). Minimum
charge, 4 cents per packet. 10
20
10
Ea
6
15
10
20
30
40
20
50
80
30
100
N
Tariff II. (Domestic) is additional to rates in Special Table of Union. postage on Parcels, q.v.
Not issued.
!
CHINESE IMPERIAL POST-(TARIFF OF POSTAGE)
Mucao 17th. to 11 b... 75. H'kong-Up to 3 b..... 25 ets. 3 b. to 7 b... 50. 80 ots.
6 kilos to 10 kilos 80.. 1 kilo to 5 kilos 40..
Up to 1 kilo
512
CHINESE IMPERIAL POST-TARIFF OF POSTAGE
1 DOMESTIC PLACES
LOCAL: Tariff I.-Mail matter within delivery radius.
DOMESTIC: Tariff II.-Mail matter between Imperial l'ost Offices in China.
2 FOREIGN COUNTRIES
UNION: Tariff III. (Union Rates).-Mail matter to or from countries in the Postal Union, JAPAN: Tariff IV-Mail matter to and from Japan.
HONGKONG: Tariff V.-Mail matter to or from Hongkong, Macao, Tsingtao (German Kiaochow), and Port Edward (Weihaiwei).
These Tariffs frank International Letters and Postcards prepared at Union (III), or at specially arranged rates (IV, V) to and from any place in China where an Imperial Post Office exists; but Tariff II (Domestic) is additional for all International heavy mail articles-Nows papers, Books, Printed Matter, Commercial Papers and Samples-carried by courier to or from inland establishments not reached by steam,
[In the case of International Parcels, Tariff II (Domestic) is additional to the rates in Special Table of Union Postage on Parcels, unless otherwise provided by special international Arrangement.]
NB. Full prepayment of Domestic rates in Chinese stamps is compulsory; articles insufficiently prepaid, other than Letters, will be refused when presented for posting, and if dropped into the letter-box, are liable to detention. Articles arriving from abroad insufficiently franked will be forwarded to destination, but double the deficiency in Union postage, and, for heavy mail articles tausmitted inland, once the deficiency in Doniestic postage, will be collected from the addressee on delivery. The amount due will be assessed in every case by a Head Office of the IP.O. and indicated in postage-due stamps affixed on the cover: refusal to acquit the postage due so indicated will be equivalent to refusing the article.
Any mail matter destined for inland places where no Imperial Fost Office exists will be forwarded through Native Agencies at the risk and expense of the addressee or sender,
NOTES.- -a. Prepayment of full postage is compulsory.
b. When not registered, prepayment of postage is optional; but unprepaid mail matter is liable to a charge of double postage on delivery, and insufficiently prepaid matter of double the deficiency.
c. At least part postage must be repaid.
d. Limit of weight, 2,000 grammes (4 h.); limit of size, 60 by 30 by 30 centimetres (2 feet by 1 foot by I foot).
e. Limit of size, 45 by 45 by 45 centimetres (18 inches by 18 inches by 18 inches); in rolls, 75 centimetres (30 inches in length by 10 centimetres (4 inches) in diameter.
A Limit of size, 30 by 20 by 10 centimetres (12 inches by 8 inches by 4 inches); in rolls, 30 centimetres (12 inches) in length by 15 centimetres (6 inches) in diameter.
g. Liable to letter tariff if sealed against in-pection, hariff I and II: Limit of weight, 10 kilogrammes (22
); limit of size, 60 by 60 by 60 centimetres (2 feet by 2 feet by 2 feet); except for inland plac s, for which the limits aro 3 kilogrammes and 30 by 30 by 30 centimetres.
Tariffs III, IV, and V: Weight and size must conform with the rules of the countries concerned.
PARCELS.--Parcels may be insured at Money Order Offices against a domestic insurance fee of 1 per cent. of the amount insured, with a minimum fee of 10 cents; the Union insurance fee is additional. A Return Receipt may be obtained on payment of an additional fee of 5 cents in the case of Domestic Parcels, and 10 cents in the case of International Parcels,
Parcels taxed with trade charges are accepted for transmission between Money Order Offices on payment of a 2 per cent. fee of the amount to be collected.
MONEY ORDERS.-Limit of one order, $50, between Money Order Offices connected by steami, and $10 between certain Offices in inland districts. For exchange rates and list of places to
which Orders are issuable, inquire from I.P.0.
CURRENCY for the purchase of Stamps).-Full valne dollars purchase 100 cents in stamps; inferior dollars and fractional coins are only accepted at current discount. Copper cash accepted at average dollar exchange rates poriodically fixed by Postmaster.
* Parcels to and from places in Shensi, Kausuh, Yuunan, Kweichow, and Szechnen pre charged double rate.
An extra charge of 2 cents per kilogramme (1th.) is collected on Parcels via Hongkong to domestic places. NOTE. It is forbidden to send by post articles which, from their nature, may soil or damage the correspondence also contraband, explosive, inflammable, or dangerous substances, and opium. Coins of all kinds, articles liable to Customs duty, and gold, silver, jewellery, and precious stones may not be sent in ordinary or registered correspondence, but may be sent by Parcels Post nuder special regulations.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
PARS.
PARS.
PARS.
1
Patterns
Offices
00-74
1T
Foreign Postage Rates...
155
Business Hours
2-4
Postcards
76-79
Unpaid and Partially Paid
4
Holidays
Local Parcel Post..
80-83
Letters
150
Division of Postal Districts..
Registration and Compensa
Letters for Russia...
157
Deliveries...
G-7
tion
80-100
Exceptional Conditions
Pillar Boxen
8-10
Articles not allowed to be
Letters,
Private Boxes..
11-15
sent by post
101-102
marked with value
ctc.. irregularly
168
150
Private Boxes between Hong-
Redirection & Interception 103-110
Postcards
100-162
kong and Canton
10-18
Poste Restante
111-115
Printed
and Commercial
relating to Posting...
Postage Stamps, etc., Rules
Undelivered orrespondetice 116-120
Papers
153-173
19-21
Articles of value
121
Patterns and Samples
174-181
Reply Coupons
21A
Certificate of Posting
122
Prohibited Articles
182-193-
Despatch ...
22-30A
Miscellaneous
123-130
Registration
184-194
Local Postage Rates
31
Local Money Orders and
Insurance of letters
195
Letters
32.40
Postal Notes
131-142
...
Foreign Parcel Post
196-239
Printed Matter-Newspapers
47-49
Postal Notes
143-153
Foreign Money Orders...
210-248
Book Packets...
41-52
Countries comprised in Pos-
Imperial Postal Orders....
210-254
Commercial Papers
53-58
tal Union
154
General
255
Prices Current Circulars
59-65
OFFICES
1. The Head Oflice for British Postal business in China is in the City of Victoria, Hongkong, with branch offices at Kowloon and Des Voeux Road Central (Western Branch). There is a Post Office also at Shanghai, and Agencies at the following places, viz. :-
Canton, Hoihow, Swatow, Amoy, Foochow, Ningpo, Hankow, Liu Kung-tau, Chefoo and Tientsin.
BUSINESS HOURS
2. The General Post Office is open for the transaction of public business on week days from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. On Sundays and Holidays from 8 to 9 a.m. In the event of a contract mail arriving after the ordinary business hours, the office is opened for the delivery of correspondence as soon as possible after the mails have been landed and sorted, and will be kept open for one hour thereafter.
3. The Branch Office at Kowloon is open from 7.30 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. on ordinary days, and from 8 to 9 a.mt. on Sundays and Holidays, The Western Branch Office is open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
HOLIDAYS
4-Sundays and all Public and Government Holidays are observed as Post Office Holidays, except as notified in the foregoing paragraph, and except the departure of a contract mail liappens to be fixed for a Public or Government Holiday, when the Office will be kept open for the purpose of despatching the mails.
DIVISION OF POSTAL DISTRICTS
5. The City of Victoria is divided as follows:-
(i) West side of Pedder Street, Praya Central from Pedder Street to Wing Shing Street. All streets and lanes running from Praya to Queen's Road.
(ii) East side of Pedder Street, Des Voeux Road from Pedder Street to City Hall, Streets from Des Voeux Road to Queen's Road, Praya Reclama- tion from Queen's Buildings to Messrs. Butterfield & Swire's Offices and Victoria Recreation Club.
(iii) Queen's Road Central from Pedder Street and Wyndham Street to
No. 5 Police Station.
(iv) Queen's Road Central from Pedder Street and Wyndham Street to City Hall and Beaconsfield Arcade, Zetland Street, Duddell Street and Ice House Street. (v.) Queen's Road from City Hall and Beaconsfield Arcade to Ship Street, Head Quarter House, Arsenal Street and Praya East from Arsenal Street to Ship Street.
(vi) Wyndham Street (east side) to Dairy Farm Office, College Gardens, St. Paul's College, Peddler's Hill, Government House, Government Offices, Garden Road, Kennedy Road, Macdonnell Road and Bowen Road.
16
514
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
(vii.) Wyndham Street (west side) Glenealy, to Caine Road, Wyndham Street (both sides) from Glenealy, Central Police Station, Gaol, Remedios Terrace, Arbuthnot Roud.
(viii) D'Aguilar, Stanley, Wellington, Pottinger, Graham, Cochrane, Peel, Aberdeen, and Gage Streets, Lyndhurst Terrace, Gough Street, Holly- wood Road both sides from Pottinger Street to Ladder Street.
(ix.) Old Bailey, Staunton, Elgin, Bridges, and Shelley Streets, Caine Road
from No. 1 (both sides) to top of Ladder Street.
(x.) Mosque Street and Terrace, Belilios Terrace, Castle and Seymour Roads
and Robinson Road from East end to Castle Road, Conduit Road.
(xi) Albany and Peak Road.
(xii) From Ship Street to beginning of Causeway Bay Road, Shaukiwan (xiii) From No. 5 Police Station to Kennedy Town.
(xiv.) Penk.
(xv.) Kowloon.
(xvi.) Pokfulam.
(xvii.) Kowloon City.
DELIVERIES
6. In Town districts (Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 deliveries will start from the General Post Office at 8 a.m., 10a.m., noon, 2 p.m., 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. on ordinary days.
In district No. 11 (Albany and Peak Road) at 9 a.m., 1 p.m., and 5 p.m.
In district No. 12 (Ship Street to Causeway Bay) at 9 a.m., noon, 3 pm, and
6 p.m., at Shaukiwan at noon, at Quarry Bay at 9 a.m. and 3 pan.
In district No. 13 at 8 a.m., 11 a.m., 2 p.m., and 5 p.m.
In district No. 14 (Peak) at 8 am, noon and 3.30 p.m.
In district No. 15 (Kowloon) from the Kowloon Branch Office at 8.40 a.m., 10.40 a.m., 12.40 p.m., 2.40 p.m., and 4.40 p.m.
In district No. 16 at 10.30 a.m.
In district No. 17 at 9 a.m,
On Sundays and holidays deliveries are made once daily in all districts.
Contract mails are, however, delivered as soon as possible after arrival. The ordinary deliveries may be retarded by such mails,
The last delivery of Registered Correspondence is at 4 p.m.
There are no deliveries on Chinese New Year's Day.
To facilitate the delivery, and as a means to prevent the loss of Letters, a Letter Box should be affixed to every house or office door. Such Letter Box should be provided with Locks and the Keys kept by responsible persons.
To Shipping
7.Correspondence for Shipping in Harbour will, as a general rule, be delivered to the Agents, and if there be no Agents or delivery be refused by them, such corres- pondence will be kept at the Post Office to be claimed.
PILLAR BOXES
8.--Pillar Boxes in Hongkong and Kowloon are placed in the following Districts and places, and are cleared daily at the hours marked thereon, except on Sundays and holidays, when one clearance only will be made at the first hour indicated on each.
District.
***** ****2=97
No. Pillar Bor.
رید
ANNO
3
Locality
IN HONGKONG PEAK
Victoria Gap.
Mount Kellett.
Junction of Mount Gough Road with road to Aberdeen. Junction of Plantation Road and Mount Gough Road. Magazine Gap.
CITY OF VICTORIA
14
1
14
14
14
14
12
信
5
12
13
9
West Point, Near No. 7 Police Station.
13
10
Junction of Robinson and Bonham Roads.
11
Junction of Albany, Robinson and Garden Roads.
10
12
Junction of Seymour and Castle Roads,
13
Junction of Old Bailey and Caine Roads,
SI-DOOHNS
East Point junction of Percival Street and Praya. Junction of Queen's Road East and Arsenal Street. Praya East, No. 2 Police Station.
I
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
ölö
District.
No. of Pillar Box.
13
19
9
20
21
26
27
222224
15
14
15
15
15
16
15
17
15
18
15
25
16
22
23
17
12
***
24
Park View
Ladder Street Macdonell Road
Peddar Street Ferry Wharf Lower Tram Station
IN KOWLOON
Cosmopolitan Dock.
Hung-Hom Dock,
Yaumati Police Station,
Yaumati Gas Works.
Junction of Cameron and Carnarvon Ronds, Kowloon Ferry Wharf
IN COUNTRY DISTRICTS
Pokfulam.
Kowloon City.
Quarry Bay.
9.-Letters containing any article of value should not be posted in a Pillar Box, but should be registered at the General or Branch Post Offices and a receipt obtainerl for the same.
10-Persons posting in these boxes may cancel their stamps by writing the date across them.
PRIVATE BOXES
11-Private boxes may be rented in the General Post Office, Hongkong, and in the Post Office, Shanghai. The fee is $10 a year, payable in advance.
12-Each boxholder is supplied with an account book free, but must himself provide at least two stout bags marked with his name in English and Chinese on both sides. Chinese nankin makes the best bags for this purpose. They should be without strings, but have a couple of iron rings at the mouth for suspending. Boxholders should insist on their coolies returning these bags to the Post Office as soon as emptied, or at any rate not later than next morning. The only safe way to empty a bag is to turn it inside out.
13. Each boxholder's coolie will be provided with a stout ticket of pasteboard, bearing his employer's name in English and Chinese. This will enable him to obtain letters whenever a mail arrives and ensure that no coolie can wrongly obtain letters.
14. The advantages of renting a box are many. It secures a quicker and more accurate delivery of correspondence. Boxes are required to be cleared by Boxholders on the arrival of European and American Mails; on ordinary days delivery will be made by postmen unless boxholders desire that their daily correspondence should remain in their boxes to be cleared by themselves. Access to the boxes is afforded to boxholders in Hongkong at all hours. Unpaid letters are delivered to boxholders without the delay of demanding payment, change, &c., as they are charged to the account. The boxholders of Hongkong and Shanghai send bags down in the mail steamer to be filled. Boxholders are allowed to post their letters in sealed boxes* and to mark their Postage Stamps. They receive free copies of all notices issued by the Post Office, Tables of Rates, &c.
15.-Boxholders' books are sent out for settlement on the first day of each month and should be returned promptly. As a general rule no information can be given as to the correspondence charged in these accounts, where it came from, &c. There is only one way to obtain such information, and that is to file the covers of all unpaid corres- pondence received. Entries On Board are for unpaid correspondence dealt with by the marine officer on his way up from Singapore.
PRIVATE LETTER BOXES BETWEEN HONGKONG AND CANTON
16. Private Letter Boxes may be placed on board the River Steamers belonging to or managed by the Hongkong, Canton and Macao Steam Boat Company, Limited, running between Hongkong and Canton.
The boxes should be closed with some recognizable seal. Locked boxes cannot be allowed. A receipt book should be sent with each box, but as the receiving officer cannot undertake to count the correspondence sent, he only gives a receipt for One Bor. No attention is promised to anything written in the book- To be Registered, for instance..
I
↓
1
L
16*
516
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
17. The fee for a permit is $60 a year. No Permit is issued for a period less than twelve months, and the fee is payable on the 1st January in each year for the twelve months ending the 31st December, following. If, however, the permit is taken at any time after the commencement of the year the proportionate fee inay (for convenience of account) be paid for the unexpired period to the 31st December, so that the full fee for the next year may be payable on the 1st January.
18. The Boxes must not be taken to the Post Office either at Hongkong or Canton, but are to be placed on board and taken off the steamers by the messengers of the Permit-holders.
POSTAGE STAMPS, POST CARDS, WRAPPERS AND ENVELOPES 19.--Hongkong Postage Stamps, Wrappers and Envelopes of the following values can be purchased and are available at any British Post Office or Agency in Hongkong or China:
Postage Stamps-¦
10
cent
וי
}
2 cents (with reply paid).
4 cents.
8 cents (with reply paid). Wrappers-
2 cents.
4
11
Embossed Envelopes-
I cent size 8}
2 cents
་་
11
12
51
20
**
30
2
13
ל
**
**
50
4
92
I dollar.
4
13
17
2 dollars.
10
11
3
10
13
**
39
packet of envelopes. Registration Envelopes bearing a 10 cents stamp, embossed on the flap for the payment of the registration fee are sold at 11 cents cach, and are of the following sizes:-
F. --5 ins, X
ius.
G
-6
H
++
11.
-8
H
17
HE
-9
14
骨中
6
11
5
10
**
H
Post Cards-
1 cent.
Envelopes are sold in packe
of 5, and in addition to the par value of the stamps embossed thereon, 1 cent is charged per
K-11
Books of Stamps (containing 16
four cents, 12 two cents and 12 one cent) at $1.
Reply paid coupons, 12 cents
cach,
20.---Boxholders are at liberty to mark their Postage Stamps on the back or face or by perforation, so as to prevent their being stolen. If the mark be on the face, it must be such as not to interfere with the clean appearance of the stamps.
21.-Correspondence will not be stamped at the Post Office and charged to a boxholder's account.
REPLY COUPONS
21A-Coupons exchangeable for stamps of the value of 25 centimes (23) each in any country participating in the arrangement can be purchased at the General Post Office and its agencies in China for 12 cents each for the purpose of prepaying replies to letter. The coupons can be exchanged by the adressee of such letters at the Post Ofice of the place of destination for local postage stamps.
DESPATCH
22.--Tables showing the dates of the departure of the contract mails and the dates when replies to letters are due in Hongkong are published separately. The dates and hours of closing all mails in the General Post Office are also published twice daily in a Special Mail Notice, except on Sundays and Holidays.
23. As a general rule the Mails for Europe by English, French and German Contract Packets are closed as follows when the steamer leaves at noon, viz. :-
Letters....
11 a.m.
11 a.m. to noon by
Late Letters with Late fee of 10 cents
English and French Mails, and 11 a.m. to 11.30 by German Mail. 24. Mails by American, Canadian, Indian or Australian packets and by private steamers for Coast and other Ports are closed one hour before the advertised time of departure except when such steamers leave at daylight, when such mails are closed the evening previous at 5 p.m., or as notified.
25. When private steamers leave at noon of the days of departure of Contract Packets, mails by such steamers are closed at 10 a.m.
26.--The mails for Shanghai, &c., by English, French and German Contract Packets from Europe are closed one hour before time of departure.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
517
27.-Correspondence can be registered for contract mails to Europe, Canada, and America up to one hour before the time of closing; with a late fee of 10 cents registered articles for despatch by such packets will be accepted up to a quarter of an hour before the time of closing the ordinary mail; registered mails to Shanghai, Japan, Straits, India, Manila and Australia, by other than contract packets, close half an hour before the ordinary mail, and to the coast ports a quarter of an hour before closing the -ordinary mails.
28.-Correspondence specially directed for any particular steamer is sent by her (failing any request to the contrary), however nuny times her departure may be postponed. If it is postponed sine die the correspondence is sent on by the next opportunity.
29. Correspondence marked vid Brindisi or viá Marseilles will be KEPT FOR THE ROUTE INDICATED even though that may involve a fortnight's detention. Unless this is intended, therefore, the safest direction is "By first mail."
30. There are two routes to Western Australia, viz., vid Torres Straits and vid Colombo. All correspondence will be sent as superscriber.
30A.-Correspondence to be sent via the Siberian Railway should be superscribed "Vid Siberia." Only mail matter fully paid at letter rate and postcards can be sent by this route. Insured letters cannot be sent "Vi Siberia."
LOCAL POSTAGE RATES
31. The term "Local" used in these rules shall mean and include all correspond- ence posted in Hongkong and the adjacent territories belonging to Hongkong, as well as extending to the following places in China at which there are British Postal Agencies, viz., Hoihow, Canton, Swatow, Amoy, Foochow, Ningpo, Shanghai, Hankow Liu Kung Tau, Chefoo and Tientsin.
It shall not, however, be taken to include and apply to correspondence sent to the Imperial Chinese Post Offices in China, to the Portuguese possession of Macao, or to the German possession at Kiaochow.
LETTERS
32-In Hongkong and its dependencies 2 cents per oz., and from Hongkong and its dependencies to Canton or Macao 2 cents per foz.
To all other places mentioned in Paragraph 31, 4 cents per oz.
For Chinese Postal Hong packets the rate is 4 cents per oz.
33.-A letter posted unpaid is chargeable on delivery with double postage; if insufficiently paid, with double the deficiency.
34. No letter may exceed 2 feet in length, 1 foot in width, or 1 foot in depth, unless it be sent to or from a Government Office.
35.-Letters upon public business must be franked by the official sending them with his name and office on the lower left-hand corner of the cover. The several Public Officers and Heads of Departments specified below are entitled to this privilege:
The Private Secretary to H.E. The Governor.
The Chief Justice.
The Colonial Secretary.
The Attorney General.
The Assistant Colonial Secretary.
The Paisne Judge.
The Chief Clerk, Colonial Secretary's Office. The Colonial Treasurer,
The Local Auditor.
The Director of Public Works.
The Assistant Director of Public Works. The Registrar General.
The Assistant Registrar General. The Postmaster General.
The Assistant Postmaster General, The Harbour Master.
The Assistant Harbour Master. The Principal Civil Medical Officers. The Government Medical Officers. The Registrar of the Supreme Court, The Deputy Registrars of the Supreme
Court.
The Captain Superintendent of Police. "The Deputy Superintendent of Police.
The Assistant Superintendents of Police.
The Chief Inspector of Police.
The Police Magistrates.
The District Officer, New Territories. The Crown Solicitor.
The Director of the Observatory.
The First Assistant to the Director of the
Observatory.
The Superintendent, Botanical and Af-
forestation Department.
The Director of Education
The Superintendent of Imports & Exports The Head Master of Queen's College. The Head Masters of Government Schools. The Land Officer and Official Receiver. The Deputy Official Receiver.
The Assistant Land Officers.
The Registrar of the Land Court.
The Medical Officer of Health.
The Assistant Medical Officers of Health. The Head of Sanitary Department. The Secretary, Sanitary Board.
The Deputy Superintendent, Victoria Gaol | The First Clerk to the Magistrate.
518
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
Address to be Complete
36.-Addresses should be as complete as possible in order to facilitate delivery. In order that, in the event of the letter becoming from any cause undeliverable, it may be returned to the writer unopened, it is recommended that the sender's name and address be also superscribed on the cover.
Unpaid Letters; Loose Letters
37.-The general rule as to insufficiently paid letters is to double the deficient postage. Nothing can be sent wholly unpaid except letters and Post Cards.
38. Consignees' letters, being privileged by law, need not be sent to the Post Office
at all, but if they are sent they are liable to ordinary rates of postage.
39. In the event of an unpaid letter becoming a dead letter, the sender is liable, according to international rules, to pay the deficient postage and the fine.
Late Fee Letters
40. As a general rule Late Letters are received up to the times indicated in Para- graphs 23 and 27 on prepayment on same of a Late Fee of 10 cents in addition to full postage. After the hour appointed for the closing of the Contract nails by English, Canadian and American Packets, correspondence being fully prepaid with ordinary postage and bearing a Late Fee will be received on board by the Officer from the Post Office up to the time appointed for the closing of the mail on board.
PRINTED MATTER-NEWSPAPERS
41.-The Prepaid rate is as follows:--
Every newspaper posted singly and not exceeding
4. ozs. in weight...
Every newspaper exceeding 4 ozs.
..2 cents.
2cents. per 2 ozs.
Every newspaper should be so folded and covered (if posted in a cover) as to permit the title to be readily inspected, and must be open at both ends.
42. A bundle of newspapers may be prepaid at so much each (and each one must count, however small), or the whole may be paid at book rate.
Two newspapers must not be folded together as one, nor must anything whatever be inserted except hon fide supplements of the same paper and same date. Printed matter may, however, be enclosed if the whole be paid at book rate.
A newspaper or a packet of newspapers posted insufficiently paid will on delivery be charged with double the deficiency. Unpaid newspapers cannot be forwarded.
No newspaper and no cover of a newspaper may bear anything (not being part of the newspaper), except the names and addresses of the sender and the addressee, à request for return in case of non-delivery, or the title of the newspaper. If it contains any written communication whatever it will be charged as a letter.
43.-A packet of newspapers must not weigh above 5 lbs, or exceed 2 feet in length by I foot in width or depth.
BOOK PACKETS
44. The prepaid rate of postage on a book packet is 2 cents for each 2 ounces, 45. The term "book packet includes almost all kinds of printed or writtenmatter not of the nature of an actual or personal correspondence, with whatever is necessary for its illustration or safe transmission, as maps, rollers, binding, &c.; but a book must contain no communication whatever of the nature of a letter. Stamps of any kind, whether obliterated or not, or any papers representing monetary value, such as coupons, drafts, &c., must be sent at letter rate.
46.-A book may contain an inscription presenting it, notes or marks referring to the text, or such writing us With the author's compliments, &c. Compliments not exceeding five words may be written on visiting cards In travellers' announcements the place of the intended visit, as well as the date and the traveller's name, may be indicated in writing Christmas and New Year's cards may bear a written dedication. Titles of books may be written in forms of subscription to libraries, as well as in orders to booksellers; and on newspaper cuttings the addition in manuscript or by a mechanical process, of the title, date, number and address of the publication from which the articl is extracted, is permitted.
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47.-Mechanical reproductions (not less than twenty) of a manuscript or type- written original may pass as printed papers if handled in at the Post Office counter."
Albums containing photographs may has the contents visible, or easily to be
pass as printed papers. 49. The packet must be open at the rendered visible. Packets which are sealed or forwarded in closed covers with the corners cut off or with notched ends will be taxed and sent forward as ordinary correspondence. Packets may be tied with string to protect the contents, but in such a way that the string can be easily untied.
50. The weight of a book packet is limited as follows:
To British offices, 5lbs.
To other offices, 4 lbs.
51-Book Packets for Non-British offices must not exceed two feet in length or one foot in width or depth. Packets in the form of a roll may not exceed 30 inches in length and inches in diameter, but such objects as maps, pictures, plans, photographs, tc., if made up into rolls of no great thickness and not exceeding 30 inches in length, and inches in diameter, may be so forwarded to any country.
52.-The rules applicable to unpaid or insufficiently paid newspapers are equally applicable to book packets and commercial papers.
COMMERCIAL PAPERS
33. The distinction between Books and Commercial Papers (papiers d'affaires) is, that whilst Book Packets are to consist of printed matter, Commercial Papers are wholly or partly written by hand. They must not be of the nature of an actual or personal correspondence.
54-Commercial Papers are such papers as the following:-Printers' copy; authors' manuscript; press copies of any documents not letters: law papers; deeds; bills of lading; invoices; insurances papers, copied music, &c. The rate is the same as for books, but no packet of commercial papers, whatever its weight, is charged less than 10 cents. Stamps of any kind, whether obliterated or not, or any papers representing monetary value such as coupons, drafts, &c., must be sent at letter rates,
55.-Any one Commercial Paper in a Book Packet exposes the whole packet to the above rule as to minimum charge; with this exception all kinds of printed matter and patterns may be enclosed in one packet and forwarded at book rates.
56-Commercial Papers are subjected to all the conditions of Book Post as to the ends of the packet being open, liability to examination, hours of closing, late fees, &c.
57-Packets of commercial papers, printed papers and samples, when they do not accord with the regulations, are returned to the senders.
58.-Book Packets posted from or to the Banks with the works "Pass Book" printed on the cover and open at both ends are allowed to pass as printed matter. Local Savings Bank Pass Books are free.
PRICES CURRENT AND CIRCULARS
59.-A circular is a communication of which copies are addressed in identical terms, or nearly so, to a number of persons. It may be either written or printed, or partly written and partly printed. A prices current or circular may be paid as a newspaper or as a book.
60-Dividend Warrants, Invitations, Cards, Patterns, Bills, Almanacs, &c., are also included under the head of Circulars when intended for addressees in Hongkong or Ports of China at which British Postal Agencies are established only and when posted in batches of not less than ten of uniform size and weight (such weight not to exceed 2 ounces) and prepaid in stamps at the 1 cent rate. Such circulars should be delivercel to an officer of the Post Office.
61-Circulars when posted singly or addressed to places other than Hongkong or its Agencies must be prepaid 2 cents each in stamps.
62.-A bundle of prices current or circulars may be paid for as so many newspapers (each one counting), or the whole may be paid at book rate. The Union rate of postage is 2 cents encli.
63.--Prices Current or Circulars in closed envelopes with the corners cut off, or with notched ends, will be taxed and forwarded as ordinary correspondence.
64.Addresses must be complete, that is to say: on such covers as are not addressed to heads of houses, the addressee's residence or place of business must be added.
65. Prices Current and Circulars arriving in such large quantities as to retard the delivery of the mails are allowed to stand over till there is time to deal with them.
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PATTERNS
GG. Samples of merchandise must not possess any saleable value, nor bear any writ ing or printing on or in the packet, except the name of the sender or that of his firm, the address of the addressee, a manufacturer's trade mark, numbers, prices, and indi cations relative to weight or size, or to the quantity to be disposed of, or such as are necessary to determine the origin and the nature of the goods.
67.-Type samples of unmanufactured tobacco are admitted by post into the United Kingdom provided that such samples are sent for trade purposes, that they do not exceed 4 ounces in gross weight, and that they comply with the general regulations of Sample Post. Upon the delivery of such samples there is levied from the addressee a charge of 1/- for Customs duty.
Liquids
68.--Liquids, oils and fatty substances easily liquified must be enclosed in glass- bottles hermetically sealed. Each bottle must be placed in a wooden box adequately furnished with sawdust, cotton, or spongy material in sufficient quantity to absorb the liquid in case the bottle be broken, and the box itself must be enclosed in a case of metal, of wood with a screw-top, or of strong and thick leather. Deleterious liquids or substances and explosives are absolutely prohibited.
Ointments, &c.
69. Fatty substances which are not easily liquified, such as ointments, soft soap, resin, &c., must be enclosed in an inner cover (box, linen bag, parchment, &c.), which itself must be placed in a second box of wood, metal, or strong and thick leather.
70.-Articles of glass must be securely packed (boxes of metal, wood, leather, or card- board) in a way to prevent all danger to the correspondence and postal officers.
Dry Powders
71.-Dry powders, whether dyes or not, must be placed in cardboard boxes, which themselves are enclosed in a bag of linen or parchment.
Patterns and Samples
72. Packets of patterns and samples must be so packed as to admit of easy inspection; any such found to be insecurely packed will be stopped.
73. Such packets for places in the Postal Union must not exceed 12 inches in length, 8 inches in width, and 4 inches in depth.
74.-The maximum weight for packets of patterns or samples of merchandise posted in Hongkong or its agencies for places in the Postal Union is 12 ounces (350 grammes) To the United Kingdom the limit is 5 lbs.
PosT CARDS, OFFICIAL AND PRIVATE
75.-Official Post Cards impressed with a one cent stamp and official Reply Post Cards impressed with a one cent stamp on each portion of them can be bought at every Post Office.
76.-Private Post-cards must be of cardboard or paper sufficiently stout not to hinder their manipulation The minimum dimensions are 10 cm. x 7 in. (4 in. by 23, in.). The title "Carte Postale" is not obligatory for single (ie, not reply paid) post- cards of private manufacture.
The right half of the face is reserved for the postal directions and address. The left hand half is available for purposes of the sender, subject to restrictions as to attaching articles. The stamp may be affixed on the back of the card.
77.--In addition to stamps for prepayment, post-cards may bear gummed labels not exceeding 2 cm. by 5 cm. (4 in. by 2 in.) showing the name and address of the sender and of the addressee; and engravings and photographs may be affixed to the back and left-hand half of the address side provided they are completely adherent.
78.-Cards bearing the title "Post-card" or its equivalent are admitted at the rate for printed matter provided that they conform to the general regulations respecting printed papers. If they do not conform either to these regulations or to the rules. applicable to post-cards, they are treated as letters.
A Post Card must not be folded, cut, or otherwise altered, nor may it be enclosed in a cover of any kind.
79.-It is forbidden to forward by post any Post Card having thereon any word, marks or designs of an indecent, obscene or grossly offensive character. Any such shall be stopped and dealt with by the Postmaster-General as the circumstances of the case may require.
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LOCAL PARCEL POST
(Direction as to Posting)
[C
521
80.-In order that a packet may be sent by Parcel Post it must be presented at the counter of a Post Office for transmission as a parcel and must bear the words Parcel Post" written conspicuously on the upper left-hand corner. It must also bear the name and address of the sender on the bottom left-hand corner of the face of the cover. parcel should not be left until the weight, size and postage have been tested by the officer who accepts it, and a receipt of its posting obtained.
The
If a "tie on" label is used, the address must nevertheless be written on the cover as well.
A declaration of the contents must be made out on the form provided for that purpose, which should be affixed to the parcel.
LIMITS OF SIZE AND WEIGHT
81.-The size allowed for a local parcel is: Greatest length, 3 feet 6 inches; greatest length and girth combined, 6 feet, and the greatest weight, 11 lbs.
82.-Rates of postage to Hongkong and its agencies at the Treaty ports :-
For a parcel not exceeding 3 tbs, in weight, 25 cents. Exceeding 3 tbs. and not exceeding 7 lbs., 50 cents. Exceeding 7 lbs. and not exceeding 11 lbs., 75 cents.
MODE OF PREPAYMENT
83.-No packet can be accepted by an officer of the Department for transmission. by Parcel Post unless the postage at the above rates is paid. The postage stamps should be affixed by the sender to the cover of the parcel at the right-hand upper corner on the face.
PARCELS POSTED OUT OF COURSE
84.-If a packet, which either bears the words "Parcel Post," or from its appearance seems to be intended for transmission as a parcel, is not posted in accordance with these regulations it is treated as a letter if it is fully prepaid at the letter rates and is other- wise in accordance with the Letter Post regulations.
If such parcel is not fully prepaid at the Letter rate it will be returned to the sender.
DIRECTIONS AS TO PACKING
85.-Parcels containing any fragile or perishable article must be so packed as to ensure their safe handing and their causing no injury or damage to the mails.
86. Parcels generally must be so packed and enclosed in a reasonably strong case, wrapper, or cover, fastened in a manner calculated to preserve the contents from loss or damage in the post, and to prevent any tampering therewith. The packing of a parcel must also be such as to protect other postal packets from being damaged in any way by it. Any parcel not so packed will, if tendered for transmission, be refused, and if dis- covered in transit will be liable to be detained.
PARCELS ADDRESSED TO POST OFFICES
87-Parcels may be addressed "to be called for" to any Post Office at which letters similarly addressed may be received and under the same general regulations, and will be detained at such offices for a period of three weeks. If not then claimed such parcels will be returned to the Returned Branch of the General Post Office and notice of the fact will be forwarded to the senders, to whom delivery will be made on payment of the postage due for the return of the parcels,
88.-In default of proper application and payment of the charges due, undelivered parcels are liable to be finally disposed of three months after the date of their return to the General Post Office. If, however, during this period or during the period of reten- tion at a Post Office the contents of a parcel become or are likely to become worthless through natural decay, or are found to be offensive or injurious, they are liable to be disposed of forthwith."
REGISTRATION AND COMPENSATION
89.-The ordinary registration fee for each local letter or other postal packet is 10
cents.
90.-Every description of paid correspondence may be registered except such as is addressed in pencil, or is addressed to initials or fictitious names, or is not properly fastened and secured.
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91. The sender of any registered article may obtain an acknowledgment of its delivery to the addressee by paying in advance at the time of posting a fee of 10 cents in addition to the postage and registration fee. The sender must enter in the form provided for the purpose both his own name and address and the name and address of the person to whom the packet is sent, and he must also affix to the form a stamp or stamps of the value of 10 cents in payment of the fee.
92.-Letters are accepted for registration at the General Post Office, at the Kowloon and Western branch offices, as well as the Postal agencies.
93.-Every article to be registered must be given to an officer or agent of the Post Office and a receipt obtained for it. It should bear the name and address of the sender on the lower left-hand corner of the face of the cover.
If contrary to this rule an article bearing the word "Registered" or any other word, phrase, or mark to the like effect, or a Registration envelope intended by the sender to go forward as an ordinary letter, be dropped into a letter box it will if directed to any place at which delivery can be made by Hongkong or its Agencies be compulsorily registered and charged on delivery with a registration fee of 20 cents.
94. All registered letters or packets on being redirected must be taken back to the Registration Department to be dealt with as registered, and must not be dropped into a letter-box as ordinary letters or packets. If brought later than the day (Sundays and public holidays not being counted) after delivery, a fresh registration fee as well as fresh postage will be required.
95. The Postmaster-General is not legally responsible for the safe delivery of registered correspondence, but will be prepared to make good the value of such correspondence if lost while passing through the Post, to the extent of 50 francs in certain cases, provided :
(a) That the sender duly observed all the conditions of registration.
That the correspondence was secured in a reasonably strong envelope.
(e) That application was made to the Postmaster-General immediately the loss was discovered, and within a year at the most from the date of posting such correspondence.
(d) That the Postmaster-General is satisfied the loss occurred whilst the corre- spondence was in the custody of the British Postal Administration in China; that it was not caused by any fault on the part of the sender; by destruction by fire, or shipwreck; nor by the dishonesty or negli- gence of any person not in the employment of the Hongkong Post Office. 96. No compensation can be paid for mere damage to fragile articles such as portraits, watches, handsomely bound books, &c., which reach their destination, although in a broken or deteriorated condition, nor on account of alleged losses of the contents of registered covers which safely reached their destinations, nor on account of any article for which the addressee has signed a receipt. No claim for compensation will be admitted if made more than a year after the article was posted.
97.--The Post Office declines all responsibility for unregistered letters containing bank notes, or jewellery, and where registration has been neglected will make no enquiries into alleged losses of such letters.
98. A postcard enclosed in a packet of correspondence, for return to the sender by way of receipt, will not under any circumstances be admitted as evidence that any particular article reached the Post Office.
99.-Enquiry as to the disposal of a registered article will be made free of charge when the sender produces prima facie evidence that it has failed to reach the addressee. When, however, no such evidence is produced, a fee of 10 cents for an acknowledgment of delivery will be required before enquiry is instituted. No fee will be charged for enquiry when the sender has already paid for an acknowledgment of delivery.
100.-Officers employed in the Registration Department are forbidden to address registered mail matter, to enclose it in the envelope, seal it, or affix the stamps.
ARTICLES NOT ALLOWED TO BE SENT BY POST
101.-The following articles cannot be sent through the post :-
(a) Samples of merchandise having a saleable value.
(7) Samples and other articles which, from their nature, may expose the postal
officials to danger, or soil or damage the correspondence.
(c) Explosive, inflammable, or dangerous substances.
(d) Animals or insects, living or dead.*
* Live bees may be sent if enclosed in boxes so constructed as to avoid all danger and allow the contents to be ascertained.
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(e) Any indecent or obscene print, painting, photograph, lithograph, engrav- ing, book, or card, or any other indecent or obscene article, or any letter, newspaper, or publication, packet or card, having thereon any words, marks, or designs, of an indecent, obscene, libellous or grossly
offensive character.
102.-It is forbidden to insert in ordinary or registered correspondence consigned to the post:
(a) Current coin.
(6) Articles liable to Customs duty.
(c) Gold or silver bullion, precious stones, jewellery and other precious
articles.
If contrary to this rule such articles above described or any uncrossed Postal Notes: Cheques or Dividend Warrants, not payable to order, Bank Notes and Postage Stamps. used or unused, be found enclosed in unregistered correspondence when opened in the Returned Letter Office, such correspondence will be subject to Compulsory Registration and be charged with a registration fee of 20 cents.
REDIRECTION AND INTERCEPTION
103. Letters, book packets, post cards, newspaper and book packets are not liable to additional postage for re-direction whether re-directed by an officer of the Post Office or by an agent of the addressee after delivery, provided in the latter case that the letters, &c., are re-posted not later than the day (Sundays and public holidays not being counted) after delivery, and that they do not appear to have been opened or tam- pered with. Re-directed registered letters must not be dropped into a letter box but must be handed to an officer of the Post Office to be dealt with as registered.
104. Re-directed letters, &c., which are re-posted later than the day after delivery will be liable to charge at the prepaid rate. Any which appear to have been opened or tampered with will be chargeable as freshly posted unpaid letters or packets.
105.-Parcels are when re-directed liable to additional postage at the prepaid rate for each re-direction except when the original and corrected addresses are both within a delivery of the same Post Office.
106.-Letters and all other postal packets, provided that they are directed to an addressee living within the Hongkong Postal Administration, may, on payment of the following fees to be paid by means of Postage stamps affixed to the request for interception, be intercepted at Hongkong or Shanghai and delivered to the addressee, at such place as he shall request, viz.:-
By any particular contract mail steamer from
Europe
By any vessel from any port during the course
of one calendar month
$1.00
$5.00
107. Interceptions shall be made when practicable, but the fees so paid shall not entitle the persons applying to have their mail matter intercepted to claim as of right the interception of all or any particular postal packet addressed to them.
108. The Postmaster-General shall not be bound to entertain any request for interception unless such request is accompanied by the above prescribed fees. Corres- pondence directed to care of boxholders in Hongkong must, without exception, be delivered as addressed. The Post Office does not undertake the redirection of cor- respondence for a person temporarily leaving home, unless the home be left uninhabited; nor does it undertake to redirect correspondence addressed to clubs, hotels, boarding- houses or lodgings.
109.-Requests for the redirection or interception of correspondence must be in writing. The precise address of the correspondence must be given.
No request for redirection will be acted upon for more than three months, at the end of which time the correspondence resumes its usual course,
H
POSTE RESTANTE
111-All letters and other Postal packets superscribed "To be kept till called for,' To await arrival," or in any similar way, and also those addressed "Post Office," or Hongkong" without any other address are held to fall under the head "Poste Restante." 112.-When correspondence is received addressed to parties in "Hongkong" with- out a full address and no request has been received from the addressee regarding it or his name does not appear in the Directory, such correspondence will be placed in
Poste Restante.
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113.-The Poste Restante being intended solely for the accommodation of strangers and travellers who have no permanent abode in the town, letters or other postal packets for residents must not be addressed to the Post Office to be called for, nor will letters or postal packets be kept in the Poste Restante longer than the following periods, viz.:-
Local letters are kept for 1 month International
**
2 months
}}
Letters for steamers are kept for 3 months
13
sailing vessels
4
114.-Letters or other postal packets addressed to initials or to fictitious names or to a Christian name without a surname are not taken in at the Poste Restante but are at once sent to the Returned Letter Branch for disposal.
115.-All persons applying for Poste Restante letters or other postal packets must furnish the necessary and required particulars to prevent mistakes and to ensure the delivery of the same to the persons to whom they properly belong and sign the register. If the addressee does not apply for same in person the messenger must be furnished with the required information and must have a written authority to receive them. If the applicant be a foreigner he must produce his passport or other evidence of identity.
DISPOSAL OF UNDELIVERED CORRESPONDENCE
116. Every letter or other postal article should bear the full name and address of the sender in order to ensure its return in case of non-delivery.
117. An undelivered local or foreign letter or post card bearing the full name and address of the sender printed or written upon the outside is returned direct to the gender. Other undelivered local letters and post cards are sent to the Returned Letter Branch where, after having been advertised, they will at the expiration of ten days be opened and returned, if possible, to the senders if they contain neither sender's name or address, nor any enclosure of importance they will be destroyed. Letters found to contain articles of value are recorded and if returned are registered. Letters from abroad are returned unopened to the country of origin after having been advertised.
:
118.-Book packets and newspapers which cannot be delivered and which bear the name and address of the sender with a request for their return in case of non-delivery are returned direct to the sender on paynient of a second postage. Those bearing no name nor request for return are sent to the Returned Letter Branch, where, after having been advertised, they will, at the expiration of ten days thereafter, if not pre- viously claimed and a second postage paid, be disposed of.
119. The name and address of the sender and the request for return should be written or printed in small type at the upper left-hand corner of the packet.
120.-All unpaid undelivered letters or post cards shall be delivered to the senders only on the payment of the amount charged thereon.
ARTICLES OF VALUE
121.--Neither money nor any other article of value ought to be sent by post except in a registered postal packet, and in the case of money by means of a Post Office Money Order or of a Postal Order duly filled up with the name of the payee. Any person who sends money or any other articles of value otherwise runs the risk of losing his property, and the Post Office declines all responsibility for such, and will make no enquiries into alleged losses of such letters.
CERTIFICATES OF POSTING
122.-Contrary to general usage, the Hongkong Post Office will give a Certificate of posting for an ordinary letter, to assure the sender his correspondence has not been stolen on the way to the Post. The conditions under which such Certificate will be given are as follows:
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(1.) The certificate of posting written in ink must be presented to an officer on duty at the Post Office along with the article to be posted during the hours which the Post Office is open to the public.
(2.) The certificate must contain an exact copy of the address on the article to which it relates and must have a postage stamp value one cent affixed thereto.
(3.) The officer to whom the article and certificate are presented will compare the address on the article with the certificate, and if it be correct will obliterate the postage stamp and impress the date stamp on the certificate and return the certificate to the person posting the article. (4.) The granting of such certificate affords the public an assurance that letter
and other articles entrusted to servants and messengers for posting have actually been posted, but implies no responsibility on the part of the Post Office if such articles be lost or damaged in transit.
MISCELLANEOUS
123. It is no part of the duties of the Post Office to affix stamps to correspondence, or to see that servants purchase or affix the proper amounts, nor can the officers of the Department, under any circumstances, undertake to do this.
124. Any article of correspondence duly prepaid and posted becomes the property of the addressee, and cannot be returned to the sender, nor can it be detained, without the written authority of the Governor of Hongkong or of His Majesty's Consul at the Port, on an application stating fully the reasons for the request.
125.-Postal officials are not bound to give change, nor are they authorized to demand it; and when money is paid at a Post Office, whether as change or otherwise, no question as to its right amount, goodness, or weight can be entertained after it has been removed from the counter.
126.-Postal officials are not bound to weigh for the public, letters, books. packets or newspapers brought for the post, but they may do so if their duty be not thereby impeded. This rule does not apply to parcels, which are tested both as to weight and size before being accepted.
127. No information can be given respecting letters or any other postal packets except to the persons to whom they are addressed, and in no other way is official information of a private character allowed to be made public.
128. Circulars should be tied in bundles, with all the addresses in one direction, and should be posted as early as possible before the hour fixed for closing, so as to secure due despatch.
129.-The Post Office is not legally liable for any loss or inconvenience which may arise from the damage, delay, non-delivery, mis-sending, or mis-delivery of any letter or other postal packet, but liability for actual loss or damage is accepted on certain condi- tions in the case of parcels and registered packets.
130-All complaints in Hongkong and those which cannot be adjusted locally at Postal Agencies should be addressed to the Postmaster General, Hongkong, and if Marked "On Postal Business," will be forwarded free by any Postmaster or agent. The cover of any correspondence about which complaint is made should if possible be for- warded with such complaint. When correspondence has been mis-sent or delayed (both of which are liable to happen occasionally), all that the complainant need do is to write on the cover, Sent to
instant, or as the case may be, and forward it, without any note or letter whatever, to the Post- master General. Attention to this would save much writing and endless trouble
or Delivered at or Not received till the
130A. The importation into Hongkong through the Post Office of any lottery ticket or advertisement of any lottery, or of any letter, post card or circular concerning any lottery, is prohibited. The Postmaster General inay seize all such lottery tickets
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HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
and letters, post cards or circulars concerning a lottery and cause the same to be returned to the Post Office at which they were mailed.
1308. The Postmaster General may seize all seditious publications and cause the same to be returned to the Post Office at which they were mailed.
130c.--Nothing sent through the post may contain an enclosure which is directed to a name and an address different from the name and address borne on the cover, and which is enclosed with the intention of evading postage. Any such forbidden enclosure if observed is liable to be taken out and forwarded to the addressee charged with separate postage at the prepaid rate.
LOCAL MONEY ORDERS AND POSTAL NOTES
131. The hours of business at the General Post Office, Hongkong, daily, excepting Saturdays, are from 10 a.m. to 4 pm,; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. On the working day next before the English and French contract mails for Europe leaving at noon, the Office is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Money orders for the Straits, India and Europe are not issued before noon on days when the contract mail for Europo leaves at that hour. Postal notes, however, can be obtained.
132. Single Money Orders are issued at the General Post Office, Hongkong, and at the British Post Office, Shanghai, at the current rates of exchange for any sum not ex- ceeding $400.
133.--Money Orders are paid at the above-named offices and at the several Britis Postal Agencies in China.
134. Applications for Money Orders must be made on the printed forms provided for the purpose at the Money Order Offices. The full name and address of both appli- cant and payee should always be given.
135.-Parties procuring Money Orders should examine them carefully to see that they are properly filled up and stamped.
136. When a Money Order is presented for payment at the office upon which it is drawn, the Postmaster will use all proper means to assure himself that the applicant is the person named and intended in the advice, and upon payment of the order care must be taken to obtain the signature of the payee or of the person authorized by him to receive payment to the receipt on the face of the order
137. When a Money Order has been lost by either remitter or payee a duplicato thereof will be issued by the paying office on payment of a second commission; and when a remitter desires to correct any error in an order obtained by him such correc- tion may be made on payment of a second commission. Application for either of the above purposes should be made in writing to the Postmaster-General.
138.-The remitter of a local order may request at the time of issue or subsequently that the order be crossed like a cheque, thus " & Co.," in order that it may be paid only through a bank.
139. If the payee is unable to write he must sign the receipt by making his mark, to be witnessed in writing by someone known to the Postmaster but unconnected with the Post Office. The witness should sign his name with his address in the presence of the Postmaster, and the latter will then certify the payment by adding his own initials. In no case should the Postmaster act as witness himself. It is not necessary that the witness should be personally acquainted with the payee.
140.-After once paying a Money Order, by whomsoever prosented, provided the required information has been given by the party who presented it, the Department will not hold itself liable to any further claim.
141.-The Commission to be charged on the issue of Money Orders payable in Hongkong and the Agencies in China will be one cent per dollar, or fraction of a dollar, with a minimum charge of five cents.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
527
142. An order remaining unpaid after one year from date of issue-(e.g., issued in January, but unpaid at the end of the following January)-becomes legally void and lapsed to Government and will not be paid unless satisfactory explanation as to the cause of delay in presenting it for payment can be furnished to the Postmaster-General, who alone can authorize such payment. Repayment of such orders as have already been paid into the treasury as void may be authorised by the Governor under such conditions as he may see fit.
POSTAL NOTES
143.-Local Postal Notes for the following amounts, payable within six months, are issued and paid at the General Post Office, Hongkong, and at the several British Postal Agencies, and in respect thereof the Commission payable shall be:-
Commission.
3 cents
Amount, 25 cents
Commission.
1 cent
Amount.
$3.00
50
1
4.00
+
*
$1.00
5.00
5
15
1
2.00
10,00
10
31
4
144.-In addition to the above commission on Postal Orders issued at the General Post Office, Hongkong, Hoihow, Canton, Swatow, Amoy and Foochow payable at Shanghai, Ningpo, Hankow, Liu Kung Tau, Chefoo and Tientsin a further charge at current rates is made to cover the difference between chopped and clean dollars.
145,-Broken amounts may be made up by the use of Hongkong postage stamps not exceeding 24 cents in value affixed to the face of any one Postal Order. Perforated or marked stamps cannot be accepted for this purpose.
146.-The office issuing any Postal Note shall fill in the name of the port where it is payable. The purchaser may, before parting with the order, fill in the name of the Payee,
147.--Every person to whom a Postal Order is issued should retain the counter- foil bearing the number, date and name of office of issue, to facilitate enquiry if the Order should be lost, and should register the letter in which it is forwarded.
148. If a Postal Order be crossed
& Co., payment will only be made through a Banker, and if the name of a Banker is added payment will only be made through that Banker.
149. After a Postal Order has once been paid, to whomsoever it is paid, the Government will not be liable for any further claim.
150-If any erasure or alteration be made, or if the Order is cut, defaced or mutilated, payment may be refused.
151.-Any officer in charge of a Post Office may delay or refuse the payment of a Postal Order, but he must at once report his reasons for so doing to the Postmaster-General.
152-After the expiration of six months from the last day of the month of issue a Postal Order will be payable only on payment of a commission equal to the amount of the original commission, but after twelve months it will become invalid and not payable.
153.-It shall be within the discretion of the Postmaster-General to suspend at any time the issue of Local Postal Orders.
528
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
+
Abyssinia
* Aden
Antigua
+
*
154.--LIST OF COUNTRIES WHICH ARE COMPRISED IN THE POSTAL UNION
Argentine Republic
Ascension
Austria-Hungary
• Azores
* Bahamas
Barbados
*
Bechuanaland Protectorate Belgium
* Bermuda
• Bolivia
* Bosnia
• Brazil
British East Africa Pro- tectorate (including Uganday
* British Guiana
* British Honduras
British New Guinea * British North Barneo
* British Somaliland
British Southern Nigeria
* Bulgaria
* Caicos Island Cameroons
• Canada (Dominion of) Cupe Colony (including Basutoland, British Be chunnaland, Pondoland, Griqualand East, Gri qualand West, Little Namaqualand,St. John's River Territory, Trans- kei, Tembuland, and Walfisch Bay)
* Cayman Islands
* Ceylon
* Chili
Colombia, Republic of Congo, including Black Point, Majumba and Nyuuza
▾ Corea * Costa Rica
Cyprus
Danish Colonies; viz. :-
Greenland, St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas * Denmark (including Faroe Islands and Iceland)
C
Dominica
++ Dominican Republic (San
Domingo)
* Ecuador
+
Egypt
* Erithre
• Falkland Islands Fiji Islands
* France
*French Colonies, viz. :-
and
Martinique, Guadeloupe dependencies, FrenchGuiana(Cayenne), Sénégal and dependen cies, Abgwey, Gaboon, Grand Bassam, Half Jack and Wydah (also Sette Cama and Assinie), Réu- nion, Comoro Islands, Mayotte and dependen- cies, Madagascar, New Caledonia and dependen- cies, the French portion of the Low Archipelago, and the French Esta- blishments in India, Pon- dichery, Chandernagor, Karikal, Mahé, and Yanaon) Annami, Cam- bodia, Tonkin, and in Co- chin China, French Esta. blishments in Morocco, viz. Casablanca, Ksar-el-Kbir, Fez, Lar- aiche, Mazugan, Mogador, Rabat, Saffi, and Tangier, and Society Islands. Gambia
Germany
EL-
German Colonies, viz.:-
Caroline Islands, Marian Islands (except Guam), Pelao Islands, Marshall Islands, New Guinea (por- tion of), Samoa (Apia), Toyo Territory, includ ing Bageida, Little Popo, Lome, and Porto Seguro, and territory in South West Africa, viz., Grand Namaqua, the Damaras Country, and Southern portion of Ovarubo; also Bagamoyo, and Dar-es- Salaam, Lindi and Tanga in East Africa. German Establishments in Mor- OCCO, viz., Casablanca, Laraiche, Marrakesch, Mazagan, Mogador, Ra. bat, Sath and Tangier, Gibraltar (including the
British Post Offees at Tangier, Tetuan, Fez, Laraiche, Rabat, Casa- blanca, Sath, Mazayan, and Mogador)
* Gold Coust
* Greece
* Honduras (Republic of) * Hongkong and ita Agencies
in China
* Indiu (including the In- dian Post Office Estab- lishments in the Per- sian Gulf)
* Italy
* Italian Somaliland
Jamaica
* Japan * Labuan
Lagos
• Liberia Luxemburg
* Madeira
+
Maltu
Marquesas Islands
* Mauritius and its depen-
dencies
* Mexico
+
Montenegro
* Montserrat
Nafal__ (including Zulu-
land) *Netherlands
• Netherlands
Colonies,
viz:-Dutch Guiana (Su- rinam), Curacos and dependencies, viz-Bo- naire, Aruba, the Ne- therlands portion of St. Martin, St. Eustache, Suba, Java, Madura, Sumatra, Celebes, Bor- neo (except North-west part), Billiton, Archi- pelago of Banca, Archi- pelago of Riouw, Sunda Islands (Bali, Lombok, Sunibawa, Floris, and the South-west part of Timor), the Archipelago of the Moluccas, and the North-west part of New Guinea (Papun)
* Nevis
* Newfoundland + New South Wales
New Zealand (including Cook or Hervey Islands and the islands of Pal- merston (Avarua), Sa- vage (Nine), Pukapuka (Danger), Kakaanga Suwarrow, Munahiki and Penrhyn (Tongar eva). Nicaragua Nigeria
Grenada and the Grenn-
dines
+
Norway
* Guatemala
* Hayti
* Herzegovina
Norfolk Island
Nyassaland Protectorate
* Orange River Oolong *Panaina Republic
* Paraguay
+
Patagonia
• Persin
* Pero
+
+
+
Portugal
Portuguese Colonies:- Goa and its dependen- cies (Damoa and Diu), Macao, Timor, Cape Verd Islands and de- pendencies Bissau and Cacheu), Cabenda, Mu- culla, Mussera and 19- lands of St. Thomas and Prince (in Africa), with the Establishment of Ajuda, Angola, Dela- goa Bay, and Mozam bique
Queensland
* Rhodesia (Southern)
• Roumania
* Russia
St. Helena
• St. Kitts
* St. Lucia
* St. Pierre-et-Miquelon * St. Vincent, West Indies * Salvador * Sarawak Servia
* Seychelles
• Siam
Sierra Leone + South Australia
* Spain (including Balea.
ric and Canary Islands *Spanish Colonies, viz. :- Fernando Po, Annobon and dependencies
* Struita Settlements
* Swerlen
* Switzerland * Tahiti †Tasmania * Tobago
Transvaal
* Trinidad
++
-
Tristan d'Acunta
Turkey
Turk's Islands
United Kingdom
• United States
* United States Colonies, viz.:-Cuba, Hawaiini (or Sandwich) Islands, Porto Rico, Philippine Islands and (Marian Islands).
* Broguay
Venezuela
† Pretoria
•
Firgin Islanda Wextera dustralia Zanzibar
คน
Includ-
*The transmission by Letter Post of coin, gold, silver, precious stones, jewellery, &c., is prohibited in those contries marked thus Uncut diamonds may, however, be sent by post to Canada and the United States. In some of the Australian Colonies gold and silver jewellery is not transmissable, or is subject to Customs duties. ing Mashoualand and Matabeleland. § Including Francistown Gaberoncs, Kanye, Lake Ngami, Lobasti, Macloutele Mächudi, Mahapapre Siling, Molopolole, Palachive (Khaniastown), Hamoulsa Shosong, and Tati Itiver.
NOTE. The names of British Colonies and Possessions are printed in italice
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
FOREIGN POSTAGE RATES
529
155.-The Rate of Postage to be prepaid in Hongkong and at the several British Postal Agencies in China on letters for all Foreign countries and other British posses- sions is shown in the attached table :--
TO
Not ex-|Each ad-
Return
ceeding ditional Single Reply Newsp's Rogia Receipt
1 oz. orloz. or 201 (20gram-| gram-
mes.
mes.
cents. centa.
Books,
Post! Post Prices Cards, Cards, current, each.❘ each. eto, per
2 02,
tration
for Regis. Fee. tered
Articles.
cente, centr.
8
cent". 2 *
centa.
centa.
10
10
-
*
UNION COUNTRIES (except as below).
United Kingdom
Aden, Ascension, Australia, Bahamas, Bar- bados, Basutoland, Bechuanaland, Ber- mudas, British Central Africa, British East Africa, British Guiana, British Honduras, British New Guinea, British North Borneo, British Somaliland, Caicos Is., Canada, Cape Colony, Cayman Is., Ceylon, Cyprus, Egypt (including the Sondan), Falkland Islands. Funning Island, Fiji Islands, Gambia. Gibraltar, GoldConst Colony, India (British), including Bahrain, Chandernagore, Guador, Karikal, Mahé, Muscat, Pondicherry, urd Yanam; Jamaica, Johore, Labuan, Lagos, Leeward Islands, viz, --Antigua, Dominica, Montserrat, Nevis, St. Kitts and Virgin Islands; Malay States (Federated) viz.
Negri Sembilan, Pahang, Perak, and Sel- angor: Malta, Mauritius, Natal, including Zululand; Newfoundland, New Zealand,| including Cook (or Hervey) Islands, Danger (Pukapuka), Manabiki, Palmerston (Ava- rua), Penrhyn (Tongareva), Rakanaga,| Savage (Niue) and Suwarrow; Nigeria (Northern), including Borgu, Idda, Lokoja, etc.; Nigeria (Southern), fncluding Akassa, Asaba "Benin, Bonny, Brass, Burutu, Calabar, Degama, Egwanga, Forcados, Idah, Onitsha, Opobo, Sapele, Warri, etc.; Nor- folk Islands, Orange River Colony, Rhodesia (Southern), St. Helena, Sarawak, Seychelles. Sierra Leone, Straits Settlements, Tobago, Transvaal, including Swaziland Trinidad, Tristan d'Acunha, Turks Island, Uganda, Windward Islands, viz.: Grenadines, Grenada, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and Zanzibar. Hongkong, Linkungiau and British Post
Offices at Shanghai, Amoy, Chefoo, Foo- chow, Hankow, Hoihow, Ningpo, Swatow and Tientsin
Canton (including Chinese Post Oilee at Fat
shan, Chun Chuen and Whampoa), fram
10
4+
6
++
Hongkong (and Canton to Hongkong). 2(1oz.)+2({oz.)† †1 Canton only, from Liukungtan and all other
British Post Offices in China,
Macao (from Hongkong and Canton)
Do. Liukungtai (from all other British
Post Offices in China)
NON-UNION COUNTRIES
Afghanistan (a).
Banks Islands..
Arabia (Hejaz and Yamen)
China (Chinese Post Offices), (4) from Houg-
kong and Liukangtuu only
1+
4+ (2(1 oz.)† (ox.)t
|4 (8 oz.);† (3 oz.)
4 (e) 10 (e)
10 (c)
6
(oz) +1(oz.)
Ellice Islands.
To (c)
6
Friendly (or Tonga) Islands
10
6
Gilbert Islands
10(e)
G
Morocco (except Arcila, Casablanca, Elksare).
A
10
10
100 00
Sarne na for Books, except that the lowest chargo is 10 cents for commercial papers, and 4 cents for samples.
|
2*
10
10
GINN
10
1818 1
1818 181
10
10
10 (")]
kbur, Fez, Laraiche, Marrakesch, Mazagon, Mequinez, Mogador, Rabat, Safti, Tangier
and Tetuan, at each of which places the 10 (e) British Post Office or French Post Office or German Post Office or Spanish Post Office maintains an Agency under the Postal Union Regulations)
New Hebrides, Sta. Cruz Is., Solomon 1s. Rhodesia (N. E. and N. W.)..
Local Delivery,
10 (c)
10 2
8
00000
A
ANN
I
10
10
#
10
10
Mi Curempondence should bear the sender's mume au thé muver to urald detentiän by the Anicek agent at Peshawar. Itongkong Posings Magy are valist for the payment on correspondence for Afghanistan as far as the Indian Frontier only; for the transit thence to utisetion alditional postage is payable to the Adeling authorities. (b) The foreign Fost Ofees in China are included in the Postal Union del Prepayment of postage is compulsory, (ix) Registration is incomplete, not extending beyond Port of Arrival. *Single Newspapers to the following British Possessions and foreign countries are accepted at the special rate of 2 cents per 4 oz. or fraction thereof, viz. Australie, Cedia, Netherlands India, Sia, Canada, Corca, Japan, New Zealand, Straits Settlements, China, Formas, biecan, Philip- ple, and Timer. For Chinese Postal Hong Packets the rate is 4 cents per à. oz. Pre-payment of postage on Postal Hong Packets is com
The unit of weight for letters from the British Post Offices at Shanghai, Amoy, Unston, Chefco, Conchow. Bankow, Hofhow, Nin, Awatow, and Tientsin is 20 grammes instead of 1 oz. The uult of weight from Linkangtan in the same as that from Hongkong
kamely, I oz.
530
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
UNPAID AND PARTIALLY PAID LETTERS
156.-Letters posted unpaid or insufficiently prepaid, for any country to which prepayment is compulsory, are returned to the writers.
LETTERS FOR RUSSIA
157. -The addresses of letters for Russia should be very plainly written; the name of the town and of the province in which it is situated should also be added in English.
EXCEPTIONAL CONDITIONS
158. The countries in which exceptional conditions apply, such as compulsory pre payment of postage, the collection of an additional charge on delivery, or the absence of arrangement for the complete or even partial registration of letters, will be found in the footnotes to the Table of Rates of Postage.
LETTERS, &C., IRREGULARLY MARKED WITH DECLARATION OF VALUE
159.-Letters, &c., bearing on the outside a declaration of the value of the contents cannot be transmitted by post to places abroad unless they are insured (see Rule 195).
POST CARDS
160.-Official post cards, single and reply, are transmissible to all parts of the world. Single cards are issued with impressed stamps of 4 cents and reply cards bearing stamps of the value of 4 cents in each half. Local post cards are also transmissible abroad if the additional postage required is supplied by means of postage stamps affixed to the cards.
161.-Private post cards bearing adhesive stamps of the value of 4 cents, and private reply cards with adhesive stamps of the value of 4 cents on each half, may be sent as post cards to places abroad, provided that they are in conformity with the official post cards in respect of size, substance and other requirements, and comply with the local rules (see Rules 77-79).
162.-Unpaid post cards from places abroad are charged 8 cents each and partially paid cards are charged double the deficient postage.
PRINTED PAPERS AND COMMERCIAL PAPERS
163.-The articles which are entitled to be sent at the rate applicable to printed papers are mostly impressions or copies obtained upon paper, parchment or cardboard, by means of printing, lithography, engraving, photographing, or any other mechanical process easy to recognize.
164. This description includes the undermentioned articles wholly printed:- Newspapers, books (stitched or bound), periodical works, pamphlets, sheets of music, visiting cards, address cards, proofs of printing, plans, maps, catalogues, prospectuses, announcements, circulars, notices, engravings, photographs and designs. Anything not being of glass, usually attached or appurtenant to any of the above-mentioned articles in the way of binding, mounting or otherwise, and anything convenient for their safe transmission by post, may also pass at the rate applicable to such articles provided it is contained in the same packet.
165.-Besides these articles there are some others which are admitted, though not really printed matter, as, for instance, manuscript intended for the Press (when sent with the proofs of the same), papers impressed for the use of the blind, albums con. taining photographs, and cardboard drawing models stamped in relief.
166. The undermentioned articles are excluded from transmission at the rate applicable to printed papers:-
Postage stamps, whether obliterated or not, and in general all printed articles. constituting the sign of a monetary value. Blank Paper, Note Paper, or envelopes (with or without printed address), and all other articles of stationary pure and simple.
167. The products of the copying press and typewriter are not admitted at the rate for printed papers, nor, as a rule, are printed papers, the text of which has been modified after printing, either by hand or by means of a mechanical process, so as to constitute a conventional language. But the following exceptions are allowed:-
(a) Printed circulars may be dated in manuscript or by a mechanical process and the signature of the sender, his trade or profession, and his address may be added.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
531
(b) On printed visiting cards the address or title of the sender, or conventional initials, such as "p.p.c.," may be written, and also good wishes, congratu- lations, thanks, condolences, or other formulas of courtesy, expressed in not more than five words.
(e) On printed circulars corrections and insertions may be made in manu- script or by a mechanical process in regard to names of commercial travellers, dates of their journey, and the places they intend to visit, dates of departure of ships, names of persons invited to meetings, and the place, date and object of the meetings.
(d) Printers' proofs may be corrected in manuscript; additions which relate to accuracy, form and printing may be made, and in case of want of space additional sheets may be used; the author's manuscript may be enclosed; printers' errors in other printed documents may also be corrected, and igures may be inserted or corrected in prices current, tenders for adver- tisements, trade circulars, prospectuses and stock and share lists. (e) Books, papers, music, photographs, engravings, and Christmas and New Year's cards may have a dedication inscribed on them, and the invoice relating to them may be enclosed.
(/) In forms of order or subscription for books printed on cards the works
required or offered may be indicated in manuscript.
(g) To cuttings from newspapers and periodical publications may be added in manuscript or by a mechanical process the title, date, number and address of the publication from which the article is extracted.
168. Circulars which are in other respects admissible but which are printed or lithographed in characters resembling those of the typewriter, or are produced by means of any mechanical process from type-written originals, will be admitted to the privilege of the Book rate, provided that they are posted by being handed in at the window of the Post Office and that special attention is called to their nature, and that at least twenty copies precisely identical are posted at the same time.
169.--" Commercial Papers" comprise all papers or documents written or drawn wholly or partly by hand (except letters or communications in the nature of letters, or other papers or documents having the character of an actual and personal correspon- dence), documents of legal procedure, deeds drawn up by public functionaries, copies of or extracts from deeds under private seal written or stamped or unstamped paper, way bills, bills of lading, invoices, and other documents of a mercantile character, documents of insurance and other public companies, all kinds of manuscript music, the manuscript of books and other literary works, and pupils' exercises with corrections but without any comment on the work, and other papers of a similar description.
RATE OF POSTAGE
170-The rate of postage to be prepaid in Hongkong and at the British Postal Agen- cies in China on printed papers and commercial papers for all places abroad is 2 cents for each 2 ounces except to those places named in the footnote to Rule 155.
N.B.-For commercial papers the lowest charge is 10 cents, for which sum, however, a weight of 10 oz. may be sent. If there be any mixture of commercial and other papers in the same packet the whole is treated as commercial papers.
LIMITS OF SIZE AND WEIGHT
171. The limits of size for packets addressed to the United Kingdom, British colonies or possessions or to non-Union countries or colonies are 2 feet in length by 1 foot in width or
depth; but to foreign countries in the Postal Union the length is limited to 18 inches. If in the form of a roll the limits of size in either case are 30 inches in length and 4 inches in diameter. The limits of weight are 5 lb. for the United Kingdom, Bri- tish colonies or possessions, and for non-union countries or colonies, and 4 lb. for foreigu countries in the Postal Union.
172.-Printed papers and commercial papers may be posted either without a cover, in which case they must not be fastened, whether by means of gum, wafer, sealing wax, postage stamp or otherwise), or in any ordinary letter envelope left wholly unfastened, or in any other cover, or upon rollers entirely open at both ends, or between boards so as to admit of the contents being easily withdrawn for examination. For the greater ecurity of the contents, however, the packets may be tied at the ends with string, but the string must be easy to unfasten.
532
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
EXCEPTIONAL TREATMENT OF PRINTED MATTER IN CERTAIN COUNTRIES
173. The following countries accord exceptional treatment to certain articles of printed matter :-
Country.
Australia
Austro-Hungary..
Canada
Belgium.
Italy
Portugal
India ......
Spain
Republic of Columbia
Uruguay
United States
Venezuela
Description of Article and Treatment. Advertising pamphlets and circulars.{
Liable to Cus- toms Duty.
Foreign newspapers received from Tax of 2 Kreuzer
other counties.
Advertising pamphlets and circulars.
Certain printed papers.
Books if sent to any one person
any considerable extent.
.Bound books.
All articles under this head with the exception of printed books and newspapers.
All articles under this head.
**
Jon the delivery..
Except those for the personal use of the addressees all articles under this head. .Except newspapers and periodicals, photographs and printed papers other than books intended for personal use and not for sale; or books, &c., more than 20 years old.
(Liable to Cus-
toins duty. (Subject to Cus-- toms duty.
++
**
17
All books except unbound books re- Prohibited.
lating to service, art, or drafts.
PATTERNS AND SAMPLES
174. The use of the Sample Post is restricted to (a) bona fide trade samples of merchandise without saleable value, and (b) natural history specimens, dried or preserved animals and plants, geological specimens, and scientific specimens generally when sent for no commercial purpose, keys sent singly, fresh flowers, tubes of serum and pathological specimens rendered innocuous by their mode of preparation and packing Packets containing goods for sale or consigned in execution of an order (however small the quantity), or articles sent by one private individual to another, which are not actually trade samples or scientific specimens cannot be forwarded by sample post.
RATE OF POSTAGE
175. The rate of postage to be prepaid in Hongkong and the British Postal Agencies. in China is 2 cents per 2 oz., except that the lowest charge is 4 cents, for which sum, however, a weight of 4 oz. may be sent. If not fully prepaid, double the deficiency will be charged on delivery. On insufficiently paid packets of samples from places abroad a charge will be levied not exceeding 8 cents up to 4 oz. and 4 cents per 2 oz. for heavier weights. In- sufficiently paid packets of samples from places abroad are charged double the deficiency.
LIMITS OF SIZE AND WEIGHT
176. The limit of weight for packets of patterns or samples for the United Kingdow British colonies or possessions except Australia or for non-union countries is 5 lb., but for foreign countries in the Postal Union the limit is 12 oz.
177. A packet of patterns or samples sent to the United Kingdom or any British colony or possession or non-union country must not exceed 2 feet in length by I foot in width or depth, but to any foreign place comprised in the Postal Union a packet must not exceed 12 inches in length, 8 in width, or 4 in depth, unless it be in the form of a- roll, in which case the limit of size is 12 inches in length and 6 inches in diameter.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
TRANSMISSION OF LIQUIDS, GLASS, &c.
533.
178.-Packets containing liquids, glass, greasy substances, colouring powders and live bees can be sent by sample post from Hongkong and the British Post Agencies in China to countries in the Postal Union.
MODE OF PACKING AND ADDRESSING
179.-Patterns or samples must be sent in such a manner as to be easy of examina- tion, and, when practicable, must be sent in covers open at the end. But samples of seeds, drugs and such like articles, which cannot be sent in covers of this kind, may be posted enclosed in boxes, or in bags of linen, or other material, fastened in such a manner that they may be readily opened. Packets containing liquids, glass, greasy substances, colouring powders and live bees, must conform to the conditions as to packing, &c., applicable to those articles when intended for local transmission (see paras. 68-71) but they must also be made up so that they can be easily opened for pur- poses of inspection, with the exception of packets containing live bees, which must be enclosed in boxes so constructed as to allow the contents to be ascertained without open- ing. In order to secure the return of packets which cannot be delivered, the names and addresses of the senders should be printed or written outside; thus, "From--of-
180.-There must be no writing or printing upon or in any sample packet for non- Union countries except the address of the person for whom it is intended, the address of the sender, a trade mark or number, the price of the articles, the weight or size, and the quantity to be disposed of, or such as may be necessary to indicate the place of origin or the nature of the merchandize. A sample packet for a country in the Postal Union may contain, besides these particulars, any Printed Papers and, if the rate applicable to Commercial Papers be paid, it may also contain Commercial Papers.
MUST NOT BE OF SALEABLE VALUE
181-Samples of saleable value must not be sent to the United Kingdom or any foreign country, or to any of the British Possessions which are comprised in the Postal Union, Packets of samples of either down, raw or thread silk, woollen or goats' hair thread, vanilla, or isinglass, are considered to fall under this rule if they weigh_more than three ounces, and packets of tea if they weigh more than eight ounces. When addressed to France sample packets of tea must not contain more than twenty grammes (a little less than three-quarters of an ounce) of that article.
DANGEROUS AND PROHIBITED ARTICLES
182.--Such articles as scissors, knives, razors, forks, steel pens, nails, keys, watch machinery, metal tubing, pieces of metal or ore, provided that they are bona fide samples and are packed and guarded in so secure a manner as to afford complete protection to the contents of the mail bag and to the officers of the Post Office, while at the same time they may be easily examined, may be sent by the Sample Post to places abroad. Explosives are absolutely prohibited.
No article liable to Customs duty can be sent as a pattern or sample.
PROHIBITED ÅRTICLES
183. The transmission by Letter Post of coin, gold, silver, precious stones, jewellery. dc., is prohibited in these countries of the Postal Union marked thus * in Rule 154. Such articles may, however, be sent by Parcel Post except in cases in which they are specially prohibited (see Rule 239).
The following restrictions and requirements apply to the undermentioned countries to the Postal Union, viz. :
-
(a.) In Luxemburg the registration of such packets is compulsory, and every-
thing of value, except coin or bullion, is liable to duty.
(b) In the undermentioned Colonies, viz. Falkland Islands, Gambia, Gibraltar, Hongkong, Labuan, Lagos, Malta, Montserrat, Newfoundland, St Vincent, Sierra Leone, and Straits Settlements, articles of value are transmissible, and, with the exception of jewellery addressed to Newfoundland and St. Vincent are exempt from Customs duty. Their
534
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
transmission is also permitted in Bermuda and Cyprus, but they are liable to Customs duty, with the exception of bullion, coin and diamonds, in Bermuda; gold, bullion and specie in Cyprus; gold, silver and diamonds in Grenada.
(c) In France engravings, prints, drawings and chromo-lithographs are liable to Customs Duty, and cannot be sent by post to that country in quanti- ties sufficiently large to have a saleable value, but small quantities can be sent as bona fide specimens.
(d) In the Dutch East Indies articles of value are admissible, except wrought
gold and silver, but the packets containing them must be registered. (e) Special prohibitions in Bulgaria, the Cape of Good Hope, Dutch East Indies, Italy, Norway, Queensland, Servia, Transvaal and United States of America anything relating to foreign lotteries, and in Roumania bound books. In Belgium Bronze, copper and nickel coin. Bermuda.-Jewellery, being dutiable.
(f) In Ceylon.-Current coin and jewellery.
(4) In Grenada. -Current coin and articles liable to Customs duty. (h) In Liberia.-Gold and silver articles.
(i) In New South Wales.-Opium and tobacco are prohibited.
In the Transvaal-Gold, silver, jewellery, &c., are liable to Customs duty. (k) In New Zealand. Cuttings of grape vines.
In Western Australia.-Coin.
In
(m) In the Cape of Good Hope, Natal, New Zealand and Queensland.-Jewellery and precious articles, if dutiable, are liable to detention until the duty is paid.
(a) In Victoria. Tobacco and cuttings of grape vines, also jewellery, which is
dutiable and liable to confiscation.
(0) In Spain the transmission by Letter Post of all dutiable articles is prohi
bited, and any such articles sent contrary to this prohibition are liable to a fine of from five to ten times the duty.
(p) Russia.-Printed matter in the Russian language is prohibited, and even such trifling articles as photographs and Christmas cards are liable to duty, though a single photograph may be sent to Russia by post. All letters or packets containing prohibited or dutiable articles of any kind, however small the value, are confiscated in that country. (a) Egypt.-Only a single copy (in one or more volumes) of any printed book is admitted into Egypt by letter post free of Customs duty. If more than one copy is sent to the same person, the packet will be subject to a Customs duty of 8 per cent. ad valorem.
(r) British Central Africa.-Packets containing seeds of plants must be accom- panied by a sworn declaration stating the countries of origin and varieties of the contents; such packets should be paid at the rate applicable to commercial papers.
(s) United Kingdom.-Post Cards bearing the imitation of postage stamps.
REGISTRATION
(Fee charged)
184.-The fee chargeable for registration to places abroad is 10 cents. There are a few countries where no arrangements for registration exist, as shown on the table in Rule 155. To some countries, as shown in that table, an article can be registered only to the port of arrival, it being left in those cases to the Postal Authorities of the country to which that port belongs to continue the registration or not as they may think proper.
ARTICLES WHICH MAY BE REGISTERED
book
185.-Registration is applicable equally to letters, post cards, newspapers, packets and patterns addressed to places abroad, except in the cases specially mentioned in Rules 101 and 183. (As to parcels, see Rule No. 224).
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF DELIVERY
186. The sender of a registered article addressed to the United Kingdom, any foreign country or British colony in the Postal Union (see table in Rule 155), may
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
535
obtain an acknowledgment of its delivery on paying a fee of 10 cents as well as the registration fee, in advance.
He can also obtain an acknowledgment if he applies after posting and pays 10 cents. The name and address of the sender must be left at the Post Office at which the article is registered. For enquiries as to the delivery of registered articles a fee of 10 cents must be paid, unless it can be shown that there is reason to suppose the article has been lost.
CONDITIONS OF REGISTRATION
187.--No article addressed to initials or to a fictitious name can be registered. The prohibition, however, does not extend to articles addressed to the care of a person or firm. 188.-Every letter presented for registration must be enclosed in a strong envelope, securely fastened.
189. It is prohibited to send to a country of the Postal Union any registered article marked on the outside with the declared value of the contents unless it is insured (see Rule 195). Postmasters are instructed to refuse to receive articles which are so marked. 190-Registered articles must be prepaid as regards both postage and registration fee. 191.-Articles to be registered must be given to an agent of the Post Office and a receipt obtained for them; they should on no account be dropped into a letter box or given to a Postman to be registered
192. As it is forbidden to send coin, jewellery, or precious articles through the post to those countries of the Postal Union the names of which are marked with an asterisk in Rule 154, no letters or packets addressed to those countries and containing such articles can be accepted for registration.
193.-Letters or packets containing coin for any of the British colonies not in the Postal Union can be registered; and if they are posted without being registered they are treated in the same manner as local letters under similar circumstances.
INDEMNITY FOR Loss
194-Expect in cases beyond control (e.g. fire, tempest, shipwreck, earthquake, war, &c.) the Hongkong Postal Administration and the Postal Administration of all countries and colonies included in the Postal Union undertake to pay an indemnity of 50 francs when it is proved to their satisfaction that a letter or packet duly admitted to Registration has been entirely lost while in their custody. Countries, colonies, dependencies, and Postal Agencies not included in the Postal Union are under no obligation to pay such Compensation or indemnity, nor do Administrations comprised in the Union undertake to pay compensation in any case other than of the loss of the entire letter or packet.
INSURANCE OF LETTERS
195.-Letters containing paper money, or documents, etc., on which a value has been declared, may be sent from Hongkong to any of the following places, insured to the amount of the declared value:-
Algeria.
Annam.
Argentine Republic.
Austria-Hungary.
Azores.
Belgium.
Bosnia.
British Guiana.
British Somaliland.
British Postal Agencies in
China. Bulgaria.
Cameroons (Duala and Vic-
toria only).
Canary Islands.
Ceylon. * Chili.
Cochin China.
Crete (Caedia, Canea, and
Retimo).
Dahomey (Agoué, Carnot- ville, Cotonou, Dogba, Great Popo, Porto Novo, Sagou, Savalou, Whydah, and Zagnanado only). Danish West Indies (St. Thomas, St. John and St. Croix).
Cape Verde Islands (San-
tiagoand St. Vincent only) $
Denmark (including the Faroe Islands, Greenland and Iceland). Egypt.
Falkland Islands France.
French Congo (Libreville.
and Loango only).
French Guiana. French Guinea. Gaboon. Gambia.
Germany.
German East Africa. German New Guinea. Guadeloupe. Herzegovina,
Holland,
India.
Antologasta, Arica, Caldera, Chillon, Concepcion, Copiapó, Coquimbo, Curicó, Iquique, Linares, Pisagua, Punat. Arenas, Rancagua, Santiago, San Fernando, Serena, Tacna, Talar, Talcahuana, Taltal, Valdivia and Valparaiso only. 1 The amount to be insured is limited to 50/. $ Letters for places in the Soudan can be insured as far as Wady Halfa, Or Soakim only. Bagamoyo, Dar-es-salam, Kilwa, Lindi, Mitcindani, Mohorro, Pangani, Sanadai, and Tanga.
536
Italian East Africa (Assab
and Massowah only).
Italy.
Ivory Coast.
Jamaica.
New Caledonia,
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
Spain (including the Ba-
fearic Islands). Straits Settlements Sweden. Switzerland.
Tangier only).
Newfoundland,
Norway.
Nossi Bé.
Portugal.
Tonquin.
Japan.
Jibouti.
Lagos.
Leeward Islands (Antigua,
Dominica,
Montserrat, | Nevis, St. Kitts, and the Virgin Islands). Luxemburg
Madagascar (Antananarivo, |
Diego Suarez, Majunga, Ste. Marie de Madagas- car, Tamatave only).
Madeira.
Malta.
Martinique.
Mayotte,
Morocco(Casablanca, Maza-i
gan, Mogador, Safti, and
Tripoli (Italian Post Office)
Portuguese East Africa. Trinidad.
Chinde, Inhambane, Lo- renzo Marques, Mozamb' Tunis.
ique and Quilimane only. Portuguese West Africa
(Benguela, Loanda, Mos- j samedes Bolama and St. Thomé only).
Réunion.
|
Roumania.
Russia.
St. Helena.
Sénégal (Daker, Goree, Ru- fisque, St. Louis, Thyes, and Tivaouane only).
|
Servia.
Turkey (Beyrout, Caifa or Haifa Cavalla, Chios (Scio), Constantinople, Dardanelles Dedeagatch (Dedeagh), Durazzo Jaffa, Jerusalem, Kerassonde (Keresun) Mytilene, Pre- vesa, Rhodes, Salonica, Samsoun, San Giovanni di Medua, Santi Qua- ranta, Scutar d'Albanie, Smyrna, Trebizond Valo- na, Vathy only. United Kingdom.
As all the routes available for ordinary letters are not available for insured letters the letter may be longer in transit than the former.
(a) The maximum amount for which a letter packet may be insured is $1,200.
The rates of insurance are:
Francs
£
S
$ cts.
Francs
£
$
300
or
12 Or
120 fee 25
1,800 or 72 Or
720 fee $1,50
600
24
240
50
}}
}}
2,100
84
840
1.75
**
900
36
360
75
11
כל
2,400
96
55
1,200
48
480
1,00
}:
1,500
60
600
++
55
++
1.25
2,700 108 3,000 120
>>
}}
960 1,080
2.00
12
2.25
**
"J
11
1,200
2.50
}}
(e) The fee for insurance is in addition to postage and fee for registration. (d) Insurance to an amount greater than the real value of the contents of a
letter is prohibited.
(e) The infringement of the above rule with intent to defraud deprives the
sender of any right to compensation.
(f) It is forbidden to enclose in insured letters:-(1) Coin; (2) Articles subject to Customs duty, except paper money; (3) Articles of gold or silver, precious stones, jewellery, and other articles of a similar nature, (g) The sender of a letter containing insured articles receives gratis at the time
of posting a summary receipt for his letter.
(h) The sender of a letter containing insured articles can have sent to him an acknowledgment of the delivery of the packet to the addressee, or can,
subsequent to posting of a packet, ask for information as to its disposal, under the same conditions as for registered articles.
(An application for an indemnity for loss of an insured letter is only enter-
tained if made within a year of the posting of the insured letter. (/) Letters containing insured articles can only be accepted if enclosed in a strong envelope fastened by means of seals in fine wax, with spaces be- tween, reproducing a private mark, and affixed in sufficient number to hold down all the folls of the envelope. The employment of envelopes with coloured borders is forbidden. Five seals must at least be placed on a private envelope and thereon one purchased from the Post Office. (4) The condition of every letter must be such that its contents cannot be got
at without external and visible damage to the envelope or the seals. (7) Space must be left between the postage stamps used for the prepayment, so that they cannot serve to hide injuries to the envelope. They must not be folded over the two sides of the envelope so as to cover the edge. (m) Letters containing insured articles addressed to initials or directed in
pencil are not accepted.
etc.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
537
(n) The amount of the value insured must be expressed in francs and centimes, and must be written by the sender on the cover of the packet in words and in figures, without erasure or correction, even if certified. (0) The sender's name and address must be endorsed on the left-hand lower
corner on the face of the cover.
() Except in cases beyond control, ¿e, fire, tempest, earthquake, war, shipwreck, etc., where an insured letter has been lost or damaged or its contents abstracted, the sender or at his request the addressee, is entitled to an indemnity corresponding with the actual amount of the loss, abstraction, or damage, unless the damage has been caused by the fault or negligence of the sender, or arises from the nature of the article, and provided that this indemnity may not exceed in any case the sum for which the letter has been insured.
(7) In case of loss the sender is also entitled to a return of the expenses of
transmission.
FOREIGN PARCEL POST.-GENERAL REGULATIONS
(Postage, Dimensions and Weight)
196. For Postage, maximum dimensions and weight, see Table of Rates of Postage,
PREPAYMENT, ADDRESS, METHOD OF POSTING, CERTIFICATE OF POSTING
197 The rules as to the method of address, as to the method of posting, and as to certificates of posting, are similar to the rules for local parcels given in Rule 80 respec- tively.
CUSTOMS DECLARATION AND DESPATCH NOTE
198. Parcels are subject to Customs regulations, and the sender of each parcel is required to make for Customs purposes-upon a special form or forms, which can be obtained at any Post Office-an accurate statement of the nature and value of the contents and other particulars. Undervaluing the contents or failure to describe them fully may result in seizure of the parcels. The net weight or quantity of the various articles contained in a parcel should, if possible, be stated, and any other particulars which would. facilitate the assessment of Customs duty; such as, in the case of clothing, the material of which it is composed, and whether it is new or has been worn. In the case of articles returned to the country where they originated the fact should be stated. The forms for Foreign parcels should, when possible, be filled up in both English and French.
CUSTOMS DUTY AND Charges on DeliveRY
199.-All parcels are liable to be open for Customs examination, and their con- tents are subject to Customs duty according to the laws of the country or colony of destination. Such duty cannot be prepaid, but is collected from the addressee on delivery, except in the case of parcels sent under the arrangements explained in Rule 202. In most Foreign countries and British colonies the articles which are not subject to Customs duty on importation are comparatively few. The Post Office can give no information as to the Customs tariff or procedure of particular countries nor does it accept any responsibility for loss, delay, or charges arising from the Customs or sanitary regulations to which the contents of parcels are subject.
200. In addition to Customs duty, a charge of 6d. per parcel for stamp duty clearance, &c. is levied on all dutiable parcels entering Cape Colony and Natal. This charge is increased to 1s. 6d. in the case of parcels for Rhodesia and Orange River Colony. In most European countries and some others a fee not exceeding 24. per parcel is leviable for delivery and Customs formalities. In Honduras and Salvador the fee is 1 centavo for each 4 oz., with a minimum of 5 centavos. As to the charge on parcels for the Congo Free State-ci e footnote in Table of Postage.
201. The following rules apply to the exchange of Parcel Post with the United States when Parcels are posted to be sent vid London.
(a.) The charges payable on parcels for the United States are partly postal and
partly non-postal.
(.) The non-postal charges which must be paid in advance are as follows:-(1.) 60 cents on every parcel, due to the American Express Co. for Customs clearance and formalities, and (2.) 60 cents in respect of the charges levied by the United States Government under the title of "Sample Office Fee" or "Storage Fee" on every parcel entering the Country.
538
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
MODE OF PREPAYMENT
(c.) The postal charges must be prepaid by means of stamps affixed to the cover of the parcel. It is open to the sender:-(1.) To prepay in the same way the non-postal charges other than Customs duties. (2.) While prepaying the charges specified under heading I., to assume responsibility for the Customs charges, so that the parcel may be delivered free of cost to the recipient. In this case it will be necessary to proceed in the manner described in Rule 202. This arrangement ensures a speedier conveyance, since ordinary parcels will remain at the New York Custom House until the addressees have remitted thither the amount of duty and other charges upon them. The charges not prepaid by the sender will be collected from the addressee.
PARCELS FORWARDED IN BOND
(7.) The sender may, without extra charge, direct that a parcel be sent through the New York Custom House in boud, for Customs Examination at any of the "United States Ports of Entry," or Inland Custom Houses, of which a list is appended. This arrangement also does away with the delay at New York referred to in the preceding paragraph, but, on the other hand, the addressees will have to make arrangements for the delivery of parcels so treated after they have been cleared at the Custom House of the Inland Port of Entry. The sender of a parcel intended to be forwarded in boud must mark it plainly "In boad naming the Inland Port of Entry chosen, and the same words must also appear in the same handwriting on the Customs declaration which accompanies the parcel.
to...
+
CUSTOMS DECLARATIONS
(e) The non-adhesive form of Customs declaration must be used. Two copies are required. If the parcel is to be sent in bond to an Inland Port of Entry, it must be endorsed as directed in para. d. Moreover, if the value of the goods contained in the parcel exceeds $100 (Gold) or £20 10s. the declaration must be made before a United States Consul on forms supplied by him.
(.) The following are the United States Ports of Entry
Albany, N. Y.
Astoria, Ore. Atlanta, Ga. Baltimore, Md. Bangor, Me. Bath, Me.
Boston, Mass. Bridgeport, N. Y. Buffalo, N. Y. Burlington, Vt. Calais, Me.
Charleston, S. C. Chicago, Ill.
Cincinnati, O. Cleveland, 0, Columbus, O. Council Bluffs, Ia. Denver, Col. Des Moines, Ia, Detroit, Mich. Dubuque, la. Duluth, Minn. Dunkirk, N. Y, Durham, N. O. Durango, Col.
Eastport, Me.
Eagle Pass, Texas.
El Paso, Texas Enfield, Conn. Erie, Pa. Evansville, Int. Everett, Wash. Fall River, Mass. Galveston, Texas. Gladstone, Mich. Grand Haven, Mich. Grand Rapids, Mich. Green Bay, Wis. Hartford, Conn. Indianapolis, Ind. Jacksonville, Fla. Kansas City, Mo. Key West, Fla. Knoxville, Tenn. Leadville, Cal. Lincoln, Neb. Los Angeles, Cal. Louisville, Ky. Laredo Texas. Marquette, Mich. Memphis, Tenn. Middletown, Conn. Milwaukee, Wis.
Minneapolis, Minn.
Mobile, Ala. Nashville, Tenn. New Bedford, Mass. Nogales, Ariz. Newport, R. I. Newark, N. J. New Haven, Coun. New Orleans, Ia. New York, N. Y. Newport News, V. Newfolk, Va. Oakland, Cal. Ocala, Fin. Ogdensburg, N. Y. Omaha, Neb. T'hiladephia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. Portland, Me. Portland, Ore. Port Huron, Mich. Portsmouth, N. H. Port Townsend, Wash. Providence, R. I. Pueblo, Col.
Richmond, Va.
Rochester, N. Y.
Saginaw, Mich.
Sandusky, U.
San Antonio, Texas. San Diego, Cal. San Francisco, Cal. Sault Ste Marie, Mich. Savannah, Ga.
Syracuse, N. Y. Seattle, Wash. Sioux City, In.
Soull Manchester, Conn. Springfield, Mass. St. Augustine, Fla. St. Joseph, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. St. Paul, Minn. Tacoma, Wash. Tampa, Fla. Titusville, Pa. Toledo, O. Vanceboro', Me. Vernon, Conn. Washington, D. Č.
Wilmington, Del.
Wilmington, N. C.
Worcester, Mass.
When Parcels are posted to be sent via San Francisco or to the Philippines: (a.) The contents of all such Parcels must be specially declared, and must not
be of greater value than $50 (Gold).
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
(b) The weight limit must not exceed 11 tbs.
(c) Parcels must not be sealed.
539-
(d) Parcels cannot be registered or insured and no compensation is payable
should any such be lost or damaged when forwarded by this route.
202.-Arrangements have been made whereby persons sending parcels to the under; mentioned countries and places can take upon themselves the payment of the Customs and other charges ordinarily payable by the addressees :-
THE UNITED KINGDOM
Customs charges are at the rate of 25 cents per lb. for Tea and $2.50 per lb. for Cigars (gross weight of parcel). On receipt of account from the London Office any balance of deposit made by the sender will be refunded.
Antigua. Barbados.
BRITISH POSSESSIONS
Dominica. Falkland Islands.
Lagos.
Natal.
St. Kitts.
Malta.
Nevis.
St. Lucia.
Tobag Tortolal
Cape Colony Q5prus.
Gambia
Mauritius.
Seychelles,
St. Vincent (West Indies).
Grenada.
Montserrat.
-Sierra Leone.
FOREIGN COUNTRIES
Algerla.
Denmark.
Germany.
Luxemburg.
Belgium.
Comoro Islands,
Austria-Hungary. France.
French Guiana.
Guadeloupe.
Madagascar.
French Congo.
Holland).
Martinique.
Norway. Obock. Réunion.
Ivory Coast.
Montenegro.
Dahomey.
French Guinea.
Italy.
New Caledonia.
Sénégal. Sweden.
Switzerland. Tahiti. United States.
The sender must pay a fee of 25 cents, must sign an undertaking to pay on demand the amount due, and must make a deposit on account of the charges at the rate of 25 per cent. of the value of the parcel. A final settlement will take place as soon as the amount of the charges due has been ascertained from the country of destination Parcels intended to be sent under these arrangements must be handed in at the Genera Post Office.
FORBIDDEN ARTICLES, ENCLOSURES, &C.
203.--No article may be sent by the Local or Foreign Parcel Post, with any enclosure which bears an address different from that placed on the cover of the parcel."
201.-No letter, even if addressed in the same way as the parcel in which it is enclosed, may be sent in a parcel addressed to any Foreign Country or to Australia, British Central Africa, Cape Colony, Natal and other parts of South Africa, Fiji, Jamaica, Mauritius, New Zealand, Seychelles, Straits Settlements, Trinidad, the United States. Parcels for other British possessions may contain a letter for the addressee, but packets of letters must not be sent by Parcel Post to any place abroad. An invoice in an open envelope, giving simply particulars of the goods contained in the parcel, may be enclosed in any parcel.
205. Further, no parcel is admissible which contains base or counterfeit coin, articles infringing trademark or copyright laws, any article or substance liable to become offensive or injurious through natural decay during the time ordinarily occupied in transmission (for example, butter, &c., addressed to a tropical or sub-tropical country, or having to pass through the tropics in course of transmission, unless enclosed in a hermetically sealed tin), or any article or substance specially prohibited from im- portation into the country or colony to which the parcel is addressed. For a list of such special prohibitions, see Table of Postage, &e. The Post Office can accept no responsibility for the correctness and completeness of this list, although efforts are made to secure accuracy.
206.-It is pointed out that many perishable articles, even though in good condition at the time of posting, may become offensive and worthless owing to the length of the journey, although delivered in proper course of post.
207.- Parcels for Ascension, St. Helena, South and Central Africa, and uninsured parcels for Egypt and Zanzibar, may not exceed £50 in value, and parcels for Straits Settlements exceeding the value of $50 must be insured.
208.- Parcels containing coin, any article of gold or silver, or any article of value, cannot be sent by Parcel Post to the United Kingdom, any Foreign country or British possession included in the insurance system (for list of such places see Rule 222), unless they are insured for at least part of their value, and are packed and sealed in accordance with the special regulations given in Rules 227-230.
PACKING AND SEALING
209.-The rules as regards articles which require to be packed with special care cellules 85 and 86) must be observed in the case of Foreign and Colonial parcels. More
640
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
careful and substantial packing is necessary for such parcels than for local parcels, owing to the much greater distance over which, as a rule, the former have to be conveyed, the very different conditions of transit, and the influences of climate. This is a consideration which must necessarily be taken into account in dealing with claims for compensation. Parcels for Greece, Persia, Roumania and Russia must be packed in some material stronger than paper or cardboard.
210. For parcels containing liquids and substances which easily liquefy the following method should be adopted-Two receptacles should be used, and between the inner one, which contains the liquid, and the outer one, which should be of wood or metal, space should be left all round, and this space should be filled with bran sawdust, or other absorbent material.
211. Further, a parcel for a Foreign Country must be so sealed by the sender that it cannot be opened without breaking the seals or leaving an obvious trace of violation. The seals must bear the impression of a private mark of the sender.
212.As to the packing and sealing of insured parcels, see Rule 227.
DELIVERY OF PARCELS
213.-In Hongkong parcels are not, like letters, delivered at the residences of the .addressees. Notice of the arrival of a parcel is sent to the addressee, who must then
claim the parcel at the Post Office where it is lying.
214.--In Belgium, France and Spain parcels are delivered by the Railway Com- panies and not by the Post Office, and parcels intended to be called for should be addressed, not to a Poste Restante in those countries, but to a Railway Station (en gare),
215. In the United States parcels are not in all cases delivered at the houses of the recipients. They will, however, be delivered at all places within the delivery of any Express Company of the United States, and when they are not delivered, a notice of their arrival will be sent to the addressees, who must then arrange to obtain them at the point where they are lying.
RE-DIRECTION AND RETURN OF PARCELS
216.--Parcels arriving in this Colony and re-directed from one address to anothe in the Colony are treated and charged under the regulations which govern the treatment and charge of re-directed parcels by the Local Parcel Post. (See Rule 105.)
217. A parcel which is returned or re-directed from one country to another is charged the full postage.
COMPENSATION FOR LOSS OR DAMAGE
218.-The Postmaster-General will (not in consequence of any legal liability, but voluntarily, as an act of grace) give compensation for the loss or damage of uninsured parcels sent by Parcels Post between Hongkong and the United Kingdom and the undermentioned British Possessions and Foreign Countries, when such loss or damage takes place while the parcels are in his custody, and does not arise from any fault or neglect of the senders or the nature of the contents:-
Ascension Bahamas Barbarlos
British Guiana
British Honduras
Ceylon
Cyprus
Argentine Republie
BRITISH POSSESSIONS
Palkland Islands Gambia
Gibraltar
Gold Coast Colony Grenada India
Labuan
FOREIGN
Congo Free State
Costa Rica
Danish West Indies
Denmark
Dutch Possessions Egypt
Austria-Hungary
Azores
Delgium
Beyrout
Bosnia
Bulgaria
Cameroons
Chili
French Possessions Germany
Colombia, Republic of
German Possessions
Constantinople
Grecce
France
Lagos
Leeward Islands Mauritius Newfoundland
North Borneo St. Helena St. Lucia
COUNTRIES
Herzegovina Holland
Italy
Japall
Liberia
Luxemburg
Madeira
Norway
St. Vincent Seychelles Sierra Leone South Australi Tobago
Trinidad
Samon (via Germany Servia
Smyrna
Spain Sweden Switzerland Tangier Tripoli
Tunis
Turkey
Portugal
Roumania Salvador
Cenguay
219. The compensation paid will in no case exceed £1. In the case of parcels becoming wet or damaged while under the control of the Post Offices of the above mentioned British Possessions and Foreign Countries the Postmaster General will endeavour to obtain compensation for the senders under similar regulations. But in the Parcel Post with
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
541
France and some other countries the compensation payable in the case of parcels not weighing more than 7 b. is limited to 15 francs.
220.-No compensation is payable for the loss or damage of an uninsured parcel sent to or from any British possession or Foreign country other than those mentioned above. 221. The compensation payable will be in accordance with the Rules contained in Rule 95, and with the General Regulations of the local Parcel Post, so far as these are applicable
INSURANCE OF PARCELS
922.-Insurance of Parcels may be effected between Hongkong, the United Kingdom and the undermentioned British Possessions and Foreign Countries:-
Aden (via Calentia) Ascension (via London)
do. do.
Babemas Barbados Bermuda dlo. British East Africa :-
Kilindini, Mombass Lan only (via London) British COİNDE (via
London)
British Soun Jiland Burmah (ria Calcutta)
Algeria and Corsica Austria Hungary Azores and Madeira Belgium Beyrouth
UNITED KINGDOM AND BRITISH POSSESSIONS
Ceylon (Direct)
Cyprus (via London) Falkland Island (as far as Stauley only) (rin London) Gambin (via London) Gibraltar
Gold Coast Colony(Axim, Sekondi, Turkwa, Ac- cra, Ada, Cape Coast Castle, Kwitte, Salt- pond and Winnebu) (via London)
India (via Calcutta) Jamaica
Lagos (via London) Leeward Islands do. Malta
Mauritius Newfoundland (via L'don) New Zealand (via London) Nigeria (Southern) (via
London) Nyasaland Protectorale Natonica Seychelles
FOREIGN COUNTRIES
Coren (via Japan). Crcle
Danish West Indies Denmark
Germany Holland
* Italy (via France) * Do. (via Belgium)
St. Helena (via Loudon) Sierra Leone clo.
Straits Settlements (Direct)
Tobago (via London) Trinidad do.
United Kingdom (via
Gibraltar)
Windward Islands :-
Grenada, and St. Vincent (via London) St Lucia clo. Zauzibar (via Calcutta)
Norway Portugal Roumania
Russia (including Finland)
Servia
EFFE
Bosnia Herzegovina Cameroons & Togo
Chili
China
Dutch Guiana Dutch West Indies Beundor
China Japanese Post
Offices) Constantinople
Egypt Erithea Formosa
France
Japan Karnfuto Kinochau Liberia Luxemburg Mauchurin(Japanese
Pust Odices)
Montenegro
Sunnyria
Sweden
Switzerland (via France)
(via Belgium)
Tunis
Turkey(Austrian Post Offices)
United States
INSURANCE OF PARCELS BY GERMAN PACKETS
223. -Parcels for the undermentioned places can be insured :-
COUNTRIES (VIA GERMANY)
-
Austria-Hungary
Belgium
and Iceland! France
Denmark, Faroe Islands
Germany
Holland Luxemburg Norway
Portugal Sweden Switzerland
REGULATIONS
224-The fee (which is for insurance and registration) must be prepaid by means of postage stamps, which the sender must hand in at the same time with the parcel to be affixed to the certificate of posting; they must not be placed on the cover or label of the parcel. A certificate of posting must always be obtained by the sender of an insured parcel.
225. No parcel can be insured for more than the sum set in the list given on page 480 against the name of the country or colony to which it is addressed, or for a sum above the real value of the contents. A parcel of which the contents have no saleable value may, however, be insured for a nominal sum in order to obtain the safeguards of the registration system. Over-insurance is a bar to compensation.
No compensation is given for the damage in Italy of fragile or perishable parcels or parcels containing liquid ‡ Adrianople, Caifa (Haifo), Candia, Canca, Cavalla, Dardanelles, Dedeagh, Durazzo, Gallipoli, Ineboli, Jaffa, Janina Jarnok, Keresun, Lagos, Mytilene, Prevesa, Retino, Rhodes, Salonica, Samson, San Oiovanni di Medua, Sant Qala, Seio, Trelizond, Valona. Vathi. No compensation is given for the loss in Cyprus of parcels containing watches or jowellogy || Insurance confined to parcels for Malacen, Penang, Province Wellesley, and Singapore. Each Parcel must be scaled in such a way as to render it impossible that it should be opened without detection. The senders must supply declaration of the nature, value, and net weight of the contents and of the grossweight o the Banel
542
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
226. The sum for which a parcel is to be insured must be entered on the cover thus-"Insured for £ -8. -d." It must also be inscribed in the place pro vided on the despatch note if one is used. The number of pounds should be entered in words. No alteration or erasure of the entry is permitted.
227. Every insured parcel must be packed carefully and substantially, with due regard to the nature of the contents and the length of the journey, and must be sealed with wax or lead in such a way that it cannot be opened without either breaking the seal or leaving obvious traces of violation. For instance, seals must be placed over each joint or loose flap of the covering of a parcel, and if string be used in packing a seal must be placed on the ends of the string where they are tied.
228.-All the seals on a parcel must be of the same kind of wax or lead and must hear distinct impressions of some device, and this device must be the same on each seal and must not consist merely of straight, curved, or crossed lines. Coins or buttons must not be used for sealing, and it is strongly recommended that, when possible, an impression of the seal used on the parcel should be made on the counterfoil of the despatch note.
229.-Parcels containing coin, any article of gold or silver, or any article of value, must be enclosed in strong boxes or cases, which must be sewn up, or otherwise fastened, in wrappers of linen, canvas, strong paper, or other substantial material. In such cases the seals must be placed along the edges of each joint or loose flap at distances not more than three inches apart. The address of such parcels must be written on their actual covering.
230. If a parcel tendered for insurance does not, in the opinion of the officer to whom it is tendered, fulfil the foregoing conditions as to packing and sealing, it is his duty to refuse to insure it; but the onus of properly packing and fastening the parcel lies upon the sender, and the Post Office assumes no liability for loss or damage arising from defects of packing or fastening which may not be observed at the time of posting.
231. Unless parcels containing coin, any article of gold or silver or any article of value, are insured for at least part of their value, they cannot be sent by Parcel Post to the places mentioned in Rule 222. Any such parcel posted uninsured will generally be returned to the sender. A compulsory registration fee of 20 cents will be collected in the delivery of every uninsured parcel received from the places above mentioned and found to contain coin, any article of gold or silver, or any article of value.
232.-When an insured parcel is re-directed from one country to another a fresh insurance fee becomes payable for each transmission. If this fee is not prepaid it is collected from the addressee on delivery. Insured parcels can only be re-directed to countries which have adopted the insurance system.
233. Compensation for a parcel lost or damaged in the Post will not exceed the amount of the actual loss or damage, and no compensation at all will be paid for a parcel containing any prohibited article, or for a parcel which has been delivered with- out external trace of injury and has been accepted without remarks by the addressee; nor does it follow as a matter of course that compensation will be given when loss or damage arises from tempest, shipwreck, earthquake, war, or other causes beyond control, No claim for compensation will be admitted if made more than a year after the parcel was posted. The sender has the first claim to any compensation which may be payable, but he may waive his claim in favour of the addressee.
234.- No legal liability to give compensation in respect of any parcel for which an insurance fee has been paid attaches to the Postmaster-General, either personally or in his official capacity. The final decision upon all questions of compensation rests with the Postal Administration of the country in which the loss or damage has taken place.
235.-The insurance system also applies to parcels from the places mentioned in Rule 225, but parcels to or from other places abroad cannot be insured.
236. Any insurance effected contrary to the foregoing Regulations is invalid.
GENERAL
237-Where not ropuguant to the foregoing Rules, the General Regulations of the Local Parcel Post apply to Foreign Parcels.
238.-Parcels must be posted before 5 p.m. on the working day next before the departure of the packet.
239. - Purcel Post.-Rates of Postage, Conditions, &c., see Annexed Tables.
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
ROUTH
DESTINATION.
OF TRANSMISSION.
LIMIT OF Sızk.
OBSERVATIONE,
PROHIBITED CONTENTS
1
Ib. 2 Ibs. 3 lbs. 4 lbs. 5 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 lbs. 8 Jbs. Is. 10 lbs. 11 lbs.
Aden (including
Persia)
Via
Direct
$ c. c.
00
1.20
I
Argentine Republie.......... London.
Ascension
Australasian Colon-
ies:-
New Zealand (in- cluding Cook and Harvey Islands)
Do.
New South Wales)
including Lord
Howe and Nor-
Torres Straits.
---
1.80
3.60
1.80
2.00
3 ft. 6 in. long or
6 ft. in greatest
2.00
3.00
bined.
1.00
2.00
8.00
4 ft. in length:
and girth com. bined
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
3 ft. 6 in. long or 6 ft. in greatest! length
and
girth com-j bined.
and not smaller than 8 in, by 2 in. by 2 in.
2 ft in length or 4 ft. in length and girth com- bined.
length and! girth
Com.
4 ft., but not
more than 6 feet in length) and girth com- bined.
Parcels for the
Argenline Re public are sub- ject to nou- postal charge of 1 peso delivery
on
(No parce! may
Opium,
Letters, vine plants, gold, sil
ver, jewellery of exceptional value.
exceed $600 in Specie, ostrich feathers. value,
The maximum
length of a parcel to New Zealand must not exceed 8}] feet.
Letters, etc.
/Letters.
New South Wales-
Tobacco
(except samples addressed to a manufacturer or dealer), opium, cigars, cigarettes and snuffs not less than 101bg. New Zealand. - Tobacco. Queensland,
Tobacco (unless for the personal use of the addressee), grapes, vine cut- tings, coffee plants or seeds, spirits (except perfumed or medicinal). Tusmania.-Tobacco (except in quantities not excecding5 lbs. for the personal use of the addressee or as bout fide samples)
Fictoria. Coin, opium, spirits (except perfumed or medicin- al or bona fide Jamples), vines or vine cuttings.
Western Australia. - Coin, gold or silver bullion, apples,pears, quinces.
Letters.
Do.
++
1.00
1801
3.00
folk Islands).
New Zealand,
sydney.
Queensland,
Torres Straits,
€0,50 1,000 1.30
** 00
2.50
3.00 | 3,00
4.00
4.60 4,00
5.50 Same as Ascension)
Tasmania,..
Sydney.
Victoria,
Torres Straits,
Brisbane.
Western Australia,
Torres Straits, Sydney.
Port Darwin, South Australia,..
Direct. Torres Straits
3.00 0.00 0.90 5.00 1.00 1,50
1.20 1,30 2.00 2.50
1.80 2.10 2.40 5,00 3.50 4.00 4.50 6.00 6.60
2.70 3.00 3,30
Do.
Do.
543
RATES OF POSTAGE-PARCEL POST.-Continued
514
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
ROUTI
LIMIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATIONS.
PROLIAITED CONTENTS.
DESTINATION,
OF TRANSMISSION.
1 lb. 2 lbs. 3 lbs. 4 lbs. 6 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 lbs. 8 lbs. 01. 10 11s. 11 lbs.
I
Austria-Hungary Do.,
Bahamas, Barbados,
Brazil.-Rio de Janei-!
ro (including Petro- polis), Pernambuco
and Bahia only
British
Bechuana-
Viu
London. German Packet
$ c. $
.. $ c.
$ .
#
1.40
2.15
++
2.85 Same as Ascen 2.00 $ sion,
TH
London,
1.00
2.00
3.00
---
Do.
2.50
E
HI
0.85 1.30 1.75 2,00 3.05 3.50
land,
Bechuanaland
Pro-
tectorate and Rho-
*
1.45
2.50
3.50 5.00
6.051
desiu,
Belgium,
1.00
Do.
German Packet.]
London.
Bermudo.
Beyrouth,
Do..
Bolivia,
::
:
++
ᎨᏐ
3.20 not exceeding 6 lbs.
I
$.95 4.80 5.25 5.70 6.15
7.10 8.15 9.00 10.05 11.70 12.75
2.40
1.70.
+
2,00
2,00
2.30
1.00
1.00
Egypt
1.30
1.
London.
2.50
2.00
■
1.45
2.15
+1
Limit 63 lbs.
2,001
Same as Argen Limit of weight
tine.
6 lbs. (3 kilos)
Sames Ascen- No parcel may
exceed $500 in value
siou,
Do.
Do.
3.00 Same as Ascen siou.
3.00
3.30
Dm.
Do.
Do.
Magazines and News
paper cannot be forwarded by Par- cel post,
Same as Argen-Limit weight of
tine.
Letters, lottery tickets, plants
with roots, raga. Rags,shoddy,disused and filthy
clothing and bedding.
Letter, Arm, Ammunitions
Coins
Letters, specie, bullion, golddust, onggets, ustrich feathers, bo- bacco stalks, essences of tobac- co, tea, coffee, or chicory, parts of vine, plants, bulbs, roots. Letters, plants, arms, coins,
rage, succharine.
Letters, leaf tobacco, salt, plants, foreign coins, lottery tickets, And trearms. Books, maga- zines, and Newspapers should not be sent by Parcel Post. Letters, tobacco leaf, firearms, rags, lottery tickets, foreign coius, salt, plants.
¿6 lbs. (3 kilos)
}
Letters, arms.
*
2.95 Same ns Ascension
Letters, lottery tickets, plants.
Bosnia, Herzegovina,"
Sandschak, & Novi Bazaar
British South Africa:
1. Cape Colony, includ
ing Basutoland, Be- chuanaland (except Protectorate), Fingo. laud, Griqualand, East And West, Kaffraria, Tondolaud Temby- land and Waldah Bay. 2. Natal (including Zululand) and Amatongaland. 3. Orange RiverCol- ከፕ, Transvall Swaziland.
Do.
0.85
1.30
1.75
2.00 3.05 3.50
3.95
4.80
5.25
5.70
8.16.
No parcel may
Same as Bechuanaland.
Do.
exceed $500
value.
***
*: Insurance confined to
parcels for
Blantyre, Chirome,| Fort Jolinatou and
Zomba.
1.00
1.00 2,20 3.20' 3.80 4.40 5.00
6,00
0.00 7.20 7.80
1'0.
!
4. Nyassalud Pro-
tectorate.
1.00
Hr
2.60 ***
3.00
Do.
Do.
DESTINATION,
LIT OF SIZ.
OBSERVATIONS,
RATES OF POSTAGE-PARCEL POST. ·Continued
ROUTE
OF TRANEMISSION,
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCHUS NOT EXCEEDING
7
Tib.2 lbs. 3 lbs. 4 lbs, | 5 lbs. | 6 lbs. 17 lbs. & lbs. 9 lbs. 10 lbs 11 lbs.
PROHIBITKD CONTENTS.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
British
Fast Africa (including Uganda),
F
Via
$ c.
$
c.
8 c.
London
1.00
:
c.
e. મૈં . $ c.
2,00
沿
British Guiana,
1.00
2.00
÷
#
C $ 0.
3.00
Same as Ascension.
Insurance confued to parels for Kilin-1 dini, Mombasan, & Lauin. Parcels for other places in Br. E. A. may be in- sureil as far as one of
three
Same as Bechuanaland.
3.00
Do
British Honduras,
British New Guinea,..
British North Boruco.
British, Somaliland
1.00
2,00
3.00
D+7+
1.
Queensland. Direct.
0.00 1,70
2.50
3.30 4.10 4,90
5.96)
7 20
7.86
850
9.15
Do.
(1.25
0.501
0.75
1Jr.
+
Berbera,
Bulhar
Aden.
and Zaida
Bennet
British West Africn:-
1. Gold Coast Co- lony (including Ashanti & the Nor- fhéru Territories).
2. Sierra Leone and 1
Gambia
Singapore.
1.55
901
1.95
2.85
Do.
1.80
2.70
Do.
thesc
places. Express delivery cou
tined to parcels for
รา
Georgetown New Amsterdam.
Poisonous drugs. Dutiablearticles, spirits,opium, guuje, charms, bhang, can- nabies indica.
Same as Bahamas.
Some as Queensland.
Explosive matter, liquids,
opium.
Poisons (except under special
licence/
Same as Straits Settlements.
Insurance confined to
Jareels for Acera,
London
1.00
E
2.00
3.00
Du.
Axin, Cape Coast, Kwitta, Sekondi, Tarkwa and Win- mcbxh.
Coin,
Gold, Silver, Precious
stones, Jewellery.
Expressdelivery
1.00
2,00
3.00
confined
pare. Is
tol for
Do.
Free Town.
The coureFauce
3. Nigeria (Nor)
thern) 5
4. Nigeria (Son-
Bulgaria,
Burmalı,
Canada
Cape Colony
British South Af-
of parcels to places Northern Ni-
in
1.00
2.00
3.00
D
1*0.
gerin is at the risk and CI-
pense of the auldressees.
(Son)}
1.00
2.00
:
4:
#
3.00
Du.
+
(See)
London
Calcutta. Vancouver.
London
1.75
2.45
3.15
Do.
0.00
1.201
1.80 Same as Aden.
0.80 1.00
130 1.601
2.20
2.50 2.80 3.70 3.40
3.70)Same as A cension
Do.
Letters. arms and ammuni-
tion, coins.
(in.
Cleomargarine, buttorine.
Der
17
rien.)
5-45
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST.-Continued
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
546
HONGKONG
POSTAL
GUIDE
DESTINATION.
ROUTE OF TRANSMISSION.
LIMIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATIONS.
PROHIBITED CONTENTS.
1 lb. 2 lbs. 3 bs.
6 lbs. | 7
4 lbs. 5 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 lbs.8 lbs. 9 lbs.
lbs. 11 lbs.
J
Cayman
Islands
(same as Jamaica)
Ceylon,
Via
Direct.
$ c.
$ c.
$ c.
$ c.
8 c.
$ 0.
$ c.
Same as Ascen-
0.00
I
C
TH
1.30
1.90
sion.
Chili,
London.
1,60
9.60
3.00
Do.
TLP
---
China
I+H
0.50
0.75
1.00
Do.
I+
++
-1
Columbia,
(except
the Provinces of Cauca & Marino
Province of Cauca?
and Narino
Congo Free State,..
Constantinople and
Smyrna,
Constantinople,
London.
1.00
2.00
3.00
Do.
***
F-г
וי
Parcels for the
Opium, current coins, Lettors, plants, arms and im.
plements of
war, articles
iujurous to health.
Letters, opium, opium pills,
cocaine, morphine.
Letters, arina, ammunitions.
2.20
3.50
1.80
Lower Congo are
H
Do.
liable to a sar-
.:
1.90
+
2,00
+
-
3.30 Argentine.
Same as
and for Upper
Corea,..
Cuba
Costa Rica..
Crete
Cyprus,
Danish West Indies. (St. Thoaa, St. John, & St. Croix), -
Denmark, Faroe Is
lands, Iceland and Greenlaud,
Egypt.
Nagasaki.
1,00
1.35
0.69
.
London.
1.60
14
--
London.
1.60
-10
+4
*
1.10
2.60
2.00
Egypt. London. Egypt.
1.15. 1.00
--
1.05
2.00
+1
*
1.85
1.95
***
London.
+
ta
1.60]
2.00
++
마
1.00)
1.70
HI
144
Denmark,
German Packet.
H
1.70
止中阝
---
2,40
Same as 4scen-|
Bion.
1.951
2,55
H
Do.
1.60 Same as Japan.
Same as Japan.
3.60
Sameas Argentine
8,40
Some as Ascension.
2.33
M
דיי
Same asArgentine Same as Greece.
9.00
Do.
2,55
++
Do.
9.00!
Do.
2.40.
Do.
---
2.00
Do.
+
-
LA
---
Dutch East Indies,....
Datch Guiana, (Al-"
Direct.
1.15
1.60
bina Oorouja. Pa ramaribo,
and
Londou.
1.00
++
Nieuw Nickeri)
2.00
2.00 (Same ns Argen-
5.00
Same ut Argen-
tine.
charge of 1 franc, Letters.
Congo to a charge
of To franes ou delivery,
..
Parcels are onlyl" forwarded by the China and Japan Line Steamers.
Same as Beyrouth.
Do.
Letters, opium, explosives, Arti. clea for smoking opinm, books, paintings or other articles opposed to the public welfare or morality. Letters,
Letters, armis, ammunition,
precious metals, tobacco. Same as Greece.
Letters, colas, rags.
Do
Letters, arms and ammunition, except with consent of the Government.
Letters, imitations of money,
notes, stamps or bills.
Do.
Lettors, opium, arms, salt,
coffee, plants and seeds.
Do.
RATES OF POSTAGE-PARCEL POST.-Continued
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
ROUTE
DESTINATION.
OF TRANSMISSION.
LIMIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATIONS.
PROHIBITED CONTENTS.
1 Ib. 2 lbs. 3 lbs. 4 lbs. lbs. 6 lbs. 7 lbs. 8 tbs. 0 lbs. 10 Thu. 11 m.
81
Via
C.
$ c.
8 c. 3 c.
છે.
Dutch West Incher,
(Caracao, Baba St.
London,
Eustatius and St.
2.50
Ir
3.20
FIL
Martin)
3.90 Same as Argentine
for Curacao
only.
Ecuador.
London.
3.10
3.80
4.50
Do.
Egypt.
Direct.
0.60
1.20
Erithrea, (Red Sea))
London.
2,20
2.90
Italian Colony,
Do.
Adeu.
1.16
1,65
1.80 Same as Ascension
3.60 Same a Argentine.
1.90
10.
Falkland Islands
1.00
2.00
8.00 Same as Ascension,İ
14
Torres Sts, and
Fiji Islands
.70 1.40
2,10
2.80
3.50
4.20 1.00
5.60
6.30; 7.00
7.70
Do.
Syduey.
Frauce (including
Monaco)
London.
1.201
||:
1.85
2,50 8ame as Argentiue
-
France,
German Packet.
2.00
+1
TTT
FI
+
Ti
ודי
=
+
Do.
Insurance con+
fived to parcels Letters,
Insurance con
fined Gunga-
quil and Quito.
Parcels for the Falk-|
land Iald's can be insured as far us Stanley only.
arms, ammunition,
liquids,
Letters, arms and ammunition
coins.
Letters, coins, rags, saltpetre,
Corap and other Mahom medan religious books. Samo ns Italy.
Do.
Same us Bahamas.
Letters.
Letters,
arms, ammunition, coins, gold and silver jewel, lery, foreign bronze coins,
L
French Colonies:
I.
Algeria
and
London.
1.45
+
Corsica,..
2. St. Pierre and
Miquelon,...
3. French Guinea, Freuch Somall Coast.
4. French Congo,,
Ivory Coast, Dahomey and Dpucies, Gaude. loupe, Mar- tinique, French Gaiana, Reuni- on, Madagascar, aud Upocies (Madagascar,St. Marie, and Nossi Bé) Camoro Is. land (Mayotte, Grande Camoro and Anjonon or Johanna Mohéli), New Caledonia,
1.00
14+
|||
---
+
1.75
TH
2,10
2.30
2.45
4.75
1
+
Do.
3.00
:
Do.
Same as France.
Do.
3.1#
Do.
+
Insurance confued to parerla for Buké, Conakry, Kindia Bota and Dubreka, Prench SomaliConst.
Do.
4
2.201
2.00
3.00
THI
i
Insurance for Ivory
Const(for Bingervillej Hereby, Grand Bas- sum, Grand Kaboo, And Jacqueville.]] Dahomey and Del pendencies, Guada loupe, Martinique, brench Guinoa (for Cayenne only), Re- unlon, Madagascar, and Camore Islandu (Mayotte only).
Do.
2.801
3,50
4.20
Du.
Do.
547
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST.-Continued
Same as Japan.
Same as France.
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARORLA NOT EXCEEDING
DESTINATION.
Rourk
OF TRANSMISSION,
TIMIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATIONS.
PROHIBITED CONTENTS.
1 lb. 2 lbs. 3 lbs. 4 lbs.5 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 lbs. 8 lbs. 2 lbs. 10 lbs. 11 lbs.
-1
5.10
¡Same as Argentiuc,
Do.
$ 0.
$ c.
से
$ c.
Via
C.
Direct.
London,
3.70
4.40
Formosa (Same as Japau,), French Settlements of Ocennia. (The Society Islands, Gambler Aré- hipelago, Marquesas Is. ¿ lands, Touamotou, be ward Islands & Tubani.)j
Annam, Cambodia, Co- ebin China & Tonkin, Gambia (See British
West Africa),
Germany,
Do..
* German Oudowles
East Africa,
1. Genna
German South West
Afrien, Gennau New Goines und Samoa.. For Jaluit..
Herbertshole, Yap
Direct.
London.
London. German Packet.
London,
Direct.
0.25
0.50
+++
1.25
+
1.85
+
-
÷
0.75
Do.
J
Do.
2.55 Same as Ascension.
1.75
Do.
2.20
2.00
3.60
Do.
not
over 11 lbs.
1,75
E
1.25
+
:
3
For Welhetumhafen,"
Ponape Saipan,..
2. Cameroons, Togo,
London.
1.75
Kinochow
Direct.
0,75
Gibraltar,
0,60
Gold Coast (See British
West Africa)
Greece,
London.
1.75
Greece,
Grenada,
Guatemala,
2.45
0.75 1.20
2.16
:
518
+
Same as Japan.
Letters, plants with roots, vines or parts of vines, socialistic books.
Letters, vines, socialistic books,
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
Insurance confined to marcels for Duala Kribi and Victoria (Cameroons)Agone- Paline, Anecho and Lome (Togo)
3.15
Do.
0.75
Do.
1,80
Do.
/Parcela
Greece
3.16 Same as Argentine,
for
must
be packed in some material stronger than paper or card. board.
Letters.
Do.
Arms, ammunition,
Letters, gold and silver jewel- lery, plants, playing cards, cigarettes, paper, rags,satuples declared to be of no value.
Letters, liquids, poisons.
Letters, hides, plants
Do. Letters.
Egypt. London.
1.40
1.80
2.20
Do.
.
1.00
2,00
3.00 Šame as Ascension
Parcels must b
1.80
2.00
!
3.00
Do.
claicued by the add-
TH
dresses at the chief office, Guatemala.
Direct.
0.35 0.70
1.05
1,40
1.75 2.10 9,45 2,90 3.15
3.50
3.85
London.
1.00
1.70
Same as United Same as United Statca.
¿States. 3.40 Sanc as Ascension.
+
German Packet,
2.00
Do.
++
London
1.00
2.00
3,00
Do.
lawan Islands
Holland,
Do..
Honduras, State of.
LIMIT OF SIZK.
OBSERVATIONS.
PROIBITED CONTENTS.
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST.-Continued
30 Same as Ascension
Do.
3. 6 in. long or6 ft. in gratest length, and girth com- bined, and not smaller than 3 in. by 2 in.
Do.
Letters, opium,
Do.
Opium, coius of £5 in value and
8 ozs. in weight.
Do.
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
ROUTE
DESTINATION.
OF TRANSMISSION.
1 lb. 2 lbs. 3 bls. 4 lbs. 5 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 1hs.8 lbs. Ib. 10 lbs. 11 lbs.
7
Via
c.
$ c.l
Hongkong,
(Loon!
$ c.
101
& c
$ c. $ c.
$ 0.
$ c.
$ 0.
$ c.
c.
20
Delivery.)
Hongkong to and from
25
50
*
75
Tuticorin or?
Calcutta.
00
Calcutta.
60
H. B. M.'s Postal Agencies in China....
India,
Indian Post Office in the]
Persian Gulf & in Tar- kish Arabia-Bagdad, Baabrain, Bandar Ab- bas, Bushire. Bumrah, Gusdur, Jask, Linga, Mohuminerah '& Musi
cat
Marino)...
1,20
1,80
1.20
1.80
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
Italy (Including San>
London and
1.76
Belgium.
I
2,43
Japan...
Direct.
0.60
1.10
Ir
:
Jamaica.
Kedah
Londou.
Singapore.
Kelautan
ᅡ
Labuan (same
48
London.
||
Lagos (see Nigeria|
''
Straits Settlements)
Southern)..
Leeward Islands :-
Antigua, Dominica, Montserrat, Nevis, St. Kitts, Tortola
Liberia,
Luxemburg,
4
1,00
+
2.00
3.00
Do.
-
0.90
1,80
ht
2.70
Do.
0.90
1.80
3.70
Do.
3.16 Same as Argenting
1.60 Same as Ascension
Letters, plants.
Letters, drugs, opium, articles for smoking opium, explosive, articles whick contravene the laws of Japan, publications, books, paintings Sculptures, or other articles oppos ed to the public welfare or morality, manufactured tobacco. Letters
Letters, arms, opium. jewellery.
Do
+
4
+
ter
++
+++
HL
:
1.00
1.60
1.00
Do.,
German Packet.
|||
F
++
Malay States (Negri"
Sembilan, Pahang, Perak, Selangor & Johore)
Singapore.
0.60
THI
2.00
2.60 1.70
3.00
Do.
:
3.60
Do.
2.40
Do.
+I+
1,80
Do.
"Insured parcels are
1,20
H
H
1.80
Do.
||
Malta,
Direct.
0.60
+++
Do.
ווי
Manila,
0.35 0.70 1.05
1.40
1,75 12.10
2.45
2,80 3.15 3.50
3,85
(Same as United
Stales.
accepted for all places in Negri Sembilan, Palang Perak, and Selan- gor, except Kuan- fan and Pekan in Yabang.
The Post Office of either of the coo- tracting countries will not be res ponsible for the loss or damage of any parcel.
Rags, Shoddy, disused and
filthy clothing,
Letters.
Same as Germany.
Do.
Letters, opium, morphia, morphiue, cocaine, spirits, firearms, and ammunition.
Lettors, jewellery, tobacco,
sale, coffee, raw
Silk.
519
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST.-Continued
RATES
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
DESTINATION,
LIMIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATION.
PROHIBITED CONTENTS,
OF
TRANSMISSION,
I
1 lb.21bs. 3 lbs. 4 lbs. 15 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 s. 8 lbe. 9 lbs. 10 lbs. 11 lbs.
Via
$ 4.
0.
8 0.
S c.
Mauritins,
Direct.
.
4||
0.80
s el c.
8 c.
1.00
2,40 Same na Ascension,
וי
Mexico,
London,
Montenegro,.
Morocco:-
Casablanca, Maza- gan, Mogador, Larache, Rabat, Safi, Tangier, & Tetinu,
Natal (See Britial
South Africa)
Newfoundand,.
De..
New Hebrides,
1.00
1.90
i
550
2.30
H+
3.30 Same as Argentine.
2.60
H
2,30 Samous Ascension,
Letters, unobliterated postage stamps, articles of gold, silver or precious stones, money in auy form, armus or flrorMA addressed to private individ- uals.
Parcels for Letters.
Mexico must he so packed that they can be opened for Custome CI. amination without break. the cover-by simply untyin
unscrewing or unmailing.
Letters, corrosive substaneça, articles of gold or silver of inferior standard, mediciues and used clothing.
1,00
**
44
2,00
5.00
Io.
ווי
3.00
Do. Do.
FAI
G. 15
0.76
London. Vancouver. Sydney.
1.00
++
***
2,00
0,80 1.05 1.20 1,90 2.05 2.55 2,95 1.25 1.35 1,95 2,56 3.15 3.7A 4,35
Limit 7 lbs.
4.95
6.56
Nicaragua, (Corinto, San Juan del Sur, Managua, Leon, Chinandega, A cotal, Somoto, Matagalpa, Jino tega, Grauada, Jingalpa, Massaye, Rivas Jiuoteno)..
and
2.201
!
3.50
4.80
Do.
A
Same as France.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
If the value off
goods con-
tained in parcel or ix several parcela sent by the same mail by! one sender for the same ad- dressec ox ceeds $100, the declaration must be certi- fie d by H Nicaragua Consul. Par- oels must be scaled and strongly packed.
Rags, nand clothing. Do.
Same as Sydney.
Letters, liquids, telegraphic & triephonic apparatus, arms,
ROUTE
DESTINATION,
OF TRANSMISSION,
LINIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATIONS.
PROHIBITED CONTENTS.
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST.-Continued
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT ENGELDING
C.
察
I 1b. 2 lbs 3 lbs. 4 lbs. 5 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 lbs. 8 lbs. 9 lbs 10 11 11.
Vin
$ c.
Nigeria (See British
West Africa)
40
30-
ը.
$ c.
c.
$ c.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
Norway,
Do.,
Orange River Colony)
Tondon.
German Packet
***
1.00
***
#
#
1.70
2,40 Same as Ascension)
Do.
2.50
(See British South
Africa)
Panama, Republic of
Londou
1.60
2.00
3.00
Do.
Paraguay,
Persia (not includ ing Bundar Abbas, Bushire, Jask and Linga, where there are Indian Post Office Agencies)
Persia..
Peru,
Portugal,
London.
2,00
3.90
Limit 6 lbs.
4.
+
2.20
3.20
TH
Calcutta
1.30
1.70
+
London
1.60
2.60
Same as Argentine.
4,20 Same as Aden.
2.10
Do.
3. Same DB Ascension
Parcels address- ed to places in the Republic of Panama ore
sent to the Post Office of Colon.
Ar-
raugements must be made for them to be. claimed there by the ad- dresscos.
Parcels for Per- sia must be packed
wood, tin, can- vus, linen or similar mater- ial, and not, merely in paper
or cardboard
A parcel may not
consist of twul
1.30
***
2.00
2.70
Do.
"
:
or more pkgs
tied
Letters.
Do
Letters, arms ammunition.
Letters, articles of gold and
silver.
Letters.
Letters, weapona, rags.
Do.
Letters, coins, paper money payable to bearr, postage stamps, medicine (unless ac-
together.companied by the prescrip.
tion), plants.
Do.
Do.. Portuguese Colonies:
Azores,
Gorman Pocket.
*
London,
TH
1.30
Lin
::.
F
2.00
F
2,05
Do.
Do.
++
2,40
Do.
Do.
Do.
651
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST.-Continued
RATES OF 10STAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
DESTINATION.
ROUTE OF TRANSMISSION.
LIMIT OF San
OBSERVATIONS.
1 lb. 2 lbs.
Ibs. 4 lbs. 5 lbs. | 6 lbs. 7 lb. 8 be. ¡9 lbs.
Ibs. 11 lbs.
Via
8 c.
$ 0.
$ c.
$ c.
$ c. $ c.
$ c
$ 0. 8 c.
$ c.
Portuguese Went Af-.
rica: (Cape Verde
and Guinca, St.
London
1.00
2.60
ILL
3.80
Sume
Asccusion
Д. 9
Thome, Principe &
Angola)
Portuguese East
Africa,
1.60
=
2.80
3,00
Po.
PROHIBITED CONTENTS.
552
HONGKONG
Insurance con- Bined to parcels for Benguela,i Boloma, Ca-!
benda, Loanda, Mossamedes, Novo Redondo, Praia, S. Thomé, & St. Vincent. Insurance con- fined to parcels for Lourenço Marques, Mo- zambique, Qui-| limane, Chindej Inhambane Beira, Gorjao Chai chai and Macequece. Insurance con-
fined to parcels
Letters, coins, paper money payable to bearer, postage stamps, medicine (unless ac- companied by the prescrip- tion), plants,
Do.
2.00
ILL
2.70
Do.
***
TH
Do.
1.45
1.85
Do.
for Nova Gow
3.50
0.50
. ||
++
4.20
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
#=
0.76
Do.
1.76
2.451
3.15
H
Same
Ascension.
Madeira,..
Portuguese India,
Timor (Dilly)
1.30
Calentta.
1.05
London.
2,80
Ma '10,
Direct.
0,25
Rangoon (Sec Eur-
mah).
Rhodesia (See Bec-
huanaland Protec-
torate)
J
Roumauia,
London.
German Packet.
TJO..
Russia in Europe (inouding Finland & Trans-Caucasia Russia)
Russin in Asia. Rnasia
1,60
2.40
Do.
2.30
THE
3.00
Do.
POSTAL GUIDE
Parcels for Bou- mania must be packed in wood, tin, Canvas, linen Or Himilar material and not merely in paper or Cardboard.
(Same as for Roumania.
Do. Do.
Letters, tobacco, plants, arms, ammnuition, playing cards, Roumanian bronze money, patent medicines, worn used lineu, rags, hair of every kind.
or
Letters, tobacco, plants (except seeds and dry roots), arms, ammunition, bronze coins, patent medicines, plants, objects from which liquids of fat exudes, Russian coina or small value, gold or silver ticles, not up to the proper standard, lottery tickets, wooden pipe stems, playing cards.
Arma, ai-guna, saltpetrc.
2.20
2.90
3.60
Do.
German Packet.
2.40
Do.
Sydney.
1.G5'
2.25❘ 2,05
3.851 4,56: 5.25 5,95
7.56
8.25
8.06 8 nà Avcension'
+4
London.
RATES OF POSTAGE. -PARCEL POST.-Continued
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
ROUTE
DESTINATION.
Or
LIMIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATIONS.
PROHIBITED CONTEXTS,
TRANSMISSION
1 lb. 2 lbs. 3 lbs. 41bs. 5 lbs., 6 lbs. 7 lbs. 8 lbs. 9 lbs. 10lb. 11 lbs.j
St. Helena
Via
London.
Ес
$ c.
$ c.
$ c.
$ e.
$ 0.
$ c.
$ c. $ c.
$c. $ e.
1.00
TTI
2.00
3.00)Same as Ascension|
Salonica
(British)
Post Office)
*
140
1.60
2.50
3.00
Du.
Salvador,
Sarawak
*
Singapore
PAR
2.20
.90
+
3.50!
1.80
Do.
---
?
1.80
2.70
Do.
Senegal.
including
the French Soudao j
London.
1.75
2.45
3.15 Same as Argentine
No pracel may exceed $500 in value.
*Елицеансе confined| to parcela for Dagunn, Dakar: Falick, Foundi Ougoc, Goree Kaluck. Louge, N'Dande, Fodor, Rufisque, Louis, Thits,
SL.
Gold funless manufactured),
ostrich feathers, spirits. Letters, tobacco, salt, plants,
coin, lottery tickets.
Letters, coins, gold and silver articles, urus, ammuniticos, nitrate of potash, saltpetre, powder of all kinds. Letters opinn
Same as France.
Tivaouane, Ziqu-
Servia,
Seychelles,
Siam,
Sierra Leone (Sco)
British West Af-
Calcutta,
414
1.4 1.90
F
T
2.15
F
2.30
2.70
Do.
Direct.
0.60
1.20
1.80
Do.
inchor and Sédbion.
2.85 Same as Ascension Same as Roumenin
9,50
Do.
1.80
Do.
The Parcel post extends only to Bangkok, Cheing- mai, Lampang Zucknom poh Naken, Swyn and labang only. No rn may oxceed 350 in value.
Parcels are not delivered at place
which has not & railway sta Lion.
Letters, part of vines. Lettere,
counterfeit
coin,
foreign gods bearing the names or trade mark nt a maunfactory established in the United Kingdow. Arms, letters, liquids, opium.
Letters, arms, ammunition, air- gune, Spanish maps, missals, rosaries, relics, breviaries, medicine not accompanied by the prescription, wax vestas, saccharine, tobacco, gold and silver jewellery.
Letters, specie, liquids, duit- able articles, dangerous arti- cles likely to injure other parcels Watches or articles of gold and silver must be insured.
Arms and ammunition. Opium, Spirits, Bhang,
Morphia.
Morphine or Cocaine.
HONGKONG POSTAL
GUIDE
553
533
rica)
Spain
Continental }
London.
1.30
2.00
2.70
Do.
Do. (Balearic Isles)]
1.10
2.15
2.85
1
T
Spain
German Packet.
traits Settlements:- Christmas Islands," Dinding s Labuan, Ma1- acca, Penang, Province Wel- lesley, and Sin- gapore.
Direct.
0.00
IH
***
1.20
:
ROUTE
DESTINATION.
OF
TRANSMISSION,
RATES OF POSTAGE-PARCEL POST.-Continued
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
1 lb. 2 lbs. 9 lbs. 4 lbs. 5 lbs. 6 lbs. 7 lbs. 8 lbs. 9 lbs. 10 lbs. 11 lbs.
! F
LIMIT OF SIZE.
OBSERVATIONE.
Via
8 c.
London German Packet
$ c.
1.30
$ c.
$ c.
$ c. & c. $ C.
*
$ c.
8 c.
2.001
2.70 Same us Ascension
2.50
Do.
London
1.80
2.001
2.76
Do.
2,00
Do.
German Packet
440
(same ng
Sweden,
Do., Switzerland,
Do..
St. Lucia
Leeward Island),
St. Vincent (same za
Grenada)
Trausvaal (Bee British;
South Africa),
Trinidad & Tobago, [same]
as Leeward Island] Tripoli (Africa Tripoli and Benghazi only). Turks & Caicos Islands,
(Pame as Jamaica
Tunis,
Turkey(Austrian P.O'
Turkey (Ottoman P.0.)
In Europe
In Asia
London
1.45
=
2.15
+
1.75
2.40
사
1.80
2.30
+
It
14
2.05
2.75
3.46
2.25
2.00
9-60
+4
United Kingdom,
Gibraltar.
0,60
1.20
+
F
PROHIBITED CONTENTS.
554
Express delivery_con="
fined to purcels for Brockholm. Gothen- burg and Malmo.
Letters, rags,manufactured gold
or silver, drugs, arsenic,
Į Letters, newspapers, plants in
mota, liquids.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
2.85 Same as Argentine
3.05
Do.
3.00 Same as Ascension
1.80
Do.
Do.
(3ft. Gin, long Or
6 ft. in greatest
length and,
girth
bined.
COM
Parcels must be packed in such
a manter as to permit of their contenta being easily inspected Note: The Post Office of either of the contract ing countries will not be responsible for the loss of or damage to any parcels, and no indemnity can consequently be claimed by the sender or udctresses in either country. |
Letters, arms, salt, tobacco,
books, pamphlets.
Letters, foreign reprints of British copy- right works, Base enfus, Foreigu cõlu other than gold or silver, tobacco ex- cept for personal use. and Coln or Bullion over £5 in value or 8 ozs. In weight, saccharlue.
Same ns via London.
Do.,
Overland..
Brindisi,
1,20
1.80
2.40
Do.
***
-F
+++
United States
0.35 San Francisco
0.70 1,05
1.40
1.75
2.10 2.45 2.80 3.15 3,50
3.86
Do.
ESTINATION.
United States:-New
RATES OF POSTAGE.-PARCEL POST.-Continued
ROCTE
OF
TRANSMISSION. 12 lbs. 3 lbs. | 4 lbs. 5 lbs. | 8 lbs. 7 lbs. 5 lbs.
3
RATES OF POSTAGE ON PARCELS NOT EXCEEDING
LIMIT OF SIZE.
s. 10 lbs. 11 lbs.
इ
e. 8 c.
.
c. 8 c. & c. % 0.
York City, Brook-
London.
lyn, Hoboken and
Jersey City only,
Any other ports:
of the United
States,
Uruguay,
Venezuela
Zanzibar Protector- ate (including Pemba)
Zanzibar.
Zululand (See British
South Africa),
1.90
2.90
OBSERVATIONS.
PROHIBITED CONTENTS.
3.90
3 ft. 6 in. loug or G ft. in greatest length and girth com- Bined,
3.60 Same as Ascension|
Each parcel for the United Stutes must be; accompanied by an invoice which must be certified by U. S. Consul if the value of the! parcol exceeds $200.
In addition to those articles which are specified in the Postal Guide, Rules 209-215, asexcluded from transmission by the Foreign and Colonial Post, the undermentioned articles are prohibited from importation into the United States:-
Letters, Extables, Ox. hides, Prison-made Wares, Wines, Spirits, Cigars, and Cigarettes iu quantity numbering less than 3,000. Opium containing less than 9 per cent. of Morphine. Letters, coins, articles of gold
or silver.
2.50
Frk
3.50
4.50
Do.
1.00
D
M
2.00
-
Fri
Calentta
---
1.00
2.05
3.60
है
3.25
2.00
3,00
3.90 Same as Argentine Same as Ronmania
Do.
2.45
*.85
Do.
(No uninsured porcel
may exceed £51,
Do.
Opium.
Do.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
1. THE UNITED KINGDOM AND COUNTRIES BEYOND.-Parcels to the United Kingdom and Countries beyond, are forwarded by P. & O. packets only, and as a rule arrive in London about eight days later than the letter Mail, Parcels via Brindisi, for which an extra fee of Sixty Cents must be paid, are delivered in London with the letter Mail,
2.-VALUE LIMIT ON INSURED PARCELS VIA BRINDISI. The limit of value on Insured parcels sent via Brindisi is $200.
$.-TREATMENT OF PARCELS. Re CUSTOMS-On arrival in London no further charge is made on ordinary or Insured parcels except for Customs Dues.
4-TO INDIA VIA CALCUTTA,-All ordinary and Insured parcels to India are forwarded by the Indian Mail packets only; this does not refer to Bombay, 5. TO BOMBAT VIA TUTICORIN. Ordinary parcels to Bombay only are forwarded by P. & O. packets.
6. -STRAITS AND BURMAIL-Parcels for the Straits and Burmah are forwarded by P. & O. and Indian Mall packets. Limit of value for ordinary parcels, $50.
7.-GERMANY BY GERMAN SHIPS DIRECT.-Parcels intended to be sent to Germany by German ships only must be so directed. Parcels to certain countries on the con- tinent may be forwarded by German steainers in Naples "overland route" with an extra fee of 60 cents.
8. PARCELS FOR CHINA.-Parcels for China are forwarded by private steamers only,
9. PARCELS TO THE UNITED States via LONDON.-Parcels to the United States are partly postal and non-postal, the regulations of the Foreign and Colonial Parcel Post apply generally to this service, but attention should be paid to the points of difference, full particulars of which will be found in the "Hongkong Postal Guide."
10.-PARCELS TO THE UNITED STATES VIA SAN FRANCISCO. The public are enabled to forward parcels which do not exceed 11 lbs. to San Francisco direct for distribution any City or Town, etc., in the United States, such parcels must not be sealed, mast not be of greater value than 850 Gold, and it should be distinctly understood they cannot be Registered or Insured; furthermore, there is no compensation on lost or damaged parcels to the United States via San Francisco.
11.-MANILA OR the PHILIPPINE ISLANDS.-Parcels may be forwarded to Manila or the Philippines under the same conditions as apply to parcels to the United States tio San Francisco.
12-PARCELS CONTAINING COIN, GOLD, SILVER, ETC.-Parcels containing Coin, any article of Gold or Silver, or any article of value cannot be sent to the United Kingdom or to any Foreign Country, or British Possession included in the Insurance system unless they are insured for at least part of their value.
18.-TIME OF CLOSING PARCEL MAILS.-Parcel Mails to Europe and America are closed punctually at 5 p.m. the day preceding the actual departure of the Mail.
555
556
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
(1.)-To the United Kingdom and Places Beyond.-Parcels are forwarded by P. & 0. packet only, and arrive in London about eight days later than the letter mail. No further charge is made on delivery except for Customs dues.
(2.) Any person sending a parcel to either of the places named below (via London) may relieve the addressee of the payment of Customs and either charges:
The United Kingdom, Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Denmark (including the Faroe Islands and Iceland), Egypt, Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Italy (via Belgium, Ger- many and Switzerland only), Luxemburg, Montenegro, Barbados, Cyprus, Cape Colony, Falkland Islands, Gambia, Grenada, Lagos, Malta, Mauritius, Natal, Seychelles Sierra Leone, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Sweden, and Tobago.
Any person wishing to defray the above charges must endorse the parcel "to be delivered free of all charge." He must sign a declaration that he will pay the amount due on such parcel as soon as it has been ascertained. He may, if necessary, be called upon to pay a deposit in addition to signing the declaration. Such deposit to be paid by means of postage stamps to be affixed to the declaration.
In addition to the postage and insurance fee, if any, a fee of 25 cents will be charged on every parcel for which the sender desires these facilities. This fee will be paid by means of postage stamps to be affixed to the declaration.
(3.)-To India.-By Indian Mail packets only. Insured Parcels by Indian Mail packets only.
(4.) To Bombay.-(Only). By P. & O. Packets via Tuticorin (Insured Parcels by Indian Mail Packets only).
(5.) To the Straits Settlements and Burmah by Indian Mail Packets only. Limit of value allowed for uninsured parcels, $50.
(6.)- Parcels intended for the German packet must be so directed.
(7.)-A parcel for a Foreign Country must be so sealed by the sender that it cannot be opened without breaking the seals or leaving an obvious trace of violation. The seals must bear the impression of a private mark of the sender.
(8.)-In certain countries a small charge is made for Custom House purposes on the delivery of the parcel. Except Customs dues, this is the only charge the addressee will have to pay.
(9.)-To China.-By Private steamers only.
(10.)---Straits Settlements, P. & O. and Indian Mail Services.
(11.)-Parcels for the United Kingdom and other Foreign Countries may be forwarded via "Brindisi" by paying an additional postage of 60 cents to the rates above mentioned.
(12.) Limit of value allowed for Insured Parcels sent via "Brindisi" is $200. (13.) The Non-Postal charges on Parcels for the United States are as follows:-
(a) 60 cents on every Parcel, due to the American Express Company, for Customs
clearance and formalities, and
(4) 60 cents in respect of the charges levied by the United States Government under the title of "Sample Office Fee or Storage Fee" on every parcel entering the Country. For further particulars respecting the United States Purcels see Rule No. 201.
(14.)-Parcels addressed to the Philippines will be accepted and forwarded under the same conditions as apply to parcels sent to the United States via San Francisco.
Parcels containing coin, any article of gold or silver, or any article of value, cannot be sent to the United Kingdom or to any foreign country or British possession included in the insurance system, unless they are insured for at least part of their value.
FOREIGN MONEY ORDERS
(Application for Money Orders)
240.- When applying for Money Orders payable abroad the public should use the special Requisition Forms which are supplied gratuitously at the General Post Office, Hongkong, and British Postal Agency at Shanghai.
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
537
241. The applicant must furnish, in full, the surname and, at least, the initial of one Christian name both of the remitter and the payee and the remitter's address. In the case of orders through the United Kingdom the full address of the payee must be given, and if the order be payable to a native in British India the tribe or caste and the father's name should also be furnished.
242.-In any case in which the name of the payee is not known the remitter must make a note to the effect on the front of the Requisition Form, and give such descrip- tion of the payee as will be sufficient to identify him or her to the Paying Officer. The order will then be issued at the remitter's risk.
243. In the case of orders drawn on the countries and places through the London Office, a receipt of the issue of such order only will be given to the remitter, an order in the currency of the country of payment being issued by the London Office, subject to discount on such order at the following rates:
3d. for sums not exceeding £5, and 3d, for each £5 or fraction of £5 additional. All such orders must be expressed in British currency and, if so desired, the remitter must allow for the above discount.
244. The commission to be charged will be one and a half cent per dollar on the amount (or equivalent of the amount) in dollars, with a minimum charge of 10 cents.
245.--In the Money Order Service between Hongkong and the United Kingdom, Germany, Straits Settlements, and the Transvaal a system for furnishing the remitters of money orders, on application at time of issue, with "Advices of Payment" has been introduced. The paying Postmaster, as soon as the orders have been paid, will send the advices direct to the remitters.
The fee chargeable for each order is 10 cents in addition to the ordinary money orders commission,
246. The limit for a single money order is £40, $100 gold, marks 800, Rs. 600, Yen 400, or $400 Mex.
247.-A foreign order remaining unpaid in Hongkong after one year from the date of issue will be considered void and returned to the office of issue.
248. Where not repugnant to the foregoing Rules the General Regulations for the issue of the Local Money Orders will apply to Foreign Money Orders.
2484. The following is the list of countries and places upon which Money Orders are drawn, viz.
DRAWN DIRECT
British India (including Burmah and the Agencies of the Indian Post Office in the Persian Gulf, Seychelles, Portu- guese India, British East Africa, Ger- man East Africa, Zanzibar) Cape Colony
Federated Malay States
Japan (including Formosa and offices
in Corea and Saghalien) Mincao
Queensland (including British New Guinea) Siam (Bangkok and Chiengmai only) South Australia
Straits Settlements (including Labuan) Tasmania
Transvaal
United Kingdom
Sarawak
United States of America (including Hawaii
and Porto Rico)
Canada
Germany (including German West Coast and South West Africa, German New Guinea, Samoa, Marshall Islands and the German Colonies in Oceana)
Ceylon (including orders on Mauritius, Egypt, Cyprus, Greece, Montenegro, Natal, Orange River Colony, Rhodesia, Bechuanaland)
British North Borneo (Sandakan, Kudat,
Beaufort and Jesselton)
New South Wales (including Fiji) New Zealand
Victoria
Western Australia
Kiaoutschou, German protectorate, North
China.
658
Austria
Belgium
Bosnia
Bulgaria
Chili
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
DRAWN THROUGH LONDON OR GERMANY
Congo Free State (Banana,
Boma and Matadi)
Cuba
Danish West Indies
Denmark (including Faroe
Islands)
Dutch East Indies
(Foreign Countries.)
Finland
Norway
France (including Algeria) Peru
Herzegovina
Hungary
Iceland
Portugal (including Ma-
deira and Azores)
Roumania
Italy (including Agencies Russia
at Assab, Massowah, and Salvador
Tripoli)
Servia
Liberia
Sweden
Luxemburg
Switzerland
Mexico
Netherlands
Tunis Truguay
(Foreign Cities and Towns.)
Constantinople (British Postal Agency)
Panama (British Postal Agency)
>>
י
Tangier Beyrout (
11
Agency}
>
Smyrna
Salonien
(Austrian Agencies.)
Adrianople
Candia
Canea (Khania, La Canée)
Cesme (Telesme)
Chios (Khios)
Dardanelles
Dédé-Agatch (Dédé-Aghadj)
Durazzo
Galeppoli
Basutoland
Bermuda
Ineboli
Jaffa
Janina
Jerusalem
Kaifa (Caiffa)
Kavala (Cavalla)
Lagos (Turkey)
Kerassonde (Kéressoun)
Mitylene
Prevesa
Retimo
Rhodes
Rodosto
Samsoun
Santi Quaranta (Serandoz)
Trebizond (Trapezunt) Valona
Vathy-Samos
(British Colonies, Possessions and Protectorates.)
British Central African
Protectorate
British Guiana
British Honduras
Cayman Islands
Chatham Islands Cook Islands Falkland Islands Gambia
Gibraltar
Gold Coast Colony
Lagos
Malta
Newfoundland
Niger Coast Protectorate Northern and Southern Nigeria Protectorate
St. Helena
Sierra Leone
IMPERIAL POSTAL ORDERS
Somaliland British Pro-
tectorate
Uganda Protectorate West Indies -Antigua, Bahamas, Barbadoes, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat, Nevis, St Kitts, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Tobago, Trinidad, Turk's Island, Zululand
249.-Postal Orders of the values named below, payable within three months at any Post Office in Antigua, Bahamas, Barbados, Basutoland, Bechuanaland Protectorate, Bermuda, British Bechuanaland, British Guiana, British Central Africa Protectorate, British East Africa, British Honduras, Cape Colony, Cayman Islands, Chatham Islands, Cook Islands, Cyprus, Ceylon, Dominica, Egypt, Falkland Islands, Fanning Islands, Federated Malay States, Fiji, Gambia, Gibraltar, Gold Coast, Grenada, India, Jamaica, Lagos, Labuan, Malta, Mauritius, Montserrat, Natal, Nyassalund, Nevis, Newfound land, New Zealand, Northern Nigeria, North Eastern Rhodesia, Orange, River Colony, Penrhyn Island, St. Helena, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, St. Vincent: Savage Island, Sey- chelles, Sierra Leone, Somaliland Protectorate, Soudan, Southern Rhodesia, Southern Nigeria, Straits Settlements, Swaziland, Tobago, Trinidad, Transvaal, Turks or Caicos
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
550
Islands, Uganda, Virgin Islands, Zanzibar, and in the United Kingdom, and at the Agencies of the British Post Office at Ascension, Beyrout, Constantinople, Panama, Salonica, Smyrna, Casablanca, Fez, Larache, Mazagan, Mogador, Rabat, Saffi, Tangier and Tetuan, can be obtained at Hongkong or at any British Post Office in China at prices, which include Commission, and vary with the rate of Exchange :-
-/6, 1, 1/6, 2/6, 5/-, 10/-, 10/6, 20/-
250. The purchaser of any Postal Order must fill in the payee's name before parting with it. He may also fill in the name of the office where payment is to be made. If this is not done the order is payable (within three months) anywhere in the United Kingdom or in the countries named above.
251-Any Postal Order may be crossed to a Bank, and in such case payment will only be made through a Banker.
If this precau- tion is not taken no enquiries whatever will be made as to the loss or alleged loss of any such order.
252.-Postal Orders should always be forwarded in registered covers.
253.-Postal Orders issued in the United Kingdom and above places are payable in Hongkong and at any of the British Postal Agencies in China.
264. Any regulation in force in the United Kingdom governing the issue and pay- ment of Postal Orders there should to taken to apply to the Imperial Postal Orders issued and paid in Hongkong and at the British Postal Agencies in China.
"CASH ON DELIVERY" SERVICE
I. NATURE OF THE SYSTEM
255,--The Postmaster General undertakes, on certain conditions, to collect from the addressee the value of an article sent by post and to remit it to the sender by Money Order or Postal Order.
(a) The Service applies to parcels (uninsured or insured) only sent from Hong- kong to the United Kingdom, Straits Settlements and Gibraltar and vice versa.
(6.) The amount to be collected under the C. O. D. System is called the "Trade
Charge
>>
(c) The Trade Charge on any parcel may not exceed £20.
(d.) A special fee of 10 cents is charged on every parcel bearing a Trade Charge posted in the Colony; and in addition, a fee will be charged in the United Kingdom for the delivery service.
The delivery fees to be charged in the United Kingdom on such parcels when
received from Hongkong are as follows:-
When the Trade Charge does not exceed £5...
}}
17
11
s. d.
0 4
does exceed £5 but not £10..
0 6
20
17
1
£10 £15
זי
£15.. £20..
0 0
I 0
*
15
1
The fee due to the office of posting must be paid with the other postal charges; but the amount of the fee due to the office of delivery will be deducted, with the commission on the Money Order or Postal Order by which the remittance is made, from the amount paid by the addressee. (e.) The sender of a parcel on which a Trade Charge is to be collected will be required to sign a declaration that the parcel is sent in fulfilment of an order from the addressee.
(7.) The sender may arrange under certain conditions for the Trade Charge on a parcel to be reduced or cancelled. For this purpose the Cer- tificate of Posting must be produced at the office at which the packet was posted, where full information can be obtained. A fee of 20 cents will be charged in connection with applications for reducing or can- celling a Trade Charge.
II POSTING
1. Parcels on which Trade Charges are to be collected are accepted at the General Post Office, Hongkong only.
560
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
2. The sender must
(a.) Write, on the cover of the parcel, his name and permanent address. the amount in British currency of the Trade Charge in figures and words, and the name of the office on which the Money Order or Postal Order is to be drawn.
These particulars may be written on the back of the parcel if there is not
room for theni to be written clearly on the front.
No erasure or alteration of the Entry of the money is allowed.
An incorrect entry must be completely obliterated and a fresh Entry made; () Fill up a Request Form (to be obtained at the Post Office) which includes the prescribed declaration that the parcel is sent in fulfilment of an Order;
(c) Prepay the special fee, by affixing 10 cents in postage stamps to the Re- quest Form. The ordinary postage and other charges must, of course, also be prepaid.
3. He must then hand in the parcel at the Post Office, where he will receive a certificate of posting, which he will be required to give up when he presents the money order or postal order to be cashed. (See Section IV.)
III DELIVERY
1. Parcels bearing Trade Charges will be kept at the General Post Office to be called for, notice of arrival being sent to the addressee.
2. A C. O. D. parcel will not be given up to or be allowed to be opened by the addressee until the amount of the Trade Charge and any other charges due have been paid. But the addressee will see from the Entry on the parcel the name and address of the sender, who (see above Section I. para. (e)) must have sent the parcel in fulfilment of an order.
3. If after a reasonable time the parcel is not called for, a Second notce will be sent to the addressee. In the absence of instructions after the second notice, the parcel will be kept for 30 days, exclusive of the day of arrival, and if not called for in the interval, will be treated as undeliverable.
A receipt will be given for the Trade Charge collected.
5. Cheques will not be accepted in payment of Trade Charges.
6. In no case will a Trade Charge, once paid, be refunded to the addressee.
IV. PAYMENT OF MONEY ORDER (OR POSTAL ORDER) TO SENDER OF PARCEL. The sender of a parcel on which a Trade Charge has been collected will receive in a closed envelope the Money Order or Postal Order representing the amount, less the deductions referred to in Section I. para. (d.) When ashing the order, he must produce at the paying office the Certificate of Posting (see Section II. para. 3) which was given to him when he handed in the parcel. The Certificate must be given to the Postmaster when the Order is paid.
V. INCIDENTAL SERVICES
1. Parcels on which Trade Charges are to be collected will, in other respects than those above specified, be treated like other parcels as regards registration insurance and compensation.
2. When a Trade Charge has been collected, the Post Office undertakes responsi- bility for the due remittance of the amount to the sender of the parcel.
GENERAL
256. As full information regarding articles that can and can not be sent by Post is published, under the proper heads, in the "Postal Guide," no application will be entertained for the refund of the value of postage stamps on correspondence which is dis- covered, after the postage labels have been obliterated, to contain any prohibited article, or which exceeds the limit of weight, or which for any other reason cannot be for warded and has consequently to be returned to the sender, and any loss resulting
from a non-observance of the Rules by the sender of an article must be borne by him.
DESTINATION
HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE
PARCELS POST-INSURANCE RATES
Limit of InsurTENDA
Insurance Pro for
first £12 or Dra. 300 or $120.
topassana haaaa anfang saHBARENT
412 or Zem, 300 or 3120.
DESITNATION
Limit of Insurance
Inguruner Fee for
first £12 or Dye, 300 or $120,
Insurance Fes for every meceeding
£12 or 79, 800 of $120.
*
Aden.. Ascension.
1,2010
500
C+
3 38
2
23
15
Grenada,
100
35
25
Gibraltar,
500
Holland,
400
Australasian Colonies (via London) :-
---
New Zealand (including Cook
and Harvey Island),
Hongkong to and from II. B. M. Postal
Agencies in China..
1,200
1,200
Austria-Hungary,
Bahamas,
Barbados,
1,200
500
1,200
Belgium,
1,200
Berinuda,
1,200
Beyrouth.
400 40 30
Bosnia, Herzegovina, Sandschak, and
Novi Bazaar,
1,200
Nyasaland Protectorate,
200
British East Africa (including Uganda) 1,200
British Somaliland
500
* # 56889 9988
36 25
35
40
35
36 25
35
40
40
35
* 88 8868
India...
1,200
Italy (including San Marino),
400
25
Jaronica,
1,200
Japan,
659 26983
35
35
20
40
35
30
1,900
25
25
Leeward Islands
Antigua, Dominicas, Montserrat.
25
Nevis, St. Kitts, Tortolu,..
1,200
35
Liberia,
200
30
Luxemburg,..
1,200
55
20
25
Malay States,
20
Malta,
1,200 1,200
British West Africa :-
Montenegro,
Mauritius,
Newfoundland
400
45
1,200
25
1,200
Norway,
1,200
1. Gold Coast.
500
2. Cambia and Sierra Leone,
500
3. Nigeria (Southern),
1,200
British Guiana,
1,200
Burnish,
1,200
Cameroons and Togo
1,200
China,
1,200
Cuba
1,200
Ceylon,
1,200
Chili
500
Constantinople and Symrna,
Corea via Nagasaki,
400
1,200
Creta
100
Cyprus,
1,200
Dutch Guiana,
20100
Danish West Tudies (St. Thomas, St.
Greenland,
Egypt,
Ecuador,
Falkland Islands,
France (including Mounco).
French Colonies:-
1. Algeria and Corsica,
John, and St. Croix),
Denmark, Faroe Islands, Iceland and
Jintch West Indies (Curacao),
Erithren (Red Sea), Italian Colony,
200
1,200
200
1,200
100
200
500 35
1,200
*EXB9A88945593 3 3 9 64*58
36
25
20
50
25
40
40
26
35
2. Senegal, French Guinea, French
Somali Coast,
3. French Congo, Ivory Const. Dahomey and Dependencie, Gaudeloupe, Martinique, French Guana, Reunion, Madagascar, and Dependencies (Madagascar, Ste. Marie, and Nossi Bé), Čamioro Island (Mayotte only), New Caledonia, Germany triu London), German),
Kinochow
200 45
Sarawak,
20
200 45 30
1,200 1,200
36
Zanzibar,
99958
25 15 1,200 20 10
1,200
45
200 43
30
28 FRERE N P V 89658558ESENORA
25
Nigeria (Southern)
1,200
26
Portugal,
200
35
25
25
Portuguese Colonies
Azores,..
200
35
焼 5 5 5 10 5 25 25
* **
3442ARRA A
* 53
33998388 3
25
26 15
25
25 15
25
25
25
20
25
25 15
35
15
35 25
35 25-
35 25
25
25
15
30
Portuguese West Afrion
(Cape Verdej
and Guinea, St. Thome, Principe
35
and Angola),
200
15
Portuguese East Africa,
200
25
Madeira,
200
35
Portuguese India, ..
200
36
Roumania,
1,200
30
Russia
1,200
Sénégal,
200
Seychelles
St. Helena,
Salonica (British Post Office), Servia,
St. Vincent..
500 35 25
200
200
200
500
Straits Settlements,
1,200
993
R9
99399233
35
35
25
40
40 25
15
35
40 25
25
35 25
*** * *
39339RA
25
25-
2.5
15
25
30
15
30
25
Sweden,
1,200
35
Switzerland,
1,200
Tripoli (Africa), Turkey Tunis,..
United Kingdom,
100 45
400 45
400 45
1,200 25
Do.,
Overland
(Semi-official service via London) 200
1,200 35
1,200 25
500
35
25
55 30 5 30 15蹲5 15
45
36
999 23 2 13
55
25
25
35
ZO-
17a
561
LIST OF STAMP DUTIES.
CHARGEABLE UNDER THE STAMP (AMENDMENT) ORDINANCE 19 OF 1909.
NOTE-A document containing or relating to several distinct matters is to be separately and distinctly charged with duty in respect of each of such matters. Any document liable to Stamp duty under nore than one Article of this Schedule shall be charged under that Article which imposes the highest duty. 1.-ADIGDICATION, as to the amount of stamp duty to be levied on any #1.
document.
2.-AFFIDAVITs, Statutory declaration or declarations in writing on oath or affirmation made before any person authorised by law to take the same or to $3. administer an oath or affirmation and not otherwise chargeable with duty....
EXEMPTION. This Article shall not apply to any such affidavit or declaration made for the immediate purpose of being filed or used in the Supreme Court or before any Judge or Officer of sneh Court or to any affidavit or declaration made for the sole purpose of enabling any person to receive any pension or charitable allowance. 3. AFFIRMATION,
4.-AGREEMENT, or any memorandum of an agreement, unler hand only, and
$.
not otherwise specially charged with any duty, whether the same be only 31. evidence of a contract or obligatory on the parties from its being a written
instrument
NOTE-Agreements as to letting or tenancy are in all cases chargeable as lenses. See articles 32 and 34. AGREEMENT, or Contract, accompanied with the deposit of Title Deeds to any)
immovable property or for securing payment or repayment of any moneySee Mortgage, 384
or stock.
EXEMPTIONS.-Label, slip, or memorandum containing the heads of any Insurance to be effected by means of a duly
stamped Policy or Risk Note. MEMORANDUM, letter, or agreement made for or relating to the sale of any goods, wares, or merchandise, or to the
sale of any shares in any public company, not being a Broker's note or document given by a Broker. SEAMAN's advance note, of memorandum or agreement made between the master and inariners of any ship
for wages.
EMIGRATION CONTRACT.
PASSAGE TICKET.
5. ARBITRATION AWARD:
Where the amount claimed or involved does not exceed 8500.
$1.
SL.
Where the amount claimed or involved exceeds $500 but does not exceed $1,000 $2. And for every additional $1,000 or part of $1,000 over the first $1,000 Where no money claim is male or the amount involved cannot be ascertained..86. 6. ARTICLES OF CLERKSHIP, or Contract whereby any person shall first become bound to serve as clerk in order to his admission as an Attorney or Solicitor
Z-ASSIGNMENT, by way of security, or of any security.. Upon a sale.
$150,
.See Mortgage, 38.
See Conveyance, 21.
03.
8. ATTESTED Cory of any document chargeable with Stamp Duty under this? scherlule
Nors. In case any document of which an attested copy shall be made has annexed to or subscribed upon it any certificate, affidavit, declaration, or attestation referring to the execution of such document or to any other formality in connection with such document, no separate or additional stamp shall be required for or in respect of an attested copy of any such certificate, affidavit, declaration, or attestation, and the stamp of & upon the attested copy of the principal document shall be deemed to cover and include the attested copies of all such certificates, affidavits, declarations, and attestations.
9.-ATTORNEY, Letter or Power of
10. AVERAGE STATEMENT,
11.-BANK CHEQUE payable on demand to any person, to bearer, or order.
12.-BANK NOTES, or other obligations for the payment of money issued by any Banker or Banking Company in the Col- ony for local circulation and payable to bearer on demand,
One per cent. per annum on the average value of such notes in circulation.
13. BILL OF Excnasos drawn out but payable on demand Within the Colony not being a Cheque, and bearing the date on which it was made,
See 36 and 42.
.See Bond, 15. ..5 cents.
To be collected monthly on a state- ment thereof to be furnished by each Banker or Banking Company to the Collector of Stamp Revenue at the end of each month, and to be signed by the Banker, or Manager, or Agent and by the Accountant of such Banker or Banking company.
Centr
BILL OF EXCHANGE of any other kind whatsoever except a Cheque or Bank Note, aid Promissory Note of any kind whatsoever excepta. Bank Note
From
JA
14
900 to $10 $250
$10,--Free.. $250,- 5 eta.
14
11
$500
H
$1,000 $2,000
כ!
וי
H
$3,000
++
$500,-10 $1,000,-20 $2,000,-50
$3,000,-$1.00 85,000,-$1.50
$5,000 $10,000,-$2.00
215,001-$4.00 1
$10,000 Every 85,000 additional, or |
part thereof,.
→30.50
Nors 1-A Bill of Exchange for exactly 8250 is to be charged 5 cents, and so throughout the table. NOTE 2-When Bills of Exchange or other such documents are drawn in sets of two or more, half the above duties to be charged on each part of a set. If the Duty be 5 cents the first part of the set shall be stamped be that amount in accordance with Rule No. 2 of the Rules made by the Governor-in-Council under the Stamp Orduaner, 1901, on the 6th day of April, 1908, and the other parts with an impressed stamp of the same nominal value. Provided that only the sum of 5 cents shall be payable in respect of the whole set.
LIST OF STAMP DUTIES
ORDER IN COUNCIL, 19 JUNE, 1900.
563
Nork 3.-In the case of a Bill of Exchange drawn out of and payable on demand out of the Colony, the duty payable
on any such Bill of Exchange when it is negotiated within the Colony shall be 5 cents.
NOTR 4-In the case of Bills in sets drawn out of the Colony, the whole duty shall be parable on that part of the set which is first presented for payment or acceptance, or is first otherwise negotiate, the other parts of the set being tree.
14-BILL OF LADING, or ship's receipt where bills of lading are not used:7 When the freight is under $3 for each part of every set, When the freight is $3 or more for each part of every set,
•
10 vents,
20
EXEMPTION Bill of Lading for goods shipped by any Government Oilleer on account of Government. 15.-Boxn, or other obligation concerning RESPONDENTIA
AND BOTTOMRY, and 10 cute for every $100 or part thereof,
Average Statement, or Bond where no statement is drawn up
Boxe, for securing the payment or repayment of money not otherwise provided) for, or the transfer or re-transfer of stock, or accompanying the deposit or Title See Mortgage, 38. Deeds to any innovable property,
Boyd,
16-BROKER'S
NOTE, or any document having reference to the sale or purchase of any merchandise, given by any Broker,
Sec also Articles 6, 20, 31, 40.
$1.
17-CHARTER PARTY, or any Agreement or contract for the charter or hiring 10 cents for every $100 or part thereof.
2 of any sen-gong ship or vessel to be charged on the estimated freight
18-Cory CHARTER.
10.-COLLATERAL SECURITY, 20.-CONTRACT,
..$6.
See Mortgage, 38. See Agreement, 4.
21. CONVEYANCE or Assignment on sale, to be levied on the amount or value" of the consideration money, such consideration money to include any suni payable by the purchaser in respect of any mortgage or other debt remaining 50 cents for every $100 or part thereof. upon the property purchased or released by such purchaser to the vendor (See also Article 25),
EXEMPTIONS-Transfer by mere endorsement of a duly stamped Bill of Exchange, Promissory Note or other negotiable Instrument, or of a Bill of Lading. Instruments for the sale, transfer, other disposition either absolutely or by way of mortgage, or otherwise, of any ship, vessel, junk ör boat, or any part, Interest, share, or property of or in any ship, vessel, junk or boat.
Any document relating to land in the New Territories executed in pursuance of the provision of the New Territor
ies Land Ordinance. 1905.
ORDER IN COUNCIL, 31 JULY, 1001
22.-CO-PARTNERS, Deed or other instrument of,
-DECLARATION.
24. DECLARATION OF Trust,
-DEED or other instrument or Gier, assignment, or exchange, where n10 money consideration, or a merely nominal money consideration passey,
$25.
See 2. .$30.
$20.
DEED or other instrument of Assignment by a Trustee to the cestui qui trust, where no money consideration or merely nominal money consideration passes,
DEED of Assignment where no money consideration or a merely nominal money consideration passes in enses where such Deed of assignment is merely confirm- $20. atory of an Assignment on which the full conveyance duty has been paid.
NOTE-The Collector of Stamp Revenue shall, unless the two deeds referred to in the last paragraph are comprised in one and the same document, denote by an entry under his hand made upon the Deed stamped with the $20 duty, that the full conveyance duty (if more than 20) has been paid upon the other.
20. Derosit of Title Deels..
.See Mortgage, 38.
27.-DUPLICATE Or Counterpart of any Document chargeable with duty under this schedule, to be affixed on the production of the original Domment heuring its proper Stamp, and not otherwise. If the original duty is;-
Under 1..
Over I and not exceeding $10.
P
510
11 11 $20.
י
820.
Same duty, $1.
ازالة
83.
NOTE-The duplicate or counterpart of any instrument chargeable with duty is not to be deemed duly stamped unless it appears by some entry made by the Collector or by some stamp impressed thereon that the full and proper duty has been paid upon the original instrument of which it is a duplicate or counterpart or unless it is stamped as an original instrument.
98.-EQUITABLE charge, -
20-FOREIGN ATTACHMENT BOXD, in the Supreme Court, either Jurisdiction. 30-GUARANTEE,··
31-Every INSTRMEST in writing USPER SEAL, not otherwise specially charged
with duty under this schedule..
See Mortgage, 38.
$1 for every $100 or part thereof,
See Agreement, 4.
30.
NOTE-The impressions of Chinese names, shop names, or trading names, commonly called chope, shall not be taken
to be seals within the meaning of this Article.
3-LEASR or Agreement for a Lease, made for a term of years, or for a period)
determinable with one or more life or lives or otherwise contingent, in considera- ( 30 cents for every $100 or part there-
t of a sum of money pair in the way of premium, fine, or the like, if without
rent.....
33-LEASE executed in pursuance of a duly stamped agreement for the same,
-LEASE or Agreement for a Lease of any Land, House, Building or Tenement, tarent, without payment of any sum of money by way of fine or premium, to be tfed on the Annual Rent, for a term not excceding:-
Chie year,
Three rears, 1
Thirty years,
Execeding thirty years,
LEASE, surrender_of
.$3.
of
10 cents
25
M
50
For every $100 or part
thereof.
13
.75
The same amount of duty as is pay-
able on the lease itself.
Nor-When both rent is paid and there is a fine or premium, the duty is to be the total of that due under both
Articles 82 and 34.
EXEMPTION All rentals under 50 per annum.
501
LIST OF STAMP DUTIES
ORDER IN COUNCIL, 19 JUNE, 1908. 35.-LETTER or other instrument of HYPOTHECATION accompanying deposit of document of title to any moveable property, or bond, or other instrument of guarantee in respect of such property or documents of title, .
36-LETTER OR POWER OF ATTORNEY, or other instrument in the nature there- of, for the sole purpose of appointing or authorizing a proxy to vote at any one meeting at which votes may be given by proxy, whether the number of persons named in such instruments be one or more...
37.-LETTER OF GUARANTEE,
38.-MORTGAOR, or Agreement for a Mortgage, Bond, Debenture, Covenant, Warrant of Attorney to confess and enter up judgment, and Foreign security of any kind not specially charged with duty under this schedule, to be levied on the amount or value of the principal sum secured.
Referring to particular property, si, Duplicate, 30 cents. General, $6.
-5 cents. See also 42
See Agreement, 4.
(1) Being the only, or principal, or primary security, and also where any) 10 cents for every $100 or part- further money is added to the money already secured,
(i) Being a collateral or auxiliary or additional or substituted security, other" than a Mortgage, executed pursuant to a duly stamped agreement for the same, or by way of further assurance for the above mentioned purpose where the prin cipal or primary security is duly stamped, and for every extension of the time of an Original Mortgage whether or not endorsed on such Mortgage,
(iii) Transfer assignment, disposition or assignation of any Mortgage, bond, debenture, covenant, or foreign security, or of any money or stock secured by any such instrument or by any warrant of Attorney to enter up Judgment, or by any Judgment; to be levied on the amount transferred,
thereof.
cents for every $100 or part thereof.
5 cents for every $500 of the princi
pal sum paid off or otherwise lischarged, provided that no duty is chargeable in respect of any part of $500.
(iv) Re-assignment, release, discharge, surrender, re-surrender, warrant to vacate, or renunciation of any such security as aforesaid, or of the benefit there. of, or of the money thereby secured. Where the payment of interest in respect of the money secured is mentioned in any re-assignment or other document specified in this sub-section, no duty shall be payable in respect of such interest. (v) Mortgage executed in pursuance of duly stamped agreement for the
EXEMPTION. Re-assignment accompanied by a Certificate from Land Officer that it has been made to obtain a new
Crown Lease.
ORDER IN COUNCIL, 29 SEPTMBER, 1904.
saine,
} $8.
39.-ANY NOTARIAL ACT whatsoever not otherwise charged with duty in this $8. schedule,
40.--NOTE OF PROTEST by any Commander or Master of a vessel, or with regard to any Promissory Note or Bill of Exchange,
41.-POLICY or Risk Note (insurance) for each copy, and every renewal (a) Life Insurance (including Interim Receipts),
(b) Marine, Hull Risks for Thns,
(e) All other Insurances (Fire Marine or otherwise),.
74 cents.
25 cents for every $1,000 or park
thereof insured.
Where the amount insured does not
exceed $1,000, 10 cents. Where it exceed $1,000, 10 cents. .84. See also 36.
to
42-POWER OF ATTORNEY, Or Revocation of Power of Attorney. 43.-PROBATE, Or Letters of Administration, with or without the will annexed, be calculated upon the value of the estate and effects for or in respect of which such Probate or Letters of Administration shall be granted, exclusive of what the deceased shall have been possessed of or entitled to as a Trustee for any person or persons and not beneficially:-
(a.) Where the estate and effects are above the value of two hundred and fifty dollars and not above the value of one thousand dollars, .
(b) Where the estate and effects are above the value of one thousand dollars and not above the value of ten thousand dollars,
(e) Where the estate and effects are above the value of ten thousand dollars and not above the value of one hundred thousand dollars,...
(4.) Where the estate and effects are above the value of one hundred thousand dollars and not above the value of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars,..
(.) Where the estate and effects are above the value of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars and not above the value of five hundred thousand dollars,
Where the estate and effects are above the value of five hundred thousand dollars and not above the value of seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars...
(r.) Where the estate and effects are above the value of seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars and not above the value of one million dollars,
(4.) Where the estate and effects are above the value of one million dollars and not above the value of one million five hundred thousand dollars,
At the rate of one dollar for every one
hundred dollars and for every tran tional part of one hundred dollars over any multiple of one hundred dollars.
At the rate of two dollars for every one hundred dollars and for every fractional part of one hundred dál- lure over any multiple of one hun dred dollars.
At the rate of three dollars for every one hundred dollars and for mvery fractional part of one hundred dol lars over any multiple of one hun dred dollars.
At the rate of five dollars for every one hundred dollars and for every fructional part of one hundred dol lars over any multiple of one huo-
dred dollars.
At the rate of five dollars and fifty cents for every one hundred dollars and for every fractional purt of one hundred dollars over any multiple of one hundred dollars. At the rate of six dollars for every One hundred dollars set for every fractional part of one hunded ilo)- lars over any multiple of one hun dred dollars."
At the rate of six dollars and fifty vents for every one hundred dollars wasil for ovary Tractional part of que hundred dollars over any multiple of one hundred dollars At the rate of seven dollars for ever
one hundred dollars and for every fractional part of one hundred dol- lars over any multiple of one hun- dred dollars,
LIST OF STAMP DUTIES.
(1) Where the estate nul effects are above the value of one million five hun dred thousand dollars and not above the value of two million five hundred thousand dollars,
() Where the estate and effects are above the value of two million Ave hun- dred thousand dollars,.
565
At the rate of seven dollars and fifty cents for every one hundred dollars and for every fractional part of one hundred dollars over any multiple of one hundred dollars.
At the rate of eight dollars for every one hundred dollars and for every fractional part of one hundred dol- lars over any multiple of one hun- dred dollars.
EXEMPTION. Where the Estate and Effects do not exceed the value of two hundred and fifty dollars. Any grant of Probate or letters of administration in respect of the Estate of any deceased person which estate at the death of such person comprises land subject to the New Territories Ordinance, 1905, is so far as the value of such land itself is Concerned but not further.
14-RE-ASSIGNMENT,
ORDER IN COUNCIL, 31 JULY, 1905.
1
See Mortgage, 38.
15.-RECEIPT or Discharge given for the payment of money, or in acquittal of" a debt paid in money or otherwise, when the sum received, discharged, or 5 cents. acquitted exceeds $10,
EXEMPTIONS. Letter acknowledging the arrival of a Currency or Promissory Note, Bill of Exchange, or any security for money, Receipt or Debit Note for the Premium on a duly stamped Policy of Insurance. Receipts for pay and allowances of persons in the service of the Imperial or Colonial Government whether Civil, Naval, or Military.
40-SERVANT'S SECURITY BOND.-Any Instrument in writing under seal by which any domestic or other Servant of Clerk or Compradore shall give security for the due discharge of his duties, or of the duties of other persons to be en- ployed by him, or for the safe custody of money or property to be entrusted to him, or for the proper carrying on of business to be conducted by him, or for the discharge of his responsibilities arising from such business, whether such security shall be given by the binding of other persons, or by the deposit of money or valuable property or by deposit of the Title Deeds to any property or by any assignment,
47. SETTLEMENT. Any instrument, whether voluntary or upon any good or valuable consideration, other than a bond fide pecuniary consideration, whereby any definite and certain principal sum of money (whether charged or chargeable on lands or not, or to be laid out in the purchase of lands or not) or any definite and certain amount of stock, or any security, is settled or agreed to be settled in any manner whatsoever,.
The same duty as a mortgage. See
Article 38, and (ii).
30 cents for every $100 or part thereof
of the amount or value of the pro perty settled or agreed to be set- tled.
EXEMPTION. Instrument of appointment relating to any property in favour of persons especially named or described as the objects of a power of appointment crented by a previous Settlement stamped with ad calorem duty in respect of the same property, or by will, where probate duty has been pairt in respect of the same property as personal estate of the testator.
48.-SETTLEMENT executed in pursuance of a duly stamped agreement for the .
same,
49. STATUTORY DECLARATION,
See 2.
EXEMPTION. All statutory Declarations which, since the 4th day of September, 1893, have been, and which shall hereafter be made under or in pursuance of Form No. 3 in the Schedule to the Statutory Declarations Ordin. ance, 1893.
ORDER IN COUNCIL, 3 NOVEMBER, 1904.
M-SURRENDER OF A LEASE,.
The same amount of duty as is pay-
able on the lease itself.
51.-TRANSFER OF SHARES, or stock in any Public Company, to be computed on the market value of such shares on the day of stamping, which, if doubt 10 cents for every $100 or part there. arises, the Collector shall decide subject to Section 10 of this Ordinancé,
(0) Transfer for a houinal amount, to be approved by the Collector,
OL
2. Share warrants to Bearer three times the amount in Article 51 (1) above (the nominal value of the warrants is taken.)
GENERAL EXEMPTIONS.
Any Document made or executed by or on behalf of His Majesty or of any Department of IIis Majesty's Service, or whereby any property or interest is transferred to, or any contract of any kind whatsoever is made with His Majesty or Any person for or on bulalf of His Majesty or any such Department as aforesaid.
But this exemption does not extend to any Document executed by the Registrar of the Supreme Court as Official Adminstrator or by a Receiver appointed by any Court, or to any Document rendered necessary by any Ordinance or by onder of any Court; neither does it extend to a sale marle for the recovery of an arrear of Revenue or Rent,; or in satisfaction of a Decree or Order of Court, in any of which cases the purchaser shall be required to pay the amount of the requisite Stamp in addition to the purchase money.
date of execution.
SECOND SCHEDULE (see Section 8, Ordinance 16 of 1901).
Showing documents which may be stumped, without payment of penalty, at any time within seven days from the All the documents which are included in Articles 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 15, 19, 20, 21, 22, 21, 25, 26, 28, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 37, 28, 29, 40, 42, 44, 46, 47, 48, and 50, of the First Schedule to this Ordinance, with the following exception, namely
or Agreements for a Lease for a period of one year or under.
1
EMIGRATION FEES, Under the Chinese Emigration Consolidation Ordinance,
1860-
Application for a certifiente,
Certifleate,
.81.
.31.
SCALES OF COMMISSIONS AND BROKERAGES
Hongkong General ChaMBER OF COMMERCE
Adopted at the Annual General Meeting held 19th May, 1903
Purchasing or selling Tea, Raw Silk, and Cotton
Purchasing or selling Opium
Purchasing or selling all other Goods and Produce Purchasing or selling Ships and Landed Property Purchasing or selling Stocks and Shares
Inspecting Tea
Inspecting Silk
411
Guaranteeing Sales
Guaranteeing Remittances
Drawing or endorsing Bills of Exchange
+1
Drawing or endorsing Bills of Exchange without recourse
Purbasing or realising Bullion or Bills of Exchange
Remitting the Proceeds of Bullion or Bills of Exchange
--
24 per cent.
ૐ
1
M
JJ
H
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+
21
**
1
14
1
*
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15
27
**
Paying and receiving Money in Current Account
Paying Ship's Disbursements
Collecting Freight
Obtaining Freight or Charter
+++
Obtaining Freight or Charter and collecting same Freight
*
>T
>
Adjusting Insurance Claims on Amount Recovered
Effecting Insurance, on the Insured Amount
Prosecuting or defending successfully Claims, either at Law or by Arbitration
Prosecuting or defonding unsuccessfully
Managing Estates and collecting Rents (on Gross Receipts)
Transhipping and forwarding Jewellery and Bullion
Forwarding or transhipping Cargo
Transhipping or forwarding Opium
Goods withdrawn or re-shipped
Granting Letters of Credit
J
JI
21
+4
JJ
JE
+
$2 per chest
Commission
1 per cent. For doing ship's business when no inward or outward Commission is earned, 20 ets. per Register tou. The conversion into Hongkong currency of sterling freight inward to Hongkong, payable in Hongkong, shall, unles otherwise stipulated, he made at the rate for Bank Bills on London payable on demand; and the rate ruling a the close of à mali shall be the rate applicable to such purpose during the subsequent week. Brokerage on Bills and Bullion
Brokerage on Produce and General Merchandise
**
C
Brokerage for Negotiating and completing Charters and
Brokerage on Fire Arms
procuring Freight...
Brokerage for Negotiating sale or purchase of Landed Property 1
per cent. Payable by Seller
M
++
(2
by Ship.
7
SHANGHAI GENERAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Adopted at the Annual General Meeting held 26th February, 1906
COMMISSIONS
if as return for Goods sold
24 per cent,
TT
21
Purchasing Tea, Raw Silk, Opium, and Cotton
Do.
Do.
Do.
do.
do.
all other Goods and Produce
Ships and Real Estate
SCALES OF COMMISSIONS AND BROKERAGES
Guaranteeing Sales or Remittances, when required
Inspecting Silk, Tea, or other Good and Produce....
Do. Stocks, Shares, Debentures, and other good Securities Do. Ships, and Real Estate
Do. all other Goods and Produce
Selling Tea, Raw Silk, Opium, and Cotton
Do. Native Bank orders received in payment for Goods.
Drawing, indorsing, or negotiating Bills of Exchango, on approved Bills secured
by Credits or Documents
Remitting the proceeds of Bullion or Bills of Exchange
Paying and receiving Money in current account..
Do. Ships' Disbursements
Collecting inward Freight.....
Obtaining Freight and collecting same Froight, including Brokerage
Entering and/or Clearing
Disbursements, etc., 23 per cent. Entering and/or Clearing
On charters and sales effected
Settlement and payment of Marine Insurance Claims...
On the amount paid for Average Claims
On the amount paid for Total Lossos.
Prosecuting or Defending, successfully, Claims, either at Law or by Arbitration,
on amount claimed
Prosecuting or Defending, unsuccessfully, on amount claimed..
Froving Claims, collecting and remitting Dividends, on amount proved
567
24 per cent.
1
30
*
23
1
-3-23-
01
**
J
JJ
The. 30
5
per cent.
2
per cent
1
JJ
5
>
21
Managing Estates and Collecting Rents.....
Transhipping and Forwarding Jewellery and Bullion
+
01
272
Landing or Transhipping Cargo...
Transhipping or Forwarding Opium
Selling cargo ex Ships put into port Damaged
Goods withdrawn or re-shipped
1
5
Tls. 2 per chest.
half commission
Granting Letters of Credit
per cent.
Interest on cash advances
8
JJ
The foregoing rates to be exclusive of Shroffage, 1 per mil,, and Brokorage, when paid; unless
otherwise stated.
BROKERAGES
Brokerage on Bills aud Bullion...
Do. selling Produce, Metals, and General Merchandize*. Ship Brokerage for negotiating and completing Charters
Do. obtaining Freight....
Brokerage on Charters and sales effected
1.
0 per cent, from seller
+3
1}
from ship
1
13
Do.
Sales of Coal
1
from sellers
+
(from seller
Do.
Shares, Stock, Debentures, and other Public Securities 0}
and buyer
Brokerage to be paid only on Goods actually delivered.
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DIRECTORY
1
EASTERN SIBERIA
VLADIVOSTOCK
This port, on some charts still called Port May, lies in latitude 43 deg. 7 min. N. and longitude 131 deg. 54 min. E., at the southern end of a long peninsula reaching into Peter the Great Bay. Of the ports in East Siberia it is by far the most important both as a military and commercial centre. Vladivostock is one of the most magnificent harbours in the East. From its peculiar long and narrow shape and the once supposed hidden treasures in the slightly auriferous soil of its surrounding hills it has not inappropriately been called the Golden Horn. The entrances to the harbour are hidden by Russian Island, which divides the fairway into two narrow passages. This fine sheet of water first runs for about half a mile in a northern direction and then suddenly bends to the east for a distance of about one mile. On all sides it is surrounded by hills, low on the southern and higher on the northern shore; these hills slope sharply down to the water's edge. Once verdant with foliage, they have been completely denuded of trees by reckless felling. The harbour, capable of accommodating an almost unlimited number of vessels of deep draught and large capacity, affords a safe anchorage. It is usually icebound in January and February, but steamers can always find their way in with the assistance of an ice-breaker. There is a floating dock capable of taking in vessels up to 3,000 tons, and a fine graving dock of the following dimensions Length over all, C25 feet; length at bottom, 555 feet; breadth, 120 feet; breadth at entrance, 90 feet; depth, 30 feet. There are also two large docks especially for purposes of the State war fleet, but merchant vessels are also permitted to dock in same.
---
Now that Russia has lost her usufruct of Port Arthur, the port of Vladivostock is again the chief naval station of Russia on the Pacific. The port is commanded by an Admiral appointed from home, who is chief of all the naval forces of Russia in the Pacific, and there is also a military Governor residing at Vladi vostock, who is in command of the forces spread over the South Ussuri district. The municipal affairs of the town are managed by a Mayor and Town Council elected by and from among the Russian civil community. In 1899 the Commercial Harbour Office was opened. The town is built on the southern slope of the hills running along the northern shore of the harbour, and handsome brick residences have been erected in recent years, replacing the older wooden structures. The entire area, with the exception of some unoccupied lots intervening here and there, is covered by buildings; and the town is well laid out with wide but ill-kept roads. The sanitary arrangements are bad, though the town is fairly healthy. Most conspicuous among the buildings are the government offices, the post and telegraph-office, municipal house, the barracks, the railway station the museum, the Russian church, the Governor's residence and that of the Admiral Commanding, which is surrounded by a public garden, while the houses of the more afluent merchants are well and substantially built. In the public garden the naval band plays twice a week during the summer. There is a naval club, to which civilians are admitted as non-voting members, two or three hotels, a high Oriental lyceum with a gymnasium and school for boys, au institute for girls, and military, naval and civil hospitals. There are monuments of Admiral Nevelsay Zavoyco. The town has a population of about 50,000, most of whom are of European extraction. The retail trade is principally in the hands of Germans and Chinese, and the port is one of importance, Russian, British, and German steuners doing most of the carrying trade. A large garrison is maintained, but exact figures are not obtainable. In June, 1891, the present Tsar cut at Vladivostock the first sod of the Siberian Railway, which was completed in 1902. A branch extends to Habarofsk. The accommodation and service are very good, and the fares very reasonable.
During the eighteen months of the war between Russia and Japan, the inhabitants lived in constant expectation of a determined attempt being made by the Japanese to take the town, but the Japanese contented themselves with detach- ing a squadron to watch the port and to gauge the strength of the defences by an
occasional bombardment.
VLADIVOSTOCK
$71
In November, 1905, sorious riots occurred in the port arising out of the disappointment of the reservists who had expected to return home at the conclusion of the war, but were detained at Vladivostock; a third of the town was burnt down, including the entire Chinese quarter, and about 600 persons were killed. Great damage was done to property before the authorities succeeded in suppressing the riots by bringing into the town 1,200 Cossacks, who fired on the rioters when they refused to desist. Four of the best known hotels were burnt down, and travellers have since had great difficulty in finding accommodation in the town. Three new hotels Russian, German and French-have since been ferected, and many other fine buildings in brick and also stone are to be seen going up. Altogether there is now an air of prosperity about the port.
NICOLAJEWSK
The port and settlement of Nicolajewsk, founded in 1851 by Admiral Nevelskoi, is situated on the river Amur, about 39 miles from its mouth. The Amur is here about nine miles in width, with a depth in mid stream of eight to nine fathoms and a current of three to four knots, though the river is very shallow in parts, even in mid-stream. It is navigable for vessels of light draught for more than 2,000 miles, and vessels of 12 feet draught can get up 600 miles. The town is built on a plateau 50 feet above the sea level and gradually slopes eastward down to the river. The most conspicuous edifice is the Cathedral, round which the town is built. This structure is imposing in appearance, with a large west tower, having belfry and dome, but it is built of wood and is showing signs of deterioration. At the back of the Cathedral is a large grass-grown square, two sides of which are occupied by Barracks, Governor's House, and Police Station. There are few substantial houses in the town, except those used as public buildings or stores, and the buildings are small and wholly built of wood. There is little trade except in fish and cranberries, quantities of salmon being dried and cured here. Naval and inilitary head-quarters are again established here and the Port is increasing in importance.
Mow-sing
AMERICAN TRADING COMPANY
O. W. Lindholm & Co.,
agents
DIRECTORY
A. N. Kousnetzoff
A. A. Maslenikoff
A. I. Sitnikoff, signs per pro.
AMUR STEAM NAVIGATION AND TRADING
COMPANY, THE
Agents at Vladivostock
Commercial Bank of Siberia
G. G. Tashlikoff
W. A. Kapraloft
AMUR STEAMSHIP AND TRADING COMPANY; Tel. Ad Parotor. Head Office: Blago- weschtschensk
F. Th. Rosse, manager
Commercial Bank of Siberia, agent
at Vladivostock
Clemens, agent at Habarowsk Popow, agent at Harbin Reniger, agent at Stretensk
J. M. Zarembo, agent at Nicolajewsk
BRYNEL, KOUSNETZOFF & Co., Merchants, Commission, Landing and Forwarding Agents, Stevedores, Ship, Freight and Custom-house Brokers ; Tel. Ad: Bryner
Jules J. Bryner
L. F. Sjostedt,
do.
V. E. Niklevitch,
do.
L. J. Bryner, cashier
K. N. Chaltourine
V. N. Belozeroff
J. W. Coats
|
L. I. Schwalko
H. Diecks
E. T. Maslenikoff G. C. Blake E. F. Bruderer B. J. Froese I. I. Tehirkoff P. I. Tellason A. I. Storelny E. I. Stamm S. L. Grodetzky S. E. Belaeff T. Mahlerwein A. P. Podgorny M. T. Boulatoff A. I. Joukoff
I. A. Bondsinsky G. Denguine M. F. Babaeff
S. P. Vinnitchenko
M. D. Bojko V. Tchouiko E. Bartz A. S. Playsky P. V. Vetko J. W. Webb A. A. Overchouk A. N. Joukoff I. A. Titoff I. Chochloff A.A.Pourpourovsky V. N. Zindovitch I. O. Kousnetzoff M. Grabok A. Grabok
Capt. Th. Helliesen A. Panoff A. N. Nikolaeff
572
A. Sulg R. Osoling G. Marker
K. Lomann
S. N. Tchoulkoff
Agencies
VLADIVOSTOCK
I. Semeniutin
F. Meshkoff
M. Malishevsky
P. Baranoff
Su Ajan, Comprad.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd. Tsingtau Dock
Compagnie des Messageries Maritimes. Chargeurs Reunis Shire Line
Java-China-Japan Lijn, Hongkong Steam Navigation Co., "Nederland,"
Amsterdam
Houlder Brothers & Co., Ltd., London Nautillus Steamship Co., Sunderland Gulf Line of Steamers
Gellatly, Hankey & Co., Hamburg Gerhard & Hey, Ld., St. Petersburg Babcock & Wilcox Ld., London Tiutiuho Silver, Lead, Zinc and Copper
Mines, Ld., Maritime Province Pilevo Timber Mills, Saghalien Island Pilevo Collieries
Mongugai Collieries, Maritime Province Novo-Udylsky Gold Mining Co., East
Siberia
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Revs. Spiganovitch & Bulvitch, pastors
CHOORIN & Co. (TSCHURIN & Co.) Merchants, and at Blagovechensk, Nikolaevsk on the Amur, Habarovsk, Nikolsk-Ussurisky, Chernigowka, Zeia, Harbin, Petropav lowsk (Kamchatka) Cape Djnew (Tchou- kotsky Peninsula). Offices: Moscow, Odessa, Irkoutsk and Hamburg
Managing Partner:-A. W. Kasianoff
(Moscow)
Partners W. A. Lewashoff (Blagove-
chensk)
Do. J. J. Mamontoff (B'chensk.) Do. A.W.Babintzeff (Wladivostok) Do.-W.P. Babintzeff, do. successers J. N. Kozloff, signs per pro. W. M. Kisliakoff.
K. N. Zepernik N. S. Kotelevitz M. A. Shokolenko, I. I. Roumiantzeff S. M. Minin W. E. Grigorieff A. A. Grigolowsky N. K. Petroff W. G. Kousichkin M. N. Koumanina S. K. Semko W. W. Troussoff M. P. Petchenkin A. K. Sourovikin D. A. Arestoff K. E Lisitsin
do.
P. S. Ivanoff P. A. Alexeof N. A. Joludewa Ch. S. Pakhaloff A. J. Rousanoff P. W. Konowaloff J. P. Bondarenko S. S. Iwanoff M. M. Perwerseff A. P. Nikitin | S. W. Majusheff P. P. Silakoff S. S. Louzin A. G. Shelonin S. J. Pawloff P. M. Ulianoff
S. S. Petroff J. A. Smirnoff D. A. Sokolik J. J. Artemjeff A. D. Zatonsky W. A. Koudriasheff S. J. Sherbakoff S. F. Souhoff K. F. Tshipkoff A. N. Levitzky M. G. Dymoff M. W. Winogradoff A. M. Shoulgin W. P. Sweshnikoff N. A. Fedorenko S. A. Fedorenko A. A. Majewsky J. A. Boudenny W. B. Lysnewsky G. Sergeef
M. S. Tsheglowity P. A. Peickert S. N. Ananin A. I. Ananina P. O. Kozloff F. I. Markoff N. Ewfitzenko A M. Alexandroff I. A. Shestakoff J. N. Kychakoff N. N. Wahoudin L. W. Mochinski F. W. Filippoff
CITY BANK
!
J. O. Tchekan J. A. Shabalin P. M. Horhorin A. D. Staheeff K. M. Solowieff O. A. Arestowa T. P. Parloff M. J. Denisson L. G. Kousichkina W. G. Kousitchkina S. M. Kasakoff M. S. Vorobieff P. P. Maksounoff L. Kym W. Goncharoff A. S. Arenzwary S. I. Parsbin J. A. Labashta S. W. Saharoff W. I. Olissoff W. P. Krashewsky P. A. Bajusheff A. D. Kanabeeff R. P. Silomedne T. I. Marchenko M. M. Merkouloff P. A. Vedensky S. S. Salamatoff I. E. Tischenko N. S. Roumiantzef I. S. Sterhoff and
others
Director-H, A. Wysoczky
Hok-sing
CLARKSON & Co., Merchants, Shipping Agents and Contractors, Saw Mill, Sash and Door Factory, Box Factory, Barrel Stave Factory, Flour Mill, Boiler Shop and Ship Building Yards, Pressed Brick Works, Olga Iron Mines, Novaya Nadye- shda Coal Mines, Askold Island Granite Quarries: Tel. Ad: Clarkson
David M. Clarkson
do. Shanghai
dlo. New York
H. F. Newhard, signs per pro. A. C. Hunter, Wm. H. Bell, R. E. Smith H. R. Smith W. H. Powers N. T. Leontieff G. I. Hofford G. Kosmin D. Kosmin A. Seaman I. Gavrilenko J. Povalaeff A. Maltsoff I. Labsuk A. F. Brown
P. Rosenwanger G. N. Leentyeff Henry Bush
I. Shianoff
Branch: Shanghai
Agencies
Glen Line of Steamers
VLADIVOSTOCK
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co.
Indra Line of Steamers
Canton Insurance Office
New Zealand Insurance Co.
行銀務商華東
COMMERCIAL BANK OF SIBERIA (Head
Office at St. Petersburg); Tel. Ad:
Sibirsky
A. K. Minnout, manager
S. A. Boushueff, signs per pro.
G. K. Kahn,
do.
A. K. Evers, accountant
F. R. Schellhorn
M. A. Apollonoff Th. J. Bernatzky A. G. Derankoff N. N. Sourgikoff A. M. Sokolnikof Th. A. Vstoffsky N. K. Pomiluykoff' J. N. Grey S. E. Benetzky
C. C. Bargocheffsky S. S. Sacharoff
B. A. Teploff
G. A. Souchanoff
J. D. Penkin, cashier
J. J. Cheparin, assistant
F. P. Doinikoff,
J. B. Lazareff,
do.
do.
Six Ee San, compradore
CONSULATES
AMERICAN CONSULATE
Consul-Lester Maynard
Vice and Deputy Consul-Harold
Frederick Newhard Interpreter-Waldemar Toritch
BELGIUM
Commercial Agent.-A. Maslemkoff
CHINA
Imperial Chinese Consul-General
Dantai Koué Fang
FRANCE
Consul--Louis Nettement
GERMANY
Consul-Ad. Dattan
GREAT BRITAIN
Vice-Consul-R. M. Hodgson
GREECE
573
Vice-Consul-L. G. Ambanopulo
General Agent for Salamandra
Insurance Co.
Manager of the Vladivostock Bank
of Mutual Credit
Consul-Jules J. Bryner
HOLLAND
Secretary-Leonide J. Bryner
ITALY
Consular Agent Åd. Dattan
JAPAN
Consul-M. Nomura
OTTOMAN EMPIRE
Honorary Consul-Louis Mettement
DURAND & Co., Glass Manufacturers
GOLDENSTADT, C., Horticulturist and Army
and Navy Contractor
GRAND HOTEL
Skidelski, proprietor
GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPH Co., LD.
C. C. Kalmberg, superintendent
A. Christensen
R. Jensen
J. P. Christianson
K. K. Kastrup
K. T. Jonsen
O. A. Hanson
HEITMANN & AURNHAMMER, Merchants
G. Heitmann, signs the firm
Ed. Schulk, signs per pro.
B. Thomsen J. Johannson P. Schroder
K. Rapsey A. Pomiluikoff K. Janes L. János Kornilow A. Lorenz Chabarowsk--
J. Streng, manager E. Neukirch S. Lenski
Berchnoi
Owsianikow Alexandrow Makasow Cherkashin F. Shivalkin L. Lenski
Charbin, New Town--
W. Mevius, manager A. Pichlack D. Babin
574
H. Lambio
K. Harkowenko
Iman
W. Prokopjew, manager
Popowich Pleshakoft
Bulgakoff
Denissow
VLADIVOSTOCK
HOTEL D'ALLEMAGNE; Tel. Ad: Nemkahotel Arthur Schliewiensky, proprietor
HOTEL VERSAILLES (1st Class)
JAROSLAWSKO-KOSTROMSKOI BANK
M. A. Arapoff, agent
KUNST & ALBERS, Bankers and Merchants,
G. Albers (Hamburg)
A. Dattan
P. Behn (Hamburg)
Ed. Cornells, signs the firm
E. Kappenberg,
do.
J. Jeurgensen (Nikolsk) signs per pro. M. Ebert (Harbin)
do.
H.Skribanowitsch (Blagow.) do.
M. Spitze
do.
H. Wuensche (Nikolajefsk) do. A. Gese (Nagasaki),
do.
C. Steinberg (Habarofsk)
do.
A. Buttenhoff
do.
VLADIVOSTOCK
Branches Anutschino, Barabasch, Iman Murawiew Amurski, Nowokiewsk, Pogranitschnaja, Possiet, Rasdolnoje, Saissanowka, Slavianka, Spasskoje, Tschernigowka.
Dr. A. Albers B. Alexandrow F. Anutschkin F. A. Batujew
S. Barabasch (Now-
(okiewsk)
A. Bakowa
C. Beck
W. Banduzew M. Chamenko
C. Charlow N. Cholod abasch) Alex. Dattan M. Dawydow
M. Daduekiu
A. Behrend (War-
schau)
P. Danilow
J. Danilow
G. Demmel
E. Brund (Iman)
R. Bergmanu
L. Bersing F. Bewer W. Bilib
C. Bierstedt
M. Blinowa
N. Blochina
J. Borownikow
M. Boiko, I
M. Boiko, II
P. N. Buyalsky (Spa-
askoje) W. Buekow
N. Besrakow (Bar-
abasch)
W. Doutesfeld
E. Dsirne
(Bar-
W. Duschkin N. Faschtschewsky J. Fatjanow A. Fedotowa
N. Fominsky (Pog-
ranitschnaja)
E. Fricke
M. Galler W. Galagan (Spas-
skoje)
A. Gasnikow Ph. Georg
G. Golowanow
M. Gruadów
1. Lissowsky
M. Guiwartowskaja E. Lorenz
J. Guriatschew
K. Gretschanow W. Gross
F Grundmann
K. Gruenberg P. Gogolew V. Hansen M. Havam A. Hellwig
J. Hildebrandt W. Hildebrand (St.
Petersburg) J. Holmgreen W. Huitiu
J. Ikonikow P. Jaeger A. Jankowski P. Jastrebow J. Johannsen L. Kabakow H. Kabisch M. Kawalewa G. Kiritschenko F. Klose Th.
Kolessnikow (Nowo-Kiewsk)
L. Korduetschenko O. Kohenrt
J. Komiarow (Sais-
sanowka)
(Spa-
S. Krassilnikow S. Kriewetz
skoje) J. Krutikow R. Kuehns V. Kurlowitsch J. Kusnetzow A. KusnetzoW A. J. Kusnetzow (Tschernigowka) N. Kutseharin D. Krawtschenko
(Rasdolnoje)
E. Kurakow (Ras-
dolnoje D. Kuligin (Mur.
Amarsky)
1. Kim J. Kim
A. Langschwadt J. Larionow
E. Larsen
A. Larssen
I. F. Lasarew
I. M. Lasarew (No-
wokiewsk)
A. Lewkowitsch P. Lensky
J. Loshenuezín
L. Makarewitsch
A. Mari
N. Matjuschko J. Massjutin (Iman) W. Makuschin E. Moellenberg
Mett (Portland)
H.
F. Mingtschilow N. Mingtschilow G. Migunon (Tscher-
nigówka) 1. Miks M. Mohr F. Moeller E. Muehlhardt E. Mueller J. Miagtschilow(No-
wokiewsk)
J. Mordowskoi (Ras-
dolnoje)
J. Mordowskai do. J. Massjutin (Mur,
Amursky)
P. Nam (Rasdolenje) A. Nestman G. Ni (Possiet) J. Nigai (Nowoki-
ewsk)
K. Nigai
D. M. Nethschaew-
sky (Nowokiewak) H. Ollandt
M. Orlow P. Otriganiew (No-
wokiewsk)
W. Owsiankin J. Patschersky M. Paul
(). Pegler T. Permin
A. Petuchow (Sais-
sanowka) V. Pestrikowa 3. Perepetschai (Ts-
chernigowka) A. Permjakowa H. Pielberg H. Podgarbunsky P. Podgarbunsky F. Popow (Spasskoje) M. Ponoluikow (Sla
vianka)
M. Ponomarowa | P. Portuiagin
J. Purtow N. Polewoi (Pogran-
itschnaja)
J.Liesecke(Nagasaki | O. Reinfeldt
J. Ljau
D. Remmersen
J. Lopatin (Spas J. Reschetow
M. Riabow
skoje)
G. Kossow M. Rotbenstein G. Ruehe
F. Rosenwanger A. Russkich A. Sahnwaldt C. Seyffarth
A. Sakownikowa N. Samoschnikow D. Samoschnikow K. Schaidarow
E. Schewtschenko E. Schindler
N Schitikow
F. Schwalbach
P. Schulze
O. Schultz
M.
(Slavianka)
Schischmarew
W. Shabin (Anu-
schino)
G. Shgulew
A. Shgulew
A. Shilkin
J. Shurawlew
W. Slobodnitschen-
ko
N. Sotuikow
P. Solodow (Iman)
J. Speck
F. Spantschek
P. Ssypuschnikow
(Nowokiewsk)
A. Starikow
VLADIVOSTOCK
A. Stengel O. Stuebler W Stukanow
A. Subritzkaja I A. Subritzkaja II
Stukanow (Rus- donoje)
T.
J. Tarunin (Saissa-
nowka
A. Tabarsky (Iman) G. Ten
G. Tenberg B. Ten
R. Teich
M. Thurm
O. Tichauer
J. Omelkow N. Olrow
Cl. Pauly
R. Petry
A. Petuchow
J. Pliskowsky A. Popkow
M. Batseluurin
P. Ehlers A. Fokin N. Ignatiew W. Kalinin A. Krawzow P. Kriewetz J. Lawrentiew W. Mortensen
N. Malinowsky
575
M. Reschepetžkaja H. Sommer
J. Skepsky
P. Sprennit R. Thies
L. Wassiljew
NIKOLSK
G. Potschepnaja M. Recksing W. Rubzow A. Saljanow C. Seemers D. Schaidurow P. Scheremetjew A. Schukowa N. Schisclimarow J. Sotnikow J. Windjukow
A. Timojejewa
N. Tuerepin
S. Perewosky
N. Tarassenko (Pos-
G. Pilipenko
ssiet)
A. Pischel
A. Timm
(Nowo-
kiewsk)
HARBIN
M. Trudajewa (Spus-
skoje)
W. Bojarkin
H. Conradi
R. Uhlmann
A. Gurejew
E. Imanissi
E. Komarowski
W. Nurkewitsch
O. Wedekind
A. Weidauer
W. Wesemann
C. v. Weyhe
M. Woronin
J. Wtoroi (Basdol-
noje)
N. Zybassow (Ts-
chernigowka)
P. Starikowa (Iman) | J. Zybassow
A. Stauffacher
F. Stendel
R. Stengel
K. Baar
W. A. Batujew T. Boboruekin G. Burkow J. Gromuecke
J. Grushetzky E. Haars
F. Huth
A. Jermolajew
J. Karth
P. Kulik
A. Kurtisch M. Limberg J. Luschnow A. Malyschew A. Meyer
L. Zelai
W. Zehai
HABAROFSK
A. Merello Erw. Mueller J. Mueller S. Nikitew F. Pape Th. Ritter O. Saburowa
do.
F. Samoschnikow
S. Soljatschin
W. Senkow
N. Skoropissenko O. Schuricht A. Tschernow P. Waeliner W. Winokurow A. Zybassow
NIKOLAJEWSK
W. Bachmann X. Duntschewsky
Th. Freymann
P. Gertz
A. Idolow
A. Egorowa
P. Kapustin H. Ketels W. Koidan K. Kanonow P. Krogmann W. Kuchterin
K. Alexjew W. Aristow F. Bauer
J. Schwalbe L. Radke W. Stypnek
F. Wolf
J. P. Nakrochin
BLAGOVESTSCHENSK
D. Belilnikow O. Berg A. Besrukow O. Brockmann H Brusche A. Deschin
W. Dokutschaew B. Figurschinskaja K. Filippoft B. Gastrock W. Gambeke Fr. Goercke N. Golew O. Guenther K. Hinz
F. Holberg D. Jermolin J. Iljenko A. Knjasew H. Koch F. Koschwitz D. Korjakow H. Komissarow P. Korjakowa
D. Mostowoi
G. Martyschtschen-
ko
C. Mueller
A. Ponomarow N. Ponomarow
E. Perelomowa G. Ratschkowsky E. Ratschkowskaja L. Rjaesanowa E. Samarina A. Scharowa St. Schilnikow A. Schileuss J. Schlichting H. Schmidt L. Schukowsky N. Schigalew W. Schroeder P. Sheludkow M. Suturin V. Starodubzew WV. Spangenberg A. Tenne P. Tokarew J. Tschugunikow M. Wichmann
A. Kostromitinow G. Witt
E. Lamprecht Ch. Lanzowa F. Luecht
Agencies
L. Wjasamskaja
M. Worotilow
M. Wulf
Hamburg-Amerika Linie Norddeutscher Lloyd
576
VLADIVOSTOCK
Russian Steam Nav. and Trad. Co. Russian Baltic Steam Nav. Co. Pacific Mail Steamship Company Occidental and Oriental S.S. Company Toyo Kisen Kaisha
North China Line (A. Weir & Co.) P. & O. Steam Navigation Co. Austrian Lloyd
Boston Steamship Co.
Boston Tow Boat Co.
China Navigation
Ocean S. S. Co.
Co., Ltd.
China Mutual S. N. Co. Lloyd's, London
Verein Hamburger Assecuradeurs Verein Bremer Versicherungs Gesel-
lschaften
North China Insurance Company, Marine Insurance Co.
MannheimerVersicherungsgesellschaft
Oberrheinische
lschaft
Versicherungsgesel-
Union Insurance Society of Canton Tokio Marine Insurance Co. China Fire Insurance Company, Jakor Insurance Co., Moscow
South British Fire & Marine Insce. Co. New York Life Insurance Company
LANGELĈTJE & Co., Joн. H., Merchant
Helene Langelutje (Hamburg) Georg Tolle (Vladivostock)
N. Reinfeldt
do.,
St. Permin (Nikolsk)
Wilh. Scharrmann
Ch. Paap
C. Filipeck
Herm. Treide Franz Seiler A. Langelutje W. Kühlstaedt Alfred Norden Hans Nielsen Alb. Wolff Heiur. Lody Arn. Thieme A. Suikow M. Winokuroff T. Sacharoff
S. Krukowsky
A. Golodajeff A. Smetanin Const. Drobinin
M. J. Gontscharow
F. Jeftuschenko
P. Stupnikow
G. Korn
A. Darillow
J. Kimm
K. Fukasawa
K. Ochara
General Agency
EL
signs per pro.
do.
Rossija" Fire, Life, Accident and
Marine Insurance Company
Georg Tolle, agent-general W. Schumacher
LINDHOLM & Co., O. W., Merchants and proprietors of Nicolsk Steam Flour Mill, Gold Mine at Nahodia and Podgerodny Coal Mine
O. W. Lindholm
C. A. Tyrtoff, signs per pro. V. E. Michaeloff
R. J. Kakting A. Kravtzoff Yan-do Zin
M. Nikiforoff, supt, Nicolsk Mill I. A. Nazaroff, engineer do. A. J. Mindoff, supt. coal mine J. Kuharsky, Morkoussoff, asst. I. Sapeossoff, do.
Agencies
do.
dlo.
do.
Chartered Bank of India, A. & China Yangtsze Insurance Association, L. China Traders Insurance Co., Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Shire Line of Steamers
Ben Line of Steamers
NOEBEL & Co., Merchants; Branches at
Blagovestschensk and Nicolaewsk Max Kloss, signs per pro. R. Noebel, do.
ORIENTAL TIMBER CORPORATION, LTD., THE, Timber Merchants Saw and Millers Head Office: Melbourne, Australia. Vladivo stock Oflice: Pekinskaia 28; Tel. Address: Ortimco
MacLaren, J. N., signs per pro.
Reppmann, A. V.
Imperial Harbour (Timber Concession)
A. C. Hauland, manager
S. H. Dawes
K. F. Dobrjitsky A. I. Podshivaloff
ORTHODOX RUSSIAN CHURCH Rt. Rev. Mouravicff Rt. Rev. M. Pokrovksi Rt. Rev. Chistiakoff Rt. Rev. Popoff
Rev. Trostianscki Rev. Davidoff
Mr. Fatueft, diocesan observer of
the Church School
Rev. George
Rev. Damasci
Rev. Varnava
students of the
Oriental Institute
Administration
Bishop Evsevi
Consistory
Missionary Committee
C
Direction of Diocesan School Editing the Diocesan News' Trusteeship of Poor Clergy
VLADIVOSTOCK
577
PJANKOFF & BROTHERS, M., Merchants
M. P. Pjankoff (Pawlinovsk, near Ni-
kolsk)
I. P. Pjankoff
W. S. Iwanoff, signs per pro. W. N. Kosloff,
do. (Nikolsk)
A. P. Stepanoff, do. (Nikolajewsk) K.I.Tolmatshoff, do.(Blagowestsh'k)
Agency
Russian Insurance and Transportation
Co., St. Petersburg
PLARR, L, French General Agency, Tel. Ad Plar, Vladivostock, A.B.C." Code. 5th Edition
L. Plarr, manager Agencies
Adams' Express Co, New York
Official Delegate of the French Naval
Ligue and T. C. F., Paris
PONOMAREFF, M. P., Merchant
PROTESTANT CHURCH
Rev. A. Rumpeter, pastor
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK
A. W. Ovsiankin, manager S. A. Pavloff, attorney H. F. Gaenzer,
P. A. Scharoff,
*
Sub. Branches in Blagovestchenk, Khabarovsk, Nikolaieffs on Amur, Stretensk, Tchita, Harbin, Hailar, Kouantchendze, Nikolsk-Ousseurüsk and Tehita
SAGHALIEN COAL COMPANY
Maev, agent
SEMENOFF & Co... Merchants and Proprietors
of Sagalien Fisheries
J. Ľ. Semenoff
G. P. Denbigh
N. J. Semenoff
A. G. Denbigli
C. J. Semenoff (Saghalien)
SMITH. S. L., Commission Merchant Fred. S. Pray, signs per pro. F. E. Savecheft
SUVOROFF, MICHAEL J., Importer and Ex- porter. Timber and Wool Contractor and Builder for the Government. Proprietor of Saw Mills and fron Foundry, &c. Tel. Ad: Misonvorow, Vladivostock
Michael N. Reugarten, signs per pro.
Michael T. Plasker, Alexander Goloobitsky
TRANS-PACIFIC COMMERCIAL
Import and Export
Otto Lagerfell, agent M. J. Sterelny
Carl Wuebbens
USSURI MINING COMPANY, LD.
Startzew & Co., agents
VLADIVOSTOCK BREWERY
Ad. Rieck
Lothar, brewer James Lange
do.
COMPANY;
WALDECKER & PEOPPLE, Import & Export Merchts, Vladivostock and Khabaroffsk Tel. Ad: Wahlpoeppel
E. Waldecker, partner
E. Poeppel, W. Osmidoff
1. Kissmann
A. Jaansan
A. Arustedt
J. Pairs
P. Pawlow
W. Thukoff A. Rehren F. Durakoff
do.
E. Perepetchkin A. Jambedallo J. Lorrim
I. Filippow E. Kroas M. Titoff W. Lementy K. Lange
W. Loschkareff
W. Borgest
A. Pikoff
J. Treumam
A. Glinin
K. Müller
A. Greenberg
R. Ramann
Agency
The Moscow Fire Insurance Co.
WASSARD & Co.
L. Wassard (Nicolajewsk on Amur) A. Matwin (Vladivostock)
L Larsen
A. Jerrich
F. Milkowsky
Tichonoff
NICOLAJEWSK ON AMUR
E. Lehmann, signs per pro. C. Krogh
HARBIN (MANCHURIA) C. Hansen, signs per pro. Agencies
The East Asiatic Co., Ltd., Copenhagen The Russian East Asiatic Steamship
Co., Ltd., St. Petersburg The Swedish East Asiatic Company,
Gothenburg
18
!
JAPAN
CONSTITUTION AND GOVERNMENT
The government of the Japanese Empire was formerly that of an absolute monarchy. In the year 1868 the how ruling sovereign overthrew, after a short war, the power of the Shogun, together with that of the Daimios, or feudal nobles, who, on the 25th June, 1869, resigned their lands, revenues, and retainers to the Mikado, by whom they were permitted to retain one-tenth of their original incomes, but ordered to reside in the capital in future. The sovereign bears the name of Emperor; but the appellation by which he has been generally known in foreign countries is the ancient title of Mikado. Mutsu-hito, the reigning monarch, was born at Kyoto, on November 3rd, 1852; succeeded his father, Komei Tenno, 1867; married December 28th, 1868, to Princess Haru-ko, born April 17th, 1850, daughter of Prince Itchijo. The reigning Emperor is the 121st of an unbroken dynasty, which was founded 660 D.c. By the ancient and regular law of succession the crown devolves upon the eldest son, and, failing male issue, upon the eldest daughter of the sovereign. This law has often been disregarded in consequence of the partiality of the monarch or the ambition of powerful ministers, which was one of the principal causes that culminated in the dual system of Government in Japan. The Throne has frequently been occupied by a female. A new law of succes sion was promulgated in February, 1889, which excludes females from the Imperial
Throne.
The power of the Mikado was formerly absolute, but its exercise was controlled to some extent by custom and public opinion. His Majesty, in 1875, when the Senate and Supreme Judicial Tribunal were founded, solemnly declared his earnest desire to have a constitutional system of government. The Mikado has long been regardled as the spiritual as well as the temporal head of the Empire, but although the Shinto faith is held to be a form of national religion, the Emperor does not interfere in religious mat- ters, and all religions are tolerated in Japan. The Ecclesiastical Department was in 1877 reduced to a simple bureau under the control of the Minister of the Interior. The Mikado acts through an Executive Ministry divided into nine departments, namely:- Gwaimu Sho (Foreign Affairs), Naimu Sho (Interior), Okura Sho (Finance), Kaigun Sho (Navy) Rikugun Sho (Army), Shiho Sho (Justice), Mombu Sho (Education), Noshoma Sho (Agriculture and Commerce), and Teishin Sho (Communications). In 1888 a Privy Council modelled on that of Great Britain, was constituted. The new Constitution, promised by the Mikado in 1881, was proclaimed on the 11th February, 1889, and in July, 1890, the first Parliament was elected, and met on the 29th November. The Parliamentary system is bicameral, the House of Peers and the House of Representatives constituting the Imperial Dict.
The Empire is divided for administrative purposes into three Pu, or cities (Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka), and forty-three Ken, or prefectures, including the Loochoo Islands, which have been converted into a fen and named Okinawa. The island of Yezo is under a separate administration called Hokkaido-cho, and Formosa is governed as a colony. These fu and ken are governed by prefects, who are all of equal rank, are under control of the Naitou Sho, and have limited powers, being required to submit every matter, unless there is a precedent for it, to the Minister of the Interior. Nor have they any concern in judicial proceedings, which come under the cognizance of the forty-eight local Courts and the seven Supreme Courts at Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Miyagi, and Hakodate, over which the Daishin In presides at Tokyo.
Previous to the last change of Government, which restored the ancient Imperial regime, the administrative authority rosted with the Shogun (Military Commander), whom foreigners were at first led to recognise as the temporal sovereign, and with whom they negotiated treaties of peace and commerce. The Shogunate was founded in 1184 by Yoritomo, a general of great valour and ability, and was continued through several dynasties until 1869, when the Tokugawa family were dispossessed of the usurped authority. Under the Shogun three hundred or more Daimios (feudal princes) shared the administrative power, being practically supreme in their respective domains, conditionally upon their loyalty to the Shogun; but their rank and power disappeared with the Shogunate. On the 7th July, 1884, however, His Majesty issued an Imperial Notification and Rescript rehabilitating the nobility, and admitting to its ranks the most
JAPAN
579
distinguished civil and military officials who took part in the work of the Restoration. The old titles were abolished, and have been replaced by those of Prince (Ko), Marquis (Ko), Count (Haku), Viscount (Shi), and Baron (Dan).
REVENUE AND EXPENDITURE
The
The estimated revenue for the year 1909-10 is 518,929,283 yen, which shows a decrease of 70,804,666 when compared with the estimates for the previous year. ordinary revenue shows an increase of nearly thirty million yen, while extraor·linary revenue is reduced by over a million yen. The total expenditure is estimat 518,921,111 yen and it is noteworthy that the ordinary revenue exceeds the ordinary expenditure by nearly sixty-six million yen. Extraordinary expenditure is reduced by fifty-one million yen. The total of the national debt amounts to about 2,100,000,000 yen (roughly, £215,000,000), about one half being foreign loans. The total of the public loans raised for the purpose of meeting extraordinary expenditures connected with the war exceed 1,700,000,000 yen (£174,180,827), which is three times the total amount of the loans prior to the outbreak of the war. The greater part of this huge sum was raised in Europe and America, and to effect the redemption of these loans the Govern ment has provided a sinking fund. In the current year à sum of 153,000,000 yen is to be transferred from general account to the sinking fund, and nearly 30,000,000, from the Imperial Railways special account, making a total of 185,000,000, is to he devoted to the repayment of the principal. The grand total of the extraordinary expenses connected with the war with Russia was 1,932,00 1,000 yen (£203,073,770). Following on the restoration of peace there was a remarkable boom in commercial enterprise. During the two years 1906-7 the registered capital of joint stock companies showed an increase of 916,411,725 yen (ninety-seven million pounds sterling). A further increase of 110,0-3,330 yen was shown in 1908.
The first public loan in the financial history of Japan was raised in London in order to supply the funds required for constructing the first line of railway in the country. The sum raised was £4,880,000, and interest was paid at the rate of 9 per cent. The sterling foreign loans raised in 1904 and 1905 bear interest at the rate of 6, 44 and 4 per cent. Two six per cent. loans were raised in 1904 in London and New York, the Brst for £10,000,000 and the second for £12,000,000. The issue price of the first was £93 10s., and of the second £90 10s. Both are redeemable in seven years and the Customs duties are pledged as security. A sterling loan of £30,000,000 at 43 per cent. interest was raised in London and New York in March, 1905, the issue price being £90, the period of redemption 20 years, and the security the net profits of the tobacco monopoly. Another sterling loan of £30,000,000 at 44 per cent. was raised in July, 1905, in London, New York and Germany, the terms and security being the same as in the preceding loan. These four loans were raised for the express purpose of meeting the extraordinary expenses of the war. In November, 1905, a 4 per cent. sterling loan of £50,000,000 for the purpose of consolidating the national debt was decided upon. Half of this was raised immediately in London, Paris, New York and Germany, the issue price being £90, and the period of redemption 25 years. A loan of £23,000,000 at 5 per cent. interest was raised in March, 1907, in London and Paris, the issue price being £90 10s., and the period of redemption 40 years. These funds were applied to the redemption of the 6 per cent, sterling loan of £22,000,000.
ARMY AND NAVY
Until the war with China the Army consisted of six divisions and the Imperial Guards, with a peace footing strength of 70,000 in round numbers, and a war footing of 208,000, exclusive of the Gendarmerie and the Yezo Militia; but on the conclusion of the war a large scheme of expansion was adopted, under which the number of divisions was raised to twelve, exclusive of the Guards. The peace footing is now 160,100, and the normal war footing (33,600.
At the conclusion of the war with China, Japan found herself in possession of a fighting fleet of forty-three serviceable vessels-independent of twenty-six torpedo- boats their aggregate displacement being 78,774 tons. Of these, ten, with an aggregate displacement of 15.055 tons, had been captured from China, namely, an armour-clad turret-ship of 7,335 tons, two steel cruisers, six steel gunboats, and One wooden gunboat. (Prior to the capture of the Chen-yuen, now called the Chin-yen, Japan did not possess a line-of-battle ship. Her fleet consisted entirely of compara- tively small vessels). There were also on the stocks two steel cruisers and a steel despatch vessel. An expansion scheme, extending from 1st April, 1890, to 31st March, 1906, was then adopted and orders were subsequently placed for ships in Great
18*
580
JAPAN
Britain, the United States, France, and Germany, as well as in the home yards. The war with Russia augmented Japan's naval strength considerably.
She possesses now a fine fleet of 12 battleships and 11 armoured cruisers of over 10,000 tons displacement, 17 protected cruisers, 4 armoured coast defence ships and 74 torpedo-boat lestroyers, The shipbuilding yards of Japan are now constructing super-Dreadnoughts.
POPULATION, TRADE, AND INDUSTRY
The total area of Japan, exclusive of Formosa, is estimated at 163,042 square miles, and the population in 1909 was estimated to be 49,769,704. There are, exclusive of Chinese, about 5,000 foreigners residing in Japan, more than one-third of that number being British subjects. The empire is geographically divided into the four islands: Honshiu, the central and most important territory, Kiushui, "nine pro vinces," the south-western island; Shikoku, "the four provinces," the southern island, and Yezo, the most northerly and least developed. The former three islands are sub-divided into eight large areas, containing sixty-six provinces, and the latter (Yezo or Hokkaido) is divided into eleven provinces.
The total value of the foreign trade for the last six years was:
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
Exports, Yen 258,303,065 319,260,89; 321,533,610 423,754,892 432,421,873 378,245,673 Imports, 271,731,508 371,360,738 488,538,017 418,784,108 494,467,346 436,257,462
1
Total Yen 530,043,578 690,621,634 810,071,627 842,539,000 926,889,216 814,503,135 For ten years the balance of trade had been against Japan, but in 1906 the exports exceeded the imports by yen 4,800,000. In 1907, however, there was again an excess of imports over exports amounting to yen 62,54,473 and in 1908 by 58,011,780. In 1908 imports exceeded exports in value by yen 58,011,789. Twenty-nine per cent. of Japan's total foreign trade in 1908 was with Great Britain and its Colonies and Dependencies.
The largest item in the export returns of the country is raw silk, which (not including waste) represented in 1908 yen 108,609,042, which was yen 7,280,000 below the value for 1907, although there was a considerable increase in the output. Raw silk and silk fabrics together represent about 40 per cent. of the total exports. Next in importance is the export of cotton yarns, which were exported to the value of 20,723,904 yên in 1908, which is nearly ten millions below the figure for 1907. In 1890 this export represented a value of only 2,364 yen. The record export was in 1906, the value being 35,303,526 yen. Cotton tissues are also an important item. The tea export has never been so high as it was in 1903, when it represented a value of over yen 13,000,000. In 1908 the export amounted to 11,153,379 yen. Copper showed a remarkable increase in 1906, the value of the export being yen 25,104,955, as compared with yen 16,048,452 in 1905. In 1907 the export was worth yen 29,2 12,693, but in 1908 it dropped to yen 21,255,013. Coal was exported to the value of 18,233,913 yen.
The leading article in the import list is raw cotton. In the last ten years this import has more than quadrupled in value. In 1907 Japan imported ginned and raw cotton to the value of 115,641,509 yen, which beat all previous records. In 1908 it fell to yen 90,256,289. The import of cotton manufactures, which reached record figures in 1900 and 1907, was lower in 1908 than it had been for the three previous years, the value being yen 1,395,760. The same is to be said of the import of woollen goods. Metals, in 1907, reached the unprecedented figure of yen 66,810,990. In 1908 the impot showed a decline on these figures to the extent of yen 7,840,000. The import of sugar in 1906 was valued at yen 23,725,174, a figure which had not been reached since 1901, when the import was valued at yen 33,529,802; but in 1904 it reached a value of yen 23,093,177. Its value
Its value in 1907 was yen 19,864,956 and in 1908 yen 19,604,038. More than nine-tenths of the import comes from Netherlands-India. Experiments are being made in sugar-cane planting in Formosa and Southern Japan, but these are not likely to affect the import of raw sugar from foreign countries for many years. Since the war with Russia, the amount of capital invested in the sugar refining business in Japan has been more than quadrupled. The companies which were in existence before the war have more than doubled their capital, and new companies, having an aggregate capital equal to that of the old companies, have been formed. The trade of 1908 was divided between the old Treaty Ports as under:-
Yokohamia Kobe Nagasaki Osaka Moji Other Ports. Totals. Exports, Y. 190,805,900 84,114,773: 3,717,429 43,943,317, 14,9 19,840138,709,3341378,245,673 Imports, 151,288,110 191,080,866114,033,57-126,470,834 21,953,793 30,430,231 436,257,402
17
-
Totals, ,, 3-12,094,010 275,195,639 18,351 007 72,819,231 36.903,633 69,139,615 814,503,136
JAPAN
581
The following was the total value of the trade with Foreign Countries in 1908:---
Exports
Imports
United States of America China...
Yen 121,996,586
27,636,556
Total 199,633,142
77,745,792
63,783,951
141,529,753
Great Britain
}}
25,521,404
107,794,569
133,315,973
Continent of Europe.
58,470,345
68,027,512
126,497,857
India, Australia and Canada
17
22,047,544
53,441,813
75,489,357
Coren.....
H
30,273,171
13,718,419
43,991,590
Dutch Indies
>>
2,123,577
23,965,360
26,088,937
Hongkong
**
18,638,730
1,115,530
19,054,269
Philippines and Siam
Hawaii and Egypt
French Indo-China.....
British Straits Settlements
Other Countries...
4,067,608
4,310,943
8,978,551
3,706,022
5,086,318
8,882,340
305,442
77
8,484,222
8,8-19.664
17
5,344,120
2,702, 114
8,046,240
>>
1,597,065
4,082,320
5,679,385
Asiatic Russia
Mexico, Peru and Chili
Unknown
**
4,710,948
864,182
5,575,180
843,003
630,838
1,473,841
11
204,301
612,805
817,106
..Yen117,241,207
Silk Manufactures
+1
38,227,482
+
22,075,926
Copper
Coal
11
21,659,864
**
18,317,240
11
16,260,275
51
14,840,913
11
1,156,479
Totals Yen 378,245,673
The following table shows the total values of goods exported in 1908 :--
Silk (Raw and Waste)
Cotton Yarns
Cotton and Cotton goods... Beverages and Comestibles
Tea
436,207,462 814,503,135
Rice and Grains
Yen 6,330,682
Drugs, Medicines, &c.
17
6,223,994
Oils and Waxes
5,891,871
Mats and Mattings..
5,765,053
15
Metals&Metal Manufactures
11
5,459,402
Paper&PaperManufactures.
Alcoholic Liquors
זי
4,783,671
4,631,215
Sugar, Refined
3,779,221
ל!
Lumber, Manufactures of Matches
**
10,286,491
Straw, Manufactures of
**
3,492,292
Clothing and Accessories... Machinery
*
9,408,602
Tobacco and Cigarettes
1,912,172
9,028,453
Skins, Hair, &c.
11
1,865,900
7,081,095
Sundries
*
11
24,908,145
Porcelain and Earthenware
J
6,657,078
Total Yen 378,245,673
Grains and Seeds
Iron and Steel
Machinery
Oil Cakes
Oils and Wax
11
ייי
]]
19,835,094
}}
18,595,576
17,956,687
12,487,058
10,873,694
The import of foreign produce and manufactures in 1908 were as follows: Cotton, Raw and Ginned...Yen 109,014,658
Sugar and Sweetinents
Drugs, Chemicals & Medicines
Cotton Manufactures.....
Metal Manufactures
Dyes, and Paints
38,535,194 " 37,267,565 ,,34,393,736
11
24,480,195
,, 22,496,167
Cotton and Woollen Manu-
factures (Mixed)
senger Cars
Scientific Instruments
Steam and Sailing Vessels
Earthenware and Glass Manu-
Manures
Yen 6,068,198
4,056,389
Railway Locomotives and Pas-
**
11
3,683,923 3,424,825
"
2,937,227
factures
2,451,068
Clothing and Accessories
ן
2,322,978
Bicycles.
2,148,039
Beverages and Comestibles...
5
8.857,134
Timber
Woollen Manufactures
11
1,977,396
8,581,234
Pulp for Paper Manufacture....
1,814,844
Copper, Lead, Zinc, &c............
Ores and Minerals
:)
7,865,663
Horses, Cattle, &c.
15
1,180,488
6,737,377
Paper & Paper Manufactures
>>
Skins, Hairs, Bones, Horns, &c.,
6,407,452 6,325,803
Wines, Liquors and Spirits. Sundries
902,910
י!
**
12,577,400
Total Yen 436,257,462
The total Shipping, including junks, from and to Foreign Countries for the year
1908 was -
Entered
Tonnage
Cleared
Tonnage
Total
Tonnage.
Sterners Sailing Vessels
10,330
20,104,267
10,334
20,021,286
20,664
2,699
111,320
2,717
111,652
5,416
40,15.543 222,972
Totals, 13,029 20,215,577
13,051
20,132,958
26,080
40,348,515
582
JAPAN
The merchant vessels entered from Foreign Countries in 1908 were divided among the different nationalities as under :-
Strs.
Japanese
6,309
8,629,759 2,620
Tonnage Sailing Tonnage Total Tonnage
91,084
8,929 8,720,843
British
2,264
6,400,830
3
8,292 2,267 6,409,122
German
660
1,847,957
660 1,847,057
United States of America
268
1,603,202
3,867
204 1,607,069
French
138
430,083
5,794
141
435,877
Russian
171
342,:03
1
79
172
342,282
Norwegian
274
314,305
274
314,305
Dutch
03
175,227
MIL
63
175,227
Austrian
42
160,088
42
160,086
Chinese
84
83,080
84
83,080
Danish
26
66,028
26
66,028
Other Countries
41
$1,497
66
2,204
107 53,701
111,320
Totals, 10,330 20,104,257 2,699
The total Customs Revenue for the 1908-09 was yen 41,410,920.
13,020 20,215,577
Extension of the Japanese railway systems has proceeded uninterruptedly since the first line was laid in 1872. The mileage open to traffic, according to the latest returns, is 3,116 miles of State railway, and 1,691 miles of private railway. The Government in 1906 decided on the State ownership of all railways which are used for general traffic, the object being to improve the facilities for direct traffic over long distances, to accelerate transportation, and to cheapen the cost. The Government proposed to purchase the lines belonging to thirty-two private companies within a period extending from 1900 to 1911, but the House of Peers, when the Bills came before them, reduced the number of companies to be bought out to seventeen, and extended the period of purchase to 1915. The aggregate length of the lines it was decided to purchase is 2,812 miles, the cost of construction being about yen 229,000,000. Public loan bonds to the value of yen 476,318,000 are to be issued for the purchase of the railways, and it is intended to redeem by means of the net profit accruing from the railways purchased. This profit amounts to about eight million yen a year, The purchases included the line of railway in Corea, running between "Fusan" and Seoul. As a result of the war with Russia, the South Manchurian Railway was taken over by Japan. There are about 253 miles of electric tramway in Japan, and 156 miles more under construction.
By treaties made with a number of foreign Governments the Japanese ports of Kanagawa (Yokohama), Nagasaki, Kobe, Hakodate, Niigata, and the cities of Tokyo (formerly called Yedo) and Osaka were thrown open to foreign commerce. In 1894 a new treaty was signed with Great Britain by which extra-territoriality was abolished and the whole country opened to foreign trade and residence, the treaty to come into force in July, 1899, provided similar treaties were effected with the other Powers This was done and extra-territoriality ceased to exist on August 4th, 1899.
CURRENCY
From October, 1897, Japan placed her currency on a gold basis. The unit of value is a gold dollar weighing 8333 grammes and containing .75 grammes of fine gold. The conversion from silver to gold was effected at the ratio of 1 to 32.348.
EDUCATION
Education is national and very general in Japan, and is making great progress There are numerous Higher Schools, Middle Schools, Normal Schools, and Colleges for special studies, such as Law, Science, Medicine, Mining, Agriculture, and Foreign Languages, and several Female High Schools have been established, and are carefully fostered by the Government. In order to facilitate the prosecution of foreign studies the Government employs many European professors, and also sends, at the public expense, a large number of students every year to America and Europe,
TOKYO
The capital of Japan [until the Restoration called Yedo] is situated at the north on the Bay of Yedo, has a circumference of 27 miles, and covers a surface of nearly 36 square miles. The river Sumida runs through the city, dividing Tokyo proper from the districts on the east side called Honjo and Fukagawa.
Tokyo as viewed from the bay is a pleasant-looking city, being well situated on undulating ground, and possessing abundant foliage. The city is divided into fifteen grand divisions, and its suburbs into six divisions. It is in fact more like in aggregation of towns than one great city. The Castle of Tokyo cecupies a commanding position on a hill a little to the westward of the centre of the city. It is enclosed in double walls, and surrounded by a fine broad moat. Within the Castle formerly stood the Shogun's Palace and several public offices, but the destructive fire of the 3rd of April, 1872, levelled these ancient and massive buildings, leaving only the lofty turrets and walls. A new Palace on the old site has been constructed and the Mikado took up his residence there in January, 1889. The Imperial Garden called Fukiage is situated within the enclosure of the Castle. It is tastefully laid out in the pure native style, and contains fine forest trees, care and beautiful plants of all kinds, a large pond, cascades, &c.
Between the Castle and the outer walls, a large area was formerly occupied by the numerous palaces of the Daimios, but nearly all these feudal erections have now given place to brick or stone buildings, used as Public Offices, Barracks, Government Schools, &c., so that at the present time very few of the Daimios' palaces remain to illustrate wliat old Yedo was like in the time of the Shogunate. They are large long buildings of a single storey high, plain but substantial, with no pretensions to archi- tecture, but interesting as reminiscences of feudal Japan.
The remaining portion of the city outside the walls is very densely inhabited, and may be called the commercial district of Tokyo. It has a circumference of 24 miles and covers an area of about 29 square miles. The most important part of the business quarter is on the east of the Castle, and is traversed by a main street running from the north to the south-west under different names. A considerable length of this thorough- fare, which is caller Ginza, is lined with brick buildings in the European style; the road is wide and well kept, the pavement broad and planted with trees on either side. As it is in close contiguity to the principal railway station, it is always very animated and thronged with vehicles and foot passengers.
The north end of the main street leads to the public park or garden named Uyeno, where formerly stood the magnificent Temple founded and maintained by the Shoguns, and which was destroyed by fire during the war of Restoration in July, 1868. In these grounds the Industrial Exhibition of 1877 was held, when the gardens were converted into a public pleasure resort by the Government. Several exhibitions have since been held here and have proved very successful. In Uyeno is also situated the fine Imperial Museura (Haku-butsu-kwan).
Among the places much resorted to by visitors is the ancient temple of Kwamon, at Asakusa, not far from Uyeno, one of the most popular and most frequented temples in Japan. The temple is elevated about 20 feet from the ground. A flight of steps gives access to the interior. There is a chief altar at the extreme end of the temple, with side chapels at its right and left, containing a great number of wooden images and er votos. The interior is not very large, and is not so conspicuous for cleanliness as most of the public buildings in Japan. At the right of the temple there is a fine old Pagoda, and near it two colossal stone statues. A new park was also opened close to the temple about the same time as that of Uyeno. Thus, with Shiba, in the south-west, where are to be seen some of the splendid shrines of the Shoguns, among the chief glories of Tokyo, there are three large public gardens within the city. The fine buildings of the Impe rial University (Teikoku Daigaku) stand in the district of Hongo ucar Uyeno Park, They are altogether 1,275 temples in Tokyo, some of which are fine edifices. The building in which the Imperial Diet meets is a plain odifice, and is only intended
for temporary use.
The districts of Honjo and Fukagawa form the quiet portion of the capital. This quarter is connected with Tokyo proper by five great bridges, some of which are constructed of iron and soine of wood. They are called, commencing on the north, Adsama-Bashi, Umaya-Bashi, Ryogoku-Bashi, O-Hashi, and Eitai-Bashi respectively. From these the traveller may obtain a fine view of the animated river-life of the Sunila. whose waters are always covered with junks and boats of all descriptions.
584
TOKYO
A great part of the remaining area, forming the district north of the Castle is covered by paddy fields, in the midst of which rise picturesquely situated houses. There are also extensive pleasure gardens, such as Asuka-yama, and neat little villages. The part west of the Castle contains fifty temples, and a number of nobles' palaces. The district on the south of the Castle, with an area of about 173 square miles, contains about sixty temples. The most remarkable among them is Fudo-sama in Meguro.
Several great fires have, during the last two decades, swept Tokyo, and these have led to great improvements and widening of the streets. Rows of good houses in brick and stone, and new bridges, in many cases of iron or stone, have been built, and the city has in many portions been thoroughly modernised. There are some very large and handsome official and mercantile buildings. Tramways have been laid and the cars are usually crowded with passengers. The main streets and those adjacent to them are lighted by electricity, and the remainder by gas and oil lamps. Lines of telegraphs, amounting in all to 200 miles, connect the various parts of the city with one another, and with the country lines. The main streets are broad and well kept, and improve ments attend the work of reconstruction after each conflagration. But as the city is in a transition state, it necessarily presents many strange anomalies. Side by side with lofty stone buildings stand rows of rude wooden houses. As with the buildings so with the people; while the mass still wear the native dress, numbers appear in European costume. The soldiers and police are dressed in uniform on the Western model.
The environs of Tokyo are very picturesque and offer a great variety of pleasant walks or rides. Foreigners will find much to interest them in the country rourid. The finest scenery is at the northern and western sides of the city, where the country is surrounded by beautiful hills, from which there is a distant view of the noble mountains of Hakoen, while beyond rises in solitary grandeur the towering peak of Fuji-san, covered with snow the greater part of the year. The population of Tokyo, according to the official census of 1908, was 1,625,555,
The native Press is represented by more than a hundred newspapers, several of which are dailies. There is a daily paper run by Japanese in the English language called the Japan Times, which is representative of Japanese interests, and last year the Japan Advertiser removed to the capital from Yokohama. There are 1,225 schools of different classes, including one university. A large and handsome hotel designed for foreigners and called the Imperial Hotel was opened in 1890. There is also a first class hotel, called the Metropole. Both are now under Japanese management.
DIRECTORY
IMPERIAL GOVERNMENT
CABINET (NAIKAKU)
General Marquis Katsura Taro, Minister President of State and Minister of Finance General Viscount Terauchi Masakata, Minister of the Army
Count Komura Jutaro, Minister for Foreign Affairs
Vice-Admiral Baron Saito Makoto, Minister of the Navy
Baron Hirata Tosuke, Minister for Home Affairs
Baron Oura Kanetake, Minister of Agriculture aml Commerce Baron Goto Shimpei, Minister of Communications Komatsubara Yeitaro, Minister of Education
Vice-Count Okabe Nagamoto, Minister of Justice
Shibata Kamon, secretary general
Sakata Mikita, secretary to cabinet
Ushiguka Torataro,
Amaoka Naoyoshi,
Yegi Tasuku
11
*
**
SECRETARIAT (KWAMBO)
Sughi Takejiro, Nagashima Ryuji, Sakata Mikita, Saionji Hachiro, confidential secretaries to the minister president
BUREAU OF DECORATION (SHOKUN KYOKU) Count Ogimachi Saneinasa, president
LEGISLATIVE BUREAU (HOSEI Kroku) Yasuhiro Banichiro, president
PRINTING BUREAU (Insatsu KyokU) Kanno Katsunosuke, director
PENSION BUREAU (ÖNKYU KYOKU) Yasuhiro Bunichiro, director
STATISTIC BUREAU (PEKA KYOKU) Hanabusa Naosaburo, director
TOKYO
PRIVY COUNCIL (SUMITSU-IN) Prince Ito Hirobumi, president Count Higashikuze Michitomi, vice-presdt. Kawamura Kingoro, chief secretary
IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD DEPARTMT
(KUNAI SHO)
Imperial Palace, Tokyo Count Major-General Mitsuaki Tanaka,
minister
Viscount Yoshimoto Hanabuska, vice-
minister
Secretariat
Scigo Nagasaki, confidential secretary H. Kondo,
Hirota Kurihara, secretary
do.
Section for Interior Afuirs
Hisayoshi Kondo, chief
Section for Exterior Affairs Katsuaki Yamanouchi, chief
Section for Inspection, etc.
Hirota Kurihara, chief
Board of Ceremonies
Count Ujitaka Toda, grand master Yukichi Ito, vice
do.
Tomotsuna Iwakura, chief ritualist G. Miyaji, chief musician
Services to III.M, the Empress Count Keizo Kagawa, grand master Katsuaki Yamanouchi, master
Services to H.III. the Crown Prince Marquis T. Nakayama, grand master S. Katsura, master
Viscount A. Nishikinokoji, master
Imperial Treasury
Viscount Chiaki Watanabe, director
Bureau of Imperial Estates Baron Chiaki Watanabe, superintendent Bureau of Peerages
Prince Tomosada Iwakura, superintendent. Services of the Imperial "Cookery Count K. Kagawa, grand master
Bureau of Palace Superintendence T. Ogasawara, superintendent
Imperial Police Station
T. Ogasawara, chief
Imperial Library
E. Yamaguchi, director
Bureau of Imperial Works Dr. Tokuma Katayama, director
Bureau of Imperial Mews Viscount Kototada Fujinami, director
Bureau of Imperial Sepulchres
E. Yamaguchi, director
Bureau of Imperial Physicians
Dr. Genkei Oka, president
Bureau of Imperial Venery
Count U. Toda, director
Bureau of Purchase
Seigo Nagasaki, director
Bureau of Court Auditors
T. Saito, director
Bureau of Imperial Gardens
H. Fukuba, director
Privy Court Councillors
585
Marquis Sanetsune Tokudaiji, lord keeper
of the seals (Naidaijin)
Marquis Naohiro Nabeshima Baron Dr. Kensai Ikeda Yasushi Miura
Viscount Dr. Tsunatsune Hashimoto Baron Saburo Osaki Baron Dr. Hiroyuki Kato Baron Mamoru Funakoshi Baron Masayoshi Tsutsumi Baron Dr. Jun Iwasa Baron Motohiko Katori Marquis T. Nakayama Count Ujitaka Toda Major-General Masashi Sato Viscount Osanaga Takatsuji Baron Torao Komeda Viscount Kototada Fujimani Seigo Nagasaki
Viscount Motonari Higashizono Viscount Ujiyasu Hojo Baron Nagayoshi Maki Kinsaku Maruo
Secretariat of the Naidaijin
Chichibu Hidaka
Raizo Nosaki
Bureau of Imperial Private Record J. Hosokawa, president
Count Kenko Hirolashi, confidential secty. Tkki Kudo,
do.
Imperial Muscum Migaku Mataon, director-general
Peerage Boys' and Girls' School General Count K. Nogi, director
Services to the Imperial Princes Saburo Baba, grand master of court of
Prince Fushimi
Y. Ito, grand master of court of Prince
Arisugawa
Baron Hanabusa Yoshimoto,do. Pr. Kwanin Sentaro Katsura, do. Pr. Higashi-fushimi C. Hidaka, master of court of H. I. H. Princess Komatsu J. Tanaka,
do. H. K. Prince Kacho Hidegoro Kagawa, do. Pr. of Yamashima Saburo Asow, do. Pr. Kitashirakawa KeizaburoTsunoda, do. Prince Kuni S. Tsuboi,
do. Prince Nashimoto
MINISTRY FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS (GWAIMU SHO)
1, Kasumigaseki, Tokyo
Count Jutaro Komura, minister Kikujiro Ishzii, vice minister
586
Yosaku Yoshida, private sec. to minister
Otojiro Sasano,
Tokutaro Sakai,
do.
do.
Kiroku Kwa (Section of the Archives) Mitsunojo Funakoshi, chief secretary Zinjikwa (Sec. of Protocol and Personnel) Shichita Tatsuke, chief secretary
TOKYO
Okino Tadao, engineer
Kondo Toragoro,
do.
Harada Teisuke,
do.
Okazaki Yoshiki,
do.
Ichinosi Kyojiro,
do.
Adachi Taksujiro,
do.
Kurashige Tetsuzo,
do.
Okumura Chosaku, do.
Ikeda Maruo,
do.
Goto Unpei,
do.
Miguno Shigendo,
do.
Okuda Yiichiro,
do
Yamane Miki,
do.
Sakata Sadaashi,
do.
Noda Koichi,
do.
Kwaikei Kwa (Section of Accounts) Seizaburo Shimizu, chief secretary
Honyaku Kwa (Section of Translations) Shinsaku Kodera, chief secretary
Denshin Kwa (Section of Telegraphy) Kijuro Shidehara, chief secretary
Torishirabe Kwa (Section of Law Affairs) Kijuro Shidehara, chief secretary
Hokoku Kwa (Section of the Press) Otojiro Sasano, chief secretary
BUREAU OF DIPLOMACY (SEIMU KYOKU) Tetsukishi Kurachi, director
BUREAU OF COMMERCE (TSUSHO KYOKU) Shuichi Hagiwara, director
HOME DEPARTMENT (NADMU SHO) 2, Ote-machi, Itchome
Baron Hirata Tosuke, minister Ikki Kitokuro, vice-minister
MINISTER'S SECRETARIAT (DAIJIN KUWANBO)
Kitagawa Fumihiko, private secretary Oya Yasushi, chief of the accounts office Sugiyama Shigoro, chief of the Taiwan office and Karafuto office, and chief of the document office
COUNSELLORS (SANJIKUWAN)
Midzuno Rentaro
Inoue Tomoichi
Tsukawoto Seiji
Sugiyama Shigoro
Kohashi Ichită
BUREAU OF SHRINES AND TEMPLES
(JINSIA KYOKU)
Inoue Tomoichi, director
Tsuhumoto Seiji--councillor
DIRECTION OF LOCAL ADMINISTRATION
(CHINO KYOKU)
Tokonami Takejiro, director
Inouye Tomoichi, secretary
Nakagawa Nozomu, do.
Arimatsu Eigi, director
DIRECTION OF POLICE AFFAIRS
(KEIHO KYOKU)
Nagano Kan, secretary
PUBLIC WORKS BUREAU (DOBOKU KYOKU) Inuzuka Katsutaro, director
Ushio Kenusuke, Yuasa Kurachi, Kohashi
Ichita, secretary
Josiah Conder, bon. adviser
SANITARY BUREAU (EISEI KYOKU) Kubota Seitaro, director Tsukamoto Seiji, counsellor Noda Tadahiro, engineer Ando Kyujiro, do. Uchino Senkichi, do.
BUREAU OF RELIGIONS (SHUKYO KYOKU) Shiba Junrokuro, director
Ushio Kenusuki, Ynaso Karachi, Kohashi
Ichita, secretary
TAIWAN SOTOKUFU General Count Sakuma, governor general
METROPOLITAN POLICE (KEISHI CHO) Kamei Eizaburo, superintendent general
KARAFUTO-CHO Hiroka Teitaro, governor
HOKKAIDOCHO
Kawashima Jun., governor
GOVERNORS OF CITIES AND PREFECTURES
(FC AND KEN)
Abe Ku, Tokyo
Omori Shoichi, Kyoto Takasaki Chikaaki, Osaka
Baron Sufu Kohei, Kanagawa Hattori Ichizo, Hyogo Arakawa Yoshitaro, Nagasaki
Count Kiyosu Tenori, Niigata
Shimada Gotaro, Saitama Koyama Zyunji, Gunma Ariyoshi Chuichi, Chiba Saka Nakasuke, ĺbaraki Nakayama Miyozo, Tochigi Akoi Yoshio, Nara Arita Yoshisuke, Miye Fukano Ichizo, Aichí Rinoie Ryusuke, Shidzuoka Kumagae Küchiro, Yamanashi Kawashima Junkan, Shiga Susuki Sadakichi, (tifu Oyama Tsunamasa, Nagano Terada Sukeyuki, Miyagi
Nishisawa Shotaro, Fukushima Kasai Shinichi, Iwate Takeda Chiyosaburo, Aomori Mabuchi Eitaro, Yamagata Mori Mesatuka, Akita Nakamura Zynnkuro, Fukui Murakami Yoshiwo, Ishikawa Usami Katsuo, Toyama Kotsumori Ryo, Tottori Maruyama Shigetoshi, Shimane Taniguchi Tomegoro, Okayama, Munakata Sei, Hiroshima Watanabe Toru, Yamaguchi Kawukani Chikaharu, Wakayama Watanabe Kateusaburo, Tokushima Onoda Motohiro, Kagawa Izawa Takio, Ehime Ishiwara Keuzo, Kochi
Terahara Nagateru, Fukuoka Chiba Sadamoto, Oita Nishimura Mutsuo, Saga Kawaji Toshiyasu, Kumamoto Takaoka Naokichi, Miyazaki Sakamoto Sannosuke, Kagoshima Hibi Shigeaki, Okinawa (Loo-choo)
FINANCE DEPT. (OKURA SHO)
1, Otemachi Itchome.
Marquis Katsura Taro, minister Wakatsuki Reijiro, vice-minister
TOKYO
MINISTER'S SECRETARIAT Sudzuki Shigeru, private secretary to the
minister, chief of the document office Isono Sodajiro, chief of the accounts office Tsumaki Raiko, chief of the building and
repairing office
COUNCILLORS
Sugawara Michiyoshi
Ichiki Otohiko
Nonaka Kiyoshi
Ninomiya Motonari Ono Giichi
Mori Shunrokuro
Kuroda Hideo
Matsumoto Osantu
ACCOUNTS BUREAU (SHUKEI KYOKU) Hashimoto Keizaburo, director Nishino Gen, chief of the office of the
general budget and settled accounts Ukochi Kiko, chief of book-keeping office
REVENUE BUREAU (SHUZEI KYOKU) Sakurai Tetsutaro, director Sugawara Michiyoshi, chief of internal
revenue office
Nonaka Kiyoshi, chief of customs office Sudzuki Shigeru, chief of collection and
accounts office
FINANCIAL BUREAU (RIZAI KYOKU) Shodla Kazuye, director
Mori Kengo, secretary
687
Ninomiya Motonari, chief of banks section Nagashima Riuji, chief of national treasury Sugi Teijiro, chief of section of mis-
cellaneous affairs
Den Akira, secretary
Sengoku Masayoshi, secretary
MINT
Hasegawa Tameji, director
TOBACCO MONOPOLY BUREAU
Hamaguchi Yuko, president
President's Secretariat
Ikebukuro Hidetaro, director of dept. Kono Iwao, councillor
Sugiura Kenichi, do.
Hara Tsurujiro,
do.
do.
Imakita Sakunozuke, councillor
Mizoguchi Junta, controller
Mori Shoichiro,
Mori Shunrokuro,
Ikeda Shigeyuki,
Kato Morikazu,
Sasaki Kyoshiro
do.
do.
do.
do.
COLLECTION DEPARTMENT
Tsukuda Issei, director
Oku Kenzo, chief of appraising section Mori Shoichiro, chief of tobacco section Kono Iwao, chief of salt section Ikeda Keihachi, councillor Ikeda Shigeyuki, controller
SALE DEPARTMENT
Matsumoto Jui, director
Imagita Sakunosuke, chief of sale section Kato Moriichi, chief of forwarding section Ono Giichi, controller
MANUFACTURES DEPARTMENT
Sasaki Zenjiro, director
Ishii Junjiro, chief of working section
Takata Kanzo, chief examining section
SPECIAL NATIONAL CONSOLIDATION BUREAU
Tsukada Tatsujiro, director
Matsumoto Osamu, secretary
Iuchi Isamu,
do.
BUILDING OFFICE (RINJI-KENCHIKUBU) Tsumaki Raiko, director Kimoto Fusataro, controller Yabashi Kenkichi, engineer
WAR DEPARTMENT (RIKUGUN SHO) 1, Nagata-cho, Itelome
General Viscount Terauchi, o.C.B., minister Lt.-General Baron Ishimoto, vice-minister
588
Yoshimura, Y.
COUNCILLORS
TOKYO
Dr. Akiyama, M.
PRIVATE SECRETARY TO THE MINISTER - Lt. Col. Yoshida
Major Tsuno
MINISTER'S COMMISSARIAT
Col. Yamada, adjutant (chief)
PERSONAL AFFAIRS BUREAU (JINJI KYOKU) Lt. General Baron Ishimoto, acting director Col. Miyazaki, director of rewards office Col. Kusabu, dir. of appointment office
ARMY AFFAIRS BUREAU (GUMMU KYOKU) Lt.-General Nagaoka, director Colonel Tanaka, army affairs office Colonel Kawai
Colonel Yoshida, cavalry office Lt. Colonel Nara, artillery office Colonel Inoue, engineering office
HEIKI KYOKU (ORDNANCE BUREAU) Major Gen. Bunpachiro Shimakawa,director Lt. Colonel Makoto Yegawa, director of
rifle and gun office
Lt. Colonel Daihei Hirase, director of im-
plement and material office
QUARTERMASTER'S SUBSISTENCE AND PAY DEPARTMENT (KEIRI KYOKU) Military Intendant InspectorTsujimura,dir. 2nd Class sub-Intendant Hirose, director of
computation office
1st Class sub-Intendant Kato, director of
clothing and provisions office
1st Class sub-Intendunt Ide, director of
construction office
VETERINARY SCHOOL (JUIGAKKO) Vet. Srg. Col. Dr. Imaidzumi, lirector
MEDICAL BUREAU (IMU KYOKU) Surgeon-Lieut.-Genl. Dr. Mori, director Surg. Col. Onishi, director of sanitary office Surg. Col. Yajima, director of medical office
JUDGE ADVOCATE'S DEPARTMENT (HOMU KYOKU)
Judge Advocate Shimizu, director
GUN-I GAKKO
Surgeon Colonel Haga, director
SCHOOL OF QUARTERMASTERS, SUBSISTENCE AND PAY AFFAIRS (KEIRI GAKKO) 2nd Class sub-Intendant Takayama, dir.
H.I.M.'S AIDE-DE-CAMP (JIJU BUKWAN) Lt. General Nakamura, director
CROWN PRINCE'S AIDE-DE-CAMP (TOGU BUKWAN)
Lieut.-General Baron Muraki, director
NAVY DEPT. (KAIGUN SHO) 1, Kasumigaseki Nichome, Kojimachika Vice-Admiral Baron M. Saito, minister Vice-Admiral T. Kato, vice-minister
MINISTER'S SECRETARIAT (DALJIN KANBO) Captain K. Nomaguchi, adjutant Captain T. Hiraoka, do. Lieut-Com. J. Kimura, adjutant and
private secretary to the minister Lieut-Com. K. Yamanashi, adjutant and
private secretary to the minister
BUREAU OF MILITARY AFFAIRS (GUMMU KYOKU) Vice-Admiral Baron T. Nakamizo, chief
BUREAU OF PERSONNEL (JINJI KYOKU) Rear-Admiral T. Tsuchiya, chief
BUREAU OF MEDICAL AFFAIRS (IMU KYOKO) Surgeon-General S. Kimura, chief
NAVAL MEDICAL COLLEGE (KAIGUN GUNI GAKKO) Surgeon-General T. Honda, president
BUREAU OF GENERAL ACCOUNTS AND
SUPPLIES (KETRI KYOKU) Paymstr.-General K. Fukunaga, chief
NAVAL INTENDANT COLLEGE (KAIGUN KEIRI GAKKO)
Paymr.-Inspector K. Utsunomya, president
Bureau of JUSTICE (SHIHO KYOKU) Vice-Admiral T. Kato, chief
DEPARTMENT OF NAVAL EDUCATION
(KAIGUN KYOIKUKOMBU) Vice-Admiral Baron T. Sakamoto, chief Rear Admiral K. Murakami, chief of first
and second section
Engineer Rear-Admiral O. Gejo, chief of
third section
HIGHER NAVAL COLLEGE
(KAIGUN DAIGAKKO)
Vice-Admiral H. Shimamura, president
NAVAL COLLEGE (KAIGUM HEIGAKKO),
Etajima Rear Admiral S. Yoshimatsu, president
NAVAL ENGINEERING COLLEGE (KAIKUN KIKAN GAKKO), Yokosuka Engineer Rear-Admiral K. Nagamine,
president
GUNNERY SCHOOL (KAIGUN HOJUTSU
GAKKO), Yokosuka Captain R. Arima, president
TOKYO
TORPEDO SCHOOL (KAIGUN SUIRAI GAKKO),
Nagaura
Captain K. Okarla, president
ARTIFICERS' SCHOOL (KAIGUN KOKI GAKRO),
Yokosuka
Engineer Captain S Ito, president
DEPARTMENT OF MATERIEL OF THE NAVY
(KAIGUN KANSEIHOMBU)
Rear-Admiral K. Matsumoto, chief Rear Admiral K. Murakami, chief of 1st
section
Capt. H. Ishibashi, chief of second section U. Fukuda, inspector of naval construction
and chief of third section
Engineer Rear-Admiral Y. Yamamoto,
chief of fourth section
NAVAL ÅRSENAL (KAIGUN ZOHEISHO) Juspr. General of Naval Ordinance, K.
Sawa, superintendent
SHIMOSE POWDER FACTORY (SHIMOSEKAYA-
KU SOIZOSHO)
Capt. K. Oda, K, superintendent
HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE (SUIROBU) Rear-Admiral Y. Nakao, hydrographer
DEPARTMENT OF NAVAL WORKS (RINJI KAIGUN KENCHIKUBU) Vice Admiral T. Kato, chief
BOARD OF ADMIRALS (KAIGUN SHOKAN KAIGI)
Vice Admiral Baron M. Saito, chairman
NAVAL COURT MARTIAL (TOKYO)
GUMPO KAIGI
S. Uchida, judge advocate
NAVAL GENERALSTAFF (KAIGUNGUNREIEU) Admiral Count H. Togo, chief
Vice Admiral Baron M. Misu, asst. chief Captain D. Iwamura, adjutant Lieut-Com, S. Sakurai,
do.
YOKOSUKA NAVAL STATION (YOKOSUKA CHINJU-FU)
Vice-Adl. Baron H. Kamimura, cdr.-in-chief Rear-Admiral K. Koidzum, chief of staff Lieutenant K. Midzutani, staff adjutant
NAVAL ARSENAL (KAIGUN KOSHO, Rear-Admiral K. Wada, supt
DIRECTION OF ACCOUNTS AND SUPPLIES
(KAIGUN KEIRIBU)
Paymaster-General M. Aibara, director
PORT OFFICE (KOMUBU)
Real-Admiral R. Ide, chief Captain M. Jukin, chief
€89
RESERVE SQUADRON (GORI-KANTAI) Real-Admiral R. Gashiro (Commanding)
NAVAL BARRACKS (KAIHEIDAN) Captain T. Sento, acting chief
TORPEDO DIVISION (SUIRAIDAN) Real-Admiral T. Kitagowa, chief
NAVAL HOSPITAL (KAIGUN BYOIN) Surgeon General J. Suzuki, president
NAVAL COURT MARTIAL (GUMPO KAIGI Y. Kawachi, senior enquirer J. Kawaji
NAVAL PRISON (KAIGUN KANGOKU) Y. Iwasaki, superintendent
KURE NAVAL STATION (KURE CHINJUFU)
Vice-Adl. M. Yamanouchi, comdr -in-chief Rear-Admiral Heitaro Takenouchi, chief
of staff
NAVAL ARSENAL (KAIGUN KOSHO) Rear-Admiral Syetuka Igiti, chief
ACCOUNTS AND SUPPLIES (KAIGUN KEIRIBU) Paymaster Inspector Junkichi Nakadai
PORT OFFICE (KOMUBU) Rear-Admiral Ichibei Mori, chief
DIRECTION OF RESERVE SHIPS (YOBIKAMBU) Rear-Admiral Ichibei Mori, cliief
NAVAL BARRACKS (KAJHEIDAN) Captain Junkichi Yajima, chief
TORPEDO DIVISION (SUIRAIDAN)
Captain Gunkichi Magoi, chief
NAVAL HOSPITAL (KAIGUN BYOIN) Surgeon-General S. Tsuruta
NAVAL COURT MARTIAL (GUMPO KAIGI) S. Yamada, senior enquirer
NAVAL PRISON (KAIGUN Kangoku) Y. Niki, superintendent
NAVAL DOCKYARD
Sako Yamado, chief constructor
SASEHO NAVAL STATION
(SASEHO CHINJUFU)
Vice-Admiral Baron Arima, comdr.-in-chief Captain G. Oki, chief of staff
Commander R. Thara, adjutant
NAVAL ARSENAL (KAIGUN KOSнO) Rear-Admiral Fujü, superintendent
וי
490
TOKYO
DIRECTION OF ACCOUNTS AND SUPPLIES (KAIGUN KEIRIBU)
Paymaster Inspector K. Sisa
PORT OFFICE (KOMUBU)
Captain N. Matsumura, chief
NAVAL BARRACKS (KATHEIDAN) Captain T. Kamaya, chief
TORPEDO DIVISION (SUIRAIDAN) Captain K. Kimura, chief
NAVAL HOSPITAL (KAIGUN BYOIN) Surgeon-General Y. Oota, president
NAVAL COURT MARTIAL (GUMPO KAIGI) M. Miyashita, senior enquirer
NAVAL PRISON (KAIGUN KANGOKU) M. Nagano, superintendent
MAIDZURU NAVAL STATION (MAIDZURCHINJUFU)
Vice-Adl. Baron S. Kataoka, comr.-in-chief Rear-Admiral S. Kato, chief of staff Commander C. Horiye, adjutant
NAVY YARD (KAIGUN KOSHO) Rear-Admiral H, Sakamoto, director
DIRECTION OF ACCOUNTS AND SUPPLIES (KAIGUN KEIRIBU)
Paymaster T. Akiyama, director
PORT OFFICE (KOMUBU)
Captain T. Chayama, chief
COMMAND OF YOBIKANTAI
Real-Admiral S. Takagi
NAVAL BARRACKS (KAINEIDAN)
Captain S. Obana, chief
TORPEDO DIVISION (SUIRAIDAN) Captain G. Mori, chief
NAVAL HOSPITAL (Kaigun BYOIN) Surgeon Inspector B. Tomatsuri, president
NAVAL COURT MARTIAL (GUMPO KAIGI) K. Taniyama, senior enquirer
NAVAL PRISON (KAIGUN KANGOKU) K. Narazaki, superintendent
TAKESHIKI NAVAL ESTABLISHMENT (TAKESHIKI YOKOBU) Vice-Adl. Baron S. Mukoyama, comdt. Captain G. Kimura, chief of staff Lieut. Commander S. Hidzuno, adjutant
BAKO NAVAL ESTABLISHMENT (BAKO YOROBU)
Rear-Adm. T. Amoto, commandant
Commander S. Yokao, chief of staff Lieut. Comdr. T. Hara, adjutant
ORMINATO TORPEDO DIVISION (OHMINATO SUIRANDAN)
Captain N. Miyaoka, chief
STANDING SQUADRON (JOBIKANTAI) Vice Admiral R, Togo, comdr.-in-chief Rear-Admiral K. Kamimura, comdr.of divn. Rear-Admiral S. Dewa comdr. of division Rear-Admiral S. Uriu, do. Rear-Admiral T. Nashida, do. Captain K. Shimamura, chief of staff Lieut.-Commander T. Nagata, adjutant
FOREIGN EMPLOYĖS
Arthur Lloyd, instructor in English in the Naval Academy and Naval MedicalSchool Armand Baillod, instructor in English in
the Naval College
Mrs. Baillod, Mark Maun,
do.
do.
Edward Stanley Stephenson, instructor in English in the Naval Engineering College
(For Fleet see end of Directory)
* EDUCATION DEPT. (MOMBU SHO) 1, Takehira-cho, Kojimachi-ku, Tokyo Komatsuban Eitaro, minister Okada Ryohei, Bu., vice-minister
MINISTER'S SECRETARIAT (DALJIN KAMBO) Akashi Takaichiro, Ho., confidential secty.
BUREAU OF SPECIAL SCHOOL AFFAIRS
(SEMMON GAKUMU KYOKU) Fukuhara Riojiro Ho., chief
BUREAU OF COMMON SCHOOL AFFAIRS
(FUTSU GAKUMU KYOKU)
Matsumura Mosuke, Ho., chief
BUREAU OF TECHNICAL SCHOOLS (JITSUGYO GAKUMU KYOKU) Mano Bunji, Ko., K., M.I.M.E., chief
TOKYO IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY OF JAPAN (TOKYO TEIKOKU DAIGAKU) 1, Motofuji-cho, Hongo, and Meguromura
Komala, Tokyo
In this list the University degrees are represented by the following abbreviations:H. Hogakuhakushi (Doctor of Law A. Kogakuhakushi (Dr. of Engineering) R., Rigakuhakushi (Dr. of Science) . Igakuhakushi (Dr. of Medicine, B. Bungakuhakushi (Dr. of Literature), Nogakuhakushi N. Dr. of Agricultural Science) Bit. Ring kubakushi Dr. of Forestry, J. Juigakuhakushi (Dr. of Veterinary Science), . Yogakushi (Bachelor of Law), Hor. Horitsugakushi (B. of Law), Ko. Kogakushi (B. of Engineering), R. Rigakushi (B. of Science), Ig Igakushi (B. of Medicine), Bu. Bungakushi (B. of Liter ature), J. Jaigakushi (B. of Veterinary Science), P Yakugakushi (B. of Pharmacology), No. Nogakushi (15 of Agricultural Science), Noy. Nogeikagakushi (B. of Agricultural Chemistry), Ring. Ringokushi (B. of Science of Forestry).
TOKYO
Hamao Arata, Baron LL.D. (Cantab.) pres. Professors Matsui Naokichi R., PH. D., Kawase Zentaro R. R., Koto Bunjiro R. R, PI.D., Hijikata Yasushi, Ho. H. Teda Kazutoshi, Bu, B. R., HI., Hozumi Yatsuka, Bu., II. Mitsukuri Kakichi, R. II.D., Aoyama Tanemichi, Iq., I., Tsuboi Kumazo, Bu, Ri., B., Watanabe Wataru, R., K., Sakurai Joji, R., F.C.S., LL.D., Takahashi Juntaro, Ig., I, Miyoshi Shinrokuro, E.,
Ka councillors Shimizu Hikogoro, Takebe Naomatsu, Na-
kamura Kyohéi, secretaries Wada Mankichi, Bu., librarian Terao Hisushi, R., R., licencié de sciences. mathématiques, director of Tokyo As- tronomical Observatory
Matsumura Jinzo, R., curator of the
Botanic Gardens
Sato Sankichi, Ig., I., principal of the Hos-
pital
Iijima Isao, R., R., director of the Marine
Biological Station
Kawase Zentaro, Rin., R., director of the
College of Forestry
College of Law
Hozumi Yatsuka, Bu., H., director
Professors
ני
Hozumi Nobushige II., barrister-at-law,
Jurisprudence
Henry T. Terry, B.A., English Law Miyazaki Michisaburo, Io., II., History of
Legal Institutions
Hozumi Yatsuka, Bu, H., Constitution Umé Kénjiro, Hor., I., docteur en droit,
Civil Law
L. H. Lonholm, DR. JUR., German Law Yamazaki Kakujiro, Ho., H., Political
Economy
Kanai Noburu, Bu., U., Political Economy Hijikata Yasushi, Ho., H., barrister-at-law,
Civil Code and English Law
Tomizu Hiroto, Ho., II., barrister-at-law,
Roman Law
Terao Toru, Hor., II., Public International
Law
Okano Keijiro, Ho., H., Commercial Law Matsuzaki Kuranosuke, o., 11., Finance Okada Asataro, H., II, Criminal Law
(now in the service of Chinese Govt.) Louis Bridel, licencié en droit, French Law Matsunami Niichiro, Ho., II., Commercial
Corle
ני
Takahashi Sakue, Ho., H., Private Inter-
national Law
Yamada Saburo, o., H., Private Intnl. Law Onozuka Kiheiji, o., II., Politics
//o.,
Minobe Tatsukichi, Io., II., Comp. History
of Legal Institutions
Shida Kotaro, H., H., Civil Code Takano Iwasaburo, Ho., II., Statistics Yalagi Eizo Ilo, H., Political Economy
591
Kato Shoji, o., H., Code of Civil Proce-
dure and Law of Bankruptcy Kakehi Katsulike, Ho., H., Administrative
Law
Kawazu Sen, Ho., H., Political Economy Nakagawa Kotaro, Ho., II., Code of
Criminal Procedure
Tachi Sakutaro, Ho., ., Diplomatic History
and Pub. Inter. Law
Oliver Mitchell Wentworth Spragne., A.M., PH.D., Political Economy and Finance Kawana Kenshiro, Io., H., Civil Code and
German Law
Assistant Professors
Nomura Junji, o., Public Law (absent) Matsuoka Kinhei, Io. (absent) Matsumoto Joji, o. (absent) Nakada Kahoru, o., History of Legal
Institution
Makino Eiichi, Io., French Law
Lecturers
་
Viscount Tajiri Inajiro, Z., B.A., Practical
Finance
Ogawa Shigeyiro, Prison Law
Kitamura Talichi, Judicial Decision under
the Tokugawa Government Kawamura Josaburo, Hor., H. Matsuoka Yoshimasa, Io., French Law Okuda Yoshito, Ho. H., Civil Code
Ichiki Kitokuro, Ho., H., Adm. Law
College of Medicine
Professor Aoyama Tanemichi, I., I, dirctr. Professors
+
Osawa Kenji, J., M.D., Physiology Ogata Masanori, I., I., Hygiene Koganei Yoshikiyo, I., I., Anatomy Takahashi Juntaro, I., I., Pharmacology Miura Moriji, I., I., M.D., Pathology and
Pathological Anatomy
ני
Shimoyama Junichiro, S. F.,PH.D., Pharmacy Tauba Keizo, S. Y., PH.D., Pharmacy Aoyama Tanemichi, Ig., Z., Medicine Sato Sankichi, I., I., Surgery Katayama Kuniyoshi, Ig., I., Forensic
Medicine
Komoto Jujiro, Ig., I., Ophthalmology Hirota Tsukasa, Ig., I., Predicatories Kumagawa Mune, Z., 7., Medl. Chemistry Nagai Nagayoshi, R. F., PH.D., Pharmacy Yamagiwa Katsusaburo I., I., Pathology
and Pathological Anatomy
Miura Kinnosuke, I., I., Medicine Doi Keizo, Ig, I., Dermatology and Syphilis Kondó Jihan, g., 7., Surgery Osawa Gakutaro, Ig., I., Anatomy Irisawa Tatsukichi, I., I.. Medicine Tashiro Yoshinori, Ig., I., Surgery Kure Shuzo, I., I. Psychiatry
Okada Waichiro, Ig, I., Otologie Rhino-
logie and Laryngologie
Kinoshita Seichiu, I., I., Gynakol und
Geburtshilfe
Niwa Tokichiro Sei Y., Pharmaceutical
Technology
502
Assistant Professors
TOKYO
Futamura Ryojiro, I., Anatomy Nagai Sen, I., Physiology. Miyamoto Shiku, Ig., Medicine Yokote Chiyonosuke, a., I., Hygiene Hashimoto Sessai, 19., Medicine Ishiwara Hisashi, g., Dentistry Miwa Shintaro, I., I., Pedetrics Nakaizumi Yukinori, I., Ophthalmology Iwase Yuichi, I., Gynakol und Geburt-
shilfe (absent)
Mita Tesoku, g., Forensic Med. Sudó Kenzo, Medical Chemistry
Chiba Special School of Medicine (Chiba)
Ogiu Rokuzo, director
Sendai Special School of Medicine (Sendai)
Yamagata Chukai, ., director Okayama Special School of Medicine (Ok-
ayama), Suga Koreyoshi, Z., director Kanazawa Special School of Medicine,
Takayasu Migito, I., director
Nagasaki Special School of Medicine,
Tashiro Tadashi, director
College of Engineering
Watanabe Wataru, Ri. K., director
Professors
Miyoshi Shinrokuro, Ko., K., Naval Archi-
tecture
Watanabe Wataru, Ri, K., Mining and
Metallurgy
Mano Bunji, Ko., K., MUME., Mechl. Engrng. Nakano Hatsune, Ko., K., M.SC., F.M.I.E.E.
Electrical Engineering
Nakamura Tatsutaró, Ko., K., Architecture Matoba Naka, K., K., Mining & Metallurgy Inokuchi Ariya, Ko., K., Applied Mechanics
Mech. Engineering,
Nakajima Yeiji, R., A., Civil Engineering Kawakita Michitada, Ko., K., F.C.S., M.S.C.I.,
Applied Chemistry
Nakayama Hidesaburo, Ko., K., Civil Eng. Yamakawa Gitaro, Ko., K., Electrical Eng. Asano Osuke, Ko., K., Electrical Eng. Hiroi Isamu, K., Civil Engineering Terano, Seiichi, K., K., Naval Architecture Frank Prior Purvis, F.R.S.N., A., M,I.N.A.,
WH.S.. Naval Architecture
Yemori Jokichiro, Ko., A., applied chemistry Shiba Chuzaburo, Ko., K., M.IN.A., Marine
Engineering
Arisaka Shozo, Ko., K., Technology of Arms Ho Hidetaro, Ko., K.,Electrical Engineering Suehiro Chúsuke, Ko, K., Mining and
Metallurgy
Kusunose Kumaji, K., K. Ancien élève de l'Ecole d'application des Pourlres et Salpêtres, Technology of Explosives Tawara Kuniichi, Ko., K., Mining and Me-
tallurgy
Tsukamoto Yasushi, Ko., K., Architecture Hattori Shikajiro, Ko., K.,Civil Engineering Oshima Michitaro, K. Kamoi Takeshi
Ito Chuta, Ko., A., Architecture Inouye Jinkichi, K.,K.,Applied Chemistry
Assistant Professors
Sagawa Eijiro, R., Geology and Mineralogy Sano Riki, Ko, Architecture
Tanaka Yoshio, Ko., Applied Chemistry Takemura Kango, Ko., Mechanical En-
gineering and Marine Engineering Yokota Seinen, Ko., K., Naval Architecture
and Dynamics (in Europe)
Kamo Masao, K., Mechanical Engineer-
ing (absent)
Shibata Keisaku, Ko. K., Civil Engineering
and Applied Mechanics (absent) Arakawa Bunroku, Ko., Electrical Eng-
ineering (absent)
Sekino Tadashi, K., Architecture Suehiro Kyoji, A., Naval Architecture and
Dynamics
Funahashi Ryosuke, Ko., Mining and Met. Tanaka Fuji, Ko., Mechanical Engineering Ito Yeizaburo, Ko., Applied Chemistry Katsura Benzo, Ko., Mining and Metallurgy
(absent)
Kimishima Hachiro, Ko., Civil Engineering
(absent)
Uchinaru Saiichiro, Ko., Mechanical En-
gineering
Usami Keiichiro, Ko., Applied Chemistry
(absent)
Okochi Masatoshi,
Arms
o., Technology of
Nishida Sei, Ko., Civil Engineering Matsura Benzo, Ko., Marine Engineering Yoshikawa Ko., Ko., Mining and Metallurgy Kuribara Kanji, Ko., Chemistry
Yokoyama Katsuto
Kujirai Tsunetaro, Ko., Electrical Engrng. Kita Genitsu
Lecturers
Tsuruuchi Jitsutaro, Technology of Arms Fukao Shichiro, Ko., Technology of Ex-
plosives
Kita Genitsu, Ko, Chemistry Yamamoto Tadaoki, Ko.. Electrical Eng-
ineering, Designs and Drawing Hinata Shosaku, Ko., Technology of Arms Uori Chûzo, Ko., Civil Engineering Yamanonchi Masaaki, Ho., Industrial
Economy
Enami Tsunekichi, Ko., Mining and
Metallurgy
Hori Yetsunojo, Ri., F. C. S., Organic Che-
mistry, etc.
Hara Kalo, Io., II., Mining Law Tomiogi Tomoyoshi, Bu, Aesthetics Matsunaga Shinnosuke, Ko., Chemistry Kinoshita Yoshio, Ko., Industrial Economy Kondo Motoki, Ko., Naval Architecture Saito Makoto, Ko., Marine Engines Nonaka Sueo, Ko., Architecture Mori Hikozo, Ko., Locomotives Koriki Naoshiro, Spinning and Weaving
TOKYO
Kondo Toragoro, Ko., K., Adminstrative
Law affecting engineering works Noutomi Iwaichi, Ko., Electrical Engineer-
ing, Designs and Drawings Kato Seiichi, Ko., Naval Architecture
College of Literature
Tsuboi Kumazo, R., Bu., B., Director
Professors
Hoshino Hisashi, B., Chinese Literature
and Chinese History
Motora Yujiro, B., PH.D., Psychology, Ethics
and Logic
Inoue Tetsujiro, B., B., Philosophy and
History of Philosophy
Tsuboi Kunazo, Bu, R., B., History and
Geography
Karl Florenz, M.A., PH.D., B., German
Language and Literature
Emile Heck, licencié des lettres, French
Language and Literature
Hojino Yoshiyuki, B., Japanese History Nakajima Rikizo, B.A., B.D., PH.D., B., Ethics
and Logic and Psychology
R. von Koeber, FI.D., Philosophy John Lawrence, M., English Language
and Literature
Uyeda Kazutoshi, Bu., B., Japanese
Language and Literature
Mikami Sanji, Bu., B., Japanese History Takakusu Junjiro, M.A., M.A.B., PH.D.B.,
Sanscrit
Takebe Tongo, Bu., B., Sociology Otsuka Yasuji, B., B. Aesthetics Mitsukuri Genpachi, R., B., History and
Geography
Haga Yaichi, Bu, B., Japanese Language
and Literature
Siratori Kurakichi. Bu., B., Chinese Phi- losophy, Chinese History and Chinese Literature and Language
Hattori Unokichi, B., B. (now in the
service of the Chinese Government) Anezaki Masaharu, Bu., B., Science of
Religion
Tanaka Yoshinari, B., Japanese History Ichimura Sanjiro, B., Chinese History Hagino Yoshiyuki, B., Japanese History
Assistant Professors
Wada Mankichi, Bu, Librarian Murakawa Kengo, B., European History,
Geography
Fujioku Sakutaro, B., B., Japanese
Litorature
Shionoya On, B., Chinese Literature (abt.) Hoshina Koichi, B., Japanese Language
and Literature
Yano Niichi, B. (now in the service of the
Chinese Government) Shinmura Izuru, B., Japanese Language Kuroita Katsumi, B., B., Diplomaties Fujioka Katsuji, Bu., Philology,
Uno Tetsundo, B., Chinese Philosophy Uerla Seiji, B., German Language and
Literature
Yoshida Kumaji, B., Pedagogics Okada Masayuki, Chinese Literature
Lecturers
593
Kuroki Yasuo, Chinese Language Hatano Toshio, B., Science of Religion Murakami Sensho, B., Buddhism Chang Ting Yen, Chinese Language John T. Swift, A.B.,A.M. (Yale) English Mori Taijiro, Chinese Literature Shidehara Taira, Bu., B., Korean History Kobayashi Ichiro, B., Logic Mori Taijiro, Chinese Literature Mayeda Eun, B., Buddhism
Sekine Masanao, Japanese Language Cesare Norsa, Italian Language Kanazawa Shozaburo, Bu., B., Korean
Language
Jean Baptiste Bouf, French Murakami Naojiro, Bu., History Fujishiro Teisuke, Bu., German Language Uyeda Bin, B., English Literature Arthur Lloyd, M. A. (Cantab) do. do. Hayama Manjiro, Bu., German Kusaka Kan, Chinese Sasa Seiichi, Bu.,
do
do.
do. Literature
do.
Yasugi Sadatoshi, B., Russian Sasaki Nobutsuna, Japanese Literature Hayashi Hirotaro, Bu., Pedagogics. Koyanagi Kita, Chinese Philosophy Kida Sadakichi, Bu., Geography Kato Kurotomo, Bu., B., Religion Fukurai Tomokichi, Bu., Psychology Suzuki Torao, Bu., Chinese Literature
College of Science
Prof. Sukurai Joji, director
Professors
Sakurai Joji, R., F.C.S., Chemistry Mitsukuri Kakichi, R., PH.D., Zoology Terao Hisashi, R., R., licencié dès sciences
et mathématiqués, Astronomy
Koto Bunjiro, R., R., PH.D., Geology,
Paleontology, and Mineralogy
Iijima Isao, R., R., PH.D., Zoology Fujisawa Rikitaro, Ri., R., PH.D., Math'tics Yokoyama Matajiro, R, R., Geology
Paleontology, and Mineralogy Matsumura Jinzo, R., Botany
Tanakadate Aikitsu, R., R., F.R.S., Physics Tsuboi Shogoro, R., R., Anthropology Hirayama Shin, R., R., Astronomy Miyoshi Manabu, R., R., Botany
Jimbo Kotora, R., R., Geology, Paleonto-
logy and Mineralogy
Nagaoka Hantaro, R., R., Theoret'l Physics Omori Fusakichi, R., R., Seismology Haga Tamemasa, Ko., R., Chemistry Watase Shozaburo, No., R., Zoology Ikeda Kikunae, R., R., Chemistry Tsuruda Kenji, R., R., Physics Takaki Teiji, R., R., Mathematics Sakai Eitaro, Ri., do. Tamaru Takuro, R., R., Physics
Assistant Professors Matsubara Koichi, R., Chemistry
594
TOKYO
Nakamura Seiji, R., R., Physics Yoshie Takuji, R., Mathematics Imamura Akitsune, R., R., Seismology Iizuka Akira, Ri., Zoology
Majima Toshiyuki, R., Chemistry
Yabe Yoshitada, R. (now in the service of
the Chinese Government) Hirayama Seiji, R., Astronomy Fuju Kenjiro, R., Botany
Kuwano Hisato, R., (Chinese Govt.) Nakagawa Senkichi, R., Mathematics
Lecturers
Kishinoue Kamakichi, R., R., Fisheries Terada Torahiko, R., Physics. Yamazaki Naonasa, R., Geography Yatsu Naohide, R., Zoology Hattori Hirotaro, R., Botany Yabe Hisakatsu, R., Geology Fuji Kyotoku, R., Physics
Hirabayashi Takeshi, R., Applied Geology College of Agriculture
Matsui Naokichi R, PH.D., director
Professors
Matsui Naokichi, R., PH.D., Chemistry Wadagaki Kenzo, Bu, II., Agricultural
Politics and Political Economy Ishikawa Chiyomatsu, R, R., PH.D., Zoo-
logy, Entomology, and Sericulture Inagaki Otsuhei, Agricultural Physics and
Meteorology
Sasaki Chujiro, R., R., Zoology, En-
tomology and Sericulture
Katsushima Sennosuke, Ju.. J., Veterinary
Medicine and Surgery
Suto Giyemon, Ju., J., Veterinary Medicino
and Surgery
Yokoi Tokiyoshi, No., N., Agriculture Kawase Zentaro, Rin., R., Forestry Nitobe Inazo, No., N., H., Plantation Honda Kosuke, No., N., Zootechny Honda Seiroku, Rin., R., PH.D., Forestry Tanaka, Ko., Ju., J., Veterinary Anatomy Kozai Yoshinao, No., N., Agricul, Tech. Kawai Shitaro, R., R., Forestry A. Hofmann, Forestry
Tokishige Hatsukuma, Ju, J., Veterinary
Medicine and Surgery
Tsuno Keitaro, J., J., Veterinary Hygiene
and Pharmacology.
Toyonaga Masato, No., N. (in the service
of the Korean Govt.)
Shirai Kotaro, Ri, Vegetable Pathology Migita Hanshiro, R., R., Forestry Suzuki Umetaro, No., N., Chemistry Yahagi Eizo, Ho., II., Agriculture
Assistant Professors
Yoshikawa Suketero
Takahashi Teizo, No., N., Agricultural
Chemistry
Sato Kwanij, No., Agriculture Kawashima Meihachi, Forestry (absent) Ikeno Seiichiro, R., Botany (absent) Kubo Takemaro, No., Agriculture
Kusano Shunsuke, R.,Botany
Wakimizu Tetsugoro, R., Geology and Soils Ogura Kotaro, J., Pathological Anatomy
and Physiology
Hara Hiroshi, No., Agriculture Moroto Kitaro, Rin., Forestry Nitta Naoshi, Ju., J., Bacteriology Mimura Shozaburo, Rin., Forestry Hotta Seiitsu, Rin., Forestry
Sawamura Shin, No., N., Agric'l Chemistry Aso Keijiro, No., N., Agricultural Chemistry Suzuki Shigehiro, No., Agricultural Che
mistry
Yakuwa Gishichiro, No., Zootechny (abt.)
Lecturers
Murakami Tatsugoro, B., Ethics and
Pedagogics
Hara Kado, Ho., I., Forest Law Toyama Kametaro, No., N., Zoology Uchimura Hyozo, Ju, Farriery
Kani Teijiro, J., Veterinary Medicine Miyake Küchi, R., Vegetable Physiology
and Botany
Iwate Chuzo, Io., Encyclopaedia of Law Imai Kiyoshi, Ju., Veterinary Medicine and
Surgery
Imai Kippei, J., J., Hippology
Chiga Tatsuo, No., Melioration of Land
KYOTO IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY (Kyoro
TEIKOKU DAIGAKU) Baron Kikuchi Dairoku, R., president Toda Kaichi, Political Economy Mori Shunkichi, secretary, Shima Bunjiro Bu, librarian College of Law
Prof. Inoue Mitsu, //o., II., director
Professors
Iwaya Magozo, II, Dr., Jur., Professor of
the Peking University
Inouye Mitsu, Ho., II., Constitution, Public
Law and German Law
Oda Yorozu. Ho., II., Administrative Law Senga Tsurutaró, H, Dr., Jur., Public International Law and German Law Tajima Kiji, H., I., Political Economy
and Finance
Niida Masutaro, Ho., H., Code of Civil
Procedure, and German Law
Niho Kameniatsu, Ho., II., Jurisprudence
and German Law
Haruki Ichiro, Ho., H., Roman Law
and English Law
Okamura Tsukasa, Mo., H., Civil Code and
French Law
Katsumoto Kanzaburo, Ho., II., Criminal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure Keto Katsumoto, Ho., H., Commercial Code and English Law, Bankruptcy Atobe Sadajiro, Ho., H., Private Interna
tional Law and French Law Okamatsu Santaro, Ho., H. Nakajima Tamakichi, Ho., Civil Code and
English Law
Ishizaka Otoshiro, Ho., Civil Code
TOKYO
Kanbe Masao, o., Political Economy and
Finance
Suehiro Shigeo, Ho., I., Political History
Political and French Law
Nakajima Tamakichi, Zo., Civil Code
Assistant Professors
Sato Ushijiro, Ho., Politics
Sasaki Soichi, ffo., Administrative Law Takarabe Seiji. Mo., Political Economy Ichimura Mitsue, Io., Public Law" and
Administrative Law (abroad)
Ban Fusajiro, Ho., Civil Code Ogawa Gotaro, Io. (absent)
Lecturers
Okamoto Yanamatsu, Ig., J., Forensic
Medicine
Ikebe Yoshikata, Histy, of Jap. Legal Inst. Takeda Sei. fo.
College of Medicine
Araki Torasaburo, Z, M.D., director
1 rofessors
Inoko Shikanosuke, I., I., Surgery Kasahara Mitsuoki, I., I., Medicine Amki Torasaburo, I., M.D., Med. Chemistry Suzuki Buntaro, I., I., Anatomy Amaya Sennatsu, Ig., I., Physiology Ito Hayazo, g., I., Surgery Morishima Kurata, Ig., I., Pharmacology Fujinami Akira, Ig., I., Pathology and
Pathological Anatomy
Nakanishi Kametaro, I., I., Medicine Asayama Ikujiro, Ig., I., Ophthalmology Okamoto Yanamatsu, I., Forensic Medic. Hirai Ikutaro, J., L., Paediatrics Matsuura Ushitaro, I., I., Dermatology
and Syphilis
Matsushita Teiji, Z., Hygiene
Imamura Shirikichi, 7. Ig., Psychiatry Adachi Buntaro, I., I., Anatomy
Watsuji Shunji, I. T., Otology, Rhinology
and Laryngology
Hayami Takeshi, Ig., I., Pathology Matsuoka Mechiharu, I., I., Orthopedic
Surgery
Takayama Shohei. .. Obstetrics
Assistant Professors
Kaya Riukichi, I., Medicine (abroad) Katayama Yoshinori, S., Pharmacology Torigata Ruizo. Ig., Surgery Fukuda Tsunesuke, Ig., Medicine Matsuoka Michiharu, Ig., I., Orthopedic
Surgery (abroad)
Kakisawa Nobuyoshi, I., Hygiene Inoue Katsuji, I., Medical Chemistry Hayami Takeshi, Ig. (abroad), Pathology
and Pathological Anatomy Miura Soichiro, Ig., Paediatrics Avalara Shinjiro, I., M.D. (Berlin), and
Ballimore, Surgery
Ishikawa Hidezurumaru, Ig. Physiology Nakamura Hachitaro, /g., Pathology and
Pathological Anatomy
596
Ichikawa Kiyoghi, I., Opthalmology Obo Otoliko, I., Dermatology and
Syphilis
Lecturers
Akimoto Ryūjiro, 79, Pract.
Phantom
Hospital.
Ito Hayazo, Ig, Z., principal Katayama Yoshinori, S., manager
on the
College of Medicine (At Fukuoka) Omori Harutoyo, I., I., Director,
Professors
Nakayama Morihiko, Ig, Surgery Goto Motonoske, 1.,7., Medical Chemistry Ito Sukehiko, I, I, Paediatrics Koyama Riutoku, Ig., I, Anatomy Miyairi Keinosuke, T., I., Hygiene Miyake Hayashi, I., Z. Surgery Onishi, Katutomo 7, Opthalmology Hayashi Haruo, Zy, Z, Pharmacology Inada Ryokichi, I., Medicine Naka Kinichi, Ig., Medicine
Takayama Masao, I.,., Forensic Medicine Sakurai Tsunejiro, Ig., I., Anatomy Nakayama Heijiro, Ig, Pathology Ishibara Makoto, Ig., Physiology
Asahi Kenkichi, I., Dermatology and
Syphilis
Sasaki Yasutaro. Ig., I., Psychiatry Kutbo Inokichi, , Otology and Rinology Kamon Keitaro, I., I., Anatomy
Assistant Professors
Ishizaka Tomotaro, Ig., I., (abroad) Phar-
macology
Tawara Jun, Ig., Pathology Sumita Masao, Ig., Surgery Takeya Hirokichi, fg., Medicine
Lecturers
Tsukaguchi Resaburo, Anatomy Sumita Masao, Ig., Surgery Imabuchi Tsunehisa, Ig., Gynaecology Hikita Naotaro, Ig., Opthalmology
Hospital Onishi Katsutomo, I., Principal
College of Science and Engineering Kuhara Mitsuru, R., R., PH.D., director Professors
Muraoka Hanichi, R., PH.D., Physics Kuhara Mitsuru, R., R., PH.D., Chemistry Tanabe Sakuro, Ko., K., Civil Engineering Namba Masashi, K., Licencié és
Sciences Physiques. Elect. Engineering Futami Kyōsaburo, Ri, R., Civil Engin'g Tomonaga Shozo, Ko., K., Mechanical do. Abe Masayoshi, Ko., K., Mining Yoshida Hikorokuro, R., R., F.C.S.,
F.S.C.I., Chemical Technology. Osachi Yukichi, R., R., Chemistry Saito Daikichi, Ko., K., Metallurgy Kaneko Noboru, Ko., Mechanical En-
gineering
596
TOKYO
Yoshikawa Kamejiro, Ko., Chemical
Technology
Otsuka Kaname, Ko., K., Mechanical En-
gineering
Ogawa Umesaburo. Ko., A., Civil En-
gineering (absent)
Tomonaga Shozo, Ko., K., Mechanical En-
gineering
Yokobori Jisaburo, Ko., A., Metallurgy Yamada Kunihiko, Ko., K, Mining Ofuji Takahiko, Ko, K., Strength of
Construction
Aoyagi Eiji, Ko., K., Elect. Engineering Matsumura Tsuruzo, Ko., K., Mechanical
Engineering
Mizuno Toshinojo, R., R., Physics Hosoki Matsunosuke, Aö, K., Chemical
Technology
Miwa Kanichiro, R., R., Mathematics Hibi Tadahiko, Ko., Civil Engineering Kawai Jutaro, R., R., Mathematics Takahashi Shoji, Ko., Metallurgy Toda Kaichi, Industrial Economy Ono Kansei, Ko., Mechanical Engineering Nishiwaki Yoshihisa, Ko., Telepliony Inoue Kyoshiro, Ko., Mining & Metallurgy Kimura Masamichi, R., Physics Shinjo Shinzo, R., Physics
Nobara Yasuo, R., Chemical Technology Lecturers
Hasegawa Tei, Ko., Telegraphy Shimizu Yasukichi, Kó, Administrative
Law as affecting Engineering Works Omori Fusakichi, R., R., Seisinology Oda Yorozu, Ho., H., Mining Law Matsunaga Rokuji, A., Mechanical En-
gineering
Wado Takeo, Ri, Mathematics Miyajima Uhei, R., Physics.
Hachiya Sadaoki, Ko, C. Technology Hirano Masao, Ko., E. C. Engineering Shioya Masujiro, Ko., E. C. Railway Tonegawa Morisaburo, A., Telephony Furuya Yoshio, Ko., Elec. Engineer
Assistant Professors
Chikashige Masumi, R., R., Chemistry
(in Europe)
Hiki Tadasu, R., Mining Matsumoto Hitoshi, R., Chemistry Ogura Kohei, Ko., Chemistry. Oi Kiyokazu, Ko, Civil Engineering Kashiwagi Yoshisaburo, R., Physics Hori Kakutaro, Ko., Mechanical Engnrg. Yoshikawa Saneo, R., Mathematics Nagasawa Yasutomo, Ko., Mechanical En
gineering
Aichi Kaichi, R., Physics Matsui Motooki, R., Chemistry Motono Ko, Ko., Electrical Eugurg Nakagawa Tokuro
Kaiso Kusuka Ri., Chemistry
Shimizu Yoshikazu Electrical Eugurg.
College of Literature
Matsumoto Bunzaburo, B., B., Director
Professors
Tanimoto Yutaka, B., Pedagogics Matsumoto Mataturo, B., B., Psychology Matsumoto Bunzaburo, Bu, B., Philosophy Kuwagi Genyoku, B., B., Philosophy Uchida Ginzo, B., B., Jap. History Kano Naoyoshi, B., Chinese Language
and Literature
Fujishiro Teisuke, B., B., Occidental
Literature
Assistant Professors Sakaguchi Noboru, Bu., History and Geo-
graphy
Shima Bunjiro, B., Introduction to Li-
terature
Sakaki Ryōsaburo, Bu. (abroad) Shinmura Izaru, Bu. (abroad) Takase Takejiro, Bu., B.,Chinese Philosophy Asanaga Sanjiro, B., Philosophy Ishibashi Goro, Bu., Geograpliy
Lecturers
Amaya Senmatsu, Ig., I., Physiology Atsuta Riichi, Indian Philosophy Piel Oriense, French
Emil Schiller, German
Frank Alanson Rombard, English
NORTH EASTERN IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY
(Tohoku Teikoku Daigaku, Sendai)
College of Agriculture (Sapporo) Sato Shosuke, No., N., PH. D. Director
Professors
Sato Shosuke, No., N., Agriculture Miyahe Kingo, No., N., Botany Minami Takajiro, No., N., Agriculture Yoshii Toyozo, Nogeigakushi, Agriculture Hashimoto Sagoro, o., Zootechny Matsumura Matsutoshi, No., R., Zoology,
Entomology and Sericulture
Oshima Kintaro, No., Agri. Chemistry Takaoka Kumao, No., Agri. and Political
Colonization
Assistant Professors Hatta Saburo, R., Zoology, Entomology and
Sericulture
Tokito Kazuhiko, A., Agri. Physics Suda Kinnosuke, No., Zoology, Entomology
and Sericulture
Hoshino Yuzo, No., Horticulture Akimine Masao, No., Agriculture Shoji Rikuzo, No., Agriculture
MORIOKA HIGHER SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY
Tamari Kizo, No, Director
TOKYO HIGHER NORMAL SCHOOL
Otsuka Kubo-cho, Koishikawa, Tökyð
Kand Jigoro, Bu, director
John Trumbull Swift, instructor in English
William E. L. Sweet,
Augustus Woorl,
do.
[]).
F
HIROSHIMA HIGHER NORMAL SCHOOL (Koto-Shihan Gakkō, Hiroshima)
Hojo Tokiyuki, Ri, director William Elliott, instructor in English P. A. Smith,
do.
FEMALE HIGHER NORMAL SCHOOL
Hongo, Tokyo
Takamine Hideo, director Mary Copeland Dodge, English
FIRST HIGHER SCHOOL Hongo, Tokyo
Nitobe Inazo, N., N., director
John Nicholson Seymour
Wilhelm Gundert
C. Giraud
E. B. Clark
Ernst Emil Junker
SECOND HIGHER SCHOOL
Sendai
Nakagawa Hajime, director
W. Denning, instructor
G. A. Forrest,
do.
August Degenhart do,
THIRD HIGHER SCHOOL Kyoto
Orita Hikoichi, M.A., ‹lirector
C. M. Cady, B.A., instructor
TOKYO
697
YAMAGUCHI HIGHER COMMERCIAL SCHOOL Yokoji Ishitaro, temporal director Charles Howard Ross, instructor
Edward Gauntlett, Kun Shun, Tei Chiu
Ko, C. L. Rotzel
KOBE HIGHER COMMERCIAL SCHOOL (Kobe-Hyogo)
Mizushima Tetsuya, director
Albert G. Belding, instructor
Frank Müller,
do.
Henri Perrin,
do.
C. W. Davidge
do.
Mary Oldenburg
dlo.
Sin Zun Tai,
10.
NAGASAKI HIGHER COMMERCIAL SCHOOL
(Nagasaki)
Kumamoto Arinao director
An Yei Chu, Ri Shun Sho, Maurice Ray- mond, Georges de Katers, John Moerle. Davis, Ri Sho Wu, Konrad Knopp Walirian Wascilivich Popof, instructor Joseph Lichtenberg
do.
TOKYO HIGHER COMMERCIAL SCHOOL (1, Hitotsubashidori-cho, Kanda) Matsuzaki Kuranosuke, Ho., H., director Alexander Joseph Hare, instructor Ed. J. Blockhuys,
do.
J. K. Goodrich,
do.
Alexander Petrof,
do.
P. S. Brasch,
do.
Richard Heise,
do.
P. Jacoulet,
do.
FOURTH HIGHER SCHOOL
Henry L. Fardel,
do.
Kanazawa
Yoshimura Torataro, director
Edward Gauntlett, English
K. Steiner, instructor
E. Wohlfarth,
do.
G. R. Berlinger
do.
Arthur Lloyd,
dlo.
Ernest P. Ruse,
do.
Cesare Norsa,
do.
Henry F. Bray, mechanic
FIFTH HIGHER SCHOOL
Kumamoto
Matsuura Torasaburo, director
N. Fritz von Wenkstern, English, Latin
and Gemuan
Ernest Charles Hugh Moule, English Max August Golber, German
SIXTH HIGHER SCHOOL (OKAYAMA)
Sakai Sukeyasu, director
Cary Richard Colburn, instructor
C. Scharschmidt,
Franz Otto Hellfritzsch,
do.
do.
SEVESTU HIGHER SCHOOL
Iwasaki Yukichika, director J. Murdoch, M... instructor Miss Sophie Büttner, do.
German
BUTH HIGH SCHOOL (NAGOYA) Ushima Gishiu, Bu., Director
TOKYO HIGHER TECHNICAL SCHOOL (Kuraue, Asakusa)
Teshima Seiichi, director
Frederick Woodrough, E. T. Sykes
FOREIGN LANGUAGES SCHOOL (Hitotsubashi-dori, Kanda, Tokyo)
Murakami Naojiro, B., director Paul Jacoulet, instructor
A. Hoerbe,
do.
Cesare Norsa, Italian Alexander Petrof, Russian A. W. Medley, English
Gonzago Juriency de la Espana, Spanish
Chang Ting Yen, instructor in Chinese
Sun Yum Chion,
instructor
K. T. Achaya Tamil,
do.
W. George Smith,
do.
Kun Kin Po,
do.
En Shun,
do.
Boku Wa Yo,
do.
N. L. Dutt, Hindustani do.
5J8
IMPERIAL SCHOOL OF ART (Tokyo Bijutso Gakko) Ueno Park, Tokyo
Masaki Naohiko, //o., director
TOKYO ACADEMY OF MUSIC Uyeno Park, Tokyo
TOKYO
Katayama Yoshikatsu, councillor
Matsumura Shinichiro, do.
Otani Junsaku,
do.
Okamoto Eitaro,
do.
Yamawaki Haruki,
do.
Mitsumatsu Takeo,
do.
Beppu Ushitaro,
Tsurumi Sakio,
do.
Miyauchi Kunitaro,
do.
Piano
Katayama Yoshikatsu, do.
August Junker,
Singing, Violincello, etc.
Miura Saneo,
do.
Herman Heydrich, Piano.
Ito Bunkichi,
do.
Yubara Motoichi, director
Heinrich Werkmeister, Violincello, Bass
do.
R. Koeber, PH. D., Sharlotte Fleck, Singing
Tokyo Mo-A. GAKKO (Blind and Dumb School) 77 Sasugaiacho Koishikawa Konishi Nobuhachi, director
IMPERIAL LIBRARY (Uyeno Park, Tokyo)
Tanaka Inagi, Bu., director
IMPERIAL ACADEMY (TOKYO)
Baron Kato Hiroyuki, B. I., chairman
OSAKA HIGHER TECHNICAL SCHOOL Yasunaga Yoshiaki, A., director R. F. Veatch,
do.
E. Clare
E. T. Sykes
KYOTO HIGHER TECHNICAL SCHOOL Nakazawa Iwata, Ko., K., director Virginia Clarkson Carly, English
SENDAI HIGUIER TECHNICAL SCHOOL Nakagawa Kenjiro, director
NAGOYA HIGHER TECHNICAL SCHOOL Doi Sukesaburo, director
KUMAMOTO HIGHER TECHNICAL SCHOOL Nakahara Junzo, K., director
AGRICULTURAL AND COMMERCIAL DEPT. (NOSHOMU SHO)
Kobiki-cho
Baron Oura Kanetake, minister Oshikawa Noriyoshi, vice-minister
SECRETARIAT (DALJIN KWAMBO)
private secretary
Matsumura Shinichiro, do.
Hori Tei,
Ota Hajime,
councillor
Oka Minoru,
do.
Hida Heijiro,
do.
Shikuri Eiji,
do.
Mitsumatsu Takeo,
do.
Shimamura Tasaburo,
do.
Murakami Riukichi,
do.
Katsube Kuniomi,
do.
Nagai Toru,
do.
Nakamura Kiyohiko, secretary
Matsuzaki Juzo
do.
BUREAU OF AGRICULTURE (NOME KYOKU) Shimooka Chuji, director
BUREAU OF COMMERCE (SHOMU KYOKU) Okubo Joshitake, director
BUREAU OF INDUSTRY (KOMU KYOKU) Kanokogi Kogoro, director
BUREAU OF FORESTRY (SANRIN KYOKU) Kamiyama Mitsunoshiu, director
BUREAU OF MINING (KOZAN KYOKU) Isobe Masaharu, director
BUREAU OF MARINE PRODUCTS (SUISAK KYOKU)
Doke Hitoshi, director
PATENT OFFICE (TOKYO KYOKU) Nakamatsu Morio, director
ACRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION (NOJI SHIKENJO)
Dr. Kozai Yoshinao, chief
IMPERIAL COMMERCIAL MUSEUM (SHOHIN
CHINRETSUKWAN)
Tsurumi Sakio, chief
IMPERIAL IRON FOUNDRY Baron Nakamura Yujiro, president
MARINE PRODUCTS SCHOOL (SUISAN KOSHIUJO)
Matsubara Shinnosuke, chief
F. J. Lurcock, foreign instructor (English)
SERICULTURAL SCHOOL (SANGYO KOSHUJO) Honda Iwajiro, chief (Tokyo), Ishiwatari Shigetane, chief (Kyoto)
INDUSTRIAL EXPERIMENTAL STATION (KOGYO SHIKENJO)
Dr. Takayama Jintaro, chief
SILK CONDITIONING HOUSE (KI-ITO
KENSAJO)
Shido Sho, chief (Yokohama)
TOKYO
THE OFFICE OF THE GRAND EXHIBITION OF JAPAN (NIHON DAI-HAKURAN-KWAI
JIMUKYOKU)
H. I. H. General Prince Fushimi, president Baron Oura Kanetake, vice-president Wada Hikojiro, assistant director-general Okamoto Yeitaro, commissioner Hori Tei,
599
POSTAL MUSEUM (YUBIN HAKubutsu Kan) Tanaka Jiro, superintendent
FIRST-CLASS POST OFFICES
(ITTO Yubin Kyoku)
Sakano Tetsujiro, director, Tokyo
Shishido Shozo,
do., Osaka
ilo.
Sugi Seizo,
do., Kyoto
Yamawaki Haruki,
do.
Kawai Go,
do.,
Yokohama
Beppu Ushitaro,
do.
Tada Minoru,
do.,
Kobe
Oka Minoru,
special commissioner
Yabuchi Keinosuke,
do.,
Nagasaki
Sakai Tokutaro,
do.
Sumi Gensen,
do.,
Sapporo
Katayama Yoshikatsu,
do.
Tanabe Jitsu,
do.,
Niigata
Toyohara Sukekiyo,
do.
THE IMPERIAL JAPANESE COMMISSION TO
THE JAPAN-BRITISH EXHIBITION (NICHI-YEI HAKURAN-KWAI JIMUKYOKU) H. I H. General Prince Fushimi, hon.
president
Baron Oura Kanetake, president
Baron Matsudaira Masañao, vice-president Wada Hikojiro, commissioner-general
Count Mutsu Hirokichi,
Kitsuki Kokichi,
do.,
Nagoya
Utsunomiya Tomoye, do.,
Kumamoto
Komori Shichiro,
do.,
Sendai
Mori Giichi,
do.,
Hiroshima
Abe Kiichi,
do.,
Utsunomiya
Nakamura Kojiro,
do.,
Nagano
Yoshikuni Kanezo,
do.,
Amori
Nakamura Osamu,
do..
Kanazawa
Kato Keizaburo,
do.,
Tahavnatsu
Murata Toranosuke,
do., Kagoshima
Baba Saburo,
commissioner
do.
Okamoto Yeituro,
do.
Yamawaki Haruki,
dlo.
Hori Tei,
do.
Beppu Ushitaro,
do.
Sakai Tokutaro,
do.
Katayama Yoshikatsu,
do.
Toyohara Sukekiyo,
do.
DEPARTMENT OF
COMMUNICA-
TIONS (TEISHIN SHO)
No. 1, Zenigame-cho Kojimachi-ku
Baron Goto Shimpei, minister Nakashoji Ron, vice-minister
MINISTER'S CABINET (DALJIN KANBO)
Komori Yusuke, private secretary Nakaya Hirokichi, chief of section Yukawa Motomi,
do.
FOREIGN ADVISER
William H. Stone, M.I E.E.
COUNCILLORS (SANJIKWAN)
Manesuya Kikuma, councillor
Higo Hachiji,
Futagami Hyoji,
do.
do.
DIRECTION GENERAL OF POSTS AND TELEGRAPHS (TSUSHIN KYOKU)
ELECTRIC BUREAU (Denki KYOKU) Nakaya Hirokichi, director
Higo Hachiji, chief of section
Asano Osuke, Dr. Eng.,
do.
MERCANTILE MARINE BUREAU (KWANSEN KYOKU)
Uchida Kakichi, director
Yukawa Motomi,
chief of section
Miyoshi Shinrokuro, Dr. Eng., do. Ito Jisaburo,
do.
MARINE BUREAU (KAIJI KYOKU)
Wakamiya Sadao,
Umemura Sadaaki,
Ishikawa Takeyuki, Takatori Yasutaro,
director, Tokyo do., Osaka do., Nagasaki do., Hakodate
LOCAL MARINE BUREAU (KAIMU SHO)
Directors
Yoshizawa Gensaku, Niigata
Hayakawa Yoshio, Yokohama Miyatomi Kenzo, Toba Ota Sadao, Ishinomaki Katakura Mikimaru, Fushiki Sawabe Hatsuo, Shimizu Okochi Tokuichi, Uraga Harada Oho, Handa Ota Kiyojiro, Kobe
Tsukakoshi Reizo, Shimonoseki
Shigono Yutaka, Sakai
Nomura Hiroshi, Tadotsu
Takabe Kankichi, Kochi
Komatsu Kenjiro, general director
Tanaka Jiro,
chief of section
Futakami Hyoji,
do.
Kageyama Senzaburo,
do.
Nojiri Kyosuke, Itosaki
Kuwayama Tetsua, acting do.
Oi Saitaro, Dr., Eng.
do.
POST AND TELEGRAPH TRAINING SCHOOL
(THSHIN KANRI-RENSHU SHo)
Sakano Tetsujiro, principal
Watanabe Kamejiro, Mitsugahama
Tada Gonzaburo, Kuchinotsu
Yasui Chiyujiro, Kagoshima
Taketomi Shingo, Otaru
Kimura Seio, Marine Inspector, Shanghai
Tokunaga Kaku,
do.
do.
600
BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES, Buoys, BEACONS, ETC.
(KORO HYOSHIKI KANRISHO) Yokohama.
Kusama Jifuku, director
Takeda Kantaro, chief of section
Nakao Masakiyo, capt. of the s.s. Rashu
MARINE APPEAL COURT
(KOTO KAIN SHIMPAN S10)
TOKYO
Y. Shima, chief, Rolling Stock & Machinery T. Mimoto, chief, Ships and Boats S. Tamaki do. Electrical
Construction Department
Dr. Ryutaro Nomura, director
S. Harada, chief, Documents and Archives S. Ishimaru, do. Engineering
Finance Department
Dr. S. Hirai, director
K. Matsuki, chief, Documents and Archives K. Morimoto, do. Accounts
S. Aoki, do. Stores
Uchida Kakichi, president
LOCAL MARINE COURTS (CH1100 Kain SHIMPAN SHO)
T. Naguro,
Wakamiya Sadao, president,
Tokyo
Umemura Sadaaki, do.
Osaka Nagasaki
Takatori Yasutaro,
do.
Hakodate
Ishikawa Takeyuki, do.
MERCANTILE NAVIGATION SCHOOL
(SHOSEN GAKKO)
Captain Hirayama Tojiro, LJ.N., president
BUREAU OF DEPARTMENTAL FINANCE (KEIRI-KYOKU)
Machida Shigemasa, director
Tanaka Takeo, chief of section.
Kabahara Kyshiro,
Nakanishi Shiro,
Yoshii Shigenori,
do.
do.
do.
Saisho Bunji, director, Osaka Branch
DIRECTION GENERAL OF POSTAL MONEY
ORDERS AND SAVINGS BANKS (YUBIN CHOKIN KYOKU) Tokyo
Shimomura Hiroshi, director
Hirayama Umasuke, do. Osaka, Branch. Cho Shoren, director, Shimonoseki, do.
IMPERIAL GOVERNMENT RAILWAYS (TETSUDO IN)
Baron Shimpei Goto, president Dr. Seijiri Hirai, vice-president
R. Daido, president's private secretary U. Sugi do.
do.
Dr. R. Nomura, engineer-in-chief President's Secretariat
do.
K. Matsuki, chief, Personal Affairs
R Daido, do. Documents and Archives
do. Relief and Sanitary
S. Inoue,
M. Takata,
do. Inspection
charge)
Office
(in
General Administration Department
Koriki Fujita, director
S. Harada, chief, Documents and Archives.
S. Kobayashi, do. inspecting
S. Mukasa, do. engineering
Transportation Department
I. Yamanouchi, director
G. Kobayashi, chief, Documents & Archives
F. Tanaka, chief, Motive Power
do. Audit
Investigation Office
Junnosuke Yamaguchi, lirector
Eastern Divisional Superintendent Office
(Uyeno, Tokyo)
Kinsuke Hasegawa, director
Central Divisional Superintendent Office
(Shimbashi, Tokyo)
Sakajiro Furukawa, director
Western Divisional Superintendent Office
(Kobe)
Hikomatsu Iwasaki, director
Kinshiu Divisional Superintendent Office
(Moji)
Shumpei Uyemura, director
Hokkaido Divisional Superintendent Office
(Sapporo)
Yasaburo Nomura, director
Kagoshima Branch Office (Kagoshima)
Director -S. Ijichi
Yougo Branch Office (Yonago)
Director J. Miyake
JUDICIAL DEPT. (SHIHO SHO) Nishi Hibiya-machi
Viscount Okabe Nagamoto, minister Dr. Kawamura Ziozaburo, vice-minister Dr. Loenholm, honorary legal adviser
CHAMBER OF MINISTER (DALJIN KWAMBO) Section of Confidential Secty. (isho Kwa) Kashiwabara Yojiro, confidential secretary Baron Okimachi Suyetada, do.
Staff Section (Shokuin Kwa) Takahashi Bunnosuke, chief
Documents Section (Bunsho Kuda) Hori Yeichi, chief
Finance Section (Kwaikei Kwa) Kashiwabara Jojiro, chief
Section of Architectural Works (Yeisen Kwa) Yamashita Keijiro, chief and architect Yokohama Tsutomu, architect
BUREAU OF CIVIL AND CRIMINAL CASES
(MINKEI KYOKU)
Hiranuma Kiichiro, director
Saito Juichiro,
councillor
Toyoshima Naomichi
do.
Tanida Saburo,
do.
T. Okada, chief, Maintenance Way & Works Iriye Yoshiyuki,
do
Y. Kinoshita, traffic manager
601
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES (SHUGI IN) Sumitaka Haseba, president
Ryo Koidzuka, vice-president Hayashida Kainetaro, chief secretary
TOKYO
Hori Yeichi,
Councillor
Yokota Goro,
dlo.
Tanino Tadasu,
do.
Yamanouchi Kakusaburo, do.
Oba Shigema,
do.
Motoji Arakuma
do.
Ikeda Torajiro
Miura Yeigoro
BUREAU OF PRISON AFFAIRS (KANOOKU
Κιρκυ)
Koyama On, director
Sanagi Takashi, intendant
Toyono Tanehiko,
dv.
Section of Prison Mungt, (Gokumu Kwa) Tanino Tadasu, chief
Section of Prison Accounts (Keiri Kwa) Sanagi Takashi, chief
SUPREME COURT (DAISHIN IN)
Yokota Kuniomi, president
Tomitani Shotaro,presdt., 1st div.,civil cases Tanabe Kaoru, presdt., second do. Yokota Kunioui, president, first division.
criminal cases
Inouye Shoichi, president, second divi-
sion, criminal cases
Matsumuro Itasu, public prosecutor-general
COURTS OF APPEAL (Koso-IN) Hasegawa Takashi, president, Tokyo Kawamura Yoshimasu, chief com'ary, do. Furusho Kadzuo, president,
Osaka Midzukani Chojiro, chief com❜ary, do. Nishikawa Tetsujiro, president, Nagasaki.
chief com❜ary,
do.
Fujita Riuzaburo, president,
Nagoya
Teilzuka Taro, chief commissary,
Mayeda Kokai, president,
do. Miyagi
do.
Okunomiya Masaharu, chief com.. Ichinose Ynzaburo president, Hakodate Ikegami Saburo, chief commissary, do. Baba Genji, president,
Hiroshima Kawabuchi Tatsuokí, chief com., do.
CHIHO SAIDANSHO (LOCAL COURTS) Sudzuki Kisaburo, president,
Kobayashi Yoshiro, chief com.,
Isotani Kojiro, president,
Odakuro Yeki, chief com.,
ADVERTISER PUBLISHING Co., Publishers of the "Japan Advertiser," 18, Yamashita- cho, Kyobashi-ku; Telph 2570, Tel. Ad: Advertiser, Tokyo
B.W. Fleisher, proprietor and publisher
AKASAKA EYE AND GENERAL HOSPITAL, 17 Hikawa-cho, Akasaka, Telephone Shim- bashi 4384
Director and Ophthalmic Surgeon-
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ARTBERG, J. G., Machinery and Tool Manu- facturers, Schuchardt, Schuette, London, Berlin, New York, Vienna, Stockholm, St. Petersburg, Copenhagen, Budapest, Shanghai, 14, Akashi-cho, Tsukiji, Tokyo
ASIATIC SOCIETY OF JAPAN, Ginza, Shi-
chome No. 1
President--Sir C. Macdonald, G.C.M.G. Vice-Presidents-C. H. Vickers, J. C.
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IMPERIAL DIET (TEIKOKU GIKWAJ
HOUSE OF PEERS (KIZOKU IN) Prince Tokugawa Iyesato, president Marquis Kuroda Nagashige, vice-president Ota Minesaburo, chief secretary
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BAILLOD, A. A., 42/1, Kitano-cho, 3 chome
BOHLER BROS. & Co., LTD., Steelworks, &c., Japan Branches: Tokyo, Osaka, Moji. Kyobashiku, Minami-Kinrokucho No. 7. Telephone No. 3569 Shinbashi. Tel. Ad: Steelgobel, Head Office: Vienna, Austria
Leon P. Goebel, M.E., general manager L. F. Eisner, M.E., assistant manager Dante Capanelli, PH. DR., secretary
M. H. Ishiwara, consulting engr O. Fukushima
T. Kawamura
+
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K. Motozawa
K. Nakamura K. Ishido
1. Tanaka
T. Yamanouchi
Miss M. Kobayashi
ΤΟΚΙΟ
BOWDEN BROS. & Co., LTD., Australian and General Import and Export Merchants, 10,Sanchome, Honzaimoku-cho, KyoBashi Ku, Telph. 3422 Honkyoku
James Summers
"BRITISH TRADE JOURNAL," 1, Kagacho,
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BRITISH TRADING Co., 1, Kagacho, Kyobashi
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CHAMBERLAIN, B. H., Emeritus Professor of Japanese and of Philology at the Imperial University. c/o General Post Office
CONDER, J., F. R. I. B. A., Architect, 25,
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CONINGHAM, C. G., Professor of English, 1860 Shimo-Shibuya Machi, O Aza Hiro-o, Tokyo-fu
Cox, W. D., 16, Hirakawa-cho Rokuchome,
Kojimachi-ku
DEGUY, A., Civil Engineer, Creusot Works,
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DENYS LARRIEU, No. 10, Mita, Tsumachi,
Shibaku, Tokyo Agency
Etablissements Decauville ainé
DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT FÜR NATUR-UND VOELKERKUNDE OSTASIENS, 8, Imakawa- koji, Ichome, Kanda-ku
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Chas. S. Schultz, chief engineer and
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H. T. Rice W. M. Booth C. S. Wade
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E. J. Libeaud
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Y. Chikayama R. Izumi H. Kasama W. Suzuki
M. Takagi
ECOLE DE L'ETOILE DU MATIN, 32, lida
machi, Sanchome
Directeur Albert Henri Sous-Directeur-J. B. Beuf
do. -H. Humbertclaude Econoine-L. Baumann
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J. C. Ward, registered representative
E. P. Cox
R. H. Gordon, signs per pro. T. Hayashi
(See A. B. C. List of British
(Manufacturers)
EHMANN, P.,113,Wakamatsu-cho, Ushigome
EMBASSIES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY, Kioicho Kojimachiku
Tel. Ad: Austung
Ambassador Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-Baron Call Zu Rosenburg and Culmbach Councillor-Baron Koenning-O'Car
roll
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Walderode
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Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary H. E. Baron
Albert d'Anethan
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Kai
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R. André
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Elevé Interprète G. Bonmarchand Attaché Militaire-Capitaine Ch.
Bertin
Attaché Naval-Lieut. de vaisseau
R. Martinie
Lettré de l'Ambassade -R. Fukui
GERMANY, 14, Nagata-cho, fchome
Ambassador Extraordinary
and
Plenipotentiary-Baron Dr.Mumm von Schwarzenstein
First Secty. Botschaftsrat Count
von Montgelas
Second do.-Legations Secretaer Dr.
Baron von Richthofen
Attaché Oberleutnant von Lieres
und Wilkan
Military Attaché - Kauptmann
Freikerr von Bernowitz
Naval Attaché--Fregattenkapitän
Lange
Secrétaire Interprète-Dr. Ohrt Second Interpreter-Dr. Fuehr Chief of the Chancery-Hofrat Kopke Chancellor-Hermann Schultze Diactar-Karl Hinz
Japanese Linguists-Seki Michitaka,
Misawa Sukesaburo
:
GREAT BRITAIN, 1, Goban-cho, Kojimachi, Tel. Ad Britain. Teleph. No Bancho 59; Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary and Consul-Gen. Col. The Rt. Hon. Sir Clande Maxwell Macdonald, G.c.M.G., G.C.
V.O., K.C.B.
Councillor of Embassy---H. G. M.
Rumbold, M.V.o
Military Attaché--Lieut.-Col. R. W.
Boger, R.A
Naval Attaché-Capt. Chas. Dundas
of Dundas, RN.
Acting Second Secretary-M. W.
Lampson, M.V.0.
Third Secretary --N. M. Henderson,
M.V.O.
Commercial Attaclié--E. F. Crowe Jap'se Secty.-S.M.Hobart-Hampden Asst. Jup'se Secy.-C. J. Davidson Hon.Chapn. Rev. L. Cholmondeley Student Interpreters--P. D. Butler,
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ITALY, Kojimachi ku, Urakasumigaseki
Ambassador-Marquis Gniccioli Councillor Count Ancilotto Third Secretary-G. Rogadeo Military Attaché-Major Caviglia Interpreter-Chev, A. Gasco
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Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-Ramon G. Pa-
chicco
First Secretary-Efren Rebolledo Interpreter-II. Sato
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Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-J. H. van Roijen Councillor--Léon van de Polder Student Interpr.-Dr. M.W. de Visser
(absent)
Attaché Militaire H. Z. Bense,
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PERU, Consulate General, Yokohama 27, Yamashita-Cho, P O. Box No. 273
Consul--E. C. Davis
Chancellor--Harold Y. Irwine
604
TOKYO
PORTUGAL, 143. Aoyama Harajiku, Tokyo Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-Baron de Sendal
RUSSIA, 1, Ura, Kasumegasaki, Telephone
Shimbashi 2042
SIAM
Ambassadeur
Extraordinaire
et
Plénipotentiaire--N. Malewsky-
Malewitch
Conseiller A. Bronevsky
1er. Secretaire-G. Kosakow
do. -A. Bouteneff
2e.
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plen.--Phya Narisra Rajkitch Secretary-Luang V. Botchanakit. Military Attaché-Major M. Mongol Sturlent attaché-Nai Pooh
SPAIN, 2, Hiromachi Azabu; Telph. 444,
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Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo.--Don Ramiro Gil de Uribarri
Secty. Don Manuel Ynclan de la
Recilla
Military attaché-Major Don Ed.
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SWEDEN
Envoy Extraordinary, Minister Pleni- potentiary and Consul General- G. O. Wallenberg
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SWITZERLAND, Azabu Zaimokucho, 55
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary-F. Salis Secretary of Legation-H. Stroehlin
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1, Eno-
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Ambassador- Thomas J. O'Brien Sec. of Embassy--Peter A. Jay Military Attaché--Col. J. A. Irons. Naval Attaché-Captain J. H. Sears Japanese Secretary-R. S. Miller Second Secretary-G Post Wheeler Third Secretary-Charles Campbell,
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J. T. Hamilton, general manager Kinzabure Nakayama, principal agent
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Silverhall. Teleph. Honkyoku 409
Ad
A. F. Calusae, manager
HOKKAIDO TANKO KISEN KAISHA (Hokkai- do Colliery & Steamship Co.), Proprietors of Yubari, Sorachi, Poronai and Iku- shiunbetsu Coal Mines. Head office- Mororan, Hokkaido; Tokyo Office- Tsukiji; Tel. Ad. Tanko
K. Inouye, managing director K. Inagaki, general manager R. Goto, secretary
S. Aruga, manager coal dept. T. Kurai, treasurer
Branch Offices:- Yokohama, Mororan,
Otaru and Hakodate Agents and Correspondents:-
Shanghai, Hongkong, Singapore, Vladi- vostock, Sabang and London
(See Advertisement)
HORNE, F. W., Importer of American Machinery, 6 and 7,Takiyamacho, Kyoba shiku, Telp. Shimbashi 2922 and 2077.
HOSPITAL, ST. LUKE's, for Foreigners and Japanese, 37, Tsukiji: Telephone No. 3014, Shimbashi
Dr. R. B. Tousler (physician in charge)
HUNTER & Co., E. H., 7, Yazayemon-cho Kyobashi-ku, Teleph. 3346 Shimbashi H. Robertson, A.M.LEE, A.M.L. MEų
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0. Suwo
ILLIES & Co., C, Merchants, 15, Tsukiji
Sanchome
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R. Pohl, (Yokohama)
W. Traun
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IMPERIAL COMMERCIAL BANK, (Teikoku Shyogyo Ginko) 5, Kabutocho, Nihon- bashi-ku: Tel. Naniwa 105,724, 2999, 3250, Masabumi Asada, managing director Yataro Kani,
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IMPERIAL MARINE TRANSPORT AND FIRE INSURANCE CO., LD., 6, Kita Sayacho, Nihonbashiku Tel. Ad. Teikoku, Tel. Nos. Main 679, 2469 & 2329
:
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Harouo Mourassé, managing director
INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIAL CORPORATION, Importers and Exporters--Main Office, 1, Takiyamachio Kyobashi-ku, Tokyo: Tel. Ad: "Indusco"; American Office,90, West Broadway, New York City; European Office, 107, Fenchurch St., London. E. C. PresidentandGen. Mgr. Shiguo Kondo
ISHIKAWAJIMA SHIP BUILDING AND EN
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Directors S. Umeura (managing), T.
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G. H. A. Snow
A. Beirens
F. G. Correa
A. S. Koshino
T. Ui
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JAPAN TIMES, Daily Newspaper (English)
S. Yamada, director
K. Takahashi, editor
F. Schroeder, exchange editor
T. Ihara, manager
K. Horiuchi, Yokohama represent-
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JOHNSTON, T. RUDDIMAN, English and American Manufacturers' Agent, 13, Mi- kawadai-machi, Azabu, Tokyo
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0. Dusseldorp, manager
605
KEISHICHO (METROPOLITAN POLICE BOARD)
Yayesucho, Nichome
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Masahiro Ota, chief of the first dept. Matsujiro Ohama, chief of 2nd. do. Tsunekatus Kurimoto, chief police
surgeon
KRAUSS E., 34A, Tsukiji, Optical Works
E. Krauss (Paris)
G. Weber, signs per pro.
K. Muhlschlegel do."
LANE, CRAWFORD & Co. LTD., Store- keepers and Commission Merchants, Tailors and Outfitters; 11, Honcho Itchome, Nihonbashiku; Telephone Honkyoku 3740
Directors K. F. Crawford (London),
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LEFROY, A. J. S., Manufacturers' Agent, Mitsu Bishi Buildings, Yayesucho It- chome, Kogimachiku
A. J. S. Lefroy
LEO ROMISCH, Import & Export Merchant, 33A, Akashi-cho, Tsukiji, Tel. No. 2591 Shimbashi; Telegi. Ad: Roenisch
Leo Romisch
G. Romisch
LETZEL & HORA (Goshi Kwaisha), Kyoba- shiku, Ginza, Idzumocho, 3-Banchi. Architecture and Engineering Offices. Teleph. Shinbashi 26061; Telegs.: Letzel, Tokyo
J. Letzel, architect
K. J. Hora, E.E. (Yokohama)
L. LEYBOLD SHOKAN, 26, Himono-cho, Nihonbashi-ku. Tel. No. 1824; Telegr. Ad: Leybold
Julius Saenger (Hamburg) M. Kaufmann (Yokohama)
F. Hartmann (Eng.)
P. Kandler (Eng.) K. Meissner
P. Singer W. Veil (Eng.) H. Rothe (Osaka)
LOENHOLM, L. H., Professor Dr. jur., Azabu
Hiroomachi, 75
MANUFACTURERS' LIFE INSURANCE Co.,
336, Tsukiji; Telep. 4048
Wm. Harris, manager for Japan Seichi Kishi, general adviser R. B. Teusler, M.D.,
T. Kubo, M.D.,
10.
do.
606
T. Koike, agency director M. Ikeda, cashier
TOKYO
Maruzen Kabushiki Kaisha, The (Z. P. Maruya & Co., Ltd.), Book and Stationery Department and Dry Goods Department, 11 to 16, Nihonbashi Tori, Sanchome; Tel. Address: "Maruya"
K. Oyaidzu, managing director S. Nakamura, manager
MEIJI KWASAI HOKEN KADUSHIKI KWAI-
SHA (Meiji Fire Insurance Co., Ltd.)
Taizo Abe, managing director Kingo Hara, secretary
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missionaries see end of
Japan Directory
MEIJI GAKUIN, Shirokane, Shiba. Telph.
820, Shiba
Board of Directors--
Rev. Kajinosuke Ibuka, D.D., presdt. Rev. E. R. Millen, A.M., secretary Y. Kumano, secretary and treasurer M. N. Wyckoff, sc.D., treasurer J. C. Ballagh
Rev. J. H. Ballagh, D.D. Rev. Imbrie, D.D. Rev. E. S. Booth
Rev. E. R. Miller, A.M.
Rev. H. M. Landis, A.M,
Y. Matsui
S. Isobe
R. K. Mori
A. Hattori, M.P.
S. Uzawa, L.D., M.P.
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Langunge
Rev. H. M. Landis, A.M., English Y. Kumano Kanji, Ethics and Chinese K. Ishiwara, Bungakushi, Western
History
K. Miyachi, English
8.
Saku, Bungakushi, Chinese and Japanese Language and Literature
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H. Ishizawa, Mathematics
J. Shumuta, Chinese and Japanese
Literature
M. Nakamura, Physics and Mathem
atics
Z. Wakayama, Bungakushi, Oriental
and Japanese History
Rev. A. K. Reischauer, A.B., English Rev. W. E. Hoffsommer, A.B., do. H. Shunuta, Japanese Faculty, Academic Department---
Rev. K. Ibuka, D.D.,president, Ethics M. N. Wyckoff, su.D., English
Language and Literature Rev. H. M Landis, A.M., English
Logic, Economy and German M. Hirota, Pedagogy and English K. Ishiwara, History, Sociology Y. Kumano, Chinese
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S. Nomura, Japanese
Rev. A. K. Reischauer, A.B., Rhetoric.
English and Greek)
Faculty, Theological Department-
Rev. K. Ibuka, D.D., president. Ethics
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History
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Rev. Prof. H. Yannanoto Rev. S. Tajima
Rev. M. Miyagawa
Kashiwagi,
RAILWAY MISSION, 123, Yodobashimachi, Tokyo
Superintendant-Miss E. R Gillett Assistant-Miss A. M. Hutchings
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION, 35, Tsukiji
H. G. Mgr. Pierre-Xavier Mugabure,
archbishop of Tokyo
Rev. Felix Evrard, vicar general,
Tokyo
Rev. Jean P. Rey, vicar general,
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Rev. E. Talpin, do.
Rev. J. M. Daumer (absent)
Rev. J. B. Lissarrague, Tokyo Rev. Harnois, Tokyo Rev. J. Bertrand, Gotemba Rev. Giraudias, Maebashi
Rev. Drouart de Lezey, Tokyo Rev. Lemarechal, Shizuoka Rev, Pettier, Yokohama
Rev. Papinot, Tokyo Rev. Guérin, Nagoya
Rev. Chabagno, Kanazawa Rev. Roy (absent)
TOKYO
RUSSIAN ECCLESIASTICAL MISSION, Su-
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Right Rev. Archbishop Nicolai Right Rev. Bishop Sergy Dimitry Lvowsky, deacon
SCRIPTURE UNION OF JAPAN, 17 Hika- wacho Akasaka, Tokyo Tel. 4384, Shimbashi
Secretary Mrs. W. N. Whituey
SISTERS OF ST. MAUR, "Sœurs du St. En- fant Jesus"; Pensionnat, Kojima- chiku-Shimoroku Bancho No. 45
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SŒURS DE ST. PAUL DE CHARTRES
Bev. Mère Augustine Joseph.
supérieure
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UNION CHURCH, Yuraku Cho, Nichone,
Kojimachi
Trustee-W. Imbrie
Secy, and Treas.-C. Bishop
METHODIST PUBLISHING HOUSE, 1,Shichome,
Ginza, Tokyo
METROPOLE, HOTEL, THE, 1, Tsukiji: Telep.
400, Shimbashi
MITSU BISHI GOSHI KWAISHA (Mitsu Bishi Company, Limited), 1. Yayesu-cho It chome, Kojimachi-ku: Tel. Ad. Iwasaki; Telephone 78, 678, 213, 363, Honkyoku Barou Iwasaki Hisaya, president, Baron Iwasaki Koyata, vice president
Shoda Heigoro, general manager
Dept. for General Affairs Sho Seijiro, manager
Aoki Kikuo, sub-manager
607
Tsutsumi Noganobu, sub-manager
Mining Department
Nambu Kiugo, manager
Harada Shinji, sub-manager
Eguchi Sadaye
Uyematsu Kio,
do.
do.
Shipbuilding and Engineering Dept. Midzutani Rokuro, manager
Hano Tomoji, sub-manager
Banking Department (Telephone 32, 82,
Honkyoku)
Toyokawa Riohey, manager Mimura Kumpey, sub-manager Kirishima Shoichi,
Kushida Manzo,
do.
do.
Estate Department (Telephone 189, 336,
742, Honkyoku)
Kirishima Shoichi, manager
Mitsui Bank 1, Suruga-cho, Nihonbashi- ku; Tel. Ad. Mitsuigink: Teleph. Nos. 129, 130, 299, 420
MitsuiTakayasu,director and president
Hayakawa Senkichiro, mang. diretr Ikeda Senkichiro,
do. Yoneyama Umekichi, do.
MITSUI BUSSAN KAJSHA (Mitsui & Co. in Europe and America), Importers. Exporters and General Commission Merchants; Head Office, 1 Surugacho Nihonbashiku, Tokyo. General Teleg- raphic Address: Mitsui
President-Hachirojiro Mitsui
Managing Directors G. Iida, S. Watanabe (in London), K. Iwahara, J. Yamamoto, K. Fukui Directors-Y. Mitsui, S. Hayakawa,
E. Asabuki, S. Komuro
MORIMURA GINKO (Bankers), 15, Toti
Itchome, Nihonbashi-ku
I. Morimura, senior partner S. Hirose, president
K. Morokuzu, manager
MORRISON, JAMES & Co., LD., J, Yayesu-cho Itchome, Kojimachi-ku: Tel. Ad: Muni- festo, Tokyo; A.B.C. Code, 5th Edit. and Engineering 2nd Edition
V. Sanguinetti, engineer and manager
S. J. Wheeler
G. B. Slater
C. B. Ewart
MOSLE & Co., Ltd., Engineers and Con- tractors, 19, Ginza, Sanchome: Telph. Shimbashi 883
H. A. Poole, director E. J. Libeaud, do.
608
MUNICIPAL OFFICE
Mayor-Ozaki Yukio
Assistant Mayor-Harada Jue
Do. Do.
TOKYO
-Miyagawa Tetsujiro -Tagawa Daikichiro
NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE Co., 6, Baba sakidori, Marunouchi; Tel. Ad: Nylic E. A. Wiedemann, resident secretary
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Dr. M. Kawase, chief med, officer
NIEROP & Co., Ed. L. Van, 14в Akashi-
Cho, Tsukiji, Tokyo, Engineers
Dr. C. W, Janssen (Amsterdam) R. Werdermann (Yokohama)
Nippon Electric Company, Ld., 2, Mita Shikokumachi, Shiba, Importers, and Manufacturers of Telephonic and all other Electrical Apparatus and Supplies Tel. Ad: Microphone
Agents for the Western Elect- ric Company of America and Europe
K. Iwadare, managing director
P. K. Condiet, secretary and director F. W. McIntyre, works manager
NIPPON GINKO (BANK OF JAPAN)
Head Office: Honryogae-cho, Nihon-
bashi-ku, Tokyo
Board of Administration:
Baron S. Matsuo, governor
Baron K. Takahashi, vice-governor M. Yamaguchi, director K. Uchida, auditor
S. Kimura, director
T. Sameshima, auditor
T. Yoshii, director
T. Sanda, auditor
M. Shuto, director
S. Kawakami, auditor
C. Watanabe, private secretary E. Fukai,
do.
S. Sakurada, assistant
Inspection Department:
K. Kawada, chief inspector
I. Tamagi, inspector
G. Toshida, do,
T. Oku,
do.
Foreign Department:
F. Fukai, chief communication and
chief accounts secretary.
Business Department:
H. Hijikata, chief
J. Hayashi, assistant
Tellers' Department:
T. Suzuki, chief T. Noda, assistant
Issue Department:
N. Indo, chief T. Ota, assistant
State-Treasury Department:
S. Ikuta, chief'
G. Narikawa, assistant National Debt Department:
W. Yanagiya, chief K. Suzuki, assistant Secretary's Department:
I. Shima, chief
Y. Watanuki, assistant N. Yasui,
do.
Securities Department: S. Tsukui, chief Accountant's Department: C. Watanabe, chief H. Nagaoka, assistant Investigation Department: T. Katayama, chief
M. Nonomura, assistant Superintendent of Agencies:
E. Ono, chief
J. Inouye, assistant
Osaka Branch Office: 23, Nakanoshima
Itchome, Kita-Ku, Osaka
C. Kajiwara, chief
T. Yuki, assistant
Saibu Branch Office: 24, Honmachi, Moji
H. Kato, chief
T. Kakiuchi, assistant
Nagoya Branch Office: 1, Sakaemachi,
Rokuchome, Nagoya.
J. Aso, chief
I. Hamaoka, assistant
Otaru Branch Office: 11, Ironai-cho-
Otaru
M. Shoda, chief
G. Furukawa, assistant
Kyoto Branch Office: 48, Hishiya-machi,
Shimogyo-ku, Kyoto
S. Shiokawa, chief
Fukushima Branch Office: 21, Hon-cho
Fuku-hima
N. Omiwa, chi
Hiroshima, Branch Office: 39, Kako-
machi, Hiroshima
B. Watanabe, chief
Hakodate Branch Office: 59, Toyokawa
Hakodate.
K. Kawase, chief
Kanazawa Branch Office: 70, Ishiurama-
chi
Y. Kawashima, chief
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHIA (Japan Mail Steamship Company), Head Office 1, Yuraku-cho Itchome, Kojimachi-ku, Tokyo Tel. Ad: Morioka, Tokyo,
Presdt. R. Kondo, managing director Vice-Presdt.-M. Kato, managing dir Managing Director-S, Iwanaga Directors M. Asada, H. Shoda, B.
Sonoda, Z. Ogawa Auditors--T. Arishima, T. Iida
T
TOKYO
Secretarial Department
T. Hori, secretary
S. Nakajima, assistant secretary
Freight Department
S. Iwanaga, in charge
E. P. Pallister, assistant manager
"Maru
FF
Gross Tonnage,
Moru
(trosy Tonnage,
Takasago,
1,789
Wakanoura, 2,527
Takeshi Ilit,
2,073
Wakase,
6,265
Tambe,
6,134
Yamaguchi, 3,321
Tango,
7,408
YHILUSHIEU,
2,580
Tategnui,
2,703
Yawata,
3,817
Tenshiu,
4,173
Yeijio,
2,650
Tokachi,
1,110
Yeiko,
1,969
Tose,
5,823
Yokohama, 2,373
Totomi,
3,412
K. Nagai,
Y. Nagai,
T. Masaki.
I. Wada,
T. Yoneda,
Passenger Department.
T. Hayashi, manager
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
M. Kobayashi, asst. manager Superintendence Department
T. Suda, chief superintendent
A. P. White (technical adviser) K. Motegi, supt.
do.
Y. Iwato,
do. (Yokohama)
Y. Matsuyama, asst, supt.
N. Chin,
S. Ito,
K. Kawakami, asst. supt. (Kobe) H. Fujishima,
T. Tojo,
Supplies Department
do.
do.
do. (Yokohama)
K. Harada, manager
K. Kodera, assistant manager
Accounts Department
K. Kagami, manager
Y. Nagatomi, assistant manager T. Komatsu,
Printing Department
K. Harada, manger
do.
Tokyo-Yokohama Lighter Department
K. Nagai, manager
B. Mori, assistant manager
Stores Department
S. Ninagawa, manager
נו
Steamers
"Maru
Gross
'Maru''
Tonnage.
Gross Touuage.
Aki,
0,414
Kanagawa, 0,165
Atsutu,
8,623
Kasugo,
8,320
Awa,
6,300
Kuwachi,
6,101
Ami
2,047
Kitami,
7240
Bingo,
6,247
Kitauo,
8,512
Bombay
4,620
Kobe,
2,877
Ceylon,
5,068
Kokura,
2,596
Chelon,
1,934
Kosai,
2,635
Chitugo,
2,578
Kumano,
5,706
Chikuzen,
2,578
lushing,
1,076
Colombo,
4,700
Matenyatu, 3,090
Foobiki,
1,830
Miike,
8,381
Geokni,
1,447
Mikawo.
2,932
Inksta,
6,101
Mishima,
BAKMILI,
2,686
Miyazaki,
8,500 8,500
lamasaki,
1,570
Nagato,
1,884
Bigu,
1,120
Niigata,
2,184
8,521
Nikko,
5,600
1,460
Omi,
2,501
1,438
Oxumi,
1,335
3,283
Otarii,
1,571
Hitachi Maru
6,716
Riojuu,
4,806
6,180
Sado,
0,227
Ise,
1,250
Sagnani,
1,934
Ishikari,
1,312
Saikio,
2,904
ITD.
Knga,
6,320
Sakata,
1,063
Iagobium,
0,301
Santo,
2,032
4,405
Saouki,
6,111
Kamikano,
8,120
Satsuma,
1,939
Kamo Mare
1,465
shinku7,
8,398
5,524
Takamatsil, 1,335
Fit no, Dirosaki, Hiogo,
Hiroshima,
Ioan.
Kanıkları,
ORIENTAL COMPRESSOL Co., LTD. THE, 1, Yayesucho, Kogimachi. Tel. Ad: Compressar
Directors R. Loonen, T. Nagamori, W. B. McNaughton, I. Kawai, S. Ohara
PIGOTT, H. C., Maru-no-uchi, Yayesucho,
Itchome, Kochimaji-ku
RASPE & Co., M., Merchants, 18, Tsukiji,
Teleph. Shimbashi 164
SALE & FRAZAR, LTD., Import and Export Merchants-Yayesucho, Tel. Nos. Honk- yoku 2393, 3188. Tel. Ad: Salefrazar
Fred. G. Sale, managing director E. W. Frazar, director
R. J. Kirby,
do.
Vivian M. Sale, do. (London)
G. E. Furness, auditor
E. M. Barnby
F. S. Booth P. Bruhl V. C. Flynn F. Gonzales P. H. Green C. E. Kirby H. Levy
G. Lodge
F. W. H. Ritter J. N. Strong
H. Upton M. Winstanley
SANGUINETTI, V., Sole Agent and Repre- sentative in Japan, Korea and Manchuria for Messrs. Hennebigue, of Paris, Ferro- Concrete Engineers. 1, Yaesu-cho It- chome, Kojimachi-ku. Tel. Ad: Henne- bigue, Tokyo. A. B. C. Code 5th Edition
S. Yamamura
SANKYO GOSHIKAISIA (Sankyo & Co.), Wholesale Dealers in Drugs, Chemicals, and Surgical Instruments; Muro-machi, 3-chome, Nihonbachi-Ku. Cable Address:. Iliastase, Tokyo
M. Shiohara, signs per pro.
SCHUCHARDT and SCHUTTE, Makers of Machinery and Tools, 21, Minami Dem- macho Sanchome, Kyobashi-ku; Tel. Ad: Initiative, Telpl. 353 Honkyoku
B. Schuchurdt (Berlin)
James G. Brown, manager
19
610
TOKYO
DENKI KABUSHIKI
SIEMENS-SCHUCKERT,
KAISHA, Electrical Engineers and Con tractors, Head Office: 48 Tsukiji, Tokyo. Tel. Ad: Siemens, Tokyo, Telephone: Shimbashi Nos. 774 and 775
M. Wolff, E.E, managing director H. Reyss, EE, signs per pro.
F. Seeberger, acct., signs per pro. A. Von Gaszner, engineer G. Lohe, elec. engineer S. Saunderson, A.M.I.E,E, F. Wilhelm, engineer H. Büchele Ch. Fehlmann Miss A. Kolbel
E. Steffen
I. Ito,
engineer
K. Kihara
do.
T. Kume,
do.
S. Murayama, do.
S. Takagi,
do.
D. Takalara do.
Y. Nakamura H. Yagi
Branches-Osaka, Moji, Hakodate and
Dalny
ST. LUKE'S PHARMACY, Chemists and
Druggists, 37, Tsukiji
STONE, W. H., M.I.E.E., 3, Awoi-cho, Akasaka
TAKATA & Co., Head Office--1 Yurakucho, Itchome, Kojimachi-ku, Tokyo; Telep. Nos. 304, 984, 1,808 and 2,670, (Honkyo- ku), Tel. Ad: Takata, Tokyo Branches-Osaka, 18, Nakanoshima Ni- chome, Kitaku, Osaka. London, 88, Bishopsgate St., Within. New York, 60, Wall Street. Shanghai, 8, Museum Road, and at Yokohama, Kobe, Maizuru, Sasebo, Kure, Yokosuka, Taihoku (Formosa)
TEIKOKU FLAX SPINNING AND WEAVING Co., LD. Head Office, Shinagawacho- gashi, Nihonbashi
Zenzaburo Yasuda, president
Yeizaburo Wooyeuo, works manager Nisaku Miyauchi, business manager
TEUSLER, DR. Rudolf Bolling, 27, Tsukiji
THE WELCOME SOCIETY OF JAPAN (Kilin Kai) Head Office: The Tokyo Chamber Marquis Hachisuka, president Baron E. Shibusawa, vice-president Rear Admiral M. Kaburaki, hon.
secretary
Executive Committee Count K. Hirosawa
K. Ito
H. Hijikata
T. Tanaka
H. Shugio
T. Masuda, jun. Branches:-Yokohama and Kobe
TOKYO CLUB, Uchi Saiwai-cho
President H.I.H. Prince Kanin Vice-Presidents-H. E. Sir Claude Macdonald, H. E. Baron Tsusuki Committee E. J. Blockhuys, Col. Boger, A. Bonteneff, Count Hiro- sawa, Viscount Inaba, P. A. Jay, Com. Lange, M. Naruse, H. T. Rice, Count Soyejima, G. Tanaka, and Count Terajima
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-E. J. Blockhuys
TOKYO FIRE, MARINE AND TRANSPORT INSURANCE CO., LTD., 1, Kita-sayacho, Nihonbashi-ku; Tel. Ad: Tokaho. Telep 580, 785, 2730, and 2980 (Honkyoku)
Takei Morimasa, president Sakaino Daikichi, managing director Nagamatsu Atsusuke,
do.
TOKYO GAS COMPANY, Head Office, 23, Nishiki-cho 3 Chome Kanda-ku; Teleph. Honkyoku Nos. 13, 256, 548, 570, 2303, 3239,
Dr. Toyokichi Takamatsu, president Ryosaku Kume, vice president
Soichiro Asano,
Shintaro Ohashi,
director
do.
Fukusaburo Watanabe, do, Kishiro Hakamada, do. Kashiro Fukushima, do. Suyekichi Hiramatsu, do. Saku Watanabe, auditor Toemon Kobayashi, do. Kanichi Ito,
do.
Ryosaku Kume, chief of treasury
"department
Kashizo Fukushina, chief of business
department
Suyekichi Hiramatsu, chief of cngi-
neering department
Gentaro Hagiwara, chief secretary
TOKYO GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY (TOKYO CHIGAKU KYOKWAI) 19, Nishi Konyacho
Patron-H, I, H. Prince Kanin President-Marguis Nabeshima Vice-President Baron Y. Hanabusa
Do. -Baron D. Kikuchi
TOKYO KAIJO HOKEN KWAISHA (Tokyo Marine Insur. Co.), 1, Yayesu-cho, Ichome, Kojimachi-ku: Tel. Ad: Stil water; Telep. Nos. 1,457 and 401 L. V. Honkyoku
M. Suyenobu, chairman of directors S. Sasaki, director
H. Shoda, do.
K. Kagami, general manager
T. F. Nonweiler, manager, foreign dept.
TOKYO
TOYO KISEN KAISHA (Oriental Steamship Company), 18, Kita Shinbori-cho, Nihon- bashi-ku, Tel. Ad: Toyoasano Soichiro Asano, president
Shuzo Tsukahara, vice-president Motojiro Shiraishi, director and
general manager
TOKYO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (Tokyo Shogyo Kwaigisho), Marunos Uchi, Kojimachi
B. Nakano, president
S. Ohashi, vice-president El. Hibiya,
do.
J. Shiraishi, secretary
TOKYO TSUKIJI TYPE FOUNDRY, THE, 17
Tsukiji Nichome
S. Nomura, managing director
(See Advertisement)
TSUKIJI SEIYOKEN HOTEL, 32, Uneme-cho, ¦
S. Kitamura, proprietor
VACUUM OIL CO. OF NEW YORK, No. 1,
Yayesucho Itchome Kojimachikú
R. J. Arkland, manager for district of
Northern Japan
VORSITZENDER DES
R. Lehmann;
611
KIRCHENVORSTANDS,
Pfarrer--Schroeder, Koishikawa Kami-
tonisaka 23
WHITNEY, W. NORTON, M. D., M. R. C. S., Akasaka Eye and General Hospital, 17, Hikawa-cho, Tokyo, and 60, Main Street, Yokohama ; Telep. 4384 Shimbasl;i
WINCKLER & Co., 2, Minami Konyacho, Kyobashi-ku, Telph. 4979 Shimbashi Tel. Ad: Winckler, Tokyo J. Winckler (Hamburg) F. Danckwerts do. J. Westphalen (Kobe) F. Fachtmann (Yokohama) F. Gensen (Kobe)
G. Selig, signs per pro.
YAMATAKE & Co. Importers of Machinery and Tools, No. 21, Minami Demmacho Sanchome, Kyobashi-ku; Tel. Ad: Yam- atakeco. L. D. Telph. No. 353, Honkyoku.
Partners T. Yamaguchi, P. Kummel Employees N. Saito S.
S. C., K. Yabuuchi S. C., S. Obata, N. Mitsumori, T. Minato
19*
YOKOHAMA
the
Yokohama is the peinesysal Treaty purt of Jupan, und was mal to fousin trode in July, 1950. This situated on the Bay of Yokolana, a small bay to the western sino of the Galf of You, in lat. 15 deg. 20 m. 11 wou. N., ad loug. 139 dag. 30 min. We, in the island of Hunshiu, and is dictat about eighteen miles from the capital, with which is i nnected by a line of railway. The town having spring up from a poor fishing village only, since the site was selected for a tresty port, insteal of the t town of Kanagawa, possesses few attraction for the vinico! The wenery sround, Lowever, is billy and plessing, and a clear daya thu snow-crowned unit and grapatul outlines of Faji-mau, a roleonic mountain 15,370 feet high celebrated in Japanese literaturs and depicted on innumerable alive work of art-is most distinctly visible, though some, seventy-five miles distant The native portion of Yokohama is compactly built of low houses with tiled roofs. The town is divided into two nearly equal parts, the western half being pecqpied by what was known, before the abolition of extes territoriality, Konvigu settlement Beyond the plain on which the town is levilt rises & work of semi-uirole of low hill called "The Bluff," which in thickly lettel wich handsom loveiga villa uul dwelling-houses in various styles of arabilestum, all sending ju Jelly gardens. From these dwellings charming prospects and obtainable. Along the water-front us a good wod called the Bund, on which, facing the water, stand wa of the principal houses and bolala, and the United Club The slusel airly pored, curbed, and drained. There are Anglican, French Catholic, Upion Protestauk, and several pative Mission Churches in the Settlement. A tuo Crickes and Disor tion Ground grists in the Settlement, and there are well laid out. Public Gardens on The Bluff There is fairly good lace Course situated about two miles from the Sthlmont. A good Boating Club also oxiscs, which has prided facilitans for deep sex bathing. The Public Hall, containing a theatre and assembly rooms, Tilt of brick. is situated at the top of Camp Hill, and was opened in 1955. Tha alief public buildings in the native bown am the Renalu, opposite the British Consulate, te Town Hall, which hapa elpult tower, and the Casteau House. The Railway Station is na creditable structure, being a well designed and commodious termine. On the 19th August, 1899, o disastrous lire occurred in the Iverakl-cho district, in which RDG SOTIL- been atrecta were swept by the lanes, the number of bounes destroyed being 8347. The pown is now in she enjoyment of an excellent water supply, lange Waterworks bavia, been completed in 1987. The barbour à mach exposed, bas tie besakwaters, of an nggregate length of 13,000 feet, bave been built and are se projected as he pratically ecluse the whole of the nuchorage, leaving au cute God frol wide bebwann thes extremities. There is a pier 1,600 foot long as which vessels may lond or dissbagyo. An extensive schoon for insproving the harbour and poviding better facilities for trade is being carried out. It was enoughest in 1889, and is expected to be completed in 1915 A groving dock was opened on the 26th April, 1897; it is built of large blocks of granite and is S1 Bast on the bloals, its length from the outside of the extrue to the beid is 410 tot 10 inches, and from the outside onlsson to the bead 400 feet 9 inel The walth of the entosa is to feet inches at the top and in feet 11 inches at the bobbon. The opth is fear 1 inch on the inside, nod 1 docs & inches on the The depth of water on the blocks is met & inches of spring tides 23 feet inche at ordinary springs, and 10 feet 8 inches at low water of spring the smaller or Nu. 2 Dick of the Company. The No. 1 Dock, completed as the end 1999, is 475 EL. 10 in. on ches hilsels and has a depth inside of 2 3 . and on rel of 34 ft. 1 in the depth of water on the blocks being 25 ft. 10 instash I in, st ordinary springs and 21 ft. 4 in at low water of spring Tokohuwa wa supplied with hotels, and also with English daily paper, of which three are publishe the part, namely, the Japan Daily Mail, Japan Gentle, and Jogan Hewald, a severu
The Japanese population of Yokohama numbered, on the 31st December, 10% 314999; at the end of 1900 sha awaber was below 900,000. The number of tereign residents, carlosive of Chinese, was 2,447, of whom 1,080 were Beitu Americans: 970 Germans, and the French. The Chinese population was resurg $2,800. The importance of the foreign element in the puck my be gauged by the fa that they pay ussely 40% of the entire amount of business and income taxes in Yokolpima, though they have no voice in the control of local afaire.
d
PLAN
OF
YOKOHAMA
Electric Tramway's shown thus
to Mississippi B
Bay
172
190
139
460
421
158
ISS
164
153
150
146
129
RI
2
227
235
47
155
130
124
128
味
す
126
788
JEE
263
270
263
262
264
147
145
139
140
243
24
142#
Zes
100
/18
120
108
96
331
50
#
30
HERAL
49
113
British
Despatal
37
#
38
*
hospital
#5
#
久
22
*
**
78
CEMETERY)
17
100
Cool
#
56
Temples
Baske
23
味
282
224
223
グル
To Race Course
SIZ
231
240
20
42
202
208
Bashi
Kaone-no Baski
I
Basta
BANKS
Chartered Bk. of I., A., & C. 38 Hongkong & Shanghai Bank
ני
International Bank
MERCHANTS, &c.
Bangel Sammel & Co.
17
Ahrens & Co., H.
200
Siber, Wolf & Co.
10%
American Trading Co.
24
Simon, Evers & Co.
225
Averill & Co.
153
Smith, Buker & Co.
178
Christ Church,
Russo-Chinese Bank
Yokohama Specie Bank, Ld.
CHURCHES
Bluff 231
Bavier & Co.
209
Standard Oil Co.
Bowden Bros, & Co., Lal.,
55
Stracban & Co., W. M.
7!
Butterfield & Swive
7
Strauss & Co., 8.
201
China and Japan Trad'g Co. 89c
NEWSPAPERS
Roman Catholic
Cornes & Co.
***, 50, 221
Union Church,
Blu 178
Dell'Oro & Co.
$1
Daily Advertiser
"
GF
CONSULATES
Dodwell & Co.
50
Japan Gazette
53
10
Austro-Hungarian, Bluff
760 | Findlay, Richardson & Co.
6
Japan Herall," Main St.
$1
Belgian,
Blun 179
Fraser, Farley, & Co.
210, 218
Japan Mail"
55
Brazilian, Main St.
81
Frazar & Co.
200
S. 8. COMPANIES
Kritish
172
Grosser & Co.
180
Chinese
Jollyer & Cu
Canadian P. R. C.,
Bund 14
225
Danish
200
Hunt & Co.
211
Messageries Maritimes
French,
Bluff 185
Illies & Co., C.
Nippon Yusen K., Knigun-dori
51
Norddeutscher Lloyd
German
17
Jardine, Mutheson & Co.
1
Northern Pacific R. Co.
20 50
Italian,
Bluff 170
Japan BreweryCo., La., Bluff 123
Occidental & Oriental
JA
Netherlands
89
Kelly & Walsh, Ld.
FO
Pacific Mail S. 8. Co.
TA
Peruvian
70
Lane, Crawford & Co.
50
Peninanlar & Orientul
15
Portuguese,
Ithụ 174
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
00
Russian
171
Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Mollison & Cu,
48
Spanish,
Bluff
2440
Oppenheimer Frères
13
Swedish and Norwegian
Swiss,
Bluff
800 55
Pila & Co., Ulysse, Water St,
MISCELLANEOUS
Chamber of Commerce, Bund 14
Baspe & Co., M.
190
Club Germania
United States of America 231
Reimers & Co., Ottu
198, 20
Police Station
235, 237
203
HOTELS
Rohde & Co., Carl
70
Public Hall
Club Hotel, Grand Hotel,
Bund 5%
Rosenthal Co., The 1.8.
Bund 18, 19, 20
Sale & Fruzar
47 107
Yokohama Fire Brigude 208
Yokohama United Club, Bund 48
202 203
122
343
154
168
丸
227
139
11
MY
437
135
a
た
A
HATORA
801
187
*
*
&
32
9
2:32
32 197
75
F
#
26
17
25 24 24
7
$
+
2
Drawn and Engraved for the Directory & Chronicle
77
190
*
129|| 177
Pool Off
乌
Komas Apokzi
Landing Pin
في الواير
Mopan · Odori
Koncho
TE
Ichome Mahom, Sanchom
Pizza
22077
Giustom Bruss
zyon Fiksen Kaisha
ENGLISH
(HISH))
HATOBA
Sockome
Rokuchums
SHIN MATOLA
Bankoku
Boshi
Shin Minato Cho
RAILWAY
STATION
Light House
Dept
John Burtholomew & Co.Elint
YOKOHAMA
613
In 1908 the values of the different classes of Imports were :-
Cotton, Ruw..
Iron and Steel
Machinery
Seeds and Grains... Sugar and Sweetmeats Cotton Manufactures of Oils, Fats and Wat.... Drugs, Chemicals & Medicines Oil Cake
Metal Manufactures Locomotives & Passenger Cars
The values of the principal
Grains and Seeds
17,272,427 Dyes and Paints
-1,370,996
15,338,59) Beverages and Comestibles.... 12,073,731 Paper & Paper Manufactures 10,600,849 Wool, Manufactures of 7,833,766 Horns, Ivory, Skins &c. 7,591,409 Scientificial Instruments 7,585,525 Clothing and Accessories 6,812,236 Sundries.
3,764,203
3,701,506
2,990,713
2,297,940
2,249,168 1 472,938 Yen 28,800,853
6,471,475
5,122,350
4,037,434
Total Imports, Yen 151,288,110
articles of Export in the same year were as follows:
1,570,708 Tobacco and Cigarettes
1,492,012
Silk (Waste and Raw)
Yen
116,567,867 Machinery..
Silk (Piece Goods)
1,215,394
32,976,680 Sundries
21,334,626
Metals and Manufactures of
9,639,302
Tea
Beverages and Comestibles...
4,115,744 1,893,587
Total Exports, Yen 190,805,900
The above figures represent the total imports and exports of both foreign and native goods. The export of tea during 1908 amounted to 9,932,844 catties or kins. There has been a considerable decline in the export in recent years. Nearly all the tea exported goes to America.
DIRECTORY
For Government Departments see under G.
AALL & Co., International Building Tel.
Ad: Aall; Telph. L. D. 2362.
Cato N. B. Aall E. B. Suhrke
ABENHEIM BROs., Merchants, 247 and 249; Teleph. 362 and 2147, P. O. Box 101, Tel. Ad: Japanning. Also at London, Paris, New York, Tokyo and Kobe
Richard Abenheim (London) F. Bert. Abenheim (Kobc) R. E. Abenheim
A. MT. Woodward S. J. Hirschmann Garnet W. James Allan Smith C. L. Manley
E. Muller
B. Deveson
P. K Sizer Miss Hay
J. L. F. d'Aquino
ADET, CAMPREDON & Co.--95
E. Adet (absent)
M. Campredon
B. Martinelli, sigus per pro. C. FT. Moss
ADVERTISER PUBLISHING CO. (Kabushiki Kaisha); Publishers of the "Japan Adver- tiser," No. 53, Main St.; Teleph. No 1649 B. W. Fleisher, proprietor and polshr.
J. N. Penlington, editor Dr. D. Eastlake, sub-editor D. D. T. Weed, accountant A. G. L. A. Smith
Y. Okamoto, translator M. Motono,
do.
R. Hirata, interpreter & translator Y. Ikeda, shipping editor
E. Okada, circulation clerk
AERATED WATER MANUFACTORY, 138
K. Mingard
AURENS & Co., H., NACHF., Merchants--29;
Tel. Ad: Ahrens and Nordlloyd
J. A. Harnssen
F. Popert (Kobe)
L. Temme
A. Gesc, signs per pro. (Nagasaki)
E. Kroneck, do.
G. Erich
R. Henzler
J. Stenernagel
W. Reimers
G. N. Witt
H. Andrae H. Bodenshedt Leo. Koeing
G. Gans
H. Clare
C. Perpetuo
Max. Gebauer
(Kobe)
Alf. Schmidt, chemical expert F. Benicke, M.E., engincer
614
Agencies
YOKOHAMA
Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremen London Ass. Corp. (Fire and Marine) Badische Anilin and Soda Fabrik
(Ludwigshafen) Cornelius Heyl, Worms Central Agency, Ld.
AKIYAMA, G., LL.B., Advocate, Law Practi- tioner, Patent Agent and Translator-- 75: Tel. Ad: Akiyama, P. O. Box No. 18
G. Akiyama, LL.B.
ALFRED HERBERT, LD., Machine Tool Makers and Importers, Works, Coventry, England. Office for Japan, 14, Yamashita- cho; Tel. Ad Lathe, P. O. Box No. 226 W. M. Cumming, manager for Japan
and China
F. J. Allen
W. Churchi
ALLEN & Co., Gro. R., General Merchants
Geo. R. Allen
ALTMAN & Co., B.
C. F. Heinlein, agent
AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY, THE
Agent Rev. H. Loomis
Tokuji Hoshino Akio Kobayashi
AMERICAN TRADING Co.-28, Main Street; P. O. Box 28, Telep. 108, Tel. Ad: Amtracó D. H. Blake, general agent for China.
and Japan
E. B. S. Edwards, acting agent C. A. S. Boyd, accountant P. Messer, engineer
W. R. Devin
J. H. AllisoTI
F. J. Blake
P. Whiteing C. I. Hornstein
Mrs. A. M. Clark D. A. Neville
K. Sugiyama
Agencies
Prince Line, Ltd.
American & Oriental Transport Line South British Insurance Co., Ltd. Liverpool & London & Globe Insee. Co.
ANDREWS & GEORGE-242; Tel. Ad: Yadzu,
and at Shanghai
H. W. Andrews E. W. George
G. W. Colton G. C. Hadden W. Dempster J. Hunter E. M. Milne
ANGLO-SAXON PETROLEUM CO., LD., THE,
Tel. Ad. Petrosam, Telph. 449
Manager-M. Spencer Smith
APCAR & Co., A. M. (Gomei Kaisha), Gal. Merchants and Commission Agents; Tel. Ad: Apcar; P. O. Box No. 70
Mrs. A. M. Apcar Miss Rosie Apcar Michael Apcar Miss R. Apcar Z. Yoshida G. Ishiwata
B. Sugihara (Kobe)
S. Yamamoto S. Takano
S. Inaba
ARTHUR & BOND, Comn. Agents, Exporters of Fine Art Curios, 38, Water Street
H. F. Arthur
C. Aslet
ASSOMMULL, W., 31, Water Street
BABCOCK & WILCOX, LD., Patent Water Tube Boiler Manufacturers, &c., No. 23; Tel. Ad: Babcock
Henry E. Metcalf, representative and
manager in Japan
J. Thompson, supt. engineer
J. E. Hargreaves, accountant
BAGNALL & HILLES, Electrical Engineers and Contractors, &c.-42, Yamashita- cho; Tel. Ad: Bagnall, Telph. 1067
A. L. Bagnall
L. D. Hilles
L. Grimmesey, manager W. E. Ketcham
H. N. Holloway
K. M. M. Tresize
BAVIER & Co., Merchants-209
Ed. de Bavier (Paris)
S. Warming
J. Jacquemin, signs per pro. Miss Donker Curtius
BEART, EDWARD-111B, Bluff
BECKER & Co., Merchants-195
E. Becker (Hamburg) Th. Bunge (Kobe)
F. Urhan, signs per pro. H. Scheel
BENNETT, DANIEL, & Co., Exchange
Brokers-23, Water Street
F. R. Daniel
A. H. Dare
E. Coutts
A. Wilckens (absent)
F. Hoffmann
YOKOHAMA
BERGMANN & Co., Merchants; Tel. No. 413,
P. O. Box No. 291, Tel. Ad. Bergmann
O. Bergmann (absent)
M. J. Bengen
H. Ramseger (Kobe)
Paul Griebel
T. Baumann H. Wolff
Herm. Hoene H. Schäfer
F. Röhrbein
BERNARD & Co., Merchants-210
C. B. Bernard
L. C. Sharman, signs per pro. S. R. Ford
Agencies
Union Assurance Society, Ld. Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld. The Island Lead Mills, Ld.,
BERRICK BROTHERS-760
L. Berrick (London) B. R. Berrick, do.
J. F. Hibbs
J. Abbey
E. H. Irwine
BETHELL BROS.,
Merchants
Telph. 437
H. Bethell
Import and Export 70A; Tel. Ad: Riverito
BHESANIA & Co., J. B., Merchants-248c
R. E. Daver, manager
BIEBER, M., Import, Export and Com-
mission Merchant-160
BLAD & MCCLURE, Bill and Bullion Brokers 70, Main Street; Tel. Ad: Blad, P.O.B. 232 Teleph. 835
V. Blad (absent) A. J. McClure Johnstone McClure
BLEIFUS, F. R., Merchant--92
Fr. Bleifus, jr.
BLUFF HOTEL, 2, Bluff
Miss J. Clausen
Miss Bingsted Miss Jahin
Miss Hartmann
BLUNDELL, & Co., G., Import and Export
Merchants-41
ROEHMER & Co., L., Exporters of Horti- cultural, Agricultural and Forestry Products, 5 & 28, Bluff; Telephone 549
Robert Fulton
M. C. Fennessy M. Luther
K. Tsutsumi M. Suzuki
K. Ikeda
615
BOWDEN BROs. & Co., LD., Merchants-55;
Tel. Ad: Australind
V. R. Bowden, managing director
D. Maher, signs per pro. G. Stadelmann
V. G Bowden
J. Summers C. R. Howard
S. A. Vincent A. Mowll
E. Kildoyle
Agencies
British Dominions Marine Ins. Co., Ld. The Queensland Insurance Co., Ld. Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Co.,
Ld. (Marine Branch)
Sun Insurance Office, London International Forwarding Co., Chi-
cago
Box, HOLYOAKE, Dressmaker, Milliner
and General Draper
Mrs. Holyoake Box
Miss Hadfield, milliner
BOX OF CURIOS PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY, PRINTERS, LITHOGRAPHERS and ENGRAVERS 61B, Hatoba Street; Tel. Ad: Thorn, Telph. 913
E. V. Thorn & Son, proprietors E. V. Thorn
C. H. Thorn
E. F. Hanson, manager
BOYER, MAZET, GUILLIEE, Silk and General Merchants-250F, Yamashita-cho; Tel. Ad: Bomaguil and Boyersan
M. Boyer, partner (Lyons) V. Mazet, do. do.
A. Guilliee, do.
do.
A. Bosredon, manager (Yokohama)
signs per pro.
T. M. G. da Cruz, silk inspector Edm. Baron, silk inspector
BRANDENSTEIN & Co., M. J., Tea Merchants
258, Yamashita-cho
A. Adelsdorfer (New York)
E. Brandenstein (San Francisco)
J. Becker, manager
BRETSCHNEIDER & Co.-119
C. Bretschneider
BRETT & Co., Chemists and Druggists-60
A. Marsh, manager
J. C. Flemons
BUNTING & Co., ISAAC; P.O.B. 105, Tel. Ad:
Bunting
616
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants-7
Alex. Cumming, signs per pro.
G. N. Courtney
T. H. Darton J. E. Drummond F. A. Dinsdale
G. S. Nelson
Agencies
YOKOHAMA
T. Nakajima
"China Navigation Company, La.
Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering
Co. of Hongkong, Ld. Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. China Mutual Steam Nvgth. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld.
CAMERON & Co., Lv., A., Merchants
Nowlson Parliam, managing director
CANADIAN Pacific Railway Co.'s R. M. S.S. Line, 14, Bund; Tel. Ad: Citamprag Wm. T. Payne, manager Trans Pacific
Steamship Line H. T. Wilgress, agent E. Mast
J. R. Shaw
M. F. Stephens
L. B. Bickie
J. S. Curtis
W. Pepper M. S. Nozaki M. T. Jinno T. Hasumi
K. Yada
CANADIAN TRADE COMMISSIONERS SERVICE For Promoting Trade Relations between Canada, Japan, and Corea; 14, Bund
G. A. Harris, trade commissioner
CARLOWITZ & Co. --No. 3
C. Löffler, signs per pro.
J. Carrillon,
Agency
do.
Sun Insurance Office, London
CENTRAL POST OFFICE
Director
H. Kawai
Chief Inspector-T. Hatakoyama Supt. Domestic Mails-S. Fakuda Supt. Telegraph---C. Kawajiri
Supt. Telephone Exchange-H. Kikui Chief Accountant-S. Shiwokawa Electrical Engineer-J. Ninagawa Foreign Mail Department Superintendent-Y. Yanagiya
Chief Clerk--K. Katow
do. -T. Iwahashi
Inquiry Office Clerk-T. Inouye.
CHALHOUB FRERES, Commission Agents; Tel. Ad: Chalhoub, P. O. Box 191, Telepli. No. 84
A. J. Chalhoub T. A. Chalhoub
I. Urano
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE JAPANESE, 84.
Rokuchome, Honcho
President Kabei Otani Vice do.
Sobei Kurusu Secretary--Takekumia Okada, M.A.
CHARGEURS REUNIS (French Steamship Co.) No. 9, Bund-Tel. Ad: Chargeurs, P.Ö.B. 261
Compagnie des Messageries Maritimes,
agents
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA-179
J. Williamson Jones, agent
L. R. Bremner, accountant J. Reid, sub-accountant
A. E. Todd,
G. Munro,
do.
H.W. Matheson, do.
J. C. Pender,
T. Bordunal
do.
do.
A. J. G. Pereira, chief clerk
M. M. Xavier
J. M. de Figueiredo
J. L. dos Remedios
J. Hyndman
J. Ritchie
Shaw Nakao, interpreter F. R. da Silva
Miss Watt, stenographer J. S. Carneiro B. G. Walker M. J. Figueiredo J. P. da Costa, jr. Chas, Correa
CHINA-IMPORT-EXPORT & BANK CIE, 208;
Tel. Ad: Lemjus; Head Office: Hamburg Branches Hongkong, Shanghai Kobe, and Yokohama
Paul Ehlers, manager (Hamburg)
K. Hoeffner, signs per pro.
L. Svendsen
John Hardt
CHINA AND JAPAN TRADING COMPANY, LD., Import, Export and Commission Mer- chants; 896, Yamashita-cho: Tel. Ad: Junketing; Teleph. 175 & 286
J. B. J. Gibbs, manager
W. Stanley Moss, assist, manager W. H. Price
C. McGerrow
S. T Farnsworth, B.Sc. Chas. F. Rhine
W. B. Mason R. Morris P. A. Gorman C. V. Hodder B. Shimazaki
YOKOHAMA
017
T. Hiramatsu
K. Nemoto, and seven others
Agency
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld., of London Scottish National Insurance Co., Ld.,
London
CHINA TRADERS
INSURANCE
LIMITED, 74A, Main Street
COMPANY
Union Insurance Society of Canton
Limited, agents
CHURCH & Co., Exporters and General Mer-
chants; No. 51, Main St.
Victor Church
CLAUSEN, C. B., Builder and General
Contractor-No. 66
CLUB GERMANIA-235 & 237, Teleph. 1594
President--C. Weinberger Vice-President--A. Gerdts
H. Luther, secretary and manager
Private Residence 237
CLUB HOTEL, LIMITED, 5, Bund
Directors-A. H. Stewart (chairman) A. Weston, M. Russell, E. B. L. Edwards, Dr. L. Reidhaar
1. Williams, manager
E. J. Kitson, clerk
Conн, MARTIN, L. & Co.-168a, Yamashita
Cho; Telephone No. 534
Martin L. Cohn (New York)
J. H. Rosenthal
S. E. Unite
flo.
COLOMB & Co., J., Agents for the Com- pagnie des Cristalleries de Boccarate à Paris, No. 10
Jules Colomb, resid., 10, Settlement Paul Colomb
A. Dubourg
COMMERCIAL UNION ASSURANCE COMPANY, LIMITED (Fire and Marine), Japan Branch, 72, Main Street, Yokohama ; Tel. Ad: Cuaco, P.Q.B. 177
F. E. Colchester, manager A. L. Kennedy
P. K. Chan
N. S. Choy
Lai Yuk Woon
Lai Shun Woon
COMPTOIR SOTES, Societé Anonyme Lyon
Yokohama
A. Bussion, administrateur
CONSULATES
ARGENTINE, 217, Settlement; Teleph. 1519 Sre. Fioravanti Chimenz, vice-consul in charge of the Consulate General
Austria-HungarY-768, Bluff
Consul-Herman Koller Secretary-A. Prohaska Interpreter-T. Yamamoto BELGIUM-30, Bluff
Consul-General--C. Bastin
BRASIL 4 Main Street, 2nd Floor
Consul-José Monteiro de Godoy Vice-Consul--J. A. Harmssen Interpreter S. Kobayashi
CHILE-167
Vice Consul-Everett W. Frazar
CHINA-135
Consul-General-Woo Chung Yen Japanese Interpr.-Ma Yung Kuan
DENMARK-209
Consul-Sophus Warming
FRANCE 185-186, Bluff
Consul General Mee Dejean de la Bátie
Chancelier p.i.-P. l'inelli Interprète-Ozawa Benzo
GERMANY-17
Acting Consul-General--F. Thiel
Vice-Consul-Dr. Scholz
Vice-Consul-Dr. Kühne
Interpreter-Dr. Muller
Commercial Attaché-W. Jonas
Secretary-W. Steinsel
Clerks J. Marki, H. Sellien Linguists-Fujii, Nikki
GREAT BRITAIN-172
Consul-General--J. Carey Hall, 1.8.0 Vice Consul-T. Harrington Assistant--R. Boulter
Medical Attendant-E. Wheeler, M.D. Shipping Clerk-Geo. Hodges Commerl Attaché to the Embassy-
E. F. Crowe
GREECE NO. 50
Consul A. G. Morey Weale (absent) Acting Consul-A, J. Cornes
ITALY-217, Settlement
Consul-General in Tokyo
Inptr. in charge-Chevalier A. Gasco
NETHERLANDS-30 Bluff
Acting-Consul-C. H. Bastin
I
618
NORWAY-214
YOKOHAMA
Agencies
Consul-Fr. Retz
Vice-Consul-R. Schmidt-Scharti
PERU--27, Yamashita-cho
Consul-Ed. C. Davis
Chancelier-Harold Y. Irwine
PORTUGAL 217, Settlement
Minister & Consul-Genl.-Baron de
Sendal
Officer in charge-Chev. A. Gasco
SPAIN-93D, Yamashita-cho
Consul-Vicente Palmaroli Interpreter Yoshihiko Hiratia
SWEDEN-24A
Vice-Consul-A. Gerdts
SWITZERLAND-
Consulate-General-Swiss Legation
of Tokyo, in Charge
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA--234
Consul-General-Thomas Sammons Vice and Deputy do.-E. G. Babbitt
Do.
do.-J. K. Caldwell do.-H. B. Albright
Deputy
Stenographer-Miss A. Woodruff (In charge of the interests of the
Republic of Panama)
COOK, THOS. & SON, Tourist, Steamship & Forwarding Agents-14 Water Street; P.O.B. 277; Tel. Ad: Coupon
A. E. Kaeser
J. H. Green
W. F. King
CORNES & Co., Merchants-Tel. Ad: Cornes;
Teleph. No. 374; P. O. Box No. 388
Frederick Cornes (London)
A. G. Morey-Weale (absent) A. J. Cornes (Yokohama)
J. M. Collum (Kobe)
W. Y. Showler
F. J. Hall
W. M. Squire
E. F. Doertlinger J. E. Moss E. C. Jeffery G. Neville
A. L. Manley
J. H. Phelps
F. N. Grossmann
G. Kenderdine
N. Buckle
E. T. Eagling
R. H. Box
F. Stone
R. Tipple, surveyor to Lloyd's Agents
Eastern and Australian Steamship Co.
Ben "Line of Steamers
Apcar Line of Steamers American Asiatic S. S. Co. Lloyd's, London
La Fonciere, Paris
The Underwriting & Agency Associa
tion, Ld.
The Association of Underwriters &
Insurance Brokers, Glasgow
The Glasgow Salvage Association London Salvage Association United States "Lloyds"
Indemnity Mutual Assurance Co., Ld. Rhenish-Westphalian Lloyd
United Rhenish Marine Insurance Co.,
Bradford
Savoia Marine Insce. Society of Italy Union Continental Insurance Society
of Italy
Italia Societa D'Assicurazioni Maritime
Fluviali E Terrestri
Gauthoid
Marine Insurance. Co.,
Gothenburg
Allianz Versicherungs-Actien Gesells-
chaft, Berlin
Batavia Sea & Fire Insce. Co., Batavia East India Sea & Fire Insurance Co. Netherlands Lloyds
Nord-Deutsche Versicherungs Gesell-
schaft
Nord-West Deutsche Versicherungs
Gesellschaft
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Co. Lancashire Insurance Co. Union Assurance Society, Ld. The Scottish National Insurance Co.,
Glasgow
J. S. Morgan & Co.
CORP, FERRIOL & Co., General Importers and Exporters, Cork Manufacturers and Cork-Wood Growers; Teleph. No. 1834, P. O. Box No. 320; Tel. Ad: Secof; Head Office and Factory: Bagur (Spain)
Francis Corp Francis Ferriol
J. Hiramoto
T. Tshikawa
CRICKET AND ATHLETIC CLUB-YOKOHAMA
President Dr. E. Wheeler Vice-President --D. H. Blake Hon. Secretary-Bernard C. Foster Hon, Treasurer-M. B. Lendrum
CRITERION HOTEL, 97, French Hatoba St.
G. F. Heenay, proprietor
CROSSE & YAMASHITA, Barristers-at-law, 79
C. N. Crosse
Y. Yamashita
G. O. Heath
YOKOHAMA
CROWN CORK CO., LIMITED, 224; Factory 259,
Yamashita Cho
Ed. Mendelson, manager
A. Kuik, engineer
CURNOW & Co., LD., J., Storekeepers-82
M. Russell, managing director
H. Russell, director (Kobe) George Russell, do.
Louis Russell
H. J. Taylor J. Budge
Dai Ni Ginko, Ltd., No. 45, Honcho
Sanchome; Teleph. Nos. 254, 1122
President T. Hara Manager-R. Yamagata
DELL'ORO & Co., Merchants-91
A.Dell'Oro (Milan)
and
De Becker, J. E., Solicitor
Conveyancer, (Kobayashi Beika); Tel. Ad: Debecker; Office Tel. No. 84 (L.D.), House Tel. Kamakura 190. (L.D)
Nakamura Hiromu, advocate
Dr. J. L. Isler
A. Bianchi
F. Casati
N. Sano
DENTICI & Co., M., Bakery Stores and
Shipchandlery, No. 109
M. Dentici
E. Dentici
Teutonia; No. 180A
DEUTSCH-ASIATISCHE
BANK; Tel. Ad:
P Sandberg, manager (absent)
F. Rittmüller, acting
E. Lenz, sub-manager
W. Schmidt, accountant, signs per pro.
M. Elinske
G. Mueller
R. Schsidges W. Rust
M. H. Gomes
F. F. Jorge
G. Araki
A. E. Moulron
H. Wood
M. M. da Silva
DEUTSCHE JAPAN POST, No. 60; Tel. Ad:
Japanpost
Martin Ostwald, editor
Yujiro Yoshino
Tsunetsugu Muraoka Shizuo Inoue
Mahiro Kasuya
DEWETTE & Co. (Goshi Kaisha Dewette Shokai); Telephone No. 1,813; P. O. Box No. 114.
Madame Louis Dewette
619
A. L. J. Dewette, managing partner
Wm. Styles
Miss D. Arthur H. C. Ballagh Y. Matsuo, Tokyo
Y. Isawa, Osaka
DINSDALE, & Co. G. K., Merchants-30,
Water St.
E. Dinsdale
DODWELL & Co., LD., Merchants-500; and at Hongkong, Shanghai, Foochow, Hankow, Kobe, Colombo, Victoria, and Vancouver (B.C.), Tacoma and Seattle (Wash.), Portland (Oregon), New York and London
Geo. Syme Thomson, manager E. J. Libeaud, sub-manager
H. E. Hayward
O. M. Poole
J. H. C. Goodban W. J. White
B. C. Foster H. Buist
E. G. Fradgley A. E. Bateman J. G. Crane F. A. Graham E. L. Squire Miss M. Kilby
Agencies
Bank Line of Steamers Mogul Line of Steamers Warrack Line of Steamers Natal Line of Steamers Barber Line of Steamers New York & Oriental S.S. Co. Asiatic Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Hull Underwriters' Association, Ld. Northern Maritime Insurance Co., Ld. United Dutch Marine Insurance Cos. Providence, Washington, Insurance Co. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. Alliance Assurance Co., Ld. Yorkshire Insurance Co. Ld. Standard Life Assurance Co.
United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld. Zocus Paint Co., Ld.
DOERING, J. G., Piano Manufacturer, Tuner, Repairer and Importer of Musical Instru- ments, 73c, Main Street,
H. Schreiber, tuner Watanabe, interpreter
DOURILLE, P., Silk Merchant--164B
C. Pig, silk inspector
E. Dourille
do.
DUBUFFET & CIE., Export Merchants, 1768;
P. O. Box 110; Tel. Ad; Esbing
620
YOKOHAMA
T. Nakamura
P. Lagrange do.
R. Sudzuki
R. Dubuffet (Paris)
Ch. Mignon, signs per pro. (Yhama) H. Dupuis,
do.
(Kobe)
DURAND, COBB & Co., Livery Stable Kee- pers, Saddlery and Harness Makers and Carriage Builders, No. 83, Yokohama
L. Moreau Ch. Dufour
EASTERN WORLD, Law, Translation, and Newspaper Correspondence Bureau, No, 3578 Sakura Michi, Negishi, Yokohama
F. Schroeder, proprietor T. Nakano, translator
ELPHINSTONE & Co., S., Merchants
$. Elphinstone
ENGERT, DE CUERS & BRADY, Bill and Bullion Brokers-72; Telephone No. 59
M. Engert (absent)
J. de Cuers de Cogolin G. G. Brady
R. Jantzen (Kobe)
EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF UNITED STATES, No. 24; Tel. Ad: Deva
J. T. Hamilton, general manager W. H. Talbot, asst. general manager J. Webster, chief accountant
S. Shimoda, secretary
T. Futaki
H. Amagaya
R. Nemoto
B. Cuhusac
N. Fearon
Medical Department
L. A. B. Street, M.D., N. Suzuka, secretary
director
ESSAROY, A. M., General Merchant and Commission Agent; Telph. No. 463, P. O. Box No. 172
A. M. Essabhoy (absent)
T. K. Kakajeewalla, manager S. Honda, chief barito
R. Taki, assistant banto
H. Sutow, silk banto
S. Yenui, assistant silk bantu I. Sumitá, Customs clerk
EXCHANGE MARKET, 42, Yamashita-cho, Surveyor to American and Foreign Ship- ping and American Record. General Mgrs. of The Japan Cold Storage & Ice Co., Ld.; Telph. 97,L. D., Tel. Ad: Laffin, Yokohama
T. M. Lattin
W. H. McGowan
B. Roberts
A. Swanson
J. Gomes
E. J. King, manager (Hakodate) I. Gonzales
do.
EYMARD, C. L., Silk and Waste Silk
Exporter, 251 and 253; Telph. 289
EYTON & PRATT, 3001, Negishi Machi, Com-
mission and Estate Agents
J. L. O. Eyton J. Eyton, Jr.
Leonard W. Eyton
FARSARI & Co., A., Photographers, 32,
Water Street
I. Fukagawa, proprietor
FAVRE BRANDT, C. & J., Watch and Clock
Importers 175
FEARON, C. H., Exchange and General
Broker; Tel. Ad: Fearon, Yokohama
C. H. Fearon
FINDLAY, RICHARDSON & Co., Merchants-6;
Tel. Ad: Findlay
A. H. Cole-Watson, signs per pro. Chas. A. Fraser
F. W. R. Ward H. A. Vincent L. T. Xavier G. W. Anderson N. H. Macdougall
H. C. Macnaughton
FIORAVANTI CHIMENZ, Commission Agent,
217, Settlement; Telph. 1519
FLORENZ, KARL, Prof. Bungaku Hakushi, Imperial University, Tokyo, and 171-173 Bluff
FRAZAR & Co., Merchants ---200
E. W. Frazar
F. G. Sale
GADELIUS & Co, No. 41; Akashicho, Tsukji: Telephone No. 2531, Shimbashi; Tel. Ad: Goticus; Head Office: Gothenburg (Sweden)
Knut Gadelius
Martin Mansson, signs per pro. Robert Thunc, engineer R. Fukuoka
M. Koga
S. Mashiyama
GAS WORKS (YOKOHAMA), 71 and 77, Hans
zaki-cho, Gochome
President N. Mitsuhashi Acting Manager-K. Sugiyama Chief Engineer S, Sakai
YOKOHAMA
621
GEARY, J. R.; Tel. Ad: Geary, Yokohama;
Telph. 2314; P. O. Box, 245
J. R. Geary
C. Cartwright
GEISER & GILBERT, Book and Music Store; P. O. Box. 53; Tel. Ad: Geiser, Yokohama
E. Geiser
Fr. Gilbert
J. Otto Seyffert
GEO. LEWIS & Co., Yokohama, Chicago and New York; Telph. 87, P. O. Box. 11
GILLETT B., Merchant-24
GILLON & Co.; Telph. No. 1,967, P. O. Box
No. 224, Tel. Ad: Gillon, Yokohama.
O. T. Gillon
W. E. Gooch
K. Matsuo
I. Ichikawa
F. Fujimoto
GOMEI KAISHA MITSUIGINKO(Mitsui Bank)
Honcho 2-Chome
Manager O. Majima
(See Advertisement)
GOVERNMENT DEPTS. (see also Tokyo)
YOKOHAMA KAIMUSHO (Local Marino
Bureau)
Supdt. and Surveyr.-Y. Hayakawa Surveyor R. Jogashi
Do. -Y. Yokoyama Do. -Y. Yamamoto Secretary R. Ide Assistant--T. Ono
CHIHO SAIBANSHO (District Court)
President-Isogai Kojiro Chiefs of Divisions-Higashi Kame-
goro, Hasegawa Kikutaro Preliminary Judges-Matsuyama Kyuta, Tanuina Bunosaku, Ari- take Masami Judges-Iwasaki Kojiro, Goto Wa- saji, Inoue Toshio, Ono Egen, Ha- yashi Moriharu, Abe Daiji Procurators Bureau
Chief Procurator---Otaguro Eiki Procurators-Sugimoto Tokisaburo, Hattori Masaaki, Ohira Kinnosuke
KU SAIBANSHO (Local Court)
Superintending Julge-Ito Kyujiro Judges-Takeda Kotaro, Yoshizumi Hidezo, Okada Junjiro, Yamaguchi Zenroku, Nozawa Fumihiko. Procurators Bureau
Procurators-Okuda Taosa
Ogata Sheñchiro
Translators and Interpreters
English lutpts.- Imadate Tosui, Hat-
tori Fukumatsu, Watanabe Kota French Interptr.-Ogata Nuoto German do. Akagi Yoshinori Chinese Intr. Yenomoto Moroyoshi,
Ko Shoppo
Russian do. --Aichi Mangoro
CUSTOMS-IMPERIAL
Yamazaki Yoroku, director
Sugi Ichiro, controller and chief of
Entry Dept.
Oya Masao, chief inspector and controller and chief of warehousing department
Sato Tomotaro, chief appraiser Watanuki Otojiro, chief accountant Kobayashi Torataro chief collector
HARBOUR OFFICE (KOMU BU, KANAGAWA
KENCHO)
Director K. Ishii
Assistant Directors-Capt, K. Yabe,
N. Yokoyama
Port Surgeon-T. Fukuda
Port Veterinary Surgeon-Y. Sato Collector-Y. Yasunaga
Harbour Officer H. Odawara Asst. Port Surgeon-- A.Haruzakitomi Hon. Port Surgeon-K. Rokkaku
HYGIENIC LABORATORY, THE YOKOHAMA IMPERIAL (Eisei Shikinjo), 73, Honelio, Gochome
Director-Nishizaki Kotaro
Chief of Pharmaceutical Section-
Yamamoto Masami
Chief of Sanitary Section--Hanzawa
Seisuke
Chief of Section of Miscellaneous
Affairs Takahara Umekichi
KANAGAWA KENCHO (Prefectural Govt.)
Governor-Baron Kohey Sufu Secretary-Shinji Hori
Do. -Masaharu Hashimoto
Yeihiko Shirasaka Ko Tominaga
Do. Do.
Chevalier L. K, van den Berchi vau
Heemstede (foreign secretary)
LIGHTHOUSE BUREAU (Moto Benten),
Telephone 29, 1823
Director- Kusama Tokiyoshi Chief Engineer--K. Takeda
-T. Aoyama
Do. Do.
Machinery Works
--G. Ishikawa
44
Chief Engineer-T. Aoyama Light House Tender Rashu Maru"
Captain M. Nakao
Chief Engineer-R. Okada Chief Mate--Y. Suzuki
622
YOKOHAMA
POLICE STATION, Kagamachi-203
Superintendt. Susumu Ikariyama Inspectors Seisuke Arima, Juzo
Tanaka
POLICE STATION, Yamate Honcho
Inspector-in-charge-Kumasaburo
Iwano
POST OFFICE, CENTRAL H. Kawai, director
H. Hatakeyama, chief inspector
S. Fukuda, supt. domestic mails C. Kawajiri, do. telegraph H. Kikui, do. telephone ex. S. Shiwokawa, chief accountant J. Ninagawa, electric engineer Foreign Mail Department
Y. Yanagiya, superintendent K. Katow, chief clerk T. Iwahashi, do.
T. Inouye, inquiry office clerk
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT
H. Kikin, superintendent
GRAND HOTEL, LIMITED, 18, 19, 20, Bund;
Tel. Ad: Grand, Yokohama ; Telph. 85 Directors D. H. Blake (chairman). C. F. Heinlein, G. W. Colton, C. H. H. Hall, T. Murai
H. E. Manwaring, manager H. B. Dougherty, secretary
Jules Filbert, chef de cuisine. Mrs. S. Seky, matron M. Trockey, engineer M. J. Oishi, agent
GRÖSSER & Co., Merchants No. 76
A. Serno (Kobe)
A. Hasche,
do.
K. Goose, signs per pro.
HAIM & Co., A., General Import and Export Merchants, Yokohama-70c.; Tel. Ad: Haimico; P. O. Box 319
Albert D. Haim
J. Graciani
ני
HAM & Co., W. J., Coal and Coke Dealers
W. J. Ham S. Arai
HAMMOND & Co., Engineering, Bicycle and
Electro-Plating Depot, 108, Creek Side
HEALING & Co., LTD., L. J., Electrical En- gineers and Contractors, 22, Water Street
L. J. Healing, A.M.I.E.E. E. Eddison, M.A.
A. W. S. Austen J. D. F. Collier W. D. S. Edwards J. L. Graham
R. Graham
V. A. Hearne Miss J. J. Scott
HEINLEIN, C. F., agent for John V. Farwell & Co., Chicago, Export, Commis- sion, Silks, &c., 77
C. F. Heinlein
R. Cox
N. Kiyohara.
HELLER BROSs., Merchants-176, Yama shitacho: Telep. H. 43; P. O. Box, 215, Tel. Ad. Helgo
Victor Heller
HELLYER & Co., Merchants-225
F. Hellyer (Chicago) C. B. Stedman
A. T. Hellyer (Kobe) W. Hellyer (Chicago) H. J. Hellyer (Kobe)
C. H. Lightfoot, signs per pro (Kobe) W. F. Balden,
do.
Agents,
HELM BROS., LD., Stevedores, Landing,
Shipping and Forwarding. Yokohama Drayage Co.-43; Acting Forwarding Agents for Nordeutscher Lloyd
K. Schmidt Scharff, chairman Julius Helm, managing director J. A. Hermssen, director
P. A. Cox,
do.
J. Helm, manager Chas. J. Helm, secretary L. Goldfinger
J. T. Helm M. Bornhold
H. Bretschneider B. Thompson G. Meyer
HIGGINBOTHAM & Co., Share, Insurance and General Brokers and General Com- mission Agents; Telep. 1296, L.D. 559, No. 193 Yamachita-cho; Tel. Ad: Higginboth
Eijiro Makino Tomekichi Uriu
G. M. dos Remedios A. L. Bouffier
J. H. Makins
HOLT, FRED. W., Paymaster, U. S. Navy
Pay Office, 234
HOLST, WM. & Co., Importers and Exporters
Telep. No. 36; P. O. Box No. 239;
Tel.
Ad: Holst
Wm. Holst
C. Campbell
P. A. Roeper Bosch.
R. Stoppel
F. B. M. Botelho
R. van der Heyden
C. T. Mayes (Kobe)
YOKOHAMA
G. H. Stitt, acting, sub-manager
HONGKONG
AND SHANGHAI
BANKING
CORPORATION-2
H. D. C. Jones, manager
J. K. Hutton,
accountant
A. B. Lowson, assistant
do.
J. H. Lind,
do.
rla.
J.E. B. De Courcy,
do.
do.
J. P. McGillivray,
do.
do.
E. S. Hooper,
do.
do.
A. G. Kellogg,
do.
do.
M. B. Lendrum,
do.
do.
G. F. Gordo
F. C. Ribeiro
T. E. da Silva
L. V. Ribeiro
F. X. dos Santos
J. Mendonça
J. Marques da Silva C. A. Ribeiro
F. A. F. Gordo
B. M. Ritchie
F. X. Simões
L. J. Ribeiro
J. A. M. P. Guterres
L. J. Pereira
Mrs. B. Ouchterlony, stenographer
K. Kikushima
K. Machida
I. Ikariyama
S. Toriyama
Shiu Kiu, compradore
HOOD, GEO., Broker and General Commis-
sion Agent
Ozawa Geo. Hood
A. M. Watt
G. Aoki
HORNE, F. W., Importer of American Machinery-70c; Branches: 6, Taki- yamacho, Kyobashi-ku, Toyko, and 36, Kawaguchi, Osaka
F. W. Horne
J. S. Nicholl F. H. Abbey
A. A. Nunes
E. Schenk J. A. Kappitt
Miss J. L. Woodworth
HOSPITAL-H.B.M.ROYAL NAVAL, 115, Bluff Fleet Surg'n in Charge-Thos. D. Ha-
lahan, F.R.C.S., R.N. Writer-R. Clark
First S. B. Steward-J. A. Neal Second S. B. Steward-W. L. Guy S. B. Attendant-F. L. Stubbings
623
HOSPITAL-KAISERLICHI DEUTSCHES MA-
RINE-LAZARETH, 40 and 41, Bluff
Chefarzt Oberstabsarzt Dr. Scholtz Lazareth Verw.Inspektor-G.Schlaffke
HOSPITAL DR. ROKKAKU's, No.
Nakamura Machi; Tel. 967
1457,
Dr. K. Rokkaku, M.D., physician,
surgeon, and director
Dr. M. Kondo, M.B., resident physician J. Kobayashi, treasurer
HOSPITAL UNITED STATES NAVAL, 99,
Bluff; Tel. Ad: Navhosp
Surgeon James G. Pryor, in charge Passed Asst-Paymaster- F. W. Holt Pharmacist-Hubert Henry Hospital Steward-C. H. Dean Hospital Steward--B. E. Cole
Chief Machinist's Mate-W. E. Bates Hosp. App. 1st class-S. Yamata
Do., do., --J. E. McDaniel Do., do., -B. Fitzpatrick Do., do.,
-J. M. Caldwell First Sergeant-D. Riordan, in charge
of guard
-
Coporals John Tomkinson, George
Warrell
HOSPITAL YOKOHAMA GENERAL, 82, Bluff E.W.Frazar,chairman of the Committee Doctor in charge-Dr. E. Wheeler Assistant-Dr. T. Ishiura
Business manager-H. B. Haskell Matron-Miss Frances Gray
Hotel de GENÉVE-26; Tel. Ad: Genève
Jules Dubois, proprietor
Mme. Jules Dubois
HUNT & Co., Merchants-211; Telep. 87;
P. O. Box 11
H. J. Hunt (London)
H. R. Hunt
E. G. Hunt
J. H. Dinsdale
HUTCHISON & Co., Merchants-183
J. D. Hutchison
D. Marshall
J. F. Drummond
A. R. Catto
M. Mamada
Miss K. Woodruff
Agencies
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld. World Marine Insurance Co., Ld. General Life Assurance Company Provident Clerks' Mutual Life Assurce. Royal Exchange Assce. Corp. (Marine
Underwriting Agency)
Sea Insurance Co. Ld. Federal Insurance Co. Ld.
Union Estate & Investment Co., Ld.
4
624
YOKOHAMA
IBBOTSON, H. J., Gas Engineer and Manu-
facturers' Agent-22, Water Street
ILLIES & Co., C., Merchants-54
C. Illies (Hamburg) C. Illies, jr. (Hamburg) R. Pohl (Yokohama)
H. Hansen, sigus per pro, E. Matthaci
C. Schulz C. F. Benrath R. Loeffler
E. Kock
H. Reimers
Miss M. Mohr
Agencies
Hamburg-Amerika Linie
Dampfschiffs Rhederei "Union" A G. Germanischer Lloyd, Berlin
Scottish Imperial Life Insurance Co.,
Glasgow
Settling Agents for
Allianz Vers. Akt.-Ges., Berlin
Düsseldorfer Allgem. Versich. Ges.,
Düsseldorf
Forsakrings Aktiebolaget
Stocklm.
Hansa,
Fortuna "Allgemeine" Vers. Akt.
Ges., Berlin
Germania Trspt. Vers. A. G., Berlin Internat. Lloyd Transp. Vers. A. G.,
Berlin
Münchener Rückversicherungs Ge
sellschaft, Berlin
Oesterreichischer Phoenix, Wien Rhenania Vers. A. G., Kolen. Rh. Riunione Adriatica di Sicuritá, Trieste Union Internationale, Comp. d'Ass.,
Anvers
IMPERIAL HOTEL, Hotel and Restaurant, 133
A. Richter, proprietor
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION.-
74, Yamashita-cho
N. S. Marshall, manager
M. D. Currie, accountant
Thos. Seggie, sub-accountant
E. L. Brigham,
L. M. Whyte,
H. Stetson
A. H. Gutierrez
F. da Roza
K. Iida
C. Kafat
R. M. Ramos
S. Kariya
J. Wood C. Hocho Y. Tashiro J. Walter Y. Kubo Pau Fai
1. Nakamura
do.
do.
do.
K. Matsubara
E. Ritchie
INTERNATIONAL OIL Co., LD-8, Water
Street; Tol. Ad: Pacific; Telph. 820 H. E. Cole, managing director J. F. Archbold, director C. D. Campbell, do. N. B. Morton,
do. A. E. Hinch, P. E. Nicolle,
do. and secretary do. and accountant
INTERNATIONAL SLEEPING CAR & EXPRESS TRAINS Co. (The Great Trans-Siberian Route), General Railway and Steamship Agents; Tel. Ad: Wagolits, Yokohama. Head Office: Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits et des Grands Express 40, Rue de l'Arcade, Paris
H. B. Darnell, general agent for the
Far East
Maurice Roger
G. H. A. Snow S. Nabeshima M. Tsuchiya K. Hasegawa
ISAACS & Co., S., Merchants-78
S. Isaacs
E. Curjel
Miss G. R. Mansbridge Agency
Palatine Insurance Co., Ld.
IVISON, H., Commission Agent and Coal
Dealer-121c
JAPAN COLD STORAGE & ICE COMPANY LD., (Kabushiki Kaisha), Works No. 116, Yamashita-cho, Yokohama, Telph. 991; Office No. 42, Yamashita-cho; Telph. 7 T. M. Latin, managing director and
general manager
K. N. Otto, chief engineer John Gorman, clerk
JAPAN DAILY HERALD, 60, Main St.
C. A. Parry, B.A., editor
H. G. Ball, manager
J. Miller, assistant
K. Watanabe, chief translator G. Miura, translator
JAPAN GAZETTE Co., Publishers, Printers, Lithographers, Collotypers, Bookbinders. Publishers Japan Gazette," "Japan Morning Gazette" "Japan Weekly Gazette" "Japan Directory "--No. 10
L. D. Adam
A. W. Sherriff S. H. Somerton
J. Van Doern
T. M. Laffin, shipping reporter
YOKOHAMA
JAPAN IMPORT AND EXPORT COMMISSION
COMPANY-63; Tel. Ad: Guggenheim
B. Guggenheim (New York)
F. P. Solomon
J. Guggenheim (Kobe)
J. P. la Costa
C. Woodruff
JAPAN MAIL, Daily and Weekly News-
papers-55
Capt. F. Brinkley, R.A., proprietor and
editor
E. Bruce Mitford, managing-editor
H. O. Palmer, sub-editor
F. G. Woodruff, collector
T. M. Laffin, marine reporter
JAPANESE AMERICAN BANK, 56, Honcho 4-chome; Tel. Ad: Jameriko; Head Office: San Francisco
Manager-H. Fujita
JARDINE, MATHESON&Co. LD., Merchants-1 H.V. Henson, representative for Japan,
signs per, pro. F. H. Bugbird M. Baggallay A. S. A. Bishop P. C Bousfield A. Gerin
G. Gilbert
F. W. Gotch
H. C. Gregory
J. Martin
P. W. Pate
F. Perez
J. R. Thomson
J. H. Tresize
Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Limited
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld.
Glen Line of Steamers
Indra Line of Steamers
Canton Insurance Office, Linaited Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Limited Triton Insurance Co., Limited Alliance Fire Assurance Company, Ld. Eastern Insurance Co., Ld.
JEWETT & BENT, Merchants-264-265; Tel. Ad: Jowett; Telep. No. 1045; P. O. Box 181
J. H. Jewett
P. S. Bent
K. Wilson, signs per pro.
Agency
Aachen & Munich Fire Insurance Co.
JEWISH BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION
President M, Russell Vice-President-H. Blum
Secretary and Treasurer J. Koerting
625
JOHNSTONE, CAIN & Co., Brokers, Commis- sion Agents and Mchants,, 70; P. O. Box 233; Tel. Ad: Cain; Teleph. No. 221
J. W. Cain
P. V. Mitchell
J. E. Kenderdine
Agency
Holzapfel's Compositions Co. Ld.
JONES, EDMUND B., Share Broker and Estate Agent Office 240; Tel. Ad: Jones. Private Address, 134, Bluff
JUN KOBAYAGAWA & Co.-34, Wholesale Exporters of and Retail Dealers in Japanese Stamps, Coins and Postcards; P. O. Box 214
H. A. Ramsden Jun Kobayagawa
Kikori Marita
KAESELER & Co., P. M. F.--99, Consulting
Engineers; P. O. Box 222
KAI TSU GOMEI KWAISHA, Custom House
Brokers; Teleph. 909 and 1616
J. Hattori, managing director S. Hattori, director
N. Tashiro, do.
KAREL JAN HORA-13; Tel. No. 418, P. O.
Box 334; Tel. Ad: Janhora, Yokohama
Karel Jan Hora, E.E.
U. Prochaska, engr.
N. Vaughan
KELLY & WALSH, LD., Booksellers, Printers,
Stationers, News Agents, &c.-60
Geo. Brinkworth, director (Shanghai)
John Morris,
John West,
G. H. Davis
G. H. May, manager
K. Hisauchi
do.
do.
do.
lo.
KILDOYLE, E., Marble and Granite Works,
746, Kurakigori, Nakamura
KIRIN BREWERY CO., LD., TUE, 123, Yama-
techo; Tel. Ad: Kirin
Directors G. Yonei (managing), R.
Kondo, F. Wuriu, T. Tanaka Auditors-T. Takagi, S. Imamura S. Ida, general manager
E. Eichelberg, chief brewer F. Sandstede, assistant brewer
R. Wendt,
do.
KJELLBERG & SON, LTD., J. A., No. 259; Tel. No. 2136; P. O. Box No. 169; Tel. Ad: Kjellbergs and Brusewitz
C. A. Kjellberg (Gothenburg, Sweden) C. O. Kjellberg,
L. Brusewitz (Yokohama)
do.
626
H. Ouchterlony, signs per pro. R. Klintin
YOKOHAMA
H. Montgomery, engineer Miss S. Sundblad, stenographer
KOERTING, BUME & REIF, No. 176A; Tel. No. 43; P. O. Box No. 322; Tel. Ad: Koerting
F. E. Bume (Hamburg) B. Reif (Bradford)
J. Koerting
H. Scherbak
G. Simpson
A. Herold
F. Klüss, Kobe, signs per pro. J. Uffenheimer (Kobe)
KUHN & KOMOR, Manufacturers and Dealers in Japanese Art and Curios, 37 Water Street; Tel. Ad: Komor, Tel. 1788; P. O. Box 103
S. Komor
K. Jerauchi
LADIES' BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION President Mrs. Eldridge Vice-President-Mrs. Isaacs
Hon. Sec. for Tokyo-Mrs. E. Hobart-
Hampden
Hon.Treasurer-Mrs. Williamson Jones Hon. Secretary-Mrs. J. Carey Hall Committee Mrs. Reidbaar, Mrs. J. Walter, Mrs. Eddison, Mrs. Harmssen, Mrs. Barmont, Mrs. Tegner
LANE, CRAWFORD & Co., LD., Storekeepers and Commission Merchants, Tailors and Outfitters - 59; Tel. Ad: Decoction; Telph. No. 1044
Directors K. F. Crawford (London), J. B. Coulson, R. B. MeKinnell, A. W. Read
A. E. Pawsey J. Macbeth C. E. Manton
J. E. Gray
F. L. Hunt
A. Liguori E. F. Johnson V. H. Etheridge
S. G. Stanford A. L. Bouffier W. G. Crokam Miss Phillips Miss Rice Miss Gray
LANGFELDT & Co., LIMITED, Storekeepers, Importers and Dealers in Provisions, Shipchandlers, Navy Contractors and Coal Merchants-73
C. B. Bernard, managing director
M. F. Bengen, D. H. Blake, V. R.
Bowden, directors
J. Tornoc, manager and secretary J. H. Schmidt
F. Woodruff H. Miyasaki M. Yamazaki
LETZEL & HORA (Goshi Kwaisha), Ar- chitecture and Engineering Offices; Tel. No. 418; P. O. Box 334; Tel. Ad: Janhora, Yokohama
J. Letzel, architect (Toyko) K. J. Hora, E.E. (Yokohama)
LEWIS, KARL, Photographer and Post Card Manufacturer, Tel Ad. Karlewis, No. 102, Honmura Road
Karl Lewis
LLOYD'S REGISTER OF SHIPPING, 23, Water
Street; Tel. Ad: Register
A. S. Williamson, surveyor
LOHMANN & Co., Iuporters, and Tobacco Dealers for the Tobacco Monopoly, No. 53
E. Binder
Loor, Exporter and Importer-80
LONDON & LANCASHIRE FIRE INSURANCE
Co., 70B; Tel. No. 221
John W. Cain, agent
MACARTHUR & Co., H., Importers, For- warding and General Agents-10, Bund; Tel. A: MacArthur, Yokohama; Teleph. No. 769
H. MacArthur A. J. Rolfe
C. Takada
MACY & Co., Gro. H., Tea Merchants- 64
Tel. Ad Cartermacy
Carter, Macy & Co. (New York) Geo. H. Macy,
Geo. S. Clapp,
Oliver C. Macy,
F. E. Fernald
E. J. Cowan R. M. Varnum H. Grimble
(New York)
do.
do.
MANUFACTURERS' LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF CANADA, International Building, No. 74, Main St.; Tel. Ad: Manulife; P.Ö.B. 180; Telephone 1157
William Harris, manager for Japan
and Korea
A. G. Hearne, cashier
L. Reidhaar, medical examiner
MARINE INSURANCE CO., LTD., THE, 15
F. J. Abbott, agent
*
YOKOHAMA
627
MARTIN & Co., Coal Merchants-107
J. Martin
C. K. M. Martin
A. L. Haum
G. B. Vignolo W. Brown P. Hielkema
W. Smith
MASON & CO., E. T., Silk Merchants.---10, Bund; Teleph. 020; Tel. Ad: Masonet
W. L. Keane, manager
MEIER & Co., A., Merchants-24A, Yama- shitacho; Tel. Ad: Import, Subaltern; Export, eierco
H. Geslien (Hamburg) W. Heitmann (Kobe)
A. Gerdts (Yokohama) W. Stumpf
A. Keil
Agency
Bureau Veritas, Capt. J. Carst, survyr.
MENIL, V., Lyons Dye Factory--166E
Mrs. V. Menil
MENDELSON & FRANK, Ltd., Merchants-
273
M. Mendelson
J. S. H. Frank S. Isaacs
A. H. Windett J. E. Esdale
J. C. de Costa
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES, COMPAGNIE DES, No. 9, Bund; Tel. L. D. No. 2085; P. O. Box No. 261; Tel. Ad: Messagerie
P. de Champmorin, agent
C. Machard, chief assistant René Hachette, assistant for Cie.
des Chargeurs Réunis
L. Blanc, godown keeper
T. Nishikawa, clerk
K. Otani,
do.
Lai Bing Woon, compradore
MESSULAM, D. & Co., General Import and Export Merchants, 246A; P. O. Box No. 248; Tel. Ad: Messulam
D. Messulam
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missionaries see end of
Japan Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION, 44, Bluff
L'Abbé Alfred Pettier, M.A, L'Abbé P. Rey, M.A., L'Albé J. N. Guérin, M.A,
L'Abbé M. Steichen M.A. (Wakabacho)
L'Abbé de Noailles (Honmura-dori 80)
SISTERS OF CHARITY (Pensionnat du St.
Enfant Jesus), 83, Bluff
Rev. Mère Ste. Ludgarde, supérieure Rev. Mère Ste. Mathilde
Sr. Ste.-Xavier, Bernard, Guil- laume, Croix, Clarisse, Mary, Dunstan, Wilfrid, Cheophane, Augustin, Pierre, Louise
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, Merchants, 69,
Honcho Shichiome; Tel. Ad: Mitsui
Shichiro Kitamura, manager
(See Advertisement)
MOLLISON & Co., Merchants--48 James Pender Mollison
J. J. M. Carst
F. Cummins J. M. Mollison V. Warden
Agencies
Thames and Mersey Marine Insce. Co. Alliance Life Insurance Company Liverpool Underwriters' Association Liverpool and London and Globe Insce. Maritime Insurance Co., Liverpool British Foreign Marine Insurance Co.
MORRIS, A. R.-141, Bluff
Moss, E. J., Yokohama Furniture Reposi- tory-86A, B and c; residence 101, Bluff
MOTLEY, R. W. C., Commission Agent-127D
MOTTET, L., Merchant-89B; Tel. 1225; P.
O. Box 76
L. Barmont R. Jumin
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL (Yokohama Shisanjik-
wai), Honcho, Itchome
Mayor N. Mitsuhashi (chairman) Councillors-F. Watanabe, I. Wakao, B. Watanabe, C. Olama, M. Saito, K. Hiranuma, S. Nakanuma, M. Asada, J. Yoshida
MUNSTER, B. A., M.I.M.E., 19, Bluff
NARHOLZ & Co., Merchants-95; Teleph.
No. 17; Tel. Ad: Nabholz
H. R. Nabholz (Zürich)
H. C. Deck, signs per pro. M. Zahn,
do. II. Seid!
J. Brigel
NANIWA BANK, LTD., THE, Kobe Branch, 3,
Chome Sakayemachi
Y. Ukawa, manager O. Hori, vice manager J. Komatsu
do.
628
YOKOHAMA
NEW ZEALAND FIRE INSURANCE CO., LTD., Sale & Frazar Building-167; Tel. Nos. 22 and 888; P. O. Box No. 51; Tel. Ad: Moana, Yokohama and Kobe
G. K Totton, manager
N. W. Nelson, sub-manager (Kobe)
E. Lord, accountant
C. W. Cheng, compradore
O. W. Luke
Y. Ishiguro
M. Matsuda
C. K. Fai
NIEROP, ED. L. VAN-55; Tel. Ad: Jachinpan
(for shipping only)
Dr. C. W. Janssen (Amsterdam)
R. Werdermann, general manager for
Japan Agencies
Java-China-Japan Line of Steamers Koninklyke Paketvaart Maatschappij
NIPPON RACE CLUB
President Sir Claude
Maxwell
Macdonald, K.C.B., G.C.M.G., G.C.V.O. Chairman of Executive Committee-
S. Isaacs
Hon. Clerk of the Course-F. M.Tegner Secretary-Geo. Hood
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA, Kaigan-dori
K. Nagai, manager
B. Mori, assistant manager
T. Komatsu,
do.
Landing and Shipping Department
K. Nagai, manager
B. Mori, assistant manager T. Yoshii
Stores Department
do.
S. Ninagawa, manager Superintendent Department N. Chin, superintendent
T. Tojio, assistant superintendent
NORMAL DISPENSARY (Deutsche Apotheke) Ld. (formerly J. Schedel), Pharma- ceutical Chemists,-77; Tel. Ad: Schedel; Tel. No. 1783
C. G. Schramm, director
W. Schmaedecke,
R. S. Scharff,
L. Kiefer, manager
M. Osawa, do.
do
do.
M. Komatsu, bookkeeper
NORTH CHINA INSURANCE CO., Lv.-75
Agency
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld.
(Marine Branch)
NORTH & RAE, LIMITED, Medical Hall and Dispensary and Aerated Water Manu- facturers-79; Teleph. No. 487; Tel. Ad: North Code A. B. C. (5th ed.)
F. L. Elliott, managing director
R. Wallace W. Grahamı
B. Farrer
NOVELTY GOODS STORE, THE, General Photographic and Gramaphone Sup- plies-80; Tel. Ad: Loof W. Loof, proprietor
T. Sayegusa
K. Fukuzawa T. Saji
N. Inouye
M. Watanabe
OESTMANN & Co., A., Merchants-76; P.Q.
Box 154
L. Bobsien (Kobe)
A. Dreyer, signs per pro.
OLDIS, F. A. Printers' Furnisher -900; Tel.
Ad: Oldis, Yokohama
F. A. Oldis
OLSEN, CAPT. C., Marine and Gen. Surveyor, No. 73, Main Street: Tel. Ad: Knutolsen, Surveyor for Japan to Bergens and Agdars Dampskits Assurance Foreninger
OPPENHEIMER & Cie., 13
I. Bickart, signs per pro.
F. Blum
E. Roux
O. Dusseldorp Thi. Evans
ORIENTAL PALACE HOTEL, 11, Bund;
Telephone, 846; Tel. Ad: Oriental
L. Muraoui, proprietor
P. Muraour, manager
J. Muraour, do.
B. E. Tanizawa, secretary
A. Progin, chef de cuisine J. H. Myers, agent
C. Nagamine, steward
J. Sadatomi
ORTH & Co., Import and Export Mer-
chants-P. O. Box No. 241
E. Orth
OWSTON, ALAN,Mercht and Naturalist -224
OWSTON & Co., F.-50B, Stevedores, Trans-
porters and Customs Brokers Francis Owston, manager
PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY-4A. TOYO KISEN KAISHA (Oriental S. S. Co.) PORTLAND & ASIATIC S. S. Co.
Tel. Addresses:-P. M. S. S. Co., Solano; Toyo Kisen Kaisha, Toyokisen; P. & A. S. S. Co., Portasia; Telph. 1038 B. C. Howard, agent
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YOKOHAMA
PAPASIAN, P. M., General Merchant and Commission Agent-68; Tel. Ad: Papas- ian; P. O. Box 119
PATTERSON, A., Consulting Engineer; Sur- veyor to the British Corporation for the Survey and Registry of Shipping, and for Det Norske Veritas, 23, Water Street
PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL S. N. Co.--15
F. J. Abbott, agent
E. N. D. Parr
B. Buxton, gunner
Agency
Marine Insurance Company
PEARSON, MACKIE & DEMPSTER, Chartered Accountants; No. 61 Main Street; Tel. Ad: Finance, Yokohama
A. E. Pearson, C.A. F. W. Mackie, C.A, W. M. Dempster, C.A. W. E. Atwell, C.A.
J
224; Tel. Ad:
Pieper; Telph. 2485; P. O. Box 221
PIEPER & KAUFFMANN -
-T
E. Pieper
Alfr. Kauffmanu
PILA & Co., Silk Merchants-92
G. Fila
L. Pila
A. Coye, signs per pro.
L. Baret
L. Wertheimber
K. Nakatome
PILOTS, LICENSED -see Kobe
POHL FRÈRES & Co., Merchants-67
POHOOмULL BROTHERS, 246H Yamashito- cho; P. O. Box No. 130; Teleph, No. 1272; Tel, Ad: Pohoomull
H. P. Adoani, manager
Lokumall
D. Rawandass
Porrs, A. C. HUTTON, Stock and Share
Broker-75; P. O. Box 5; Tel. No. 323
PRIEST, MARIANS & Co., LD., Mchts.-263
H. G. Priest, mang, directr. (London) H. W. Lea, director
W. King, manager
PRIVATE HOTEL---109
M. Dentici & Co.
RASTE & Co., M., Merchants-199
M. Raspe (Hamburg) C. F. Oberlein (Tokyo)
G. Roeper (absent) C. Refardt (Kobe)
J. Stürcke
Agencies
629
Assecurazioni Generali, Trieste Allgemeine See Versicherungs Ges. Netherlands Fire Insurance Company
REIDHAAR & PARAVICINI, Drs., Physicians and Surgeons, 61A Bluff; Teleph. No. 1064; Tel. Ad: Reidhaar. Consulting Rooms 1, 2, 3 International Bdgs. -74 Settlement
REIMERS & Co., Orro, Merchants-198; Telep. No. 20 and 322; P.O. Box 27; Tel. Ad: Reimers
Otto Reimers (Hamburg)
M. Pors
do.
M. Blümer (Yokohama)
H. Fokkes, sigus per pro.
C. Heitmann
K. Fischer
R. Bahre
W. Paul
H. Schnakenbeck
G. Wendler
Agency
Royal Insurance Company, Liverpool
RETZ & Co., FR., Merchants--214
Fr. Retz
R. Schmidt-Scharff,
manager
Reuter's TELEGRAM COMPAny, Ld.--41
G. Blundell, agent
REYNAUD, J.-157
J. Reynaud (absent)
J. Sibiodlon (Paris)
T. Vérissel, signs per pro,
Agencies
Comité des Assureurs Maritimes (Paris) (Havre)
Do.
RISING SUN PETROLEUM Co., LD.-27; Tel. Ad: Petrosom; Tel. No. 449; P. O. Box No. 331
M. Spencer Smith, managing director
H.D. Williamson, supt. engineer
A. P. Scott
H. G. W. Pratt, by-products dept. F. Quinnell, accountant
W. Hayward, J. W. Martyr
A, M. Arlette
Miss Brockhurst
W. R. Fellowes-Lukis, engineer
B. W. Anderson, engineer
A. Robertson, engineer
K. Kondo and Japanese Staff
630
YOKOHAMA
ROOKE & HAY, Engineers Agents and Con- tractors, Yokohama and Kobe-74, Ya- mashitacho; Rooms 17-19 International Building; Teleph. 1157; Tel. Ad: Hay
A. S. Hay, A.M.I.M.E., A.S.M.E. Wm. M. Rooke, M.I.M.E.
ROHDE & CO., CARL, Merchants-70A (Akamon); Teleph. Nos. 35, 282; P.O. Box No. 275; Tel. Ad: "Rohde"
O. Haynemann (Hamburg) P. Gayen (Hamburg) R. Fachtmann (Yokohama) G. Petersen (Kobe) A. Seekamp (Yokohama)
R. Bohlke, signs per pro. Agencies
Farbenfabriken, v. Friedr. Bayer & Co.,
Elberfeld
Bremer Linoleum Werke, Delmenhorst Asbest & Gummiw. Alfred Calman &
Co., Hamburg
"Vulcan" Shipbuilding and Engineer-
ing Works, Stettin
Suter Hartmann & Rahtj. Comp. Co.,
London (Antic. P'ts.)
"L'Union" de Paris Fire Ince. Co., Paris "Agrippina" See-Fluss & Land' Vers.
Ges. Coln
C
"Albingia" Vers. Act. Ges., Hamburg Aurora" Compania Anonyma de Seg.
Bilbao
Badische Assecuranz Ges., Mannheim Baseler Transport Vers. Ges., Basel "Bayerischer Lloyd" Transport Vers.
Ges., München
Underwriting
LI
City of London"
Assoe., London
Compagnie d'Assur. "Salamandra," St.
Petersburg
Deutsche Mit. & Rück Vers. Ges., Wesel Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges., Berlin "El Dia" Compia. Anon. de Seguros,
Cartagena
"Foncière" Pester Vers. Anstalt, Budpst. Hamburg Board of Underwriter, Hbg. Kölner Lloyd, Koln
"La Fédérale" Eidgenöss, Trans. Vers.
Ges., Zurich
"La Neuchateloise" Schweizer Tpt.
Vers. Ges., Neuchâtel
Munchener Ruckversicherungs Ges.,
München
Neptunus" Asrz. Compagnie, H'burg NiederrheinischeGut.Assek.Ges., Wesel Norddeutsche Vers. Ges., Hamburg Oberrheinische Vers. Ges., Mannheim Russian Tpt. Ince. Co. St. Petersburg Sjoförsäkrings Aktiebolaget "Ocean
Goteborg
Versicherungs Ges. Oesterreichisch
"Phoenix Wien Versicherungs Ges. von 1873, Hamburg "Wilhelma" Allgemeine Vers. Act.
Ges., Madgeburg
ROSENTHAL & Co., A.S., Silk Merchants-47: Tel. Ad: "Censurable "; Teleph. No. 1150
John G. Gibson
S. C. Kaufman
ROTTMANN & Co., No. 92, Exporters
ROWING CLUB-YOKOHAMA AMATEUR
President-V. R. Bowden Captain-M. Schellenberg Hon. Secretary-G. G. Franklin
ROYAL EXCHANGE ASSURANCE CORPORA-
TION (Fire); Teleph. 221,
John W. Cain, agent
ROYAL HOTEL (late Phonix Hotel), 71,
Main Street
G. W. Suzor, proprietor
Mrs. H. Suzor
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK-77; Tel. Ad: Sino-
russe; Teleph. No. 807
H. A. Stewart, manager
A. Elked, sub-manager R. Klingenberg M. Takahashi K. Hisamatsu W. F. Koh B. P. Gani
SALE & FRAZAR, LIMITED, Import and Export Merchants--167 Yamashita-cho; Tel. Ad Sale: Tel. Nos. 25, 888; P.0. Box 263
(do.)
Fred. G. Sale, managing dir. (Tokyo) E. W. Frazar, director Vivian M. Sale, do. (London)
R. J. Kirby,
do. (Tokyo)
G. E. Furness, auditor (do.
E. W. Ray
O. Grossmann
E. M. Barnby (Tokyo)
F. S. Booth
do.
P. Bruhl
do.
V. C. Flynn
do.
F. Gonzales
do.
P. H. Green
do.
C. E. Kirby
do.
H. Levy
do.
G. Lodge
do. )
F. W. H. Ritter
J. N. Strong
H. Upton
Miss M. Winstanley W. P. James (Kobe)
do. H. Carew Agency
American & Manchurian S. S. Line
SAMUEL SAMUEL & Co., LD., Importers, Exporters, Insurance and Steamship Agents, 27, Yamashita-cho, Yokohama; Tel. Ad: "Orgomanes"; P. O. Box 273
YOKOHAMA
631
Samuel Samuel,
W. F. Mitchell,
director (London)
E. C. Davis, managing do. (Yokohama)
do.
do.
W. H. Samuel,
do. (London)
W. H. Levy,
do.
do.
G. G. Samuel,
dlo.
do.
H. V. Summers
do. (Yokohama)
O. W. Heim
J. Kaufner H. Y. Irwine
A. J. Coyne G. W. Hawkins W. W. Jarmain
H. T. Hume
J. A. Darling
H. W. Rowbottom
G. G. Irwine
Agencies
"Shell" Transport & Trading Co., Ld. Asiatic Petroleum Co., London
A. Lees & Co., Olliam, England Diesel Oil Engine Co.,
do.
British Vacuum Cleaner Co., do. Ransomes, Sims & Jefferies
Cole, Marchant & Marley
CC
do.
Shire" Line of Steamers, Ld. Danish, Russian and Swedish East
Asiatic Companies
British India Steamship Co. Id. Robert Dollar S.S. Co. of San Francisco Osaka Shosen Kaisha (American Linc) Alliance Assur. Co., Ld.
Law, Union & Crown Insurance Co. Commercial Union Assec. Co. Compania Transatlantica of Barcelona Compania General de Tabacos de
Filipinas, Manila
SATOKE, K., Hairdresser-56
SATSUMA CHO FIRE BRIGADE HEADQUAR
TERS-238; Teleph. 677, Committee of Management: Committee of the Yoko- hama Fire Insurance Association
N. F. Smith, hon, adviser
P. S. Bent,
do.
N. Morgin, adviser
N. M. Morgin, superintendent R. Gabaretta, engineer
J. Gabaretta, assist engineer
SCHEUER & Co. (Iwashita Shokai)-168A; Tel. Ad: Scheuer; Tel. No. 1250; P. O. Box No. 182
M. G. Scheuer (New York)
P. C. Scheuer
Shozo Iwashita
Clarence Griflin
do.
H. C. Norman (Kobe)
SCHMIDT, SCHARFF & Co, R., Merchants-214
R. Schmidt-Scharff
SCHRAMM & Co., PAUL, Merchants-202
C. G. Schramm
E. Hasche (Kobe)
SBELL TRANSPORT AND TRADING Co., LD.-
No. 27
Samuel Samuel & Co., L., agents
SHIMIDZU & Co., K., General Merchants and Commission Agents, No. 120, Yama- shita cho; Tel. Ad: Kamen
K. Shimidzu
S. Yoshino (Tokyo) I. Ichikawa (Mino) N. Tamaru
SIBER, WOLFF & Co., Merchants -- 90A; Tel. Ad. Siber; Teleph. 12 and 965 (L.D.)
H. Siber (Milan)
A. Wolff (Zurich)
J. Kern,
H. Abegg
do.
F. Ehrismann (Kobe) E. Bosshart
E. Hohl, signs per pro. E. Baumgartner (Kobe) H. Treichler
G. Louis
E. Burkhart
E. Deuber (Kobe)
J. Morger
W. Hosoi
A. Polil
SIEBER & Co., Raw Silk Merchants-90B
H. P. Sieber (Zurich)
G. Bluntschli, do.
R. Pfister, signs per pro. Wm. Zellweger, assistant
SILK CONDITIONING HOUSE, IMPERIAL
JAPANESE
Director Shito Akira
Experts-Imanishi Naojiro, Adachi
Mototaro, Yamano Eisuke'
Masurla Yoshiyuki, Ino Bunsaku
SIMON & CO., J. R., Silk Merchants--254
Theo. Schwarz
A. Altschuler
W. Graham
SIMON, EVERS & Co., Merchants-25;
Tel. Ad: Evers; Teleph. No. 963
M. Kaufmann (Yokohama)
J. Saenger (Hamburg)
C. Klingemann, signs per pro. H. Wiersum
P. Stambrorger
Agencies
Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges., Berlin. Th. Hoeg's Anti-Corrosive Ships' Paint
632
YOKOHAMA
SINGER SEWING MACHINE Co., 61; Tel. Ad: Singer; P. O. Box 160; Teleph. No. 1591
R. J. Tobin, agent H. H. Kempf C. E. Benedict F. H. Barnes
F. F. Spielman
SINGLETON, BENDA & Co., Ld., Mchts.--96;
Tel. Ad: Singleton; Teleph. No. 1058
G. W. Brockhurst
H. S. Bell
SMITH, BAKER & Co., Merchants-178
N. F. Smith
H. M. Arnoull
C. Kobayashi
8. Okaira
Agencies
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
South British Fire and Marine Ince. Co.
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY
President-F. O. Stuart
Vice do. A. B. Lowson
Hon. Secretary-D. M. Currie Hon. Treasurer-James Reid Committee C. Murray Duff, John- stone McClure, James Thoni, N. S. Marshall, Alex. Cumming
}}
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK-8
Settlement; Tel. Ad: "Socony" Oriental Freight Department Thompson & Bedford Department
H. E. Cole, attorney and gul. manager H. A. Ensworth, asst.
Mrs. P. J. Abbey
R. C. Bowden
C. H. Bragg C. D. Campbell T. I. Chapman W. W. Clark R. D. Cochrane Miss E. Gorman A. Gorman F. Green E. Gregory Wm. Gray A. E. Hinch H. I. Houben P. Joss
A. L. F. Jordan Miss McCulloch J. B. Moore E. K. Morgan P. E. Nicolle H. M. Nock W. S. Scott
W. E. Shields H. S. Salisbury
K. Van R. Smith
do.
do.
STANTON, SCHOENE & Co., 51 Main Street, Stock and Sharebrokers; Tel.Ad:Cyprian; Teleph. Nos., 379 and 318
Cyprian Stanton Fritz Schoene
W. E. Hauffe
STEWART & CO., W. M., Importers and Ex- porters; P. O. Box 54; Teleph. 2212; Tel. Ad: Bromoform
W. M. Stewart
M. Akiyeda
H. Yamada
STRACHAN & Co., W. M., LD.,Merchants-71
W. M. Strachan (London), director
J. P. Reid
C. H. Pearson,
do.,
do.,
F. O. Stuart, signs per pro.
G. C. Allcock, do.
J. T. Esdale
R. Ruegg
H. Bridges
A. Barthelemy
N. Brockhurst
Miss D. Fuller
Agencies
do.
do.
"Northern Assurance Co., Fire and Life London and Provincial Marine and
General Insce. Co., Ld. Queen Insurance Company
Mutual Life Insce. Co. of New York
STRÄHLER & Co., F.; No. 941; Tel. Ad:
Strahler: P. O. Box 38
F. Strähler
H. Dieckmann (New York)
W. O. Strähler (do.) signs per prò. C. Diener, signs per pro.
STRAUSS, & Co., G., Merchants--204; Tel Ad: Strauss; Telph. 824; P. O. Box 55
G. Strauss (London)
J. Strauss, Senr. (London)
J. Strauss, Junr.
do.
J. S. Scott, signs per pro.
W. K. Wilson,
R. E. Gill
K. Dehn
F. Kronacher
do.
STREET, LIONEL A. B., M.D., Medical Practitioner and Medical Director for the East, The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States; 60, Main Street, Residence 237, Bluff
STREULI, OTTO, 168v ; Tel. Ad: Streuli ; P.
O. Box 170
Ch. Gmür, signs per pro.
R. Stadelinain
STROME & Co., Merchants-12, Water St.
C. J. Strome
YOKOHAMA
633
O. Strome, signs per pro.
F. Muller
H. R. Manley
D. Cox, signs per pro. (Kobe)
SULZER, RODOLPH & Co.,--174; Tel. Ad:
Sulzersilk; Teleph. 839
E. Sulzer (Zurich)
E. Rudolph, do.
Ch. Rudolph (Shanghai)
R. Sulzer, signs per pro. M. Schellenberg, do. P. Nipkow
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE CO. OF CANADA--70; Tel. Ad: Sunbeam; Telph. 751; P. O. Box 175
H. R. Macaulay, general manager for
Eastern Asia, Shanghai
J. C. Fletcher (agent for Japan) W. D. Cameron
SUZOR, L., Estate, House, Import, Export
and Commission Agent--80
L. Suzor
L. Serkis, manager, signs per pro. R. Quillet-Delcaire
S. Ohashi, civil engineer
P. Suzuki
Agencies
L'Union Fire Insurance Co., Ltd., Paris Société Anonyme des Etablissments Delaunay Belleville, St. Denis-sur- Seine Douane, Paris, etc.
TAIT & Co., 756; Tel. Ad: Tait; Telph. 120
(L.D.); Head Office: Amoy; Branches: Daitotei (Taipeh), Anping (Tainan), For- mosa and Kobe
F. B. Marshall (Amoy)
W. Wilson
R. N. Obly
Agency
(do.)
E. O. Herrmann
R. Lent
The North British & Mercantile Insur-
ance (Fire Agency)
TAYLOR, COOPER & Co., Ld. (in liquidation) P.O.B. 295; Tel. 132; Tel. Ad: Horseshoe
R. Wendermann, liquidator
C. Dietrich
"THE TIMES" (LONDON), P. O. Box No, 132;
Teleph. 873; Tel.
Ad: Knowingly
Publication Department
James Thom, general manager
D. C. McArthur
P. Jenks
J. Mitchell
Miss A. Kildoyle
Miss E. McAra
R. W. Davis (Shanghai),
R. P. Sanderson (Tientsio)
THOMAS, THOMAS, Exchange Broker-74A
Residence, 8 Bluff
THOMAS, & Co.. Merchants-No. 53; Tel.
Ad Thomasius
:
Gottfr. Thomas (Kobe)
A. F. Jalın, signs per pro. C. Weber (Yokohama) W. Babiok (Kobe) H. Detjens (Kobe) Agencies
H. Diederichsen Line of Strs., Kiel Jebsen Line of Steamers, Hongkong Continental Insurance Co., Mannheim Aachen-Munich Fire Insurance Co. Anilinfarben-Fabrik Kalle & Co., A. G.,
Riebrich
Vereinigte Schmiergel und Maschinin
Fabriken, Hannover
Neue Photographische Gesellschaft,
Berlin, Steglitz,
Farbenfabrik Hansa, Kiel
THWAITES & Co., C., Pianoforte Dealers and Manufacturers and Musical Instru- ment Importers. Tel. Ad: Thwaite; Teleph. 1659
C. Thwaites
H. Cabeldu T. A. Levack S. T. Shiba
TIPPLE, R., Surveyor to Lloyd's Agents
and Local Insurance Offices-50
TOKIO MARINE INSURANCE Co., LTD., 90 Bentendori Gochome; Teleph No. 981
S. Kitadai, agent
TOYO KISEN KAISHA (Oriental Steamship Company), Yokohama; Telephone 877; Tel. Ad Toyoasano
Soichiro Asano, president
Heizaburo Ohkawa, vice president T. Isaka, manager
TUSKA, E. H., Merchant-194
E. H. Tuska (Kobe) P. Frey, manager
UNION CHURCH, 167 Settlement
Pastor-Rev. T. Roseberry Good, B.A.,
Residence 48A, Bluff
Secretary Frank S.
Settlement
Booth, 167,
Treasurer J.
Macbeth, No.
59
--
Settlement
UNION ESTATE & INVESTMENT Co., Ld.
Builders and Contractors-183
Directors-E. Rogers, D. Marshall,
D. H. Blake
Hutchison & Co., agents
634
B. M. Ward, A.R.I.B.A., architect D. Coleman, foreman
YOKOHAMA
UNION INSURANCE SOCIETY OF CANTON,
LIMITED 74A; Tel. Ad: Union
A. J. Easton, agent G. G. Franklin
C. S. Hye C. Yee
UNITED CLUB (YOKOHAMA)-1B, Bund
Committee-E. Eddeson, (chairman) T. J. Harrington, G. Reiffinger, D. H. Blake, W. B. Mason, L. K. Davis
H. J. Snow, secretary
T. Herlihy, steward and sub-manager E. Kildoyle, chief engineer
VACUUM OIL Co., OF ROCHESTER, N. Y.-74,
Main Street
H. E. Dount, general manager for
Japan
W. L. Mitchell, marine representative J. L. Dunn, assistant
VANTINE & COMPANY, A. A., Export Mer-
chants--268-9
A. L. Rock F. P. Daly
P. F. da Silva
VARENNE & Co., Raw Silk Merchants--206
J. F. Varenne (Lyons) T. Varenne, do. G. Reiffinger
G, Seffert
VARNUM, ARNOULD & Co.-178, Manufctrs. and Exporters of Moni Tea Chests and all other kinds of Cases and Boxes. Teleph. 265; P.O.B. 157; Tel Ad: Arnould
R. M. Varnum H. M. Arnould
VEHLING & Co., Import and Export Com- mission Merchants. Yamashitacho 92; Tel. Ad Vehling; P. O. B. 32
W. Vehling
S. Fritz S. August
K. Paul
T. Nishimura
T. Yamasaki
J. Sakakibara
VINCENT, BIRD & Co., Silk Mercers and
Hosiery Establishment-85
W. K. E. Vincent
B. J. Jackson,
Miss Gillbard
Miss Gabaretta Miss A. Gabaretta
VIVANTI BROTHERS, Public Silk Inspectors
and Commission Merchants-168B
W. Greenbuam (New York) F. M. Tegner signs per pro. Fred Pollard
do.
WALKER, WM., Conveyancer and General Writer, 527, Aoki Kami-tan machi Kanagawa
T. T. Walker
WATER WORKS-236, Yamashita-cho
Director-
Hara Ryota, Kogakuhakuchi, chief
engineer
Doi Jiuhei, manager
WEINBERGER, C. & Co., Importers-46;
Teleph. 686; P. O. Box 270
C. Weinberger
O. Meyer (absent)
E. Kraemer, signs per pro. Gust. H. Hamann
C. Hemme
Agencies
The Transatlantic Insurance Co. of
Berlin
The General Insurance Co. "Helvetia'
of St.-Gall
The United Swiss Insurance Co. of
Manchester
The Consolidated Insurance Co. of
Berlin and Dresden
The Scottish Union & National In- surance Co. of Edinburgh & London
WESTON, A., Landing, Shipping and Cus
toms Agent 10c.
WHEELER, DR. E., 97, Bluff
G. C. Gibbs
WHITNEY, W. N., M.D., M.R.C.S.-60.
WILLIAMSON, A. S., Surveyor to Lloyd's Register, 23, Water Street; Tel. Ad: Register
WINCKLER & Co., Merchants-256
J. Winckler (Werben)
F. Danckwerts (Hamburg) J. Westphalen (Kobe) F. Fachtmann (Yokohama) F. Gensen (Kobe)
G. Selig, signs per pro. D. W. A. Benecke W. Hastedt
E. Holzberger
R. Zeiler
WINDSOR HOTEL, THE
YOKOHAMA
WITKOWSKI & Co., J., Import & Export Commission Agents-93, Yamashitacho; P. O. Box 56,
Henri Blum
L. Meyer, signs per pro.
M. Isaacs,
L. Lazarus,
do.
do. (Kobe)
do.
Arthur Caro, do.
L. Goetlinger,
G. Cwrac de Bordes
do.
WOODRUFF, F. G., Commission Agent,
29 Bluff
WRIGHT'S HOTEL-40
W. N. Wright, proprietor Mrs. W. N. Wright
K. Fujimori, steward and runner
YANGTSZE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION, LD.
708 Main Street
John W. Cain, agent
Auencies
Royal Exchange Assurance Corpora-
tion (Fire)
London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co.
YOKOHAMA CHESS CLUB
President J. T. Griffin
Hon. Sec. and Treasurer -L. Russell Committee -W. B. Mason, C. E. Bruce-
Mitford, E. Geiser
YOKOHAMA CITY ASSEMBLY (Yokohama
Shikai)
Chairman M. Asada Vice-Chairman-M. Kaneko
YOKOHAMA CITY OFFICE (Shiyakusho)
Mayor N. Mitsuhashi
Asst. Mayors-M. Saito, J. Yoshida Treasurer--S. Kawata
YOKOHAMA DOCK Co., LD.; Tel. Ad: Dock
S. Kurusu, managing director
M. Asada,
do.
R. Hara,
do.
R. Kondo,
do.
J.D. Hutchison,
do.
auditor
T. Ishikawa,
K. Nishimura, do.
E. R. Thompson, chief engineer
Capt. T. Matsumoto, dockmaster
S. Yamada, B.A., engineer
T. Ono, B.A.,
H. Kariya, B.A.,
clo.
do.
E. Nakahara. B.A., do.
YOKOHAMA DRAYAGE Co. (See Helm
Bros., Ld., 43)
YOKOHAMA ENGINE AND IRON WORKS, LD.-
113, 114, 115, 158, 159, and 161: Tel. Ad: Machine
635
Directors B. C. Howard (chairman), C. B. Bernard, (managing director), L. J. Ilealing, F. J. Abbott, N. F. Smith,
W. K. Tresize, manager
R. T. Bell, secretary
J. W. Weaver, general foreman W. N. Watt, shop foreman
G. Hay, assistant
F. G. Beatty
R. Henderson R. Lutze
F. Schatzen
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
YOKOHAMA FOREIGN BOARD OF TRADE
74, Yamashita-cho
Chairman-H. V. Henson
J.
Vice Chairman-1). H. Blake Committee J. A. Harmssen,
Williamson Jones, E. C. Davis, J. B. J. Gibbs, V. R. Bowden, H. D. C. Jones, F. Strahler Secretary J. E. Beale
YOKOHAMA ICE WORKS-184, Bluff
YOKOHAMA LITERARY & MUSICAL SOCIETY,
66, Yamashita cho
President J. Pender Mollison Vice-President-W. Kart Vincent Hon. Treasurer-T. H. G. Kenderdine Hon. Secretary-R. H. Box
Literary Committee-Vice President, Secretary, A. W. Sherriff, Rev. E. S. B. Booth, R. H. Box
Musical Coìumittee-Mrs. J. P. Molli- son, Mrs. W. P. G. Field, Miss Blundell, Miss Hall, W. H. Lewis, S. H. Somerton
YOKOHAMA NURSERY Co., LD., No. 21, Nakamura, Bluff; Telph. No. 509; Tel. AdUyekigumi." Exportors of Lily Bulbs, Plants, Seeds, etc.
Ulei Suzuki, president A. Ijima, director S. Tokuda, do. H. Suzuki, do.
S. Iida, Manager
(See advertisement)
YOKOHAMA SEAMEN'S
Teleph. 1343
MISSION, 82B.,
Rev. W. T. Austen, chaplain Japanese Branch
Manabe Mazazo, scripture reader in
charge
YOKOHAMA SEAMEN'S MISSION, No. 82, Odawara-cho; Auxillary to the Mission to Seamen, London, England. American Seamen's Friend Society, New York, U.S.
636
YOKOHAMA
Chunosuki Kawashima, director and
Chaplain in charge--Rev. W. T. Austen. Scripture Reader-Manabe Masazo Institute Keeper-S. Suzuki
--Y. Hakazu
Do.
YOKOHAMA SEVENTY-FOURTH BANK, LD. THE, (The Yokohama Shichi-jiu-shi Gin- ko.) Minami-Naka-Dori; Established 1878; Telph. Nos. 156 and 356
President--K. Otaui Manager-K. Mari
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LIMITED
Baron Korikiyo Takahashi, president Yuki Yamakawa, dir, and gen. uger.
manager at Yokohama
Kyujiro Miyagawa, sub-manager Suteroku Takahashi,
do.
YOKOHAMA STEAM LAUNDRY CO., LD,
Julius Helm, managing director
ZEMMA WORKS, LD., Manufacturers of Wood and Metal Working Machinery and Rubber Moulded Work, Isozo-Mure, near Yokohama; Tel. Ad: Zemma, Telph No. 10 9
W. H. Brenner, manager F. G. Britton, acting do.
INSURANCE OFFICES
OFFICES
Aachen-Munich Fire Insurance Company Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance Co.
AGENTS
Thomas & Co.
Jewett & Bent
Agrippina See, Fluss und Landtransport Vers. Ges... Carl Rolide & Co.
Allgemeine See Versicherungs Gesellschaft
Alliance Assurance Company, Limited.....
Alliance Assurance Company, Ld..
Alliance Fire Assurance Company
Alliance Life Insurance Company. Allianz Vers. Akt. Ges., Berlin Assicurazioni Generale, Trieste
Association of Underwriters & Inse. Brokers, Glasgow Badische Schiffahrts Assec. Gesellschaft, Mannheim Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co., Batavia Board of Hamburg Underwriters
British Dominions Marine Insurance Co., Ld. British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company. Bureau Veritas
Canton Insurance Office, Limited. China Traders' Insurance Company
City of London Underwriting Association..... Colonial Mutual Fire Insce. Co., Ld. (Marine Branch) Commercial Union Assurance Co., (Fire and Marine) Commercial Union Assurance Company Comité des Assureurs Maritimes de Paris Comité des Assureurs Maritimes de Havre Compagnie d'Assurance Salamandra, St. Petersburg Consolidated Insurance Co.......
Continental Insurance Co., Mannheim... Dusseldorfer Allgemeine, Versicherungs Gesellschaft Deutsche Mit, & Ruck Vers. Ges., Munchen Deutsche Transport Versicherungs Ges., Berlin Deutsche Transport Versicherungs Ges., Berlin East India Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Eastern Insurance Company, Ld.
Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States...
Federal Insurance Company, Limited........... Foncière Insurance Company of Budapest Forsakrings Aktiebolaget Hansa, Stockholm. Fortuna General Insurance Co., Ld., Berlin Gauthoid Marine Insurance Co., Gothenburg,
General Insurance Co., of" Helvetia" St. Gall... General Life Assurance Company Germania Transport Vers. A. G.
M. Raspe & Co.
Dodwell & Co., Ld. Samuel Samuel & Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Mollison & Co.
Cornes & Co. M. Raspe & Co. Cornes & Co. Carl Rohde &Co. Cornes & Co. Carl Rolide & Co.
Bowden Bros. & Co., Ld. Mollison & Co. A. Meier & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co. Union Insce. Society of Canton Carl Rohde & Co. Bowden Bros. & Co., Ld. North China Insurance Co. Samuel Samuel & Co. J. Reynaud J Reynaud Carl Rohde & Co. C. Weinberger & Co. Thomas & Co. C. Illies & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. Simon Evers & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. Cornes & Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co. J. T. Hamilton Hutcheson & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. C. Illies & Co. C. Illies & Co. Cornes & Co. C. Weinberger & Co. Hutchison & Co. C. Illies & Co.
YOKOHAMA
INSURANCE OFFICES-Continued
637
Germanischer Lloyd
OFFICES
Glasgow Salvage Association
Guardian Assurance Company Limited Guardian (Fire and Life) Assurance Co., Ld. Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Limited Hall Underwriters' Association, Limited Indemnity Mutual Assurance Company. International Lloyd Transp. Vers. A. G. Berlin Italia Soc. D'Assicur. Maritime Fluviali E. Terresti La Federale, Eidgen Transport Vers. Ges, Zurich La Foncière, Paris..
Lancashire Insurance Co.
Law Union & Crown Insurance Company, Liverpool Underwriters' Association
Liverpool and London and Globe Fire Insurance Co. Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co. Lloyd's, London.
London Assurance Corporation..
London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company London & Provincial Marine & General Insce. Co., Ld. London Salvage Association
L'Union de Paris Fire Insurance Co., Paris Manufacturers' Life Insurance Company Marine Insurance Company
Maritime Insurance Company, Liverpool Münchener Ruck-Versicherungs Gesellschaft Mutual Life Insurance Co., of New York Neptunus Assecuranz Compagnie, Hamburg Netherlands Fire Insurance Company Netherlands Lloyds
AGENTS
C. Illies & Co. Cornes & Co. Hutchison & Co. Smith, Baker & Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Dodwell & Co., Id. Cornes & Co.
C. Illies & Co. Cornes & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. Cornes & Co. Cornes & Co.
Samuel Samuel & Co. Mollison & Co. Mollison & Co.
American Trading Co. Cornes & Co.
H. Ahrens & Co. J. W. Cain, agent Hutchison & Co.
W. M. Strachan & Co. Cornes & Co.
Carl Rohde & Co. W. Harris
F. J. Abbott, agent, P.&O.S.N.Co. Mollison & Co.
Carl Rohde & Co.
W. M. Strachan & Co.
Carl Roldo & Co.
M. Raspe & Co.
Cornes & Co.
Neuchaletoise Schweiz. Transp. Vers. Gess., Zurich Carl Rhode & Co.
New York Board of Underwriters
New Zealand Insurance Company
New Zealand Insurance Co.....
Niederheinisch Gut. Assek. Ges., Wesel Nippon Life Assurance Company
Norddeutsche Versicherungs Gesellschaft, Hamburg Norddeutsche Versicherungs Gesellschaft. Nord. West Deutsche Versicherungs Gesellschaft North British and Mercantile Insurance Co. (Fire)... North British and Mercantile Insurance Company... North China Insurance Company, Limited North Queensland Insurance Company Northern Assurance Company, Ld. (Fire and Life) Northern Maritime Insurance Co., Limited Norwich Union Fire Insurance Co.
Oberrheinische Versicherungs Ges., in Mannheim Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Limited Oesterreichischer Phoenix, Wien
Patriotische Assekuranz Compagnie.
Phoenix Assurance Co., Limited, of London Phenix Assurance Co., Limited...
Providence Washington Insurance Company
Provident Clerks' Mutual Life Assurance Association
Queen Insurance Company
Queensland Insurance Co., Ld......
Sale & Fruzar, Ld. G. K. Totton.
Sale & Frazar, Ld. Carl Rohde & Co. Tokyo Marine Assurance Co.
Carl Rolide & Co. Comes & Co. Cornes & Co.
Union Insce. Society of Canton Findlay, Richardson & Co. B. C. T. Gray, agent
Union Insce. Suciety of Canton W. M. Strachan & Co. Dorlwell & Co., Ltd. Cornes & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ltd. C. lllies & Co
Carl Rohde & Co.
China & Japan Trading Co. Hutchison & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Hutchison & Co.
W. M. Strachan & Co. Bowden Bros. & Co., Ld.
638
YOKOHAMA
INSURANCE OFFICES-Continued
OFFICES
Rhenish-Westphalian Lloyd
Riunione Adriatica di Sicurita Triesto.. Rhenania Vers. A. G. Kolen, Rh.
Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation (Fire)
AGENTS
Cornes & Co.
C. Illies & Co.
C. Illies & Co. J. W. Cain
Otto Reimers & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. Cornes & Co.
Royal ExchangeAssrce.(MarineUnderwritingAgency) Hutchison & Co. Royal Insurance Company, Liverpool... Russian Transport Insurance Co., St. Peterburg Savoia Marine Insurance Society of Italy Scottish Imperial Life Insurance Co., Glasgow Scottish National Insurance Co., Ld. London Scottish Union & Nat. Ins. Co. of Edin. & London Sea Insurance Co., L.
South British Insurance Co...
South British Insurance Co., Lrl.
St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co.
Standard Life Assurance Co.
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada.....
Sun Insurance Office, London....
Sun Insurance Office, London......
Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance Company
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ldl. Transatlantic Insurance, Berlin..
Triton Insurance Company
Underwriting Agency Association, Limited Union Assurance Society, Ld.....
Union Assurance Society, Ld.
L'Union Fire Insurance Co., Ltd., Paris Union Insurance Society of Canton Union Internationale, Co., d'Ass.
Union Continental Insurance Society of Italy United Dutch Marine Insurance Companies... United Rhenish Marine Insurance Co., Bradford United States Lloyd
United Swiss Marine Ins. Co. Manchester. Versicherungs Ges. Oesterrischischer Phoenix, Wien... World Marine Insurance Company, Limited Wurttembergische Transport Versicherungs Ges. Yangtsze Insurance Association Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld. Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld.
C. Illies & Co.
China and Japan Trading Co. C. Weinberger & Co. Hutchison & Co. American Trading Co. Smith, Baker & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Dodwell & Co., Ld. J. C. Fletcher, agent Bowden, Bros. & Co. Carlowitz & Co. Mollison & Co.
Findlay, Richardson & Co. C. Weinberger & Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Cornes & Co. Bernard & Co. Cornes & Co. L. Suzor
A. J. Easton, agent C. Ilies & Co. Cornes & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Cornes & Co. Cornes & Co. Weinberger & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. Hutchison & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. J. W. Cain Bernard & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld.
HAKODATE
This, the most northerly of the old treaty ports of Japan, is situated in the south of Yezo, in the Straits of Tsugaru, which divide that island from Honshiu. The port lies in latitude 41 dog. 47 min. 8 sec. N., and longitude 140 deg. 45 min. 34 sec. E., and the harbour is nearly land-locked. The town clusters at the foot and on the slope of a bold rock known to foreigners as Hakodate Head, 1,106 feet in height. The surrounding country is hilly, volcanic, and striking, but the town itself possesses few attractions. A row of fine temples, with lofty picturesque roofs, occupying higher ground than the rest of the town, are the most conspicuous buildings. There are some Public Gardens at the eastern end of the town, which contain a small but interesting Museum. Water- works for supplying the town with pure water were completed in 1889. The climate of Hakorlate is healthy and bracing. The hottest month is August, but the thermome ter there rarely rises above 90 degrees Fahr.; in the winter it sometimes sinks to 18 degrees. The mean temperature throughout the year is about 48 degrees. The population of Hakodate is about 85,000. The number of foreign residents on December 31st, 1907, was 319, of whom 48 were British, 64 American, 53 French, 11 German, and 123 Chinese.
The foreign trade of the port is small, but has been steadily growing during the last few years. The value of the imports in 1907 was yen 2,845,480 and exports yen 344,575. One hundred and nineteen steamers of 111,790 tons and 113 sailing vessels (incluiling junks) of 14,895 tons cleared during the year 1908. The agricultural resources of Yezo have been to some extent developed under the auspices of the Kaitakushi, or Colonization Department. The rich pasture lands are well adapted for breeding cattle. In the valuable and extensive fisheries on the coast, however, the chief exports of the future from Hakodate are to be looked for. Increasing quantities of dried fish and scaweed are exported annually, mostly to China. The mineral resources of Yezo are large, and may also some day yield a valuable addition to the exports of this port. About a million and a half tons of coal are annually taken from 41 mines, and the output of the eighteen sulphur mines amounts to about 250,000 tons a year. Manganese is produced to the extent of about five thousand tons a year from five mines between Hakodate and Otaru, and an important export business in this com- modity seems to be developing. Copper has not figured in the export returns since 1904. Timber has during the past few years formed the chief item in the export list, and now represents in value just about half the total. Washing for gold dust has been carried on in Kitami, and the belief is entertained that with proper machinery the gold mines of Hokkaido may be worked with fair profit. They yielded only 68 lbs. in 1908. The kerosene wealth of this district is considerable, and it is even stated the prospects are not inferior to those of Echigo. The places where oil is said to exist are numerous, At Nukimi-Mura on Soya Strait--in the extreme North-oil wells were discovered long ago, and have been worked by hand for some years. The oil, in fact, overflows into the sea, and in stormy weather boats take refuge at Nukimi-Mura, as the sea is rendered smooth by the oil. Oil also exists at Nigori-Kawa, near Hakodate; at Kayamagori, near Shiribeshi; at Itaibetsu, on a tributary of the Urin River (output "800 gallons per day); at Kotamimura and Tsukisama Mura (Imperial property), near Sapporo and near Abashira, where the wells are considered rich. The output of the district in 1907 was 106,499 gallons. Hakodate is connected with the capital by telegraph, and a line of railway (157 miles) connects Hakodate with Otaru. A railway from Otaru to Sapporo, 22 miles long, was opened to public traffic on the 28th November, 1880, and has since been carried on to Poronai, where are some large coal mines, the total length of the line being 56 miles. A branch Ikushumbetsu, seven miles, has since been laid and another line from the coal mines to Muroran, a port on the south-east of the island, a distance of 143 miles, was opened to traffic in July, 1892.
At the station of Oiwake, from which point there is a branch line to Yubui (263 miles), the Tanko Tetsudo Kaisha established ovens for the manufacture of coke. There are now about 900 miles of railway in the Hokkaido.
640
HAKODATE
The Hakodate Harbour Improvement works were completed in 1900, and a patent slip capable of taking vessels up to 1,500 tons was also finished.
There is also under construction a dry dock to accommodate ships up to 10,000 tons at ordinary spring tides, and at highest spring tides the dock will be capable of receiving the largest battleships in the Japanese Navy. Harbour improvements are also being carried on at Otaru, where a massive breakwater, about 3,500 feet long, is under construction.
In August, 1907, half the city of Hakodate was destroyed by a fire.
The number of houses destroyed in the conflagration was ascertained to be 8,977, rendering about 60,000 persons homeless. All the foreign residents with the exception of the American Consular Agent were burnt out, saving nothing, and the total loss was estimated at not less than 50,000,000 yen.
DIRECTORY
BANKS
Nippon Ginko
Hakodate Bank, Ltd. Da San Ginko Twentieth Bank Takushoko Ginko
113th Bank, Ltd.
Yesashi Ginko
CHIHO SAIBANSHO (DISTRICT COURT) President Techkia Yoshiyasu Chief Procurator-Hasama Yeijiro
COLBORNE, DR. W. W., Ensleigh Hospital,
8, Omori-machi
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul--Harold G. Parlett
GREAT BRITAIN, 68 Kaisho-machi
Vice-Consul-Harold G. Parlett Shipping Clerk--J. Will
NORWAY
Acting Vice Consul-Harold G. Parlett
UNITED STATES OFÁMERICA
Consular Agent-E. J. King
CURNOW & Co., J. Lo., Storekeepers
M. Russell, managing director H. Russell, director
G. Russell,
CUSTOMS IMPERIAL
do.
Director- K. Miyoshi
Chief of Secretariat S. Tateyama
Chief Appraiser-Nishimura Chief Collector
K. Kirino
Chief Accountant T. Kishibe
Chief Inspector-C. Anzai Auditor M. Takigawa
Chief of Secretariat-Y. Nagaoka Agencies
Chartered Bank of I., A. and Chine Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. British Dominions Marine Ince.Co.,Ld.
DENBIGH & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents, 31 Kaji Machí; Telephone No.111
GG Denbigh J. A. V. Cooper
Agencies
Chartered Bank of I. A. and C. Russo-Chinese Bank (Correspondents) Commerical Union Assurance Co., Ld. British Dominions Marine Insurance
Co., L.
Russian East Asiatic S. S. Co., Ld. Russian Volunteer Fleet (Okhotsk-
Kamchatka Lines)
HAKODATE DOCK COMPANY, 88, Benten-
machi
Baron Ryokichi Kawada, president Directors Baron Ryokichi Kawada, Chuzo Okamoto, Toyokichi Kawada, Aisuke Kabayama, Shigeo Sakaki Mangrs.--Toyokichikawada, Hisataro
Shinagawa
Auditors Kumutsuchi Matsushite,
Kichi Yendo
Adviser-Renpei Kondo
1
HAKODATE
HAKODATE KOSO IN (COURT OF APPEAL)
President Ichinose Yusaburo Procurator-Genl.--Ikegami Saburo
HAKODATH KU SAIBANSHO (LOCAL COURT)
Chief Judge-Matsuta Reiji Commissary- Chinjo Yo
HAKODATE KYAKUSHO (MAGISTRACY)
Mayor Y. Takeuchi Sub-Mayor-M. Hokushu Chief Accountant-K. Shibuya
HAKODATE POLICE OFFICE
Superintendent H. Sonoda
HAKODATE POST OFFICE
Director-Yuichiro Odani
HOKKAIDOCHO, HAKODATE BRANCH
Chief and Actg. Governor --S. Kawake Private secretary and interpreter-L.
J. Ogawa
HOWELL & Co., Merchants
J. A. Wilson
C. I. Fraser
A. H. Baillie
Agencies
North China Insurance Company, Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Company Yangtsze Insurance Association Lloyd's Sub-agency
Board of U'writers, N. Y., sub-correspts National Bd. of Marine Underwriters,
N. Y., correspondents Ocean Steamship Co. China Navigation Co.
Deutscher Lloyd Transport Versi-
cherungs A.G.
International Lloyd Versicherung A.G. New York Life Insurance Co., Ld.
HUNDRED AND THIRTEENTH BANK
S. Tanaka, director
LAFFIN, T. M., "Exchange Market," Ship- chandler and Contractor; Tel. Ad: King
T. M. Laffin
E. J. King
Isaac Gonzales
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missionaries see end of
Japan Directory
RUSSIAN CHURCH
SISTERS OF CHARITY
Sour Marie Auguste, supérieure
Eight sisters
SOCIETÉ DES MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES
641
Rt. Rev. A.Berlioz, Bishop of Hakodate,
Sendai
Rev. C. Jacquet, vicar general, Sendai Rev. U. Faurie, Aomori Rev. J. H. Lafon, Sapporo Rev. O. M. de Noailles, Yokohama Rev. P. D. Dalibert, Yamagata Rev. J. E. Favier, Hakodate Rev. J. B. Deffrennes, Sendai Rev. A. M. P. Pouget, Morioka Rev. R. L. Mathon, Niigata Rev. P. Marion, Fukushima Rev. J. Reynaud (absent) Rev. F. J. Hervé, Tsurugaoka Rev. F. F. Corgier, Wakanatsu Rev. A. J. Hutt, Asahigawa Rev. J. Biannic, Aomori Rev. A. Cornier, Otaru Rev. Chambon, Hakodate
Rev. L. Montagu, Hirosaki Rev. P. Cesselin. Sendai
Rev. P. R. F. Dossier, Morioka Rev. P. Anchen, Sapporo Rev. A. Breton, Aomori Rev. H. Auger, Sendai
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA (Japan Mail Steam-
Ship Co.); Tel. Ad: Yusen
S. Sankaki, manager
O. Kintoku, asst. manager
SCOTT, JAMES, Millwright and Engineer
SAPPORO
AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
President Shosuke Sato, PH.D. Thirty-three Japanese professors
J. B. Morgan
HOKKAIDO CHO (ADMINISTRATION) Governor J. Kawashima
HOKKAIDO COAL MINE RAILWAY CO.
K. Inouye, chief director
MILITARY
gawa)
SEVENTH DIVISION (Asashi-
Lieut. Gen.-Baron Naotoshi Osako
SAPPORO BREWERY
S. Uyemura, director
TANKO RAILWAY COMPANY
Sutezo Nishimura, president
TEIKOKU FLAX SPINNING AND WEAVING Co., LD.; Head Office: Shinagawacho- gashi, Nihonbashi, Tokyo
Zenzaburo Yasuda, president
Yeizaburo Wooyeno, works manager Nisaku Miyauchi, business
do.
20
OSAKA
Osaka is the second city in Japan in point of size and commercial importance and has not inaptly been termed the Venice of the Far East, owing to the manner in which it is intersected by canals. Considering the extent to which the factory system of indus trialism now holds sway, the town recalls Manchester rather than Venice, Osaka is essentially Japanese, though a go-ahead and progressive city, and possesses much of interest to the foreign visitor. The population is close upon a million. It is situated in the province of Setsu, and is built on the banks of the river Aji, about five miles from the sea. The river is only navigable for small vessels, and on the opening of the railway to Kobe the foreign trade of Osaka commenced to decline. Almost all the foreign firms which at one time were established in the latter city have removed to Kobe. Hopes were very generally entertained in Osaka of a recovery of the city's lost position in this respect, and to that end a new harbour was partially constructed to accommodate ocean-going steamers. The works have, however, been temporarily abandoned. The most imposing and at the same time the most interesting object to be seen in Osaka is the Castle, erected in 1583 by the famous warrior Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and which was carried by Yeyasu, the founder of the House of Tokugawa Shoguns, after a famous siege in 1615. Though less extensive than that of Tokyo, it is a much grander and more striking edifice, and is indeed, next to that of Nagoya, the finest example of the ancient feudal castles of Japan. It is now occupied by the Osaka garrison, and forms the headquarters of one of the six great military districts, and it has also within its inclosure an extensive military arsenal. The city is the seat of the provincial government, which is called Fucho, in contradistinction to most of the other provincial governments, which are termed Kencho. Osaka is the seat of numerous industries, including cotton spinning mills, shipbuilding yards, iron works, and sugar refining. The number of factories, mills or works in Osaka in 1908 was returned as 6,673, but only ten of these employed more than one thousand hands. The Imperial Mint is aso located here. This establishment is in active operation and turns out a coinage not surpassed by any in the world. The trade statistics of Osaka in recent years have shown remarkable growth. In 1900 the imports amounted to yen 9,741,436 and the exports to yen 9,626,595, showing an increase of nearly 40 per cent, on the previous year's returns. In each succceding year there was steady growth in imports, while exports jumped up astonishingly. In 1904 the figures were: imports yen 16,977,392, and exports yon 20,790,208. The returns for 1905 showed a further increase in the trade of Osaka, the imports amounted to 18,499,831 yen, while the exports increased to 55,938,208 yen. The imports in 1906 amounted to yen 24,878,715, and the exports to yen 59,910,227, while in 1907 imports amounted to yen 34,005,261, and exports to yen 58,752,200. This shows the trade to have more than doubled in three years, but these are abnormal figures, due to the military movements following on the termination of the war The returns for 1908 showed a decline of 23 per cent. on those of the previous year. The population returns show 600 foreigners, mostly Chinese, residing in the district of Osaka. In 1909 a third of the city was destroyed by fire, the total damage being estimated at yen 25,000,000.
|
DIRECTORY
ALLCHIN, REV. GEO., 31 Kawaguchi-cho
Mrs. Geo. Allchin
Miss M. Allchin
Miss Elisabeth Ward (No. 75)
ANDREWS & GEORGE, 119, Yedo-bori Minami-dori Nichome Nishi-ku; Head Office: Yokohama; Tel. Ad: Yadzu; Teleph. 1397, Nishi
K. Kishi, manager K. Okubo
S. Yamashita H. Yamahaku S. Okamoto H. Yoshimura K. Mizoguchi Y. Morimura H. Kaniye K. Moriike S. Kobayashi H. Yamabaku K. Masuda
•
OSAKA
ASAI & Co., T., Import, Export and General Commission Agents, 184 and 185, Na- kanoshima, 5 Chome ; Tel. Ad : Tomo
Tomotaro Asai
Rokuro Nakaseko, manager George Asai Sanjiro Shimada
Binoru Okaoto
4394
Ataka & Co, Importers and Exporters, No. 36, Koraibashi, 4-Chome, Higashiku; Teleph. Nos. 712 (Higashi), (Higashi), and 2251 (Nishi); Branch Offices Hongkong and Tokyo
Y. Ataka
Y. Nakato, signs per pro.
T. Fujita
G. Kawakami
Y. Agui
B. Yamasaki
H. Ito
Y. Nishikawa
K. Okamura
C. Kurabashi
I. Mitsuda,
T. Tawara
U. Yamada
K. Ataka
U. Kawakami
U. Yokono
General Managers
Nippon Flannel Co., Ltd., Osaka
BOHLER BROS. & Co., LTD., Manufacturers of Bohler Steel, Crucible Tool Steel, High Grade Steel Castings and Forgings, Charcoal Pig Iron, Magnets, War Mater- ials, etc., etc. No. 32, Kitchoriye Sam- bancho, Nishiku; Teleph. No. 392, Nishi; Head Office: Vienna
R. Inouye, M.E., manager H. Umezawa
S. Tamine
G. Yamaji
CHINA AND JAPAN TRADING COMPANY, LD. Nakanoshima 7, Chome; Tel. Ad: Gaisen, Osaka
D. Kennedy C. Dresser J. F. Rabbit
Agencies
Scottish Union&National InsuranceCo. Phoenix Assurance Company, Ld., of
London
CHOBEI TAKEDA, Wholesale and Export Druggist, Doshomachi; Tel. Address :-- Takedacho
(See Advertisement)
CONSULATES
BELGIUM
Acting Consul-C. Favre-Brandt
NORWAY, Ahsasi Machi, 31A
Consul-Alf. Hasche
643
DAI NIPPON BREWERY CO., LD., Products: Yebisu Beer, Sapporo Beer, Asahi Beer, Peace Beer, Tokyo Beer; Tel. Ad: Beer, Osaka; Head Office: Meguro, Tokyo
President Kiohei Makosni
Mang. Director-Chozaburo Uyemura Directors-Taisuke Miura, hintaro
Ohashi Tokuhei Tuku, Jiro Katsua
(See Advertisement)
DAI NIPPON SEITO KAISHA (The Japan Sugar Co., Ld.)-Head Office: No. 479, Tihei Shinden, Sunamura, Minami- Katsushika-Gun, Tokyo; Teleph Nos. 2738, 958, 1875, 2 49 (Naniwa); Branch Office: 19, 2-chome, Natanoshima, Kitaku Osaka; Teleph, 509, 26 7, 4412 (Higashi)
Edgar ÅLLEN & Co., Ld. (Imperial Steel Works, Sheffield, England), 9, Kami Itchome, Ajikawadori, Kita Ku; Tel. Ad: Chikara, Osaka; Teleph. Nishi, 1740
J. C. Ward, registered re. resentative
RH Gordon, signs per pro.
E. P. Cox
T. Hayashi
(See A. B. C. List of British Manufacturers)
FAVRE-BRANDT, C. & J., Merchants- 10
Concession
C. Favre-Brandt (Neuchatel) J. Favre-Brandt (Yokohama)
C. Favre-Brandt, signs per pro. F. Favre-Brandt
H. Favre-Brandt E. A Jungers
J. J. H. Van 'Hoff
GOVERNMENT OFFICES
IMPERIAL CUSTOMS
Director R. Otsuki Controller-I. Morimoto Chief Inspector-I Morimoto Chief Appraiser-K. Sekiguchi
IMPERIAL GOVERNMENT MINT(Kawasaki)
Director T. Hasegawa Assayer-Y. Koga, P.C.S.
MUNICIPAL OFFICE, Enokojima Kami-
no-cho, Nishiku
S. Yamashita, mayor
M. Fujimura, assistant mayor M. Ohara, treasurer
Harbour Works (Tempo-cho, Nishiku)
S. Yamashita, director Dr. T. Okino, chief engineer Dr. T. Kobayashi, engineer T. Tagawa
do.
20*
1
644
C. Hori,
do.
R. Kobayashi, pier master
Water Works
K. Nakahara, chief engineer T. Bito, engineer
T. Yamane, engineer
Z. Tanaka,
do.
T. Takeuchi, do.
do.
Y. Sumita,
Electric Tramway Department
Dr. S. Sugiyama, chief engineer
H. Shimizu, engineer
K. Iwai,
S. Takagi,
A. Tanaka,
do.
do.
do.
Hygienic Laboratory (Awabori Nishiku)
T. Kita, director
K. Nakano, vice director
Isolation Hospital (Momoyama, Minamiku) M. Masuyama, director S. Ichikawa, vice-director
Higher Commercial School (Edobori, Nishiku)
A. Kato, president
Technical School (Kitano-Ushimaru-cho, Kitaku)
S. Hori, President
OSAKA
OSAKA CHINO SAIBANSHO (Dist. Court) Judge and President Kakihara
Takekuma
Public Procurator
Yamamoto
Tatsukuro
Interpreter (Eng.)-Mikuni Isotaro Do. (German) Kuroda Iwanoskey Do. (Chinese)-Hashimoto Yos-
himasa
OSAKA FUCHO
Governor Chikankira Takasaki 1st Secretary-T. Hirata 2nd Secretary--S. Matsuki Chief Engineer-K. Asuke Chief of Police Shiro Ikegami Clerk (Foreign Affairs)-T. Maida
OSAKA KOSOIN (Court of Appeal)
Presidt. and Judge-Kazuo Furusho Chief Public Prosecutor-Chojiro
Midzukami
OSAKA KU SAIBANSHU (Local Court)
Chief Judge Miura Ziuntaro
OSAKA MILITARY ARSENAL
Director-Col. Yoshihide Kawatani
HODGKINSON & Co., Mechanical and Elec- trical Engineers-12, Itachi-bori, Kita- dori, 5-chome
G. Hodgkinson
HORNE, F. W., agent for American Ma chinery and Supplies, 36, Kawaguchi
F. W. Horne (Yokohama)
HUNTER, E. H. & Co. (Gomei Kaisha) 14 Honden Nibancho Nishi-ku; Telephone Nos. 325 and 1,609 West. Tel. Address: Hunter
E. H. Hunter
R. Hunter
Jas. L. Robertson, signs the firm
H. Robertson, I.A.M. M.E., AM.I. E.E. C. J. C. Moon, A.C.G.I.
Jas. A. Hunter
M. Ohta O. Suwo
M. Atagi
Agency
Osaka Iron Works, Shipbuilding and
Dockyard
HYGIENIC LABORATORY-OSAKA IMPERIAL, (Osaka Eisei Shikenjo), Hachikenya Higashiku; Telephone No. 1348E Director-Hirayama Matsuji Examiners Machiguchi Eizo, Kami- yama Masao, Ohashi Tomojiro, Hayashi Shintaro, Mori Shigeru, Tsushima Sadakatsu, Okugawa Harukichi, Yoshii Motoo, Muraka- mi Sasuke Ishii Tatsuzo, Miyake Keüchi, Oskada Fumio, Ogawa Tatsujiro
Accountant-Yasuda Masachika Clerks Sato Yutaka, Imura Jiro
JAMES MORRISON & Co., L.D., 77, Okawa- cho, Higashi-ku; Tel. Ad Manifesto, Osaka; Teleph. 1537 Higashi
M. Ishida, manager
KASAI & Co., Goshi-Kaisha General Importers, Exporters and Commission Merchants, 112 Nakanoshima, Nichome; P. O. Box No. 6; Tel. Ad: Kasai; Teleph. Higashi No. 2599 L.D.
V. Hermann J. Kasai
S. Kasai T. Fujii
KOBE EXCHANGE BROKERS' ASSOCIATION
Nam 59B.
Chairman E. Oldenburg
Hon. Secretary-H. F. Teverson
L. LEYBOLD SHOKWAN, 15, Toshabori Uramachi, Niskiku; Tel. Ad: Leybold
Julius Saenger (Hamburg) M. Kaufmann (Yokohama)
H. Bothe
F. Hartmann, eng. (Tokyo)
P. Kandler,
K. Meissner
do.
do.
P. Singer
W. Veil, eng.
OSAKA
(Tokyo) do.
MEISEI GAKKO, Eisashimachi, 16, Higashiku
(Sanadayama)
J. Wolff, director
N. Walter
H. Barthélemy
J. Gessler
A. Deiber
C. Imhof
E. Gutleben
A. Sandrock
MOMOYAMA CHU GAKKO, Fudegasaki-cho,
Tennoji, Minami-ku.
Rev. C. H. B. Woord, M.A. Rev. G. W. Rawlings, B.A.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missionaries see end
of Japan Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION, Osaka Diocese Mgr. J. A. Chatron, Bishop of Osaka L'Abbé A. Luneau, Vicar-gen'l., do. L'Abbé A. Vagner, Nara
L'Abbé L. Marie, Hiroshima L'Abbé M. Puissant, Kishiwada
L'Abbé J. B. Angles. Osaka
L'Abbé V. Laisné, Matsuye L'Abbé P. Marmonier, Osaka
L'Abbé P. Trintignac, Shimonoseki L'Abbé P. Aurientis, Kyoto L'Abbé J. L. Relave, Myazu L'Abbé E. Roland, Fukuyama L'Abbé A. Villion, Hagi L'Abbé A. Rey, Kyoto
L'Abbé J. B. Duthu, Okayama L'Abbé E. Hebert, Tamashima L'Abbé J. Birraux, Tsu L'Abbé I. Charron, Himeji L'Abbé J. Geley, Wakayama L'Abbé J. Cettour, Yamaguchi
L'Abbé J. B. Castanier, Maizuru L'Abbé A. Grinand, Otsu L'Abbé S. Bousquet, Osaka L'Abbé H. Perrin, Kobe
L'Abbé P. Fage,
do.
L'Abbé H. Daridon, Tottori
L'Abbé S. Planes, Kyoto
L'Abbé G. Derny, Kyoto
SISTERS OF CHARITY, 1 and 2, Concession
Soeur Bernardine, supérieure
NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE Co., Osaka
Central Office, 16, Kawaguchi
A. L. Manley, agency director NICKEL & Co., LTD., C., Stevedores, Land- ng. Shipping and Forwarding Agents; 14, Tomijima-cho, Kita-ku; Teleph No.
2755
645
NIPPON ELECTRIC CO., LTD., Manufacturer
and Importers of Elec. Apparatus and Machinery; 30, Kitahama Nichome, Higashi-ku; Head Office: 2 Mita Shiko- kumachi, Shiba, Tokyo
K. Iwadare, managing director
E. W. Clement, director
P. K. Condiet, secretary
NIPPON GINKO (The Bank of Japan)
N. Kajiwara, manager
NIPPON MARINE TRANSPORT AND FIRE INSURANCE CO., LIMITED, 144, Yedoburi Minami-dori, Nichome
G. Ukon, president
W Ukon managing director
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA, Umeda, Osaka
Freight Office, Kawaguchi
T. Yatsui, manager
M. Miyanaga, assist.-manager
G. Fujiyama
D. Inouye O. Tachibana
OSAKA CITY COUNCIL
Mayor-Yamashita Shigetake Asst. Mayor-Matsumura Tashio
Yoshimura Heizo
do.
-
Treasurer-Ohara Masataro
OSAKA EISEI SHIKENJO
Laboratory)
OSAKA HARBOUR WORKS
(see Hygienic
T. Okino, L.A.M., engineer in chief T. Kobayashi, E., principal engineer K. Seyke, paymaster
S. Tagawa, C.E., C. Hori, C.E., section
engineers
OSAKA IRON WORKS, Shipbuilding Yard and Dry Docks (E. H. Hunter & Co., Kobe, agents)
R. Hunter U. Koga M. Miyoshi S. Takakura
T. Shirato and others
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA (The Osaka Mercantile Steamship Company); Head Office: Tomijimacho, Kita-ku; Tel. Ad: Shosen
President T. Nakahashi Managing director-K. Hori
Directors I. Tanaka, Z. Toyoda, S.
Teranishi
Audrs. S. Iba, S. Sugimura, S. Tajima General Manager--J. Yamaoka Secretariat Department
K. Kimura, manager
646
Traffic Department K. Hori, manager
R. Kafuku, sub-manager Superintendence Department
OSAKA
J. Chiura, chief superintendent G. Taruo, M. Shiraki, supt. captains. Y. Okami, J. Kawabe, supt. engineers S. Kojima, T. Nakane, S. Warashima,
naval architects
S. Sasase, T. Wada, marine engineers
Accounts Department
A. Nakagawa, manager Supplies Department
G. Tarao, manager
K. Okumura,
Coasting Lines Department
J. Yamaoku, manager
B. Matsuzaki, chief acnt, and treasurer H. Masuda, acting traffic manager J. Katsuki, chief superintendent H. Ota, superintendent captain
Steamers
Steamer
Gross Tonnage.
Steamer
Gross Tonnage
Aichi
393
Koghin
457
Amakuso
2,519
Koshun
2,873
Amoy
783
Kotsu
1,604
Anegawa
277
Koyo
177
An-ping
1,698
Kunsan
779
Auto
803
Matsue
762
Asuhi
504
Mexico
6,000
Basau
1,244
Midorigawa
408
Banyo
176
Miuatogawa
400
Beppu
762
Miye
974
Bujan
1,811
Miyajua
1,609
Cañada
6,000
Miyazaki
762
Chicago
0,000
Moppo
779
Chikugogawa
710
Mukogawa
417
Chikusagawa
172
Nachigawa
181
Chost un
1809
Nakagawa
210
Choyo
181
Oigawa
653
Choshin
1,870
Onogawa
328
Daichi
1,258
Onsbu
1,202
Daigi
1,508
Oita
762
Daijin
1,570
Panana
6,000
Daini-Sakuhana
142
Rinjun
192
Dairei
1,335
lokho
2,410
Daishin
13304
Ryukyu
783
Doyo
158
Sabakawa
F27
Ehime
613
Seattle
6, 00
Erimo
3,281
Shibetoro
3,3 6
Fujikawa
679
Shign
Fukuoka
2,744
Shinanogawa
Fukushin
1,473
Shinchiku
3,127
"
Fusan
2,501
Shinkochi
473
Fuso
324
Shirakaw
589
997
Shokwa
2,022
Geiyo
177
Shoshiu
1,011
Gishin
સર
Soshu
1906
Hachisuka
151
Suma
1,500
Heijo
1,201
Sumidagawa
Hijikawa
968
Swatow
1,045
Himekawa
420
Theonin
+
0,178
Hodzugawa
328
Taichin
3,319
Hozan
2,509
Taiboku
2,708
Ikutagawa
178
Tainan
3,311
Josbin
1,244
Taito
2,000
Kagawa
613
Tatsutagawa
408
Kagi
2,509
Tenriugowa
058
Kaijo
2,084
Tetsurei
2,142
Kakogawa
215
Tokushim
#14
Kamogawa
421
Tonegawa
655
Kanko
2,135
Toyokawa
160
Katsuragawa
212
Toyourn
322
Keelung
1,060
Tsakomo
172
Keijo
1,207
Wakayama
362
Kiikawa
215
Yamatogawa
270
270
Yoshidagawa
325
Kochi
359
Yoshiigawa
214
Kin
836
Yoshinogawa
401
Futami
Kisetsu
783
701
746
PAUL SCHRAMM & Co., 36, Edobori Minami- dori Itchome, Nishi-ku; Telephone No. 1,233, Nishi; P. O. Box 22; Tel. Ad; Schramm, Osaka
E. Hasche (Kobe).
C. G. Schranum (Yokohama) P. Rode (Yokohama) P. Zell, signs per pro. Fr. Koch
ROYAL BRUSH GOSHI KAISHA, Brush Manu- facturers, Kitanagara; Teleph. No. 3738 Higashi (L.D.); P. O. Box No. 1 Temma Tel. Ad: Truth, Osaka
Charles Loonen (Paris) Geo. R. Gibson (New York) W. C. Greaves (London)
G. Millward
E. H. Spence M. Macaire E. Gueriteau
SIEMENS-SCHUCKERT
DENKI KABUSHIKI KAISHA (Siemens & Halske A. G., & Siemens Bros. Dynamo Works), Elec- trical Engineers and Contractors, 50, Yedobori Minamidori Ichome, Nishku; Tel. Ad Sieniens Osaka; Telephone 1631 Nishi (L.D.)
V. Herrmann, E.E., director E, Boeddinghaus, E.E. H. Drenckhahan, E.E. B. Mohr, E.E.
G. Braun, accountant J. Lacher, cashier Y. Ohtsubo, chief clerk
SUMITOMO BANK; Tel. Ad: Sumitbank
K. Sumitomo, proprietor T. Shidachi, manager
Branches: Tokyo, Yokohama, Kyoto,
Kobe, Hiroshima, Moji, &c,
SUMITOMO, KICHIZAYEMON, Proprietor Besshi Copper Mines. Tadakuma Coal Mines, Sumitomo Copper Rolling Works, Sumitomo Bank, Warehouses and Cast Steel Foundry
M. Suzuki, director-in-chief T. Shidachi,
K. Nakata,
director
K. Yukawa, mang
do.
R. Fujio, chief auditor
TAKATA & Co., Contractors and Engineers
S. Takata, president (Tokyo)
TAYLOR, WALLACE, M.D., 15, Kawaguchi-Cho
THIRTY-FOURTH BANK (SANJUSHI GINKO)
LD., Korai bashi, 4-chiome
Kenzo Koyama, president
TOBACCO MONOPOLY BUREAU
Superintendent - Y. Watanabe
OSAKA-KOBE-HYOGO
TOKYO MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY, LD.
23, Koraibashi-dori, Shichome
H. Hirao, manager
VACUUM OIL Co., of New York, No. 4
Chome, Utsubokitadori Nishi Ku
J. W. Webb, representative
KYOTO
CADY, Prof. C. M., Director of the Orphan Industrial Press; House Ad: 1, Daisan Koto Gakko Kwanslia, Yoshida, Kyoto
KYOTO UNIVERSITY, IMPERIAL
647
(See Mombu - Sho in Tokyo section); Telephone 460
President--Baron D. Kikuchi
WILMINA JOGAKKO, American Presbyterian Mission Girls School, Niyemon-cho, Higashi-ku
Miss Agnes Morgan Miss Sallie Alexander Miss Elva Robertson Miss Evelyn Maguet
KOBE-HYOGO
The
Kobe was until 1892 the foreign port of the adjoining town of Hyogo and was opened to foreign trade in 1868, but in 1899 the two towns were incorporated under the title of Kobe City, when the City Municipal Law was put into force. The port is finely situated on the Idzumi-nada, at the gate of the far-famed Inland Sea. The harbour is good and affords safe anchorage for vessels of almost any size, but to extend the facilities for loading and discharging an extensive scheme of harbour improvement was begun in 1907 and is proceeding. The two towns face the land-locked water covered with white sails, while behind, at a distance of about a mile, rises a range of picturesque and lofty hills, some of which attain an altitude of about 3,000 feet, and the steep sides of which are partly covered with pines. On one of these hills, Rokkosan, are a number of foreign residences, the place having become a favourite summer resort. The summit of this hill has been well prepared for the purpose, sevoral miles of excellent paths making walking on the hills easy and enjoyable. Among the attractions of Rokkosan are excellent golf links. Kobe and Hyogo stretch for some five miles along the strip of land between the hills and the water, and the former is rapidly extending in the direction of Osaka, which is connected with Kobe by the Hanshin Electric Railway. What was at one time known as the foreign quarter at Kobe is well laid out; the streets are broad and clean, and lighted with gas, Bund has a fine stone embankment and extends the whole length of the foreign business quarter. The foreign houses are neatly built, and the Sannomiya railway station, within three minutes' walk of the Bund, has a very English look. The railway terminus is at the other end of Kobe, where it meets Hyogo, and there are extensive carriage works adjoining the station. There are four Clubs-the Kobe Club (British, but including members of all nationalities), the Club Concordia (German), the Masonic Club, and the Oriental Club (Indian). At Mirume the K. R. & A. C. liave a fine boathouse and large lawn for all kinds of sports. The Union Protestant Church and a French Roman Catholic Church are in what was formerly known as the Concession. An English Episcopal Church, All Saints, was opened in 1898 on the Hill behind, and there are several native Protestant churches in Kobe town. There are three foreign hotels in the town--the Oriental, the Tor, and the Grand, while the Mikado (near Kobe railway station), is in foreign style, but under Japanese management. Two foreign daily papers, the Japan Chronicle and the Kobe Herald, and one weekly, the Japan Weekly Aronicle, are published in Kobe. There are also two native papers. The population of the city of Kobe exceeds 300,000. There are about 3,000 foreigners residing in Kobe, but of this number nearly two-thirds are Chinese. When a census was taken in 1901, the British numbered 602, Germans 198, Americans 179, French 67, and the Portuguese 70.
KORE-HYOGO
The Temple of Notokuji, which possesses a large bronze Buddha, and which in gitnated in the old town of Hyogo, is worth a visit; and there is a ument to the Japanese beo Kiyomori, erected in 1956, in a grove of trees in the vicinity of who ta ple, which claims some attention from its historic associations. On e Kobe side of the old river known as the Minato-gawa also stands a temple dedicated to Kusunoki Muselige, so famous in Japanese history for loyalty and valoar, who diel no the spot 1334, during the nocceful wars for the restoration of the blikadu's power. The Kawaki Shipbuikling Yard sinunted at yoxo is one of the largest in Japon In 1908 in addition to exerating repairs to 697 vessels, the yard touod out 15 new vezes baring an aggregate connage of 19,046. The new geiving dock will noomproduko Towels of some 1,000 tons The Mitani Eishi Co. also have a dockyard at the Western extremity of the port. This dogkyard has an arm of 2004000 innare yards, and a seatrout of 1,50 square yarıls. Engines, was electris mahinery, de, are manufac tured here, and the yard is sulle of building ships of 10,000 tons To November, 1008, a floubing dock capable of heating four hours. vessel of 13,000 ton, length foot, brewith 65 feet and draught 20 lest. The Government in 1908 sangcioned a scheme for the improvement of the harbour involving an expenditure of 29,006,000 yan Large redimuatiouns are being undertaken at Onokama, and commodious wharges and other decilities for the working of cargo are to be provided The work is to be com- pletel in about ten years.
Kobo's excellent railway communications both north and south, have naturally tendo to centralise traile at this porc,
In 1908 the values of the different class of inquirks of foreign produced manufactures were
Cute Kaw and Ginued...Teu Metals and Blaufecure of
47,607,451
Dyes and Paints...
29,791,637
Machinery.
15,121,
Wool and Woollen Manufacture Kamjere Beverages and Comestibles
Druga, disines ke....
10,949,60
Esper and Paper 3wfvetura.
2,451,750
Grains and cods..
10,898,740
$ting, Haire, Boues de
IJJ
3,582,771
Cotton Town and Piece Goods...
10,08,401
Sundries
15,063
Oil Cake
7,801,688
Oil and Wax
5,040,048
Total importa
...Yen 101,
The values of the principal articles of Export in the same year were as follows:-
Cotton Youn & Cotton Goods Ven 18,804,000
Straw and Chip Braid
1800132
Oils and Waxes
---
6.00409
Dres and l'aincs...
Metale snel Mecal Manufactur Masches..
Mate and Mattings
Bareragos and Comestible,
......
3,584,800
3,025,184
2.977,74
---
2,487,392 1874308
5,141,000 Ecthen ware and Glas Marie 859
---
4,804,108 Pen...
4,11,122 Sundries
1,109,651
3,900,271
Total Exporte
....
Gruins And Beers...
Clothing and Accra
Machinery
...en 24,114
The quantity of ten exported from Kobe-Hyogo during the year, 1007 was 3,208,723 kin. while in 1909 is amutol to 7,021,198 kin." Practically the whole of this went to the United States of America und Öhman,
The following table of values in Yea shows the total trade if the port from 1810
1906-
Imports 169 120,268,JEL 1900 137,451,31 1909 123,079,029
Total
Importe Experts
87,020,173 62,31,30
230,014,005
Exports Total 55,350,81 185,910,400 1901 174,850,301 69,704,019 207,180,880 | 1905
84,456,570 213,072,854 7,308,226 209,195,246 1906 192,190,186 110,605,293 203,795,498 100% 144,318,111 74,749,148 2199241,904 1907 223,437,506 10000,260 2,105,00 1008 104584,018 60,018,816 243,009,929 1908 191,020,806
84,113,773 273,193,605
00
MITSUBISHI
DOCK
YARD
ENGINE WO
KOBED
HYU
STATION
HIMOS
(Water Police Sta.
PORT OF HYOGO
Minakogawa Park
TATION
WATERWORKS
Filtering Bads
Waterworks
SUWA YAMA
HAHAKUMA
KITA
NACASA
DORI
KIGAN B -
TOKY) SOKO/& co WAREHOUSES
Kailway Pier
PORT OF KORE
"Kawasaki SnipBUILDING YARD
Kawasaki BocK
Haloba.
Bund
PIER
SAM
MIYA
FORMER
TTLEMENT
CHSTONES
W
SUJI
KITANO
YAMAMOTO
MACHI
MOTO
KITAND MINERAL WATER
WATERFAL
MICHI
SHIN KAWA
TOKYO SOKO & CP PIER
FLOATING
DOCKS
'WADA POINT
HYOGO
AND KOBE
A-East Custom Bouse
R-West
C-Hyogo Hotel
++
D-Nippon Yusen Kaisha
E-Post and Telegraph Office
F-Electric Light Co.
G-Railway Dept.
H-Nan-K6-San (Temple)
I-Saiban-sho (Court)
I'-City Hall
J-Aloi-Bashi (Bridge over Railway)
K-Kobe Public Hospital L-Kangoku-sho (Ward)
M-American Church N-Shinomiya
0 Ujino-Yams.
P-Eiwa Jogakko School Q-Ken-cho
R-Sannomiya Station
Temple
U-Ikuta Tomple V-Custom House Quarters W-Recreation Ground X-Suwayama Hot Bath
Y-Chindai (Garrison)
Z-Ten-no Hot Bath
2
1-Harbour Works under construction 2-Proposed Harbour Worka
Electric R. W. (1st section) Electric R. W. (2nd section)
KU
NUNDBIKI WATERFALL
NUNGBIKI MINERAL BATH,
Estarworke
KUMOCHI
KOBE-HYOGO
DIRECTORY
ABDOOLA & Co., C., 11, Ikutamaye; P. O. Box 171; Telph. 2495; Head Office: A. Allarakhia & Co., Bombay
C. Abdoola & Co., Hongkong R. J. Hassum
G. S. Mahomed H. Iwata
Y. Ishikawa
I. Kishimoto T. Ito
ABENHEIM BROS., Merchants,--57; and in
London, Paris, New York,
and Yokohama
Richard Abenheim (London) F. B. Abenheim (Yokohama)
R. E. Abenheim (London)
F. G. Penfold, signs per pro. Russell Leeds,
J. G. Dickson
S. D. Clay,
E. J. Merrill
H. Maxwell
W. G. Nicolle
do.
do.
Tokyo
(Tokyo)
ABRAHAM & Co., L. D., Comsn. Merchs.-51
L. D. Abraham
S. Ohashi
K. Shundo
I. Shindo
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Dr. P. C. Thornicroft, chairman
H. Pitteri, vice chairman
A. J. McGlew, treasurer J. Marshall
R. Roups
A. F. N. Joyner, secretary
AHRENS & Co., H., NACHF., 10, Kaigan Dori,
Telph. Nos. 367 & 1487; P. O. Box No. 30; Tel. Ad: Alirens and Nordlloyd
Chr. Mosle (Bremen)
J. A. Harmssen (Yokohama)
F. Popert (Kobe)
L. Temme (Yokohama)
E. Kroneck, signs per pro. (Kobe) A. Gese, signs per pro. (Nagasaki) H. Hoffmann
A. Fischinger
C. Schlueter
H. Dezes
G. Sahling
F. Vogel
A. Mueller
Alf. Schmidt, technical expert of
the B.A.S.F.
F. Benicke, engineer
Branches: Yokohama, Tokyo, Nagas-
aki and Bremen
Agents
Norddeutscher Lloyd
649
Navigazione Generale Italiana London Assurance Corporation Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Deutsch Niederlaendische Tel'hen.-
Gesellschaft
-
AMERICAN TRADING Co., 99, Kita-machi
P. H. Wootton, acting-agent F. N. Shea, sub-agent
E. J. Marshall, accountant
W. R. Rastall, M.E. H. A. Guiley
R. J. Archer
Miss M. E. Ladd
Agencies
Law Union & Crown Ins. Co. (Fire) American & Oriental Transport Line
of Steamers to the Far East
ANTAKI, E. Commission agent, 32, Akashi
Machi
ARRATOON, C.M., Commission Agent, 20B, Harima-inachi; Tel. Ad: Arratoon; P. O. Box No. 32
T. Matsunaga S. Matsumoto
ASIATIC EXPORT AND IMPORT Co. (Incor- porated), Nichome. Tel. Ad: Natzdorf; Head Office: Seattle, U.S.A.; Agencies: Yokohama, Hongkong and Hamburg; Codes: Private, A.B.C. 4th Edition
M. Matzdorf, president (Seattle) F.C.Hellenbrand, signs per pro. (Kobe)
BANK OF TAIWAN, LIMITED, Sakaye-machi
Ichome; Tel. Ad: Taiwangink
I. Sada, manager
BECKER & Co., 31B, Akashi-machi
E. Becker (Hamburg) Th. Bunge
K. Bandelow
G. Lücker
H. Teubner
BENNETT, DANIEL & Co., Bill and Bullion
Brokers-14 Mayemachi-dori
F. R. Daniel (Yokohama)
A. H. Dare (Kobe) E. Coutts (Yokohama) A. Wilckens (Yokohama) F. Hoffmann (Kobe)
BERGMANN & Co.-40
O. Bergmann (Hamburg) M. F. Bengen (Yokohama) H. Ramseger (Kobe) T. Baumann do.
650
KOBE-HYOGU
BERIGNY & Co.. Merchants, 268, Naniwa-
machi
Th. de Berigny
H. Pitteri
Agencies
Commercial Union Assurance Co. Yorkshire Fire and Life Insurance
Co., Ltd.
North of England Protecting and In-
demnity Association
Newcastle Protecting and Indemnity
Association
The World Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Boston Board of Marine Underwriters United Kingdom Mutual S. S. Assce.
Association, Ld.
La Providencia of Vienna
BETHELL BROS., 11, Kumoye-dori, 8-Chome;
Tel. Ad Riverito; Telph. 1987
H. Bethell (Yokohama) A. P. Bethell (London)
P. J. Gillbard (Kobe)
BIRCH, KIRBY & Co., L., Engineers and Merchants, 35, Nishi-machi; Tel. Ad: Metallic; Telep. No. 525
S. Meadows, manager
C. L. Spence, signs per pro.
M. Ellerton
A. R. Hall
BLACKMORE&Co., Mhts-64, Naniwamachi
J. L. Brown
A. Gordon Brown
J. C. D. Alexander
BORKOWSKY, G. (Nichi-Doku Shoten) No. 169, Ichome Sannomiyacho; P.O. Box 142
BOWDEN BROTHERS & Co., LD., Import and
Export Merchants.
V. R. Bowden,mang.dirctr.(Yokohama) Herbert Bowden,mang.diretr(Sydney)
William Campbell, manager Leslie D. Kibble H. Klingen A. E. Crane
J. B. Gomes Agencies
British Dominions Marine Ins. Co. North Queensland Insurance Co. Colonial Mutual Ins. Co. (Marine)
BOYER, A. G., agent for
American
Manufacturers, Broker and Surveyor- 266, Yamamotodori, 2-chome
BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY, National Bible Society of Scotland, 95, Yedo-machi; Tel. Ad: Testaments, Kobe; Home Office: 146, Queen Victoria St., London
F. Parrott, agent
A. Lawrence, sub-agent K. Handa
BROWNE & Co., Merchants-26
C. M. Birnie H. Nutter (Moji)
L. Birnie (Moji) J. Jesselsen
Agencies
Apcar Line of Steamers
British India Steam Navign. Co., Ld. Russian Volunteer Fleet
Maritime Insurance Company, Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Sun Insurance Office
BUCKLEY & CO., A. J., Import and Export Produce and Commission Merchants; 48, Uramachi; Telph. 2452; P. O. Box 10; Tel. Ad: Buckwheat, Kobe
BUNT, GEORGE, Government Instructor of English to the police of Hiogo-ken, 1, Nakayamatedori, Nichome
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, 103; Teleph. 848
W. J. Robinson, signs per pro.
W. G. Feast
F. W. Grimble J. N. Watson
Agencies
China Navigation Company, Ld. Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. China MutualSteam Navigation Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. The Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering
Co., Hongkong
CABELDU & Co., P. S., High Class Tailors, Drapers, and General Outfitters, 16, Mayo Machi
P. S. Cabeldu
J. Osborne, cutter
Miss Michel, ladies' department
CAMERON & Co, Ld., A., Merchants-93
Nowlson Parham, director
Alexr. Cameron,
E. A. Koettgen,
John Arthur,
do.
do.
do.
(absent)
(do.)
E. B. Bower, A.c.A., inspr. and auditor
James Knight
J. Morris
J. Hall
R. Fitzgerald H. Flores
K. Okada
CAMROODIN & Co., C. A., Merchants and Comsn. Agents, 1, Sakai-machi, Ichome
KOBE-HYOGO
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Co's Royal Mail Steamship Line, 14a, Maye-machi ; Tel. Ad Citamprag; Teleph. No. 2293
J. Rankin, agent
CARLOWITZ & Co., 124, Higashi-machi, and 11, Isogami-dori, 2-chome, Ohno P. O. Box No. 124; Teleph. 1269 and 1437; Tel. Ad: Carlowitz
Head Office: BelvedereHouse, Hamburg
Chas. von Bose (Hamburg) Martin March
(do.)
Chas. Rayner (Shanghai) Townsend Rushmore (New York) C. B. Rosenbaum (Shanghai) R. Lenzmann (Hongkong)
A. Lüttich, signs per pro. A. Thordsen
H. Grossmann Th. Thordsen
W. A. Zeh
H. Weissenborn Miss Z. Botelho
CHARGEURS REUNIS (French Steamship Co.) 16B, Maye machi; Head Office: Boulevard Malesherbes, Paris; Telph. 2170; P. O. Box 34; Tel. Ad: Chargeurs
G. Thouroude, general agent
L. H. M. Husson, chief assistant
L. Meere
M. Tsunoda
M. Kohori
Lum-Sika, compradore
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA; Tel. Ad: Keramic
J. Alston, agent
J. L. Crockett, accountant
W. Neil,
H. R. Nicoll,
sub-accountant
do.
A. R. Macqueen, do.
G. H. M. da Costa, chief clerk
CHINA EXPORT, IMPORT & BANK CIE.-75;
Tel. Ad: Lemjus
Paul Ehlers, director (Hamburg) H. Boetel, signs per pro.
H. Adam
W. Tieleke
L. Schild
C. J. Schmidt
CHINA AND JAPAN TRADING CO., LD.-88;
Tel. Ad: Gaisen
F. A. Kendrick, acting manager
J. A. Doyer
H. E. Allcock
K. Scheuten
J. Donald
N. Hansen
D. Kennedy (Osaka)
D. Dresser,
do.
J. F. Rabbitt, do.
Agencies
651
Phoenix Fire Assnce. Co., Ld., London Scottish Union & National Insce. Co.,
London
CHOTIRMALL & Co., K. A. J., Commisson Merchants, 319, Sannomiyacho Itchome; Tel. Ad: Chotirmall
CHRISTENSEN & Co., T. A., Stevedores and Landing Agents to the P. M., and T. K. K. S. S. Cos., General Ship'g, Landing and Forwarding Agents, and Customs Bro- kers, No. 38, Naka Machi; P. O. Box 113
T. A. Christensen
K. P. Johansen
H. C. Christensen S. Isaacsen
CHURCHES
ALL SAINTS' CHURCH (Episcopalian)
Chaplain-
ALL SAINTS' CHURCH ASSOCIATION (regis-
tered under Japanese law)
Directors-F. S. Shaw (chairman), S.
E. Giles (hon. secretary), F.W. Mac- kie (hon, treasurer), P. S. Cabeldu
KOBE UNION CHURCH, 48, Akashi-machi,
Pastor Rev. J. B. Thornton Deacons--G. B. Patterson, P. Fraser,
J. Jones, Dr. O. A. Dukes Secretary--H. S. Wheeler Treasurer-Dr. C. P. Knight Trustees-G. S. Watrous, Rev. J. B.
Thornton, P. Fraser
Secretary and Treasurer to Trustees
-G. Seelhurst
CLIFFORD-WILKINSON TANSAN MINERAL WATER CO., LD., THE; P. O. Box No. 41; Cable Address: Tansania
J. Clifford-Wilkinson, president R. B. Byles, managing director W. J. Turnbull, secretary Miss Wilkinson
T. Omori
O. Wakayaneji, chief clerk W. Moore, ships' canvasser
G. A. Reid, superintendent of works
(Takaradzuka)
I. Yamashita, manager (Takaradzuka)
CLUBS
CLUB CONCORDIA-117 and 126 President G. Roeper Vice-President A. Dreyer Hon. Secretary R. Scheidges
KOBE CLUB, 14, Kano-cho, 6-Chome
H. Lucas, president
A. N. Hansell, hon. secretary A. G. Macara, secretary
H
:
652
KOBE CRICKET CLUB
President G. C. Pakenham
KOBE-HYOGO
KOBE GOLF CLUB, Links and Club House
at Rokkosan
Dr. T. C. Thornicraft, president
LAWN TENNIS CLUB
Hon.Sec. and Treas.- Mrs. W.G.Feast
REGATTA AND ATHLETIC CLUB
President-C. H. Lightfoot Hon. Secretary-H. E. Green Hon. Treasurer-C. L. Spence
SAILING CLUB
Hon. Secretary-M. Ellerton Hon. Treasurer-F. S. Shaw
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul-Henry Bonar
BELGIUM
Consul-E. R. De Vos
BRAZIL 10, Kaigandori
Vice-Consul-F. Popert
CHILI
Consul-M. Vendrell
CHINA
Consul-Chang Hung
Translator and Interpreter-Wong
Sewin Secretary-Li Ka Chun
DENMARK-100
Acting Consul-A. H. Hansen
FRANCE-42, Yamamoto, 2-chome Vice-Consul-M. Charpentier Intrepreter M. Hasegawa
GERMANY-115; Tel. Ad: Germania; Tel. No. 2009 (also in charge of Swiss interests)
Consul-F. Thiel (absent) Acting Consul-Dr. Specka Assistant-Dr. K. Vogt Secretary-E. Hafen
Clerk-J. Christians
GREAT BRITAIN-9; Teleph. No. 991
Consul General-It. de B. M. Layard Vice-Consul-J. B. Rentiers (absent) Assistant-F. C. Greatrex
Shipping Clerk-Angus Macdonald
ITALY--Yamamoto-dori, Sanchome, 118-
In Charge-Wenceslau de Moraes
NETHERLANDS-125, Kitanocho 1-chome Consul for Japan and Korea-J.
Barendrecht
NORWAY-Akashi machi, 31a
Consul --Alf. Hasche
PERU
Vice-Consul-M. Kropp
PORTUGAL Yamamoto-dori, Sanchome,
118
Consul-Wenceslau de Moraes
ROUMANIA-Yamamoto-dori,3-chome,118 Consul in charge-Wenceslau de
Moraes
RUSSIA
Consul in charge of Vice Consulate-
Alexander Maximov (absent) Acting Vice-Consul-P. de Kerberg
SPAIN
Vice Consul-M. Vendrell
SWEDEN-Kyo Machi
Vice Consul-William Campbell
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA-5, Akashi-
machi
-
Consul-Geo. H. Scidmore
Vice and Deputy Consul and Inter
preter-Walter Gassett
Clerks A. Stanley Clarke, W. Ebiharah, N. Tsutajima, I. Sudzuki
CORINTHIAN HALL, 48, Nakayamate-dori,
Nichome
Trustees G. H. Whymark, G. A.
Adam, L. D. Abraham
P. H. McKay, hon. secretary and
treasurer
CORNES & Co., Merchants
Frederick Cornes (London) A. G. Morey Weale (Yokohama) A. J. Cornes
Do. J. M. Collum
S. F. Gillum P. L. Spence T. C. Daniel
F. E. Wilkinson
A. W. Gordon
E. X. Lambert Capt. Macmillan F. X. Braga F. S. Souza R. F. Malabar
Agencies
Lloyds, London
Ben Line of Steamers
South African Line of Steamers
Eastern & Australian Steamship Co., Ld.
KOBE-HYOGO
Lancashire Insurance Co. (Fire & Life) Norwich Union Fire Insce. Society Royal Exchange Assce. Corpn. (Mar.) Sun Life Assurance Co., of Canada London Salvage Associations Association of Underwriters and In-
surance Brokers of Glasgow Glasgow Salvage Association Liverpool Salvage Association Underwriting Association, London United Dutch Marine Ince. Co. Indemnity Mutual Marine
Higgins & Cox, Agents, United States
Lloyd's Maritime Insurance Board of Underwriters, New York National Board of Mar. Underwriters,
New York
CROMBIE, A. W., Auctioneer, Auditor, Public Accountant, Estate and Commission Agent, 14, Naniwa-machi
CROSSE & YAMASHITA, Barristers at-law and Patent Agents, 14, Maye Machi: P. O. Box 135; Tel. Ad Crosse
C. N. Crosse, barrister-at-law and
patent agent
Y. Yamashita, barrister-at-law and
patent agent
GO. Heath, solicitor
CROWTHER & Co., C., EXPORT AND IMPORT MERCHANT, 11 Isogami-dori, 2 Chome, Ono; Telephone 1097; P. O. Box 14
C. Crowther
Agencies
Lever Bros., Ld., Port Sunlight Cadbury Bros., Ltd., Bourneville
DAVID & Co., S. J., Merchants-21A, Harima Machi; Tel. Ad: Psalmist; Teleph. No. 343; P. O. Box 65
M. J. Moses
E. J. Ezra, signs per pro.
J. E. Raymond
C. Mancini
K. A. Sopher Sub-Agencies
Union Assurance Society, Ld.
South British Fire & Mar. Insce. Co., L‹l.
DAVIDGE, C. W., M.A., Higher Commercial School; Res.:37Nakayamate-dori2-chome
De Aru & Co., A., Export Merchants, No. 5, Hachiman Dori 2-chome; Teleph. No.
2430
A. Cameron & Co., Ld. (proprietors) E. H. Summers
John Hall
T Imai K. Igi A Mihara $. Ohno
T. Wada
T. Adachi
S. Imai
S. Yokota
653
DELACAMP & Co., Merchants-121 and 122, Higashi Machi; Tel. Ad: Delacamp, Teleph. 632; P. Ô. Box 151
H. O. de la Camp (Hamburg) Charles Lange de la Camp Th. Kopff, signs per pro.
J. Rief
R. Ratjen
Herbert de la Camp A. F. Jorge
DELBOURGO & Co, Commission Merchants,
308, Sannomiya, 1-chome
DEUTSCHE APOTHEKE Kobe Building, opposite Oriental Hotel, 7, Export and Import Chemists
F. Starke & Co., Ltd.
Sole-Agents for Japan, China, India, Netherlands India and Philippine Ids. for--
Haematopan Lysoform
Agents in Japan for- Styx (Rat Poison) Pain-Expeller
Nitragin (Fertilizer), Dr. Kühn Steriligen, Dr. Eisenhardt Wolff & Sown, Karlsruhe
DEUTSCHE-ASIATISCHE BANK-83, Kyoma- chi; Tel. Ad: Teutonia; Teleph. No. 1221: P. O. Box 176
G. Boden, acting manager E. Thon, signs per pro. H. Gsell
L. Goebel
C. Mori
H. Murakami
S. Araki
B. Nakaya
DICK, BRUHN & Co., M., Storekeepers, Butchers, Bakers, and Naval Contractors, 2, Nishi-machi; Tel. Ad: Dick, Kobe
J. Dick
O. Olsen
L. Andersen
DODWELL & Co., LTD., Merchants, No. 5, Bund; Import dept.: No. 36, Nakai-machi
G. J. Melluish, manager Matthiessen Smith, acting manager
J. M. C. Galletly
J. P. Warren
A. W. Cosser
F. D. Bain
P. E. Webb
W. Braess
I
054
H. A. Xavier
J. J. Gomes
Agencies
Northern Pacific Railway Co.
KOBE-HYOGO
Andrew Weir & Co.'s Line of Steamers
(Glasgow)
Bank Line of Steamers
Asiatic Steam Navigation Co., Limited
(Calcutta and Liverpool)
Andersen's C. Steamers (Hamburg) Barber's Line of New York Strs. (N.Y.) British & Foreign S. S. Co., Ld. ("Saint"
Line, Liverpool)
Burrell & Sons "Strath" Line Strs.
(Glasgow)
Bedouin Steam Navigation Co., Ltd.
(Liverpool)
Clyde Steamship Co., Ltd. (Glasgow) Gow, Harrison & Co.'s Strs. do. Hindustan S.S. Co., Ltd. (Sunderland) Lancashire SS. Co., Ltd. (Liverpool) Mogul Steamship Co., Ltd. (London) Natal Line of Strs. (Durban & L'don) Warrack's Line of Steamers (Leith) Watts & Co.'s Line of Strs. (London) Weddel, Turner & Co.'s Steamers
("Lion" Line, L., London) Yorkshire Fire & Life Ince. Co. (Fire) Alliance Assurance Co., Ltd. do. Ocean Marine Insce. Co., Ld. (Marine) St. Paul Fire & Mar. Ince. Co., Ld. do. Providence Washington Insce. Co.
(Marine) New York
Standard Life Assurance Co. (Life) United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld.
Dossa & Co., 51, Harima-machi; Telph. 972;
Tel. Ad: Dossa
A. K. Joshi, manager
DREWELL, & Co., A., Ship, Freight and Coal Brokers, Commission and Insurance Agents, 20, Harima-machi
A. Drewell
C. Mancini
Sub Agency
Yorkshire Insurance Co.
DUBUFFET & Co., Export Merchants-58, Naniwa-machi; P. O. Box No. 156; Tel. Ad: Esbing
R. Dubuffet (Paris)
P. Lagrange do.
H. Dupuis, signs per pro.
DUFF, JOHN, F., 4, Isogami-dori, Itchome; Tel. Ad: Duff; P.O. Box No. 5, Sannomiya
John F. Duff
A. W. Newton
Jno. Wm. Ottoson, signs per pro.
DUKES, Dr. O. A., "Suggestive System of Teaching English," No. 3 of 123, Yama- moto-dori, 4-chome
ESSABHOY, A. M..
Sannomiya-cho
M. M. Ebramjee
A. H. Hoosen G. Essajee E. A. Attari
D. A. Hoosen
Merchant, 26,
Far Eastern Advertising Agency, General Advertising Agents and Con- tractors for Japanese and Foreign Journals ; Tel. Ad: Kokoku, Kobe
Douglas M. Young
J. D. Abell J. V. Bot ho K. Miyake H. Takata E. Uyemura
FEICKE & Co., J., Share and General Brokers and Commission Agents, 383. Naka- machi; Teleph. No. 1468 'L.D.); P. O. Box. No. 68; Tel. Ad: Feicke
J. Feicke
G. Otsubo
H. Yamamura T. Abo
FINDLAY, RICHARDSON & Co., Merchts.-110
Jas, Marshall
J. M. Maitland H. Rankin W. Forsyth
H. C. Macnaughton G. Heughan
Agencies
Union Marine Insurance Company, Ld. Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Western Assurance Company Sun Fire Office
Atlantic Mutual Insce. Co.
FUKIAI SHONO SEISEIJO (Camphor Refin-
ing Co.), Onoye-dori Sanchome
H. Lucas, proprietor
FUTEHALLY & SONS, N., 20 Harima Machi; Telephone 1312; Tel. Ad: Futehally
R. N. Futelially
GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS
CUSTOMS
Director S. Saito
Chief Inspector-S. Sasaki Chief Auditor-T. Inoue Chief Appraiser-E. Ikeyama Chief Secretary-M. Arakawa
HIOGO KENCHO (Local Government Office)
I. Hattori, governor
H. Fuwa, secretary-general N. Uchimura, chief-supt. of police K. Tanaka, inspector of education H. Abe, secretary
J. Fujii, harbour master H. Trotzig
KOBE-HYOGO
Bureau of Foreign Affairs in the Gover-
nor's secretariat
H. Hirai
K. Watanabe
KEISATSURU (General Police Dept.)
Pol.Inspr.-Gen.-UchimuraÑaotoshi San. Expert-Sumikawa Gisaburo
-Hawaka Yuji Interpreter T. Kodama
do.
KENJI KIOKU (Public Procurator's Office)
Chief Procurator
Koyama
KENKO GIJIKU (ENGLISH
Matsukichi
MISSION
SCHOOL), Nakayamate-dore Sanchome
H. Hughes, headmaster
KOBE CHIRO SAIBANSIO (District Court Judge and Presdt.-Inatoshi Tamaru
KOBE CITY OFFICE, Higashi Kawasaki-
cho
Mayor-
Sen. Depu.-Myr.--Kashima Fusajiro Jun. do. -Kotegawa Shinji Revenue Officer-Shibata Kametaro Chair. of City Assembly-Tsubota
Juro
In charge of For. Affairs-Namae, Aoki Yutaro, Nishikawa Wataru
KOBE KU SAIBANSHO (Local Court)
Judge and Supt.-Torakichi Komuro
KORE POLICE STATION
G. Kaiyeda, superintendent
Interpreters T. Hiragama
KOBE SOKKO SHO (Kobe Meteorological
Observatory)
Director G. Nakagawa
KOBE SUIJO KEISATSU SIO (Kobe Water
Police Station); Teleph. No. 1355
Supt.-R. Goto Inspector-S. Minoda
Do. --M. Yendo
Interpreter T. Higashiyama
KOMU-BU (Harbour Office).
Harbour Master-Fujii Jisaburo Asst. do. -Hayashi Harusada Do. do. Katayama Sachiya Port Surgeon-Tsukiyama Shunji
METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATORY, Naka- yamate-dori, Shichi-chome, Ujinoyama
Director G. Nakagawa
POST OFFICE, Sakai-machi
Director-M Tada
655
Supt. of Engineering Department--T,
Hasegawa, M.E.
*AYUGA
Do. of Inspecting Dept.-S. Sugimura Do. of Foreign Mails-I. Kusaka Do. of Railway Mails-K. Naito Do. of Telegr. Service-M. Tsuchiya Do. of Teleph. Service-S. Nakamura Do. of Domestic Mails-B. Takatsuki Chief Accountant-S. Mikuni
SANNOMIYA POST OFFICE
Postmaster-Itaro Kusaka
SANNOMIYA TELEGRAPH OFFICE; Telph. 99
Chief Clerk--K. Muranishi
TAXATION OFFICE, 8-chome, Shimaya
mati-dori
Chief Collector-Toyohiko Kuki In charge of foreign affairs-Katsu- toru Okajima, Toshisada Suzuki, Mitsuru Motooka, Hiroji Tsutsumi
GLENLEA HOTEL, 1 and 2, Kaigan-dori,
Itchome
GRAND HOTEL-36, Division Street
GRÖSSER & Co., Merchants-31A; Tel.Ad:
Grosser, Yokohama
A. Serno
Alf. Hasche
T. A. Thomsen
K. Goose (Yokohama), signs per pro.
GYSIN FRÈRES--Import and Export, 83;
Tel. Ad: Gysin, Kobe
R. Gysin (Paris) Jean Faveyrial
Maurice Thieck De Macar N. Ishiwata S. Shibata Agency
Union Fire Insurance Co. of Paris
•
HANSELL, ÅLEX. N., F.R.I.B.A. Architect and Surveyor-203, Concession, and 40, Yamamoto-dori, 3-chome
HASSAM, K., Merchant and Commission
Agent, 43, Nishimachi
H. Tomoi
M. Yama
R. D. Raymond
HEALING & Co., L.J., Engineers and Mchts. --
86, Yedo-machi; Telephone 719
L. J. Healing, A.M.LE.E. (Yokohama) E. Eddison, M.A.,
do.
F. S. Shaw, A.M.I.E.E., signs the firm R. Ley Alkin, A.M.L.E.E.
650
A. A. Alvares G. M. Arab
J. E. Crane
E. N. Lambert
KOBE-HYOGO
HELLYER & Co., Merchants-92, Yedo.
Machi
F. Hellyer (Chicago)
C. B. Stedman (Yokohama)
A. T. Hellyer (Japan and America) W. Hellyer (Chicago)
C. H. Lightfoot, signs per pro.
HERSOG, R. F., Import and Export Mer- chants--82A Kyo-machi, P. O. Box 126; Tel. Ad: Herzog, Kobe. Codes: A. B. C. 5th Edit., Beith's 8 figures
R. F. Herzog
H. Kato
J. Kitagawa
HIRANO, MIDZUSHIMA & Co., General Merchants-5, Sakaimachi; Tel. Address: Hiranosco
H. Hirano
J. Midzushima
HIRANO MINERAL WATER Co., LD., Pro- prietors of Reynell's Hirano Mineral Water-107, Ito-machi; Tel. Ad: Reynell;
Teleph. No. 65
Directors A. Madella, H. E. Reynell,
L. E. Charnley, G. J. Melhuish H. E. Reynell & Co., secs. and agents
HIRSCHFELD, G. C., Importer and Ex-
porter-8, Kaigan-dori, 6-chome
HOLST & Co., W., Importers and Ex-
porters-45, Sannomiya-cho Itchome
C. T. Mayes
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING COR
PORATION 2, Bund; Teleph, No. 842
R. T. Wright, agent
H. B. Pike, accountant
H. C. Sandford
A. Balean
E T. Macnamara W. Ross
C. J. Baker
R. A. dos Remedios
F. X. dos Remedios
J. A. Farias
S. Okuda
J. F. de Jesus
P. V. Couto, Jr.
D. Fundo H. Miyakura S. P. Lee
J. A. de Figueiredo José da Cunha S. Fujii
T. Yamamoto T. Miyake
HORNE, F. W., agent for American Mach'ry.
and Supplies-36, Nakamachi
J. A. Rabbit, migr. (Osaka and Kobe)
HUNTER & Co., E. H. (Gomei Kaisha),
Merchants-- 29.
E. H. Hunter
R. Hunter
E. W. Noel, signs the firm
G. M. Spence
R. G. Crane
HUTCHISON & Co, Merchants-36 J. D. Hutchison (Yokohama)
H. J. Marshall
Agencies
Guardian Assurance Company, Ld. London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Ch. Royal Exchange Assurance (Under-
writing Agency)
Sea Insurance Co., Ld. Federal Insurance Co.
HYOGO INTERNATIONAL HOSPITAL-Yam-
amotodori, Itchome
Board of Trustees C. L. Delacamp, E. H. Gill, T. C. Thornicraft, C. S. Watrous, P. L. Spence, P. H. McKay Medical Advisors-Dr. R. S. Miller, Dr. K. Quosig, Dr. J. A. McIlroy, Dr. L. S. Smith
ILLIES & Co., C., Merchants No 12, Kai- gan-dori; Telephone Nos. 382 (L.D.), 426 (L.D.), 696 (L.D.)
C. Illies (Hamburg) C. Illies, jr. do. R. Pohl (Yokohama)
R. Koops, signs per pro. H. Bosch,
P. Sillius
C. Friedrichsen
G. R. Fischer
do.
J. W. Bollenhagen. A. Focke
O. Herbold
K. Sasaki
P. Marx, Moji
Agencies
Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hamburg Dampfschiffsrhederei "Union" A. G
Hamburg
London and Lancashire Fire Insurance
Co., Liverpool
Providentia Allegm. Vers. Ges. in Wien Schweiz Allg. Vers. Act. Ges. in Zúrich Allianz Vers. Act. Ges., Berlin Internationaler Lloyd Vers. Act. Lies,
Berlin
Rhenania Vers. Act. Ges., Koeln a. R.
KOBE-HYOGO
Badische Schiffahrts Assecuranz Ges.,
Mannheim
Düsseldorfer Allg. Vers.Ges., Dusseldorf Union Internationale Compagnie d'As-
surances, Anvers
Oesterreichischer Phoenix, Vienna Kais. Kon. Priv. Riunione Adriatica di
Securita in Trieste, Trieste Germanischer Lloyd, Berlin Forsackerings Aktiebolaget "Hansa".
Stockholm
"Fortuna" Allgem. Vers. Act. Ges.,
Berlin
Bayrischer Lloyd Transport Vers.
Act. Ges., Muenchen Oberrheinische Vers. Ges. in Mannheim Versicherungs Gesellschaft von 1873
in Hamburg
Neue Fuenfte Assecuranz Compagnie
in Hamburg
"Albingia" Versicherungs Act. Ges.
in Hamburg
Gesellschaft "Ham-
Versicherungs
burg" in Hamburg
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION-
38, Akashi-machi
J. D. Longmire, manager J. Martin, accountant
Walter Greig, assist. accountant C. R. Bennett, sub-accountant
B. A. Machado, head clerk S. Shioji
W. Harada T. Umezono
M. Arao
T. Tanada
Kan Tong Po, compradore
JAPAN CHRONICLE, Daily and Weekly
issues-65, Naniwa Machi
Robert Young, editor
D. Evans, manager
W. J. Jarvis, sub-editor
A. Conway Young
S. F. Shepperd
H. Goodridge
Y. Katagiri, chief translator
E. Ozaki, accountant
JAPAN EXPORT Co., M. B. H.-104, Yedo Machi: Tel. Ad: Ascanius; Tel. 437, 368; P. O. Box 88
P. Gayan (Hamburg)
K. Behuke, sigus per pro.
JAPAN IMPORT AND EXPORT COMMISSION
COMPANY; Tel. Ad: Guggenheim
B. Guggenheim (New York)
J. Guggenheim
F. 1. Solomou (Yokohama)
Ferd. Ailion
Ch. F. Broad
657
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Ld. Merchants-
83, Kyo Machi
A. R. Riddle, agent
C. Chicken A. E. Cooper A. B. Elton W. Galloway A. Hill
A. Lamberton J. P. P. Leite
Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Limited Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Glen Line of Steamers
Indra Line, Limited
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Ld. Alliance Assurance Company China Sugar Refining Company, Ld.
JOSEPH, M. S., Merchant and Commission Agent--319, Sannomiya cho, 1 Chome; P. O. Box 101
JULIEN, H., Butcher, General Storekeeper
and German Sausage Maker
Kawasaki Dockyard Co., Ld.
Managing Director-K. Matsukata
-Y. Kawasaki
Do.
Dirs T. Nomoto, M. Hirose, C. Sato Auditors-G. Tajiri, M. Yamamoto, J.
Tanaka
Adviser Shozo Kawasaki Executive Staff
K. Matsukata, president Y. Kawasaki, vice-president
G. Matsukata, chief secretary M. Yotsumoto, private secretary and
business superintendent
Dr. T. Saka, superintendent of
engineering dept.
T. Tanaka, superintendent of ship-
building dept.
S. Arimori, chief accountant
M. Naruse, chief of store dept. M. Abe, chief of docking and repair-
ing dept.
T. Mera, chief ship designer
Y. Ogawa, chief engine designer M. Yamamoto, chief naval con-
structor
D. Tsuruta, naval constructor
R. Kato,
do.
T. Shinoda, chief engineer
G. Kuwata,
S. Fujii,
K. Takano,
engineer
do.
do.
T. Tsuruta, electrician
Capt. M. Takemura, dockmaster Hiogo Casting and Railway Shops I. Furuyama, railway engineer T. Toyota, engineer
I
658
KOBE-HYOGO
Dairen Branch Works (Dalny, N. China)
T. Suda, manager
K. Ichihara, engineer
(See Advertisement)
KELLY & WALSH, LIMITED, Booksellers,
Stationers, &c.
J. L. Thompson & Co., agents
KERR & Co., WM., Merchants- 218, Harima
Machi; Telephone 986
William Kerr
Agency
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld., of London
KERSHAW, THOS., M.I.M.E., Consulting En- gineer and Surveyor-170, Sannomiya- cho, 1-Chome; Teleph. No. 2005
J. H. Duns
W. J. Toms
G. Arab
G. H. Crane-Williams M. Dessel
KIRBY, A., Marine and General Surveyor; Surveyor to Bureau Veritas, German- ischer Lloyd and British Corporation, The Boston, Bremen and Hamburg Boards of Underwriters, Local Office, &c., &c.
KOBE CLUB-(see under Clubs)
KOBE COLLEGE
Miss Susan A. Searle (absent) Miss Olive Hoyt
Miss Charlotte B. De Forest Miss Florence Gordon
Miss M. A. Holbrook, M.D.
Mrs. Amanda W. Walker
Miss A. B. Cockroft
KOBE FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION--82,
Kyo-machi
F. S. Morse, secretary
KOBE FOREIGN BOARD OF TRADE--52
Harima-machi
Chairman-J. Marshall Secretary-J. D. Thomson
KOBEFURNISHINGEMPOR'M-82, Division St.
Whymark & Thompson, proprietors
KOBE GRILL ROOMS, THE 32A, Akashimachi
R. Fujimoto, manager
KOBE HERALD, Evening Newspaper-23,
Naniwa Machi
A. W. Curtis, mnging. editor and propr.
A. F. N. Joyner, editor A. Rozario, sub-manager U. Arima, translator
K. Tsuji, reporter
Y. Tsuda, bookkeeper
KOBE PIER COMPANY-Onohama; Tel. Nos
121, 609, 533
I. Tanaka, president
I. Kohdziro, managing director K. Yoshida, director and manager K. Matsumoto
Agency
Nippon Fire Insurance Co. of Osaka
KOBE SANITARIUM, MEDICAL & SURGICAL, THE-42, Yamamoto-doril Nichome. A well equipped Institution for the treat- ment of acute and chronic diseases. Optical work given especial attention. Graduated foreign nurses furnished upon application.
KOBE WATER BOAT Co.-8, Kaigan-dori
Nichome
C. Nickel & Co., Ltd., Managers
KOERTING, BUME & REIF, Importers-63, Naniwamachi; P. O. Box No. 160; Tel. Ad: Koerting
B. Rief (Bradford) F. Bume (Hamburg) J. Koerting (Yokohama)
F. Klüss, signs per pro.
J. Uffenheimer
Agency
The Palatine Insurance Co., Ld.
KWANSEI GAKUIN
President-Rev. Y. Yoshioka, D.D. Principal Academic Department-Rev.
S. E. Hager, M.A., B.D.
Dean of Biblical Department-Rev.
J. C. C. Newton, M.A., D.D.
LAVACRY, V.--38A, Naka-machi; P. O. Box
53; Tel. Ad: Lavacry
LESSNER & Co., S. D., Dealers and Ship- chandlers-11, Sakaye-machi Itchome; Tel. Ad: Lessner, Kobe
B. Teller, signs the firm, manager
E. Feuer
A. L. Huon
LLOYD'S REGISTER
OF
SHIPPING 164,
Harima-machi; Tel. Ad: Register, Kobe. Home Office: London
A. L. Jones
LUCAS & Co., H., Merchants-20
Henry Lucas
G. C. Pakenham, signs the firm E. M. da Silva
Agracira
KOBE-HYOGO
Douglas Steamship Company, Limited Compañia Maritima of Manila Union Insurance Society
Managers
Fukiai Camphor Refinery
at
LYONS & Co., J., Stevedores, Landing and Shipping Agents and Custom House Brokers-19, Akachi-machi, and Eastern and Western Customs; Tel Ad: Lyons; Teleph. No. 1381, P.O.B. 18
MCKAY & Co., Merchants, 49, Harima
Machi
P. H. McKay
MACY & CO., GEO. H., Tea Merchants-11;
Carter, Macy & Co. New York
F. E. Fernald (Yokohama)
Leigh F. Pye
Chas. V. Schmidt
MARTIN BROTHERS-72, Sanomacho; Tel.
Ad: Martin
MAXWELL, J. B., Bill and Bullion Broker
MEIER & Co., A., Merchants-68; Kyo- machi; Tel. Ad: Geslien, Teleph. No. 68; P. O. Box No. 49
II. Geslien (absent) W. Heitmann
O. Retzlaff
L. Bade
N. Gottlinger
Agency
Bureau Veritas, Paris
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES (COMPAGNIE DES)
-8B, Maye-machi
G. Abily, agent
H. Williams Le Coispellier, chief
assistant
MICHEL, A., Commission Agent, 4-chome-
141 of 4, Yamamoto-dori
MIDZUSHIMA & Co., Coal Merchants-5, Sa- kaimachi; Tel. Ad: Midzushima; Teleph. No. 864
J. Midzushima
A. Iwashima M. Ohno (Moji)
Y. Yamada
5. Hirata
T. Takenouchi
MILLER, R. S., M.D. (Edin.), Medical Practitioner-94, Ura-machi and 170 Kitano cho, Shi-chomie
MILNE, ALEX, Exchange Broker-6, Third
cho, Nakayamate-dori, Hill
MISSIONS
659
For Protestant Missionaries see end of
Japan Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION, Notre-Dame des Sept Douleurs-37, Nakamachi
L'Abbé P. Fage, miss. apost.
SAINTE FAMILLE, Shimoyamati-dore--3
7-chome, 348
L'Abbé H. Perrin, miss. apost.
MITCHELL, J. B., Builder, Surveyor and Funeral Director 53, Yamamoto-dori Itchome
MITSU BISHI DOCKYARD & ENGINE WORKS;
Tel. Ad: Wadadock
Y. Sugitani, manager
M. Miki, supt. engr. and asst. manager J. Tachihara, chief electrical engr. Y. Miura, dock master
M. Haramiishi, naval architect T. Fukushima, chief boiler maker N. Tomikawa, chief draftsman H. Tachikawa, electrical engr. N. Hayashida, engineer T. Matsumoto, engineer H. Murano, naval architect
MITSUBISHI GOSHI KWAISHA-10, Aioicho
Itchome
K. Kimura, manager
J. Morikawa, sub-manager
Y. Harada, acting do.
MITSU BISHI PAPER MILL Co., Ld.--
Takasago, Harima
S. Sho, president
T. Uyeda, manager M. Sone, sub-manager
Í. Fujino,
do.
M. Kashihawara, agent (Tokyo) J. Omori, agent (Kyoto, Osaka and
Kobe)
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, Import and Export Merchants-3, Kaigan dori Sanchome; Teleph. 108, 136, 448, 763, 849, 980, 1350; Tel. Ad: Mitsui
MITSUI GINKO-Sakaye-machi
T. Ono, manager
MOLLISON & Co.--48A, Akashi-machi; Tel.
Ad: Mollison; P. O. Box 110
W. M. Carst, signs per pro. C. H. Abbey
Agencies
Thames & Mersey Mar. Ince. Co., Ld. Liverpool and L'ilon & Globe Ince. Co. British & Foreign Mar. Insce. Co., Ld.
660
KOBE-HYOGO
MORSE, F. S., Cargo Surveyor, Weigher, Measurer and Auditor-82, Kyo-Machi and 44, Kitano-cho, Brent, W., 82, Kyo- machi and 2075, Fukiai-cho, Kumochi
MUSABHOY, M., Commission Merchant-95, Sannomiya-cho, 3 Chome; Teleph, 1763
A. H. Esmaljee, signs per pro.
NEW ZEALAND INSURANCE CO., LTD.-18-B;
Tel. Ad: Moana
G. K. Totton, manager for Japan
N. W. Nelson, sub-manager for Japan
E. Lord, accountant
C. W. Cheng, compradore O. W. Luke
Y. Ishigoro
M. Matsuda
C. Kum Tai
NICKEL & Co., LTD. 3 Kaigandori Nichome; P. O. Box. 318; Telph. 139 and 1741; Eastern Customs Office, 1263; Western Customis Office: 1659; Takahama Office: 1847; Shinzaike Yard: 72 (Mikage) Directors J. M. Collum, C. Holstein,
F. E. Popert, W. W. Campbell
C. Holstein, manager P. A. Jolles, secretary E. Bedellain J. F. James
Miss Fleming W. Steinbridge J. Plate
L. H. Petersen T. Mahone
T. Turner
Eastern Customs Office
A. Ehlers
Shinzaike Yard
K. Bothe
H. Thomsen
A. Frost
Shimonoseki Branch Office, No. 14,
Nishinabecho
G. B. Spain
R. Kean
Osaka Branch Oflice, No. 14, Tomijima cho Kitaku; Telph. No. West 2755
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA (Japan Mail Steam-
ship Co.), 10, Kaigan-dori, Ichome
T. Yatsui manager
Teinosuke Harada, assist, manager M. Midzukawa
K. Nakamura
A. Hayashi
K. Kuchiki
T. Chikazawa
D. Onda
do.
K. Kawakami, superintendent
Seida, asst. do.
NORTH & Co., Aerated Water Manufactur
ers-3, Kaigan-dori, Ichome; Tel. Ad: Franklin, Kobe; Telep. No. 1286
J. L. Thompson & Co., successors
J. W. Franklin K. Kanade
NORTH CHINA INSURANCE CO., LTD., THE
5, Bund; Telph. No. 753, Tel. Ad: Mandarin, Kobe; Home Office: 78. Cornhill, London, E. C.; Head Office: Shanghai
E. L. Krauss
OESTMANN & Co., A., Commission Mer-
chants-47
L. Bobsien
W. Richter F. Zabel
J. Willers
OLDENBURG, E., Bill and Bullion Broker,
40, Akushii-machi
E. Oldenburg
OLMSTED & Co., Merchants, Ohno; Tel. Ad;
Olmsted
F. H. Olmsted
K. Muramatsu
L. E. Charnley
OPPENHEIMER I. Successor to Oppenheimer
Frères--28, Harima-machi
E. Blum, signs per pro.
A. Kahn
Agencies
Comité des Assureurs Mar. de Paris Havre et Bordeaux et Marseille La Foncière l'Aurora
ORIENTAL HOTEL, LIMITED,--The Bund: Tel. Ad: Oriental; P. O. Box 55; Telephone 741 (L.D.)
Directors-A. H. Groom (chairman),
H. E. Reynell, G. A. Adam A. E. Tilston, manager
B. E. Cameron, passenger agent Mrs. L. Gorbam, matron Mrs. John Sampson, asst. do. John Sampson, supt. engineer S. Kema, cashier
K. Shimamura, assistant T. Nishijima,
do.
Ah Yeung, collector
ORNSTEIN & Co., B.-50, Harima-Machi
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA (Osaka Mercan- tile S.S. Co. LD.), Head Office: Osaka, Japan
President--T. Nakahashi Managing Director-K. Hori General Manager-T. Yamaoka
KOBE-HYOGO
Kobe Branch (Kaigan-dori, Sancliome)
Y. Hayashi, manager
T. Okohira, sub-manager
S. Shinjo,
do.
K. Yoshiyama, chief accountant
T. Uchida, coasting service dept.
Inland Sea and Coast-
Captains
P. C. Fullert
(president)
S. Saito
president)
W. H. Price
19.
K. Sakuma
G. Sobuye
F. Bischof
PABANEY, EBRAHIMBHOY, Merchant
Former Concession; Tel. Nos. 359 and 1299
H. M. Bhunji, manager
J. M. Dharamsey, assistant
PACIFIC MAIL S.S. Co.-53, Jarcline's Build❜g TOYO KISEN KABUSHIKI KAISHA
Tel. Ad: P. M. S. S. Co.-Solano
Do. T. K. K.--Toyokisen
Teleph. No. 1720
W. W. Campbell, agent
A. H. Brown
W. O. Hall
H. F. Palmer'
M. M. Williams
J. R Gibson
F. S. Morse, freight solicitor
PARBURY, HENTY & Co.-14, Mayemachi
PAUL & Co., Export Merchants--46A Harema-Machi; Tel. Ad: Bossigran & Pesale; P. O. Box 118, Nichi Machi.
H. T. Paul (Kobe) partner T. Paul (London)
H. F. da Costa
do.
PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL STEAM NAVI- GATION COMPANY-109, Ito machi; Tel. Ad: Peninsular; Telph. 1031
Alf. Woolley, chief agent in Japan
L. S. Hudson
H. V. Wilkinson
J. Weekes, gunner
PENNEY, GEO. J., Auctioneer, Estate and Commission Agent - 5, Ákoshi-machi
C. H. Abbey
K. Hirooka
G. Sawano N. Hase
Y. Yonezawa
PKU, DR. G. B., D.D.S., Dental Surgeon-
116, Higashi-machi
PIETZCKER, W.-18B; Tel. Ad: Pietzcher,
Kobe
Agent for :--
New Zealand Insurance Co., Ld. Verein Hamberger Assecuradeure Verein Bremer Seeversicherungs
Gesellschaften
PILOTS, LICENSED 38, Akashi-ma-chi ;
Tel. Ad: Anjin, Kobe; Teleph. 570
A. Fisher S. Fujiki H. D. James S. Kataoka
G. Katsura
(vice-
Y. Kaya
D. A. G. King
661
C. G. Kriedner K. Sakai T. Sakurai K. Sobajima J. S. Stevenson H. S. Yamada H.C.Russell (secre-
tary)
S. Kuramoto (assis-
tant sec.)
PоHOOмULL BROS, Merchants and Com- mission Agents--24, Kitanagasa-dori,. 3-Chome
POONAWALLA, N. M. A., Merchant and Commission Agent-28, Sannomiya-cho Sanchome; Tel. Ad: Poonawalla
D. A. Kader
M. A. Kader
T. Feedaally
PORTLAND & ASIATIC STEAMSHIP Co.-83 Jardine's Building; Tel. Ad: Portasia; Teleph. 1720
W. W. Campbell, agent
A. H. Brown W. O. Hall
H. F. Palmer
M. M. Williams
J. R. Gibson
F. S. Morse, freight solicitor
PRIEST, MARIANS & Co., LD., Merchts.-69-
H. G. Priest, mang.-diretr. (London) H. W. Lea, director (Yokohama)
F. Harrold, manager
RAEBURN & Co., M. A.-319, Sannomiya- cho Ichome; Tel. Ad: Sadka; P. O. Box No. 101
M. A. Raeburn
RASPE & Co., M., Merchants-91
M. Raspe (Hamburg) C. F. Oberlein (Tokio) Geo. Roeper
C. Refardt
E. Behr, signs per pro. Ch. de Eerens
O. Refardt
W. Stein
P. Walther
H. Bryden
Miss Ermi Hartmann
Branch at Shimonoseki and Moji
Ph. Happel, manager, signs per pro. F. von Schimmelmann
E. Fischer
662
Agencies
KOBE-HYOGO
Allgemeine See Versicherungs Ges. North British and Mercantile Ins. Co. Netherlands Fire Ins. Co., Est. 1845 British Anti-fouling Paint Co., Ld,
London
REIMERS & Co., OTTO, Merchants-8 Bund
Otto Reimers (Hamburg)
M. Pors
M Blümer
do.
(Yokohama)
E. Crevatin, signs per pro.
A. Nirrnheim, do
J. Schaumaun
A. Mosch
A. Cramer
W. Marr
Agency
Royal Insurance Company, Ld. (Fire)
REYNELL & Co., H. E., Wine and Spirit Merchants and Commission Agents-107, Ito-machi; Tel. Ad: Reynell; Teleph. No. 65
H. E. Reynell
H. E. Keynoll, jun. E. Reynell
RHAZIS, M. A., Import and Export Com- mission Agent-8 of 32, Shimoyamate- dori Nichome; P. O. Box No. 158; Tel. Ad: Rhazis
M. A. Rhazis
S. Suehiro
RICHMOND, GEORGE D., D.M.D. Dentist--66,
Naka-machi
RISING SUN PETROLEUM CO., Ld. - 53, Hari-
ma-machi
M. Spencer Smith, managing director
(Yokohama)
J. S. Cartwright, managing director
(Kobe)
E. C. Davis, director (Yokohama)
R. N. Postlethwaite, accountant S. Stephens
J.W. Farbridge, engn, in charge (Noda)
ROHDE & CO., CARL, Merchants-104
G. Petersen
R. Fachtmann (Yokohama)
A. Seekamp,
do.
P. Gayen (Hamburg)
M. Kropp, signs per pro.
A. Pabl
J. Collaço Agencies
Münchener Ruckversicherungs Ges. Neptunus Assekuranz Cie., Hamburg L'Union Fire Insurance Co., Paris
ROTHSPRACK, P. E. H., Baker and Confec-
tioner, Kitanagasa-dori-3-Chome
SALE & FRAZAR, LTD., General Import and Export Merchants-46, Harima-machi; Telp. 349; Tel. Ad; Sale
F. G. Sale (Yokohama), managing dir. Frederick G.Sale, director (Yokohama) V. M. Sale,
do. (London) E. W. Frazar, R. J. Kirby,
C. V. Sale (London)
H. Carew
W. P. James
Agency
do.
do. (Tokyo)
American and Manchurian Steamship
Line
SAMUEL SAMUEL & Co. Ld., 54, Harima
machi: Tel. Ad: Orgomanes
J. R. Black, manager
C. W. Marshall H. Renault
F. S. Boyes G. R. Jackson A. Mitchell H. W. Wilson
Miss H. M. T. Nicolle
Agencies
Shell Transport & Trading Co. Shire Line of Steamers
East Asiatic Co., Ld., of Copenhagen Swedish East Asiatic Co.
Russian East Asiatic S. S. Co.
Robert Dollar S. S. Co. of San Frisco. Russian Volunteer Fleet
Austrian Lloyd's Steam NavigationCo. Osaka Shosen Kaisha
China Commercial S. S. Co., Ld. United States "Lloyd's"
Compania Transatlantica de Barcelona Alliance Assurance, Co., Ld. Union Insurance Society of Canton, Id. Liverpool & London and Globe Insce. Asiatic Petroleum Co., Limited National Bank of China, Ld. China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld. Mannheim Insurance Co.
Firemen's Fund Insurance Corporation Indemnity Mutual Mar. Assce. Co., Ld. The Great Trans-Siberian Route Imperial Government Railway of
Japan
South Manchurian Railway
SANYO RAILWAY Co.; Main Line-Kobe-
Shimonoseki; Head Office: Hyogo
T. Ushiba, president
SCHEUER & Co. (Iwashita & Co.), Exporters and Commision Agents-38, Sannomiya cho, 1-chome; Tel. Ad: Scheuero, Teleph. 1415 (L.D.); P. O. Box 141, Sannomiya
M. G. Scheuer (New York) P. C. Scheuer do.
I
C. Griffin
S. Iwashita
(Yokohama)
do.
H. C. Norman, manager (Kobe)
KOBE-HYOGO
SCHRAMM & Co., PAUL-Ono Hamabedori
1-chome, No. 20 Ernst Hasche A. Rademacher
SEAMEN'S INSTITUTE 24 Shymoyamate
Dori, 2-chome
SELLES HERMANOS (Sellés Bros.)-12, Naka-
Jamate-dori, 1-chome
Juan Sellés José Sellés
SHEWAN, TOMES & Co., Merchants-63; Tel.
Ad: Keechong
R. Shewan (Hongkong)
C. A. Tomes,
do.
H. E. Green, signs the firm
J. M. Gordon
C. J. Williams
J. M. A. Guterres
A. M. P. Victal
H. Spahn
Agencies
American Asiatic Steamship Co. China and Manila Steamship Co. S., T. & Co's. New York Line Steamers Equitable Life Assur. Society of U.S. Green Island Cement Company, Ld. Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co.,Ld. New Zealand Insce. Co., Ld.
SIDER, WOLFF & Co., Merchants--- 60, Uramachi; Teleph. No. 1445 (L.D.), San- nomyia; P. O. Box No. 96; Tel. Ad: Siber; Home Office: Zurich, Switzerland
H. Siber (Milan)
A. Wolff (Zurich)
do.
J. Kern,
H. Abegg (Yokohama)
Ed. Bosshart
F. Ehrismann
do.
do.
E. Baumgartner, sigus per pro. E. Deuber
SIEGFRIED & Co., JOHN C., Merchants-
Shimoyamate-dori, Sanchome, 36-41
J. U. Siegfried (San Francisco) C. J. Siegfried
do.
W. H. Siegfried do.
SIMON, EVERS & Co., Merchants--101-2
J. Saenger (Hamburg)
M. Kaufmaun (Yokohama)
A. H. Hansen, signs per pro. H. Holste
H. Rothe
H. Steinfeld
663
Agencies
Aachen and Munich Fire Insce. Co. United Swiss Marine Insurance Cos.
SINGER SEWING MACHINE Co.--28A, Naka-
machi
R. J. Tobin (Yokohama), general mana- ger for Japan
H. H. Kempf, agent
O. U. Sugeta, manager
Singleton, BENDA & Co., LD., Merchants Charles Benda, managing-dir. (London) J. F Fitzpatrick,
do.
do.
G. D. Clarke, manager
J. F. Tomkins
SKIPWORTH, HAMMOND & Co., Tailors,
Drapers and Outfitters-30
W. G. Skipworth (London)
H. E. Cooke, signs per pro. L. A. Garland, cutter
D. R. Tennent, assistant
SLOANE, W. & J.-9, Hamabe-dori, 2-chome,
Ohno, General
Teleph. 1411
Export Merchants;
H.S. Wheeler, agent
Peter Fraser, sub-agent Gustave Sjobeck
Smith, Baker Co., Merchants-3 and 4 Elliott R. Smith, president (New York)
J. C. Wirtz
D. B. Taylor, manager for Japan
J. M. Macdonald
A. C. Dryer, manager (Taipeh) J. L. A. Maher
Agencies
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
South British Insurance Co., Ld.
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY
President J, D. Thomson Vice-president J. L. Robertson Committee-John Hall, J. M. C
Galletly, J. Alston, A. W. Crombie, Jas. Rankin
Sec. and Treasurer-W. Ross
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK- No. 49, Harima-machi; Telph. No. 351; Tel. Ad: Socony, Standline, Lubriwax
C. W. Atkinson, manager H. L. Frey, asst.
do.
F. L. Taverner A. L. Stanton Miss Treadway Mrs. C. J. Williams R. Hargreaves J. C. Goold
J. W. Schoening S. M. Josepli
661
W. T. Crane
J. Cameron, Yokoya godowns Oriental Freight Department
C. J. F. Lucas
Thompson & Bedford Department
S. E. Lucas Shimonoseki
J. L. Jensen
Itozaki
W. H. Gill
J. E. Conradt
KOBE-HYOGO
STRACHAN & Co., LD., W. M., Import, Ex- port, and General Merchants No. 1, Kaigan-dori, Telph. No. 292 and 642
(L. D.)
W. M. Strachan (London), director J. P. Reid,
do.,
(lo.
do.,
do.
C. G. Town, manager
C. H. Pearson,
W. G. Fox
E. P. Stroud
R. F. Stephen
G. Upton L. Fearon
Agencies
Northern Assurance Co, Ld., of London Queen Insurance Co, Ld., of Liverpool London and Provincial Marine and
General Insce. Co., Ld.
Crossley Bros., Lal., Openshaw Oil and Gas Producer Plants (sole agents) Turton Bros. & Matthews, L., Shef-
field (sole agents)
STRAUSS & Co., G., Export Merchants-96, Higashi-machi; P.O. Box 4; Tel. No. 1,379;
Tel. Ad: Strauss
G. Strauss (London) J. Strauss, Sr. do. J. Strauss, Jr. do.
O. H. Hahn, manager J. W. Miller
A. Greppi
O. Bruell
STROME & Co., Silk, Straw and Chip Braid and General Merchants-5and 6, Isogami- dori Itchome, Ono; Tel. Ad: Strome, Kobe; P. O. Box 84; Head Office: (9, Basinghall St., London, E. C.
C. J. Strome
O. D. Strome (Yokohama), signs per
pro.
Douglas Cox, signs per pro.
STUCKEN, EDMUND, Merchant-66; Tel. Ad:
Stucken
SUMITOMO BANK-Sakaye-machi, 1-chome
K. Sumitomo, proprietor
Y. Yamashita, manager
J. Tanaka, signs per pro.
SUMITOMO (Copper Sales Department)
Y. Yamashita, manager
S. Tanaka, signs per pro.
SUMITOMO WAREHOUSE-Minato-machi, 1-
chome (Hiogo)
G. Mori, manager
T. Kihara, signs per pro.
SUTTOR. N., Commissioner in the East for the, Government of New South Wales Australia-Kobe Building, Rooms 13, 15 and 16; Tel. Ad: Suttor, Kobe
H. L. Ellis, secretary
TALLERS, W., Merchant and Commission
Agent 78B, Kyo-machi, Kobe
W. Tallers
N. Dighan
TATA, SONS & Co., Merchants and Com- mission Agents-38A, Nakamachi; Tel. Ad: Tata; Head Office: Bombay; branches at New York, Paris, Lyons, Rangoon Shanghai, Kobe and Tata, Ltd., London
D. J. Tata (Bombay) R. J. Tata (London) R. D. Tata (Paris)
N. D. Tata, signs per pro. B. M. Batki, do.
H. Hino S. Isikawa G. Yamamura K. Matsumoto N. Honda T. Oai
TAYLOR, COOPER & Co., LD., General Merchants, Shipbrokers and Commission Agents
A. J. Hall, director (London)
F. Hamm, director do.
W. Grautoff,
do. (Kobe)
E. H. Summers, do. do.
TEVERSON & MACTAVISH, Bill, Bullion and Share Brokers-59B, Naniwa-machi; Tel. No. 1083
H. F. Teverson
A. D. Mactavish
THIRTY-FOURTH BANK (SANJUSHI GINKO)
LD. Sakaimachi, 3-chome, Kobe
H. Arimura, manager
THOMAS, & Co., Merchants-32; Tel. Ad:
Thomasius
Gottfr. Thomas
Alex. F. Jahn, signs per pro. H. Detjens
W. Babick
Agencies
The Continental Ins. Co. of Mannheim Jebsen Line of Steamers
KOBE-HYOGO
Steamers of H. Diederichsen, Kiel Salvage Str. "Protector," Hongkong Kalle & Co. A. G., Biebrich a Rh- Vereinigte Schmirgel und Masch. Fabrik. A. G.vormalsOpenheim & Co. and Schlesinger & Co., Hanover, Hainholz.
THOMPSON & CO., J.L., Chemists and Aerated Water Manufacturers-3, Kaigan-dori, Ichome; Tel. Ad: Franklin; Tel. No. 1286
J. W. Franklin
D. M. Bruce
H. J. Griffiths
THOMSON, J. D., Insurance Agent-52
Harima Machi
Agency
Royal Exchange Assce. Corp. (Fire)
THORNICRAFT, T. C., L.R.C.P. (E.), M.R.C.S.--94,
Uramachi
Tokyo Soko Kaisha-No. 10, Aioicho 1 chome, Kobe, Landing and Shipping Agents, Stevedores, Customs Brokers and Warehousemen; Tel. Ad: Soko
T. Tahara, manager
G. Kawai, act, sub-manager
TOR HOTEL LD., THE--P. O. Box 184
Directors-F. Popert (chairman), C.
Holstein, G. H. Wymark
C. W. Cooper, secretary
C. V. Koeing, manager
G. Matsuo, sub do.
H. F. Sanborn, agent
Li Jackson, cashier
TOYO KISEN KAISHA-7, Kaigandori
K. Nakashima, manager
T. Washida
C. Hara
TUSKA, E. H., Merchant-22, Naniwa-machi
E. H. Tuska
UNION CHURCH (See under Churches)
VACUUM OIL CO., of Rochester, New York, U.S.A.-26B, Naniwa-machi; Tel. Ad:
Vacuum
H. E. Daunt, general magr. for Japan J. T. Montgomery, asst. gen. mangr. A. F. Guterres
R. F. A. Malabar
T. F. Malloy, chief of techn. dept. K. L. Andersen
J. W. Webb (Osaka) R. Holmes (Moji)
VAN NIEROP & Co., ED. L. -18B
R. Werdermann, general manager L. van Houten, signs per pro.
Agencies
665
East Asiatic Co., Ld., of Copenhagen
(Wood Dept.)
Java-China-Japan Line S.S. Co. Koninklyke Paketvaart Mij. Steamship Company Netherlands
VANTINE & Co., A. A., Merchants-113 Kita Machi; Head Office-New York
Geo. B. Pattison, manager
E. F. Botelho
VENDRELL, M., Merchant-33, Shimoyama-
te-dori, Sanchome
M. Vendrell
VILLE DE PARIS (Gysin Frères), Tamburin
Palmera
WAGGOTT, W., Shipchandler, Compradore, and Naval Contractor--125, Kaigan-dori, Nichome
WEINBERGER & Co., C.-1, Ikutamaye
C. Weinberger (Yokohama)
C. Wilckens, signs per pro. T. H. Schmidt
A: Stadtaus
WHYMARK & Co., GEO., Wine, Spirit and Provision Merchants-81, Division St.
M. Russell H. Russell
G. Fedman
G. C. Swan
WHYMARK & AILION, Auctioneers, Valuers, Commission Agents, Surveyors, &c.-72, Kyo Machi; Tel. Ad: Pilot; Telph. 2235 (L. D.)
G. H. Whymark
J. A. Ailión
WINCKLER & Co., Merchants-100
J. Winckler (Werben)
F. Danckwerts (Hamburg) F. Fachtmann (Yokohama) J. Westphalen
F. Gensen
A. Schroeder, signs per pro. G. Werckmeister
J. Hausherr
W. Oestmann
H. Wagner
(Ono)
G. Seelhorst
do.
C. Th. J. Kufferath
do.
S. B. Mehta
do.
K. Voss (Nagoya)
M. Grube
Miss Stange
A. Kruse
666
KOBE-HYOGO
WITKOWSKI & Co., J., Merchants-118-125
H. Blum (Yokohama)
L. Lazarus, signs per pro.
A. E. Caro,
M. Gottlinger
do.
YANGTSZEINSURANCE ASSOCIATION LD.-52,
Harim a-machi
J. D. Thomson, agent
Agency
Insurance Co. of North America
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LD.-Sakaye-
machi
Tetsutaro Aoki, manager Hirozo Mori, sub-manager Kyotaro Eiyakawa, signs per pro
INSURANCE OFFICES
OFFICES
AGENTS
Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance Company
Allgemeine See Versicherungs Gesellschaft. Alliance Assurance Company
Alliance Assurance Company, Limited Alliance Assurance Company, Limited
Allianz Versicherungs Act. Gesellschaft, Berlin......
Association of Underwriters and Insurance Brokers.. Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company Badische Schiffahrts Assec. Ges., Mannheim Board of Underwriters, New York........... Boston Board of Marine Underwriters...
British and Forcigu Marine Insurance Company British Dominions Marine Insurance Co.
Bureau Veritas, Paris
Canton Insurance Office, Limited
China Traders' Insurance Company, Ltd..
Colonial Mutual Insurance Company (Marine)
Comité des Asurs. Maritimes de Paris, Havre & Bordeaux Commercial Union Assurance Company
Commercial Union Assurance Company, Limited Continental Insurance Co. of Mannheim
Düsseldorfer Allg. Versicherungs Gesellschaft (Mne.). Equitable Life Assurance Society of U.S.A. Federal Insurance Co...................
Fireman's Fund Insurance Company.
Germanicher Lloyd, Berlin
Glasgow Salvage Association
Guardian Assurance Company, Ld.
Guardian Assurance Company, Limited
Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Limited Indemnity Mutual Marine Assurance Co., Ld. Indemnity Mutual Marine
-----
Internationaler Lloyd, Vers. Act. Ges. Berlin. Kais. Kön. Priv. Riunione Adriatica di Sic. in Trieste La Foncière L'Aurora
Lancashire Insurance Company (Fire and Life).. Law Union and Crown Insurance (Fire)
Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Company Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Company Liverpool Salvage Association.
Lloyd's, Maritime Insurance.
London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Co.......
Simon, Evers & Co. M. Raspe & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Samuel, Samuel & Co. C. Illies & Co. Cornes & Co.
Findlay, Richardson & Co C. Illies & Co. Cornes & Co. Berigny & Co. Mollison & Co. Bowden Bros. & Co., Ld. A. Meier & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co. Samnel Samuel & Co. Bowden Bros. & Co. I. Oppenheimer Berigny & Co. Browne & Co. Thomas & Co. C. lllies & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co. Hutchison & Co. Samuel, Samuel & Co. C. Illies & Co. Cornes & Co. Hutchison & Co. Smith, Baker Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co. Samuel Samuel & Co., Ld. Cornes & Co. C. Illies & Co.
C. Illies & Co. I. Oppenheimer Cornes & Co.
American Trading Co. Mollison & Co. Samuel Samuel & Co. Cornes & Co. Cornes & Co. Hutchison & Co.
London and Provincial Marine & Genl. Ins. Co., Ld. W. M. Strachan & Co.
London Assurance Corporation
London Salvage Association......
L'Union Fire Insurance Company, Paris....
H. Ahrens & Co., Nacht. Cornes & Co.
Cari Rohde & Co.
KOBE-HYOGO
INSURANCE OFFICES.-Continue l
OFFICES
Maritime Insurance Company, Limited Münchener Rück-Versicherungs Gesellschaft. National Board of Mar. Underwriters, New York National Assurance Company of Ireland Neptunus Assekuranz Cic., Hamburg.
Netherlands Fire Insurance Company, Est. 1845 Newcastle Protecting and Indemnity Assn. New Zealand Insurance Co., Lel.
New Zealand Insurance Company
Nippon Fire Insurance Company of Osaka. North British and Mercantile Insurance Company North China Insurance Co., Ld.
North of England Protecting and Indemnity Ass. North Queensland Insurance Company. Northern Assurance Company of London Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society. Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Desterreichischer Phoenix, Vienna Palatine Insurance Company, Limited Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld., of London
Phoenix Fire Assurance Company, of London...
Providence Washington Insurance Co., New York. Providentia Allgem. Vers. Act. Ges. Zurich Queen Insurance Company, of Liverpool. Rhenania Vers. Action Ges. Koln
Royal Exchange Assurance (Underwriting Agency)... Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation.
Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation (Marine) Royal Insurance Company
Schweiz Allgemeine Versicherungs Ges., Zurich(Marine) Scottich Union and National Insurance Co., London South British Fire & Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Sea Insurance Co., Ld.
St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.
Standard Life Assurance Co.
Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Sun Fire Office.
Sun Insurance Office
Sun Life Assce. Co. of Canada
Thames and Mersey Marine luce. Co. Ld..
Underwriting Association, London...
Union Assurance Society, Ld.
Union Insurance Society of Canton
Union Insurance Society
Union Internationale, Cie. d'Assce., Anvers (Marine)...
Union Marine Insurance Company, Limited
United Dutch Insec. (Marine)
Browne & Co.
AGENTS
Carl Rohde & Co. Cornes & Co. Berigny & Co. Carl Rohde & Co. Raspe & Co. Berigny & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co. N. W. Nelson Kobe Pier Company Raspe & Co. E. L. Krauss, agent Berigny & Co.
Bowden Bros. & Co., Ld. W. M. Strachan & Co. H. Ahrens & Co., Nachf. Cornes & Co.
Dodwell & Co., Ld. C. Illies & Co.
Koerting, Bume & Reif Wm. Kerr & Co.
China & Japan Trading Co. Dodwell & Co.
C. Illies & Co.
W. M. Strachan & Co.
C. Illies & Co. Hutchison & Co. J. D. Thomson Cornes & Co.
Otto Reimers & Co. C. Illies & Co.
667
China and Japan Trading Co. Smith, Baker Co.
Hutchison & Co., Ld. Dodwell & Co.
Dodwell & Co., Ld.
Findlay, Richardson & Co., Ld.
Findlay Richardson & Co., Ld. Browne & Co.
Cornes & Co.
Mollison & Co. Cornes & Co.
S. J. David & Co.
Samuel Samuel & Co., Ld. H. Lucas & Co.
. Illies & Co.
Findlay, Richardson & Co. Cornus & Co.
United Kingdom Mutual S. S. Assurance Assn., Ld.... Berigny & Co.
Cmited Swiss Marine Insurance Co.
Western Assurance Company
World Marine Insurance Co.
Yorkshire Fire and Life Insce. Company,
Yorkshire Fire and Life Insurance Co. (Fire)
Yorkshire Insurance Co.
Yangtze Insurance Association.....
Simon, Evers & Co.
Findlay, Richardson & Co., Ld.
Berigny & Co.
Berigny & Co.
Dodwell & Co., Ld.
Taylor, Cooper & Co., Ltd.
J. W. Thompson, agent
MOJI AND SHIMONOSEKI
These two towns are situated one on each side of Shimonoseki Straits, the western entrance of the Inland Sea-the former on the north and the latter on the south side, The interests of both towns, so far as shipping is concerned, are identical, Shimonoseki is under the jurisdiction of Yamaguchi, 51 miles away, and Moji under that of Fukuoka, 47 miles away. The foreign merchants have their offices on the side that suits their own convenience, but the principal banks and shipping offices are at Moji. There is a fairly strong tidal current through the Straits, but the anchorage, which is at Moji, is only affected by an eddy, and good holding ground is general. Steamers entering from the West can get pilots at Rokura Light, where boats have to stop in any case for medical inspection and harbour master's instructions. From the eastward this inspection takes place at Hezaki Light. Means of transport are good. Liners run regularly to all foreign ordinary ports of call; and while from Shimonoseki the Sanyo Railway taps the North, from Moji the Kiushiu Railway taps the South of Japan. Excellent foreign accommodation can be had at the Shimonoseki Station Hotel, belonging to the Imperial Railway Bureau. This Railway has also two large ferry boats plying between Moji and the Shimonoseki Station, while a ten-minute ferry plies between the usual landing places at Moji and Shimonoseki. Waterworks are completed for Shimonoseki and are in course of construction at Moji. Both places are lit by electricity and are connected by telephone with the principal towns, from Kumamoto and Nagasaki in the South, to Tokyo in the North East. Imports for 1908 amounted to Yen 24,640,360, Exports to Yen 22,742,722. Imports consist principally of machinery, iron ore, sugar, raw cotton, and flour; and Exports of coal, cotton yarn, and rice. The quantity of coal exported from Moji and Shimonoseki in 1906 was 1,166,085, tons; 3,381 vessels engaged in foreign trade entered Shimonoseki and Moji in 1907, representing a total tonnage of 4,408,473. The population of Shimonoseki at the end of 1908 was 56,857, and of Moji 56,789. It should be specially noted that photographing and sketching are forbidden within a radius of ten miles round Shimonoseki and Moji on land and seil. The law in this respect is strictly enforced and ignorance is not accepted as an excuse.
and
DIRECTORY
BAGNALL & HILLES, Moji
T. Kato, manager
Browne & Co., Merchants-3,338 Kiu-
Moji; Telephone No. 260
C. M. Birnie (Kobe)
Horace Nutter (Moji)
Leonard Birnie
J. Jesselsen
Agencies
Apcar Line of Steamers
Austrian Lloyd Steam Navigation Co. British India Steam Nav, Co., Ld.
Glen Line of Steamers
North China Insurance Company, Ld Yangtsze Insurance Asstn., Limited New Zealand Insurance Company Sun Fire Office
P. & O. Steam Navigation Company Lloyd's (Sanyo District) Java-China-Japan Line of Steamers Commercial Union Insurance Co., Ish British Dominions Mar. Insce. Co., L American Asiatic S. S. Co.
CITY COMMERCIAL SCHOOL-Shimonoseki M. Henry, English instructor
Royal Exchange Assurance Corp'n
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
SHIMONOSEKI AND MOJI
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN (Shimonoseki)
Also
AUSTRO-HUNGARY
Consul--E. A. Griffiths
Shipping Clerk-A. H. Clarke Writer-Y. Musashi
GERMANY; Tel. Ad: Germania, Shimo-
noseki
Consul-F. Reinsdorf
Secretary O. Kitzel Interpreter-S. Tsunashima
NORWAY.
Vice-Consul-N. B. Reid
CUSTOM HOUSE,
Director J. Kasaharu
Chief at Shimonoseki-K. Ogata Chief of General Office--J. Koga
Inspector A. Kaku
do.
do.
do.
Collector T. Matsuda Appraiser-H. Narabayashi
HARBOUR OFFICE
Harbour Master--J. Tanaka Chief Boarding Officer-K. Akashi ChiefQuarantineOfficer-S.Yoshikawa Chief Medical Officer-T. Fukuda Chief Veterinary Officer- K. Kumai
Ad:
HOLME, RINGER & Co. (Wuriu Shokwai)
Merchants Shimonoseki Tel. Wuriu; Telephone 138 and 451
N. B. Reid, manager
R. Jenkin
John Graham
Agencies
Chartered Bank of I., A. and China Lloyd's (Moji)
American & Oriental Transport Line Asiatic Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Barber Line of Steamers
Ben Line of Steamers
Brocklebank Line of Steamers Canadian Pacific Steamship Co. China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. China Navigation Company, Ld. Messageries Maritimes Mogul Line of Steainers Northern Pacific S.S. & R. Co. Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. Pacific Mail Steamship Company Portland & Asiatic S.S. Co. Royal Mail Steam Packet Co. Russian Volunteer Fleet
Toyo Kisen Kaisha (Oriental S.S. Co.) Warrack Line of Steamers Weir Steamship Line
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of U.S.A Norwich Union Fire Insurance Soc.,Ld. Ocean Accident & Guaran. Corp'n, Ld.
669
Union Insurance Soc. of Canton, Ld. Western Assurance Company
American Trading Company Dodwell & Company, Limitedi Taikoo Sugar Refining Company Bank Line, Limited.
HUSTON, DR. R. J.-Shimonoseki; Tel. Ad:
Huston
IRISU SHOKWAI (C. ILLIES & Co.), Mer- chants-3,397 Kyu-Moji; Tel. Ad: Irisu; Telephone 221
C. Illies (Hamburg) H. J. Holm (Hamburg) C. Illies, jr. (Hamburg) Rud. Polil (Yokohama)
P. Marx
Agencies
Hamburg Amerika Linie
Dampfschiffs-Rhederei "Union" Act.
JARDINE,
MATHESON & Co., LD.-2,
Karatomachi
R. G. Munro, agent
R. G. Bell
Agencies
Indo-China S. N. Co., Ld. "Indra" Line, Ltd.
Eastern & Australian S. S. Co., Ld.
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Ld. China Sugar Refining Co., L. Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Cor. New York Lubricating Oil Co.
LAUCHT, H. W.; Tel. Ad: Laucht, Moji;
Teleph. No. 433 (L. D.)
"MEIDI-YA" GOME KAISHA-- Moji, Pro- vision Dealers; Tel. Ad: Meidiya: Teleph. 263, 820
M. Miyaji, manager T. Ando, sub-manager
(See Advertisement)
MIDZUSHIMA & Co. (Midzushima Goshi Kaisha) Coal Merchants-Higashi Hon- machi, Nichome; Telephone 126; Tel. Ad: Midzushima
J. Midzushima
M. Ohno
K. Nakamura
T. Yoshitomi Y. Yamada (Kobe)
MITSUBISHI GOSHI KWAISHA; Tel. Ad:
Iwasaki
K. Aoki, manager
N. Fukuda, sub-manager
(See Advertisement)
670
SHIMONOSEKI AND MOJI-NAGASAKI
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LD.; Tel. Ad:
Mitsui; Telephone 63, 64, 65, 629
1. Nakanaru, manager
M. Yoshihiro, signs per pro. Y. Ogita,
do.
(See Advertisement)
NICKEL, C. & Co., Ld., Stevedores
Geo. B. Spain, manager
R. Kean
T. Ganda
T. Hagiwara
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA (Moji and Shimo- noseki); Telep. Moji 42, 43; Shimonoseki 13, 110
A. Shimamura, manager
K. Masuda, chief clerk
OSAKASHOSEN KAISHA (Mojiand Shim'seki.)
S Hiroi, manager
F. Atsumi, signs per pro.
RASPE & Co., M., Merchants-11, Higashi- nabe-machi, Shimonoseki; Telep. No. 203
P. Happel, manager
H. V. Schimmelmann E. Fischer
SAMUEL SAMUEL & Co., LTD., Importers, Exporters, Insurance and Steamship Agents-86, Nishinabe-Cho,Shimoneseki; Tel. Ad: Orgomanes
Samuel Samuel, director (London) W. F. Mitchell,
do.
do.
E. C. Davis, manag. director (Y'hama)
W. H. Samuel,
W. H. Levy,
G. G. Samuel,
H. V. Summers,
do. (London)
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
(Whama)
R. C. Grahamn, do.
Agencies
H. Sykes Thompson, manager
A. M. Sweet, signs per pro.
"Shell" Transport & Trading Co., Ld.
"Shire" Line of Steamers, Ltd. Danish East Asiatic Co., Limited, of
Copenhagen
Swedish East Asiatic Co., Limited, of
Goteborg
Russian East Asiatic Co., Limited, of
St. Petersburg
International Banking Corporation of
New York
Law Union & Rock Insurance Co., Ld. Palatine Insurance Co., Ltd. North China Insurance Co., Ltd. Asiatic Petroleum Co, Ltd. Anglo-Saxon Petroleuin Co., Ltd. International Sleeping Car and Ex-
press Trains Co. (The Great Trans Siberian Route)
Manufacturers' Life Ins. Co. of Canada The Robert Dollar Co of San Francisco Compania Transatlantica of Barcelona Messrs T. & J. Brocklebank, Ltd. The Royal Mail Steam Packet Co.
SANYO HOTEL --Shimonosekil'wayStation
S Terosawa, manager
T. Matsumoto, asst.-manager
SIEMENS SCHOCKERT DENKI KABUSHIK! KAISIA, Electrical Engineers and Con- tractors -19, Nishi Hon-machi; Tel. Ad: Siemens Moji; Telephone 114 (LD)
G. Ihara, elec. engr., manager K. Sekiguchi, elec. engr.
STANDARD OIL Co.
J. L. E. Jensen A. E. McGlew
J. Julien
TAIMO YOKO, Coal, Import, Export and General Commission Merchants, Owners
Norrona"; Tel. Ad: Taimoyoko
3.5.
S. Orita, signs per pro.
VACUUM OIL Co., Moji
R. Holmes, manager
HAKATA
RISING SUN PETROLEUM Co., Lp.--212, Higashi Nakasu, Hakata Tel. Ad: Petrosam, Teleph. 205
S. D. Westcott, manager
Oil Refinery, Saitozaki, near Hakata
C. H. Schoolmaster, manager
F. W. Coates
A. J. Slater L. T. Hammond
O. B. Males
NAGASAKI
Nagasaki is a city of great antiquity, and in the early days of European in- tercourse with the Far East was the most important seat of the foreign trade with Japan. It is admirably situated on the south-western coast of the Island of Kiushiu. A melancholy interest attaches to the neighbourhood as the scene of the extinction of Christianity in the empire and the extermination of the professors of that religion in 1637. At the entrance to the harbour lies the celebrated island of Pappenberg, where thousands of Christians are said to have been thrown over the high cliff rather than go through the form of trampling on the Cross. Not far from Nagasaki is also the village of Mogi, where 37,000 Christians suffered death in defending themselves against the forces sent to subdue them. When the Christian religion was crushed and the foreigners expelled, to the Dutch alone was extended the privilege of trading with Japan, and they were confined to a small plot of ground at Nagasaki called Deshima. By the Treaty of 1858 Nagasaki was one of the ports opened to British trade on the 1st July in the following year.
As
On entering the harbour of Nagasaki no stranger can fail to be struck with the admirable situation of the town and the beautiful panorama of hilly scenery opened to his view. The harbour is a land-locked inlet deeply indented with small bays, about three miles long with a width varying from half-a-mile to a mile. A reclamation scheme was commenced in October, 1897, and completed in January 1905; 147 acres were reclaimeil, and retaining walls measuring nearly five miles in length have been built in front of what were formerly the foreign concessions at Deshima and Megasaki. Simultaneously the harbour has been deepened. The cost of the work was four million yen.
The town is on the eastern side of the harbour, and is about two miles long by about three-quarters of a mile in extreme width. The foreign quarter adjoins the town on the south side. The chief mercantile houses are situated on the bund facing the harbour, behind which are a few streets running parallel with it, and there are a number of private residences on the hill-side. There are English Protestant and Roman Catholic churches, three clubs (Nagasaki, Bowling and International) and a Masonic Lodge. There are several hotels, of which the largest are the Hotel de France, the Cliff House, the Hotel du Japan, and the Belle Vue Hotel. The Mitsu Bishi Company own three docks in Nagasaki, the largest of which has a length of 714 feet
on the keel blocks and a depth of water at ordinary spring tides of 34ft. 6in. a shipbuilding centre the place is rapidly developing, and since 1889 several large ocean-going vessels have been launched there. The vessels built at the yard and completed for sea in 1908 included two turbine steamers of 13,500 tons each for the Toyo Kisen Kaisha; two twin-screw passenger and cargo steamers of 8,600 tons each for the Nippon Yusen Kaisha; a 23-knot turbine despatch vessel for the Imperial Navy; and a twin-sert w turbine passenger steamer, of 3,300 tons, for the Japanese Imperial Volunteer Fleet. The work in hand in 1909 included eight large ships, their aggregate tonnage being 61,200, The waterworks, owing to the growth of the town, were found to be insufficient for its wants and a large extension of the works was completed in March, 1904. The reservoirs hold 405,240,000 gallons, and there are three filter beds and a service reservoir. The railway develop- ments of recent years have made it possible, with a brief sea passage of ten minutes, between Moji and Shimonoseki, to travel by rail from Nagasaki to Kobe and thence to Tokyo. The climate in Nagasaki is mild and salubrious, and there are several very popular health resorts in the neighbourhood, the most famous being Mount Unzen.
In 1907 the imports were valued at Yen 16,230,501, an increase of Yen 2,597,675 compared with the figures for 1906, while exports decreased by Yen 858,800, the value being Yen 5,513,744.
Though the foreign trade has fallen off considerably, the population of the port has increased greatly. In December, 1908, it was returned as 175,936, nearly double what it was fifteen years ago. The foreign population, exclusive of Chinese, was 419. The Chinese number about 850. An English newspaper, the Nagasaki Press, is published daily.
672
NAGASAKI
DIRECTORY
AHRENS & Co., H., Nachf., Merchants
A. Gese, signs per pro.
A. Nestmann
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd
London Assurance Corporation Chargeurs Réunis
BALMES, YVE, Navy Contractor
J. Sirot, successor H. Balmės
L. Salvéry
BANZAI AERATED WATER FACTORY-44,
Sagarimatsu
R. Walker
BOEDDINGHAUs, C. E., Merchant
H. Peters
Agencies
Hamburg-America Line of Steamers Bureau Veritas, Paris German Lloyd's, Berlin
Transatlantic Marine Insce. Co., Berlin Hamburg and Bremen Underwriters Agrippina M., R. & L. Insur. Co., Col. Oberrheinische Insce. Co., Mannheim Rheinisch Westfalischer Lloyd Deutsche Transport-Vers. Gesel., Berlin Deutsche Ruck and Mitv. Gesel., Berlin Netherlands Fire Insce. Co., Hague Northern Assurance Co., London Eidgenossische Trans. Insur.Co. Zürich. Neuer Schweizerischer Lloyd Providentia General-Ins. Co., Vienna Salamandra Ins. Co., St. Petersburg Russian Co. Sea, Land, and liverInsur Allianz Versicherungs Actien Gesel,
Berlin
General Insurance Co., for Sea, Land,
and River Transport, Dresden Kolner Lloyd, Allgemeine Vers. Act.
Gesellschaft, Koln
Sjoforsakrings Aktiebolaget " Ocean,"
Goteborg
Deutscher Lloyd, Transport Vers.
Act. Gesellschaft, Berlin
BOWIE, ROBERT I., M.D., Medical Practitioner
CARL SCRIBA & Co., Import, Export and General Merchants, Mining Engineers, Landing and Shipping Agents, Navy Contractors, &c. Tel, Ad: Scriba, Nagasaki
C. P. H. Scriba
Hans Wolf, signs per pro. Julius Dennay
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Chairman-Tatsujiro Hashimoto Vice-Chairman-Kuraji Matsumoto,
Jinkichi Notomi
Do.
Do. H. Yasunaka
Standing Committee - Keijiro, Waki yama, Takichi, Date (auditor), Hauzo, Murakami, Reihachiro, Otsu, Kuzo, Matsuo
Secretary M. Hayashi
CHINA AND JAPAN TRADING COMPANY, LD.
Geo. S. Watrous, acting manager
M. C. Adams, assistant manager Agencies
"China Traders' Insurance Co., Lá.
London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Standard Life Assurance Company Phonix Assurance Co., Ld.
Scottish Union & National Insur. Co.
of London
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOUR HOME FOR SEAMEN-
26,
Oura
Hon. Secretary-Geo. S. Watrous
CONSULATES
BELGIUM
Acting-Consul-P. J. Buckland
Consul-S. Y. Wong
CHINA
Interpreter-Chan Wa Yo
Secretary-Li Toon Shin
DENMARK
Consul-P. J. Buckland
GERMANY, Tel. Ad: Germania Consul--Dr. A. Mudra Interpreter-Dr. K. Mechlenburg Secretary H. Moller
Also in charge of Swiss interests
GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Consul A. M. Chalmers Shipping Clerk-J. S. Waddell
ITALY, Consular Agency
Consul-Dr. Mudră
NETHERLANDS
Vice Consul in Charge-A. M.Chalmers
NORWAY
Acting Consul- P. J. Buckland
NAGASAKI
073
PORTUGAL
Vice-Consul-P. J. Buckland
BUKSIA
Consul General--N. Rospopoff Secretary -V. Mikhailoff
SPAIN
Hon. Vice-Consul--A. Gese
SWEDEN
Acting Vice-Consul George S.
Watrons
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul-Carl F. Deichman
Vice and Deputy Consul and Inter.
-C. Miller
Surgeon -Robert I. Bowie, M.D.
CURNOW & Co., J., Storekeepers
A. Russell,
Miss Mansbridge
DALNY WOSTOK Co., Ltd., ÅGENCY OF THE, Publishers and Booksellers, 3.
Kataoka
GINSBURG & Co., M., 50, Sagarimatsu; Tel. Ad: Ginsburg; Teleph. 490; P. O. Box 52
M. Ginsburg (St. Petersburg)
Agency
Russian Steam
Trading Co.
Navigation and
GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS
APPEAL COURT
President Tetsujiro Nishikawa Chief Proc.-T. Yamakawa
ARTILLERY DEFENCE GARRISON
Commandant -Col. T. Minoike
COMMERCIAL SCHOOL
Director M. Takano Foreign Teacher-H. Woodsworth
CUSTOM HOUSE
Director Toksabro Kanoh Controller, Chief Inspect. Audr.-
Itsuro Hara
Chief Appraiser-R. Hayashi Chief of Warehouse-Tatsuo Fugenji Chief Accountant-Masaaki Kilo
DISTRICT COURT
President-Takehiro Yamaguchi Head Proc.-Haruki Sato
HARBOUR DET ARTMENT
Harbour Master-K. Nishigori Deputy do. -K. Shiina Quarantine Comsr.-S. Hayashi Port Surgeons. Dr. M. Oliwada Port Vetnry. Surgn.-H. Takamine
HIGHER COMMERCIAL SCHOOL
T. D. MacMillan-teacher of English
W. W. Popoff--
K. Knopp-
J. Lichtenburg-
do.
Russian
do.
German
do.
Commerce
INLAND REVENUE ADMINISTRTN. BUREAU
Director M. Katsu
KENCHO
Governor-Yoshitaro Arakawa Secretary Toyosuke Hada
Do. Katsuma Noguchi
Do. -Sasaburo Ide
Chief Supt. of Police-T Kawasaki Chief of Harbour Office Kan
Nishigori
Asst. Harbour Masters-Shigeka
Hayashi, Kiyoto Shiina
Port Surgeons-Masazane Owada,
Toyosuke Tashiro
LOCAL COURT
Supt. Judge-Watarou Namazu Procurator-J. Horü
MARINE BUREAU
President--K. Ishikawa
MARINE COURT
President--K. Ishikawa
MEDICAL COLLEGE
President Dr. Tashiro
MEGASAKI POLICE STATION
Superintendent M. Yeguchi
MIDDLE SCHOOL (Nagasaki, Chugakko)
Director-Y. Fumyama
MUNICIPAL BUREAU (Shiyakusho)
Mayor N. Kitagawa Deputy Mayor-K. Shima Secretary S. Isoda
NAGASAKI POLICE STATION
Superintendent--Y. Shikishi
POST OFFICE-IMPERIAL
Director K. Yabunchi Controlling Service-T. Otabe Engineering Service T. Takana Telegraph Service-K. Fukushima Foreign Mail Service-B. Amano Domestic Mail Sce.-M. Imada Accountant-M. Kobayashi Telephone Service W. Murase
TAXATION OFFICE
Chief J. Nakashima
WATER POLICE STATION
H. Takeo, superintendent
21
674
NAGASAKI
GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPIT COMPANY
A. L. Jordan, superintendent
C. Kring, electrician
I. F. Jordan, operator
HOLME, RINGER & Co., Merchants
J. H. Wallace
P. J. Buckland
R. F. Inman, signs per pro.
T. A. Glover
A. Carnduff
T. C. Robertson
P. R. Rosoman
F. Ringer
W. E. Harston
J. L Leith K. E Jordan
L G. Westcott
S. Ringer
Agencies
Chartered Bank of India, A., and China National Bank of China Banque de l' Indo-Chine
Comptoir National d'Escompte de Paris Russo-Chinese Bank
International Banking Corporation Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. Cie. des Messageries Maritimes China Mutual Steam Navtn. Co., Ld. China Navigation Company, Ld. Canadian Pacific Steamship Company Toyo Kisen Kaisha (Oriental S. S. Co.) Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. Portland and Asiatic S. S. Co.
Eastern and Australian S. S. Company Shire Line of Steamers
Mogul Line of Steamers
Ben Line of Steamers
Warrack Line of Steamers Strath Line of Steamers Pacific Mail Steamship Company Shell Transport and Trading Co. "Bank" Line, Ld. Swedish East Asiatic Co. Russian Volunteer Fleet East Asiatic Company Russian East Asiatic Co. Lloyds
Board of Underwriters of New York Liverpool Underwriters' Association Union Insurance Soc. of Canton, Ld. North British and Mercantile Ins. Co. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. S. British Fire and Mar. Ins. Co., N.Z. Royal Exchange Assurance Corptn. North China Insurance Company Marine Insurance Company Norwich Union Insurance Society London Salvage Association Natl. Brd. Marine Underwriters, N. Y. Marine Insurance Co. of Liverpool Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Law Union Insurance Company, Ld.
Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of U.S.A, Helvetia General Insurance Co., Ld. Baloise Transport Insurance Co., Ld. Switzerland General Insurance Co.,Ld. Swiss National Insurance Co., Ld. Neuchateloise Transport Insur Co.,Ld, Nordische Versicherungs-Gesellschaft Mannheim Insurance Company Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Aachen Munich Fire Insurance Co. Sun Insurance Office
China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld. Royal Insurance Co.
Cie. Internationale des Wagons Lits
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN,
W. R. McCallum, agent
G. H. Ardroo A. C. de Souza S. Usoumi
HOSPITAL ST. BERNARD
Surgeon-in-charge-R. I. Bowie, M.D.
HOTEL DU FRANCE, No. 33A, Oura, Tel. Ad.
Hotel France, A B.C. Code 5th Edition
HUNT, F. H., Chemist, Druggist, Stationer,
and Provisioner-12, Oura
C. Budge
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., LD., Merchts, 5,
Oura
E. P. W. Skrimshire, agent Harold Gill
Agencies
"Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld.
Glen Line of Steamers Indra Line of Steamers Carton Insurance Office, Ld. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Guardian Assurance Company China Sugar Refining Co., Ld. New York Lubricating Oil Co.
KISEN GIOGYO KABUSHIKI KAISHA (The
Steam Fishing Co., Ld.)-7, Oura
T. A. Glover, managing director
KUNST & ALBERS, Merchants and Bankers,
Tel. Ad: Alberson
G. Albers (Hamburg) A. Dattan (Vladivostock)
A. Gese, signs per pro A. Nestmann
Agencies
Deutsch Asiatische Bank Austrian Lloyd's S. N. Co. Hamburg-Amerika Linie (Hongkong- Vladivostock Service) and estg lines Rickmers Reisiuuhlen Rhederci Schil
bau A. G.
NAGASAKI
KYUSHIU STEVEDORAGE COMPANY, Steve- dores, Lauding and Shipping Agents and Customs Brokers
W. D. Wentworth, manager
P. Larsen
J. Furukawa
LAKE & Co., Commission Agents, Provision and General Commission Merchants, Importers and Exporters-39, 40 and 41, Sagarimatsu
Edward Lake
F. B. Lake
H. W. Lake (Boston)
LESSNER, S. D., Storekeeper
S. D. Lessner
LLOYD'S REGISTER OF SHIPPING-6, Minami
Yamate
A. C. Heron, surveyor
G. D. Aitken, do.
MEMBERS BOWLING CLUB
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-Hans Wolf
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missionaries see end of
Japan Directory
CONVENT DES SEURS DU SAINT ENFANT
JESUS
Sœur St. Elie, supérieure
Do. St. Borgia
Do. St. Zacharie
Do. St Marie
Do. St. Anthelme Do. M. Anysie
Do. M. Julitte Do. Flocellie Do. Justine Do. Fulgence Do. Isabelle
Do. M. Epiphanie
Do. St. Andrea
Do. St. Calixte
Do. Valentine
Do. Marguerite
KAISEIGAKKO, School of the Star of the
Sea, Higashi-yamate, No. 1 Director J. B. Gaschy Treasurer-H. Goger
Profs.-A. Bletzacker, C. Coutret, J. Koshl, E. Genet, F. Herner, L. Ledue, C. Rambach, S. Raymond, C. Vigroux, Vollmar, L. Joannès
ROMAN CATHOLIC
Rt. Rev. J. Cousin, Bp. of Nagasaki, Vy. Rev. M. A. Salmon, vicar general
Rev. M. M. de Rotz
Rev. A. C. Pelu
Rev. Th. Fraineau
Rev J. M. Corre Rev. J. F. Marmand Rev. E. Raguet
Rev. M. Sauret
Rev. Fr. Bonne Rev. J. Cl. Combaz Rev. J. B. Ferrié (absent) Rev. J. E. Bohrer Rev. J. Fr. Matrat Rev. E. Durand Rev. L. F. Garnier
Rev. A. A. Halbout Rev. F. Bertrand
Rev. E. Lebel
Rev. Richard (absent)
Rev. J. Kleinpeter
Rev. L. H. Bouige
Rev. F. Brengui r
Rev. E. Joly
Rev. A. Heuzet
Rev. G. Raoult
Rev. A. Chapelaine (absent)
Rev. L. Gracy
Rev. F. Lemarié
Rev. J. Breton
Rev. J. F. Bois Rev. E. Cavaignac Rev. P. Cotrel Rev. M. Fressenon Rev. M. Bonnet Rev. F. Thiry
Rev. F. Veilion
675
MITSU BISHI DOCKYARD & ENGINE WORKS;
Tel. Ad: Dock, Nagasaki
H Maruta, general manager
T. Shiota, assist. general manager
and shipyard manager
S. Kudo, assist gen. niangr and sec. T. Kato, acting assistant general manager, estimate engineer and inspector.
I. Esaky, acting assistant general manager and chief engine drafts- man and inspector
H. Hamada, acting assist. general manager and engine works man- ager, chief electric draftsman H. Nakaidzumi, acting assist. genl.
manager
N. Yamamoto, chief ship draftsman K. Yamamoto,
foreman naval
architect
K. Yamada, foreman naval architect D. Crowe, dockmaster
J. Wilson, foreman engineer
G. Mansbridge, foreman rigger, diver
and salvage master
A. Yokoyama, assistant dockmaster T. Horiye, civil engr. and architect K. Ito, foreman engineer for erecting
and machine shops
21*
676
NAGASAKI
H. Saiki, foreman naval architect
and ship decorator K.Koga, fman patternerand moulder K. Wakabayashi, f'man blacksmith
and coppersmith
T. Kitagawa, foreman engineer S. Hoshino, foreman rigger T. Okamoto, foreman boilermaker K. Shiba, ship draftsman
U. Masumoto, foreman nav. architect D. Yamasaki, assist. dockmaster F. Ikeda, engine draftsman M. Tadokoro, foreman engineer D. Kamigo, foreman engineer
S. Yamaguchi, engine draftsman M. Abe, foreman engineer K. Abe,
do.
J. Okuzumi, chief electrician T. Ishigame, ship draftsman K. Takeda,
do.
T. Okuyama, slip decorator K. Kasahara, foreman electrician T. Ohkushi, foreman moulder Y. Ban, engine draftsman
T. Morikawa, foreman engineer T. Tokudaiji, ship draftsman S. Fukagawa, foreman boilermaker K. Utsunomiya, f'man naval arch't T. Saito, ship draftsman
S. Niho, foreman boilermaker
Y. Hirata, foreman naval architect K. Ijuin, foreman engineer
T. Akushio, foreman naval architect T. Shoda, engine draftsman S. Kamachi,
do.
Y. Hagi, ship draftsman
N. Iso, foreman electrician
U. Kono, foreman naval architect K. Miura, foreman engineer
Y. Suzuki, chemist.
R. Itami, engine draftsman T. Maikuma, ship draftsman T. Goto, engine draftsman D. Hagi, foreman engineer S. Nomura, ship draftsman H. Kuge,
do.
S. Kobayashi, engine draftsman F. Yamanouchi, do.
S. Motora, ship draftsman
N. Tsuruda, do.
Y. Ohshima, f'man naval architect T. Hori, ship draftsman
M. Takami, do.
K. Tokunaga, f'man naval architect C. Sekino, electric draftsman
K. Fukuda, ship
U. Shimoda, do.
do.
do.
(See Advertisement)
MITSU BISHI GOSHI KWAISHA, Branch
Office Tel. Ad: Iwasaki
K. Takabayashi, manager
S. Moriwaki, acting sub-manager Y, Okato
T. Tamura K. Kuwata
Karatsu Office-Tel. Ad: Iwasaki
K. Takabayashi, manager
S. Sakamoto, acting sub-manager Takasima Mine
K. Sugimoto, manager and resid❜t engr. K. Tsumaki, sub-mgr. and do. C. Yamada, acting sub-manager and
resident engineer
Ochi Mine
N. Ishikawa, manager and resid't engr.
Y. Kusakabe, sub-mgr.and do. Namazuta Mine
Gengr.
T. Nakamura, manager and resid'te T. Miura, sub-mger. and do. O. Yamamoto, do. and do. Shinnew Mine
A. Nomi, manager and resident engr,
T. Miura, sub-mgr. and
I. Okada,
do. aril
Moji Oflice-Tel. Ad: Iwasaki
A. Hayao, manager
S. Fukuda, sub-manager I. Mitani,
Wakainatsu Office
do.
A. Hayao, manager
dlo.
do.
S. Miyoshi acting sub-manager
(See Advertisement)
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LTD., Export and Import Merchants, Coal and Shipping; Proprietors of Miike, Tagawa, Yamano and Hondo Coal Mines-3, Oura; Tel. Ad: Mitsui
T. Ohmoora, manager
S. Okada, signs per pro. S. Inouye,
do.
K. Sasoli
T. Yamamoto
M. Watanabe
T. Kumada
T. Matsuoka M. Hayashi
M. Motomura
H. Hayashi
(See Advertisement)
NAGASAKI CLUB
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-M., C. Adams
NAGASAKI HOTEL CO., LD. (in liquidation)
P. J. Buckland, liquidator
NAGASAKI PRESS (Daily Newspaper)
E. R. S. Parlon, editor and manager
J. A. Marston
NEVELLS, F., Stevedore, &c.
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA
S. Kobno, manager
I. Kawara
NAGASAKI
677
OSAKA SHOSEN Kaisha
T. Kakyida, manager
PIGNATEL & Co., Storekeepers
Victor Pignatel
PILOTS
Nagasaki Harbour
Y. Hori
T. Samura
Gulf of Tokyo to Nagasaki viâ Inland
Sea-see Kobe
POWERS & Co., R. H., Shipchandlers, Auc- tioneers, Contractors, Estate Agents, &c.
F. G. King
PRINCE OF WALES' HOTEL, 18, Oura
PUBLIC HALL-NAGASAKI
Hon. Sec. and Treas. F. H. Hunt
ROBERTSON, D. F., Surveyor for the
Bureau Veritas
ROWING AND ATHLETIC CLUB-NAGASAKI Hon. Sec. and Treas.-L. G. Westcolt
RUSSEL, Dr. N., medical practitioner
RUSSIAN EAST ASIATIC S. S. Co.
Agents-Holme, Ringer & Co.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK;
Tel. Ad: Socony; Teleph. No. 919
S. D. Hepburn
THOMPSON, DR., T. J., 13A, Higashi Yamate
UNITED STATES ARMY, QUARTERMASTER'S
DEPARTMENT.
Capt. Daniel W. Arnold, quartermaster
U. S. Army, depót Q. M.
W. O. Watts, chief clerk L. J. Bennett, coal inspector C. Kitamura, interpreter
URSO, C. F., Compradore to the Italian,
Spanish and Austrian Navies
P. M. Anon, assistant
VACHIER, J., Commission Merchant, 25, Oura, Agent for L'Union Fire Insurance Co., Paris
WALKER & Co., R. N., Marine and General Surveyors, Stevedores, Landing, Ship- ping and Forwarding Agents, Customs Brokers and Estate Agts., Shipchandlers, Compradores and Fresh Water Sup- pliers; Tel. Ad: Walker, Nagasaki
Capt. R. N. Walker
Capt. D. E. Jamieson R. Walker, Jr. F. Scheerer
Y. Shimidzu
WILSON, A. W., Stevedore, Landing and
Shipping Agent
Y. Yamasaki S. Hirai
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LIMITED Masayoshi Aoyagi, manager Tomokichi Tatsui, signs per pro. Kinjiro Uyeki,
do.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS
IN JAPAN
(For addresses see preceding pages.)
ARCHITECTS AND SURVEYORS
Conder, J.
Letzel & Hora
BANKS
Imperial Commercial Bank Mitsui Bank
Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisha Morimura Ginko
Nippon Ginko (Bank of Japan) BOOKSELLERS
Maruzen Kabushiki Kaisha, The Methodist Publishing House CHEMISTS AND DRUGGISTS St. Luke's Pharmacy
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES
Asiatic Society of Japan
TOKYO
Deut. Gesell. für Natur-und Voelker
Kunde Ostasiens
Kihin Kai
Tokyo Chigaku Kyokwai
Tokyo Club
Tokyo Shogyo Kwaigisho
COLLIERIES
Hokkaido Tanko Kisen Kaisha Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisha
COMMISSION Agents
Ataka & Co.
Lane, Crawford & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
EDUCATIONAL
Bailod, A. A. Chamberlain, B. H. Coningham, C. G.
Ecole de l'Etoile de Matin Gakushuin (Noble's College) Loenholm, L. H. Meiji Gakuin
ELECTRIC COMPANIES
Nippon Electric Company, Ld.
EMBASSIES
See puges 602-604
ENGINEER CONTRACTORS
Dick, Kerr & Co.
Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisla
Mosle & Co., L‹l.
Schuchardt and Schutte Siemens-Schuckert
Takata & Co.
Van Nierop & Co., Ed. L.
ENGINEERS (Civil, etc.)
Deguy, A.
Hunter & Co., E. H. Morrison & Co., James Sanguinetti, V. Stone, W. H.
FIRE INSURANCE COS.
Meiji Fire Insurance Co.
Tokyo Fire, Marine and Transport Ins.
Company
GAS COMPANY
Tokyo Gas Company
HOSPITALS
Akasaka Eye and General Hospital St. Luke's Hospital
HOTELS
Métropole, Hotel
Tsukiji Seiyoken Hotel
IRON AND STEEL WORKS
Bohler Bros. & Co. Edgar Allen & Co., Ld. RAILWAY COMPANY
+
International Sleeping Car & Express
Trains Co.
LIFE INSURANCE Cos.
Equitable Life Assurance Society Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. New York Life Insurance Co.
MACHINERY AGENTS AND CONTRACTORS
Artberg, J. C. Dodwell & Co.
Edgar Allen & Co., Ld. Horne, F. W.
MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS
Johnston, F. Ruddiman Lefroy, A. J, S.
MARINE INSURANCE Cos.
Imperial Marine Transport & Fire Îns-
Company
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
MERCHANTS
Ataka & Co.
Bowden Bros. & Co. British Trading Co. Cox, W. D.
Denys Larrieu Dodwell & Co. Ehmann, P.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
MERCHANTS-Continued
Illies & Co.
International Industrial Corporation
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisha
Oriental Compressol Co., Ld.
Pigott, H. C.
Raspe & Co.
Romisch, Leo
Sale & Frazer, Ld.
Winckler & Co.
NEWSPAPERS
Japan Advertiser
Japan Times
British Trade Journal
OIL COMPANY
Vacuum Oil Co. of New York
OPTICIANS
Krauss, E.
PATENT AGENTS
de Havilland, W. A.
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
Teusler, R. B. Dr.
Whitney, W. Norton, M.D., M.R.C.S.
SHIP BUILDERS
679
Ishikawajima Ship Building and Engi
neering Co., Ld.
Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisha
SHIPPING OFFICES
Hokkaido Tanko Kisen Kaisha
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Toyo Kisen Kaisha
SPINNING AND WEAVING CO.
Teikoku Flax Spinning and Weaving Co.
STATIONERS
Maruzen Kabushiki Kaisha, The STOREKEEPERS
Lane, Crawford & Co.
TAILORS
Lane, Crawford & Co.
TYPE FOUNDRY
Toyko Tsukiji Type Foundry
ACCOUNTANTS
Mackie & Dempster
AERATED WATER MANUFACTURERS
Mingard, K.
North & Rae, Ld.
ARCHITECTS & ENGINEERS
Letzel & Hora
AUCTIONEERS
Eyton & Pratt
BAKERS
Dentici & Co.
BANKS
YOKOHAMA
Chartered Bank of India, Australia, and
China
Dai Ni Ginko, Ld.
Deutsch-Asiatische Bank
Gomei Kaisha Mitsui Ginko
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp. International Banking Corporation Japanese American Bank
Naniwa Bank, Ld. Russo-Chinese Bank
Yokohama Seventy-Fourth Bank, Ld. Yokohama Specie Bank, Limited
BARRISTERS-AT-LAW
Akiyama, G., LL.B.
Crosse & Yamashita
BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS
Geiser & Gilbert Kelly & Walsh, Limited BREWERY
Kirin Brewery Co., Ld.
BROKERS (Bill and Bullion)
Bennett, Daniel & Co. Blad & McClure
Engert, de Cuers & Brady BROKERS (Exchange)
Bennett, Daniel & Co. Fearon, C. H.
Thomas, Thomas
BROKERS (General)
Fearon, C. H.
Higginbotham & Co.
Hood, Geo.
Johnston, Cain & Co. Owston & Co., F.
BROKERS (Share and General)
Jones, Edmund B.
Potts, A. C. Hutton Stanton, Schoene & Co.
BUILDERS
Clausen, C. B.
CARRIAGE BUILDERS
Durand, Cobb & Co.
CHEMISTS & DRUGGISTS
Brett & Co.
Normal Dispensary North & Rae, Ld.
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES
Club Germania
Cricket and Athletic Club
Nippon Race Club Rowing Club
St. Andrew's Society United Club
680
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES-Continued
Yokohama Chess Club
Yokohama Foreign Board of Trade Yokohama Literary & Musical Society
Yokohama Yacht Club
COAL MERCHANTS
Ham & Co., W. J. Ivison, H.
Langfeldt & Co. Martin & Co.
COMMISSION AGENTS Altman & Co., B. Apear & Co., A. M. Arthur & Bond Chalhoub Freres
China & Japan Trading Co.
Essabboy, A. M. Eyton & Pratt
Fioravanti Chimenz
Geary, J. R.
Heinlein, C. F.
Higginbotham & Co. Hood, Geo. Ivison, H.
Japan Import & Export Com. Co. Johnstone, Cain & Co. Lane, Crawford & Co. Lewis & Co., Geo.
Loof
Lohmann & Co.
MacArthur & Co., H.
Motley, R. W. C.
Papasian, P. M.
Pohoomull Bros.
Shimidzu & Co., K.
Suzor, L.
Varnum, Arnould & Co.
Vehling & Co.
Vivanti Brothers
Woodruff, F. G.
Witkowski & Co.
CONSULATES
See pages 617-618
CONTRACTORS
Bagnall & Hilles Clausen, C. B.
Healing & Co., Ld., H. J. CONVEYANCERS
De Becker, J. E. Walker, Wm.
CORK MANUFACTURERS Corp, Ferriol & Cn.
Crown Cork Co.
CORTO DEALERS
Arthur & Bond
Kuhn & Komor Docks
Yokohama Dock Co., Lal. DRAYAGE Co.
Yokohama Drayage Co. DRESSMAKERS & MILLINERS
Box, Holyoake
DYE FACTORY
Mrs. V. Menil
ENGINEERS AND SHIPBUILDERS
Yokohama Engino and Iron Works, Ld.
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS
Gadelius & Co.
Munster, B. A.
Kaeseler & Co., P. M. F. Kjellberg & Son, L., J. A. Patterson, A.
Rooke & Hay
ENGINEERS (Gas and Electrical)
Bagnall & Hilles Hammond & Co.
Healing & Co., Ld., L. J. Ibbotson, H. J.
Karel Jan Hora
ESTATE AGENTS
Eyton & Pratt
Jones, Edmund B. Suzor, L.
Union Estate and Investment Co., Ld.
FORWARDING AGENTS
Cook & Son, Thos.
Helm Bros., Ld. McArthur & Co., Fl. Weston, A.
FURNITURE DEALERS
Moss, E. J.
GENERAL AGENTS
Altman & Co., B.
HORTICULTURISTS
Bochmer & Co.
Yokohama Nursery Co.
HOTELS
Bluff Hotel
Club Hotel, Lol. Criterion Hotel Grand Hotel, Ld. Hotel de Genève Imperial Hotel
Oriental Palace Hotel Royal Hotel Windsor Hotel Wright's Hotel
ICE AND COLD STORAGE
Japan Cold Storage & Ice Co. Yokohama Ice Works
IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS
Bethell Bros.
Bieber, M.
Blundell & Co. Holst & Co. Wm. Rottmann & Co. Stewart & Co., W. M. Suzor, L.
Vehling & Co. Witkowski & Co., J.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
INSURANCE COs.
China Traders' Insurance Co. Commercial Union Assurance Co. Equitable Life Assurance Society London & Lancashire Fire Insurance Co. Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. New Zealand Fire Insurance Co, North China Insurance Co. Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada Tokyo Marine Insurance Co. Union Insurance Society of Canton Yangtsze Insurance Association LAUNDRIES
Yokohama Steam Laundry Co., Ld. LIVERY STABLES
Durand, Cobb & Co.
MACHINE TOOL MANUFACTURERS
Alfred Herbert, Ld.
MACHINERY AGENTS AND CONTRACTORS
Alfred Herbert, Ld. Bagnall & Hilles
Horne, F. W.
Rooke & Hay
MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS
Alfred Herbert, Ld. Babcock & Wilcox, Ed.
Horne, F. W. Ibbotson, H. J. MARBLE DEALERS
Kildoyle, E.
MACHINERY AGENTS
Zemma Works Ld.
MARINE SURVEYORS
Exchange Market (T. M. Laffin)
Olsen, Capt. C.
Tipple, R.
Williamson, A. S.
MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS
Paravicini
Reidhaar, L., M.D.
Street, Lionel A. B., M.D. Wheeler, Dr. E.
Whitney, W. N., M.D., M.R.Ç.5.
MERCHANTS (General)
Aall & Co. Abenhiem Bros. Adet, Camperdon & Co. Ahrens & Co., H. Nachf. Allen & Co., Geo. R. American Trading Co. Andrews & George Apear & Co., A. M. Assommull, W. Bavier & Co. Becker & Co. Bergmann & Co. Bernard & Co. Berrick Bros. Bhesania & Co.
MERCHANTS (General)-Continued
Bieber, M.
Bleifus, F. R. Blundell & Co. Boehmer & Co., L. Bowden Bros. & Co., Ld. Boyer, Mazet, Guilliée Brandenstein & Co. Bretschneider & Co. Bunting & Co., Isaac Butterfield & Swire Cameron & Co.
681
Canadian Trade Commissioners Service Carlowitz & Co.
China Import-Export & Bank Cie. China & Japan Trading Co. Church & Co.
Cohn Martin, & Co., L. Colomb & Co., J. Cornes & Co.
Corp, Ferriol & Co. Dell'Oro & Co.
Dewette & Co.
Dinsdale, G. K,
Dodwell & Co., Ld.
Dubuffet & Cie.
Findlay, Richardson & Co.
Frazar & Co.
Elphinstone & Co. S. Essabhoy, A. M.
Gadelius & Co.
Gillett, B. Gillon & Co. Grosser & Co. Haim & Co., A. Heller Bros. Hellyer & Co. Hunt & Co. Hutchison & Co.
Illies & Co.
Isaacs & Co., S.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld.
Jewett & Bent
Kjellberg & Son, Ld., J. A. Koerting, Bume & Reif Kulin & Komor Meier & Co., A.
Mendelson & Frank, Ld. Messulam & Co., D. Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Mollison & Co.
Mottet L.
Nabholz & Co.
Oestmann & Co.
Oppenheimer & Cie.
Orth & Co.
Owston, Alan Papasian, P. M.
Pieper & Kauffmann
Pohl Frères & Co.
Priest, Marians & Co., Ld. Raspe & Co., M.
Reimers & Co., Otto
Retz & Co., Fr.
і
682 CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
MERCHANTS (General)--Continued
Reynaud, J.
Rohde & Co., Carl
Sale & Frazar, Ld.
Samuel Samuel & Co., Id. Scheuer & Co.
Schmidt Scharff & Co,, K. Schramm & Co., Paul Siber Wolff & Co. Simon, Evers & Co. Singleton Benda & Co., Ld. Smith, Baker & Co.
Strachan & Co., Ld., W. M. Strahler & Co., F. Strauss & Co., G. Streuli, Otto Strome & Co.
Sulzer, Rodolph & Co. Tait & Co.
Taylor, Cooper & Co. Thomas & Co.
Tuska, E. H. Vantine & Co., A. A. Weinberger, & Co., C. Winckler & Co. MUSIC STORES
Doering, J. G. Geiser & Gilbert Thwaites & Co.
NATURALIST
Owston, Alan
NEWS AGENTS
RAILWAY COMPANIES
Canadian Pacific Railway Co.
International Sleeping Car & Express
Trains Co.
SHIPPING OFFICES
Butterfield & Swire
Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Chargeurs Réunis
Lloyd's Register of Shipping
Messageries Maritimes, Compagnie des Nierop, Ed. L. van
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Pacific Mail Steamship Company Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co. Portland & Asiatic S. S. Co. Samuel Samuel & Co.
Shell Transport & Trading Co. Toyo Kisen Kaisha
SILK AND FANCY GOODS DEALERS
Novelty Goods Store Rosenthal & Co., A. S. Siber & Co.
Simon & Co., J. R. Vincent, Bird & Co.
SILK MERCHANTS
Boyer, Mazet & Guilliee Comptoir Soies
Dourille, P.
Eyinard, G. L.
Heinlein, C. F.
Mason & Co., E. T.
Kelly & Walsh, Ld.
NEWSPAPERS
Advertiser Publishing Kabushiki Kaisha
Deutsche Japan Post
Eastern World
Japan Daily Herald
Japan Gazette
Japan Mail
OIL MERCHANTS
Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co.
International Oil Co., Ld.
Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ld.
Standard Oil Company of New York Vacuum Oil Company
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Farsari & Co.
Lewis, Karl
PIANO DEALERS
Doering, J. G.
Thwaites & Co.
PRINTERS, PUBLISHERS, ETC.
Advertiser Publishing Kabushiki Kaisha
Box of Curios
Kelly & Walsh, Ld.
Oldis, F. A.
The Times (London)
Pila & Co. Varenne & Co.
Vivanti Brothers
SHIPCHANDLERS
Dentici & Co., M. Langfeldt & Co.
SOLICITORS
Akiyama, G.
De Becker, J. E.
SEWING MACHINE COS.
Singer Sewing Machine Co. STAMP DEALERS
Jun Kobayagawa & Co. STEVEDORES
Helm Bros. Ld. Owston & Co., F.
STOREKEEPERS
Curnow & Co., Ld., J.
Dentici & Co.
Lane, Crawford & Co., Ld. Langfeldt & Co., Ld.
TAILORS
Lane, Crawford & Co., Ld.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN 683
TEA MERCHANTS
Blandenstein & Co., M. J.
Macy & Co., H.
TELEGRAM CO.
Reuter's Telegram Co.
TOBACCO DEALERS
Lohmann & Co.
TOURIST AGENTS
Cook & Sons, Thos.
Weston, A.
TYPEWRITER DEALERS
Church & Co. WATCHMAKERS
Favre, Brandt, C. & J.
BANKS
113th Bank, Ld. Dai San Ginko Hakodate Bank, Ld. Nippon Ginko Takushoko Ginko Twentieth Bank
Yesashi Ginko
BREWERY
Sapporo Brewery
CONSULATES
Austria-Hungary Great Britain
Norway
United States of America
Docks
Hakodate Dock Company
ENGINEERS
Scott, James
HAKODATE
MEDICAL PRACTITIONER
Colborne, Dr. W. W. MERCHANTS (Commission)
Denbigh & Co.
MERCHANTS (General)
Howell & Co.
RAILWAY Cos.
Hokkaido Coal Mine Railway Co. Tanko Railway Co. SHIPCHANDLERS
Laffin, T. M.
SHIPPING OFFICES
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
SPINNING AND WEAVING COMPANY
Teikoku Flax Spinning & Weaving Co.
STOREKEEPERS
Curnow & Co
OSAKA
BANKS
Nippon Ginko
Sumitomo Bank
BREWERY
Dai Nippon Brewery Co., Ld.
BRUSIL MANUFACTURERS
Royal Brush Goshi Kaisha
BUILDERS
Mitchell, J. B.
CAMPHOR REFINING Co.
Fukiai Shono Seiseijo
CHEMISTS & DRUGGISTS
Chobei Takeda
COMMISSION AGENTS
Asai & Co.
Horne, F. W.
Kasai & Co.
Nickel & Co., Ld., C.
CONSULATES
Belgium
Norway
CONTRACTORS
Takata & Co.
COPPER AND COAL MINES
Sumitomo, Kichizayemon
Docks
OSAKA IRON WORKS
DOCTORS
Taylor, Wallace, M.D.
EDUCATIONAL
Meisei Gakko
Momoyama Gakko
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS Hodgkinson & Co.
Nippon Electric Co.
Siemens-Schuckert Denki Kubushiki
Kaisha
ENGINEERS, ETC.
Edgar Allen & Co., Ld.
Osaka Iron Works Takata & Co.
684
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
ESTATE AGENT
Penney, Geo. J.
IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS
Asai & Co.
INSURANCE COMPANIES
New York Life Insurance Co.
Nippon Marine Tran. & Insurance Co. Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
IRON AND STEEL WORKS
Bohler Bros & Co., Ld. Edgar Allen & Co., Ld. Osaka Iron Works Sumitomo, Kichizayemon
MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS Edgar Allen & Co., Ld. Home, F. W.
MERCHANTS (General)
Andrews & George
ADVERTISING AGENCY
MERCHANTS (General)-Continued
Ataka & Co.
China & Japan Trading Co., Ld. Favre-Brandt, C. & J. Hunter & Co., E. H. Leybold Shokwan, L. Morrison & Co., James Kasai & Co. Schramm & Co., P. Sumitomo Kichizayemon OIL COMPANY
Vacuum Oil Co. SHIPPING OFFICES
Nippon Yusen Kaisha Osaka Shosen Kaisla STEVEDORES
Nickel & Co., Ld., C. SUGAR REFINERIES
Dai Nippon Seito Kaisha
KOBE-HYOGO
Far Eastern Advertising Agency ERATED WATER MANUFACTURERS
Clifford-Wilkinson TansanMineral Water
Company, Ld.
Hirano Mineral Water Co., Ld. North & Co.
Thompson & Co., J. L.
ARCHITECTS AND SURVEYORS
Hansell, Alex. N.
AUCTIONEERS
Crombie, A. W.
Penney, Geo. J.
Whymark & Ailion
BAKERS, ETC.
Rothsprack, P. E. H.
BANKS
Bank of Taiwan, Ld.
Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China Deutsche Asiatische Bank
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Cor-
poration
International Banking Corporation Mitsui Ginko
Sumitomo Bank
Thirty-fourth Bank
Yokohama Specie Bank
BARRISTERS AT LAW
Crosse & Yamashita
BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS
Kelly & Walsh, Ld.
BROKERS (Bill and Bullion) Bennett, Daniel & Co. Maxwell, J. B. Oldenburg E. Tayerson & Mactavish
BROKERS (Exchange)
Milne, Alex.
BROKERS (General)
Drewell & Co., A. Feicke & Co., J. CHEMISTS AND DRUGGISTS
Deutsche Apotheke Thompson & Co., J. L. CLUBS AND SOCIETIES
Club Concordia Corinthian Hall Kobe Club
Kobe Cricket Club
Kobe Golf Club
Kobe Sanitarium
Lawn Tennis Club
Regatta and Athletic Club Sailing Club
Seamen's Institute St. Andrew's Society
COAL MERCHANTS
Midzushima & Co. COMMISSION AGENTS
Abraham & Co., L. J. Antaki, E.
Arratoon, C. M.
Borkowsky, G.
Buckley & Co., A. J.
Camroodin & Co., C. A.
Chotirmall & Co. K. A. J.
Crombie, A. W.
Delbourgo & Co. Dossa & Co. Drewell & Co., A. Feicke & Co. J. Futchally & Sons, N. Hassam, K. Horne, F. W.
Japan Import & Export Comm. Co.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
Lavaery, V.
COMMISSION AGENTS Continued
Joseph, M. S.
Martin Brothers.
Michel, A.
Musabhoy, M.
Oestmann & Co., A.
Omstein & Co.
Parbury, Henty
& Co.
Penney, Geo. J.
Pietzcker, W.
Pohoomull, Bros. Poonawalla, N. MA. Reynell & Co., H. E. Rhazis, M. A.
Scheuer & Co.
Tallers, W.
Tata, Sons & Co.
Taylor, Cooper & Co., Lal. Thomson, J.D. Whymark & Ailion
CONSULATES
See page 652
DENTISTS
Perl, Dr. G. B., D.D.S.
Richmond, Geo. D.
Docks
Kawasaki Dockyard Co., Ld.
Mitsu Bishi Dockyard & Engr. Works.
EDUCATIONAL
Bunt, George
Davidge, C. W.
Dukes, Dr. O. A.
Kenko Gijiku
Kobe College
Kwansei Gakuin
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS Birch, Kirby & Co., Ld. Healing & Co., L. J. Kershaw, Thos. Kirby, A.
Morse, F. S.
FURNISHERS
Kobe Furnishing Emporium
HOSPITAL
Hyogo International Hospital
HOTELS
Glenlea Hotel
Grand Hotel
Oriental Hotel, Limited Tor Hotel, Limited IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS
Asiatic Export & Import Co. Bowden Brothers & Co. Ld. Buckley & Co., A. J. Crowther & Co., C. Dubuffet & Co. Gysin Frères.
Hersog, R. F.
Hirschfeld, G. C. Holst & Co., Wnt
IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS--Continued
Japan Export Co.
Koerting, Bume & Reif Paul & Co.
Sale & Frazur, Ld.
Scheuer & Co.
Strauss & Co. G.
INSURANCE Cos.
Kobe Fire Insurance Association New Zealand Insurance Co. North China Insurance Co. Yangtsze Insurance Association MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS
Boyer, A. G. Horne, F. W.
MARINE SURVEYORS
Morse, S. E. MERCHANTS
Abdoola & Co.
Abenheim Bros.
Ahrens & Co., H.
American Trading Co.
Asiatic Export & Import Co. Becker & Co.
Bergmann & Co.
Berigny & Co. Bethell Bros.
Birch, Kirby & Co. Blackmore & Co.
Bowden Bros., & Co., Ld.
Browne & Co.
Butterfield & Swire
Cameron & Co., Ld., A.
Carlowitz & Co.
China & Japan Trading Co., Ld. China Export, Import & Bank Cie Cornes & Co.
Crowther & Co. David & Co., S. J. Dè Ath & Co. De la Camp & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Duff, Jolin, F. Essabhoy, A. M.
Findlay, Richardson & Co. Grosser & Co.
Gysin Frères
Healing & Co., L. J.
Hellyer & Co.
Hirano, Midzushima & Co.
Hunter & Co., E. H.
Hutchison & Co.
Illies & Co., C.
Jardine, Matheson & Co.
Kerr & Co., Wm.
Lucas & Co. H.
McKay & Co.
Meier & Co., A.
Midzushima & Co.
Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisha
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
Mollison & Co.
685
686
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
MERCHANTS--Continued
Olmsted & Co. Oppenheimer I. Pabaney, Ebrahimbhoy Priest, Marians & Co., Ld. Raeburn & Co., M. A. Raspe & Co., M. Reimers & Co., Otto Rohde & Co., Carl Sale & Frazar, Ld. Samuel, Samuel & Co. Schramin & Co., Paul Sellés Hermanos Shewan, Tomes & Co. Siegfried & Co., John C. Simon, Evers & Co.
Singleton, Benda & Co., Ld. Siber, Wolff & Co. Sloane, W. & J. Smith, Baker & Co.
Strachan & Co., Ld., W. M. Strauss & Co., G. Strome & Co. Stuken, Edmund
Sumitomo Kichizayemon Suttor, N.
Tata Sons & Co.
Taylor, Cooper & Co., Ld. Thomas & Co. Tuska, E. H. Vantine & Co., A. A. Vendrell, M.
Weinberger & Co., C. Winckler & Co. Witkowski & Co. J. Young, Geo.
NEWSPAPERS
Japan Chronicle
Kobe Herald (evening)
OIL MERCHANTS
Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ld.
Standard Oil Company of New York
Vacuum Oil Co.
PAPER MILLS
Mitsu Bishi Paper Mill Co., Ld. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
Miller, R. S., M.D.
Thornicraft, T. C., M.R.C.S. & P., E.
COAL MERCHANTS
Midzushima & Co. Taimo Yoko CONSULATES
Austro-Hungary
Germany Great Britain
Norway
PIER COMPANY
Kobe Pier Co.
RAILWAY COMPANY
Sanyo Railway Co.
SEWING MACHINE COMPANY
Singer Sewing Machine Co. SHIPCHANDLERS
Lessner & Co., S. D. Waggott, W.
SHIPPING AGENTS
Christensen & Co., T. A.
Lyons & Co., J.
Tokyo Soko Kaisha
SHIPPING OFFICES
Canadian Pacific Railway Co.
Chargeurs Réunis
Lloyd's Register of Shipping
Messageries Maritimes (Compagnie des) Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Osaka Sho-en Kaisha
Pacific Mail S. S. Co.
Peninsular & Oriental Steam Nav. Co.
Portland & Asiatic Steamship Co.
Toyo Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha Van Nierop & Co., Ed. L. STEVEDORES
Christensen & Co., T. A. Lyons & Co., J. Nickel & Company, Ld. Tokyo Soko Kaisha STOREKEEPERS
Dick, Bruhn & Co., M. Julien, H.
Lessner & Co., S. D. Nickel & Co., Ld. Ville de Paris
Whymark & Co., Geo.
TAILORS AND OUTFITTERS.
Cabeldu & Co., P. S.
Shipworth, Hammond & Co.
TEA MERCHANTS
Macy & Co., Geo. H. WATER COMPANY
Kobe Water Boat Co.
WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANTS
Reynell & Co., H. E. Whymark & Co., Geo.
MOJI AND SHIMONOSEKI
EDUCATIONAL
City Commercial School
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS
Siemens Schuckert Denki Kabushiki
Kaisha
HOTEL
Sanyo Hotel
|
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADESAND PROFESSIONS IN JAPAN
MEDICAL PRACTITIONER
Dr. J. Huston
MERCHANTS
Bagnall & Hilles
Browne & Co.
Holme, Ringer & Co.
Irisu Shokwai (C. Illies & Co.) Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Laucht, H W.
Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisha
Mitsu Bussan Kaisha
Raspe & Co., M.
OIL MERCHANTS
Standard Oil Co.
Vacuum Oil Co.
PROVISION DEALERS
Meidiya Gomei Kaisha
SHIPPING OFFICES
Nippon Yusen Kaisha Osaka Shosen Kaislia
STEVEDORES
Nickel & Co., C.
Samuel Samuel & Co., Ld.
Taimo Yoko
NAGASAKI
AERATED WATER FACTORY
Banzai Aerated Water Factory
BANKS
H'kong & S'hai Banking Corporation Kunst & Albers
Yokohama Specie Bank, Limited BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS
Dalny Wostok Co., Ld.
CHEMISTS AND Druggists
Hunt, F. H.
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES
Christian Endeavour Home Members Bowling Club Nagasaki Club
Rowing & Athletic Club COAL CONTRACTORS
Mitsu Bishi Goshi Kwaisha
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
COMMISSION AGENTS
Lake & Co.
Vachier, J.
COMPRADORES (Navy)
Urso, C. F.
Balmes, Vve.
CONSULATES
See pages 672-673
Docks
Mitsu Bishi Dockyard & Engine Works
EDUCATIONAL
Commercial School
Higher Commercial School
Kaisei Gakko
Medical Collage
Middle School
HOSPITAL
St. Bernard
HOTELS
Hotel du France Nagasaki Hotel Frince of Wales Hotel MERCHANTS
Alirens & Co., H. Boeddinghaus, C. E.
MERCHANTS--Continued
Carl Scriba & Co.
China & Japan Trading Co., Ltd. Ginsburg & Co., M. Holme, Kinger & C Jardine, Matheso Kunst & Albers Lake & Co.
Co, Ld.
Mitsu Bishi Gosh waisha Mitsui Bussan le sha
MINING ENGINEERS Carl Scriba & Co. NEWSPAPERS
Nagasaki Press
OIL MERCHANTS
Standard Oil Company of New York PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
Bowie, Robert, I., M.D.
Russel, Dr. N., M.D.
Thomson, Dr. T. J.
PILOTS
Hori, Y.
Samura, T.
SHIPPING OFFICES
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Russian East Asiatic S. S. Co.
STEAM FISHING COMPANY
Kisen Giogyo Kabushiki Kaisha STEVEDORES
Kyushiu Stevedorage Co. Nevells, F.
Walker & Co. R. N.
Wilson, A. W.
STOREKEEPERS
Curnow & Co., J.
Lessner, S. D.
Pignatel & Co.
Powers & Co., R. H. SURVEYORS (Marine)
Lloyd's Register of Shipping Robertson, D. F.
Walker & Co., R. N. TELEGRAPH COMPANIES
Great Northern Telegraph Co.
687
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
AMERICAN BAPTIST MISSIONARY
UNION
YOKOHAMA
Rev. C. K. Harrington, D.D. (and wife,
absent), 75, Bluff
Rev. F. G. Harrington and wife (absent) Rev. W. B. Parshley and wife, 75, Bluff Rev. C. B. Tenny and wife, 45-B, Bluff Miss C. A. Converse, 34, Bluff Mrs. A. A. Bennett, 67B, Bluff
TOKYO
Rev. Win. Axling and wife, 6, Ura Sarugaku
Cho, Kanda
Rev. H. B. Benninghoff and wife 29, Sanai-
zaka Machi, Ichigaya
Rev. J. C. Brand and wife, 30-4, Tsukiji Prof. E.W. Clement and wife, 29, Sunaizaka
Machi, Ichigaya
Rev. C. H. D. Fisher and wife, 30-B, Tsukiji Rev. S. W. Hamblen and wife (absent) Miss M. M. Carpenter, 10, Fukuro Machi,
Surugadai
Miss M. A. Clagett, 101-K, Hara Machi, Koi-
shikawa
Miss A. H. Kidder, 10, Fukuro Machi,
Surugadai
Miss Inga Petterson (absent)
Miss E. L. Rolman, 9, Naka Cho, Sanchome,
Yotsuya
Miss Gertrude E. Ryder, 101, Hara Machi,
Koishikawa
Miss M. A. Whitman (absent)
MITO
Rev. E. H. Jones (and wife, absent), 45,
Minami Machi
SENDAI
Miss A. A. Acock, 27, Nakajima Cho
Miss A. S. Buzzell, 27, Nakajima Cho
MORIOKA
Rev. H. Topping (and wife, absent), 43, Uchi
Maru
OTARU
Rev. W. B. Bullen and wife (absent) Rev. T. E. Schumaker and wife (absent) Rev. F. W. Steadman and wife (absent)
HIMEJI
Captain L. W. Bickel and wife 47, Shimo
'T'era Machi
Rev. F. C. Briggs, and wife, 47, Shimo Tera
Machi
Miss K. A. Dodge (absent)
Miss F. M. Rumsey, 47, Shimo Tera Machi Miss E. F. Wilcox, 47, Shimo Tera Machi
KOBE
Rev. R. A. Thomson and wife, 39, Kitano
Cho Nichome
OSAKA
Rev. J.H.Scott and wife, 19 Kawaguchi Cho Rev. W. Wynd and wife (absent) Miss Mary Danielson, 119, Tani Machi Ku-
chome, Higashi Ku
Miss G. A. Huglies (absent)
Miss Lavinia Mead, 11, Kamidori Shichome,
Minami-hori, Nishi Ku
Mrs. Nina Tuxbury, 11, Kamidori Shichonne,
Minami-hori, Nishi Ku
Kyoto
J. F. Gressitt and wifo, Yoshida Machi Rev. G. W. Hill and wife (absent)
AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY (53, Yamashita Cho, Yokohama) Rev. H. Loomis and wife, 223, Bluff
AMERICAN BOARD MISSION
KOBE
Rev. A. W. Stanford and wife, 53, Yama-
moto Dori Gochome
Miss A. L. Howe, 22, Nakayamate Dori
Rokuchome
KOBE COLLEGE
(60, Yamamoto Dori Shichome)
Miss Ada W. Cockroft Miss C. B. DeForest Miss F. M. Gordon
Miss Julia C. Hocking
Miss Mary A. Holbrook Miss S. A. Searle (absent) Mrs. A. A. Walker
WOMEN'S EVANGELICAL SCHOOL (59, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome) Miss R. C. Bates
Miss E. Gertrude Cozad
Miss Eliza Talcott
OSAKA
Rev. George Allchin and wife, 31, Kawagu
chi Cho
Dr. Wallace Taylor, M.D., and wife, 16,
Kawaguchi Cho
Miss Marion F. Allchin, 31, Kawaguchi Cho Miss Elizabeth Ward, 25, Kawaguchi Cho
KYOTO
Rev. Otis Cary, D.D., and wife, Karasunaru
Dori, Ichijo Sagaru
Rev. E. S. Cobb and wife, Karasumaru
Dori, Imadegawa Agaru
1
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
Rev. J.D. Davis, D.D., and wife, Karasuniaru
Dori, Ichijo Agaru
D. I. Grover and wife, Karasumaru Dori,
Inadegawa Sagaru
Rev. S. L. Gulick, D.D., and wife, Nashinoki
Cho, Teramachi Dori
Rev. D. W. Learned, D.D., and wife, Imadegawa Dori, Teramachi Nishi Ye Iru Sanchome
Rev. M. D. Dunning and wife, Muromachi
Dori, Imadogawa Agaru
Rev. F. A. Lombard, Muromachi Dori, Ima-
degawa Agaru
Miss Florence S. Allchin, Doshisha Girls'
School
Miss Mary F. Denton, Doshisha Girls' School Mrs. A. D. Gordon (absent)
Miss Grace Learned, Doshisha Girls' School
ΟΚΑΥΑΜΑ
Rev. J. H. Pettee, D.D., and wife (absent) Rev. S. S. White (and wife, absent), Kadota
Yashiki
Miss Alice P. Adams, Katota Yashiki Miss M. E. Wainwright, 95, Katota Yashiki
TOTTORI
Rev. H. J. Bennett and wife (absent) Rev. C. M. Warren and wife, Higashi Machi Miss Grace H. Stowe, Higashi Machi Miss Mary E. Stowe,
MIYAZAKI
Rev. C. A. Clark and wife
Rev. C. B. Olds and wife
TOKYO
do.
Rev. D. Crosby Greene, D.D., and wife, 12,
Shin Ryudo Cho, Azabu
MATSUYAMA
Rev. H. B. Newell and wife, 52, Niban Cho Miss Cornelia Judson, 42, Niban Cho Miss H. F. Parmelee (absent)
MAEBASHI
Rev. II. Pedley and wife
Miss F. E. Griswold
SENDAI
Rev. J.H.De Forest, D.D., and wife, 7, Minami
Rokken Cho
Miss A. H. Bradshaw, 6, Minami Rokken Cho
SAPPORO
Rev. G. M. Rowland, D.D., and wife, 10, Kita
lchi Jo Higashi Sanchome. Miss Adelaide M. Daughaday, Kita Go Jo
Nishi Shichichome
OTARU
Rev.S.C.Bartlettand wife,35,ShiomidaiCho
ASAHIGAWA
Miss Ada B. Chandler
AMERICAN CHRISTIAN
CONVENTION
TOKYO
Rev. A. D. Woodworth, D.D., and wife, 26,
Kasumi Cho, Azabu
UTSUNOMIYA
Rov. E. C. Fry and wife, 7, Nijo Machi
SENDAI
689
Rev.C.P.Gorman and wife, 41, Karahori Cho Rev. E. K. McCord and wife (absent)
ISHINOMAKI
Miss Alice True
AMERICAN EPISCOPAL MISSION (MISSIONARY DISTRICT OF TOKYO) TOKYO
Rt. Rev. Bishop John McKim, D.D., and
wife, 38, Tsukiji
Rev. 1. Lloyd, 54, Tsukiji
J. M. Gardiner and wife, 15, Goban Cho,
Kojimachi
Rev. G. Wallace and wife, 25, Tsukiji Rev. C. T. Sweet and wife, 56, Tsukiji Rev. H. St. G. Tucker, 54, Tsukiji Dr. B. Teusler and wife, 27, Tsukiji Rev. R. A. Walke (absent)
Rev. J. A. Welbourne, 3, Yayoi Cho, Hongo Miss L. H. Boyd, 3, Misaki Cho Sanchome,
Kanda
Miss G.M. Heywood, 1, Hama Cho Sanchome,
Nihonbashi Ku
Miss C. J. Neely, 472, Nishi Okubo Miss C. E. Schereschewsky, 30, ligura Kata
Machi, Azabu
Miss C. Warnock, 15, Goban Cho, Kojimachi YOKOHAMA
Rev. A. R. Morris, 141, Bluff
MITO
Rev. J. Chappell and wife (absent) Miss Ada Wright
UTSUNOMIYA
Miss I. P. Mann
KAWAGOYE, SAITAMA KEN
Miss C. Martin
Miss E. F. Upton
SENDAI
Rev. A. W. Cooke and wife, 9, Moto KajiCho Miss Alice Fyock, 11, Higashi Ichiban Cho Miss Bessie McKim,
do. do.
Miss E. G. Newbold, Miss A. L. Ranson (absent)
MAEBASHI
do.
do.
Rev. C.H.Evans and wife, 32, Kita Kuruwa
Cho
Miss E. MacRae, 32, Kita Kuruwa Cho Miss B. R. Babcock
FUKUSHIMA
WAKAMATSU Rev. W. F. Madeley and wife Miss Bessie Mead
YAMAGATA
Rev. W. H. Smart
Miss F. M. Bristowe
AOMORI
HIROSAKI
AKITA
Rev.J.C.Amblerandwife, 23, YamamichiCho. Miss T. Wall
Rev. R. W. Andrews and wife, Hodono
Naka Cho
Miss D. Carlson, 26, Atago Machi, Hodono
690
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
Miss E. Correll, 26, Atago Machi, Hodono Miss E. Klemm, 26, Atago Machi, Hodono
(MISSIONARY DISTRICT OF KYOTO) Καστο
Rt. Rev. Bishop S. C. Partridge, D.D., and
wife (absent)
Rev. W. J. Cuthbert and wife (absent). J. Reifsnider and wife, Karasunaru, Shimo
Dachi Uri
Miss M. Aldrich, Maruta Machi Ohashi
Kitagawa
Miss B. Cahusuc, Karasumaru, Kami Choja
Machi Kado
Miss S. P. Peck, Heian Jo Gakuin
Miss G. Suthon, Karasumaru Dori, Kami
Choja Machi Kado
Miss H. L. Tetlow, Heian Jo Gakuin
OSAKA
Rev. I. H. Correll, D.D., and wife, 27, Kawa-
guchi Cho
Dr. Henry Laning, M.D., 5, Kawaguchi Cho Miss L. Bull, 6, Kawaguchi Cho Miss S. Laning, 5, Kawaguchi Cho
NARA
Rev. J. J. Chapman and wife, Tenma Miss J. Kimball, Tenma Miss M. Scott, Tenma
OTSU
Rev. R. H. McGinnis and wife, Kasegi Machi FUKUI
Rev. C. S. Reifsnider and wife, 19, Edo
Shimo Cho
A. L. Whitehorn, 19, Edo Shimo Cho
WAKAYAMA
Rev. I. Dooman (absent)
Miss M. Laning, 19, Kobito Cho
AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, NEW YORK TOKYO
George Braithwaite, agent, 3, Yuraku Cho
Nichome, Kojimachi
AMERICAN UNITARIAN
ASSOCIATION Токко
Rev. Clay MacCauley, Shikoku Machi Mita
APOSTOLIC FAITH MOVEMENT (20, Odawara Cho Itchome, Tsukiji, Tokyo) M. L. Ryan and wife
BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY
(95, Yedo Machi, Kobe)
F. Parrott, agent, and wife
A. Lawrence, sub-agent, and wife
CHRISTIAN AND MISSIONARY ALLIANCE
HIROSHIMA
Rev. H. Lindstrom and wife, 24, Shimo Naka
Machi
Miss E. P. Ague, 24, Shimo Naka Machi
ATSUTA, NAGOYA
Rev. K. E. Aur II and wife (absent) Miss Emma E. Barns (absent) Miss M. Wylie, 3, Shiratori Machi
CHURCHES OF CHRIST MISSION
TOKYO
Rev. P. A. Davey and wife, 72, Myogadani
Machi, Koishikawa
Rev. F. E. Hagin and wife (absent) Miss Kate V. Johnson, 262, Sendagi Hayashi
Cho, Hongo
do.
Miss L. Oldham, 35, Nakano Cho, Ichigaya Miss M. M. Rioch, do.
TAKINOGAWA MURA, TOKYO FU Rev. R. D. McCoy and wife, 267, Nakazato Rev. Alfred W. Place and wife,267, Nakazato Miss Bertha F. Clawson (absent) do. Miss Mary F. Lediard, Miss Edith Parker,
OSAKA
do.
do.
Rev. R.A. McCorkle and wife, 2,395, Minami
Kawahori Cho, Minami Kú
Rev. C. S. Weaver and wife, 2,395, Minami
Kawahori Cho, Minami Ku
Miss S. W. Lewis, 2,395, Minami Kawahori
Cho, Minami Ku
AKITA
Rev. W. H. Erskine and wife, Shimohon
Cho, Tsukiji
Rev. C. A. McCall and wife, Uramachi,
Narayama
Rev. E. S. Stevens and wife (absent) Miss Ross T. Armbruster, Nakanaga Machi Miss Jessie J. Asbury, 16, Nakanaga Machi
SENDAI
Rev. M. B. Madden (and wife, absent), 69,
Kwozenji Dori
Rev. C. E. Robinson and wife, 69, Kwozenji
Dori
Miss Rose T. Johnson, 69, Kwozenji Dori
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS (MORMON)
TOKYO
Alma O. Taylor, 81, Yakuojimae Machi,
Ushigome, president
Fred. A. Caine, 81, Yakuojimae Machi
Ushigome
Jay C. Jansen, 81, Yakuojimae Machi, Ja Ushigome
Elbert D. Thomas and wife, Ushigome
MORIOKA
James Anderson, 81, Kagano Cho
SAPPORO
Wm. S. Ellis, 12, Minami Rokujo Nishi
Maroni S. Mariott,
do.
John H. Rosskelley, do.
ASAHIGAWA
J. Preston Cutler Robert H. Barton
+
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
Koru
Wa, L. Fairbourn, 19, Nishiki Machi Melvin F. Barton, J. H. Stimpson,
SHIZUOKA
flo.
do.
W. E. Harris, 15, Nishi Kusafuka Cho
E. C. Taylor,
do.
EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION OF
NORTH AMERICA
TOKYO
Rev. J. P. Hauch and wife, 44, Tsukiji Rev. Paul Mayer and wife,
do.
Rev. S. J. Unbreit and wife, 50, do. Miss S. M. Bauernfeind (absent)
Miss E. L. Erffmeyer, 84, Sasugaya Cho,
Koishikawa
Miss Cora Haller, Miss E. E. Ranck,
do.
do.
EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN MISSION
1. United Synod South, U.S.A.
SAGA
Rev. C. K. Lippard, D.D., and wife
KUMAMOTO
Rev. C. J. Brown, D.D., and wife, 388. Furu
Shin Yashiki
Rev. A. J. Stirewalt, 388, Furu Shin Yashiki
FUKUOKA
Rev. L. S. C. Miller, 847, Haruyoshi
Shichiban Cho
2. United Danish Evangelical Lutheran
Church, U.S.4. KURUME
Rev. J. P. Nelsen and wife
Rev. J. M. T. Winther and wife, Kushihara
Cho Shichome
3. Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Mission (Helsingfors, Finland.) SHIMO SUWA, SHINSHITU
D. Minkkinen and wife
V. Savolainen and wife
Miss J. Nylund
IIDA, SHINSHIU
Rev. E. Koskenniemi and wife Miss M. Westen
Токхо Fu
Miss S. Uusitalo, 816, Sendagaya
4. General Council, U.S.A.
TOKYO
Rev. Frisby D. Smith, care of Rev. H. M.
Landis, Meiji Gakuin
FREE METHODIST CHURCH OF
AMERICA
OSAKA
Rev. W F. Mattheson and wife (absent) Rer W. L. Meikle and wife, 5,401,
Shim- poin Cho, Tennoji
Rev. August Youngren and wife, 1,921,
Hidein Cho, Tennoji
Miss Minnie K. Hessler, 1,921, Hidein Cho,
Tennoji
SUMOTO, AWAJI
Rev. M. Klein and wife
AKASHI
691
Rev. S. E. Cooper and wife, 152, Aioi Cho
GENERAL EVANGELICAL PROTEST- ANT MISSIONARY SOCIETY Токто
Pfarrer- E. Schroeder and wife, 23, Kami
Tomizaka, Koishikawa
KYOTO
Pastor E. Schiller and wife, 10, Shogoin Cho Azana Noboribata, German Church, Tokyo
Chairman Ingenieur-R. Lehmann Pastor Pfarrer-E. Schroeder Secretary Pfarrer E. Schroeder
HEPHZIBAH FAITH MISSION YOKOHAMA
F. L. Smelser and wife, 2,124, Minami Ota I. Engle and wife,
CHOSHI, SHIMOSA
Miss Agnes Glenn Miss Lizzie Glenn Miss Rosa Mintle
INDEPENDENT TOKYO
do.
Rev. Wm. J. Bishop and wife, 73, Myoga-
dani Machi, Koishikawa
Herbert G. Brand and wife, 22, Naka
Rokuban Cho, Kojimachi
Chas. H. Buxbaum and wife, 4 Kobinatadai
Machi Itchome, Koishikawa
Rev. W. D. Cunningham and wife, 6 Naka
Cho Nichome, Yotsuya
Miss M. Elliot, 40, Yo Cho Machi, Okubo,
Ushigome
Rev. G. Ensor, 2, Kasumi Cho, Azabu'
Tokyo
Miss E. V. Ensor, 2, Kasumi Cho, Azabu,
Tokyo
Miss Anna C. Hartshorne, 16, Goban Cho,
Kojimachi
Rev. H. S. Jefferys, 53, Akashi Cho, Tsukiji Rev. C. C. Klingman and wife, 68, Zoshi-
gaya, Koishikawa
Rev. J. M. McCaleb and wife, 68 Zoshi-
gaya, Koishikawa
Dr. Thos. McCloy and wife, 4, Hikawa
Cho, Akasaka
Miss Alice Miller, 7, Naka Cho Nichome,
Yotsuya
Dr. Rachel Read, 23, Reinanzaka Cho,
Akasaka
Miss Laura M. Spiese, 98, Kashiwagi,
Yedobashi Machi
Miss Minnie Upperman (absent)
Mrs. R. G. Wharton, 19, Ipponmatsu,
Daikokuzaka, Azabu
Mrs. Wm. J. White, 74, Hiroo Cho, Azabu Miss L. J. Wirick, 72, Wakamatsu Cho,
Ushigome
692
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
YOKOSUKA
Miss E. Finch, 43, Wakamatsu Cho
NAGANO, SHINSHIU
Miss L. Norman, 12, Agata Machi
MATSUMOTO, SHINSHIU
J. P. Whitney and wife, 803, Miyamura Cho
NARA
Miss Lillian Poole Miss Lulu Williams
OSAKA
Rev. Robert Atchison and wife, Nanwaen, Abeno, Tennoji Mura, Higashi Nari Gun W. P. Rollstin, 15 Kami Sanchome,
Sonesaki, Kita Kn
INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN POLICE AND WARDERS'
ASSOCIATION
(40, Ogawa, Machi, Kanda) TOKYO Wm. J. Taylor and wife Miss Lillie Mahood
INTERNATIONAL REFORM BUREAU (c/o Methodist Publishing House)
TOKYO
Rev. E. W. Thwing and wife, 30A, Tsukiji
JAPAN BOOK AND TRACT SOCIETY Representing the American Tract Society, New York, and the Religious Tract Society, London.
(3 Yuraku Cho Nichome, Kojimachi) Токто
George Braithwaite, agent, and wife, 5,
Hikawa Cho, Akasaka, Tokyo
Board of Managers
Rev. Wm. Imbrie, D.D., president
George Braithwaite, secretary-treasurer Rev. C. Bishop
Rev. H. H. Coates, D.D.
Rt. Rev. Bishop J. McKim, D.D. Rev. E. R. Miller
Rev A. K. Reischauer
JAPAN EVANGELISTIC BAND KOBE
James Cuthbertson (absent) A. L. Dyer and wife, 120 of 2, Oku Hirano Paget Wilkes and wife (absent)
Miss Coles, 120 of 2, Oku Hirano Mura Miss R. Cribb, 120 of 2, Oku Hirano Mura Miss Jessie Harrison, 120 of 2, Oku Hirano
Mura
TOKYO
Geo. Braithwaite (hon.), 5, Hikawa Cho,
Akasaka
Miss C. T. Penrod (absent)
JAPAN GENERAL MISSION NIKKO
Rev. H. R. Wansey and wife, Shiken Cho Miss H. E. Nottidge, Shiken Cho
LEPER HOSPITAL KUMAMOTO
Miss H. Riddell (absent) Miss G. Nott (absent)
MEDICAL MISSION Akasaka Hospital, Tokyo (17 Hikawa Cho, Akasaka) Dr. W. N. Whitney and wife Miss M. K. Dietz, lady superintendent
METHODIST CHURCH OF CANADA
TOKYO
Rev. H. H. Coates, D.D., and wife, 23,
Kami Tomizaka Cho, Koishikawa Rev. G. P. Connolly and wife, 16 Tatsuoka
Cho, Hongo
Miss I. S. Blackmore, 8, Toriizaka Machi,
Azabu
Miss Edith Campbell, 8, Toriizaka Machi,
Azabu
Miss Mary A. Chapman, 8, Toriizaka
Machi, Azabu
Miss M. Craig (absent)
Miss Ida B. Day, 8, Toriizaka Machi,
Azabu
Miss L M. Hargrave, 8, Toriizaka Machi,
Azbau
Miss J. L. Howie, 8, Toriizaka Machi,
Azabu
Miss M. D. Keagey, 8. Toriizaka Machi,
Azabu
Miss O. Neata Markland, 8, Toriizaka
Azabu
Miss F. K. Morgan, 8, Toriizaka Machi,
Azabu
Miss Alice Timberlake, 8, Torrizaka Machi,
Azabu
SHIZUOKA
Rev. R. Emberson and wife, Higashi
Kusabuka Cho
Miss E. Crombie, Jo Gakko
Mrs. Pinsent,
do.
Miss M. A. Veazey, do.
HAMAMATSU
Rev. C. P. Holmes and wife
Koru
Rev. J. C. L. Bates, M.A., and wife (absent) Miss E. H. Alcorn (absent)
Miss Annie Allen, B.A., Yamanashi Eiwa
Jo Gakko
Miss Ada Killam, Yamanashi Eiwa Jo
Gakko
Miss M. A. Robertson, Yamanashi Eiwa
Jo Gakko
Miss G. Tweedie, Yamanashi Ewia JoGakko
KANAZAWA
Rev. R. C. Armstrong, B.A., and wife, 14
Naka Takajo Machi
Rev. D. R. McKenzie, D.D., and wife, H.
Naka Takajo Machi
Miss H. J. Jost, 75, Hirosaka Dori
Miss Mary Jost,
do.
Miss M. E. Armstrong, 75, Hirosaka Dori
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
FUKUI
Rev. E. C. Hennigar and wife
NAGANO, SHINSHIU
Rev. D. Norman and wife, 12 Agata
Machi
UEDA, SHINSHIU
Miss R. Beattie, B.A.
Miss K. I. D. Drake
Miss C. E. Hart
Miss H. E. De Wolf (absent)
TOYAMA
Rev. A. T. Wilkinson and wife, 216, Sen-
koku Machi
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
(East Conference) TOKYO
Rt. Rev. Bishop Merriman C. Harris, D.D.,
LL.D., Aoyania Gakuin
Rev. K. Alexander, A.M., and wife,
Aoyama Gakuin
Rev. Arthur D. Berry, Aoyama Gakuin Rev. C. N. Bertels (and wife, absent) Rev. Charles Bishop and wife, 156, Tsukiji Rev. B. Chappell, D.D., and wife, Aoyama
Gakuin
Rev. C. S. Davison and wife, Aoyama
Gakuin
Rev. C. W. Iglehart and wife, Aoyama
Gakuin
Rev. J. Soper, D.D., and wife (absent) Rev. D. S. Spencer, D.D., and wife,
Aoyama Gakuin
Miss J. S. Vail, Aoyama Gakuin
Miss Harriet S. Alling, Aoyama Jo Gakuin Miss Ella Blackstock, Aoyama Joshi
Shugei Gakko
Miss E. Bullis, Aoyama Jo Gakuin
Miss N. Margaret Daniel, Aoyama Jo
Gakuin
Miss Minnie Gardner, Aoyama Jo Gakuin Miss Amy G. Lewis,
Miss M. A. Spencer, Miss Grace Wythe,
YOKOHAMA
do.
do.
do.
Rev. G. F. Draper and wife, 222, Bluff Miss G. Baucus, 37, Bluff
Bluff
Miss E. E. Dickenson 37, Miss Leonora Seeds, 221, Bluff Miss Anna B. Slate, 221, Bluff
Mrs. C. W. Van Petten, 221, Bluff
SENDAI
Rev. H. W. Schwartz, M.P., and wife, 94,
Sanban Cho
Miss Carrie A. Heaton, 2, Samban Cho Miss E. J. Hewett,
do.
Miss Frances E. Phelps (absent)
HAKODATE
Miss Augusta Dickerson, Ini Ja takko Miss M. S. Hampton (absent) Miss Florence Singer, Ini Jo Gakko Miss A. B. Sprowles,
ito.
HIROSAKI
Rev. F. A. Cassidy and wife (absent)
693
Rev. E. T. Iglehart, 5, Shimo Shirokane
Cho
Miss Bessie Alexander, 9, Naka Kawarage
Cho
Miss M. B. Griffiths, 9, Naka Kawarage Cho SAPPORO
Rev. F. W. Heckelman and wife Miss Anna V. Bing (absent)
Miss Louisa Imhoff, 13, Minami Ichijo Miss Helen Santee
(West Conference)
NAGOYA
Rev. W. de L. Kingsbury, 182, Minami
Hisaya Cho
Miss Anna P. Atkinson, Seiryu Jo Gakko,
Chikusa Machi
Miss Mabel Lee (absent)
Miss M. Helen Russell, Seiryu Jo Gakko,
Chikusa Machi
Miss E. Maud Soper (absent) Miss R. J. Watson (absent) Miss Georgia Weaver, Seiryu Jo Gakko,
Chikusa Machi
NAGASAKI
Rev. M. K. W. Heicher and wife, 12c
Higashi Yamate
Rev. F. N. Scott and wife, 6, Higashi
Yamate
Rev. F. Herron Smith, 3, Higashi Yamate Miss A. M. Ashbaugh, Kwassui Jo Gakko Miss M. A. Cody,
Miss M. E. Melton (absent) Miss E. Russell (absent) Miss H. A. Thomas (absent)
do.
Miss Marianna Young, Kwassi Jo Gakko
FUKUOKA
Rev. J. Ira Jones and wife, 77, Tenjin Cho Miss L. Alice Finlay, Eiwa Jo Gakko Miss Lola M. Kidwell (absent)
Miss Mabel K. Seeds, Eiwa Jo Gakko
KUMAMOTO
Rev. J. C Davison, D.D., and wife, 435,
Furu Shinyashiki
KAGOSHIMA
Miss J. M. Gheer, 83, Kami Tatsuo Machi,
Ahiru Baba
Miss H. Long (absent)
Miss Lida B. Smith, 83, Kami Tatsuo
Machi, Ahiru Baba
NAHA, LOOCHOO
Rev. H. B. Schwartz, D.D. (and wife, abt.) HONOLULU, HAWAII
Rev. J. W. Wadman and wife
Rev. H. B. Johnson, D.D.
JAPANESE MISSION, 1,329, PINE ŠT., SAN FRANCISCO
Rev. M. S. Vail, M.A., and wife
694
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH,
SOUTH KORE
Rev. S. E. Hagar and wife, 135, of 2,
Kitano Cho Yochome
Rev. C. B. Moseley and wife, 23, Kite
Nagasa Dori Shichome
Miss M. Bonnell, 35, Nakayamate Dori
Shichome
Miss Virginia Garner (absent)
Miss W. L. Park, 35, Nakayamate Dori
Shichome
KOBE KWANSEI GAKUIN
(P. O. Address, Box, 54, Sannomiya) Rev. T. H. Haden and wife Rev. W, K. Mathews and wife Rev. J. C. C. Newton, D.D., and wife
OSAKA
Rev. W. R. Weakley and wife, 14,
Kawaguchi Cho
KYOTO
Rev. W. A. Davis and wife, 111, Sosui
Hama, Hiromichi Nishi
ÕITA, BUNGO
Rev. W. A. Wilson and wife (absent) Miss Ida M. Worth
NAKATSU, BUZEN
Rev. W. B. Waters and wife
UWAJIMA
Rev. W. P. Turner and wife
MATSUYAMA
Rev. T. W. B. Demaree and wife
MIYAICHI, YAMAGUCHI KEN
Rev. S. A. Stewart
HIROSHIMA
Rev. W. J. Callahan and wife (absent) Rev. H. P. Jones and wife, Kami Nagare
Kawa Cho
Rev. J. T. Meyers and wife, 133, Kami
Nobori Cho
Miss M. L. Blount, 133, Kami Nobori Cho Miss M. M. Cook, Girls' School, Kami
Nagare Kawa Cho
Miss N. B. Gaines, Girls' School, Kami
Nagare Kawa Cho
Miss A. B. Lanius, Girls' School, Kami
Nagare Kawa Cho
Miss I. L. Shannon (absent)
Miss K. Shannon, Girls' School, Kami
Nagare Kawa Cho
METHODIST PROTESTANT MISSION NAGOYA
Rev. U. G. Murphy and wife (absent) Rev. E. I. Obee and wife, 47, Chokyuji Rev. F. A. Perry and wife (absent) Rev. F. Totten and wife (absent) Miss A. L. Forest (absent)
Miss E. M. Wilson, 330, Ura Monzen Cho Miss Donna Schileglemilch,
HAMAMATSU
do.
Miss Alice L. Coates, 10 Motoshiro Cho
YOKOHAMA
Rev. H. L. Laymen and wife, 83, Hinode
Cho
Miss N. V. Grosse, 244B, Bluff Miss Olive I. Hodges (absent) Miss Gertrude Mallett, 244B, Bluff Miss M. E. Williams, 244B, Bluff
TOKYO
Rev. E. II. van Dyke and wife, 15A, Tsukiji
NATIONAL BIBLE SOCIETY OF
SCOTLAND (95, Yedo Machi) KOBE
F. Parrott, agent, and wife.
ORIENTAL MISSIONARY SOCIETY
Tokyo
C. E. Cowman and wife, Kashiwagi Yodo-
bashi Machi
E. A. Kilbourne and wife, Kashiwagi
Yodobashi Machi
Edwin L. Kilbourne, Kashiwagi Yodobashi
Machi
Miss E. A. Pearce, Kashiwagi Yodobashi
Machi
PRESBYTERIAN MISSION, U.S.A.
(East Japan) TOKYO
J. C. Ballagh and wife, Meiji Gakuin Rev. W. Imbrie, D.D., and wife, Meiji Gakuin Rev. H. M. Landis and wife, Meiji Gakuin Rev. T. M. MacNair and wife (absent) Rev. A. K.Reischauer and wife, Meiji Gaku Rev. D. Thompson, D.D., and wife,16,Tsukiji Miss A. P. Ballagh (absent)
Miss E. R. Campbell, 33, Kami Niban Cho,
Kojimachi
Miss Sarah Gardner (absent)
Miss L. S. Halsey, 33, Kami Nibau Cho,
Kojimachi
Miss M. H. London, 33, Kami Nihan Cho,
Kojimachi
Mrs. J. K. McCauley, 356, Okubo, Miss E. P. Millikin, 33, Kami Niban Cho,
Kojinachi
Miss I. M. Ward. 33, Kami Niban Cho,
Kojimachi
Miss A. B. West, 2, Nishi Machi, Nihone-
noki, Shiba
Miss K. M. Youngman, 6, Tsukiji
ASAHIGAWA Rev. G. P. Pierson and wife
SAPPORO Rev. W. T. Johnson and wife Miss A. M. Monk, Hokusei Jo Gakko,
Kitayojo Nishi Itchome
Miss M. E. Moore, Jo Gakko, Kitayojo
Nishi Itchome
Miss S. C. Smith, Jo Gakko, Kitayojo
Nishi Itchome
(TEU
Miss Carrie H. Rose
1
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
(West Japan) KANAZAWA
Rev. G. W. Fulton, D.D., and wife Miss L. Dooley, Hokuriku Jo Gakko Miss K. A. Gibbons, Hokuriku Jo Gakko Miss A. Hail, Hokuriku Jo Gakko
Miss J. M. Johnstone, Hokuriku Jo Gakko
FOKUI
Rev. J. G. Dunlop and wife, 51, Hoe Kami
Cho
KYOTO
Rev. R. P. Gorbold and wife, Ichijodori,
Muromachi Nishi Ye Iru
Rev. W. Y. Jones, D.D., and wife (absent) OSAKA
Rev. A. D. Hail, D.D., and wife, 33, Kawagu-
chi Cho
Rev. D. A. Murray, D.D., and wife, 22,
Kawaguchi Cho
Rev. G. W. Van Horn and wife
Miss S. Alexander, Wilnina Jo Gakko Miss Annie Hail, 33, Kawaguchi Cho Miss Evelyn Maguet, Wilmina Jo Gakko Miss Agnes Morgana, Wilmina Jo Gakko Miss Mary E. Ransom
Miss E. Robertson, Wilmina Jo Gakko
WAKAYAMA
Rev. J. B. Hail, D.D., and wife
TANABE
YAMADA
Miss Julia Leavitt
Rev. W. F. Hereford and wife
Miss J. Riker
Tsu, Iss
Rev. J. E. Hail and wife, 23, Furukawa Miss M. B. Sherman
KURE
Rev. H. Brokaw and wife, Inari Cho
HIROSHIMA
Miss A. E. Garvin, 189, Kokutaiji Mura
YAMAGUCHI
Rev. J. B. Ayres and wife, Shimo Tatekoji Miss G. S. Bigelow, Shimo Tatekoji Miss F. Bigelow, Shimo Tatekoji Miss Lillian A. Wells, Shimo Tatekoji
SEOUL, COREA
Rev. F. S. Curtis and wife
PYENG YANG, COREA
Miss Ida R. Luther
DALNY, MANCHURIA
Rev. T. C. Winn and wife
PORT ARTHUR, MANCHURIA
Rev. A. V. Bryan and wife
PRESBYTERIAN MISSION, U.S.A.
(SOUTH) KOCHI
Roy, W. B. Mellwaine and wife, 180, Taka-
jo Machi
Rev. H. HI. Munroe and wife, 159, Ohashi
Dori
Miss Annie Dowdl (absent)
Miss M. J. Atkinson, 10, Jakoba
Miss M. G. Mebane (absent)
NAGOYA
695
Rev. Wm. C. Buchanan and wife, 64, Shira-
kabe Cho Itchome
Rev. R. E. McAlpine and wife, 64, Shira-
kabe Cho 1tehome
Miss Lilian Curd, Kinjo Jo Gakko, Shira-
kabe Cho Shich me
Miss Ella Houston, Kinjo Jo Gakko,
Shirakabe Cho Shichome
Miss Sala Evans, Kinjo Jo Gakko, Shira-
kabe Cho Shichome
SUSAKI, KOCHI KEN Rev. J. W. Moore and wife
TAKAMATSU
Rev. S. M. Erickson and wife, 127, Hama
No Cho
Miss Charlotte Thompson, 127, Hama No
Cho
TOKUSHIMA
Rev. C. A. Logan and wife, 82, Tokushima
Machi
Miss F. D. Patton, 172, Terashima Machi Miss A. N. Patton (absent)
KOBE
Rev. W. McS. Buchanan and wife, 59
Ikutacho, Itchome
Rev. S. P. Fulton, D.D., and wife (absent) Rev. H. W. Meyers and wife, 112, Yama-
moto Dori Slichome
RAILWAY MISSION
Miss E. R. Gillett, 123, Kashiwagi Yodo-
bashi Machi, Tokyo Fu
Miss A. M. Hutchings, 123, Kashiwagi
Yodobashi Machi, Tokyo Fu
REFORMED CHURCH IN AMERICA
(DUTCH) TOKYO
Rev. W. E. Hoffsommer and wife, 13,
Reinanzaka Cho, Akasaka
Rev. E. R. Miller, M.A., and wife, 22, Hira-
kawa Cho Rokuchome, Kojimachi
Dr. M. N. Wyckoff, D.Sc., and wife, 77,
Imasato Cho, Shirokane
YOKOHAMA
Rev. J. H. Ballagh, D.D., 48, Bluff
Rev. E. S. Booth and wife, 178, Bluff
Miss Jennie Kuyper, 178, Bluff
Miss J. Moulton, 178, Bluff
Miss A. de F. Thompson (absent)
MORIOKA
Rev. D. C. Ruigh and wife (absent)
AOMORI
Miss M. L. Winn, 10 Daiku Machi
NAGASAKI
Rev. H. V. S. Peeke (and wife, absent) Rev. A. Pieters and wife, 14, Higashi
Yamate Oura
A. Walvoord and wife, 16, Higashi Yamate Miss S. M. Couch, 144, Higashi Yamate Miss Grace Thomasmu, 14A, Higashi Ya-
mate
696
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
KARAISU, IZEN
Rev. W. G. Hoekje, Nishi no Hama
KAGOSHIMA Miss Jennic Buys, 45, Shimo Tatsuo Cho Miss H. M. Lausing (absent) Miss J. A. Pieters, 45, Shimo Tatsuo Cho
REFORMED CHURCH IN THE U.S.
(GERMAN) TOKYO
Rev. J. P. Moore, D.D., and wife (absent) Miss B. Catherine Pifer (absent)
SENDAI
Rev. H. H. Casselman and wife, Kita
Yoban Cho
Rev. Allen K. Faust, PH.D., and wife, 78,
Higashi Sauban Cho
Paul L. Gerhard and wife, 59, Kwozenji
Dori
Rev. Win. E. Lampe and wife (absent)
Rev. H. K. Miller and wife, 59, Kwozenji
Dori
Rev. D. R. Schneder, D.D., and wife, 78,
Higashi Sanban Chó
Rev. Wm. G. Seiple, P.D., and wife, 29,
Tsuchidoi
Rev. J. F. Steiner, 112, Kita Niban Cho Rev. Elmer II. Zaugg and wife, 59, Kwozen-
ji Dori
Miss Mary E. Gerhard, 59, Kwozenji Dori Miss Kate I. Hansen, Miyagi Jo Gakko,
Higashi Sanban Cho
Miss Clara Mosser, Miyagi Jo Gakko,
Higashi Sanban Cho
Miss Lydia A. Lindsey, Miyagi Jo Gakko,
Higashi Sanban Cho'
Miss S. L. Weidner, Miyagi Jo Gakko,
Higashi Sanban Cho
YAMAGATA
Rev. H. H. Cook and wife, Chitose-cn,
Shinchiku
RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY, LONDON
3, YURAKU CHO NICHOME, KOJIMACHI, TOKYO
George Braithwaite, agent, and wife, 5,
Hikawa Cho, Akasaka, Tokyo
REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ANGLICAN COMMUNION NOW WORKING IN JAPAN Society for the Propagation of the Gospel TOKYO
Rt. Rev. C. N. Boutflower, D.D. (Bishop
Cecil), 153, Homura Cho, Azabu
Miss S. Ballard (absent)
Miss C. Cross, 16, Hirakawa Cho Roku-
chome, Kojimachi
Miss E. M. Hughes,
do.
Miss S. C. Rogers,
do.
Miss M. D. Weston (absent)
YOKOHAMA
Rev. B. N. Miles, B A., and wife, 34, Naka-
mura Machi
Rev. H. B. Walton, M.A., and wife, 2,092,
Minami Ota Maclii
NUMAZU
Rev. R. D. M. Shaw, B.A., Higashi Kawa,
Agetsuchi
SHIZUOKA Mrs. Bickersteth (absent)
HAMAMATSU
Rev. C. O. Pickard-Cambridge, M.A., Azada
Machi Shindo
KOBE
Rt. Rev. H. J. Foss, D.D., Bishop and wife,
The Firs, Shinomiya
Rev. F. Kettlewell, Maka Yamate Dori
Shichome
Rev. C. Foxley and wife, Yamamoto Dori
Shichome
II. Hughes and wife, 5 Naka Yamate
Dori Sanchome Mr. F. B. Walker, Mr. S. Scott,
Miss N. Bosanquet, Okuhirano Miss A. Parker,
do.
do.
do.
Miss Rowland, 16, Naka Yamate Dori
Rokuchome
Miss D. Gregson,
Miss M. Service, Miss Glen Bott, 33, Miss Prindiville, 15,
OKAYAMA
cio.
do.
do.
do.
Rov. G. S. Boys and wife (absent) Rev.I. T. Steels and wife, Goban Cho
St. Andrew's Mission TOKYO
Rev. L. B. Cholmondeley, M.A., 25, Iwato
Cho, Ushigome
Rev. Wm. C. Gemmill, M... (absent) Rev. Wm. T. Grey, M.A., 11 Sakae Cho,
Shiba
Rev, A, F. King, M.A.,
Rev. A. E. Webb, MA,
St. Hilda's Mission
do.
do.
1 NAGASAKA CHO, AZABU, TOKYO Miss E. Hamilton
Miss F. M. F. Hogan Miss C G. L. Nevile Miss Newman
Miss E. C. Pringle Miss M. Rickards
Miss E. G. Philipps, 108, Zoshigaya Machi,
Koishikawa
Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada
TOKYO
ני
Rev. G. E. Ryerson, M.A., and wife, 30, Kit
Machi, Takunawa
MATSUMOTO
Rev..W. Kennedy, M. A., and wife, Arign.saki Mrs. F. E. Gibbons, St. Mary's Home, Ari-
gasaki
Miss S. E. Makeham,
do.
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
UEDA
Rev. J. G. Waller, M.A., and wife
NAGANO
Miss A. L. Archer, Nishi Nagano Cho Miss E. E. Spencer,
TAKATA
do.
Rev. C. H. Shortt, M.A., Shin Nakadono
Cho
Church Missionary Society
TOKYO
Rev. W. P. Buncombe, B.A., and wife, 52-A
Tsukiji
Rev. W. H. Elwin and wife, 7, Sasugaya
Cho, Koishikawa
Miss H. G. Langton (absent)
Miss A. Roberts, 24, Naka Rokuban Cho,
Kojimachi
CHOSHI, CHIBA Ken
Miss L. A. Galgey, 105, Koya Take Cho TOYOHASHI
Rev. J. M. Baldwin, MA and wife, Nishi
Hatcho
Miss O. Julius (absent)
Miss C. E. Wood
NAGOYA
Rev. H. J. Hamilton, B.A., and wife, 43,
Higashi Kataha
Miss E. S. Huhold, Minami Hisaya Cho
Nichome
Miss E. M. Trent, Fukide Machi, Habashita Miss D. S. Wynne-Willson, 6, Shirakabe
Cho Itchome
Miss M. M. Young, Shivakabe Cho Itchome
GIFU
Rev. G. C. Niven and wife (absent) Rev. H. Woodward and wife, Iwane Cho Miss F. Gardener, Shimo Take Cho Miss A. Henty,
do.
Miss E. M. Walter (absent)
OSAKA
Rev. G. Chapman, B.A., and wife, 23, Kawa-
guchi Cho
Rev. W. R. Gray, M.A., and wife (absent) Rev. G. W. Rawlings and wife
Rev. C. T. Warren, M.A., and wife, 4, Kawa-
guchi Cho
Rev. C. H. B. Woodd, M.A., and wife, Mo-
moyama Chu Gakko
Miss E. B. Boulton, 68, Satsuma Bori Mi-
nami no Cho, Nishi Ku
Aliss N. Bowman, 174, Shinonome Cho Ni-
chome Higashiku Miss R. D. Howard,
dlo.
Miss L. L. Shaw, 12, Kawaguchi Cho Miss K. Tristram, B.A., 12, Kawaguchi Cho
HIROSHIMA
Rev. R. M. Millan and wife, 443, Takryn
Mura
MATSUYE
Rev. O. H. Knight, M.A., and wife Miss J. Head (absent)
YONAGO
Miss J. C. Gillespy (absent) Miss E. Nash
HAMADA
Rev. J. C. Mann and wife Miss E. M. Fugill Miss M. L. Pasley
TOKUSHIMA
Rev. S. Heaslett and wife
697
Rev. L. P. Hill and wife, 17, Shinkura Cho Miss J. E. Mackie, 298, Tomida Ura Machi,
Nakano Cho
Miss E. R. Ritson (absent)
Mrs. C. F. Warren, 293, Tomida Ura Machi
Nakano Cho
KURE
Miss E. D. Preston, 163, Shimizu Dori Miss H. J. Worthington, 163,
NAGASAKI
do.
Rev. A. R. Fuller (and wife, absent) Miss A. M. Cox, 7, Shindaiku Machi Miss Thompson, 7,
ŚASEBO
do.
Rev. F. W. Rowlands, M.A., and wife, 2,
Tonoo Machi
KOKURA
Rev. J. Hind & wife, 107, Higashi Kaji Machi Miss A. C. J. Horne, Furusenba Miss E. M. Keen,
do.
FUKUOKA
Rt. Rev. A. Lea, M.A., Bishop, and wife, 96,
Daimyo Machi
Rev. G. H. Moule and wife (absent) Miss C. L. Burnside
Miss O. M. Crawford
do.
do.
do.
Miss A. Griffin, 21, Gokurakuji Cho Miss A. C. Tennent, 24,
KUMAMOTO
Rev. A. B. Hutchinson and wife (absent) Rev. S. Painter and wife, Kusaba Cho Miss F. M. Freeth, 2, Choanji Cho
KAGOSHIMA
Rev. A. C. Hutchinson, 125, Yamashita Cho Miss H. S. Cockram, 41, Kajiya Cho Miss A. P. Sells, 42,
HAKODATE
do.
Rt. Rev. W. Andrews, Bishop, and wife Rev. D. M. Lang, M.A., and wife, 55, Moto-
machi
Miss M. Brownlow, 86, Funami Cho Miss A. M. Tapson, 86,
(TAYU
do.
Miss E. C. Payne, 17, Hanazono Cho Miss G. S. Stevenson, 12, Suminoye Cho
SAPPORO
Rev. J. Batchelor, F.R.G.S., and wife (abt.)
lev. J. C. Robinson, 69, Shimo Nagare Rev. W. E. Recve, 1, Kita San Jo Nishi
Kawa Machi
Miss A. C. Bosanquet, 145, Kokutaiji Mura
Miss E. Thorp,
Miss M. Sander (absent)
do.
Shichichome
Miss E. L. B. Norton, 2,
MURORAN
Miss M. Jex-Blake, Seikokwai
do.
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
698
ASAHIGAWA
Miss A. Evans
KUSHIRO
Miss A. M. Hughes (absent)
Miss E. E. Hughes, 134, Yone Machi
PIRATORI
Miss E. M. Bryant, Seikokwai
Co-operating TOKYO
Miss Boutflower, 153, Honmura Cho, Azabu Miss M. II. Cornwall-Legh, 4, Yarai Machii,
Ushigome
do.
Miss E. M. Dixon, 29, Shimbori Cho, Shiba Miss K. A. E. Kent, 29,
YOKOHAMA
Rev. W. T. Austen (and wife, absent), Chaplain of Seaman's Mission, 82, Settle- ment, and 600, Bluff
Rev. W. P. G. Field, M.A., Incumbent of Christ Church, The Parsonage, 234, Bluff
OSAKA
do.
Miss L. C. Hamilton, 12, Kawaguchi Cho Miss J. M. Holland, 13,
MATSUYE
J. Gurney Barclay (absent)
KUMAMOTO
Miss G. Nott (absent)
Miss H. Riddell do.
RUSSIAN ECCLESIASTICAL MISSION
Tokyo
His Grace Archbishop Nicolai, Surugadai Rt. Rev. Bishop Sergy,
SALVATION ARMY
do.
11, GINZA NICHOME, TOKYO Commissioner H. C. Hodder and wife Major R. Hamilton Orr and wife Major James H. Tindale and wife Major Beaumont and wife Staff-Capt. W. Twilley and wife
Do. Robson and wife Adjutant Férnance
Do.
Pearson
Do. T. Wilson and wife
Capt. S. Montgomery
Capt. N. Harrington
Capt. A. Smyth
Capt. F. Robson
YOKOHAMA
88, Yamashita Cho
Adjt. H. Carter and wife
SCANDINAVIAN ALLIANCE
MISSION TOKYO
Rev. F. O. Bergström and wife, 920, Ueno
hara, Nakano, Tokyo Fu
TAKAYAMA, HIDA
Rev. J. Anderson and wife
Miss H. Anderson (absent)
CHIBA, SHIMOSA
Miss A. J. Peterson
Iro IDZU
Rev. A. Matson and wife (absent)
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST
TOKYO
W. D. Burden and wife, 846, Sendagaya
Machi, Akasaka
Dr. W. C. Dunscombe, M.D., and wife.
Oiwake Cho, Hongo
F. W. Field (and wife, absent)
HIROSHIMA
H, F. Benson & wife, 30, Kami Yanagi Cho
NAGASAKI
J. N. Herboltzheimer and wife WAKAMATSU, AIZU
W. L. Foster and wife Miss Etta Cornish
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS TOKYO
Gilbert Bowles and wife, 30, Koun Cha
Mita, Shiba
H. E. Coleman and wife, 144, Honmura Cho,
Azabu
Miss Saralı Ellis, 30, Koun Cho, Mita Miss A. G. Lewis,
Miss Inez E. Taber
do.
do.
MITO
G. Binford and wife, 26, Bizen Machi Miss Ella Moore
SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION
FUKUOKA
Rev. G. W. Bouldin and wife, Kego Mura
Fuji Dana
Rev. C. K. Dozier and wife, 7, Shokunk
Machi
Rov. E. N. Walve, D.D., and wife (absent)
KUMAMOTO Rev. W. H. Clarke and wife, 135, Kpo
Machi Nichome
SHIMONOSEKT Rev. J. F. Ray and wife, Tanaka Machi,
Nakashima
NAGASAKI Rev. J. H. Rowe and wife, 29, Sakura Babs Rev. John Moncure,
do.
KAGOSHIMA Rev. P. P. Medling and wife, 68, Hirano Cho
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
TOKYO FU
Rev. J. Cosand and wife, 1,929, Shimo Shi
buya
Rev. A. T. Howard, D.D., and wife, 1,913,
Shimo Shibuya
KYOTO
Rev. B. F. Shively and wife, Awata Goier
Mae Dori, Keryu Bashi Minami
UNIVERSALIST MISSION
ΤΟΚΥΟ
Rev. G. I. Keirn, D.D., and wife, 15,
Sanban Cho, Kojimachi
Dote
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN JAPAN
Miss M. A. Hathaway, 50, Oimatsu Cho,
Koishikana Miss C. M. Osborn,
SHIZUOKA
do.
Rev. N. L. Lobdell and wife, 79, Oiwa Mura
WOMEN'S UNION MISSIONARY SOCIETY OF AMERICA
YOKOHAMA
Miss J. N. Crosby,
Miss C. Alward,
Miss Anna Hill,
Miss S. A. Pratt,
212, Bluff
do.
do.
do.
Miss C. D. Loomis, 223, Bluff
Miss Mary E. Tracey, do.
Miss Florence Wells, do.
WORLD'S WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN
TEMPERANCE UNION
TOKYO
Miss R. F. Davis, 118, Honmura Cho, Azabu Miss F. E. Strout,
do.
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
(International Committee)
Secretaries TOKYO
G. M. Fisher and wife, 22, Fujimichome
Kojimachi
J. M. Clinton and wife, 21, Iida Machi
Kokuchome, Kojimachi
J. H. Wallace, Y.M.C.A. Dormitory, Waseda Miss F. Noble, 23, Fujimi Cho, Gochome,
Kojimachi
Mrs. C. V. Hibbard,
Kyoro
do.
G. S. Phelps and wife (absent)
OSAKA
G. Gleason and wife, 32, Kawaguchi Cho
KOBE
H. A. Wilbur and wife
NAGASAKI
J. Merle Davis and wife, Higashi Yamate
DALNY, MANCHURIA
C. V. Hibbard (and wife, absent)
OSAKA
Y.M.C.A. Teachers
W. H. Braddock, Yamaguchi
H. Brown, Kyoto
A. Oscar Caldwell, Miyazu
M. E. Chapin, Tokuyama, Yamaguchi Ken
699
P. H. Dowling, Shoingai Gochome, Tai-
hoku, Formosa
F. E. Greens, 142, Okazaki Cho, Kyoto C.A. Hibbbard, 123, Nagata Cho, Kagoshima R. F. Hints, Gakko Cho, Niigata
A. B. Kellog, Odawara
S. F. Light, 123, Nagata Cho, Kagoshima C. C. Lilly, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka M. L. Lowery,
do.
E. O. Mills, Chofu, Yamaguchi Ken J. B. Morgan, Agricultural College, Sapporo F. B. Nicodemus, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka J. C. Pringle, Higher Normal School,
Hiroshima
Wm. Rennie, 9, Moto Machi, Hakodate W. C. Robb, Hachiman, Omi
C. L. Rotzel, Shinmachi, Yamaguchi P. Rowland, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka P. A. Smith, Higher Normal School, Hiro-
shima
Roy Smith, Higher Commercial School,
Kobe
C. O. Spamer, Takamatsu
W. M. Vories, Hachiman, Owi
K. B. Whitworth, Nagasaki
H. F. Woodsworth, 123, Nagata Cho, Kago-
shima
Christian Teachers Fraternally Related T. G. Hitch and wife, Naval College, Eta-
jima, Aki
H. D. Leland, Iwakuni, Yamaguchi Ken Mr. MacMillan, 32, Kawaguchi-cho, Osaka
CHINESE YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
3, MITOSHIRO CHO SANCHOME, KANDA,
TOKYO Secretary
J. M. Chinton, 21 Iida Machi Rokuchome,
Kojimachi
Workers Rev. G. L. Davis (absent)
Rev. W. H. Elwin, 7, Sasugaya Cho, Koi-
shikawa
J. H. Wallace, Chinese Y.M.C.A., Waseda,
Ushigome
YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
(World's Committee)
Miss A. C. Macdonald, 41, Sanban Cho,
Kojimachi, Toyko
Miss M. L. Matthew, 41,
Miss M. Sherrard Kerr
do.
do.
FORMOSA
This island, one of the largest in Asia, is situated between latitude 22 and 26 degrees N., and longitude 120 and 122 degrees E., and is separated from the coast of Fukien, China, by a channel about one hundred miles in width. It is a prolongation of the Japanese and Loochoo Archipelagoes, and in 1895 was incorporated in the Jap anese empire. Its name Formosa, signifying "beautiful island," was conferred by the Portuguese, the first Europeans to visit it, but it was called Taiwan (Great Bay) by the Chinese, to whom it belonged from 1661 to 1894. It is said that the Japanese endeavoured to form a colony in the island in 1620, but large numbers of Chinese were settled there prior to that date. The Dutch arrived in 1034, and founded several settlements, and traces of their occupation are still to be found in the island, but they were compelled in 1661 to retire by the Chinese pirate chief Koxinga, who then assumed the sovereignty of western Formosa. His grandson and successor, however, was inducerl, twenty-two years later, to resign the crown to the Emperor of China. By the Treaty of Shimonoseki, which terminated the war between China and Japan in 1895, the island was ceded to Japan as one of the conditions of peace, and on the 1st June, 1895, the formal surrender was made, the ceremony taking place on board ship outside Keelung. The resident Chinese officials, however, declared a republic, and offered resistance, and it was not until the end of October that the opposing forces were completely overcome, the last stand being made in the south by Liu Yung-fu, the Black Flag General, of Tonkin notoriety, Takow was bombarded and captured on 15th October, and Anping was peacefully occupied on the 21st of the same month, Liu Yung-fu having taken refuge in flight.
Formosa is about 260 miles in length, and from 60 to 70 miles broad in the widest part. It is intersected from north to south by a range of mountains, which forms a kind of backbone to the island, the loftiest peak of which, Mount Morrison (Niitakayama) is 13,880 feet high. On the western side of this range the slope is more gradual than on the eastern side, and broken by fertile valleys which lose themselves in the large undulating plain on which the Chinese are settled. The whole of the territory. east of the dividing chain is peopled by an aboriginal race who acknowledged no allegiance to the Chinese Government and made frequent raids upon the outlying Chinese settlements, and they have proved troublesome also to the Japanese, notwith standing that the latter spare no effort to establish amicable relations with them They are a savage and warlike people, allied to the Malays and Polynesians, and live principally by the chase.
The total population of Formosa is given as 3,221,886. The Chinese population is about 3,036,855, whilst 569 tribes of aborigines, described in the returns as savages. aggregate approximately 100,000 persons. The latest census returns give the number of Japanese in the island as 83,329. The revenue down to 1904 averaged about 20,000,000 yen a year, but in 1905-6 it amounted to yen 25,414,146, in 1906-7 to yen 26,127,608, in 1907-8 to yen 29,257,171, and for 1908-9 it is estimated at yen 33,870,000. For the cur rent year the estimate is yen 29,951,449. The value of the exports to foreign countries in 1906 was yen 9,779,084, and imports from foreign countries amounted yen 12,738,460. For 1907 the figures were: Exports yen 9,741,429, imports yen 11,220,6 and for 1908 exports yen 9,297,875 and imports 17,074,766. The trade with Japan in 190 was returned as exports yen 18,259,527, imports yen 15,634,339; 1907 exports were yea 17,634,673, imports yen 19,750,445, and 1908 exports yen 24,423,387, imports yen 20,926,859.
The productions of Formosa are numerous, vegetation being everywhere t luxuriant, testifying to the richness of the soil. Tea and camphor are largely cultivated and exported, and a considerable industry in sugar is also growing up. Ris is likewise largely cultivated, and these two articles are extensively shipped to Japan. The fauna includes bears, monkeys, deer, wild boar, badgers, martens, the scaly ant-eater, and other smaller animals. Birds are not very numeros
FORMOSA
701
and snakes not so common as might be expected where vegetation is so abundant. It is believed that the mineral wealth of the island is very considerable. The gold mining industry is advancing rapidly. In 1902 no less than 48,400 ounces were obtained from the mines and alluvial washings, representing a value of £168,626. In 1903, 42,770 ounces were exported to Japan, in 1904, 58,680 ounces in 1905, 52,272 ounces in 1906. 48,132 ounces in 1907, and in 1908, 57,227 ozs., The output of silver in 1907 was about 19,000 ounces. At present there are three gold mines. The gold mines and alluvial washings are situated in the Keelung and Zuilo districts, and the industry from all accounts allows of considerable expansion. There are many coal mines near Keelung and sulphur springs also exist in the north of the island. The interior of the island is, however, still practically unexplored.
In
One great drawback to the island is its want of good harbours, which is more especially felt on account of the strength of the monsoons in the Formosa Channel. Those on the castern side are few and neither commodious nor accessible, while on the west coast most of the harbours are little better than open roadsteads. Harbour improvements are now being carried out in Keelung, and at Takow. Taipeh is the capital of Formosa, but Tainan-fu is the chief city in point of population. The open ports are four in number, viz.; Takow and Tainan-fu in the south, and Tamsui and Kechung in the north. The latter was held for some months in 1884-5 by the French, under Admiral Courbet, but was evacuated on the 21st June, 1885. The rivers of Formosa are few, shallow, and winding, only navigable to small flat-bottomed boats. The scenery is delightful, and the climate is very pleasant in the winter, but hot in some parts of the island and malarious in the wet season. A railway traversing the island, from Keelung in the north to Takow in the south, a distance of 259 miles, was officially opened by H. I. H. Prince Kan-In on 24th October, 1908. Short lines also connect Taipeh and Tamsui in the north, and Kyu-kyoku-do with Takow in the south. A line along the east coast is likewise in contemplation. The trade of the island shows steady development, and municipal improvements are noticeable. Kelung, Tamsui, and Taipeh water-works have been completed, and amongst numerous new buildings are large markets, and a first-class European hotel. In Taichiu practically a new city is being made, whilst in Takow large reclamations are under way, wharves are to be erected, and extensive dredging operations to be undertaken, etc. From the north of the island Ooloong tea forms the principal export, its value in 1909 being yen 5,568,092, camphor coming next with 2 value of yen 1,710,493, which is a million below the value of the export in 1907. Rice is also largely shipped to Japan. The Government is endeavouring to encourage the manufacture of black tea for export to Europe, and is said to have been successful in the experiments so far made with that object. Flax, hemp and jute amongst the articles of export, and there is now a factory at Koroton erected under official auspices for the manufacture of jute bags for packing rice. Sugar is becoming a most important industry, and bids fair to become the leading export of the island. There are now several large factories, equipped with the most modern machinery, in running order, their location being the central and southern districts, and the Government is sparing no pains to push the manufacture of refined sugar. Amongst other schemes contemplated is a vast plan of irrigation estimated to run into over 30,000,000 yen, and to require several years for comple- tim Of imports opium is the most important, its annual value amounting to some 2,250,000 yen; kerosene is an article of some importance, and there is also considerable business in white shirtings and sundry other classes of dry goods; it is, however, noticeable that there has been a steady decline in the enquiry for Chinese
cotton tissues since 1898.
are
702
FORMOSA TAMSUI AND KEELUNG
DIRECTORY
GOVERNMENT
Stationed at the Capital, TAIPER-FU (Taiboku)
Governor-General of Formosa-General Count S. SAKUMA
Chief of Civil Affairs Bureau-K. Oshima
Chief of Army Staff- Major-General S. Miyamoto
Brigadier General for North Formosa-Major-General M. Koidzumi Admiral Commanding of II. Class Naval Station of Pescadores-Vice-Admiral
Baron Y. Kano
Chief of Navy Staff-Captain T. Tsuchiyama
Chief of the Higher Court-Judge T. Ishii
Chief of the Taihoku Local Court---Judge K. Yasui
Home Affairs-T. Kawamura Finance-Dr. U. Kobayashi
DIRECTORS OF DEPARTMENTS
Agriculture and Industry-S. Miyao Public Works-H. Nagao
Harbour Irrigation and Works Dept.-K.
Oshima
Tainan S. Matsuki
Toyen-B. Nishi
Communications-R. Mochiji Police R. Otsu
Chief Engineer for Railway-S. Nimoto Monopoly Bureau-S. Miyao
SUB-PREFECTS
Giran-K. Komatsu
Taichu--T. Eda
Taipeh-D. Imura Kagi-K, Tsuda
Pescadores--T. Yokoyama
Shinchiku-T. Iyenaga
Nanto-M. Kubo
Ako-K. Sato
Taito-K. Asakura
Karenko T. Ishibashi
TAMSUI
AND KEELUNG
The port of Tamsui lies in lat. 25 deg. 10 min. N., and long. 101 deg. 20 min. E. on the north-western side of the fertile island of Formosa. The harbour, like all others in Formosa, has a troublesome bar, which greatly retards the growth of the port. This is now in course of being dredged. The town, called Hobe, is situated on the north side of the river, about two miles from the bar. In October, 1884, the Frenc ships under Admiral Courbet bombarded Tamsui, but were unable to take the place. The Japanese took possession on the 7th June, 1895. Tea grows on the bills in the locality, and the average value of the export is about five million yen
The port of Keelung lies to the north-east of Tamsui, in latitude 25 deg. 6 min. X. and longitude 121 deg. 47 min. E. It is situated on the shores of a bay between the capes of Foki and Peton, some twenty miles apart, amidst bold and striking scenery,
backet by a range of mountains. It was once a Spanish Settlement, but was subsequently captured and held by the Dutch until they in turn gave place to the Chinese under Koxinga, formerly a pirate chief who caused himself to be proclaimed King of Formosa Though a mere village, it has long carried on a considerable native trade with Amor Chin-chew, and Foochow. Keelung was opened to foreign trade at the same time as the other Formosan ports. The limits of the port are defined to be within a straight line drawn from Image Point to Bush Island. On the 5th August, 1884, the port was bo barded by the French under Admiral Lespes, when the forts above the town wen reduced to ruins, and the place captured. It was then garrisoned by the Frenc who held it until after the Treaty of Peace had been signed at Tientsin in Jum, 1885. The place was occupied by the Japanese on the 3rd June, 1895.
TAMSUL AND KEELUNG
703
At Keelung a long delayed harbour improvement scheme has been commenced, the estimated total cost of the undertaking heing Yen 6,500,000. The widening and deepening of the fairway for steamers in the inner harbour has been completed. The steamer anchorage in this harbour now has a uniform depth of at least 30 feet and the harbour has been widened to 480 feet in its narrowest part. A slipway is at Keelung for vessels of 400 tons, but a project is on foot to enlarge it to accommodate vessels up to 1,000 tons. Designs for another slipway are under consideration by the naval authorities. During 1900 a lighthouse was completed on Pak-sa Point, a low headland on the west coast, some 20 miles south-west of Tamsui, and one has been erected on Agincourt Island. A pier has been built in conjunction with the railway, alongside which most steamers are now berthed. The depth of water alongside of same is 25 feet at low tide.
The railway line between Tamsui and Daitotei (Twatutia) was opened on August, 25th, 1901, and has been of great benefit to the people of the district. The actual cost of construction was insignificant, the line having been laid upon a practically level sur- face for nearly the whole of its route. Keelung is the northern terminus of the trans- Formosan government railway; the total length of this line to Takow, on the south- west coast, is 251 miles. The capital, called by the Chinese Taipeh, is now under the Japanese nomenclature, called Taihoku. Twatutia will be found in the Japanese postal guide as Daitotei. It is here, on the outskirts of Taihoku, and on the Tamsui River which flows past Daitotei, that the foreign merchants have their residential and business quarters. At the mouth of the Tamsui River lies the town of Hobé, in Japanese Kobi, but now most usually called Tamsui to avoid confusion with Kobe in Japan proper.
TAIHOKU (TAIPEH) AND DAITOTEI
(TWATUTIA) DIRECTORY
行銀灣台社會式
BANK OF TAIWAN, LTD. (Taiwan Ginko); Head Office: Taihoku (Tai eh); Bran- ches Kobe, Osaka, Tainan, Taichu, Keelung, Takow, Hongkong, Amoy, Swatow, Foochow, Canton, etc. Tele- graphic Address: Taigin President K. Yagiu
Vice-President T. Shimosaka Directors-M. Tatsuno, I. Kajiwara Auditors K. Okura, K. Otani, K.
Kada, Lim Nee Kai
Manager-K. Nagao (Head Office)
Ho-kee
Born & Co., Merchants
E. Thomas
F. G. Kell, tea inspector G. A. Sword, assistant
Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Limited Lloyd's
China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld. Royal Insurance Company
The Northern Pacific Steamship Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. "Suez" steamers Eastern & Australian S. S. Co., Ld. The Bank Line Limited
CANADIAN PRESBYTERIAN MISSION Rev. Wm. Gauld, B.A., and wife Rev. J. Y. Ferguson, B.A., M.D.", C"M",
and wife
Rev. M. Jack, M.A., B.D., and wife Rev. Duncan MacLeod, B.A., and wife Miss Janie M. Kinney, B.A.
Miss Hannah Connell
COLBURN COY., THE A., Daitotei, Tea
Merchants
Head Office-Philadelphia, U. S. A.
William Hohmeyer, manager
C. S. Averill
A. W. Schroeter
CONSULATES
CUBA
Acting Consul S. C. Reat
GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
In charge of Norwegian and Spanish
interests
Consul A. M. Chalmers
Acting Consul-A. R. Firth Shipping Clerk-S. Shimizu Clerk T. Kise
NETHERLANDS
Consular Agent-A. W. Gillingham
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (Daitotei)
Consul S. C. Reat
Vice-Consul-
Clerk-Yachiho Nitta
704
CUSTOMS, Tamsui
Director-K. Iwamasa
TANSUI AND KEELUNG
Chief Inspector and Controller-K.
Fuse
Chief of General Office-S. Umezu Chief AppraiserY. Mitsui
Chief Accountant-S. Oi
Branch Offices
Chief B. Hirano (Daidotei)
Chief Controller-K. Funada (Kee-
lung)
Chief T. Tanikawa (Kiuko)
Do. J. Ota (Koryō)
Do. I. Shimizu (Tokatsukutsu) J. Shimada (Rokkö)
Do.
Do. -J. Tamai (Tosekikō)
Do. Controller-C. Furuhashi (An-
ping)
Chief Controller-S. Inomata (Takow) Chief S. Ishiguro (Toko)
Chief-K. Hirano (Mekin)
Mar-kin-tai
FORMOSA MERCANTILECO.;Tel. Ad:Formerco.
Head Office: 97/9, Water St., New York
C. W. Clifton, manager
F. Telles Jorge
店支藤後
GOTO & SONS, K., Merchants
Y. Kawai, manager, Taipeh-fu
Agencies
Imperial Marine Insurance Co., Tokyo
Nippon Marine & Transport Ince. Co.
Taihei Life Insurance Co., Kyoto
和怡 E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Ld., Merchants
M. Woodley, agent
H. Lachlan, tea inspector
J. C. Guterres
Agencies
Yokohama Specie Bank
Canadian Pacific Steamship Co. Glen Line of Steamers
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co.
Indra Line of Steamers
Canton Insurance Office, Limited Alliance Assurance Company
Eastern Insurance Company, Limited China Sugar Refining Co., Ld. Green Island Cement Co., Ld. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
MACY & Co., GEO, H., Tea Merchants
Carter, Macy & Co. (New York)
Geo. H. Macy,
Geo. S. Clapp,
O. C. Macy,
F. E. Fernald (Chicago)
Geo. S. Beebe
J. K. Hall
J. M. Boyol
do.
do.
do.
記瑞 Sui-kce
MALCAMPO & Co., Merchants and Commis
sion Agents
J. Maleampo (Amoy)
Agencies
Man On Insurance Company
Chai On Insurance Company
Sam Ching
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISIA, LD., Merchants
K. Saito, manager
R. Dauno, signs per pro.
U. Yoshioka,
K. Takeda
S. Asahina
do.
S. Murakami (Keelung) S. Ishiwatari
K. Ida
T. Adachi N. Mishima S. Komiya J. Takeda M. Nagai M. Mishima K. Sasaki M Fujishima K. Iwazaki T. Fujimori
M. Kawachi Y. Saito
G. Wakayama Agencies
Meiji Fire Insurance Company Tokyo Marine Insurance Company Hamburg Amerika Linie
NORTH FORMOSA FOREIGN BOARD OF
TRADE
Committee A. C Bryer, E. Thomas, Geo. S. Beebe, F. C. Hogg (sec.)
社會式株船商阪大
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA (Osaka Mercantile
Steamship Company)
K Fujita, manager (Keelung)
Y. Nakamura (Tamsui)
Y. Asano (Taipeh)
Agency
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
POST OFFICE
Director M. Nagai
Clerks-Samagasu, S. Miyagi, K
Furuichi
路毛三
Sa-mu-lo
SAMUEL SAMUEL & Co., LD., Seimongaiga
Merchants, Taipeh; Tel. Ad: Orgo manes; l'iatow, Tamsui, 63, Sansawan, Keelung, Yenteiho, Takow
E. C. Davis (Yhama.) ma ging, director
W. H. Gaskell, manager
1
1
TANSUI AND KEELUNG
A. W. Gillingham accountant
Loong-heng
705
C H. G. Hannar
O, Tobiessen
H. C. Ross
Agencies
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corpn. Thos. Cook & Sons
Dampschiffs Rederei "Union" A. G. Douglas Steamship Co. Messageries Maritimes
Java-China-Japan Lijn
Shire Line of Steamers, Ltd. Norddeutscher Lloyd
Ocean Steamship Co., Ld. China Mutual S. N. Co., Id. Chargeurs Réunis
The Great-Trans-Siberian Route Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co's Strs. Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld. Alliance Assur. Co., Ld.(Marine depart.) Commercial Union Assurance Co. Law, Union and Crown Insurance Co. Liverpool & London & Globe In. Co. Sun Insurance Office
Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. New York Life Insurance Co. Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld. Anglo-Saxon Petroleumi Co. Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ltd.
SAMUELSAMUEL&Co. Ln Tansui,Shipping
and Coal Depôt; Tel. Ad: Orgomanes
0. Tobiessen
"SHELL" TRANSport & Trading Co., Ld.,
Piatow; Tel. Ad: Shells, Tamsui
(Samuel Samuel & Co., Ld., agents)
O. Tobiessen
Agencies
Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld.
Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ld.
Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ltıl.
SMITH, BAKER & Co., Merchants: Head
Office: No. 85, Wall St., New York
A. C. Bryer
J. R. Corner
J. L. A. Maher
Agencies
Standard Oil Co. (OrientalS.S.Srvice) American Asiatic Steamship Co.
TAIT & Co., Merchants
F. B. Marshall
W. Wilson (Amoy)
R. N. Ohly (Yokohama)
J. M. Tait
F. C. Hogg
Agencies
American and Oriental Line
North China Insurance Company Ld. Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Coy. South British Ins. Co., Ld. Rhenish-Westfälischer Lloyd Verein Hamburger Assec. Pacific Mail S. S. Co.
Toyo Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha
Portland and Asiatic S. S. Co.
Yangtsze Insurance Association Ld.
Northern Assurance Co., Ld.
行銀 四
十三
THIRTY-FOURTH BANK LD., THE (Sanjushi
Ginko); Tel. Ad: Sanshigink; Teleph.34,
Hokumongai, 2-chome, Taipeh
K. Ichinose, manager
T. Shiba, sub-manager
Agency
International Banking Corporation
TWATUTIA CLUB
Committee E. Thomas, C. S. Averill,
C. W. Clifton, A. W. Gillingham (hon. secretary)
KEELUNG DIRECTORY
店支藤後
隆基社會式株船商阪大
Goro & SONS, K., Merchants-56, Shosen- OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA (Osaka Mercantile
towgai; Head Office: Kobe
S. Tanaka, manager
Agency
Imperial Marine Insurance Co., Tokyo
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA (Japan MailS.S. Co.)
T. Takayanagi, manager
S. Umezawa
S. Mori
G. Maruyama
U. Yamasaki I. Takahashi
Steamship Co.)
S. Fujita, manager
K. Nishinoiri, sub-manager
Agency
Tokyo Marine Insurance Company
SAMUEL SAMUEL & Co., LD., Merchants--40. Gyuchoksoho and 63, Sansawan; Tel. Ad; Orgomanes
M. Oda Agencies
(See under Taipeh)
22
TAINAN, TAKOW, AND
ANPING
The city of Tainan (until 1889 known as Taiwan), situated in lat. 23 deg. 6 min. N., and long, 129 deg. 5 min. E., is the commercial capital of Formosa. It is for an Eastern city moderately clean and well paved. The walls are some five miles in circumference. The shipping port of Tainan-fu is Anping, situated on the coast about three miles to the eastward of the city and connected with the suburbs by a creek. The port is an open roadstead, vessels having to anchor a mile or so from the beach. From the 1st November to the end of May the anchorage is a perfectly safe one, but during the S. W. monsoon a heavy swell sets in, rendering it difficult, and at times impossible, for vessels to load or discharge. The foreign residents in 1907 numbered 36 British subjects. No persons of any other European nationality are now resident here. Tempered by sea breezes, Anping during the summer months can boast of a cool climate. From 1st October to the end of April there is little or no rain, and the temperature leaves nothing to be desired. The value of the total foreign trade of the Tainan district, comprising the two ports of Anping and Takow, amounted in 1908 to £3,068,092, showing an increase of £835,487 on the trade of the previous year. The average increase for the previous five years works out at £1,431,227. Kerosene is the only import which remains in the hands of foreigners. The Government has been giving every encouragement to the sugar industry and many new sugar mill have been erected in South Formosa by Japanese companies during the past few years, Of the six staples of Formosan trade, namely, tea, opium, camphor, salt, sugar and rice, three-opium, camphor and salt-have already been monopolised by the For mosan Government-General, which now derives three-fourths of its ordinary revenue from these sources. Formerly, the trade in opium and camphor in this district was in the hands of the few foreign merchants at this port, and amounted, before the Japanese occupation, to nearly £250,000 annually. Since the creation of the monopolies the merchants have thus been deprived of two-thirds of their income. They feel the hardship particularly in the case of the camphor trade, which was originated and developed in this district entirely by their capital and enterprise, and for the loss of which they have received no equivalent.
Takow is a port twenty-four miles to the southward of Anping. It takes little or no share in the import trade, but is a principal centre for the sugar export trade.
The last stand against the Japanese was made at Tainan, Takow, and Anping by Liu Yung-fu, the Black Flag General. Takow was bombarded on the 15th October, 1895, and the resistance collapsed without any serious fighting, and Tainan and Anping were occupied on the 21st October.
Foreign shipping has been injuriously affected in recent years by a decrease in the volume of trade with the opposite coast, caused by the increased tariff on imports and the imposition of export duties in Formosa. The number of foreign vessels entering these two ports in 1908 was 73 of 110,314 tons, while the coasting vessels, principally Japanese, num- bered 336, and their tonnage totalled 530,181. The Japanese Government grants a subsidy of 61,028 yen to the Osaka Shosen Kaisha for a fortnightly steamer service between Anping and Hongkong via Amoy and Swatow, and since 1902 there has been a direct steamer service between the ports of Japan and the southern ports of Formosa, for which the same Company receives a subsidy of 124,800 yen. A further subsidy of 143,825 yen paid to the Company for a service of steamers around the coast of Formosa throughout the year.
The construction of a through railway from Takow as its southern terminus vit Tainan and Kagee to Taihoku in the north was begun in the latter part of 1899. The period of construction was estimated at 10 years, and the cost at 28,800,000 yen, which it was decided to raise by the issue, yearly, of Formosa Industrial Public Loan Bonds at certain fixed amounts. This Trans-Formosan railway is now completed and is in full operation. Its total length, including the branch line from Tanisui to Taihoku is 259 miles 71 chains. A private light railway from Kagi to Arizan, 41 miles in length, is being constructed by the Japanese firm which has the monopoly for the exploitation of the magnificent cryptomaria forests of Aruzan, near Mount Morrison. The railway is being constructed for the purpose of conveying timber.
The proposed harbour works at Takow and Anping and the other public works are postponed, but will be proceeded with as soon as the necessary appropriations be obtained. The harbours have been completely surveyed and the estimated cost is $6,500,000.
TAINAN, TAKOW, AND ANPING
707
記怡 Fe-lice
BAIN & Co., Merchants
A. W. Bain (London)
H. W. Arthur
H. Hastings
C. E. Hastings.
DIRECTORY
BANK OF TAIWAN, LIMITED; Tel. Ad: Taigin
T. Ikeda, manager
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
signs per pro.
(manager of Takow branch and Hozan sugar factory)
O. J. Philpotu (Anping)
R. J. Hastings, junior (Anping) S. C. Young (Anping)
J. T. Moir, supt. San Kan Tien
Sugar Factory
W. H. Cameron, chief engineer,
Sugar Factory
W. J. McCarthy, 2nd engr. Sugar
Factory
J. Compton, assistant engineer,
Sugar Factory
E. W. James, asst., Sugar Factory B. L. Van Daalen Wetters, chemist,
Sugar Factory
G. F. Stickings, chief engineer,
Hozan Sugar Factory
C. II. Best, 2nd engineer,
Sugar Factory
Hozan
W. H Saunders, assistant engineer,
Hozan Sugar Factory
J. L. Gil-Pereira, accountant,
Sugar Factory
Hozan
G. Horsin-Deon, chemist, Hozan
Sugar Factory
Y. Takata
M. Ishibashi
J. Izuji
T. Tomimori
R. Koike
K. Inouye
Y. Kawamura Y. Yenoki R. Muto Agencies
Hongkong and S'hai. Banking Corpn. Norddeutscher Lloyd
Douglas Steamship Company, Limited Indo-China S. N. Company, Limited China Navigation Company, Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Company Liverpool Underwriters' Association Canton Insurance Office, Limited China Trailers' Insurance Co., Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Limited South British Insurance Co., Limited Nouveau Lloyd Suisse
Impl. Mar. & Trspt. Ins. Co., Ld., Tokyo British & Foreign Marine Ins. Co., Ld. London & Lancashire Fire Ins. Co. General Managers
Formosa Sugai and Dev'mt. Co., Ld.
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY, Consulate DENMARK, Consular Agency FRANCE, Consular Agency NORWAY, acting Vice-Consulate SPAIN, in charge of interests
Acting Consul- W. M. Royds Pro-Consul-H. W. Arthur Writer-K. Watanabe
NETHERLANDS
Consular Agent-R. N. Ohly Act. do. -D. Elphinstone
CUSTOMS, Anping
Director--K. Iwamasa Controller-M. Kanada
Chief of the Inspecting Dept.-S.
Shimada
Chief of the General Dept.-I. Shimizu Chief of the Examining Dept.-I.
Matsumoto, Branch Office
Chief Y. Yamanouchi (Tosekiko)
Do. (controller) S. Inomata (Takao) Do. -S. Ata (Toko)
Do. R. Kodama (Mekiu)
ENGLISH PRESBYTERIAN MISSION, Tainan
Rev. W. Campbell, F.R.G.S.
Rev. Thos. Barclay, M.A.
Rev. D. Ferguson, M.A.
Rev. A. B. Nielson, M.A.
Rev. W. E. Montgomery, B.A.
Peter Anderson, L.R.C.P. & S. ED. (abt.) J. L. Maxwell, M.D., LOND. Miss Barnett
Miss Lloyd (absent) Miss Learner Miss Beuning
SHOKA
Rev. H. Moncrieff, M.A.
D. Landsborough, M.B., C.M
Miss Butler
Miss Stewart
店支籐後
Goro & SONS, Merchants and Shipping
Agents; Head Office: Kobe
I. Akagi, agent
Agency
Nippon Mar. & Trspt.Ins. Co.,Ld.,Osaka
22*
708
TAINAN, TAKOW, AND ANPING
MANSON (DAVID) MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, Takow; Now used as a Mission Hospital of the English Presbyterian Church
P. Anderson, L.R.C.P. & S., ED., physician
and surgeon in charge
三
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, Merchants, Tainan
T. Hirata, manager
S. Ishiwatari (Takao)
K. Aota
T. Kita
K. Inouye K. Asoh J. Kanai
K. Kinoshita
I. Inaye (Takao)
K. Katayama T. Matsusaki
G. Taruta
U. Yamamoto
Agencies
Nippon Yusen Kaisha, Ld. Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Meiji Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Kyodo Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
OSAKA SHOSEN KABUSIIKI KAISHA (Osaka Mercantile Steamship Co.); Tel. Ad: Shosen; Telep. 3 (Tokao Branch)
Y. Shirashoji, manager U. Higachi, sub-manager K. Watanabe, export dept. S. Suzuki, import dept. S. Yokata, cashier
ROMAN CATHOLIC (DOMINICAN) MISSION
Rev. Francisco Giner, Takao Rev. Manuel Prat, Lo-chu-cheng Rev. Tomas Pascual, Ban-kim-cheng Rev. Toribio Tobar, Tainanfu Rev. Angel M. Rodrigues, Taulak Rev. Juan Beovide, Hobúe
Rev. B. Gordaliza, Po-kiu-lun Rev. C. Fernandez, Twatutin Rev. F. Villarrubia, Nake Rev. J. Sasian, Soalun Rev. F. Rodrigues (Daitotei)
SAMUEL SAMUEL Co., Lp.
Venteiho (Formosa)
Henry Charles Ross, representative
A Hai-hing Kung-sze
SOUTH FORMOSA TRADING Co., LD. (in
liquidation), Tel. Ad. Haihing
Harry Hastings, manager
記德 Tek-ki
TAIT & Co., Merchts., Anping; Head Office:
Amoy Elphinstone, agent
H. Sauter
Agencies
Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Company North China Insurance Co., Ld. Union Ins. Society of Canton, Ld. North German Insce. Co. of Hamburg South British Insce. Co., Ld. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Id. Western Assurance Co. of Toronto and
London
Northern Assurance Co., Ld. Maatschappij tot Mijn-Boschen Land-
bouwexploitatie in Langkat China Merchants S. N. Co. Java-China-Japan-Lijn Palatine Insurance Co. Ld.
TAKAO GODOWN AND LIGHTER CO.
M. Koga I. Akagi
THIRTY-FOURTHI BANK (SANJUSHI GINKO)
Lai-kee
WRIGHT & Co., D. M., Merchants
R. J. Hastings
COREA
Corea, or Chosen (the native name), has since the end of 1905 been a Japanese protectorate. It is a peninsula situated to the north of China which hangs down between that Empire and Japan, separating the Sea of Japan and the Yellow Sea, between the 34th and 43rd parallels north. It is bounded on the north by Manchuria, on the north-east by Siberia, on the east by the Sea of Japan, on the west by the Yellow Sea, and on the south by the Channel of Corea. It has a coastline measuring 1,740 miles, and with its outlying islands is nearly as large as Great Britain. The name Corea is derived from the Japanese Korai (Chinese Kaoli); and the Portuguese, who were the first navigators in the Yellow Sea, called it Koria. Chosen is translated into "Morning Calm." The eastern half of the peninsula is a sinuous range of mountains of which Western Corea is the slope. The chief rivers of importance are naturally to be found on the western side, and most of the harbours are situate on that coast. Corea is divided into eight do or provinces, named Ping-an, Whang-hai, Kiung-kei (which contains the capital), Chung-chong, Chulla, Kiung-sang, Kang-wen, and Ham-kiung. The climate is healthy and temperate, bracing in the north and milder in the south, where it is more exposed to summer breezes. The Han river at Seoul is often frozen for two months in the year. The fauna includes tigers, leopards, wild deer, wild hogs, and in the south monkeys are to be found. A stunted breed of horses exists, and immense numbers of oxen are raised as food; goats are rare, and sheep are only imported from China for sacrificial purposes. The pheasant, eagle, falcon, crane, and stork are common, A great portion of the soil is fertile and the mineral wealth of the kingdom is believed to be considerable. The history of Corea, like that of its neighbours, is lost in the mists of obscurity, but according to native and Chinese tradition a Chinese noble named Kishi or Ki-tsze, who migrated with his followers to Corea in 1122 B.C., was the founder of the Corean social order and the first monarch. His descendants are said to have ruled until the fourth century before the Christian era. The present dynasty is descended from Ni Taijo, a young soldier who was the architect of his own fortunes, and who succeeded in deposing the Wang dynasty. It was at this time, in the 14th century, that Han-yang, known as Seoul, was selected as the national capital. In November, 1905, the Corean Government agreed to give to Japan the control and direc- tion of the foreign relations and affairs of the country, and the Japanese Government was given the right to appoint, under His Majesty the Emperor of Corea, a Resident- General as its representative to reside in Seoul chiefly to direct diplomatic affairs and having the right of private audience with the Emperor of Corea. To this responsible post Marquis (the late Prince) Ito, the maker of modern Japan, was appointed, and inas- much as by an earlier agreement Corea had pledged herself to accept the advice of Japan with regard to administrative reforms, the Resident-General has practically full direction of the government of the country. The Emperor Yi Fin, the twenty-eighth sovereign of the present line, abdicated the Throne in August, 1907, in favour of his son Heui. The State revenue is derived principally from the land tax.
For many centuries the Coreans successfully resisted all efforts to induce them to hold intercourse with foreigners. The King was formerly a vassal of the Emperor of China, and the Emperor of Japan also claimed his allegiance, but by the Treaty of Kokwa, concluded with Japan in 1876, the independence of the country was acknow- ledge, though China, which assented to Corea's conclusion of this and other treaties with foreign Powers as an independent kingdom, inconsistently continued to claim suzerainty. Upon the establishment of Japanese in the ports of Fusan and Yuensan, the prejudice against foreign intercourse gradually abated, and on the 2nd May, 1882, a treaty of friendship and commerce was signed by the Corean Government at Tenchuan (Chemulpo) with Commodore Shufeldt on behalf of the United States. A Treaty with England was signed by Sir Harry Parkes on the 26th November, 1883; in 1884 treaties were also concluded with Germany and Russia, and later with France, Italy, and Austria. The population of Corea is estimated to be between 12,000,000 and 14,000,000
710
COREA
The Japanese population, a constantly increasing one, is now nearly 80,000, but the figures do not include the military force in the country, which is probably 20,000 strong. The British residents in Corea, who number about 130, are mostly missionaries. One small English newspaper, the Séoul Press (conducted by Japanese), is published in the capital.
The industries of Corea are mainly agricultural. The foreign trade reached the high-water mark in 1907 both as regards imports and exports. The value of the trade amounted to yen 57,052,639, of which yen 40,050,405 represented imports and yen 17,002,234 exports. The imports represented an increase of over one million pounds sterling and the exports more than three quarters of a million compared with the returns of 1906. The returns for 1908, however, show a decline, as great dulness of trade has followed a period of exceptional activity. Imports amounted to yen 41,025,849, and exports yen 14,114,510. Japan's share of the export trade was 76 per cent. and of the import trade 59 per cent. China is the second largest buyer of Korean products, her purchases representing 16 per cent. of the total. As regards imports, Great Britain with 16 per cent. ranks next to Japan, and China and the United States are bracketed third with 10 per cent.
The principal articles of import are cotton manufactures, and of export, rice, hides, beans and live stock. There is a considerable paper-making industry, which is entirely in the hands of the peasantry, its great drawback being lack of capital. Gold mining has in recent years become an important industry. In 1906 the export reached its lowest value since 1902, being only £476,334, and in 1907 it showed but small improve- ment, the value of the export being £447,438. There are several gold mines now being worked owned by British, American and German syndicates. The Pritchard-Morgan Con- cession is developing the Gwendoline mine, and the Unsan district, over the whole of which this Company possesses mining rights, has been shown to contain silver, copper and coal deposits. The German concession is at Tangokae (Kim-song). An Italian syndicate was granted a concession in 1905.
A brighter era dawned for trade and commerce and much else in Corea when the agreement of 1904 was negotiated; giving to Japan virtual control of the administration. Japan lost no time in exercising the power she had acquired. The reform of the effete, incompetent and corrupt administration which has for centuries been in vogue in Corea is a task of no little magnitude. The old order of things cannot be changed in a day, or a decade, but a most promising commencement has been made during the five years Japan has had the direction of the country's internal affairs. She has set to work organising, as among the first essentials of good government, a judicial system which will guarantee the honest and impartial administration of justice by trained judges. A beginning has also been made with the codification of the laws of the country, Gradually the system of local administration is being reformed in a manner which will eliminate old political abuses and lead up ultimately to a system of local autonomy. Reform of the financial administration has received a great deal of attention with excellent results, and among other branches of administration which have been already inoculated with the leaven of reform are the Educational and the Police systems. Public Works undertaken by the Government under Japanese direction include the construc- tion of four main roads traversing some of the most productive regions of the country; waterworks are being provided by the Government at Chemulpo and Pyeng-yang, while at Seoul, and one or two other centres, the Government is establishing hospitals for the sick.
The initiation of all these undertakings involved the expenditure of a large sum of money which the depleted Corean exchequer could not provide, and recourse was lad to a loan from the Japan Industrial Bank for 10,000,000 yen, but accepted at 90 yen per 100 yen, with interest at the rate of 63 per cent, and the Corean Customs receipts are pledged as security for repayment. Half the amount (Yen 4,500,000) was provided immediately, and the remaining half is payable as the need for the money arises. The loan is redeemable in ten years, but no part of it is to be redeemed within the first five years. The national debt of Corea amounts to yen 30,463,643, all incurred since 1904. The first loans were for the reform of the currency. The currency in the country had long been in a scandalous state. There was no reserve of precious metals, and reliance was placed on a nickel con of small intrinsic value. Not only were permits issued without stint to private persons enabling them to undertake the work of coining, but the country was inundated with spurious coin. It was possible before Japan took the reform of Corea's currency in hand to obtain 245 cents for a Japanese yen. Japan's control of the country's finances was signalised by the adoption of the gold standard, the
COREA SEOUL
711
prohibition of private minting, the issue of a new currency, supplemented by a note issue by the Dai Ichi Ginko (First Bank). The old nickel coins have been gradually withdrawn, and it is hoped in time to rid the country of fractional cash. No attempt is being made to withdraw cash, but a limit was put upon its use in October, 1906, and it is expected that cash will ultimately be driven out of circulation by the increasing popularity of the new currency. The Customs statistics show a considerable export of these coins. Included in the scheme of financial reform is the establishment of Agricultural and Industrial Banks to assist trade by giving the necessary financial accommodation. A Notes Association has also been formed to popularise the circulation of reliable negotiable bills, and warehouses have been established as wholly official or government subsidised enterprises for the purpose of easing the money market in agricultural districts, by making loans on the security of rice, or lending money without security for the purchase of rice. The revenue of the country increased from yen 1,480,287 in 1905-6, to yen 23,273,236 in 1908-9, and the expenditure shows a corresponding increase.
There is still much opposition among the Koreans to Japan's intervention, and since the assassination in November, 1909, of II. E. Prince Ito, who, as the first Resilent-General, was responsible for the whole scheme of reform, the opposition has been strengthened by a fear that the outrage may lead to the definite annexa- tion of the kingdom.
A railway connecting Chemulpo with Seoul was opened on September 18th, 1899, and the Coreans have not been slow to avail themselves of modern conveniences for travelling. There are now more than 600 miles of railway in operation in Corea, and several new lines are projected. The Seoul-Fusan railway, 275 miles in length, opened in May, 1905, has been acquired by the Japanese Government as a State railway. This line connects Yong-dong-po with the railway to Chemulpo, and the journey from Seoul to Tokyo can now be accomplished in 53 hours. The railway between Seoul and Wiju, 310 miles, hurriedly constructed for military purposes in 1904-1905, is to be gradually reconstructed at a cost of 30,000,000 yen. A railway now connects Furan and Masampo, and the distance in covered by a through train in a little over three hours. Wiju and Yongampo on the Yalu River are to be opened to foreign trade. Chung Jin in North Ham Gyeng province, was added to the list of ports open to foreign trade on April 1st, 1908.
The carrying trade of the country is practically in the hands of the Japanese. The tonnage entering Korean ports in 1908 amounted to 2,996,075, The coast is now well lighted.
SEOUL
The capital city of Han-yang, better known to foreigners as Seoul (which is merely the native term for capital), is situated almost in the centre of the province of Kiung-kei, on the north side of and about three miles from the river Han, about thirty- five miles from its mouth. It lies in 37 deg. 30 min. N. lat. and 127 deg. 4 min E. long. Han-yang means "the fortress on the Han. The city is enclosed by crenelated walls of varying height, averaging about twenty feet, with arched stone bridges spanning the watercourses, It is in the form of an irregular oblong, and stretches lengthwise in a valley that runs from north-east to south-west. The houses are about eight or nine feet high, built of stone or mud, and mostly roofed with tiles. Internally they are clean, for the Coreans, like the Japanese, take off their shoes before entering their houses. A long main street, about 100 feet wide, running cast and west, divides tho city into two nearly equal portions. In the northern half are the walled inclosures containing the King's Palace and the more important public buildings. A street about 50 feet wide intersects the main street at right angles, dividing the northern half of the city into eastern and western quarters. At the point of intersection stands a pavilion called Chong-kak (the "Bell Kiosk "), from a large bell about seven feet high which is placed there. This spot is regarded as the centre of the city; and from it another street, as wide as the main street, branches off to the south-west. The four wide streets which thus radiate from the "Bell Kiosk are known as the four Chong-ro or "Bell roads.
Another conspicuous feature of this central part of the city is the row of large warehouses, two storeys high, the lower portions of which are divided off into little shops, opening into a small courtyard instead of facing the street. The width of the main streets was formerly much reduced by the construction in front of nearly every
}}
712
SEOUL
house of a rude wooden shanty used for a workshop or for business purposes, which gave the streets a poor and squalid appearance, but some of the principal streets have now been cleared of these unsightly obstructions, and the people are gradually being taught the benefits of good roads and clean surroundings. A spacious market place has been erected in one of the busiest parts of the city, and arrangements are being made for establishing two or three others at suitable centres.
An annual appro- priation of $50,000 has been made by the Finance Department for the maintenance and improvement of the roads. The shops are small and unattractive, and contain no articles de luze or curios. The population of the city is about 200,000. About 19,000 Japanese reside in Seoul and about 3,000 Chinese. An electric railway, running for three miles along the main streets of Seoul and thence three or four miles into the country, was opened in 1899, and one extends to Riong-san and Mokpo. A railway connects Chemulpo with Seoul, and another line connects the capital with Fusan.
DIRECTORY
RESIDENCY-GENERAL
Resident-General-VISCOUNT SONE
Vice-Resident General-Vacant
Captain K. Tonami
Military Attachés to the Resident-General (Major-General H. Tslu Private Secretaries to the Resident-General-S. Kokubu, Baron Satake
Acting Director-General-E, Ishizuka Director of Foreign Affairs-K. Nabe-
shima
Director Local Affairs -E. Ishizuka Director of the Supervisory Depart-
ment-E. Ishizuka
Director of the Bureau of Communica-
tions J. Ikeda
Director of the Judicial Bureau-Dr.
Y. Kuratomi
Director of the Railway Bureau-Dr.
G. Oya
Chief of Patent Bureau-J. Kiuchi Director of the Forest Undertaking
Station--Col. J. Tokio
Residencies
Resident at Seoul-Y. Miura Resident at Chemulpo-J. Shinobu Resident at Fusan-R. Kameyama Resident at Gensan S. Hisamidzu Resident at Chinnampo T. Akimoto Resident at Mokpo-S. Matsumoto Resident at Masampo-K. Mimashi Resident at Kunsan-K. Amano Resident at Pyengyang-T. Wakamatsu Vice-Resident at Songjin-Y. Oeda Resident at Chongjin-M. Nakaoji Resident at Taiku T. Nose Vice-Resident at New Wiju-D. Fuka-
gawa
COREAN GOVERNMENT
Minister President of State-Yi Wan
Yong
Minister for Imperial Household--
Min Pyongsok
Vice-Minister M. Komiya
Minister for Home Affairs-PakChaisun
Vice Minister-K. Oka
Minister for Finance-Im Son Jun
Vice Minister-K. Arai
Minister of Education--Yi Chai Kon
Vice Minister M. Tawara Minister of Agriculture, Commerce and Industry-Cho Chung Eung Vice Minister J. Kiuchi President of the Privy Council-Kime
Yun Sik
Astor House-Tel. Ad: Martin, Seoul
L. Martin, proprietor
SEOUL
Agent for The International Sleeping
Car Co.
Proprietor of The Astor House Ice
Plant
BUREAU OF COMMUNICATIONS (H. I. J. M.'s
RESIDENCY-GENERAL) Director J. Ikeda Section of General Affairs:
Chief Secretary S. Shimada Secretary K. Kanda
Assist. Secretary-T. Ichihashi
--K. Katsuhara
do.
Section of Business:
Chief Secretary-G. Yano Assist. Secretary--R. Suzuki
do.
Section of Finance:
-I. Kano
Chief Secretary--S. Hattori Assist. Secretary-T. Aonuma
do.
-C. Oki Engineer-H. Hanano
Section of Accounts:
Chief Scoretary--T. Endo Assist. Secretary-M. Tsuda
do.
S. Suzuki
Section of Engineering:
Chief Engineer-K. Okamoto Engineer T. Akiyama
do. -C. Usui do. ---F. Tsuboi
The Seoul Post Office
Postmaster-S. Sasaki Engineer S. Sakai The Fusan Post Office
Postmaster-R. Shiga The Chemulpo Post Office
Postmaster T. Endo The Pyung-yany Post Office
Postmaster-K. Yokoyama The Wonsan Post Office
Postmaster-S. Kato The Shinwiju Post Office
Postmaster-K. Tanaka The Kunsan Post Office
Postmaster-M. Tsuchiya The Mokpo Post Office
Postmaster-T. Iwahi
The Chyunjin Post Office
Postmaster--M. Watsamori
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (JAPANESE)
T. Yamaguchi, chairman
COLLBRAN BOSTWICK DEVELOPMENT Co.
H. Collbran, president
H. R. Bostwick, first vice-president S. L. Selden, second
do.
H. E. Collbrun, secretary and treas.
J. F. Smith, auditor
C. R. Cho, cashier
CONSULATES
BELGIUM
Consul-J. Bribosia
713
Le lettré du Consulat General-Yi
Hun Hua
CHINA (CONSULATE GENERAL)
Consul-General-Ma Ting Liang Chancellors C. C. Yang, S. C. Yü
and L. H. Ma
Interpreter (Japanese)-P. K. Chan Secretaries T. T. Pan, S. Y. Pao
FRANCE (CONSULATE GENERAL)
Consul-General-J, Belin (absent) Acting Consul-General-M. Paillard Vice-Consul-G.Dufaure de la Prade
GERMANY (CONSULATE GENERAL)-Tel.
Ad: Germania
Consul-General-Dr. F. Krüger Kanzlist R. Brinckmeier Hülfs Kanzlist-F. Bern Uebersetzer-Yi-Djong Sun
GREAT BRITAIN (CONSULATE GENERAL)
Consul-General H. A. C. Bonar 1st. Assistant-O. White 2nd, do. -P. D. Butler Constable T. Huntley
ITALIAN Consulate
Consul-
RUSSIA (CONSULATE GENERAL)
Consul-General-H. de Somow Secrétaire-P. de Kerberg Interprète-N. Sonko Bulany Attaché-P. Vaskevich
AMERICAN CONSULATE GENERAL
Vice Consul in Charge-Ozro C. Gould Clerk-Frank M. Gowey
Chief Interpreter - Kim Ook Tong
CUSTOMS
Chief Comr.-S. Suzuki
Secretary K. Sakurai (Chief of In-
spection Section)
Secretary-in-Charge-H. W. Davidson Appraiser S. J. Nomuro (Chief of
Appraising Section)
Assistant-S. Obate (Chief of Accounts
Section)
Assistant M. Fukao (Inspecting Sec-
tion) Assistant-N.Abe (Inspecting Section) Assistant-K. Terao (Chief of Docu-
ment Section) Assistant-in-Charge-I. Iijima
DAI ICHI GInko, Ld.
G. Takeyama, manager S. Kono, sub-manager
do.
714
SEOUL
DAIHAN MAIILSHINFO, Vernacular N'paper
editor
K. T. Yang, sub-editor
JAPANESE MERCHANTS
Fuchigami & Co.
Hamada & Co. Kameya & Co. Tsuji & Co. Yamaguchi & Co. Mitsui & Co. Takase & Co.
Wada & Co.
Kugimoto & Co
JOLY, Mrs., Instructress in Languages to
the Imperial Household
KOEN, THOS. A., Consulting Engineer and
Manufacturers' Agent
B. Okkubo, assistant
"KOREA MISSION FIELD", Monthly Magazine Mrs. H. G. Underwood, M.D., editor R. O. Roiner, business manager
KOREA DAILY NEWS
A. W. Marnham, editor
MISSIONS
MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES DE PARIS
Monsgr G. Mutel, vicar apostolic
. Rev. V. Poisnel, curé of the cathedral
Rev. P. Villemot, procureur Rev. A. Deshayes
Rev. F. Demange
Church of St. Joseph
Rev. C. Doucet, pro-vicar
College of Ryong-san
Rev. P. Guinand, superior Rev. T. E. Devred, professor' Rev. P. Chizallet, professor Revs. J. Wilhelm, X. Baudounet, L. J. Vermorel, P. Oudot, L. Curlier. J. Alix, L. Le Gendre, C. Bouillon, E. Devise, M. Lacrouts, J. Bouys- sou, J. Mialon, C. Peynet, E. Taquet, Gao, J. Meng, A. Gombert, J. Gombert, Rouvelet, P. Mélizan, F. Tournier à Ouen-San, G. Poyaud, V Tourneux à Mokhpo, P. Rouquette, M. Julien & Fusan, J, Bermond, H. Krempff, J. Lereide à Chinampo, Saucet, D. Polly, A. Jangey, A. Dorribeau, J. Cadars, missionaries Orphanage of St. Paul de Chartres
Rev. Mother Stanislas, superioress
Six Sisters
RUSSIAN ORTHODOX MISSION
Rt. Rev. Archimandrite-Paul
Rev. Father Vladimir
Deacon Fr. Cyril
Chapel Master-Father Theodosius
I'salinist Constantinoff
MUHLENSTETH, H. J.
PLAISANT FRERES
P. A. Plaisant
A. L. Plaisant
局便郵城京
POST OFFICE
Director of Posts-S. Sasaki
Superintendent of Posts-S. Nagai
Superintendent of Teis.-Y. Yogoshi
Superintendent of Telephones -S.
Sakai Superintendent
Fukuda
of Accounts-M.
Superintendent of General Affairs-
S. Kajiyama
Superintendent of Inquiry Office-S.
Aoki
昌泰 Tah-chang
RONDON, & Co., General Storekeepers
Importers and Exporters-Tel. Address: Rondon
J. A. M. Rondon
J. Sirot
A. M. Rondon Martin Tyo Mac Moon Foukaori
SCHOOL-GOVERNMENT (ENGLISH)
Head Master-G. Russell Frampton
SCHOOL GOVERNMENT (FRENCH) Head Master-E. Martel
Assistant Teachers
SCHOOL GOVERNMENT (GERMAN)
Head Master-J. Bolljahn
SEOUL CLUB
Committee--A. Hyde Lay (president), Dr. W. B. Scranton (vice president), M. Paillard, J. H. Morris (hon. tres- suror), G. Russell Frampton (hon. sec.)
SEOUL MINING Co.--Head Office: Seoul,
Corea
President H. Collbran
First Vice President-W, D. Townsend Secy, and Treas.-H. E. Collbran General Manager A. H. Collbran Auditor J. S. Collbran
Consulting Engineer A. B. Weigall Mine Superintendent M. Gallagher Do. Foreman R. Blamey, W. B.
Thorsen
Assayer-C. F. Chase
Millwright-M. J. Lidstone Mill Foreman- F. C. Brown Do. Assistant-H. G. Englishı Do. do. -J. F. Manning Physician-Dr. E. de M. Stryker Supt. of Transport-L. C. Faulk
SEOUL PRESS, Daily English Newspaper
1. Yamagato, editor
S. Miyanaga, sub-editor H. Tomita, manager S. Ito, accountant
SEOUL
Sontag Hotel,--Tel. Ad: Sontag, Seoul J. Boher, proprietor and manager
TOKANFU TSUSHIN KWANRI KYOKU (POSTS, TELEGRAPHS AND TELEPHONES OF THE RE- SIDENCY GENERAL)
Juzaburo Ikeda, director general Section of General Affairs
Chief Secretary S. Shimada
Secretary K. Kanada
Assistant Secretary-T. Ichihashi
do.
Section of Business
-K, Katsuhara
Chief Secretary-G. Yano
Assistant Secretary-R. Suzuki
do.
Section of Finance
www
-I. Kano
Chief Secretary-S. Hattori Secretary T. Aonuma
Assistant Secretary-C. Oki Engineer H. Hanano
Section of Accounts
Chief Secretary-T. Endo Assistant Secretary-M. Tsuda
do.
-S. Suzuki
Section of Engineering
Chief Engineer-K. Akamoto Engineer-T. Akiyama
do. -C. Usui
do. --F. Tsuboi
Post Offices-
S. Sasaki,
11. Ban,
Chyungchongnamdo-
S. Ishii,
T. Yamazaki, Kongju
J. Tojyo, K. Akitani,
Chungchongpukdo- K. Matsui,
Kangkyung
Hongju
Taijun
Chungju
N. Munemura, Chyungju Chonnanamado-
T. Iwaki,
Mokpo
S. Koguro,
Kwangju
S. Sakakibara, Chehju
Chonnapukdo-
G. Tsuchiya, A. Maida, T. Kajima, Kyungsanamdo- R Shiga, G. Tojyo,
Kunsan
Chunju Namwon
Fusan Masampo
M. Takabayashi, Chinju
Kyungsangpukdo-
Y. Ikuhashi, S Akaboshi
N. Nishina, S. Waki,
Kangwondo--
T. Nakaya, S. Ochiyai, M. Yamada,
Whanghaido-
Taiku
Sangju
Kyungju
Andong
Chunchyun Kangnung Kimwha
S. Murakoshi, Haiju
Pyungannando--
K. Yokoyama, Pyungyang Y. Kawai,
J. Osaki,
Chinnampo Anju
Pyunganpukdo-
K. Tanaka, Shinwiju S. Isa,
Wiju S. Kondo, Ryuganho K. Michimoto, Chyưngju K. Tanaka, Yungbyun K. Kutake, Kanggeh D. Nishimura, Chosan Hamkyongnamdo--
S. Kato,
C. Kawashima,
Wonsan
H. Tashiro,
Hamheung
Seoul
Pukchong
Kwangwhamun
Hamkyongpukdo-
S. Murakami, Sutaimun
S. Nakamura, Namtaimun
K. Yuwazaki, Yongsan
M. Wakamori,
Chyunjin
H. Oda,
Sungehin
T. Takanami,
'T. Yagi,
Chemulpo
T. Kurono,
H Hosaka,
Yongdungpo
F Matsuyama,
S. Narita,
Kaisung
T. Sasaki,
N. Tsuchida,
Suwon
C. Mori,
Kiongsung Hoinyung Kyungheung Ranam Kando
715
CHEMULPO
Che-mul-po
This port, called by the Japanese Jinsen, and by the Chinese Jenchuan, is situated on the west coast of Corea, in the metropolitan province of Kiongki, at the entrance of the Salée River, an embouchure of the Han or Seoul River. It was opened to foreign trade in 1883, when it was a poor fishing village, and is now a flourishing and rapidly increasing centre of trade, with a native population of under 12,000 and a foreign population of about 16,000, of which between 13,000 and 14,000 are Japanese; the Chinese number between 1,000 and 2,000, the number being greatest in the summer months; the British number 25; Germans 28; Americans 10; and French 8. A railway now runs from Chemulpo to Fusan, meeting the line from Seoul at Yong-dong-po (Yei-do-ho)
The Settlements are fairly well built over and are now fully occupied. The price of land has risen to almost fabulous rates.
Chemulpo enjoys a beautiful climate and is never shut up by ice. The port has two anchorages, the outer one accommodating ships of all sizes, and the inner one frequented by ships of about 1,000 tons. An enormous rise and fall of the tide, which averages 30 feet, renders the inner anchorage difficult of access to larger ships, and is also a serious hindrance to the navigation of the Seoul River. Only vessels not drawing over six feet may safely run between Chemulpo and Mapu, a place on the river three miles south-west of the capital.
The steamers of the Nippon Yusen Kaisha and Osaka Shosen Kaisha call regularly and have the bulk of the trade and passenger communication with Japan, and, in the case of the former, with North China. The Russian East Asiatic Steamship Company have a regular service between Vladivostock and Shanghai, touching at Chemulpo. British steamers also call more frequently than formerly.
There are telegraphic communications with China (overland) and with Japan, a cable between Chemulpo and Chefoo remaining a desideratum.
Chemulpo easily retains its position as the principal port in Corea. The volume of trade at the port has more than trebled during the past ten years. Japanese enterprise is abundantly in evidence, and many projects for the improvement and development of the port are at present receiving attention, including harbour improve- ments, waterworks, and industrial enterprises. The foreign trade of the port for 1907 showed an increase of yen 3,925,281 as compared with the returns for 1906; but the returns for 1908 showed a decline of yen 4,750,114. The exports were valued at yen 2,554,200, and the imports yen 446,804.
社會資合易實英日
DIRECTORY
ANGLO-JAPANESE TRADING CO., Export and
Import Merchants (Nichiyei Boieki
Goshi Kwaisha); Tel. Ad: Nichiyei
Director-W. Geo. Bennett
Do. -Shiuichiro Yebara
Agency
Chiyoda Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Kwang-chang
BENNETT & Co., Merch'ts; Tel. Ad: Bennett
Walter Geo. Bennett, signs the firm
Shinichiro Yebara,
T. Ito
H. Watabe (Dalny)
Agencies
do.
General Accident Fire and Life Assce.
Corporation, Ld.
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
North China Insurance Co., Ld, Manufacturers' Life Insce.Co.of Canada
BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO Co., LTD.
J. Smith Mitchell
A. J. Strover J. H. McGregor H. Curtis
K. Ishü
P. Y. Yong Geo. Kwoso Y. H. Min K. H. Kiu
C. H. Whang
BRITISH CIGARETTE Co., LD.
A. S. Hamilton
S. P. Song K. Hashekata.
D
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (JAPANESE)
Chairman-Y. Kaku Vice-Chairman-K. Shigen
CHEMULPO CLUB
President W. D. Townsend Hon. Secretary-W. G. Bennett
CHINESE MERCHANTS Yee Tai Chan (E. D. Steward & Co. Say Shen Chuang Yee Sung Shing Shuan Shun Tai Tick Hing Si Kung Shun
CHEMULPO
On Hing Chin Chen Tung Te Shun Foo Yuen Sung Tung Yin Lai Sheng Kung Yuen How Tien Lee Kung Shi Tien Ho Chong Yee Tsu Chang Tien Chung Chang
SHIMBUN, News-
Tung Shun Tai
'
Yung Lai Shen
Yee Yuen Shing
CHOSEN NICHI NICHI
paper
CONSULATES
CHINA
Consul-Chia Wen Yen
Secretary-Wan Tsiung
Interpreter-Dzung Che-tsang
GREAT BRITAIN
Acting Consul-Arthur Hyde Lay Medical Attendant-Dr. H. H. Weir
JAPAN (RESIDENCY)
Resident J. Shinobu Vice do.-T. Hashimoto
Do. Y. Takagi Interpreter-S. Oura Chancellors-Suzuki, Watanabe, Ta- kahashi, Hayashi, Inomata, Naga-
unna
Inspector-General of Police J.
Miyadate
Inspectors of Police-Kayano, Nino-
miya, Okamotoe Nomura, Kim
DAI ICHI GINKO, LIMITED, OF JAPAN, AND CUSTOMS BANK in Corea (formerly First National Bank); Telephone 11
Y. Noguchi, manager
K. Ikeda, acting manager
Agencies
Tokyo Marine Insurance Company Meiji Fire Insurance Company
FUJITA, K., Customs Broker and Com. Agt.
HOLME, RINGER & Co., Merchants
R. McKenzie, signs per pro.
G. W. Guttridge
W. R. Harvey
Agencies
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp. Russo-Chinese Bank
717
Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. Cie. des Messageries Maritimes Canadian Pacific Railway Mail S.S. Co. Pacific Mail Steamship Co.
Toyo Kisen Kabushiki Kwaisha. Northern Pacific Steamship Co. Boston Steamship Co.
Boston Towboat Co.
China Navigation Company Co.
China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Shire Line of Steamships
Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. Ben Line of Steamships Mogul Line of Steamships Strath Line of Steamships Warrack Line of Steamships Barber Line of Steamships Portland and Asiatic S.S. Co. North China S.S. Co.
Union Insurance Soc. of Canton, Ld. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance Corp. Norwich Union Fire Assurance Co. Law Union and Crown Fire Insce. Co. Western Assurance. Co.
Royal Insurance Co.
China Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Standard Life Assurance Co.
Equitable Life Assurance Society
South British Fire and Marine In, Co.
Sun Insurance Co.
Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Marine Insurance Company Thomas Cook & Son
Correspondents
Baring Brothers & Co., Ltd.
HYAKUSAUJU GINKO, JINSEN SHITEN (THE 130TH BANK, Chemulpo Branch Office, Ld.,); Head Office: Osaka, Japan, Tel. 58.
H. Hyosu, manager
H. Takahashi, clerk J. Buto,
do.
S. Otsuka, lo.
S. Shimada,
do.
H. Okubo, accountant S. Masuda, cashier
Agencies
Teikoku Marine Insurance Company Kyodo Fire Insurance Co.
IMPERIAL COREAN CUSTOMS,
Commissioner-M. Miyaki
Chief of Harbour Section-I. Oni Chief of Revenue Section-T. Kurobe Chief of Inspecting Section M.
Kamazawa
Chief of Examining Section
Ichikawa
-
-
- T.
Chief of Quarantine and Medical-K
Nibu Secretary B. Tanino
I
CHEMULPO
718
JAPANESE MERCHANTS, &c.
Bei-to Torihikisho (Rice Exchange)
E Kaku, director
I. Hayashi
H. Higuchi
Keida & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
K. Nobuta
R. Fujiki & Co.
K. Shono
T. Takata S. Okuda
S. Suyenaga M. Takase S. Tanaka Taku & Co. K. Kitow K. Akamatsu N. Takasugi K. Hisano K. Saclayasu T. Kimura S. Honzio
B. Machida
S. Oishi
Akita & Co., K. Akita director
Kuwano & Co., R. Kuwano
Kurachi & Co., S. Takedatsu
Ebara & Co., S. Ebara
行銀八十社會式
店支川仁
JUHACHI GINKO, LD. (EIGHTEENTE BANK)
Chemulpo Branch, Japanese Settlement,
N. Ishida, manager
T. Morikawa, chief clerk
K. Shiraishi, S. Tukamoto,
T.
Suzuki, J. Mori, S. Mikita, T.
Kiriyama, T. Yamakuchi,
S.
Okunaga, M. Akiyama, clerks
Agencies
Nagasaki Savings Bank, Ld. Nippon Kangiyo Ginko, Ld. Teikoku Life Insurance Co., Ld. Nippon Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
KOREAN METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATORY
Director-Dr. Y. Wada
Chief Assistants H. Mukasa, T.
Hirata, F. Hirayuwa Assistants-K. Yoshizoe, S. Seki, K. Yamamoto, T. Unno, Y. Takeshita, H. Yamagata, G. Akamaru, M. Haramaki, K. Nakamura
Stations-
Seoul T. Hizume,
chief
Pyngyang H Nagamine, do.
Taiko-G. Fukuda,
do.
Fusan-T. Ogawa
do.
Mokpo-G. Tokuyama,
do.
Wonsan T. Yamasaki,
do.
Songchin-G. Takashima, do.
Yongampo-M. Hatta,
do.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
Corean Directory
MISSIONS ÉTRANGÈRES DE PARIS
Rev. E. Deneux
ORPHANAGE OF ST. PAUL DE CHARTRES
Rev. Mother Eromanuel, superior
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL(FOREIGN SETTLEMENT) Dr. F. Krüger (president), Oswald White (vice pres. and hon. secretary), M. Paillard, O. C. Gould, J. Shinobu, Chia Wen Yen, V. D. Octtingen, official members; W. G. Bennett (hon. treasurer), W. D. Townsend N. Iwasaki, unofficial members
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL-(JAPANESE)
Chairman T. Okuda
Director-N. Iwasaki
社會式株易貿韓日
NIKKAN BOYEKI KABUSHIKI KAISHA
(Japanese & Korean Trading Co, Ltd.)
Import and Export Merchants, Custom
Brokers, Forwarding and Commission
Agents
President T. Kono
Acting Director T. Kato Manager-B. Inamasu
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA (Japan MailS.S.Co.)
K. Kondo, manager
T. Takayanagi, U. Hayashi, N. Nio,
Y. Kawaida
ORIENTAL CONSOLIDATED MINING Co.-Tel.
Ad Pukchin
H. F. Meserve, general manager
T. W. Van Ess, auditor Townsend & Co., agents
Capt. E. S. Barstow, supt. of
transportation (Chinnampo)
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA
Y. Asai, manager
POST OFFICE-
Director-T. Yagi
Clerks M. Yasuda, S. Tashima, K. Hayama, Y. Shimada, S. Otsuji, S. Okada, T. Matsuwo, Y. Maki, C. Imano, T. Kimura, K. Inomata, S. Yamada, R. Kai, K. Tauchi, R. Yendo, T. T. Okitsu, T. Sato, K Matsuwo, S. Sanada, K. Asano, J. Koga, J. Kozuma, K. Nada
Electrical Engineer-K. Skibata
Tah-chang
CHEMULPO--WONSAN
RONDON, PLAISANT & CIE., General Store- keepers, Importers and Exporters, Coal Merchants and Commission Agents
E. J. Sauveur, signs per pro.
A. J. Rondon
DENKI
SIEMENS-SCHUCKERT KANKOKRU
GOMET KAISHA; Tel. Ad: Siemens Chemulpo Head Office: Tsukiji 48,Tokyo
Carl Wolter & Co., managers R. Ogawa, elec. engr.
STEWARD, E. D., & Co., Shipchandlers, Forwarding Agents and Hotelkeepers
TOWNSEND & Co., Merchants
W. D. Townsend
J. D. Atkinson
Jas. Cruze
Agencies
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld.
Seichang
WOLTER & Co., Carl, Merchants; Tel. Ad:
Barbarossa
Carl Wolter (Humburg)
Paul Baumann
Hermann Henkel
P. Schirbaum
R Heckscher
O. Henschel
K. Naito
S. Chiu
H. Tanaka
Agencies
Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai Chartered Bank of India, A. and China Dresdener Bank, Dresden
Banque de Comrce. de St. Petersburg Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hamburg Russian East Asiatic Steamship Co., Ld. Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremer
Austrian Lloyd, Trieste
719
United States & China-Japan S. S. Co. Indra Line
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld Glen Line
Dampfschiffs Rhederei "Union " A. G
Hainburg
Java-China-Japan Lijn
British India Steam Nav. Co., Ltd. Lloyd's
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ltd Verein Hamburger Assecuradeure The North British and Mercantile
Insurance Co., London
The Liverpool, London, Globe Insur
ance Co., Liverpool
Albingia Feuer Vers., Hamburg Friedr. Krupp Grusonverk, Magdeburg
Buckan
A. Borsig Tegel, Berlin
Duisburger Machinenbau-Actien Ge- sells. vormals Bechem & Keetmann Central Agency Ltd., Glasgow United Alkali Co., Ltd., Liverpool Dynamit Actien Gesellschaft vormals
A. Nobel, Hamburg
Vereinigte Koln-Rottweilei Pulver-
fabriken
Chemische Fabriken vorm. Weiler ter
Meer, Uerdingen
C. F. Bochringer & Soeline, Mannheim Henkell & Co.. Mainz
Heidsieck & Co., Reims
Managers
Korea Syndikat
(German Mines at Soenchoen)
Fr. W. Kegel, managing engineer W. C. Kegel, assistant engineer H. J. Mills
R. Garratt
R. Ebena, mine captain
Siemens Schuckert
Kankoku Denki Gomei Kaishia
R. Ogawa, engineer
WONSAN (GENSAN OR YUENSAN)
Yuen-san
This port, situated in Broughton Bay, on the north-eastern coast of Corea, is in the southern corner of the province of South Ham-kiung, about halfway between Fusan and Vladivostock. It was opened to Japanese trade on the 1st May, 1880, and to other nations in November, 1883. It is called Gensan by the Japanese and Yuensan by the Chinese. The native town has grown considerably since the port was opened to trade, and contains now a population of fully 20,000 inhabitants. The town is built along the southern shore of the bay, and through it runs the main road which leads from Seoul to the Tumen river. Markets are held five times a month for the sale of agricultural produce and Foreign imports. The Custom House is situated in the heart of the foreign settlements about a mile distant from the Native town. The Japanese have
720
WONSAN
a well-kept settlement containing about 250 houses, with 2,000 inhabitants. The Chinese number 120, and the European and American residents about 30. The harbour is a good one, being spacious, easy of access, well sheltered, with excellent holding ground, and convenient depth of water. When the railway line to Seoul is laid the trade of Wonsan may be expected to show rapid development. January is the coldest month, and one corner of the harbour-that before the native town-is sometimes frozen over, but the part used by shipping is never covered with ice of such a thickness as to interfere with navigation It has been decided to illuminate the harbour by three lighthouses. The country around Wonsan is under cultivation, and the soil is very rich. Within a short distance of the port are mines producing copper and other minerals, and gold is found amongst the neighbouring mountains. The cattle at the port, as nearly all over the country, are very fine and plentiful, and can be bought at very low rates; they are used as beasts of burden and for agricultural purposes, and are largely exported to Vladivostock for food purposes. A telegraph line to Seoul was opened in July, 1891, and has been extended northwards to within 100 li of the Russian frontiers.
Trade is carried on by regular lines of steamers running to Japan, Shanghai, and Vladivostock. The returns for 1908 show the value of the trade with foreign countries to be: Imports Yen 2,884,613, and Exports Yen 1,002,548. The exports consist chiefly of beans, cattle, dried fish, gold-dust, whale-flesh and skins. Imports consist chiefly of cotton and silk manufactured goods, cotton wadding, metals and kerosene oil. About 40 per cent. of the imports are cotton goods.
DIRECTORY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (JAPANESE)
Chairman A. Kameya
Vice-Chairman-J. Yamasaki
Steam Launch "Maiko"
Captain-K. Onishi
Engineer-W. Bako
-I. Tachibana
GENSAN HOTEL
1st clerk (for the Sec.)-C. Ashihama
2nd do.
do.
CONSULATES
CHINA
Vice-Consul-T. C. Lee Secretary Tou Jou-pong
Do. -Young Tsze-ten
GREAT BRITAIN
Pro-Consul-C. E. S. Wakefield
JAPAN (Residency)
Imperial Resident S. Hisamidzu Police Vice-Resident-T, Murachi Chancelier-T. Shimaya
Do.
K. Shimada
Do. T. Togawo
Chief Inspr. of Police--S. Hashimoto Inspector of Police-T. Sugino
JAIL
Inspector of Jail-K. Kamimura Chief Jailer-I. Shimosaki
CUSTOMS
Assistant-in-charge-K. Araki Assistants-S. Iseki, Y. Fujisaki, W. M. Bowie, K. Naito, Kuan Chong-in, Yang Kim Chin
Clerks K. Okura, S. Numa, S. Yenomo-
to, Wong Seu Eng, Kuan Chonghak Medical Officer-Dr. J. B. Ross, M.B. Act. Tidesurveyor-P. E. Mannheimer Examiners-J. M. Smith, K. Mutsu,
Teng Hua Hei
Fukuya, proprietor
HOSPITAL (JAPANESE)
Doctors--Y. Imai, A. Fujimoto, G.
Arakawa, T. Horiuchi
JAPANESE MERCHANTS, &c.
First Bank-K. Ikeda, manager Eighteenth Bank S. Kakei, manager Nippon Yusen Kaisha-H. Yoshida,
agent
Osaka Shosen Kaishi
G. Ota, agent
Teikoku Marine Insurance Co.
S. Kakei, agent
Meiji Life Insurance Co.
S. Kakei, agent
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
K. Ikeda, agent
Meiji Fire Insurance Co.
K. Ikeda, agent
Nippon Marine Insurance Co.
H. Yoshida, agent Nitsusu Life Insurance Co.
J. Natsume, agent Nitsusu Fire Insurance Co.
J. Natsume, agent Teikcoku Life Insurance Co.
M. Takase, agent
JAPANESE REPRESENTATIVE OFFICE Representative-K. Yoshizoye
MISSIONS
WONSANFUSAN
For Protestant Missions see end of
Corean Directory
MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES DE PARIS
Rev. A. Larribeau
Rev. F. Tournier
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL (Japanese)
Chairman T. Nishikawa Vice Chairman--U, Iwata
POST OFFICE (JAPANESE)
Postmaster-S. Kato
Chief Clerk, Postal-H. Kuroiwa
Do., Telegr. Ch. Ishidoya Do., Tel.-K. Murakami Accountant-M. Kojima
721
FUSAN
山釜 Fu-sam
Fusan, or Pusan, as it is called by the Coreans, is the chief port of Kiung-sang- do, the south-eastern province of Corea, and lies in lat. 35 deg. 6 min. 6 sec. N. and long. 129 deg. 3 min. 2 sec. E. It was opened to Japanese trade in 1876 and to Western nations in 1883. The native town consists of some 550 houses with a population of about 5,000 inhabitants. The Japanese settlement is situated a little distance from the native town, opposite the island of Cholyongdo (Deer Island). It is under the control of the Consul, who is, however, assisted by an elective Municipal Council The Japanese population in Fusan numbers about 15,000, and there are about 3,500 more resident inland in the vicinity of the port. The Seoul-Fusan Railway and a daily service of steamers to Japan have combined to make Fusan a great centre of activity, and the volume of trade passing through the port has greatly increased. In connection with the railway a vast scheme of harbour reclamation is being carried out, and this will provide building sites suitable for godowns, which are now sadly deficient. Many public improvements have been carried out in recent years, including the erection of a new settlement, the construction of water-works, the instal- lation of electric light, and the making of good roads in the neighbourhood of the foreign quarter.
Order is maintained by a police force in a uniform of European pattern. Water, conducted from the neighbouring hills, is distributed through the Settlement by pipes and hydrants. The Corean town of Fusan is a walled city, situated at the head of the harbour; it contains the Royal granaries for storing rice, a few wretched houses, and the residence of the minor military official in charge. The harbour is good and capacious, with a sufficient depth of water to accommodate the largest vessels. The climate is very salubrious and the place is considered extremely healthy, Sea bathing may be had in perfection, and there is a nice hot spring near Tongnai. The district city Tong-nai Fu, which is distant about eight miles, is the local centre of trade. It contains a population of 33,350. Regular lines of steamers connect the port with Japan, Shanghai, northern ports of China, and Vladivostock. Fusan was connected with Japan by a submarine telegraph cable in November, 1883. As a trading centre Fusan is the second port of the empire, the value of the trade of the port in 1908 being about Yen 14,000,000 equalling nearly one million and a half pounds sterling, imports representing three-fifths of the amount.
722
FUSAN
DIRECTORY
BANK-DAI ICHI GINKO Ltd. (formerly
First National Bank), Honmachi
BUREAU OF RAILWAYS of H. I. J. M.'s RE-
SIDENCY-GENERAL (Korea Ryuzan)
Director--G. Oya (Kogakahakushi) Traffic Manager-M. Öka
Engineer for Maintenance-J. Inagaki
Do. Construction-T. Endo
Chief Mechanical Engi eer-J. Yokoi Chief Treasurer-K. Endo Secretary T, Takiwaki
Division Engrs.-K. Uzno, H. Kojyo,
H. Okamura
Workshop Superintendents-M. Kuro- sawa (Ryuzan), T. Ogura (Soryo), T. Yamazaki (Kenziho)
所議會業商山釜
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (JAPANESE); Tele. 9
Chairman H. Noguchi; Tele. 111
Vice-Chairman-J. Goto; Tel. 59
Secretary F. Morita; Tel. 439
COAL & OIL STORE COMPANY
O. Naide, manager
館列陳品商山釜
COMMERCIAL MUSEUM (JAPANESE); Teleph. 9
H. Noguchi, president; Teleph. 111
S. Ishikawa, committee; do. 123
K. Aomi,
COREAN COASTING STEAM NAVIGATION CO.
(Steamers "Changriong," "Hyenik ")
Chu-wa-za, agent
關海山釜國韓大
CUSTOMS-IMPERIAL COREAN
Commissioner-G. Yamaoka
Assistant and Chief Inspector-N.
Yoshimura
Harbour Master-S. Kinoshita Clerks T. Jono, K. Namba, and 15
others
Asst. Examiners--T. Ishü, K. Kemori,
K. Hara
____
Senior Tidewaiters S. Murai, K
Tateishi, and 19 Tidewaiters Medical Officer-S. Inudzuka
Branch Office, Choryang
Clerk-Y. Shirai and one Tidewaiter
院病立共本日
FUSAN PIER COMPANY; Teleph. 407
Director-F. Tazama
HOSPITAL (JAPANESE)--Benten machi
S. Kubo, M.D., surgeon in charge
JAPAN & COREA WAREHOUSE Co.--Teleph.
341
Director-K. Sasaki Manager--- N. Hara
do.
do. 200
do.
439
JAPANESE FIRMS, &c.
F. Morita, manager
CONSULATES
CHINA
Consul-General-C. T. Woo
Attaché-Shang Pao Shun (Seoul) Consul-Yiao Yaw
Vice-Consul-W. Y. Chia
Attaché-C. K, Chien
感事理
JAPAN (RESIDENCY); Telep. 4
Resident R. Kameyama
Vice-Resident K. Takase
Do. --K. Ogasawara
Interpreter- K. Takawo
Expert of MarineProducts-K.Hayashi Post Officer-S. Kinoshita
Asst. do. S. Ito
Clerks N. Tanaka, Y. Chaya, Y. Monobe, M. Asayama, N. Takeshita, R. Teshirogi
RUSSIA
Consul at Fusan-T. Wassilieff
Eighteenth Bank; Teleph. 18 T. Adachi, manager
Fifty-eighth Bank;Teleph. 58 M. Kawai, manager
First Bank; Teleph. 11 and 511 K. Noguchi, manager Nippon Yusen KaishaDairiten; Telph.13
C. Oika, manager
K. Yamamoto, asst. in charge Osaka Shosen Kaisha;Teleph.14 and 514
G. IIaseba, manager
Sea Product Company; Teleph. 109
K. Yabashi, acting manager Suwoo Bank
K. Hayashi, manager Corean Warehouse Co.
K. Sasaki, manager
Fusan Wharf Co.
F. Hazama, manager Fusan Warehouse Co.
S. Minamioka, manager Fusan Electric Light Co. S. Yamada, manager Fusan Tobacco Co.
H. Ogura, manager
I
MISSIONS
FUSAN MASAMPO
For Protestant Missions see end of
Corean Directory
MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES DE PARIS
Rev. L. Le Gendre
Rev. A. P. Robert
所役園民留居山釜
MUNICIPAL OFFICE (JAPANESE)
Mayor H. Ishiwara
Assistant T. Awaya
Chairman-S. Matšumaye
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA
K. Nakamura, manager
K. Yamanioto
Y. Taga
O. Tachibana
T. Hayashi
局信電便郵山釜國帝本日大
POST OFFICE (JAPANESE)
Director-R. Siga
Assistant T. Kato
Clerk, Archives-E. Hisano
Accountant-Y. Yashimizu Clerk Telephone--S. Kojiro
Do. Postal Service K. Hatta
SEA PRODUCT COMPANY
R. Hayashi, manager
TOWNSEND & Co., Merchants
C Eklundh, signs per pro.
723
MASAMPO
浦山馬
Its native
Masampo was opened to foreign trade on the 1st May, 1899. population is 34,000 and foreign 300. Regular lines of small steamers connect the port of Fusan. Its proximity to Fusan and the superior accommodation of the latter port greatly interferes with the commercial expansion of Masampo. The foreign trade in 1908 showed a decline in value to the extent of over half a million yen, or about 45 per cent., when compared with the returns for 1907. Exports in 1908 amounted to yen 251,917, and imports to yen 385,046.
CUSTOMS
關海浦山馬國韓
DIRECTORY
Comsnr.--W. McC. Osborne (Fusan)
Acting Asst. in charge-W. Armour
JAPANESE HOTELS
Iwamiya.
Horiye
Mochizuki
Taiko
Yoshikawa
廳事理山馬
JAPANESE RESIDENCY, MASAMPO
Resident K. Mimashi
Vice Resident-S. Wadda
Secretaries-M.Sakane and H. Noguch Fishery Department-H. Kimura Interpreter-M. Igarashi
Chief Inspector of Police-N. Michino Inspector of Police-C. Fukuyama
MISSIONS
MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES
Rev. G. Mousset
POST OFFICE (JAPANESE)
Director-G. Tojo
Chief Clerk-K. Uchida
MOKPO
Mok-po
Mokpo, which, like Chinnampo, was opened to foreign trade on the 1st October, 1897, in pursuance of a resolution of the Council of State, is a seaport in the province of Chulla, and has an excellent harbour capable of providing anchorage accommodation for thirty or forty vessels of large tonnage. Chulla is a great rice-growing district, and has the reputation of being the wealthiest province in the country, and Mokpo lies at the mouth of a river which drains nearly the whole province. Mokpo has undergone a great transformation since it was opened. In 1897 it consisted of a few Corean huts surrounded by paddy fields and mud flats. The foreign settlement, which comprises about 225 acres of ground, was bought up within a couple of years, and the mud flats were rapidly converted into a town, with well laid out streets, occupied by about 1,200 Japanese and a number of substantial Chinese residents. A seawall was built and a bund road, over a mile in length, was made. The climate of Mokpo is healthy and salubrious; the scenery much resembles that of South Japan and is picturesque in the extreme. Good shooting may be had, pheasants, geese, ducks, deer, wild boar and leopards abounding. Even tigers will be met with by those who care to hunt for them. Instances are not at all rare in which pigs, dogs and even men are carried off by these animals. Many of the natives are experts in training eagles to hunt smaller birds, like pheasants, &c.
The anticipations which were entertained of Mokpo at the time of its opening have proved over-sanguine, doubtless because the port of Kuusan was subsequently opened to foreign trade, and has flourished at the expense of Mokpo. But Mokpo would appear now to be regaining its old position, for during the last few years there has been great improvement in the trade of the port. Exports in 1908 were valued at yen 860,732 and imports at yen 659,102.
DIRECTORY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Chairman T. Nishikawa
Clerk-K. Tanigaki
COREAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY
S.S. "Hyenik," s.s. "Changriong P'
Kim Pong-kui, agent
CUSTOMS
Assistant-in-charge-J. Kuroda
Clerks M. Ninomiyo, Yi Hong-nai,
M. Oba
Medical Officer S. Yao
Assistant Examiner H. Yanagi T'waiters T. Mine, H. Ito
HORI STEAMSHIP COMPANY
s.s. "Keiki," s.s. "Kyengpo," s.s. "Goyo"
Takeuchi, agent
HOSPITAL JAPANESE
C. Shimidzu, physician in charge
INSURANCE COMPANIES
Meiji Kasai Hoken Kaisha (Fire)
Dai Ichi Ginko, agents
Tokyo Kasai Hoken Kaisha (Marine)
Dai Ichi Ginko, agents Nippon Kaijio Hoken Kaisha (Marine; Juhachi Ginko (18th Bank) agent Meiji Seimei Hoken Kaisha (Life)
Y. Fukuda, agent
Teikoku Seimei Hoken Kaisha (Life)
P. Kimura, agent
Nippon Kasai Hoken Kaisha (Fire)
P. Kimura, agent
Yokohama Kaijo Unso Shinyo Hokra
Kaisha (Marine and Fire)
M. Matsui, agent
JAPANESE ASSOCIATION
Chairman-N. Takane
JAPANESE RESIDENCY
Resident S. Matsumoto
MOKPO-CHINNAMPO
KANCHIYAMA, K., Medical Practitioner
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
Corean Directory
MISSION ETRANGÈRES DE PARIS
Pére A. Deshayes
MOKPO WEEKLY NEWS
K. Tanigaki, editor and publisher
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
President. Nakaoji
Elected Member-Q. Fukuda.
MUNICIPAL POLICE
Police Inspector-N. Ichikawa
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA
K. Kimura, agent
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA
K. Suzuki, chief clerk
POST OFFICE COREAN
Postmaster-Pak Chung-soo Secretary-Sim Eui Hyeng Kim Tjyoung Sik
POST OFFICE JAPANESE
Postmaster-T. Iwaki
RICE CLEANING MILL
Kimura
Fukuda
SCHOOL JAPANESE
Headmaster-M. Togawa
Teacher-S. Michiyama.
725-
SHIMIDZU, C., M.D., Medical Practitioner
TELEGRAPH OFFICE-COREAN
Paik Nak-chine, manager
Yi Phil Kon, secretary
YEE SUNG SING, Merchant, Shipchandlers
and Storekeepers
CHINNAMPO
Chin-nam-po
This port was opened to foreign trade on the 1st October, 1897, in pursuance of a resolution passed by the Council of State. The port is situated on the north bank of the Tatung inlet, about twenty miles from its mouth, in the extreme south-west of the province of Pyeng-yang. It is some forty miles distant by water from Ping-yang, the third city in the Kingdom, with a population of 40,000, and it is expected that it will become a place of considerable commercial activity. The province is rich in agricultural and mineral wealth, the latter being now developed by foreign enterprise, Like all the other ports of Korea in 1907 Chinňampo was able to report a substantial increase in foreign trade.
The exports in 1908 amounted in value to Yen 1,978,744, and the imports to Yen 3,057,586, the total trade being nearly half a million less than in 1907. The business of the port is increasing year by year, the rich hinterland holding out good prospects for the future. Building operations in the General Foreign Settlement are going on apace, and where formerly only a few mud huts were to be seen, sub- stantial wooden and brick buildings are now taking their place. The business community is entirely composed of Japanese and Chinese. The Japanese population is about 5,000
The principal articles of export are rice, beans, wheat, maize, cow-hides and timber. Of imports, cotton and silk piece goods, matches, kerosene, porcelain, iron and hardware deserve mention. The harbour of Chinnampo afford's safe accom- modation for a great number of vessels of the deepest draught and the largest
tonnage.
726
CHINNAMPO-PINGYANG
DIRECTORY
BANKS
First Bank of Japan
One Hundred and Thirtieth Bank of
Japan
BRITISH AND COREAN CORPORATION
M. Nakamura, manager
DAI LOHI GINKO, LIMITED
N. Yokoyama, manager
BROCHIER & CIE., A., Importers and
Exporters
CHINESE MERCHANTS
Tong Fa & Co.
Lau Wo Sun & Co.
Sui Sun Chen
Shan Woo Sheng
Tung Lai-Sheng
COAL MINES-IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD
L. Cuvillier, ingenieur en chef, E.C.P. F. Pouchard, sous-ingénieur
H. Truche, chef mécanicien
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN CHINA
Consul-Chang Kuo Wai
Secty. & Attaché-Ts'een Kwanghee Assistant Whang Chang Lin Interpreter-Ho Uhang
JAPAN (RESIDENCY)
Resident T. Akimoto
CUSTOMS
Commissioner-M. Aruga Clerk-H. Yamasaki
Do. K. Tachikawa Inspector M. Ogawa Examiner S. Matsuo
HORI & Co.
Shipowners--"Kyonychae," "Kyenpo"
"Dai Tong Kang"
MISSION ETRANGERES DE PARIS
Rev. J. Lercide
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
Chairman-T. Akimoto Members-C. W. Chang, C. C. Howang Secs. T. Mochihara, I. Yukimura
MUNICIPAL POLICE
Inspector of Police S. K. Koresawa
6 Japanese policemen
ORIENTAL CONSOLIDATED MINING Co.
Capt. E. S. Barstow, agent
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA (Osaka Mercantile
S. S. Co.)
H. Ichihara, manager S. Kaneko, freight manager
Regular Steamers
S. S. "Fukushu Maru
S. S.
44
Choshu Maru
JJ
JJ
S. S. Keelung Maru" S. S. "Antow Maru" S. S. "Sumidagawa Maru" S. S. "Shinanogawa Maru" S. S. "Chikugogawa Maru"
POST OFFICE, JAPANESE
G. Tojo, director, and 22 clerks
JAPANESE MERCHANTS, &C.
Iwoi & Co., general merchants Keida & Co., shipping agents Arai & Co., general merchants Okura & Co., general contractors Gihei Hamada, agent for Awa Kyodo
Kisen Kaisha
Horikiu Steamship Co., branch office Osaka Shosen Kaisha, branch office Tetsusaku Harada, agent for Nippon
Yusen Kaisha
Dr. U. Kondo, Sanwa Hospital Dr. S. Koto, Chinnampo Hospital Y. Goto, gen, contractor and civil engr Nakamura Gumi, agent, Amagasaki
Kisen Kaisha
Civil Engineer-Kocho Mura
PINGYANG
Pingyang, the capital city of the province of the same name, about 44 miles from the port of Chinnampo, ranks as the third city of the empire. It has been opened as a trade- ing mart, where foreigners may reside, trade, and rent land and houses, according to native rules, anywhere within the limit to be marked off for that purpose. This limit was, however, ignored, and the Government allowed the matter to slide. No Custom-house will be opened there, all goods to and from Pingyang paying duty for and from abroad at Chinnampo. The foreigners residing at Pingyang are American, British and French missionaries, a few Chinese traders, and a growing number of Japanese. Two steamers under the Corean flag keep up communication between Pingyang and the port of Chinnaupo, making the trip in about five hours. The famous city of Pingyang, with its historical battlefields, is well worth a visit, fairly good Japanese house. accommodation being procurable. The city is beautifully situated in an extensive plain, on the right bank of the Ta-tong River. To the northward of Pingyang city, about 100 distant, are situated the American and British mining concession, where less than 20 years ago the foot of the Occidental had never been allowed to tread; the natives are now quite familiarized with western mining life as it unfolds itself before their eyes. Both mines are worked by foreigners with native help.
KUNSAN
Kunsan, one of the ports opened to foreign trade on the 1st May, 1899, is situated at the mouth of the Yong Dang River, which runs for many miles, forming the boundary line between the two provinces of Chulla-do and Chung-Chong-do, on the West Coast of Corea, and lies about halfway between Jenchuan and Mokpo. The two provinces referred to are so noted for their abundant supply of agricultural produce that they are called the magazines of the kingdom. The principal articles of export are rice, wheat, beans, different kinds of medicines, ox-lides, grasscloth, paper, bamboo articles, fans (both open and folding), screens and mats, beche de mer, dried awabi, with various kinds of fish and seaweed.
returns for 1907.
The port itself was well known as the export station for the revenue rice, when the Government revenue was paid in rice and collected in this port for transmission to the capital. The foreign trade in 1908 amounted to Yen 1,833,392 in exports and Yen 793,419 in imports, showing a total increase of Yen, 32,416 as compared with the Among inport goods, shirtings, fawns, cotton yarn, matches, keru vil, etc., had already found their way to the port prior to its opening for distribution to different markets. and Japanese farmers have been attracted in considerable numbers to this Rico is still largely exported from Kunsan, noighbourhood.
No Europeans reside in the port, but there is a foreign Municipal Council consisting of three members two Japanese and one Korean and there is
■parate Municipal Council for the Japanese Settlement.
SONG CHIN
城津
This port is situated on the north-eastern coast of Corea, in the province of North Ham-kiung, about 120 miles from Wonsan. It was opened to foreign trade on the 1st May, 1899. The native town is built close to the beach, and to judge by the ruins of walls and watch towers was once a fortified place. The settlement area includes the native town and extends beyond to the North. The native inhabitants number about 500. The next market place is about 30 li distant and up country, whilst the main road leading from Seoul to the Tumen river is at a distance of about 10 h. The Custom House is situated near the settlement on the neck of the small peninsula forming one side of the Song Chin bay. The Japanese, who number about 1,000, live in their own houses built in the settlement, and are mostly small shop. keepers and coolies. The harbour is a bad one; indeed, it is little more than an open roadstead anchorage; from N.E. to S.E. it is quite exposed, and even with a moderate breeze from those quarters communication between ship and shore may have to be suspended. The anchorage is not spacious, though very easy of access, and vessels drawing 10 feet or so can lie within a quarter of a mile from the shore. Improved jetty accommodation has encouraged the visits of vessels to the port. Fogs prevail for the greater part of the year, and the temperature is moderate at all seasons. The country around Song Chin is well under cultivation, principally for beans. Within reasonable distances, it is said, gold, copper and coal may be found, also a very fine white granite. Hot springs, said to be very efficacious for a number of ailments, are at a distance of some 30 li from the settlement. Cattle are very fine and plentiful and can be bought at low rates. A number of Japanese fishing boats are employed along the coast reaping a seemingly good harvest in bêche de mer.
Trade is carried on by small coasting steamers, principally with the port of Wonsan. The exports chiefly consist of beans, cowhides, hemp cloth and beche de mer, whilst cotton goods, kerosene oil, ironware and matches form the principal items of imports. This port shows a tendency to benefit at the expense of Wonsan. The trade amounts to about £50,000 a year.
Examiner T. Takahashi
CUSTOMS
Commissioner-T. Kaku
Tidewaiter-M. Sagamuma Clerk-Yi-hei-tok
GRIUEFF, Z. P.
Agencies
Pacific Whaling and Fishery
DIRECTORY
Joint Stock Co. of Count H. H.
Keyserling & Co.
Pacific S. S. Coy. "Energia
>>
Chinese Eastern Railway Company's
Steamship Service
院信通國幣韓大
IMPERIAL KOREAN COMMUNICATION DE-
PARTMENT
Postmaster Yi Chun Yong
Telegraph Manager-Pack Sin Gin
RESIDENCY-JAPANESE
Vice-Consul-Y. Oyeda Police Inspector-S. Suzuki
Employees H. Saito, S. Oda, A
Tanaka
PosT OFFICE-
Postmaster-Y. Ikuhashi
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN COREA
AMERICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH MISSION
SEOUL
Rev. G. H. Jones D.D., and wife Rev. D. A. Bunker and wife Rev. S. A. Beck and wife (absent) Rev. G. M. Burdick
Rev. R. R. Repport and wife Rev. Carl Taylor Miss Lulu E. Frey Miss Mary M. Cutler, M.D. Miss E. Ernsberger, M.D. Miss M. M. Albertson Miss Jessie Marker
Miss M. L. Guthapfel (absent) Miss Ora Tuttle
CHEMULPO
Rev. and Mrs. Lawton
Miss Gertrude E. Snavely Miss Mary K. Hillman
Miss Lula A. Miller
Rev. and Mrs. Charles Leorber Rev. N. D. Chew and wife
PYENG YANG
Rev. J. Z. Moore and wife Rev. A. L. Becker and wife Rev, Carl Critchett and wife
Rev. W. A. Noble, r., D., and wife Dr. E. D. Foll well and wife
Miss Henrietta Robbins (absent) Miss Emily J. Haynes Miss Sarah B. Hallman Mrs. R. S. Hall, M.D. Mr. B. W. Billings
Rev. W. Carl Rufus and wife
YENG BYEN
Rev. C. D. Morris and wife Miss Ethel M. Estey
Dr. and Mrs. A. H. Norton
KONGJU
Rev. W. C. Swearer and wife (absent)
Rev. E. M. Cable and wife
Rev. F. E. C. Williams and wife
Rev. Corwin Taylor and wife Mrs. A. H. Sharp
J. D. van Buskirk, M.D.
Miss Ora Puttle
HAIJO
Edwin, M. Kent, M.D., and wife
AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN MISSION (SOUTH)
CHUNJU
Rev. W. D. Reynolds and wife Rev. L. B. Tate and wife
Hov. L. O. M'Cutchen and wife f. H. Birdman, M.D.
Rev. J. S. Nisbet and wife Miss M. S. Tate
Miss Nellie B. Rankin Miss Emily Cordell Miss Sadie Buckland
KWANGJU
Rev. Eugene Boll and wife Rev. C. C. Owen, M.D., and wife Rev. J. F. Preston and wife Rev. R. J. Coit
Dr. R. M. Wilson Miss Bessie Knox Miss Ella Graham
KUNSAN
Rev. W. F. Bull and wife, Rev. W. B. Harrison and wife T. H. Daniel, M.D., and wife Rev. A. M. Earle and wife Miss E. E. Kestler
Miss Julia Dysart
ΜοκΡΟ
Rev. Rob't. Knox and wife,
Mr. Will Venable
Rev. H. D. McCallie Miss Julia Martin
W. H. Forsythe, M.D.
AMERICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL
MISSION (SOUTH)
SEOUL
Rev. J. L. Gerdine and wife
Rev. R. A. Hardie, M.D., and wife Mrs. J. P. Campbell
Miss M. M. Ivey
Miss Martha Batey
SONGDO
Rev. C. T. Collyer
Rev. A. W. Wasson and wife Rev. F. K. Gamble and wife Prof C. N. Weems and wife
Mr. J. A. Thompson and wife Mr. T. H. Yun and wife Dr. W. T. Reid
Miss A. Carroll
Miss C. Erwin
Miss L. Nichols Miss E. Lowe
WONSAN
Kev. M. B. Stokes and wife
Rev. E. L. Peerman
Rev. J. W. Hitch and wife Dr. J. B. Ross and wife
Miss M. Myers Miss K. Cooper Miss Bouie Miss Edwards
728B
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN COREA
CHUNCHEN
Rev. J. R. Moose and wife, Dr. W. C. Meyes and wife
ABSENT ON FURLOUGH
Rev. C. G. Hounshell and wife Rev. W. G. Cram and wife Dr. J. W. Reed and wife
AUSTRALIAN PRESBYTERIAN
MISSION FUSAN
Rev. Andrew Adamson and wife Rev. G. Engel, M.A., and wife Miss E. S. Moore Miss A. G. Niven
CHINJU
Rev. Hugh Currell, M.B., and wife Rev. D. M. Lyall and wife Miss N. Scholes
Miss M. Kelly
BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE
SOCIETY
SEOUL
Hugh Miller, agent F. G. Vesey, sub-agent
CANADIAN PRESBYTERIAN
MISSION WONSAN (GENSAN)
Rev. W. R. Foote and wife Rev. A. F. Robb and wife
HAM HUNG
Rev. D. M. McRae and wife Rev. L. L, Young Dr. Kate McMillan Miss L. H. McCully Miss C. F. Mair
SONG CHING (Joshin)
Rev. R. Grierson, M.D., and wife Rev. A. R. Ross
Miss J. B. Robb
CHINA
REIGNING SOVEREIGN AND FAMILY
Hseun Tung, the Emperor of China, is the son of Prince Ch'un, brother of the late Emperor Kwang Su, and was called to the throne on the death of the Emperor Kwang Si on the 14th November, 1908. At the time of his accession the Sovereign was barely three years of age.
The present sovereign is the tenth Emperor of China of the Manchu dynasty of Ta-tsin (Sublime Purity), which succeeded the native dynasty of Ming in the year 1644. There exists no law of hereditary succession to the throne, but it is left to each Sovereign to appoint his successor from among the members of his family. The late Emperor, Kwang Sü, like his predecessor, died childless. Twice during his reign an heir apparent had been proclaimed and shortly afterwards deposed. The proclamation of the present Sovereign as the successor of the Emperor Kwang Su was made as the latter lay dying, in compliance with what the document described as "the benign mandate" of Her Majesty the Empress Dowager, and at the same time Prince Ch'un, the child-Emperor's father was appointed to act as Regent during the Sovereign's minority,
GOVERNMENT AND REVENUE
The fundamental laws of the Empire are laid down in the Ta-tsing Inei-tien, or Collected Regulations of the Great Pure Dynasty, which prescribe the government of the State as based upon the government of the family. The Emperor is spiritual as well as temporal sovereign, and, as high priest of the Empire, can alone, with his immediate representatives and ministers, perform the great religious ceremonies. No ecclesiastical hierarchy is maintained at the public expense, nor any priesthood attached to the Confucian or State religion.
The administration of the Empire is under the supreme direction of the Interior Council Chamber, comprising four members, two of Manchu and two of Chinese origin, besides two assistants from the Han-lin, or Great College, who have to see that nothing is done contrary to the civil and religious laws of the Empire, contained in the Ta-tsing Huei-tien and in the sacred books of Confucius. These members are denominated Ta Hsio-sz, or Ministers of State. Under their orders until recently were the Boards of Government, each of which was presided over by a Manchu and Chinese. The establishment of Constitutional Government having been decided upon, and the reform of the official system being recognised as a necessary preliminary measure, these admini- strative Boards have been re-arranged and increased from seven to twelve in accordance with an Imperial Edict promulgated on November 6th, 1906. The Chun Chi-chu or Grand Council of State and the Grand Secretariat were undisturbed by the Edict, but the Boards or Ministries are now constituted as follows:-(1) The Wai Wu Pu, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (2) Li PuMinistry of Civil Appointments; (3) Min Cheng Pu, Ministry of the Interior; (4) Chih Tu Pu, Ministry of Finance; (5) Li PuMinistry of Rites and Ceremonies; (0) Hsueh Pu, Ministry of Education; (7) Lu Chuen Pu, Ministry of War: (6) Hai Chuen Pn, Ministry of Marine; (9) Fa Pu, Ministry of Justice; (10) Nung Kung Shang Pu, Ministry of Agriculture, Works and Commerce; (11) Yu Ch'uan Fu, Ministry of Posts and Communications; and (12) Li Fou Pu, Ministry of Outer Dependencies. With the exception of the Wai Wu Pu, each Board has only one President and two Vice-Presidents, and no distinction is now made as between Manchu and Chinese independent of the Government, and theoretically above the central administration, i.e., the Tu-cha Yuan, or Board of Public Censors. It consists of from 40 to 50 members.
By the ancient custom of the Empire, all the members of this Board are privileged to present any remonstrance to the sovereign. One censor must be preseut at the meeting of each of the Government Boards. Provincial Councils were established, in October 1909. Their duties are purely consultative, the actual Govern- ment remaining in the hands of the officials.
The amount of the public revenue of China is not known, and estimates concerning i vary greatly. The Imperial Maritime Customs receipts form the only item upon which exact figures are obtainable, and these for the year 1907 amounted to Tls. 32,901,8 5. Mr. H. B. Morse, Commissioner of Customs and Statistical Secretary to the Inspectorate-General of Customs, in 1907, computed the revenue of the Imperial (iovernment at Tacks 102,924,000, and the imperial expenditure so far as is known
780
CHINA
}}
or reported, was calculated at Taels 136,496,000, giving an excess of expenditure over revenue amounting to Tls. 33,572,000, indicating, as the government is far from bank. rupt, a considerable degree of elasticity in the revenue.'
Besides the revenue from the Customs given above, the receipts from the other principal sources, allocated to Imperial purposes, are in round sums: Land tax, Taels 26,000,000; Tribute, Tls. 7,00,000: Native Customs, Tls. 4,000,000; Salt gabelle, Tls. 13,000,000; Miscellaneous taxes Tls. 4,000,000 Lekin on general merchandise and native customs, Tis. 14,000,000. Mr. Morse estimates that in addition about Tls. 142,000,000 for provincial administration and Tls.43,000,000 for local administration, is raised, giving a grand total of Tls. 284,000,000-a stun which, as Mr. Morse remarks, is an obviously insufficient sum on which to maintain the fabric of govern ment of an Empire like China. Recently the question of evolving a National Budget has been discussed in government circles at Peking, but this is a task which has been described by a competent authority as one to puzzle the shrewdest firm of chartered account- ants. The amounts given above are those supposed to be accounted for to the Government, but very much larger amounts are raised from the people and absorbed by the officials in the way of peculation. With the significant exception of the Maritime Customs, which is under foreign control, no item of revenue shows any elasticity. The land tax, salt revenue, Lekin or Native Customs, where they are stil under native control, are all about the same figures as they were ten years ago, although it is a matter of common notoriety that these sources of revenue have increased indefinitely. Many modifications were decided upon in 1901 in the fiscal plans of both the central and provisional governments to enable China to meet the obliga tions created by the indemnity paid to the Powers on account of the Boxer rising in 1900. In some districts Lekin and Native Customs were brought under the control of the Imperial Maritime Customs and hypothecations made on the salt revenues. The tariff was raised to an effective 5 per cent. ad valorem. These innovation will obtain till 1940, when the amortization of China's obligations will be complete. Sir Robert Hart, the Inspector-General of the Imperial Maritime Customs, estimated in 1904 the possible revenue from a reform of the Land Tax at 400 million tåels.
China had no foreign debt till the end of 1874, when a loan of £627,675, bearing 8 per cent. interest, was contracted through the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, under Imperial authority, and secured by the Customs revenue. Afterwards a number of other loans, of comparatively moderate amount, were contracted, mostly through the agency of the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, and several of them have been paid off Up to 1894 the total foreign debt of China was inconsiderable, but since then extensive borrowings have had to be made to meet the expenses of the war with Japan and the indemnity, which was Tls. 200,000,000 (at exchange of 3s. 3jd.), with a further Ts. 20,000,000 for the retrocession of the Liaotung Peninsula. The last instalment was paid in 1898, and the total indebtedness of the country up to 1900 was £55,755,000, the princi pal loans being the Russian of 1895, the Anglo-German of 1896, and the Anglo-German of 1898, each of £16,000,000. The country's obligations in 1901 were increased by a sum of Tls. 450,000,000, the amount of the indemnity paid to the Powers to meet (1) the expenses of the Expeditionary Forces, and (2) claims for compensation for losses to missions, corporations, individuals, etc. Several minor loans have since been obtained chiefly for railway construction, and China's total foreign debt outstanding amounts now to about £140,000,000.
AREA AND POPULATION
China proper, extending over 1,335,841 square miles, is divided into eighteen. provinces, according to the official records for 1907, the area and population of the various prefectures and provinces are as given :-
Province and Population
Province and Population
Szechuen
79,500,000
Fohkien
20,000,000
Shantung
38,000,000
Shengking
16,000,000
Anhwei
36,000,000
Chekiang
11,800,000
Hupeh
34,000,000
Kwangsi
&ttg Kwangtung
32,000,000
Yunnan..
8,000,000
Chihli
29.400,000
Other Provinces (Shansi, Shensi,
Kiangsi
24 534,000
Kansu, Honan, Kweichau)... 55,000,000
Kiangsu
Hunan
23,980,000 22,000,000
Total.......... 438,214,000
It is to be noted that the Chinese census, following all Oriental methods calculation, is not to be trusted. There is no subject on which foreign and native statisticians are more contentious than that of the Chinese population. Experts vor in their estimates between 250,000,000 and 440,000,000.
CHINA
731
The total number of foreigners in China in 1907 was 69,852, Of these 45,610 were Japanese, 9,203 British, 3,553 Germans, 3,138 Portuguese, 2,862 Americans, 2,201 French, other nationalities being represented by less than 1,000. According to the information of the Customs, the number of commercial firms was 2,595 as compared with 1837 in 1906. Of the latter Japan heads the list with 1,416, followed by the United Kingdom with 490, Germany with 239, America with 112, France with 94, Portugal with 51, Spain with 40, Italy with 21, Russia with 20, Austria-Hungary and the Netherlands each with 17, Denmark with 14, Norway with 9, Belgium with 6, and Sweden and a non-Treaty Power each with I; but, as the British Commercial Attaché has remarked, much! depends on the definition and status of a commercial firm.
all
The principal dependencies of China are Mongolia, with an area of 1,288,035 square miles, and some 2,000,000 people; and Manchuria, with an area of 362,313 square miles, and
The latter has estimated population of 15,000,000. in recent years been steadily and rapidly colonised by Chinese, who greatly outnumber the Manchus in their own land. Thibet, which is also practically a dependency of China, has an area of 643,734 square miles and a population of 6,000,000 souls. It is ruled by the Dalai Lama, but subject to the Government of Peking, who maintain a Resident at Lhassa.
ARMY AND NAVY
The standing military force of China consists of two great divisions, the first formed by the more immediate subjects of the ruling dynasty, the Manchus, and the second by the Chinese and other subject races. The first, the main force upon which the Imperial Government can rely, forni the so-called troops of the Eight Banners; they garrison all the great cities in such a manner as to be separated by walls and forts from the population. According to the latest but entirely untrustworthy reports, the Imperial army comprises a total of 850,000 men, including 678 companies of Tartar troops, 211 companies of Mongols, and native Chinese infantry, a kind of militia, numbering 120,000 men ; but these figures, derived from native sources, are altogether untrustworthy. In organization, equipment, personnel and commissariat, the Army is utterly inefficient, and with the exception of a few brigadles of foreign-drilled troops is little better than rabble as far as concerns opposition to European, Indian or Japanese troops. The native soldiers do not as a rule live in barracks but in their own houses, mostly pursuing some civil occupation. The Army of Chih-li, undoubtedly the best in the whole Empire, utterly failed to withstand the foreign troops in 1900 except in the cases when the disparity in numbers was over five to one. Disorganisation was supreme: although the arsenals around Tientsin and Peking were known to contain more than 200 modern field guns and to be replete with machine weapons, very few were forth coning in the day of battle. These arsenals, together with the forts at Taku, and all camps and fortifications between Peking and the sea, have now been demolished. Since 1903 the national Army as represented by the Northern divisions has undergone agreat change, and forces organised by Yuan Shi Kai are supposed to number some 40,000 troops; but at the manoeuvres in the autumn of 1906 only some 24,000 men took part, including the Southern divisions, and the efficient force has been greatly over-estimated Great difliculty is found in keeping even 40,000 properly paid and equipped.
The Chinese navy consisted, prior to the Franco-Chinese war of 1884, mainly of small gunboats built at the Mamoi Arsenal, Foochow, and at Shanghai, on the foreign model, but was afterwards greatly strengthened. Five ships were lost, however, in the battle of the Yalu, when the Japanese inflicted a severe defeat upon the Chinese, and the remainder of the fleet was captured or dratoyed at the taking of Weihaiwei in February, 1895. Three cruisers of 2,950 tons displacement were secured in 1895 from the Vulcan Works at Stetten, and two very dar Elswick sloops of the same size were added in 1899. These, with two corvettes and two training vessels, supplemented by four Elbau destroyers, comprised the Pei Yang Squadron or Northern Fleet. These vessels might be of real value for convoying troop- ship, shelling rebellious towns, etc., but as the Chinese have no naval base and no docking facilities in Northern waters, and as the ships are ill-found and with indifferent personnel, they would be of little use against a resolute foreign enemy. The destroyers captured at Taku on June 17th, 1900, by the British destroyers l'ame and Whiting and appropriated by the allies. The Chinese flagship at the Bar, while not actually seized. was remiered useless by removing the breech-blocks of the guns and by being placed. under rigorous supervision.
The remainder of the Fleet fled to the Yangtszę. Robert Hart in a scheme of military reorganisation prepared in 1901 recommended the
were
Sir
732
CHINA
creation of three naval squadrons, the Northern, the Southern and the Central, each to consist of 10 battleships and first-class cruisers, 10 second-class cruisers, 10 torpedo-boat destroyers, and 50 torpedo-boats, with a crew of 10,500 men.
The scheme is apparently pigeon-holed at Peking for the present, but six torpedo-boat destroyers have recently been built for China in Japanese yards, and four river gunboats were launched in 1908 from Hongkong yards. A Commission, headed by H. I. H. Prince Tsai Hsün, visited Europe in 1909 to study naval organisations with the object of developing China's navy.
TRADE AND INDUSTRY
The ports open to trade are: Newchwang, Chinwantao, Tientsin, Chefoo, Shanghai, Soochow, Chinkiang, Nanking, Wuhu, Kiukiang, Hankow, Yochow, Changsha, Shasi, Ichang, Chungking, Hangchow, Ningpo, Wenchow, Santu, Foochow, Amoy, Swatow, Canton, Samshui, Wuchow, Kongmoon, Nanning, Kiungehow, and Pakhoi. Lungchow, Méngtsz, Szemao and Tengyuel, on the frontiers of Tonkin and Burmah, and Yatung in Tibet, are stations under the cognisance of the Foreign Customs. Mukden, Antung and Tatiengkow and many other inland places in Manchuria have recently been opened to foreign trade. The import trade, exclusive of the Colony of Hong- kong, centres chiefly at Shanghai, Tientsin, Hankow and Canton, while the balk of the exports pass through the ports of Shanghai and Canton. The annual value of the trade of China coming under the supervision of the Imperial Maritime Customs was as follows:-
Net Imports from Foreign Countries. 1905... Hk. Tls. 447,100,791 410,270,082
+
Net Exports to Foreign Countries. Hk. TIs. 227,888,197 236,456,739
*
Total of Foreign trade.
Net Imports of Native Goods
Hk. Tls. 674,988,988 Hk. Tls. 166,884,461
**
1906... 1907...
646,726,821
41
158,276,126
17
416,401,369
264,380,697
680,782,066
137,552,030
1908...
11
394,505,478
276,660,403
671,165,881
H
178,544,248
1908 equals at-
Ex. 48, Mex. $583,868,107
Mex. $409,457,396
£36,888,054
Mex. $993,325,504 £69,488,784
Mex. $264,245,487
Japan (including Formosa)
Ex. 2s. 8d., £52,600,730
£23,805,900
The following was the net value of commodities imported direct from and exported direct to Foreign Countries in 1908. These figures do not include the trade carried on with neighbouring countries in Chinese junks, which does not come within the control of the Foreign Customs :-
Hongkong
Imports Exports Totals
Hk. Tls. 150,252,300
92,107,963
242,360,263
Great Britain
"
52,500,969
37,119,948 89,620,908
United States of America
}}
72,560,900
12,554,797 85,115,697
Russia, Siberia and Russian Pacific Ports
23
41,245,704
23,824,059 65,069,762
India
8,652,505
23,558,616 38,211,131
France
30,498,855
4,090,111
34,588,966
Germany
2,403,458
32,129,193
34,532,651
Belgium...
*
14,039,232
7,093,870
21,133,108
Straits and other British Colonies.
||
8,449.883
4,387,805 12,837,688
Italy
11
7,418,035
5,174,720 12,592,755
Macao
508,524
0,840,124
10,357,646
Dutch Indies..
>>
5,822,398
4,418,406 10,240,804
French Indo-China..
6,385,078
665,221
7,050,299
Siam, Phillippines, etc.
**
2,687,199
2,333,151 5,020,350
Korea
77
1,853,528
2,137,441 3,990,969
Netherlands
**
1,320,296
Other European Countries
Turkey, Persia, Egypt, Aden, etc. Austria and Hungary
31
1,278,023
2,086,819 3,364,849
2,594,981 3,916,277
+1
112,448
2,977,820 3,090,268
*
1,136,828
1,081,665 2,218,493
1
428,499
474,693
903,192
Hk. Tls. 409,554,653 276,660,403 686,215,056
Imports to the amount of Hk. Tls. 13,447,364 were re-exported to foreign countries namely, to Russian Pacific Ports, Tis. 4,590,089; to Hongkong, Tls. 1,601,811; to Korea, Tls. 3,292,582; to Great Britain, Tls. 1,488,715; to Japan, Tls. 1,682,936; to other countring Tls. 2,393,042. The chief articles re-exported were Cotton Goods to the value of Tls. 5,772,716, and Metals, Tls. 2,302,687.
CHINA
733
The following were the values of imports from foreign countries in 1908 :-
Cotton Goods
.Hk. Tls. 116,671,095 Boche de Mer & Seaweed Hk. Tls. 2,846,909
"
34,499,817 Household Stores.....
Opium.....
*
Rice and Rice Bran
Kerosene Oil..
14
28,750,724 Leather and manufrs. of 27,415,308 Medicines
5
2,633,640 2,503,765
}}
2,149,470
Metals
*
Sugar.......
++
24,476,826 Miscellaneous Piece Gds. 19,884,481 Clothing
A
2,045,519
37
1,834,649
Railway Plant...
12,995,543 Dyes, Aniline
*
1,775,650
Coal and Coke..
>>
8,906,108 Electrical Materials
11
1,769,801
Fish & Fishery Products
7,763,701 Cotton, Raw...
1,761,428
Flour
13
7,455,062 Woollen & C'ton Mixtures
}}
1,681,163
Machinery and Fittings
>>
6,659,893 Tobacco..
1,667,155
Timber and Woods
}}
6,481,030 Bags, all kinds..
1,635,486
Cigarettes and Cigars
11
5,464,257 Soap and Perfumery
17
1,620,239
Matches.
*
Woollen Goods......
+
4,628,956
5,168,520 Glass and Glassware
Cenient
}}
1,412,837
1,401,196
*
Paper and Stationery..
**
4,496,365 Hardware ...
Indigo....
}
3,745,330 Sundries..............
1,184,364 47,820,641
Tea
1
Wines, Beer, Spirits......
17
3,386,091 2,961,634
Total..
..409,554,653
Teu
11
Beans and Beancake......
}}
Silk Piece Goods
5)
Cotton, Raw.
"
Skins, Hides, Undressed
1)
Sesamum Seed
>>
Strawbraid..
H
The Exports to foreign countries, exclusive of re-export of foreign goods, were:-
Silk, Raw, Ref. & Cocoons Hk. Tls. 68,334,347
Medicines 32,883,140 Fibres, Hemp, Jute, &c... 23,562,039 Fruit, fresh and dried 14,550,017 Eggs, Fresh & Preserved 10,345,205 China, E'th'ware, Pottery 9,349,002 Vermicilli & Macaroni... 9,138,129 Tallow, Animal & Veg. 7,518,463 Grasscloth
Hk. Tls. 2,625,427
11
2,377,260
+3
2,196, 41
*
1,899,669
J]
1,596,086
>
1,536,718
*
1,554,988
**
1,477,967
Minerals, mostly Tin
6,787,911
Oil, Vegetable..
++
Timber and Wood....... 5,430,002 Sugar & Sugar Candy
1,383,503
1
1,353,728
Mats and Matting
4,718,770
Bamboo & Bambooware
77
1,352,523
Wool.
1
4,490,188 Flour
}
1,341,710
Provisions & Vegetables.
4,235,632
Clothing
1,332,703
Fire-crackers & Fireworks
>>
4,067,155 Nankeens.....
1,282,313
Cattle, Sheep, Pigs, Goats
Paper......
ל
3,541,740 Cassia Lignes...
+1
1,184,329
Firewood.
Bristles and Horns....
T
3,023,979
3,439,280 Fish & Fishery Products
Feathers
1J
1,153,062
13
1,140,026
**
2,977,432 Sundries
>>
26,045,178
Skins, Dressed Clothing
Tobacco and Cigarettes
]]
2,725,742
2,677,460
Total... 276,660,403
Goods to the value of TIs. 63,417,461 were conveyed to, and to the value of Tls. 21,326,239 were brought from, the interior under transit passes.
The total carrying trade, foreign and coastwise, was divided amongst the different flags as under:
Entries and
Clearances
Tonnage
Values
Percentages Tonnage Trade.
British......
Japanese
28,445
34,405,761
Tls. 728,994,290
40*96
44'68
Chinese
30,708
18,055,138
207,390,637
21*50
12-71
Gerrean
136,663
16,945,860
434,253,551
20*18
26*61
French...
5,496
6,585,671
H
130,179,027
7-84
7.98
3.901
American
5,071,689
13
56,985,175
6'04
3:49
Dutch.
Norwegian
653
998,775
9,149,942
1'19
56
N
1,033
Russian
156
980,635 301,048
11
19,697,017
1-17
1*21
››
4,496,259
36
28
Austrian......
139
263,847
33,482,442
31
2.05
Other Countries
54
205,024
"
4,940,721
24
30
357
177,841
**
2,218,402
21
13
207,605
83,991,289 ,, 1,631,787,463
100.00
100.00
734
CHINA
The vessels entered and cleared in 1908 were made up of 86,600 Steamers of 77,955,525 tons, and 121,005 Sailing Vessels of 6,035,764 tons; the latter including 4,947,272 Chinese Junk tonnage.
The gross coast trade in vessels of foreign build amounted to Tis. 456,148,581 outward, and Tls. 474,374,651 inward, the net native imports (that is goods not re-ex- ported) at the Treaty Ports being Tls. 178,544,248, and the exports to Treaty Ports Tls. 162,074,691.
The Imperial Maritime Customs revenue for the same year amounted to Haikwan Taels 32,901,895, and was derived from :-
Import Export Coast T'de Opium Duty. Duty. Duty. Duty. Tls.10,486,151 8,098,171 1,147,182 1,283,745 1,196,711 2,514,745 709,423 538,471
Foreign Native..
75
Totals
++
יו
Opium Tnage Transit Lekin. Dues. Dues. 3,423,318 1,202,472 1,387,069
448,104 62,443
403,890
11,682,862 10,612,916 1,856,605 1,822,216 3,871,422 1,264,915 1,790,959 Mr. J. L. Chalmers, Acting Statistical Secretary to the Imperial Maritime Customs in his report on the Foreign Trade of China for 1908, says:
J
"General. The hope of a revival of foreign trade, which seemed to be justified on a review of the conditions prevailing in the beginning of 1908, was not realised. Depression reigned almost universally from the beginning of th year to its close. The continuous fall in the value of silver was discouraging to the import trade in general, and, in the already languid state of the market, it played an important part in the history of an unprofitable year. But the foreign trade has always had to reckon with the uncertainties of exchange, which when unfavourable to one branch of the trade is favourable to another, as shown by the record value of exports in 1908.
It will probably be right to recognise in the reduced surplus of imports over exports a natural and healthy effort to readjust expenditure to income. The vigorous condition of the export trade and the progress being made in the creation of manufacturing indust ries are of the best augury for the future. Shanghai distributed to ports in 1908 350,000 piculs of cotton yarn from local mills, valued at Hk. Tls. 8,772,000, or some 88 per cent. more than in 1907, while the distribution to ports of Shanghai Mill flour was 753,180 piculs, valued at Hk. Tis. 2,717,000, or 38 per cent, more than in 1907. Hankow gives details of a great activity, especially in the production of iron and steel at the Hanyang Ironworks from Tayeh ore and of coal from the Pingsiang mines. There is no doubt that in the next few years China will make strides towards the position, as an industrial nation, for which she is destined by virtue of her natural resources and the character of her people, and to this end education as well as official encouragement should be directed. Too much is heard of adulteration, of watered cotton, slaty coal, and dirty wheat; and the splendid tea and silk trades are being endangered by the retention of primitive methods of production in the face of a formidable foreign competition. Railways have been to the front among public questions, but the actual progress made in construction has not been remarkable. So well is it now recognised that railways are necessary to the national growth that the desire to possess them outruns for the present the means of acquiring them, at least on such terms as are acceptable to patriotic and, perhaps, over-cautious Chinese. Foreign capital and professional supervision being, however, indispensable to effective railway development in China, it ought not to be difficult to secure this help on safe conditions. At Shanghai the total volume of trade was about the same as in 1907, but there was a marked difference in the proportions of foreign and native goods composing the total. In 1907 foreign imports amounted to Hk. Tls. 46,000,000, or about a third of the total, and in 1908 they fell to Hk. Tls. 35,000,000, or about a quarter of the whole. The samo tendency is seen in Chekiang, where, with an increase in the total trade of 44 million taels, there is a fall- ing off in foreign imports of 13 million. Rice crops were good in this province and fair in the province of Fukien, where, however, there were losses of over a million taels in foreign imports and over 1 million taels in exports, balanced by a gain in native imports. Kwangtung suffered severely from floods in the North River in June, which are stated to have destroyed all crops on the river banks in six districts, and from typhoons in the autumn; but its trade, with that of Kwangsi, was, nevertheless, well maintained. In the net trade of all ports there was a fall in foreign imports from Ilk. Tls. 422,838,531 in 1907 to Hk. Tls. 396,261,991, in 1908. Net native imports at all ports increased from Hk. Tis. 137,552,030 to Hk. Tls. 178,544,246. The entire exports, includ ing in their sum the total of native imports, rose from Hk. Tls. 391,050,384 to Hk. Tal 438,735,094. The outstanding feature of the year's trade being the decline in foreign imports, it will be of interest to look more closely at the statistics bearing on the
CHINA
735
distribution of foreign goods, and in doing so it must be noted that the figures of net foreign imports given in the preceding paragraphs represent the total net quantities imported at the various ports from all sources, and either retained at the ports or sent inland on payment of transit dues or likin. In two sections of the Empire only-in Manchuria and in the Two Kwang was there an increase in the foreign goods retained. The increase in Manchuria, as compared with the figures for 1907, was as much as 40 per cent., 21 per cent, being added by the new stations on the frontier and 19 per cent. by the sea ports. In Kwangtung and Kwangsi a total increase of 1.50 cent. was contributed to by most of the ports in these provinces. Swatow, however, stood aloof, and taken by itself shows a decrease of 20 per cent. Tientsin and Chinwantao, whose imports, chiefly consumed in Chibli, also penetrate in considerable quantities to Shansi, Kansu, Shantung, and Houan, retained 40 per cent. less of foreign goods. Shantung fell off by 5.30 per cent. The Yangtze ports retained 5 per cent. less; but Hankow alone, which distributes foreign goods in some quantity to half a dozen provinces, shows a decline of 8 per cent., and Chinkiang alone, from which Kiangsu, Shantung, and Honan are largely supplied, a decline of 11 per cent. At Shanghai the decline in retained imports was 24 per cent; in Fukien, 6.40 per cent.; and in Yunnan, 14.50 per cent. It will thus be seen that, except in the Two Kwang and Manchuria, the decline in demand for foreign goods has been fairly general throughout the Empire. It will be seen, further, that the decline has been most marked in the districts served immediately by Tientsin and Shanghai.
Foreign Trade. The direct foreign trade during the year gives a net value of Hk. Tls. 671,165,881, as compared with Hk. Tls. 680,782,066 in 1907; and it consists of imports to the value of Ik. Tls. 394,505,478 and exports to the value of Hk. Tls. 276,600,403, compared with Hk. 416,401,369 and Hk. Tls, 264,380,697, respectively, in 1907.
Imports. The decrease in the value of imports is about Hk. Tls. 220,000,000; but owing to a general rise in silver values resulting from the lower exchange, the real decrease in the volume of imports is much greater than the difference of value would indicate. Foreign opium iniported, although in quantity less than in 1907 by 6,129 piculs (48,347 against 54,45 piculs), has a value larger by Hk. Tls. 5,573,000 (Hk. Tls. 34,226,337, as against Hk. Tis. 28,653,653). In the case of opium, however, the rise in value is due not only to lower exchange but to higher market prices, the result of reduced exportations from India and of Chinese measures for suppressing poppy cultivation. Almost every port shows a smaller consumption of foreign opium, the principal decreases being 2,000 piculs at Shanghai, 2,000 piculs at Yangtze ports, 600 piculs in Chekiang, and 900 piculs in Fukien. So far as the movements of native opium are disclosed in the returns they were not less than in previous years, and the quantity of Szechwan and Yunnan drug passing Ichang on the way down river was considerably greater. Cotton goods show a decline in value of 8 million taels, which would have been 18 million on the valuation of 1907. The decrease is chiefly seen in cotton yarn and in sundry piece goods, such as prints, turkey reds, cotton italians, and cotton lastings, although white shirtings and 7'-cloths continue on the downward path. Of grey shirtings, 4,887,000 pieces were imported, giving an increase as compared with the importation in 1907 of 1,400,000 pieces, and fully maintaining the average of the last five years. It can hardly be said that American piece goods have recovered from the collapse of 1907, although they show a total of 1,586,000 pieces, as against 578,000 pieces in that year. In 1906 these goods totalled 8 million pieces, and in 1905 123 million pieces, and the Customs returns might be searched in vain for another. instance in which a reverse so sudden and complete has befallen a leading branch of trado. There seems to be no evidence that the American goods have been supplanted by others, and no reason why they should not, in better times, regain the ground they have lost. The importations of the principal makes of plain cottons are comparatively shown as follows:-
1905.
Great Britain, pieces ...13,548,025
American
Japanese
Indian
...12,566,093
780,580 650,636
1906. 10,785,227
8,544,165
733,436
85,003
1907.
8,224,951
578,647
840,401
67,905
1908.
8,993,534
1,586,989
986,982
141,312
Cotton yarn has declined by 450,686 piculs as compared with the amount imported in 1997, and is now in a lower position than it has occupied since 1900. Native cotton mills have hai much to do with the decreased imports of foreign yarn, with which they must increasingly compete. The importations of woollen and cotton mixtures were less by one-half in respect of quantity and by Hk. Tls. 1,100,000 in respect of total value as compared with the preceding year's figures, and woollens, while maintaining about the
736
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same total value, were much reduced in quantity. Metals, with a total value of over 22 million tacls, as against 20 million in 1907, show an all round increase in quantity, the principal exceptions being iron sheets and plates, old iron, and tinned plates. Copper ingots and slabs increased by 66,000 piculs, and went chiefly to provincial minting centres. In the total value of sundries there is a decline of 19 million taels, shared by most of the leading articles; but again this figure is far from being an accurate measure of the decline in volume. Among leading sundries, kerosene oil is the only one which has conspicuously increased in quantity, and of this commodity 186 millon gallons were imported, against 161 million gallons in 1907. Increases of over 26 million gallons in American oil, of over 2 million gallons in Russian oil, and of over 4 million gallons in Sumatra oil, are partly offset by a fall of some 8 million gallons in the Borneo product, Foodstuffs have been much reduced in volume, but less markedly in value. The importa tions of flour amounted to 1,756,000 piculs, valued at Hk. Tis. 6,931,000, and of rice to 6,736,000 piculs, valued at Hk. Tls. 26,579,000; the corresponding figures for 1907 being: Flour, 4,414,000 piculs, value Hk. Tls. 14,000,000; and rice, 12,765,000 piculs, value Hk. Tis. 34,417,000. A decline of 1,502,000 piculs in sugar, not apparently made up for by increas ed movements of the native article, would seem to indicate a smaller margin for luxuries, as would also the fall of 50 per cent. in the importations of clocks and watches, and the fall of over 40 per cent. in household stores. Building materials, cement, and timber are all noticeably reduced. Of railway materials, Dairen took the principal share Hk. Tls, 5,800,000,-while smaller quantities went to Tientsin, Hankow, Chin- kiang, Shanghai, Canton, and Mengtze. The whole, valued at about 13 million taels, was slightly in excess of importations in 1907. Needles were reduced in quantity by more than half. The importations of Formosa tea at Amoy are again less, but this trade is not yet absolutely extinct. All the leading countries of origin shared in the decline of imports with the exception of the United States and Russia.
"Exports. ---The value of exports abroad was Hk. Tls. 276,660,403, and the increase, as compared with the value in 1907, was 12 million taels. The exportation of tea- 1,576,136 piculs--was well maintained and shows, as compared with the exceptionally high figures of 1907, a decrease of only 34,000 piculs. The season was not, however, generally profitable. Kiukiang black and green teas appear to have done moderately well, but from Foochow it is reported that the shippers on commission alone benefited by the year's trade. The low exchange gave an undue impetus to shipments, and there is reason to fear that the stocks of China ten carried over from 1908, both in the United Kingdom and Russia, may block operations in the coming season. 969,493 piculs of leaf and 590,815 piculs of brick were exported, as compared with 973,075 and 604,226 piculs, respectively, in the preceding year. Shipments to Great Britain declined from 157,000 to 118,000 piculs, and to Russia from 989,000 to 965,000 piculs. Other European countries took 119,600 piculs, that is, 28,000 piculs more than in 1907, and the United States, India, and Canada took somewhat larger supplies. Silk prices were reduced to a low level in the first quarter of the year, and stocks were large; but a smaller world crop in 1908 and better conditions in the United States enabled stocks to be cleared off, raised prices, and greatly improved the position of the trade before the year's close. Of white silk, native reelings, the export rose from 28,556 to 31,926 picals, but steam filatures declined from 50,296 to 49,206 piculs, owing to short supplies from Canton, where successive climatic disasters reduced the crop to a lower figure than has been seen for many years. Wild silk advanced from 23,806 to 34,148 piculs. The cultivation of the oak-feeding silkworm in Manchuria is extending, and is reported to be capable of indefinite expansion to meet the demand for pongees. The trade in beans and beancake attained to figures hitherto undreamt of. Beans were exported abroad to the amount of 4,770,000 piculs, and while they went chiefly to Japan, there were also shipments from Hankow and Dairen, totalling some 500,000 piculs, to England, where it is stated that they were in demand for the inanufacture of oil. It seems probable, however, that the English demand for Chinese beans owed much to the combination of bumper crops low sterling exchange, a combination which does not often occur in the same degree.
and
Shipping. Entries and clearances totalled 207,605-steamers, sailing vessels, and junks-and the falling off, as compared with the figures for 1907, of 10,327, was due to the smaller number of junks recorded at Mengtze, Kowloon, and Shanghai. The total tonnage -83,991,289 tons-was, nevertheless, once more the largest on record, showing an increase of 3,881,865 tons. At Dairen there was an addition of 1,389,000 tons, at the Yangtze ports an addition of 2,787,000 tons. Tonnage under the British flag increased by 1,089,000, and, with a total of 34,405,761 tons, was 41 per cent. of the whole; while the Japanese flag, with a total of 18,055,138, or 21.5 per cent. of the whole, shows a gain of 2,456,925 tons, of which 1,103,000 tons were added at Dairen. French shipping
CHINA
737
increased by 300,000 tons, principally at Yangtze ports, showing a total of 5,071,689 tons; and under the Chinese flag 400,000 tons were gained by steamers, while junks lost 140,000 tons. In China, as elsewhere, there has been an over supply of tonnage resulting from the excessive shipbuilding of recent years and freights have been low.
"Treasure.-Taking the Chinese ports by themselves and treating Hongkong as a foreign port there appears a total exodus of 233 million taels-11 million in gold and 12 million in silver.
Balance of Trade. The value of net foreign imports (c.i.f. value) exceeded that of exports abroad (f.o.b. value) by Hk. Tls. 117,845,075, or 42 per cent, as compared with 57 per cent. in 1907, 75 per cent, in 1906, and 97 per cent. in 1905. The excess of imports over exports is thus being reduced year by year, and it is now in fact smaller than in any year since 1900.
Deduct, further, the net export of treasure, and the balance of liabilities in the trade of 1908 is reduced to Hk. 105,230,640."
Although China is traversed in all directions by roads, they are usually mere tracks, or at best footpaths, along which the transport of goods is a tedious and difficult undertaking. It was owing to the imperfect means of communication that such a fearful mortality attended the famines in Shansi, Honan, and Shantung, as well as the famine in Kiangsi in 1903, when the scarcity of food was so great that in numberless instances men even publicly sold their wives and children when powerless to meet the responsibility for feeding them. The enormous mineral wealth of Shansi is practically non-existent for the sante reason. A
vast internal trade is, however, carried on over the roads, and by means of numerous canals and navigable rivers. The most populous part of China is singularly well adapted for the construction of a network of railways, and a first attempt to introduce them into the country was made in 1876, when a line from Shanghai to Woosung, ten miles in length, was constructed by an English company. The little rail- way was subsequently purchased by the Chinese Government and closed by them on the 21st October, 1877. Since that time the principle of railways has been fully accepted. The railway from Shanghai to Woosung was re-opened in 1898, as forming part of a line to Soochow, which the provincial authorities had obtained permis- sion of the Throne to construct. A tramway, a few miles in length, begun in 1881 to carry coal from the Kaiping coal mines, near Tongshan, to the canal bank, has been extended to Tientsin and Taku on the one hand, and to Kin- chow and Newchwang on the Gulf of Liao-tung on the other. This road was only completed in the early part of 1900, and during the summer months was, between Kinchow and Newchwang, largely destroyed by the Chinese so as to preclude the advance of Russian forces on Peking via Manchuria. A line from Peking to Tientsin was opened in 1897, the Peking terminus being at Machiapu, a point two miles from the Tartar city, whence a short electric line connects it with one of the principal gates; the traffic developed so rapidly that in 1898-9 the line had to be doubled. From Lukouchiao (or Marco Polo's Bridge) a line of about eighty miles in length has been constructed southward to Paotingfu, the capital of the province of Chilli; this line, in October, 1899, was handed over by the British con- structors to the Belgian Syndicate as an integral factor in the great trans-continental line from Peking to lankow. These lines were all more or less deliberately and in some parts completely destroyed by the Chinese during 1900. The Railways, as foreign innovations, were particularly hateful to the Boxers, who in many cases attacked the lines with a fury as intense as it was insensate; burning the stations, destroying bridges, tiring the sleepers and carrying off the metals. Later on, track destruction was a strong feature of the strategy of the Imperial troops, and from their point of view, wisely so.
It was the cutting of the Railway that was the sole cause of Admiral Seymour's failure in his gallant attempt to rescue the Legations. All the lines in North China were attacked and badly cut. The terminus at Peking has been brought inside the Chinese City and is at the Chien Men or Southern Gate of the Manchu City. A branch line has been made from this terminus to Tung Chow, the head of the water- Ways; and both the French and Germans have pushed on the trunk lines being built under their exclusive auspices in Chihli, Honan, and in Shantung respectively. Railway vandalism was the first evidence of the savagery and magnitude of the Boxer sedition. It is significant that the Imperial Government was so inert in protecting its own property.
A Belgian Syndicate has constructed a trunk line of about 650 miles in length from Hankow to Paotingfu, where it joins the existing Paotingfu and Lukoachiao line, thus giving through communication with Peking. The line is now said to
23
738
CHINA
be more French than Belgian. In Honan the railway crosses the Yellow River on one of the longest bridges in Asia. The American-China Development Company obtained a concession for the construction of a line from Wuchang, on the southern bank of the Yangtsze immediately opposite to Hankow, to Canton.
A branch line from Canton to Fatshan and Shamsui was completed in 1904. It became known about this time that Belgians had acquired a predominating interest in the concession, and the announcement aroused so powerful an opposition among the Chinese of the provinces to be traversed by the trunk line that the concession was cancelled by the Chinese Government, who agreed to pay to the American China Development Co. the sum of $6,750,000 (gold) by way of compensation. The money for this purpose was lent to the Wuchang Viceroy by the Government of Hongkong. The line is now being constructed by Chinese. It was intended that the capital should be exclusively Chinese, but that hope has not been fulfilled. The British-Chinese Corporation in 1899 obtained a concession for a line to connect Canton with Kowloon, but as the years passed without any indications of a serious intention to proceed with the construction of the line, public agitation in Hongkong resulted in the British Govern- ment deciding to make the section through British territory, at the cost of the Colony. The actual work of construction was commenced in the autumn of 1905, and the British section is expected to be finished this year. Towards the end of 1906 China contracted with the British and Chinese Corporation for a loan of £1,500,000 to build the other section, which will give direct railway connection between Canton and Kowloon. Work on that section is now proceeding, and through connection between Kowloon and Canton will be established by June, 1911, if present expecta- tions are fulfilled. German concessionnaires secured the right to construct two lines from the German Settlement at Kiaochau to Chinanfu and Ichou in the interior of the Shantung province. The line to Chinan, the capital of Shantung, was commenced in 1900, and is now open for traffic over the entire length of 247 miles. An Anglo-German Syndicate has been authorised to make a line from Tientsin to Chinkiang, the Germans having charge of the northern portion of the undertaking and the British of the southern. The British-Chinese Syndicate, which has amalgamated with the Peking Syndicate secured the right to construct a line from Shanghai via Soochow to Nanking and north-westward to join the Lu-Han line (as the Hankow-Peking line is called), and also a line from Soochow via Hangchow to Ningpo. The Shanghai-Nanking line is now in operation. A line from Canton to Chengtu, the provincial capital of Szechuen, has also been mentioned. Surveys have been conducted with a view of finding a practicable route for a railway to connect Burmah with the Yangtsze region in Szechuen, and it is anticipated that a detinite project for such a line will shortly be launched. A French syndicate has just completed a line from Laokay, near the Tonkin froutier, to Yunnan, a length of 280 miles. It proved a difficult under- taking, involving the making of 145 tunnels. The chief obstacle to rapid progress was scarcity of labour. The valley of the Namti, through which the line passes, is extremely unhealthy, and work had to be practically confined to the cool season. The French also secured concessions for lines from Lungehow to Nanning, and from Nanning to Pakhoi, but it is doubtful whether these will be carried out, as their tendency would be to divert trade from the French colony to the West River route. Indeed, the proposed railway from Pakhoi to Nanning appears to have been abandoned, and it is probable, that one from Kwanchouwan, through the Yulin district, to the nearest point on the West River and thence to Nanning will take its place. An Anglo-Italian Syndicate has been authorised to work coal and iron mines in the province of Homan and to build railways connecting the mines with navigable rivers ; under this contract a line from Taiyuen to Singanfu and a branch to Siangyang are projected. Unsuccessful attempts were made in 1899 to induce the Chinese Authorities to introduce the Russian guage on their northern lines from the Manchurian border to Peking. A line from Feng Tai, 14 miles from Peking, to Kalgan a distance of 120 miles, has been built entirely by Chinese the funds being derived from the profits of the existing imperial railways of North China, which, it may be added, showed a net balance of $8,761,246 for the year ending 30th September, 1906. The old prejudices against railwaya are gradually dying out, and the example given by the Court a few years ag in ordering a special line to be built for the conveyance of the Emperor on his visit to the Western Tombs, has been of no little assistance in finally knocking them on the head. "The most conservative native," wrote the British Commercial Attaché in one of his Reports, "can hardly resist the joys of travelling in a fire cart' or steamer, and, provided he is not made unduly uncomfortable or charged too high a fare, he is
I
I
CHINA
730
sure to prove a constant patron. Passenger rates on the German railways in Shantung are 005 Mexican dol. per mile 2nd class, 0025 Mexican dol. 3rd class and 00125 Mexican dol. 4th class. Freight on the stretch from Wei-hsien to Tsing-tao, 120 miles, is carried for 0:40 Mexican dol. per 15 kilos. per kilom. (1, per ton per mile). Rates on the 132 miles of the Pei-han line, open to regular traffic, are slightly higher as regards freight (14d. per ton per mile), and lower as regarls passengers-2nd_class_0'032 Mexican dol., 3rd class 0016 Mexican dol. The most highly organised system of cartage in the Empire is carried on in Manchuria, where the rate is 244 per ton jar mile, and in South-Western China pack animals carry at the rate of 2d. per ton per mile. In order to secure the bulk of the freight traffic, railways must be prepared consider- ably to underbid native modes of conveyance, or the latter will be used in preference.'
A Chinese syndicate has built a short line connecting Swatow with Chaochowfu, a distance of 32 miles. This first railway built by Chinese private enterprise was opened in November, 1906. In nearly every province of China railways are projected, and the total mileage of railways already constructed in China must now be close upon 3,000, for the Imperial railways of North China alone have a mileage of 720, and the Peking Hankow railway measures 750 miles. The Chinese Eastern Railway in Chinese territory has a mileage of 1,072; the line from K'uan-cli-eng-tsu to Harbin and east and west to the Russian frontier remains in Russian hands. A telegraph line between Tientsin and Shanghai was opened in December, 1882, and lines how connect all the important cities of the Empire.
The year 1900 will ever be memorable in the history of China. It witnessed the last and a most determined attempt to break away from foreign influence and to revert to the exclusiveness of twenty centuries. The causes of the great social and political upheaval are not far to seek, though from their interaction and overlapping they are by no means easy to set forth in the sequence of their importance. The associations brought about by an expanding trade, by missionary effort, and by reciprocated diplomatic representation have not in any way lessened the hostile mental attitude engendered by alien civilizations, literatures, and moral standards: there are still gaps between the Western and Chinese mind that no sympathy can bridge. The whole trend of Chinese education is especially calculated to ensure a hostile bias towards change, towards reform of abuse, and towards the adaptation of environment to new conditions, on which depends the continued existence of men and governments alike. The governing and influential classes have an enormous rested interest in retaining things as they are in every phase of Chinese life. There can be but one issue to a policy like theirs in these days, though the Chinese, unlike their more nimble-minded neighbours in the East, are unable to see it. As in all countries where an enormous population lives on the narrow ledge that divides poverty from famine, there is ever a large element of social discontent ready to be moulded to whatever end crafty or plausible leaders may determine. In many places this has been directed against missionary converts and the Christian propaganda, and has given rise to a widespread idea that the Christian religion is in itself hateful to the Chinese. It may be admitted that in cases the indiscretions of the missionaries, and in a few more that of the converts, in claiming special privileges and in using the agis of their teachers for the advance of their private ends, gives some colour to the charge that missionary enterprise is the main cause of anti- foreign feeling in China; but by anyone who knows the relatively small field of missionary influence, and the huge area over which the blind national enmity obtains, it must be dismissed as incommensurate to the phenomenon, though it undoubtedly assists in swelling the tide of anti-foreign hatred. A more just explanation may be found in education and in the recent history of China. Shallow observers deny that there is patriotic sentiment in the Chinese, but that is an error. Patriotism has not the fine edge that it has in Western countries, and is not so active in personal or national conduct, but to say that it is non-existent is absurd. The national conceit in their own ineffable superiority implies a strong feeling at least akin to love of country. This conceit had, among the educated classes, received severe and deadly wounds from the issues of the Japanese war, the seizure of Kiau-chou, Port Arthur and Wei-hai-wei, from French aggression in the South and the ill-concealed designs of Italy in Chekiang. The degradation of high officials at the call of foreign ministers, the overbearing attitude of strong men like von Heyking and Pavilov in Peking, even the extension of the foreign Settlements in Shanghai and other places, and the utter insouciance with which the partition and general treatment of China is usually discussed in the foreign Press, have all contributed
23*
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CHINA
to accentuate and to intensify the chronic bitter anti-foreign feeling.
To this we have but to add the unfathomable ignorance of the outside world and its resources displayed by the harem-ridden and secluded Manchus in Peking, to get most of the elements in which the recent troubles originated.
K
The sedition arose in Shantung, the very shrine of Confucianism and Chinese patriotism-such as it is. At first it had its inception in that vague and ill-defined social discontent to which we have referred as originating in poverty, Shantung is the home of secret societies and of bold blackguardism. The Ta-tou-tse or Big Swords" long ago developed a kindred society, which took the sententious name of I-ho-chuan or Patriotic Harmony Fists," roughly rendered into English by the word "Boxers." These people have a ritual which is largely composed of gymnastic posturing. During the last few years it has focussed in its membership all the vague discontents arising in Christianity as a better system of morals, in poverty, in political loss of face," in discontent with the Dynasty, etc. It is the easiest thing in the world to direct a feeling of general discontent exclusively toward one of its elements; and if cleverly done the whole force of the storm will be directed against this one object to the complete neglect of all the rest. This was cleverly brought about in Shantung. The last two Governors of the Province seeing the trend of events, skilfully represented to the Throne that it would be wise to guide the coming storm into channels into which it could be made subservient to Imperial resistance to foreign design; otherwise, they pointed out, the society would as likely as not follow the example of the secret societies of the South and adopt primarily an anti-dynastic policy. The Boxers were consequently encouraged in their baiting of Christians, and only half-heartedly punished when they added the murder of Europeans to their pro- gramme. When they began to harass Catholic Missions and converts, Bishop Anzer, a strong-minded but somewhat tactless Bavarian, made strong representations to his impulsive Imperial master. The latter instructed his Minister to demand the instant dismissal of the highest provincial authorities, and so intensified the anti- foreign feeling among the high officials in Peking. Things drifted from bad to worse. Li Hung-chang and other great Chinese officials, who were under no delusion as to foreign strength, were not listened to, and were sent to places where exclusively anti- dynastic risings were anticipated. Thaumaturgy and hocos-pocus were next skil- fully grafted on to the movement. The initiated were said to be impervious to bul- lets; they could walk on sunbeams, arrest rivers, stop or create fires by their mere gesture, &c., &c. This feature of the new propaganda caught on. The Chinese are still in that state of mental development in which a miracle is not only possible but welcome. Clever rogues among the Boxers gratified the multitude with some of the commonplaces of legerdemain, and the new religion began to run like wildfire. Were not the very gods on the side of the patriots? In March, April and May whole cities and districts in Chih-li went over to the new doctrine, and preachers could not be found in sufficient number to initiate the candidates. Rich men found it expedient to affect cou- version and to support the movement; otherwise they were blackmailed into poverty, All the Roman Catholic and Protestant Missionaries now clearly saw the beatings of the coming storm, and cautioned their Ministers; but, with the usual grudging attention to unofficial reports, little attention was paid to the warnings until it was practically too late to coerce the Manchu Government into action by the only possible means-force. Too late the Fleets assembled at Taku. By this time the sedition was far beyond official control, and moreover what did a Manchu who had never seen the sea care for a Naval demonstration Their notion of a battleship is that of an exaggerated sampan. Boxers swept up like a cyclone from Shantung, and gathered their strength around Paotingfu, the provincial capital of Chih-li. They began with railway destruction; making the business strictly compatible with the innate Chinese propensity for loot, and varying it with the murder of foreign missionaries and railway engineers. In the neighbouring province of Shan-si the movement was taken under the direct auspices of U-hsien, the ex-governor of Shantung. This supreme villain asked some thirty-three Europeans, including many ladies and children, to his Yamen at Tai-yuan-fu for protec- tion, and there and then let the Boxers loose on them to hack them to pieces with swords. He further supplemented this outrage on humanity by issuing most stringent orders throughout his province for the annihilation of all Christians, Europeans and Chinese alike. Next to the atrocity of Cawnpore in the Indian Mutiny, the story of the Shansi massacre is the most appalling crime of the nineteenth century.
The
The number
of native Christians that have perished will never be known, as the Missions lost their archives; pastors, members and premises were alike exterminated. A similar policy was followed by the Acting Viceroy of Chih-li at Paotingfu, and by some of
CHINA
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the officials in Northern Honan; where, though many heartrending crimes and murders were committed, the story was mitigated by the fact that there were numerous escapes, and that many officials and gentry jeopardized their own lives in attempts to save the fugitives. The Governors of Shantung and Shen-si especially distinguished themselves in their zeal for humanity. It was entirely due to their powerful protection of foreigners that the number of murders and outrages was restricted to less than two hundred and fifty European lives.
Sober estimates have been made that over 10,000 natives perished; most of these were Christians or the kinsmen of Christians, but in vast numbers of cases greed and family and personal feuds prompted the denouncing of pagans as Christians.
Reference is elsewhere made to the actions of the Boxers in detail see notes under the articles "Peking," "Tientsin" "Taku" and "Peitaiho"), so they need only be sum- marised here. The attacks on the Mission stations began in May; those on the Lu-han Railway at the end of May, and the beginning of June. The Boxers appeared in the Capital in force on June 13th, and in Tientsin three days before this date. Official collusion was from the first suspected by the terms in which the Imperial Edicts dealt with the movers of the sedition; later on this suspicion became certainty when the Imperial Officers who dealt with it rigorously were ignored or reproved for their zeal. The Boxers completely overawed the civil power when they appeared in the great cities, and openly declared their intention to expel or extirpate the foreigners. At first attempts to carry out their programme took the form of incendiarism, A., to the destruction of Mission premises; the agents were entirely confined to themselves and the city canaille, the Imperial troops only joining in after the attack on and capture of the Taku forts on June 17th. The Tientsin Settlements were attacked on the night and morning of June 15th and 16th by the Boxers alone; on the afternoon of the 17th, the Settlements were severely shelled by the regular troops. Communi- cation was re-established with Taku on the 23rd, and the siege in part raised in the open. The Great Eastern Arsenal was taken on June 27th; while the first pitched battle preceded the seizure of the Western Arsenal on July 9th; the native City was carried by assault on the 14th, when the Viceroy Yu-Lu and General Nieh met their deaths the former by suicide, the latter by a shell.
Boxers began to appear in the streets of Peking in force on June 13th, and openly assumed a hostile attitude to foreigners from that date. Until the 20th of the same month they confined their attention to acts of incendiarism and to the persecution of native Christians and people known to be associated with foreigners. The Imperial troops joined forces with the Boxers, and opened fire on the Legations on the 20th. The siege continued with various vicissitudes until August 14th, when it was raised by the entrance of a column of Allied forces, 20,000 strong, which had left Tientsin about the beginning of the month and had fought two pitched battles at Pei-tsang and Yang- tsung on August 4th and 6th, besides numerous small engagements and the capture of Tung-chow en passant. The flight of the Imperial family and the Court began on August 13th. The Court entered Shan-si by the northern passes, and then vid Tai-yuen-fu its progress continued to the ancient capital Si-an, where it remained for the greater part of 1901. It left in October.
During July, August and September, 1900, troops were poured into North China by all the European Powers, America and Japan, and, with an eye to contingencies, large forces were deviated to the Yangtze, and landed in Shanghai. The Governors and Viceroys of the Central and Southern Provinces had unceasingly protested against the Manchu and Reactionary policy in Peking, and, it is suspected, refused to carry out the secret edicts directing attacks on foreigners. In any case they succeeded in hold- ing the turbulent elements in their satrapies well in check, and in keeping the peace.
An important event in 1901 was the death of Li Hung-chang, who died in ctober at Tientsin, at the age of 70 years, whilst engaged in settling matters between his Government and the Powers.
The situation during 1992 gradually improved, and the troops of the Allies were withdrawn, with the exception of about 3,000 men, who continued to act as a permanent Sar to the Legations in the capital and in Tientsin with outposts at Fengtai, Latai, Shanhaikwan, etc. These are now being gradually withdrawn.
In November, 1908, occurred the death of the Emperor Kwang Hsu, followed a day later by the death of the Empress Dowager Tzu Hsi. This news was unexpected, and there was consequently much suspicion for a time regarding the cause of the dual demise. The public were soon satisfied, however, that the deaths were due to perfectly natural
causes,
PEKING
天順 Shun-tien
The present capital of China was formerly the Northern capital only, as its name denotes, but it has long been really the metropolis of the Central Kingdom. Peking is situated on a sandy plain 13 miles S. W. of the Pei-ho river, and about 110 miles from its mouth, in latitude 39 deg. 54 min. N. and longitude 116 deg. 27 min. E. or nearly on the parallel of Naples. A canal connects the city with the Pei-ho. Peking is ill adapted by situation to be the capital of a vast Empire, nor is it in a position to become a great manufacturing or industrial centre. The products of all parts of China naturally find their way to the seat of Government, but it gives little save bullion in
return.
<
From Dr. Dennys's description of Peking we quote the following brief historical sketch: "The city formerly existing on the site of the southern portion of Peking was the capital of the Kingdom of Jan. About 222 R.C., this kingdom was over- thrown by the Chin dynasty and the seat of Government was removed elsewhere. Taken from the Chins by the Khaitans about 936 A.D., it was some two years after- wards made the southern capital of that people. The Kin dynasty, subduing the Khaitans, in their turn took possession of the capital, calling it the Western Residence. About A.D. 1151, the fourth sovereign of the Kins transferred the court thither, and named it the Central Residence. In 1215, it was captured by Genghis Khan. In 1264 Kublai Khan fixed his residence there, giving it the title of Chung-tu or Central Residence, the people at large generally calling it Shun t'ien-fu. In 1267 A.D., the city was transferred 3 li (one mile) to the North of its then site, and it was then called Ta-tu- the 'Great Residence. The old portion became what is now known as the 'Chinese city' and the terms Northern' and 'Southern city, or more commonly nei-cheng (within the wall) and wai-cheng (without the wall), caine into use. The native Emperors who succeeded the Mongol dynasty did not, however, continue to make Peking the seat of Government. The court was shortly afterwards removed to Nanking, which was considered the chief city of the Empire until, in 1421, Yung Lo, the third Emperor of the Ming dynasty, again held his court at Peking, since which date it has remained the capital of China.
>
The present city of Peking is divided into two portions, the Northern or Tartar city and the Southern or Chinese. The former is being gradually encroached upon by the Chinese, and the purely Manchu section of the capital will soon be very limited. The southern city is almost exclusively occupied by Chinese. The general shape of Peking may be roughly represented by a square placed upon an oblong, the former standing for the Tartar and the latter for the Chinese city. The whole of the capital is, of course, walled. The walls of the Tartar city are the strongest. They average 50 feet in height and 40 feet in width, and are buttressed at intervals of about sixty yards. Tho parapets are loop-holed and crenelated. They are faced on both sides with brick, the space between being filled with earth and concrete. Each of the gateways surmounted by a three-storied pagoda. The walls of the Chinese city are about 30 feet in height, 25 feet thick at the base, and 15 feet wide on the terre plein. The total circumference of the walls round the two cities slightly exceeds twenty miles.
The Tartar city consists (Dr. Williams tells us) of three enclosures, one within the other, each surrounded by its own wall. The innermost, called Kin-ching or Frohibited City, contains the Imperial Palace and its surrounding buildings; the second is occupied by the several offices appertaining to the Government and by private residences of officials; while the outer consists of dwelling-houses, with shops in the chief avenues. The Chinese city is the business portion of Peking, but it presents few features of interest to sight-seers, while the enclosure known as the Prohibited City is, as its title denotes, forbidden to all foreign visitors. The numerous temples, the walls, the Foreign Legations, and the curio shops are the chief attractions to the tourist. The streets of the Chinese metropolis are kept in a most disgraceful condition. In the dry season the pedestrian sinks deep in noxious dust, and in wet weather he is liable to be drowned in the torrents that rush along the thoroughfares, where the constant traffic has worn away the soil,
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1899 saw the innovation of Legation Street being cleansed, levelled and macadamised -the greatest urban improvement in three centuries. Experts say that the money lost in time, wear and tear of men, mules and carts every year is greater than the prime cost of macadamising all the main thoroughfares. The congestion of traffic and the personal discomfort of cart-transit are inconceivable to people who have not experienced them. There is an air of decay about Peking which extends even to the linest of the Temples and Palaces, and which powerfully impresses every visitor as symbolic of the decadence of Empire. The population of Peking is not accurately known, but according to a Chinese estimate, which is probably much in excess, it is 1,300,000, of whom 900,000 reside in the Tartar and 400,000 in the Chinese city. There is no direct foreign trade with Peking, and the small foreign population is made up of the members of the various Legations, the Maritime Customs establishments, the professors of the College of Peking, and the missionary body. In August, 1884, the city was brought into direct telegraphic communication with the rest of the world, by an overland line to Tientsin vid Tungchow. The year 1899 witnessed two other innovations, which would have been regarded as impossible ten years ago, viz.: the erection of large two-storied buildings on prominent sites for the Austrian Legation and the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank. These are breaks with immemorial tradition that the feng-shui must resent elevation in houses other than those of the immortal gods and the son of heaven. A railway line to Tientsin was opened in 1897.
The year 1900 was the most memorable year in the history of Peking from the fact that for the first time in the history of civilization during two thousand years a dastardly and deliberate attempt was made by a responsible government to violate the sanctitas legatorum. The Chinese have made characteristic efforts to escape the responsibility for this turpitude; but the formal complicity of the leading men in the Government and of the Empress Dowager with the Boxer sedition has been proved up to the hilt, and endless Imperial Edicts remain to show that the Government as such was heart and soul committed to the anti-foreign and anti-Christian aims of the Reactionary Party. Reference is made elsewhere to the progress of the Boxer agitation enough to say here that the I-Ho-Chüan or Boxers arrived in force vid Pao-ting-fu on June 13th, and between that day and the 19th began their policy of plunder, destruction and murder. All the buildings outside of the Legation cordon in the Chinese and Manchu cities, including all the missionary premises and native preaching stations, as well as the residences of all who were known even suspected of being in any way connected with foreigners were destroyed, These people themselves were ruthlessly murdered. The most interesting building thus to suffer was the well-known Nan-Tang or Southern Roman Catholic Cathedral, built more than two hundred years ago. In the attempt to destroy the small foreign drug-store belonging to Messrs. A. S. Watson and Company, Limited, of Hong- kong, the great Bazaar in which it is situated caught fire, notwithstanding the assurances of the chief Boxer that he, by occult influence, could prevent the fire from spreading. The destruction caused by this fire was inconceivably great all the wealthy banks, silver shops, silk warehouses, and curiosity-shops, with their priceless and irreplaceable stocks of antique art, were consumed.
or
Before this act of incendiarism the threatening aspect of affairs had led the Ministers to apply to their Admirals for marine guards, and late in May and early in June some five hundred men with two or three machine guns had been sent up to the Legations. On the 9th of June the Ministers wired urgently for more men, a request which the Navy met in a way described in the notes on Taku, but these latter reinforcements never arrived. On June 19th the Tsung-li-Yamen notified the Legations to quit the city by 4 p.n on the 20th, assigning as a reason the Allies' attack on and capture of the Taku forts. Protection was of course promised; but even had the Imperial Government been acting in good faith and been willing to protect the thousand refugees in their long journey to the Coast, it was certain that they had not the ability to do so. The Boxers were now in complete domination of the City, and would have paid no heed whatever to any assurances of the Government. Moreover, such a policy of scuttle meant the certain massacre of several thousand Christian refugees who had fled into the City from the suburbs, and had placed themselves under the care of the Fathers and the missionaries. demand of the Yamen was refused. The next day, Baron von Ketteler, the German Minister, while proceeding to the Yamen to interview the Chinese Ministers, was shot at by Imperial soldiers from loopholed houses, and was brutally murdered; his Secretary, Mr. Cordes, escaping the same fate by a miracle, though he was badly wounded. This unheard of atrocity precipitated the supreme crisis. The Chinese Government saw clearly
The
744
PEKING
that it could not possibly now go back, and the foreigners knew that certain death was in store for them unless they could ward it off by their own prowess until relief came. Earthworks were thrown up, and all the people were brought within the lines to a central position. The extreme limits of the defended position were 800 by 400 yards, the greater dimension being marked with the South Wall of the Tartar City. The Rev. G. W. Gamewell, an American missionary, undertook to construct earth- works under the direction of the military officers, and succeeded admirably. His work afterwards exacted the highest praise from the Engineer officers of the Relief Column, and next to the defenders' courage it was the chief factor in the ultimate salvation of the garrison. Sandbags were improvised in vast number, the ladies and native refugees rendering fine work in this direction; every possible textile was used for this all- important purpose, and priceless embroideries, carpets, curtains, as well as clothes. were seen in the barricades alongside of jute and hessians.
The first death was that of the Rev. H. James, of the Imperial University. He was shot by Tung Fuh-shiang's wild Kansu ruffians while he was advancing to speak with their officers at the bridge to the North of the Legations. The Austrian and Italian Legations were the first to be attacked and burned; these were followed by the destruction of the Customs premises, with all the archives and the records of Sir Robert Hart's life's work. On June 22nd and 23rd desperate attempts were made to fire the British Legation, which from the first and throughout the siege was regarded as the key of the foreign position. On the 24th these were renewed, but were checked by the fine steadiness of the British marines. The Hanlin College, with its priceless. Library, was burned to the ground by the vandalistic soldiery in these attempts. Rifle fire was practically continuous on the part of the Chinese for the first ten days with great skill they kept under cover, but if their own testimony may be accepted (their conversation was easily overheard at some of the barricades), this was less due to military prudence than to personal cowardice; the besieged never wasted one shot, and only fired when an enemy was seen and could be hit. After the Customs' premises were fired, the most persistent attacks were on the east of the Allied position around the palace of the Prince Su (Su Wan'g-fuh), where the native Christians were aggre- gated, and where Colonel Shiba and his gallant band of Japanese sailors were constantly acting the part of heroes. On June 28th shell fire was added to the sufferings of the defenders. Happily, as at Tientsin, the shell was of indifferent quality, and was seldom well timed. It often failed to burst, and seldom did much damage. The most severe punishment was from a big gun in the Mongol Market close to the western wall of the British Legation.
A rough census was taken of the foreign population about this time, and gave the following numbers:-Women, 147 inside the British Legation, 2 outside; Children, 76 inside, 3 outside; Men, 191 inside, 54 out; total, 473. The marine and other guards were between 450 and 500; so that altogether inside the lines there were nearly 1,000 foreigners. On July 1st, the besieged made their first big sortie, the object being to capture a gun near the Su Wan'g-fuh. Although skilfully executed it was not successful. On the 3rd, the Chinese pressed very hard on the Americans who were holding the west part of the foreign section of the wall; they actually carried a barricade, but it was quickly retaken by a conjoint party of Americans, British and Russians, in which Capt. Myers of the American Army was seriously wounded. July the 4th was celebrated by an artillery duel. The chief weapon of the Allies deserves a paragraph to itself. Some forgotten shell had been found in a well in the compound of the Russian Legation; and then by a curious coincidence in one of the foraging expeditions constantly made in parts of the town within the lines an old British muzzle loader was discovered-it had probably been purchased as old iron by the possessor in the early 'sixties but found too refractory to his tools. This was furbished up by the skill of some of the armourers, and fired with very considerable moral effect by an American gunner on the Chinese. The gun was aptly called the "International." Necessity proved the mother of invention in many cases during the siege; the excellent pewter of the Pekingese was moulded into bullets, and the Fathers of the Pei-tang in their desperate efforts to keep the Chinese at bay actually made their own gunpowder as well as bullets.
On July 11th, the French caught and shot some twenty Chinese in a position which they rushed with great gallantry; but on the other hand they were caught by a suc- cessful sap on the 13th. By this device the Chinese managed to blow up two large houses in the French Legation, and drove still more people into the neighbouring British compound. On July 16th, the gallant Strouts, the commander of the British Marines, was killed by rifle fire while examining the defences of the Su Wan'g-fuh along
PEKING
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with Col. Shiba, the Japanese commander, and Dr. Morrison of the Times. This loss was irreparable in more senses than one. Captain Strouts had shown himself a hero among heroes, and had the complete confidence of everyone, civilians and military alike. It would be no injustice to say that he and his gallant Japanese colleague, Shiba, were the active heroes of the siege. The gallant Colonel on this occasion had a narrow escape, getting a bullet through his coat, while Dr. Morrison was severely wounded in the leg. After this the British Minister, Sir Claude Macdonald, resumed his military rank and took a leading part in the defence as a military man as well as British Minister.
Trench digging to countercheck the possibilities of further sapping was now extensively undertaken; still it did not prove altogether a success. The very day the relief was effected, a deep mine was discovered under a portion of the Students' Quarters with the boxes to receive the powder ready in position; another two hours more and there would have been a tragedy of unexampled magnitude. About July 16th the news of the capture of Tientsin reached the high Chinese authorities, and at once modified their attitude: their attack slackened, and on July 18th hostilities practically ceased, as far as fighting was concerned, while attempts were made to reopen com- munications between besiegers and besieged, though the latter were as rigidly as ever secluded from all news of the outside world. Chinese soldiers came inside the Su Wan'g- ful and wished to fraternize with Colonel Shiba's men, offering them protection: the Colonel refused; thereupon they sent in small quantities of fruit and food. Similar offers were made in other parts of the lines, but there was a just suspicion of the Danaos et dona ferentes. With a few exceptions the gifts were rejected, especially so the bag of flour hoisted over the barricades in one place. The Chinese made much of this offer of supplies in their attempts to delude the World as to the real nature of the position in Peking. About this time the besieged received their first news of outside affairs, and learned that Tientsin had been attacked and relieved, and that a Relief Column was being organized for them. The paucity of information was one of the most curious features in a situation that was full of surprises. China is a country where news may as a rule be bought for money easier than in any country in the world, as spies abound; yet for weeks the World knew nothing of Peking, foreign-Peking nothing of the World. For the next ten days active hostilities were in complete abeyance, though vigilance on both sides was unremitting, and the defences were continually being strengthened.
On the 22nd of July the attack was renewed at the Pei-tang or Northern Roman Catholic Cathedral, where the Catholic Fathers under Bishop Favier had assembled more than three thousand native Christians, and where, with the help of fifty French and Italian marines, one of the most pathetic and desperate resistances of modern times had been carried on. They were short of food, of ammunition, of medicines, and of every- thing but calm courage and Christian fortitude. These people were the special object of Boxer hatred and fanatical effort, and had to conduct their defence amidst inconceivable conditions of overcrowding, disease and famine; during the last few days of the siege their daily allowance of food was four ounces of rice, and at the very last this had to be reduced to two. The children and aged died like flies. They were not only in utter ignorance of the outside world, but also of their lay countrymen in the Legation part of the City.
News that the relief column was leaving Tientsin at once came to the American Minister on August 2nd. This was somewhat premature, as the Column did not finally start till August 3rd; but it served to reanimate the defenders. At this time there were 883 people within the enclosure of the British Legation, that being the refuge to which all had recourse when they were driven from other positions in the defence. Of this number 527 were Europeans and Japanese. The reports of the defeat of the Chinese at Pei-t'sang and Yang-tsun, and of the swift advance of the Allied army, had the effect of making the Chinese more resolute to gratify their hatred, even at the last moment, consequently the attacks of the 12th and the 13th were the most desperate of the whole siege; but as the heavy guns of the Relief were distinctly heard from Tung-chow, the defence knew the meaning of it and were more resolute on their part to beat the enemy off The Japanese and the Russians were at the eastern gates of the Tartar City on the 13th of August, and to these localities the Chinese withdrew their best forces leaving the eastern Gate of the Chinese City all but unguarded. Here Sir Arthur Gawlee and General Chaffee leading the British and American contingents of the Column found an easy entrance.
After seizing the Temple of Heaven, they swiftly pushed along in a direction parallel to the South Wall and found a way on through the Water Gate, by which the waters of the Imperial Canal flow under the Wall.
746
PEKING
In a few minutes the relief of the Legations was an accomplished fact. The Russians and French got in early the following morning at the Tung-pien-men, and the Japanese, who, after being the leaders all the way from Tientsin and bearing the brunt of inost of the hard fighting on the road up, had the bad fortune to meet with most of the real opposition at the Walls, entered later on in the same morning. The gallant little Islanders found some solace in coming across the chief Treasury as they fought their way across the City, driving the beaten Chinese before them. On the following day the Americans advanced on the Imperial and Forbidden Cities and, with the co-operation of the French and Russians, seized these citadels of prejudice and seclusion. The French, backed by the Japanese, effected the release of the sore-tried people in the Pei-t'ang The City was given up to a "modified looting" for a period of three days, and then military government was established, the different Powers undertaking different areas of the town. The Palaces fell to the Russians, who also sent out a column and seized the famous Summer Palace thirteen miles distant. The capture of the City was formally celebrated by a visit of all the leading Ministers, Officers, and some of the troops to the Palace. For the first time in history foreigners were able to see the arcana of the Imperial Court. The Imperial Family had the day before the Relief escaped from the City and fled into Shan-si vid the Northern passes, en route for Si-an-fu, where it remained till October, 1901.
Peking, though it suffered indescribably from the depredations of the Boxers, the Imperial troops, the awful ruffianism of Tung-fuh-shiang's barbarians from Kansu, to say nothing of the subsequent attentions of the Allied troops, is at present moré attractive as an object of travel than before, for the simple reason that the City was cleansed by the foreign Powers, and that many places of antiquarian, artistic or historic interest are now accessible if the visitor sets about his object with due attention to national susceptibilities.
During 1902 the fortification of the Legation quarter was completed, the railway termini brought to the Chien Men in the Chinese City, and the reconstruction of the various legations was begun. These were slowly brought to completion, and extensive barracks connected with each for the accommodation of the Legation Guards. As all Chinese buildings in this section were removed the Legation quarter present the appearance of a European settlement of about half a square mile in extent. In, or bordering upon this section, there are three good hotels, Hotel du Nord, and Hotel de Pekin, and in the Legation quarters a large Hotel has been built by the General Hotel des Wagon Lits Ld.; it is just near the memorable Water Gate leading to the railway station. There are now several large stores, German, French, Italian or Chinese, which sell all kinds of foreign goods. The Club House is much larger and more con- venient than it was before; there is a Soldiers' Y.M.C.A., and a Catholic church for the Legation Guards, and two hospitals-St. Michael's and the Methodist Episcopal (John L. Hopkins Memorial), which are provided with accommodation for both Chinese and European patients. There are four Banks, Hongkong and Shanghai, Russo- Chinese, Yokohama Specie, and Deutch Asiatische, all of which do a flourishing business. The streets are being macadamized, and an Electric Light Company has been organized which will furnish light wherever wanted in the city. Telephones are also in use and Reuter has established a permanent agency in Peking.
The various Missions have been rebuilt. The bungalows have all been exchanged for two-storied houses, the arrangement of which has been greatly altered, giving to the mission compounds a much more attractive appearance. The church in the Methodist Mission, at the rear of the Hotel du Nord, will accommodate 1,500 people. In this Mission there are hospitals for both women and men, a Girls' High School in which there are 200 pupils, and about the same number of students in the Peking Uni- versity. These buildings are all lit with acetylene, and heated by steam or hot air, while the houses are furnished with water from an artesian well in the con- pound. In connection with the London Mission, near the Von Ketteler Monument, is the Lockhart Medical College, established for medical study in North China, an institution for the erection of which the Empress Dowager contributed Tls. 10,000. Á little north of this is the American Board Mission in connection with which there is a large girls' school and a very fine church with a seating capacity of about 1,000. The Presbyterian Mission, which is near the Llama and Confucian Temples in the north of the city, has hospitals for both men and women, and is furnished with water by a windmill from an artesian well. The South and East churches of the Roman Catholic Mission have not been rebuilt, but the North Cathedral luas been greatly improved. The Mission for the Blind is on an Yu Ilu-tung, not far from the London Mission, while the S.P.CE. Mission is in the West city.
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717
The question of high houses in Peking is for ever settled by the erection of a two- storied residence by Prince Su, and three large blocks of similar buildings for the Col- lege of Languages by the Government. The private telegraph line from Peking via Tientsin to Taku, which was provided by Mr. Poulsen, the owner, before Peking was relieved, viz. from Tientsin to Taku, and which was immediately extended to Peking on the relief of the Legations, was handed over to the Imperial Chinese Telegraph Adminis- tration on Oct. 1st, 1905. The line was used by the Generals and Ministers in Peking during 1900-1 for transmission to Taku of their dispatches to be forwarded thence by cable to all parts of the world, the Chinese line having been destroyed. On the Chinese rebuilding their line Mr. Poulsen converted his line into an inter-town telephone line, the first in China, and introduced the telephone system into Tientsin and Peking When the Chinese Government started their system Mr. Poulsen sold his line to them.
DIRECTORY
Telegrams:
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co., Engineers and Contractors, Export and Import Mer- chants Legation Street. Karberg; Telephone 850.
Philip Arnhold (London) E. Goetz (London)
M. Niclassen (Berlin)
Harry E. Arnhold (Shanghai)
Arthur E. Dowler (New York)
W. Helms (Hongkong)
F. Lieb (Hongkong)
Curt Lorenz, manager G. W. Ginibel, engineer
C. Wollseiffen, Hauptmann A. D. W. Mertzsch
Ed. Sperling
R. Wegmann
Agencies
Lancashire Insurance Co.
South British Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
(Fire and Marine Depts.) London Assurance Corporation. The State Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Chartered Bank of I. A., & China Peking Water Works Co., Ltd. General Managers
The Peking Electric Co., Ltd.
Pi-yang-sheng
BISCHOFF, E. Import and Export and
General Merchant, Peking Imports: Machinery of all kinds Exports: Curios, Carpets, Furs, etc. Agency
The Central Fire Insce. Co. Ld., London CATTANEO, P., General Storekeeper
CHARIGNON, A. J., Civil Engineer (E.C.P.), Technical Adviser to the Board of Com- munications
CHEMINS DE FER IMPERIAUX CHINOIS
(Ligne de Pekin à Hankow)
Division Sud
H. Prud'homme, ingenieur en chef,
contrôleur, Peking
G. Bouillord, ingenieur en chef de
l'Exploitation, Peking
M. Hiribarren, ingenieur en chef de
la Traction, et du Materiel, Peking
A. Jacques, ingenieur en chef les
Voies et Travaux à Peking
司公局總路鐵省東清大
CHINESE EASTERN RAILWAY ADMINISTRA-
TION, Legation Street (behind Russian
Legation); Tel. Ad; Eastrail
R. Barbier, manager
A. Weinstock secretary
N. Ossipoff, Chinese secretary
CHINESE ENGINEERING & MINING CO.
J. Redelsperger, agent
CHINESE IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY (Ta Tang) Professor of English and Natural Sciences B. V. Andrews, INT. B.SC. (London), F.R.G.S,
Professor of English and History-
F. A. Nixon, F.R.G.S.
Professor of French and History-
J. Gachet, B. ES L.
Professor of French and Political
Sciences André d'Hormon, B. ES L. Professor of German and Mathematics
-G. Behaghel
Professor of German and Mining-
W. Keiper, Dipl. Ing.
Cu-lo-ty
CULTY & Co., TH., Legation Street
署公司務稅總
Tsung Shui-wu-ssi Kung-shu
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL CHINESE MARITIME,
Headquarters Staff, Peking
Inspector-General-Sir Robert Hart,
Bart., G.C.M.G. (absent)
748
PEKING
Acting Inspector-General-Sir Robert
E. Bredon, K.C.M.G.
Chief Secretary-C. H. Oliver Chinese do. --Dr. K.E G. Hemeling Andit do. J. H. Macoun
Private do,
R. H. R. Wade
Asst. Audit Sec.-C. H. Lauru Asst. Chinese Sec.-W. H. C. Weippert Asst. Secretary-H. L. Russell
Chief Accountant-H. E. Prettejohn Asst. Private Secretary A. J. Commijs Assts.-U. Marconi, J. M. H. Osborne, A.H. Abel, H. Kishimoto, C.A. Asker. R. S. Campbell, E. Bernadsky, R. M. Talbot, M. E. Weatherall
Clerk of Works--C. B. Mears At London
Non-Residt. Sec. -E. B. Hart Assistants-L. Sandercock, E. Ensor Office Keeper-H. Sinstadt Office Boy-G. E. Davis At Shanghai
Act. Stat. Sec.-J. L. Chalmers
Deputy Com. (additional) L. Lepissier Act. Asst. Stat. Sec.-Ting I-hsien Assistant-D. M. Pecorini Typist-Miss C. Taylor
DEUTSCH-ASIATISCHE BANK
H. Cordes, manager Alfred J. Eggeling, agent Paul Offermann,
do.
Wm. Pantring, assistant
*** Tai Tung Dan-bo EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALIA & CHINA
TELEGRAPH Co., LIMITED
F. W. Edwards, controller
T. K. Waugh, assistant
EL
Rin Chee
FORBES & Co., William, Merchants, Offices at Grand Hotel des Wagon-Lits; Tel. No. 811; Tel. Ad: Rinchee
A. C. Henning, signs per pro.
Agencies
China Fire Insurance Co., Ltd.
Law Union & Crown Insurance Co. Cie des Messageries Maritimes Cie des Chargeurs Reunis Ben Line of Steamers
Eastern & Australian S. S. Co., Ltd. Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. China Navigation S. S. Co. Indo-China S. S. Co.
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Yangtsze Marine Insurance Assn., Ltd.
FOSSION, M., agent for A. Chazalon & Co.
GATRELL, T. J. N., M.D., F.R.G.S., Chinese Secretary to the Peking Syndicate, Ltd.
GENERAL HOTEL DES WAGON LITS, LTD,
Tel. Ad: Wagonlits
Wm. Trendel, manager
Karl Klarer, assistant manager Mrs. Trendel, matron
GERMANIA KELLER
C. Thomas
GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPH Co., LTD.,
of Denmark
D. S. Münter, controller
J. C. Gough
C. A Petersen M. M. Armand E. Rosenorn-Lanng H. T. Langebak
Hui-feng
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPY.
E. G. Hillier, C.M.G., agent
J. K. Grant
R. E. Sedgwick
H. E. Blunt
店酒京北
HOTEL DE PEKIN, Teleph. No. 581; Tel. Ad: Italo, Peking; Code A.B.C. 5th Edition
B. Russo, proprietor
HOTEL DU NORD Co.; Tel. Ad: Nord;
Teleph. 720
JAMESON, C. D., Mem. Am. Soc. C. E, Supervising Engineer and Architect of the Wai Wa Pu
JEANRENAUD, CHS.
Chang-hsien-sheung
KARIUS, General Agent
弗羅祁 Shi-loafu
KIERULFF & Co., P., Commission Agents
J. Kruger
H. Westphal Alf. Sauer R. Walzmann,
D. Wrage W. Westphal
Agencies
Hamburg Fire Insurance Co. of 1875 Magdeburg Fire Ins. Co. Netherlands Insurance Company
L'ECHO DE PEKIN, French Journal Demoulain & Cie., proprietors
LEGATIONS
署公差欽國加馬斯澳大
PEKING
Ta Ao-ssú-ma-chia-kuo Ch'in-ch'ai Kung-shu
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Envoy Extdy. and Minister Plenipo.-
E. Ritter von Kuczynski
Secretary of Legation W. Ritter von
Storck
Secrétaire Interprète-L. Bauer Archiviste-K. Kristinus
Eleve Interprète-K. Pindór
Commander Legation Guard-Capt.
von Mallinarich
Physician-Dr. R. Suda
府差欽國比大
Ta Pei-kuo Ch'in-ch'ai fu
BELGIUM
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-Baron Albéric
Grénier
Councillor E. de Relle de la Nieppe
Vice-Consul-F. Gobert
Interpreter-Alb. Houyet
署公差欽國法大
Ta Fa-kuo Ch'in-ch'ai Kung-shu
FRANCE
Envoyé Extraordinaire et Ministre
Plénipo.-S. Exc. M. de Margerie
Premier Secrétaire d'Ambassade-
M. Boissonnas
Deuxième Secrétaire d'Ambassade-
M. Jesse-Curely
Troisième Secrétaire d'Ambassade
Prince de Bearn
Vice-Consul, Premier Interprète--
M. Blanchiet
Vice-Consul, Deuxième Interprète-
M. Veroulart
Vice-Consul, Chancelier-M. Gachet Elève-Interprète -M. Bradier Elève-Inte prète-M. Fromage Attache Militaire Commandant
Brissaud Desmaillet
Lieut. de Vaisseau, Attaché Naval-
M. Martinie
Médecin de la Légation-M. Hazard Chef de Bataillon-Pernot
Capitaines-Savin, Schmoll
Lieuts. Defontaine, de Laroche
Brochard, Leblanc, Paoli
749
Premier Secrétaire-Graf Luxburg-
2e Secrétaire Comte Einsiedel
Wolkenburg
Attachés
--
(v. Vietinghoff
Iv. Hinuber
M. Krebs
Secrétaire-Interpréte Interprète-M. le Dr. Hauar Chancelier de la Legation Conseiller
Aulique M. Dobrikow
Secrétaire de Chancellerie--M. Bahr Attaché Militaire-M. le Major von
Westernhagen
Att. Mil. Adj.-M. le Capitaine
Taubert
Médecin-major, Médecin de la Légation M. le Docteur Gelinsky
Elèves Interprêtes
M. Bragard M. Wagner
M. C. Dr. Kuhn
M. Baker
Commandant la Garde de la Légation
-M. le Capt. Dinkehmann
署公差欽國英大
Ta Ying-huo Ch'in-ch'ai Kung-shu
GREAT BRITAIN
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoty, Sir J. Jordan, K.C.B.,
K.C.M.G.
Councillor of Embassy-W. G. Max
Müller
Military Att. Lt.-Col. Willoughby Chinese Sec.-C.W. Campbell, C.M.G. Commercial Attaché-W. P. Ker Second Secretary J. Addison Third do. -W. Seeds
Assist. Chinese Secty.-H. Phillips Vice-Consul & Acel.-C. C. A. Kirke Assistant P. G. Jones
Do. -J. F. Brenan Do. -E. Teichman Officiating Chaplain-Rt. Rev. C. P. Scott, D.D., Bishop of North China Physician G. D. Gray, M.D. Student Interpreters-G. P. Byrne, A. D. Blackburn, E. W. P. Mills, A H. Genge, H. W. Gammon, J. C. Hill, S. P. Bryant, V. Fitzmaurice
Commander Legation Guard-
Lt. Col. Anderson
Sergeant of Escort-T. Pearson
署公差
國義大
Ta I-kuo Ch'in-ch'ai Kung-shu
Minister G. C. Vinci
First Secy. Cav, G. Brambilla
Médecin Aide-Major de le Classe--
Duperron
ITALY
Ta-tak-huo-fu
GERMANY
Plénipotentiaire
S. Exc. Graf
Rex
Envoyé Extraordinaire et Ministre
First Secy, & Interptr.-B. G. Vitale
Second Secy.-Cav. M. Bensa
Attaché Militaire-Major Caviglia Comdr. of Guard-Comdr. Spagua Doctor-L. L. di Guira
750
署公差國本日火
PEKING
Ta Jih-pen-kuo Ch'in-ch'ia Kung-shu JAPAN
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary ---Hikokichi Ijuin First Secretary-Kumatoro Honda Second Secy. Takanori Okohira Third Secy-Yosuke Matsuska Attaché-Naokichi Mattunaga Sec. Interpreter-Toru Takawo Chancellor-Kintaro Kondo,
Interpreters W.
W. Hiratsuka K. Nishida
Military Attaché-Major General N.
Ahoki
Assistant Attaché-Major S. Honjo Naval Attaché-Comdr-T. Masuda Commander of Legution Guard-
Lt. Col. J Doi
Physician-Surgeon-Major Kentaro
Shinose
署公差國蘭和大
To Ho-lun-kuo Ch'in-ch'ui hung-shu NETHERLANDS
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-Jonkeer Beelaerts
van Blockland
Chargé d'Affaires--W. J. Oudendijk
JG Robbers, civilengr. and architect Comdr. Legation Guard--Captain,
J. van Haaften
署公差
國洋西大
Ja Si-iang-kuo Ch'in ch'ui Kung-shu
PORTUGAL
Minister Baraó de Sendal (absent)
Chargé d'Affaires
Brederode
Martinho de
Chinese Secretary-J. V. Jorge
署公差欽國俄大
Ta Ngo-kuo Ch'in-ch'ai Kung-shu
RUSSIA
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary
J. Korostovetz
1st Secretary--Vacant
Second Secretary-Vacant
Do. D. L-Abrikossoff Military Agent-Colonel Korniloft Military Agent's Staff Capt. V. N. Sharenberg, Capt.K.A.Kremenetz- ky, Capt. M. M. Roumiantzoff First Interpreter-N.Th. L. Kolessoff Second Interpreter-J.P.Kourdliaieff Physician-Dr, Jarovitsky Student Interpreters-C.Ouspensky,
A. Tujiline, L. W. S. Brunnert, V. V. Hagelstrom, A. W. Shroot, Postmaster F. Ch. Reiss Commander Legation Guard
Lieut. G.E. Macieuski Naval Agent-A. Woskrenensky
署公差歙國牙尼巴斯日大
Tu Jih-ssi-pa-ni-ya-kuo Ch'in-ch'ai Kung-shu
SPAIN
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary--Vacant
First Secretary-Vacant
署公差欽國美大
Ta Mei-kuo Ch'in-ch'ai Kung-shu
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary-
First Sec. & C.Affaires-H.P Fletcher Naval Attache-Capt. J. H. Reeves,
U.S.N.
Chinese Secretary-C. D. Tenney Asst. Chinese Secty.-W. R. Peck Student Interpreters-Esson M. Gale Mahlon F. Perkins, Raymond P. Tenney, Horace Remillard, George C. Hanson Clerk-Frederick T. Faulkner, Commandant--Lieut-Col. G.Barnett,
U.S.M.C.
Legation Guard-Capt. T. Holcomb, Jr. Lieut. F. C. McConnell, Lieut- L. W. T. Waller, Surgeon W. D. Owens
LUDWIG, O., Storekeeperand Gen. Merchant
MAGAZZINO, Wine Store
P. Cattaneo, proprietor
MARZOLI,E.Calcareous Brick Manufacturer, Tientsin Peking Building Materials
E. Marzoli
C. Bulgheroni
M. Dangels
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of China
Directory
Tien-chu Tang
FRENCH ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Mission Catholique de Pékin et Tche ly Nord (Lazaristes)
Mgr. S. Jarlin, evêque de Phar-
boetos, vicaire-apostolique Rev. Dumond, vicaire-géneral Rev. J. Ponzi Rev. J. Capy Rev. E. Dehus Rev. T. Bantegnie Rev. Flament Rev. G. Bafcop
Rev. A. Ducoulombier
Rev. G. Vanhersecke Rev. J. M. Planchet Rev. J. Fabrègues Rev. Cotta Rev. J. Corset Rev. F Desrumaux Rev. J. de Vienne Rev H. Verhaeren Rev. V. Lebbe Rev. Lignier Rev. G. Rembry Rev. Ceny
Rev. Raaymaakers
Rev. Delaigue Rev. Giacone Rev. Chocqueel
Rev. J. Gaste Rev. Dehouck
Rev. Montaigne Rev. Ferreux Rev. Barrue Rev. Begassat
Rev. Tiberghien Rev. Fleury Rev. Ducarme Rev. Fabre Rev. Magne Rev. H. Barrault Rev. Acosta Rev. Lefaki Rev. A. Lasagna Rev. Gregoire Rev, Beaubis Rev. Vincent
Rev. Garnier
Rev. Levêque
Rev. Flandin
Rev. Routaboul
Rev. Varlan
62 Prêtres indigènes
Frère A. Maes
Frere Remy
Frère A. Denis
Frère Longueepée
Frére Van-Stiggel
Frére Van den Brandt
RUSSIAN GREEK CHURCH MISSION
PEKING
Bishop Innocent, chief of the Russian
Ep. Mission in China
Rev. Abraham Schasovnikoff Rev. Simon Vinogradoff Rev. Paul Figourowsky
Rev. Amorosy
Rev. Sergius
Deacon Nicon
Deacon Pitirim
Mouk Patermuthy
Do. Perféry Do. Anthony Do. Milissen Theodore Wlasoff Georgy Soludanaff Monk Anikita
堂慈仁 Jen-tze Tung
751
SISTERS OF CHARITY, Maison de l'Im-
maculée Conception
Jen-tse Tang Orphanage-
7 European 8 Chinese sisters
Chinese Hospital, St. Vincent-five European and five Chinese sisters Pekin Hospital, St. Michel-Seven European and three Chinese sisters
MOORE, J. M., agent
MORRISON, Dr. G. E., "Times "Correspd't
佔理
NICOLAS ET CIE, G.
G. Nicolas, proprietaire
蘭木德
Te-mou-lan
PEKING COMMERCIAL AGENCY, Import and
Export; Tel. Ad: Demoulain
PEKING CLUB
Col. J. H. Abbot-Anderson, president
H. Phillips, hon. secretary
H. E. Lowther, manager
PEKING ELECTRIC CO., LD, THE; Offices: Legation Str.; Tel. Adr: Legationco; Telephones: Offices 850, Works C97 Curt Lorenz, manager
M. Fechner, engineer
C. Huebner, engineer
R. Wegmann
Arnhold Karberg & Co., Peking, gen.
managers
PEKING HORSE BAZAAR
J. Lunini
局商藝工廠璃琉京化
Pe-king-liu-li-chang-kung-yi-shung-chi
PEKING INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTION, THE
H. E. Hwang Sze-yung, dir.-general Tao-Tai Hwang Chung-huei, director Wang Lin-goh, secretary
局石印京北
Pe-king-shak-yan-ku
PEKING LITHOGRAPHIC Co.
T. Matsumura, manager
Ching-hua-pau
PEKING MANDARIN PAPER, THE,
"The Peking Industrial Institution"
Hwang Chung-huei, editor and propr.
PEKING SYNDICATE LIMITED, Mines and
Railways, Honan, North China
John P. Kenrick, engineer in chief
752
PEKING
司公捲煙京北
Pe-king-yin-kuen-kong-shu
PEKING TOBACCO Co.
C. A. Cooke
Jules Bigel
堂學大交滙都京
Ching-tu Ilui-wen Ta-shuch otng
PEKING UNIVERSITY
Board of Trustees, New York, U.S.A.
Bishop D. A. Goodsell, D.D., LL.D.,
president
S. O. Benton, D.D., secretary Charles H. Taft, treasurer J. M. Buckley, D.D., LL.D. Henry C. M. Ingraham H. K. Carroll, LL.D. Wm. V. Kelley, D.D.
Jolm Fanklin Goucher, D.D. J. R. Joy
Faculty
Union Medical College
Thomas Cochrane, M.B., C.M., Dean N. S. Hopkins M.D., o. et A., Chair-
man (absent)
James H. Ingram, M.D. George D Lowry, M.A., M.D. Charles Lewis, M.A., M D. E. J. Peill, M B.,
EDIN. (absent)
CH.B., F.R.C.S.,
C. W. Young, B.S., M.D.
W. H. Graham Aspland, M.D., C.M.
F.R.C.S,EDIN., M. R.Ç.S., L.R.C.P.,LOND. F. J. Hall, B.A., M.D.
H. V. Wenham, M.B., B.S., F.R.C.S., ENG.
Lecturers
Dugald Christie, F.R.C P., L.R.C.S. B. L. L. Learmonth, M B., C.M. George Douglas Gray, M.D. G. W. Hamilton, M A., M.D. Thomas W. Ayers, M.D. E. J. Stuckey, B.S., M.B., CH.B. William McClure, B.A., M.D. Francis F. Tucker, B.S., M.D. Alex. L. Baxter, M B., Ts'ao Yung Kuei, M.D., Li Shao Tsu
CH.B.
Sidney Peill, M B., CH.B.
Thomas Bragg, L.R.C.P. & S.
Faculty
College of Liberal Arts Rev. H. H. Lowry, M.A.,D.D., presi- dent, professor of Biblical Theology Rev. H. E. King, M. A., M. PD., vice- president, professor of History and Political Science (absent) Rev. I. T. Headland, M.A., PH.D., S.T.B., prof. of Mental and Moral Science (absent)
Miss Alice Terrell, B.L., prof. of Math.
(absent)
Mrs. H. E. King, B.A., M.PD., professor
of English (absent)
J. MacGregor Gibb, Jr.,B.A., professor
of Chemistry
Walter W. Davis, B.A., professor of
Physics (absent on leave)
Wang Chih Ping, prof. of Chinese
Literature
Ch'en Wei Ch'eng, M.A., assistant
professor of English
Ch'en Tsai Hsin, B A., assistant pro-
fessor of Mathematics
Li Pien Lu, B.A.,instructor in English
and History
Lu Luan Sheng, Kung Sheng, in- structor in Chinese History and Composition
Sung Yu Shu, Lin Sheng, instructor
in Chinese Composition
Chou Fu Ch'uan, BA, instructor in
English and Geography
Li Shih Tsun, instructor in Geogra
phy and Physiology
Sun Jung, B.A., instructor in Math. Chang Shou Ping, Kung Sheng,
instructor in Chinese Classics Yang Jung Hsuan, B.A., instructor in
Mathematics
Sun Yueh, instructor in Mathematics Rev, Lin Fang, B.A., instructor in
Biblical Literature
SHANSI GOVERNMENT UNIVERSITY, Tai- yuanfu (founded 1901); P. O. Address via Tientsin
Governor of Shansi, chancellor Rev. Timothy Richard, D.D., LITT. D.,
chancellor
Hoie Yung Lee, director Rev. W. E. Soothill, principal Louis R. O. Bevan, M.A., LL.B., vice
principal and prof. of Law
Erick Nystrom, B.Sc.. prof. of Science A. W. Warrington, M.SC., prof. of
Science
E. H. Cartwright, prof. of Languages N.T. Williams, B.SC.,M.I M.E., professor
of Mining
Nine Chinese assistant professors
POST OFFICES
FRENCH
Postmaster W. Roy
Assistant-Etoret
GERMAN
Postmaster-E. H. Mehl
IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postal Commissioner-E. Tollefsen Assistants-D McLorn, F. A. Nixon Acting District Postmaster-J. L.
McDowall (Sianfu)
Acting Deputy Postmasters-N. J. Blix (Kaifeng), F. B. Tolliday (Taiyuan)
PEKING--TIENTSIN
Dist. Inspr.- P. Petersen (Sinkiang) Postal Officers-E. E. Encarnacao,
F. L. Tuck
JAPANESE
Director-K. Sugino
Senior Clerk-M. Nakagawa
Assistants-M. Takahashi, K. Matsu-
zaki, M. Okami
RUSSIAN
Postmaster-K. Reiss
府李 Li-fu
RAFIQUE & Co., General Merchants and
Commission Agents; Tel. Ad: Rafique
S. M. Rafique
M. S. Ayer
S. A. Ansari
REUTER'S NEWS AGENCY
A. Cotter, agent
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK
E. Wilbfahrt, manager
S. de Jastrzembski, signs per pro.
A. Lambelet du Bois D. Kabinsky
Russo-CHINESE SCHOOL
J. Brandt,
1st teacher
A. Weinstick, 2nd do.
T. Verevkin, 3rd do.
SCHINDLER, Professor
SINGER SEWING MACHINE Co.
SYLVA, J. A., Commission Agent
TABAQUERIA FILIPINA, Importers of Cigars,
Cigarettes, Tobaccos and Smokers' Sun-
dries; 3,429, Hatamen St.
W. S. Wood, manager
P. C. Ching, signs per pro.
C. H. Chang
F. C. Ning
局字印堂興德
TE HSING TANG PRINTING OFFICE
Shigesaku Ichiyama, proprietor
T. Ichiyama, manager
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
V. Petersen, superintendent
VRARD & Co., Jewellers
753
WANNIECK, L., Importers and Exporters
E. Dumetier, sign per pro.
Jules Bigle
隆信 Shin-loung
WARDROPER, W. S., & Co., Merchants
行銀金正濱横
Heng-Pin-Cheng-Chin-Yin-Hong
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, Limited; Tel.
Ad: Nabekra
S. Jissoji, manager
S. Ishimaru, signs per pro.
K. Iida
Y. Nakagawa
M. Okamoto
M. Irie
F. Machino
Y. Ikeda
會年青敎督基京北
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF
PEKING
R. R. Gailey, M.A., general secretary
D. W. Edwards, M.A., associate secretary J. S. Burgess, B.A.,
do.
L. D. Frollick, army secretary
TIENTSIN
津天 Tien-tsin
Tientsin is situated at the junction of the Yun Ho or Hwae River, better known as the Grand Canal, with the Pei-ho in Lat. 39 deg. 4 min. N., Long. 117 deg. 3 min. 56 sec. E. It is distant from Peking by road about 80 miles, but the bulk of the enormous traffic hetween the two cities is now by the railway, which was opened in 1897, and the line doubled in November, 1898. Tientsin was formerly a place of no importance and till recently had few historic associations; till the end of the Ming dynasty (1644 A.D.) it was only a second rate military station, but at the northern terminus of the Grand Canal it gradually assumed commercial importance, and by the end of the seventeenth century had become a great distributing centre.
The navigability of the Pei-ho for sea-going junks ceases at Tientsin, and this made it the emporium for the very large quantities of tribute rice yearly sent up to the capital, after the Grand Canal shoaled up so as to be unfit for carriage in bulk. The trade of the city was imperilled by the silting up of the Pei-ho, but a river improvement scheme of some magnitude was inaugurated in 1898 under Mr. A. de Linde, and the Peace Protocol
751
TIENTSIN
of 1901 contains clauses which constitute a Board of Conservancy (now in existence) and the provision of fairly liberal funds for the maintenance of the works. It is, however. generally believed that no lasting success will attend the remedial measures until steps are taken to deal with the Taku Bar by permanent dredging; meanwhile by closing the canals and creeks which take off most of the flood tide, by giving a larger radius of curvature to the bends, and by widening the Reach, and making three cuttings to straighten the river, its navigability has been greatly ameliorated. Work on the bar was commenced during 1906, the Shipping Companies and British Municipality having come to terms in regard to financing the work. A channel of some depth has been made with lakes and is now being used by vessels as it offers an additional 14 inches depth of water. In January, 1909, a conservancy scheme received the sanction of the Diplomatic Body at Peking and the Chinese Government involving the raising of a loan of Tls. 870,000 to cover initial expenditure on tugs for raking the bar, a complete dredging plant for the bar, and a second dredger for making a fourth cutting in the river. The service of the loan and the annual running expenses will be met by an increased levy of river dues on cargo and by a shipping tax. The trade of the city no longer depends entirely on this route, however. The railway now carries nearly 50 per cent. of the city's trade with the interior, and railway development generally in the district promises to make the trade less dependent upon the river. Chinwangtao makes an excellent winter jetty.
The expeditions of the allies in 1858-61 greatly enhanced the importance of the city, as it then proved to be the military key of the capital and an excellent base. It was here on June 26th, 1858, that Lord Elgin signed the treaty which was to conclude the war, but which unhappily led to its prolongation. The famous temple in which the treaty was signed, about a mile distant from the West gate, was destroyed by British shells in July, 1900.
During the long satrapy of Li the trade and importance of the city developed exceedingly. Li, by the vigour of his rule, soon quelled the rowdyism for which the Tientsinese were notorious throughout the empire, and as he made the city his chief residence and the centre of his many experiments in military and naval education, it came to be regarded as the focus of the new learning and national reform. The foreign affairs of China were practically directed from Tientsin during the two decades 1874-94.
The city will ever be infamous to Europeans from the massacre of the French Sisters of Mercy and other foreigners on June 21st, 1870, in which the most appalling brutality was exhibited; as usual the political agitators who instigated the riot got off. The Roman Catholic Cathedral, which was destroyed on that occasion, was rebuilt, and the new building was consecrated in 1897, only to again fall a victim to Boxer fury in 1900. The building occupied a commanding site on the river bank. All the missions and many of the foreign hongs had agencies in the city prior to the debacle of 1900.
The population is reputed to be 1,000,000, but there is no statistical evidence to justify such large figures. The city walls were quadrate and extended about 4,000 feet in the direction of each cardinal point; during the year 1901 they were entirely demolished and replaced by fine open boulevards under the orders of the Foreign Military Provisional Government. This body has further bunded the whole of the Hai Ho (Pei-ho) and effected other numberless urban improvements. The advent of foreigners has caused a great increase in the value of real estate all over Tientsin, and as new industries are introduced every year, the tendency is still upward.
Li Hung-chang authorised Mr. Tong Kin-seng to sink a coal shaft at Tong Sha (60 miles N.E. of Tientsin) in the 'seventies; this was done and proved the precur- sor of a railway, which was later extended to Shauhaikwan for military purposes, and from thence round the Gulf of Liau Tung to Kinchow; 1900 saw this line pushed on to Newchwang. In 1997 the line to Peking was opened, and proved such a Success that the line had to be doubled in 1898-9.
A side station for the Tientsin City was opened in 1904, and in 1905 the station was built of white sandstone bricks made at Huangsue by an Italian called Marzoli who had opened a brick factory on a large scale. From Feng-tai, about 7 miles from the capital, the trans-continental line to Hankow branches off. This line was completed and opened to traffic in November, 1905. In 1900 the violence of the Boxers was chiefly directed against the railways, all of which were more or less destroyed, but under British, French, and Russian militars administration they were afterwards all restored to their former efficiency. As usua the railway has brought all sorts of foreseen and unforeseen contingencies with it Farmers up near Shanhaikwan are supplying fruit and vegetables to Tientsin. An
TIENTSIN
755
enormous trade in pea-nuts (with Canton) has been created. Coal has come extensively into Chinese household use the foreign residents are developing a first-rate watering place at Pei-tai-lo on the Gulf of Pe-chi-li, and all the various industries of the city have been stimulated.
Brick buildings are springing up in all directions and the depressing-looking adobe (mud) huts are diminishing.
The
Foreigners formerly lived in three concessions, British, French, and German, which fringed the river below the City and covered an area of less than 500 acres. Japanese took up a concession in accordance with the terms of the Treaty of Shimonoseki. They filled in land, laid out new streets and built a large number of houses in foreign style. During 1901 Russia, Belgium, Italy, and Austro-Hungary all appropriated large areas on the left bank of the Hai-ho as future Settlements, while the existing concessions extended their boundaries very considerably. These developments have thrown all present and future landing facilities for direct sea-going traffic into Foreign hands. The concessions have excellent and well-lighted roads, with an electric tramway system. The British Municipality has a handsome Town Hall, completed in 1869; adjoining there is a well kept public garden, opened in the year of Jubilee and styled Victoria Park. An excellent recreation ground of ten acres has been developed, and three miles distant there is a capital race-course, one of the best in China, with a grand stand and stables not to be found in any other port. There are many hotels, two clubs (Tientsin Club and Concordia, the latter chiefly German), two excellent libraries and three churches (Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Union). Electric lighting was introduc- ed in June, 1905.
Distilling is one of the largest local industries; it is chiefly from kowliang (sorghum) or millet. Although a spirit, it is called "wine," and is exported to the south in large quantities. The manufacture of coarse unrefined salt by the evaporation of sea water is also carried on near Taku; the produce is stacked some distance down river at the first cutting, where all the salt junks now go. It was formerly stacked on the river bank opposite the British concession, and sometimes gave off very offensive smells, rendering life a burden. The trade in salt is a Government monopoly. In 1908 the export of salt was 1,500,000 cwts. as against some 40,00 cwts. in 1907, the increase being entirely due to shipments to the Yangtse region, which had hitherto been supplied from other sources. Carpets, shoes, glass, coarse earthenware, and fire- works are also made in large quantities in the city, but Tientsin is at present essen- tially a centre for distribution and collection rather than for manufacture. exports include coal, wool (from Kokonor, Kansuh, etc.), bristles, straw braid, goat skins, furs, wine, etc. The export trade is a creation only some 15 or 20 years old, and is largely due to foreign initiative. Wool cleaning and braid and bristle sorting are the chief industries in the foreign hongs except those of the Russians, who are ex- clusively engaged in the transit of tea. The imports are of the usual miscellaneous nature: armis, tea for the Desert and Siberia, mineral oil, matches, and needles figure next to piece goods. The fine arts are unknown to the Tientsinese except in the shape of cleverly-made mud-figures; these are painted and make really admirable statuettes, but are difficult to carry away, being remarkably brittle.
The
The export coal trade may be expected to develop rapidly, as the Chinese Corpora- tion has been replaced by a strong combination of British and Belgian capitalists registered as an English limited liability company. The output and sale of the Kaiping collieries is about 1,250,000 tons a year, of which about 280,000 tons annually is brought to Tientsin for disposal to local consumers and to native craft navigating the Grand Canal and other inland waterways. Tientsin is practically the only sea out- let for the entire trade of the provinces of Chihli, Shansi, Shensi, Kansuh, and part of Honan, with a population not far short of 100,000,000, but the trade of the port has de- clined substantially since 1906. Following are the comparative statistics for the years
1906, 1907 and 1908 :-
Net total imports-
Foreign
1906.
1907.
1908.
Tis. 64,422,439 Tls. 61,208,744 Tls. 35,903,450
Native....
Total exports of local origin
-
*
26,616,808 21,825,308
"}
**
18,317,007 17,253,215
21
24,724,132
1
19,144,941
Net value of trade of port.... Tls. 112,864,555 Tls. 96,778,966 Tls. 79,772,523 Tientsin played a great part in the history of China during the momen- tous years of the Boxer outbreak; after the capture of the Taku Forts and its own relief from twenty-seven days' siege in June-July, 1900, it became the primary base for the Allied invasion of North China, As the centre of the foreign influence, and the new learning in North China, it incurred the particular
753
TIESTSIN
olism of the Boxers, and was the Arst object of their attack when they le Fetingin at the end of May. They arrive in the city at the beginning of surl at once overwed the provincial authorities; indeed the Inter promptly cutecal into collusion with them, supplying them both with fool and taida, is the cash- books explored at the Yamen falar ou proved As in Peking, the actant basica broke out in the destruction by fire of Mission premises, and in personal atta those suspected of association with foreigners. So great was the nuimosity towards the latcar that great numbers of the compradore clerks and luff classes out the Sectlamenta to obviate certain death. The Boxers attacked the Settlements wad ibi Railway Station in great force on the night of the 16th of June, but were easily baton off by the o maring of all nationalities who bad come up from the Fless conduct the detones. Ity great good fortune, it afterwards turned out, body of Hussians, numbering 1,100 mca, and including a battery of welt fene artillery had been peeeladed from following Admiral Seymour in his gallant euch to resume the Tegations by the fact that the milwng was ent: these men had perfowe to remain in Tiesin. Brew with their presenen the figeeneys and determination of the Chur
téneke were plenaeal for wens with difficulty mck. It is terrible to think of the disaster that might have happened hud this Russion forer been about The line extended over a length of two miles, exclusive of 2,000 yards of river iconlage. Th Chinese suw with great acumen that the key of the strategic position was at the Railway Station on the native side of the river to the east of the French Settlement, and directed all their efforts to any it. It was bere throughout that the Russiaus under Colonel Wogack did very the service. but at one time would have yielded a position, bus for the determination of the amall British for unler flaps, Doly bestand their ground. Had the Station been carried, not only would the viclen have been able to entilade the Settlements with rifle fire, but they would have pë youranding position for their heavy guns, and in a day or twe would haw roduced the French and British Concessions to a besp of ruins. At Brat o for wor entertained of the Rexors in when the defenders became aware that Taku Ports hail been attarked on the morning of the 17th of June, it was st, one soon that the Tientsia komign community was in deadly peril. The Chinese Authorities resented they wet of war, und seized it as a good excuse for taking up the Boxer com upeoly, and for opening five on the Concession At the afterose of June the 17th, the Chiness opened fire frowe a conveuled battery in the City, the very existence of which we unknown, though it was universally thought to be the Black Fort or Shui- Ting near the viceregal Yamen. The women and children will
■ll non-combatants at once deg to Gordon Hall, where the capacions celines offeri accommodation to a large number; there shey, remained for ten daya, The Hall w often struck by abells, but in no case were there any easnaltics to Boropean Heer limb in it precincts.
The Chinese infantry, accompanied by the Roxers, made vigoroor gaaulty po the Railway Station for the next four days, but in every one were driven off by the steadiness of the Russian defens often supportent lay the British and Trepel woul pootingents. Au annoured train tried to keep open the communication with Tough but failed. A line attempt was also made to communicate by river: the Jannel tunately ran ashore in the dark and its volunteer crear enty resched, their data after great hardships and narrow sscapes. On June 19th, Mr. James Watts, jus volunteered to lead a party of Cossacks through the enemy lincs with despatches and at great peril did so. This was one of the most brilliant feats of the whole campnika in North Chinn, und Mr. Write mecivod tho order of 0.30. in recogula of hay services which exultal in the relief of Trentsin.. The defence was rath running short of ammunitu, wad unless help name quickly it would have had t buse merely passive On this une day the attack was the most resplate, and th China relied his highest level as a Ughting m The Gist part of the lasted six days during the course of which the Chinese succeeded in thing a consulele number of buildings in the French Concession and a few in the jacent mos Settlements. On the other hand whole tracts of the City and suburbs were destroge by the foreign attack: the wholesale destruction of these villages became as they were giving cover to the enemy's rides.
A
E
The first part of the siege was ended by the arrival of a relief column on Saturday, Tune sand. An dennec round of Kussings nad draccionn marines bad, left Toogsa * the previews Wednesday, but had been ambushed and driven back with heavy loss, Lie Maing Colt gun On Thunday they were reinford, and after two daya' wont fighting, in which they cleared the whole district between Tongku and Tientan on the
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TIENTSIN
757
left bank of the Peiho of the enemy, they reached Tientsin and freed it from further attack on the Eastern side, besides restoring communications with the naval base. The German marines on their way up met with strenuous resistance, and had a very serious engagement near the Eastern arsenal. The Chinese were still greatly superior in artillery, and at once renewed their policy of long bowls from the north and north- east; later on, swiftly pushing their right round to the west, they placed new batteries near the Race Course and renewed their bombardment with greater vigour than ever. The one need of the Allies was heavy metal with which to cope with the Chinese Krupps; one 12-pounder had come up from the Terrible and did splendid service, but a whole battery of these fine weapons was necessary. It is the unexplained mystery of the siege why these guns and the 4" Q.F. were not sent up when Capt. Percy Scott had them all ready to land. Many valuablo lives were sacrificed by this bungling at Taku, In the meantime the Allies were not idle. Early on Monday, June 25th, a column 2,000 strong, of all arms, set out to relieve Admiral Seymour, who was fighting his way back from Lang-fong, and who, by the destruction of the Railway, had been compelled to march down encumbered with many sick and wounded. The Chinese in trying to ambush his force at Hsi-ku had really been his salvation, as he had rushed that Arsenal and had found therein both stores and ammunition in vast quantities. He successfully resisted the desperate efforts to recover the place, and awaited reinforce- ments from Tientsin-the latter arrived on Monday night, June 25th and next morning after firing the arsenal in many places, and thus diverting the attention of the Chinese, who made great efforts to save the place from the fire, he arrived in Tientsin safely with all his wounded next day, after having been lost to the world for over a fortnight. On Wednesday, June the 27th, the Eastern Arsenal was taken by the Allies, the Russians supported by the British and German Marines and by the First (British) Chinese Regiment bearing the brunt of the action. The smaller Western Arsenal had been destroyed by foreign shell fire on the previous day. Japanese troops now arrived in great numbers, and the Allies gradually assumed the offensive, though they were still markedly inferior in weight of guns. On the 3rd of July, the attack by shell and rifle was the most severe of the whole siege, and as communications with Taku by river were now open, the women and children were sent down stream, to find a refuge in Shanghai and Japan, while the much-needed quick-firers and more of the Terrible's 12-pounders were got up from Taku. On July the 9th, the Allied forces resolved to clear the enemy from the Race Course, from which for days he had been exposing them to a scathing cross fire. This was most brilliantly done by the Japanese, and was the first pitched battle in which both sides were in the open-demonstrating the utter worthlessness of the Chinese of all arms when they had no cover. They were easily beaten at all points, and made a hasty retreat into the native City after losing a complete battery of guns.
On July 13th, a frontal attack was made across the open on the South Wall of the City, The Chinese were strongly posted behind the loopholed rampart, and submitted the Allies to a terrible ordeal of fire as they approached the gate. Ten per cent. of the entire force was disabled in this sanguinary fight; but early next morning the Japanese, who had again borne the brunt of the engagement, blew up the gate, and the City was at the mercy of the foreigners. It was given up to loot for one day, after which military government was established. Documents attesting the collusion of the Officials with the Boxers were found in the Yamen. From the taking of the city in 1900 to August 15th, 1902, nearly three years, Tientsin was in the possession of the allied troops, who formed a military Government which was known as the Tientsin Pro- visional Government. Each Power was represented in the Council by an officer of at least Colonel rank and under them were five Departments, viz., Secretariat, Judicial, Police, Chinese Secretariat and Public Works. All the walls, forts, arsenals, and cantonments were dismantled and razed to the ground. While the city was under the rule of the Foreign Powers many urban improvements were carried out, and these were extended under the Viceroyship of Yuan-shi-kai to whom the Government of the city was handed over on August 15th, 1902.
758
TIENTSIN
DIRECTORY
司公程工固永
Wing-ko-kung-jang-kung-sze
ADAMS & KNOWLES, Architects and Engi- neers-26, Victoria Road; Tel. Ad: Egad; Telephone No. 1010
E. G. Adams, M.A.S.C.E. G. S. Knowles, A.M.I.M.E. E. Cook, M.S.A.
ALL SAINTS CHURCH, Racecourse Road,
Rev. J. H. Sedgwick, M.A.
ALLEN, E. P., Attorney and Counsellor-at- law-15, Victoria Terrace;Tel. Ad: Penella
AMATEUR DRAMATIC CLUB
Committee-A. W. Harvey Bellingham
(president), F. Percy Harrold, K. E. O Liddell, H. W. D. Schmidt (hon. secy.), G. D. B. Bidwell (hon. treasurer), E. Gumpert
Aquarius Company, Manufacturers of High Class Table Waters from Pure Distilled Water
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., 15, Con-
sular Road, agents.
記瑞 Jui-chi
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co., Merchants-
Bristow Road; Tel. Ad: Karberg
Philipp Arnhold (London)
E. Goetz
do.
M. Niclassen (Berlin)
A. E. Dowler (New York) W. Helms (Hongkong)
do.
F. Lieb,
Harry Arnhold (Shanghai) W. Pape, signs the firm
Ed. Lueders, signs per pro. Geo. Crofts, do.
M. Horn
M. Bauer
M. A. Lorenzen
E. Vockerodt
O. A. Sixt
W. Poltrock
Lionel F. Smith
F. Behaghel
G. Fenton
W. Johnstone
G. van Corbac, engineer
Agencies
American & Oriental S. S. Line London Assurance Corporation Lancashire Insurance Co.
South British Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
(Fire and Marine Depts.)
The State Fire Insurance Co., Ld. The International Banking Corp. The China Import & Export Lumber
Co., Ltd.
The Tientsin Native City Water Works
Co., Ltd.
The Peking Electric Co., Ltd.
Yah Si Yah
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD., THE (London) -7, Quai de France (French Con- cession); Telegraphic Address: Doric. Telephones: General Office: No. 1389; Compradore's Office: No. 650; Hotung Installation: No. 1507; Tongku Installa
tion: No. 7
C. Stubbe, manager (Tientsin District) V. Walzer, assistant Hotung Installation (Russian Conces-
sion), Teintsin
O. Schulz, installation manager Tongku Installation (Tongku,
C. Mackay, installation manager
ASTOR HOUSE HOTEL, LD.-Victoria Road;
Tel. Ad: Astor
Directors H. Schell, F. Sommer, C.
R. Morling
Otto Kreier, manager
J. Messinger, asst. do.
W. Muttray, secretary
行銀理匯方東
Dong-fong-Woi-li-yen-hong
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE
Manager-L. Desvaux
Cashier De Lendos
Accountant-Rouet de Journel
Compradore-Wei Lien Fan
BANQUE SINO-BELGE-Head Office: Brus-
sels. Tientsin Branch
M. Demets, acting manager
昌隆
Lung-ch'ang
BATOUIEFF & Co.--Merchants, Devonport
Road
M. D. Batouieff
Ba-wei-an
TIENTSIN
BAVIER & CO., E., Merchants-French Bund
Agencies
Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada Shanghai Tramway Co., Ld.
BEGUE, H., Merchant- 10, Rue Courbet
H. Bėgue
A. Bégue, signs per pro.
Agency
L'Union (de Paris) Fire Insurance
Co., Ld.
Etablissements de Tongkou (S.S. Co.)
BERTRAM, R.
BIBLIOTHEQUE MUNICIPALE FRANÇAISE
Comité-Captne. Durand, De Hees,
Lachamp (trésoraire hon.)
信日
Ehsin
BIELFELD & SUN-Tel. Ad: Bielfeld
L. Bielfeld
S. C. Cheng
E. Hunke, engineer, signs per pro. K. Bielfeld, engineer
A. Litzellmann, engineer (Schneider
& Co.)
Th. Foglia
P. Michand
B. Tielcke (Shanghai) (absent) K. Bartels, signs per pro.
G. M. P. Remedios
E. van Assum (Peking)
Agencies
759
Sir W.G.Armstrong, Whitworth & Co.,
Ld., Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Dobson & Barlow, Ld., Bolton, Textile
Machinery
The Mint, Birmingham, Ld., Mint
Machinery
Schuchardt & Schuette, Berlin, Machine
Tools, etc.
Sachsenwerk Licht and Kraft Actien Gesellschaft, Niedersetlitz-Dresden, Dynamos, Motors
Gimson & Co., Leicester, Book-Making
Machinery
Wadkin & Co., Leicester, Wood-Work-
ing Specialities
William Whiteley & Sons, Ld., Lock- wood, Woollen Cloth Machinery John Haigh & Sons, Ld., Huddersfield,
Woollen Cloth Machinery
Edward White, Redditch, Needle-Mak-
ing Machinery
Shanghai Machine Company, Shanghai
BUCK & HARROLD, Brokers
R. S. Buck
P. Harrold
Wa-sun
BILGER & GALLUSSER ;
Rue de l'Amiranté. Corner Rue de Paris
Tel. Ad. Bilgal
A. Bilger
A. Gallusser
A. Brüschweiler, signs per pro.
P. Cross
G. Stoschck
Agencies
The Federal Mar. Ince. Co., Ld., Zurich
Fi-loong
BLOW & Co., H., "The Emporium," Wine and Spirit Merchants, Storekeepers, Out- fitters, Milliners and Dressmakers and Commission Agents-16, Victoria Road
H. St. C. Knox
G. Gillard
H. V. Dorey Agencies
Hongkong Daily Press
Direty.& Chronicle for China, Japan,&c.
BODEGA, THE, Victoria Road
K. Mitchell, proprietor
生瑞 Soy Sung
BUCHHEISTER & Co., Merchants
C. Stepharius (Shanghai)
R. Lundt,
do.
Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD&SWIRE, Mchts.-Victoria Rd.
R. Ross Thomson, signs per pro.
W. Turner
C. C. Dunman
G. A. Chadwick
R. N. Spens
A. C. Godby, wharfinger
Capt. H. H. Brown (Tongku)
J. B. Barclay
T. S. Morton
do.
do.
H. Elder, Jr.
do.
Agencies
China Navigation Company, Ld. Ocean Steamship Company Ld. China Mutual Steam Nvgtn. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Tientsin Lighter Co., Ld.
Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co.
of Hongkong, Ltd.
Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. Guardian Assurance Co.
British & Foreign Marine Insce. Co., Ld Standard Marine Insce. Co., Ld.
CALCAREOUS SANDSTONE BRICK FACTORY
Huang-Tsun
E. Marzoli
C. Bulgheroni
760
Chung Kwang Ho
TIENTSIN
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co. 15, Consular Rd., Wine & Spirit Merchants
E. J. Caldbeck (London)
J. Macgregor,
E. Gumpert
D. F. A. Wallace
A. F. Fong
Agency
do.
Aquarius Mineral Water Co.
*
Li-ho, Hsinyi
CARLOWITZ & Co., Merchants-6, Consular Road; Tel. Ad: Carlowitz. Import and Export; Teleph. Nos: 1118, 1287, 823 1157, 14
H. Reinhold, signs the firm.
Albrecht Schultz
R. Fries
E. Schaffner
W. Aly
F. Boss
O. J. Langhammer
F. Schaller
F. W. Ritter
Herbert de Voss
Hapag Shipping Office (German Bund)
H. v. Struszynkski
Lumber Yard, Tongku
J. Lampert
Attached
J. Schmidt, mechanic Setzkorn, master-gunner Agencies
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co. Nordeutsche Versicherungsgesellschaft British American Assurance Co.
German Lloyd Marine Insee. Co., Ld.,
Berlin
Scottish Union & National Insce. Office
Gothaer Lebensversicherungsbank a/
Gegenseitigkeit Hamburg Amerika Line.
Navigazione Generale Italiano
Dampfschiffs-Rhederei Union. A. G.
行銀利加麥 ít đi tu
Mai-chia-les
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUS. & CHINA
J. McGregor, agent
H. W Fortesquieu, accountant
S. E. Lucas, sub-accountant
R. W. Morris,
A. M. P. Remedios
J. P. P. Collaço
do.
CHEE HSIN CEMENT CO., LTD., THE- Head Office: Corner of Taku and Bristow Roads; Teleph. No. 1309; Tel. Ad: Cement, Tientsin
Chow Chi Chih, H.S. director Sun Ying Ting, T.s. co-director Chen Yih Foo, W.E., manager
S. C. Kwauk, secretary
Chu Tze Yuin, Chinese secretary M. C. Onyan, sales agent Chen Ling Ping, chief acountant Chen Sung Chiao, translator
Tangshan Works.
Chu Wai Chen, works superintendent Dr. Phil. H. Gunther, manager and
technical engineer
Li Shi Ming, manager
H. Schroeder, chemist
A. Zergiebel, mechanical engineer Yang Shu Loon, assistant do. M. Zier,
do. do.
R. Kreiser, shipping agent Chow Hsin Foo, shipping clerk Shiao Liu Tong, chief accountant P. H. Swee, translator
Hang Hsin Yuen, store keeper Machinkou Branch (Brick-Factory) F. Bollbuck, engineer,
Shanghai Office,
C. V. Yu, agent
Fuk Yuk Tien
Quai de France
Fou Fong Flour Mill (Shanghai)
Agencies
Simpson & Co., Dairen, Mukden and
Manchuria
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Newchwang Birkhauser, Ad., Peking
China Merchants' S. N. Co., Chefoo Ching Chong, Chinkiang Ching Chong, Hankow Tai Chong Shin, Nanking
CHINA ASSOCIATION (Tientsin Branch)
Committee-W. A. Morling (chairman) E. Gumpert, G. W. J. R. Brazier,
G. W. Sheppard, R. G. Buchan (hon.
treas.)
P. H. Kent (hon. sec.)
司公易貿烏搬那支
Che-ner Bo-new Now-yat Kung-sze
CHINA-BORNEO TRADING CO., Exporters
and Importers-12, Consular Road, Tel.
A: Archipel; Codes A. B. C. 5th Edition
A. F. Drossel
L. Lindner, proprietor
Tachingtsung Yuen Kunksu
CHINA FORWARDING & EXPRESS CO.-
Tientsin Railway Station, Forwarding Landing, Shipping Agents; Teleph. No. 1,501: Tel. Ad: Tsun
T. Kawabata, manager T. O. Nosaka, sub-manager
Z. Sekine
K. Yamashita J. Ito, godown dept. S. Kodani, packing R. Inouye (Peking). Y. Kodani (Tangku)
TIENTSIN
CHINA IMPORT & EXPORT LUMBER Co., Ld. Arnhold, Karberg & Co., generalagents, H. Roding, signs per pro.
CHINA & JAVA EXPORT CO.
Max Friedrichs, manager
Chau-shang-hiuk
CHINA MERCHANTS'STEAM NAVIGATION CO. Dr. Geo. Mark, managing director
K. H. Chun
Sung Hing San
F. Johnson, lighter superintendent
Agency
Yen Chai Ho Insurance Company
司公險保壽八年永
Jung Nien Jen Show Poo Hsien Kuny-se
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE Co., LD.
-35, Victoria Road; Teleph. No. 1310; Tel. Ad: Adanac
A. E. Tipper
J. W. Fenton
R. P. Sanderson (Tientsin)
CHINA CRITIC (Late REVIEW), Evening Newspaper Published by the North China Printing & Publishing Co., Ld.
C. L. Norris-Newman, P.R.G.S., F.R.S.A., mang. director and editor-in-chief R. S. Buck, chairman
W. E. Southcott, director
E. O. Patey, Tom Candlin, reporters W. R. Giles (special correspondent,
Peking)
R. O. Simmons, acting secretary and
works manager H. Fong, foreman
CHINA TIMES, LD., Daily Newspaper. Published at Tientsin, Proprietors: The
China Times, Ld., 28, Victoria Road;
Registered Office: Hongkong
W. C. B. Cowen, editor
T. G. Fisher, manager and secretary
局務礦平 開
Kai-ping Kwang Wu-chiu
Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Ld.-Tel. Ad: Kaiping. Head Office: London, E. C.; Head Office in China: Meadows Road, Tientsin. Tel. Ad: Maishan, Tientsin;Sili, Shanghai; Teleph. Nos. 1,018 (Office), 1,093 (Shipping), and 1,288 (Coal Yard)
Head Office, Tientsin Major W. S. Nathan, R.E., agent and
g neral manager
H. P. Harland, asst. agent and general
manager
W. E. Allen
N. A. Anderson
E. G. Clarke
F. Ehrhardt
E. T. Freeman
W. Sutton
Accounts Department
F. A. Hanisch, chief accountant
W. T. Stevens
L. Stedman, M. A. Bassity
W. Hudson
W. T. Thornton
Shipping Department
A: H. Watts
Land Department
H. E. O. Stanley
J. Worth
Tongku
Chinwangtao
761
R. A McConaghy, agent and engineer J. G. Gray
J. A. Enright
W. Roberts
J. Phillips
L. Moreau, divisional engineer
E. J. Bolton
C. van Brompt
J. Berkans O. Browett B. Berry F. Bricieux J. Brogniez J. Ruechsel T. A. Courtois L. Demaret F. Doucy L. Doye C. Fabris C. Fort
T. J. Graham
J. Hassoppe
H. von Haesendonck
A. Hatton
C. Ley
F. P. Lefevre J..B. Lemoing F. van Meus J. W. Nolan
D. T. Owens
E. Pérée W. Stevens P. W. Sinnott
J. Simon
Y. T. Woo, analyst
Tongshan Hospital
Dr. H. B. Moorhead, M.D. Dr. C. T. Andrew
Miss Mildred
Agencies
Anz & Co., Chefoo
Lavers & Clark, Weihaiwei
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Newchwang
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Mukden
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tsingtau
Chas. Monbaron, Hankow
782
Shanghai Office
R. N. Truman, agent
T. E. Dunn
F. C. Frischling H. N. Wienberg W. Sweetingham
J. S. Calder
Hongkong Office
J. S. Dobie, agent
L. Boutinon
CINDERELLA SOCIETY
President-A. W. H. Bellingham
# D# Te-kwo-hui-kuan CLUB CONCORDIA
President-F. Ehrhardt
TIENTSIN
Vice-Pres. and Hon. Sec.-A. Wolcken
Hon. Treasurer and Mgr.-G. Schmidt Hon. Librarian-H. Gipperich Accountant-0. Bremen
Cashier-E. Schaffner
W. Meyn
林高 Kao-lin
COLLINS&Co., Merchants-13, HsinyuanRd.
W. A. Morling
C. R. Morling
E. L. Cockell
D. C. Rutherford (London)
H. Payne
W. O'Hara
F. Dixon
A. Cockell
P. Rutherford
W. Greenland
Agencies
London and Lancashire Fire Insc. Royal Insurance Company (Fire) Atlas Fire Insurance Co.
Tientsin Land Investment Co., Ltd.
Tongku Land and Wharf Co., Ltd.
Tientsin Wharf and Godown Co., Ld.
CONSULATES
官事領國與大
Ta-ao-kwo ling-shih-kwan
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul-Kobr Miloslav
Secretary-E. Andres
E. Mitura
官事領國 比大
Tu-pi-kwo ling-shih-kwan
BELGIUM-10, Elgin Avenue, Extra Con.
cession, Teleph. No. 1198
Consul A. Disière
Vice Consul-A. Pétrement
DENMARK
Act.-Consul-
門衙事頜國法大
Ta-Fak-kow ling-shih ya-men
FRANCE
Consul-P. Claudel
Vice-Consul-Dr. Lépice
Medecin du Consulat-Dr. Mesny
門衙事領國德大
Ta-Te-kwo ling-shih ya-men
GERMANY
Consul and Councillor of Legation-
H. Knipping
Vice-Consul-Dr. Jur. H. Daumiller
(absent)
Vice-Consul--Dr. Jur. E, Staude Act. do. Dr. Jur. R. Walter,
interpreter
Act. Interpreter-E. Kleinschmidt
Assistant-H. Bragard
Secretary-P.Scharffenberg
P. Boelune. (absent)
P. H. Schmidt
J. Hoinka
P. Stark
官事頜總國英大
Ta Ying-kwo-tsung ling-shih-kwan
GREAT BRITAIN (for Tientsin and Peking)
Act. Consul-General--H. E. Fulford,
C.M.G.
Act. Vice-Consul-Harold Porter
Pro.-Con. Registrar-G. A. Combe
Act. assistant-E. A. H. Sly
Constable G. Peach
Vice Consul (Peking)-C. C. A. Kirke
ITALY
門衙事領國意大
Ta I-kuo ling-shih ya-men
Consul-Cav. Dr. Oreste da Vella
門衙事領國本日大
Ta Ji-pen-kow ling-shi yu-mên
JAPAN
Consul-General--T. Obata
Eleve-Consul-M. Syada
Chancellors S. Takahashi, R. Hida,
N. Yoshida
Interpreter-al. Senouye
Police Inspectors-K. Nishimura,
J. Obara
官事領國蘭和大
Ta-Ho-lan-kwo ling-shih-kwan
NETHERLANDS
Acting Consul-W, G. E. Brill
Chinese Secretary-Dschang
Consular Court-President, H. M's.
Consul
4 Dutch Assessors
1 Acting Clerk
1 Sheriff's Officer
門衙事領國俄大
Ta-Ngo-hwo ling-shih ya-men
RUSSIA
TIENTSIN
Act. Consul--N. S. Moulioukine Chinese Secretary-Tsai-Sho-Bien
門衙事領國瑞大
Ta Jui-kuo ling-shih ya-men
SWEDEN
Vice-Consul-J. M. Dickinson
門衙事領國美大
Ta-Mi-kwo-tsuny ling-shih ya-men
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul-General-Samuel Knabenshue
Vice-Consul General-Hamilton Butler Marshall-Chas. H. Williams Clerk-Li Sun Fu
COUNCILS AND BOARDS
BELGIAN MUNICIPAL COUNCIL (Muni- cipalité Belge); Telephone No. 1271, Ta-chi-ku
The Belgian Consul, administrator
COURRIER DE TIENTSIN, LE, Daily Paper;
in French and Belgian interests Rue du 14 Juillet, Tientsin
CRYSTAL LIMITED-8, Rue du Chemin de Fer; Tel. Ad: Mineral; Agencies at Peking, Newchwang, Tongshan, Taku, Tongku, Peitaibo and Chingwangtao; Teleph. No. 1,249
Directors-A. H. Mackay (chairman), H. J. W. Marshall, G. Crofts, W. H. Hunt, W. G. Howard, A. Bari (sec.) Alex. Mackie, factory manager,
(Shanhaikwan)
CULTY, & Co, Tn.
Th. Culty
L. Magagna
關海津
HU
豆
Ching-hai-kwan
CUSTOMS-IMPERIAL MARITIME
Corner of Rue Saint-Louis and French
Bund; Telephone No. 1335
Commissioner--H. M. Hillier
Actg. Deputy Commr.-F. Clayson Assistants-W. M. Andrew, J. W. Stephenson-Jellie, C. Praschma, S. Ishida, U. Theodoli, A. P. S. Moss, A. R. Forbes, V. A. Renouf (detached) Surgeons-O. Schreyer, J. O. M. Irwin, Acting Tidesurveyor and Harbour
Master T. Wright Examiners J. Bromley, R. Henkel, N. J. B. Galletti, T. Moreland, A. T. Westerberg, P. Brossman, G. G.
763
Sinclair, A. Gray, E. A. Strehlneek, N. Ellis Tidewaiters-E. A. W. Eckert, C French, G. Roberts, G. Norton, C. L. Fischer, W. C. A. Prahl, H. A. Earl, G. Dyson, K. Schiener, R. Zuccarini, H. F. Marsh, C. Donnelly,
N. J. G. Murray, J. McDonald, M. Katz, N. G. Leadlitter Smith
關鈔 Chao Kuan
CUSTOMS-NATIVE
Act. Dept. Commr.-J. W. N. Munthe Assistants-T. Suzuki, Y. Matsunaga, M. Takayanagi, S. Sakaki, D. J. O'Shea, S. Satow Tidesurveyor--A. McGlashan Examiner W. O. Pegge
Assistant Examiners J. R. Heard, E.
A. Georgi, P. F. J. Corbin Tidewaiters-G. H. S. Fewkes, O. K. H. Reisener, F. F. Georgi, R. H. Witthauer, M. Hamada
泰裕 Yu-tai
DALLAS & Co., Import and Export Mchts. and Commission Agents--11 Quai de France
Richard Dallas James Jones
DANIELS, W. P., Mechanical and Electrical
Engineer
華德 Te-hua
DEUTSCH-ASIATISCHE BANK; Tel. Ad: Teu-
tonia
Th. Rehm, manager
H. Frickhoffer, accountant
T. Wandel
R. Mehne
G. Schmidt
O. Schneider
Tieh-chang
DIEDERICHSEN, &Co., H., Merchants, Import, Export and Shipping-Corner of Canton and Taku Road; Telep. No. 1,397; Tel. Ad: Hadide
H. Diederichsen (Kiel) Ph. Moeller (Shanghai)
Ado. Nolte, M.E., signs per pro. I. Klette
G. Marcus
R. Walsemann Agencies
Jebsen Line
Volunteer Fleet, St. Petersburg Bureau Veritas
764
泰順 Shun Tai
FISCHER & Co., General Importers and
TIENTSIN
Branches: Tsingtau, Shanghai, Chefoo,
Hankow, Vladivostock,
Kiel and
Yung-sheng
Hamburg
DONEY & Co., Exchange, Stock and Share Brokers-9, Consular Road; Tel. Ad: Vendor; Teleph. 1,054
A. F. Algie S. Gilmore
T. L. Bryson
DUERING, VON, WIBEL & Co., Merchants
K. Wibel
H. von During
O. E. Meyer, signs per pro. W. P. Daniels, engineer F. W. Ashoff
Agencies
Vickers Sons & Maxim, Ld., London
J. I. Thornycroft & Co., Ltd.
"Ehrhardt" Guns Works, Duesseldorf
J. & E. Hall, Dartford
昌世 Shih chang
EDUARD MEYER & Co., Merchants--Rue
d'Aniranté; Tel. Ad: Coriolan
C. A. Eduard Meyer
M. Boeddinghauss, signs per pro.
F. Von Rolf
Agencies
The Liverpool & London & Globe
Insurance Co.,
E-lee-sze
EHLERS & Co., A., Merchants
Aug. Ehlers (Bremen)
Th. Meyer (Shanghai)
P. Borkowsky (do.)
P. Stave, signs per pro. Vincenz Riedler
Agencies
Badische Anilin and Soda Fabrik
Ludwigshafen a Rhein
Dentz & Geldermann Ay Champagne
Shun-fat
FAUST & Co., Merchants
J. Faust
P. Schmidt
H. Schell
J. Rexhausen, signs per pro.
W. Meyn
O. Schrader
Agency
Western Assurance Co., Toronto
FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION
Secretory-A. F. Algie
Exporters, Manufacturers' Agents and
Commercial Representatives. Tel, Ad: Emsfischer
Emil S. Fischer
Otto Paschkes
Jin-chee
FORBES & Co., WILLIAM 10, Victoria Road, Tientsin; London Office: 134, Fenchurch Street, E. C.; Branch Offices: Chinwangtao, Peking and Honan
W. A. Forbes
J. M. Dickinson W. E. Southcott
W. H. Hunt
GB. D. Bidwell, signs per pro,
Geo. Michie
F. J. L. Shaw, signs per pro.
A. C. Henning
C. G. Danby
E. Lange (Honan)
C. W. Britten
A. E. Cowell
do. (Peking)
W. Wilson, engineer
C. Marcus
T. E. Kitching
E. W. Hogg Th. van Hunt
S. B. Howell
H. C. Hurst
W. Morton Smith, signs per pro.
(Chinwangtao)
Agencies
Lloyd's
North British and Mercantile Insce.Co. China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Law Union & Crown Insurance Co. Cie des Messageries Maritimes Cie des Chargeurs Reunis Ben Line of Steamers
Eastern & Australian S. S. Co., Ltd. Marine Insurance Company
Upper Rhine Insurance Co., Mannheim United Dutch Marine Insurance Co. Alleanza Insurance Society of Genoa Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co.
FORD & SHAW, Architects; Tel. Ad: Classic
F. H. Ford
K M Shaw
FRAMJEE SORABJEE & Co.--63, Victoria Road, General Storekeepers, Wine and Spirit Merchants; Shanghai and Hankow
GATRELI, T. J. N., M.D., F.R.G.S.
Shing-loong
GIPPERICH & Co., E., Merchants-30, Taku
Road: Teleph. 1300
E. Gipperich
TIENTSIN
765
A. Francke, signs per pro.
H. Gipperich,
J, Paulsen
Agency
do.
Albingia Assurance Co.,
Prussian National Insurance Co.
GOLF CLUB
(See Recreation Clubs)
GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPH Co., Ld.
0. C. Terkelsen, acting controller
and electrician
J. L. Rohde, supervisor
HAIHO CONSERVANCY COMMISSION
Members-Dr. H. Knipping (Consul for Germany), Tsai Shao Chi (Super- intendent of Customs), H. M. Hillier (Commissioner of Customs), W. E. Southcott, hon. treasurer, F. Hussey- Freke, hon. secretary
Engineer in chief-J. C. Vliegenthart
Engineer T. Pincione
Asst. do.-G. Koch
Works manager-W. M. Chapman
利福 Fuh-li
HALL & HOLTZ, LIMITED, Furniture Manu-
facturers, Wine Merchants and General
Storekeepers-Victoria Road
S. H. Ward, agent
S. G. Wrentmore
E. C. V. Walduck
W. S. Sims
HARDY, WALTON, Exporter--Rue Chevier
立聚 Chu-li
HATCH, CARTER & Co.-13, Bund
J. N. Hatch
E. W. Carter
F. A. Kennedy
C. G. Davis
Agency
Phoenix Assurance Co., Lil.
Chien Shun
HEATH & Co., P., Merchants and Manufac-
turers' Agents
P. Heath (Shanghai)
H. Capel (London)
J. Sullivan
Sole Agencies
Humber Ld., Coventry
Williamson & Son, J., Lancaster
Tung Sheng Soap and Candle Factory,
Tientsin
茂增
Tseng-mow
HIRSBRUNNER & Co., General Storekeepers.
-Victoria Road: Telephone No. 1100
Hang-foong
HOLLAND-CHINA HANDELS COMPAGNIE (Holland-China Trading Co.)-12, Rue Dillon; Tel. Ad: Holchihandl
J. J. Brunger, signs per pro.
E. S. Rendall, fur inspector D. H. te Wechel
Agencies
Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Netherlands Fire Insurance Co. Fatum Accident Insurance Co. General Marine Ins. Co., Ld., Dresden Java-China-Japan Line of Steamers Stoomvaart "Nederland
27
Stoomvaart Rotterdamsche Lloyd
Way foong
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN.
D. H. Mackintosh, agent
C. C. Barlow
A. J. Dennys
W. R. W. Anderson
R. C. Allen
P. A. Gace
H. C. Moriel
院病養
Yang-ping-yuen
HOSPITAL, GENERAL-Rue de Consulat
Sisters of Charity
局醫施洋北
HOSPITAL, IMPERIAL-Taku Road
Director-Dr. Watt Wing Tsau
院醫嬰婦
HOSPITAL, ISARELLA FISHER- Taku Road
HOSPITAL, QUEEN VICTORIA DIAMOND
JUBILEE MEMORIAL
Hon. Treasurer-H. E. Muriel
Hon.
Secretary A. M. Cockell
Miss K. Jones, matron
Nursing Staff
Miss M. Jones
Miss E Taylor
HOSPITAL, ISOLATION
Miss Alcott
院醫施女洋北
HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN
AND CHILDREN
(Government) Taku Road
Physician-in-charge-Mrs. A. King, M.D.
來大 Tu-lai
HOTEL DE LA PAIX-7, Rue du Consulat;
Tel. Ad: Lapaix, Code: 5th edition A.B.C.
A. Launay, proprietor
J. E. Ravetta, manager
T. Lucchi
J. Simon, chef de cuisine.
Yung Hee, maitre d' hotel
706
TIENTSIN
司公造建界奧
(Hotung
HOTUNG BAU GESELLSCHAFT,
Building Co.)-Austro-Hungarian Con-
cession, Tientsin
Gino. Accurti, general manager
S. F. Wen, co-manager
HOTUNG LAND Co., L.D.-Taku Road
Directors-P. H. Kent (chairman), K. W.
Mounsey, C. Jezierski, W. Henderson,
The Tientsin Laud Investment Co., Ld.,
agents and general managers
F. H. Pickwick, secretary
HSINCHI BODEN & BAU VERINIGUNGG. M.B.II. Siemssen & Co., general managers *ARTE Luk-quan-yee-hok-tong IMPERIAL ARMY MEDICAL COLLEGE
Hsü Hun Ching, M.D., president Wu Lien Teh, M.D. (Camb.) asst. dir. M. Y. Tong, M.D., proctor
Teaching Staff.
Dr. Wu Lien Teh, sup'nt of studios Dr. S. Hiraga, medicine and surgery Dr.R.Agatsuma, physiology and m'cine. Dr. H. Ajioku, anatomy
Dr. S. Miyagawa, chemistry and
materia medica
B NM Ì Tao-ching-tich-bu IMPERIAL CHINESE RAILWAYS, Tao-Ching
Line, Honan
Peking Syndicate, Ld., managers and
administrat rs
J. Barber, general manager and traffic
superintendent
A. C. Bryson, M.B., B.S., LOND.
J. E. Stewart, M.I.M.E., engineer of
way and works
D. Fraser, locomotive superintendent W. Palmer, locomotive shop foreman J. Macknight, storekeeper E. W. Webb, boilermaker
24*** Pok-yang-e-hoh-tang
IMPERIAL MEDICAL COLLEGE
Tsai Tuotai, Director General, Supt.
of I. M. Customs.
Official Staff
Dr. W. T. Watt, director-in-charge Dr. K. Y. Kwan, co-director
Dr. H. Y. King, proctor
Teaching Staf
G. Mesny, M.D., senior professor
J. Chabnueix, M.D., professor of
Medicine
E. Robin, M.D., professor of Bacte
riology
A. Duval, professor of Pharmacy and
Chemistry
J. S. Chuan, M.D., assistant professor T. H. Chang M.D.,
dlo.
中裕 Yui-chung
IMPERIAL HOTEL, 3-4-6, Rue de France, 23
Quai de France; Teleph. No. 1052, Tel.
Ad: Empire
W. A. Davis, secty, and genl. mangr.
F. A. Musgrove
J. Elvy
H. F. Marsh H. G. Nixon J. H. Waller
W. D. Amoss
A. C. Catterinich
局總路鐵外內關海山 San-hot-kwan Noy-yoi "see-loo Chung-tson IMPERIAL RAILWAYS OF NORTH CHINA, Tel. Ad: Imperial, Tientsin; Telephone No 1315 General Office, No. 1131 Secretary's Office
Director General-Liang Sze Yi (Pe-
king)
Managing Din-Loo E Tong, Luk
Hsn Shing
Chief Deputy--Woo Ying Fo Head Office
J. E. Foley, trailic manager W. Henderson, C.A., chief acc't. H. J. W. Marshall, secretary Engineering Department
A. G. Cox, M.I.C.E., chief assistant
engineer
D. P. Ricketts, A.M.I.C.E., senior district
engineer, Shan-hai-kuan
L. J. Newmarch, A.M.I.C.E., dist. engr.,
Feng-tai
E. H. Rigby, B.SC., A.M.L.C.E.,
engineer, Feng-tai
resident
J. C. Martin, H.E., B.A., T.C.D., resident
engineer, Tang-ku
W. ✪ Leitch, A.M.L.C.E., resident engr.,
Kao-pang-tzu
R. G. Gibson, resid. engr., Jan-chow W. M. Bergin, A.M.L.C.E., assistant
engineer, Ying-kow
K. T Lomas, asst. engr, Chu-lin-ho W. R. Wilson,
Shan-hai-kuan
do.
H. Farrant, do. Ning-yuan-chow
T. Oida,
K. Ogawa,
do.
Moukden
do.
do.
F. Kitching, track insp., Tang-ku
H. C. Traeger,
G. H. Curtis,
do. Feng-tai
do. Kao-pang-tzu
P.A Sheppard, CA E's. office, Trentsin WA. Möller, A.M.IC E., M.I.M.E., MI, Amer., M.E, mining engr., Cho-liu-ha Locomotive Department
F. A. Jamieson, locomotive and works
superintendent, Tongshan
J. C. Anderson, M.I.M.E., assist. lue".
sup't., Kao-pang-tzu
E. C Young, works manager, Tongshan W. G. Alston, chief draughtsman,
Tongshan
t
TIENTSIN
WL F. Morrison, foreman car works,
Tongshan
W. L. Plowman, foreman boiler maker,
Tongshan
S. Wattson, boiler inspector, Tongshan H. Franklin, acting foreman machine
shop and foundry, Tongshan
P. Grout, forman electrician, Tongshan J. K. Cooper, loco. dept. storekeeper,
Tongshan
E.S. More, asst. storekeeper, Toughan A. Sheriff, loco, insptr., Tang-ku J. H. Moffat, do. Feng-tai C. V. Engstrom, do.
A. Wheeler,
Shan-hai-kuan
do.
Tongshan
W. H. Earley,
do.
Kao-pang-tzu
G. Simmons,
do.
Tientsin
W. A. Shellam, do.
Ying-kow
W. B. Marshall, do.
Chin-chow
J. Holder,
do.
Moukden
Traffic Department
W.H.Steele, asst. traffic manager
J. Heffernan, ch. traffic insptr., Kao-
pang-tzu
T. Bone, trattic insptr., Shanhaikwan
Shan-hai-kuan
K. E. Bessell,
do.
Tientsin
G. Bloom,
do.
Tongshan
D. Kelleher,
do.
Ying-kow
J. F. Moore,
do.
W. J. McCarthy, do.
Feng-tai
H. Elder,
do.
Tang-ku
H. Roberts,
do.
Moukden
W. C. Dodds,
do.
H. McPhee,
do.
Kao-pang-tzu Chin-chow
E. Hemm, asst. traffic inspt., Tongshan N. Coppin, conductor, Shan-hai-kuan
C. E. Lindsay, do.
do.
E. Pennell,
do.
do.
G. H. Teat,
do.
do.
S. H. Brown,
do.
do.
D. Ritchie,
do.
do.
Audit Department
F. A. Harris, c.a., loco. and works acet.
Tongshan
J. Burton, assistant, Tientsin
J. Lockhart, do.
Bridge Works
W.G.
do.
W. G. Howard, mangr., Shanhaik wan
Stores Department
W. K. Bradgate, stores supt., Hsinho
Arthur Dunn, asst. storekeeper, do.
Legal
E. P. Allen, Tientsin
Medical
J. O'Malley Irwin, Tientsin
David Brown,
do.
G. P. Smith, eye surgeon, do. Dr. Inouye,
do.
Capt. C. W. Holden, Peking H. B. Moorhead, Tongshan Dr. G. O'Niell, Shan-hai-kuan Dr. D. Christie, Moukden
Dr. Learmouth, P.L.L., Hsin-min-fu C. C. de Burgh Daly, Ying-kow
齋專學西堂學大西山
767
IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY, Taiyuanfu, Shansi
Western Department
Chancellors-H.E. The Governor of Shansi; Rev. Timothy Richard, D.D.,
LITT. D.
Director--Hsie Yung Lu
Principal- Rev. W. E. Soothill Vice. Principal-L. R. O. Bevan, M.A.,
LL.B.
Professors
Engineering and Applied Chemistry- E. T. Nystrom, CE, B. Sc., Stockholm
and Upsala
Science A. W. Warrington, M. Sc.,
Victoria, Manchester
Law and Political Science--L. R. O. Bevan MA. (Melbourne), B., LL.B. (Cambridge), Barrister at Law, Gray's Inn, London and Melbourne Mining and Mech'cal Eng'ng--N. T. William, B.SC.,M.I.M.E.(Westminster, Eng.)
Language and Literature-E. H. Cartwright (Westminster, Eng.)
Assistant Professors
J.Y. Yeli, graduate Brest Naval College
(France)
W. S. Feng, graduate Tong Chou
College (Shantung),
C. A. Chên, graduate Peiyang College J. Shaw, graduate Anglo-Chinese
College (Foochow)
C. C. Wu, Chinese graduate
K. H. Lu, graduate Tong Chou College,
(Shantung)
S. L. Sung, graduate Queen's College,
Hongkong
C. C. Chang, graduate Naval College.
(Nanking)
利快
INTERNATIONAL BICYCLE
Co.- Rue de
France; Tel. Ad: Cyclops; Telephone 1391
司公署政郵總
Tsung-yu-Cheng-ssu-Kung-shu
INSPECTORATE GENERAL OF CHINESE IM-
PERIAL POSTS
Inspector General -Sir Robert Hart,
Bart., G.C.M.G. (absent)
Acting Inspector General-Sir R. E,
Bredon, K.C.M.G,
Postal Secretary-T. Piry
Acting Deputy Secy.-J. L. Chalmers
(Shanghai)
Acting Assistant Postal Secy.--H. O.
C. Perry-Ayscough
Chief Accountant-P. Bauer
Acting Asst. Chief Acct.-G.E. Oslan:-
Hill
768
TIENTSIN
Assistants W. Von Dewall, O. H.
Hulme, W. A. Stursberg
Postal Ollicer-F. Poletti
生醫法 Fa I-sheng
IRWIN & BROWN, Medical Practitioners
J. O'Malley Irwin
D. Brown
L. D. Shaw
Hsin-soong-chang
Iro & Co. II., Wood Merchants-Japanese Concession; Tel. Ad: Ito; Code: A.B.C. 5th edition; Teleph. No. 470,
T. Yamamoto, managing partner
S. Yamamoto, accountant, sigus per pro.
T. Sugino
K. Inaishi S. Yamasaki
K. Sakasai
JAQUES & Co., A. H., General Store- keepers, Drapers, Gentlemen's Outfitters, Household Furnishers, &c.; Teleph No. 1002; Tel. Ad: Catacomb; Codes Leiber's and A.B.C. 4th Edition
A. H. Jaques
H. W. Churchill, H. E. Bland J. T. Thomas W. E. Graham
E. J. Cooke
A. J. Simmons
K. Vetter
K. Kansawa
Agency
North China Advertising Co.
Victoria Buildings,
Chamber
Milner Safe, Co., Ld.
Offices
and
Tientsin Furniture Factory
Chinese Engineering and Mining Co.
Coal Sales Agents
Ayala & Co., Champagnes
John Dewar & Co., Whisky
Andrew Usher & Co., Whisky
Fu E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Merchants-
Victoria Road
G. W. Sheppard, agent
L. D. Tebb
J. G. de G. Martyr
A. J. P. Heard
A. B. Brown
E. C. Peters
T. Parkinson
Agencies
"Canadian Pacific Railway Company
Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Glen Line of Steamers Indra Line of Steamers
British India S. N. Co.
Frank Waterhouse Co., North China
Line
Shire Line of Steamers Canton Insurance Office, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Limited Alliance Fire Insurance Company Imperial Insurance Company
China Sugar Refining Company, Ld. British and Chinese Corporation, Ld. Chinese Central Railways, Ld.
Nobel's Explosives Company
喴有
Yu-way
JUVET, MRS. VVE LEO, Importer of
Watches, &c.-2 Rue Courbet
A. Juvet
J. Juvet
士萬及士博比
KENT & MOUNSEY; Tel. Ad: Maenad
Percy H. Kent, B.A., barrister-at-law K. W. Mounsey, solicitor
Heng Fung Tai
KIERULFF & Co., H.-31 Victoria Road, Storekeepers, General Merchants and Carpet Manufacturers
F. Thomas, proprietor S. L. Briault, accountant
Chien-Tai
-Victoria Road
KLEESCHULTE, WILHELM-
Wilhelm Kleeschulte
H. Dalldorff, signs per pro.
B. Nissenson
TientsinCar iage Factory and Saddlery
R. Gehrmann
Yangtsun Steam Brick Works
E. Staasch, manager
匯永 Yung Lorng
LA BELLE JARDINIERE, Ladies', Gentle- men's & children's Outfitters, Drapers,&c.,
-23, Rue du France; Tel. Ad:Jardinière; Teleph. 1201
Mme Z. Delplanque, sole proprietress
Mme E. C. Culpeck
Mme E. A. Culpeck
E. A. Culpeck
LE JOURNAL DE CHINE, French bi-monthly
Paper
Marcel van Lerberghe, editor
LEE, E., General Store and Printing Office, 3 Victoria Road: Tel. No. 1,123; Tel. Address: Elee
H. Michels, manager
W. Michels
Ed. Melchisedech,
A. Orth
F. Parge
1
+
TIENTSIN
760
Ming-i
LEES & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents-50, Victoria Road
Chien Ho.
LEYKAUFF & Co., Mchts.- 7, French Bund
R. M. Leykauff
A. Vogelsberg
Agency
Sun Life Assce. Co., of Canada
Bing-ho
LIDDELL BROS. & Co., Commission Mer- chants, Wool, Hide, Skin, and General Produce Brokers & Inspectors-Corner of Taku and Bruce Roads; also at Shang- hai and Hunkow
C. Oswald Liddell John Liddell,
W. M. Howell F. B. Rowe
Agencies
Pacific Mail Steamship Company Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Portland & Asiatic S. S. Cu.
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Palatine Insurance Company, Limited
Loo Lee Kung Cheng_Ssu
LOUF A., Architect, Surveyor, Land, House and Estate Agent-4, Victoria Road; Telephone 1067
Ho-chang
MCDONALD & Co., J., Timber and Wool Merchants and Commission Agents: Tel. Ad: Donald, Tientsin; Telephone 1109
J. McDonald
J. M. McDonall
Loong-mow
MACKENZIE & Co., Ld.. Hydraulic Press
Packers and Commission Merchants-4, Taku Road
W. H. Poate (absent)
John H. Osborne (London)
A. Hide (Shanghai)
W. A. Argent
F. R. Scott
K. McK. Bryson
M. Boniface
W. G. McIntyre (engineer)
Agencies
Northern Assurance Co., Fire and Life World Marine Insurance Company New Zealand Insurance Company,
Fire and Marine
Toi-lung
MACLAY & CO. Merchants International
Bridge
R. H. Maclay
Seng-Chie
MCDONALD & Co., A. J., Carriage Factory and Contractors for Live Cattle; Tel. Ad: Mcdonald; Telephone 1109
A. J. McDonald
C. M. McDonald
MCDONALD, SONS & Co., General Merchants and Commission Agents, Deders in Arms, etc.; Tel. Ad: Donald; Telph. 1109 Kaining
J. McDonald A. J. McDonald
J. M. McDonald
W. N. P. McDonald
義信 Hsin-yi
MANDL & Co. H., Merchants-Consular Rd.
Ph. Lieder (Hamburg)
H. Mandl (Shanghai)
B. Rosenbaum do.
利朝馬
Ma-tchao-lee
MARZOLI, L., Building Materials, Calcar-
eous Sandstone Brick Factory-Rue Courbet
E. Marzoli
C. Bulgheroni
M. D'Angelo
MASONIC
Kuei-chu Tang
CORONATION LODGE, No. 2931, E.C.
Wor. Master Walter Hardy Treasurer J. J. Woollen Secretary J. Ralph Harper
NORTHERN CROWN CHAPTER R. A. E.C.
M. E. Z.--A. W. H. Bellingham H.-K. W. Mounsey J.-H. St. Clair Knox Scribe-G. H. Brooke
TONGSHAN LODGE, No. 3001, E.C.
Wor. Muster-G. Bloom Secretary-E. J. Bolton
UNION LODGE, No. 1951, E.C.
Wor. Master-W. A. Davis
S. W.-D. E. Bourne
J. W.--R. Fryer
Treas.-D. A. Culpeck
Sec.-G. H. Brooke
時最美
Mei-che-sz
MELCHERS & Co., Merchants--Taku Road
Karl F. Melchers, Tientsin
R. Otte
E. Gernoth
Fr. Rode
24
770
TIENTSIN
Agencie
1. G. Mail Line (Norddeutscher Lloyd) East Asiatic Co., Ld., Copenhagen Ocean Accident&GuaranteeCorpn., Ld. Globus Insurance Co. of H'burg (Fire) Salamander Fire Ins. Co. of Amsterdam Swedish East Asiatic Co., Ld., Gothen-
burg
Nordstern Lebens Vers. Akt. Ges.,
Berlin
Maatschappij Tot Mijn Boschen Land, General Managers
Equitable Life Assce. Society of U.S.A.
Hsin-chang
MICHELS, AUGUST 3 Victoria Rd ; Tel. No. 1123; Tel. Address: Michels; Branch Office: London
Michels, H.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
堂德崇 Chung-te-tany
PROCURE DE LA MISSION CATHOLIQUE DU
TCHELY SUD-EST; 18, Rue St. Louis:
Rev. Père L. Gantois, S.J.
Rev. Pere L. Duguesne, S.J.
樓河望
Wang-ho-loo
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH OF "NOTRE
DAME DES VICTOIRES'
Rev. F. V. Lebbe, director
Rev. F. J. Giacone
Rev. E. Tibergheien
Rev. F. Selinku
Sam-ching
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, Merchants--
Japanese Bund; Tel. Ad: Mitsui
Y. Yasukawa, inanager
K. Hayasawa, signs per pro. R. Niiya
T. Yotoh
T. Yamamoto
S. Ikeda
H. Iwaya
T. Kondo
T. Kawasaki
K. Kawashima Y. Ura (Kalgan)
T. Soyegima
H. Komatsugawa
S. Kiyono
K. Motai
Agency
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
Foo-chang
MOLCHANOFF, PECHATNOFF & Co., Mer-
chants-Davenport Road
M. D. Batouieff & Co., agents
Mou-teck-li
MOUTRIE & Co., LD., Piano Manufacturers
etc.
C. J. F. Irvine, manager
Ta-ying-kung-pu-chu
*I* MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
BRITISH CONCESSION
W. A. Marling, chairman W. E. Southcott, hon. treasurer C. R. Morling, councillor G. W. Sheppard,
Ross Thomson,
Executive
do.
do.
W. McLeish, B.A., secretary
A. W. Harvey Bellingham, M.I.C.E,
engineer
Drs. Irwin and Brown, health officers Percy H. Kent, barrister at-law,
adviser
legal
HR. Stewart, superintendent of works
H. E. Almond, inspector of police
W. Reece, asst. inspector of police
局部工界租拓新英大
Ta-ying-hsin-to-tsu-chich-kung-pu-chu
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL--BRIT.CONCESSION(II.)
W. A. Morling, chairman
W. E. Southcott, vice chairman and
hon. treasurer
C. E. Adams, councillor
J. R. Brazier,
do.
H. M. Havell,
do.
C. R. Morling,
do.
F Sommer,
G. W. Sheppard, do.
do.
Ross Thomson, do.
Staff (common to both Councils) W. McLeish, B.A., secretary A. W. H. Bellingham, M.I.C.E., engineer H. R. Stewart, superintendent of works Percy H. Kent, legal adviser
Irwin and Brown, health officers
H. E. Almoud, inspector of police
W. Reece, asst. inspector of police
(3 Indian sergeants, 24 Indian con- stables, 1 Chinese inspectors 6Chinese Sergeants, 115 Chinese constables)
局部工國法
Fa-kuo Kung-pu-chi
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL-FRENCH CONCESSION,
Conseil D'Administration Municipale
de la Concession Francaise
Présdt.-M. O'Neill,
Membres-M.M. Conversy, de Hees,
Mesny, Faust, Siebert, Travers-Sinith Secrétaire Lachamp Médecin-Dr. Mesny
Agent Voyer-Reverdy
Surveillant de Travaux--Mazeres
Percepteur Li-ting-tehou Chef de la Police Bruyère Inspecteur Magué
TIENTSIN
771
Usine Electrique
Ingénieur F. Runacher Assistant-Magué
AIDA Té-kuo-kung-pu-chu MUNICIPAL COUNCIL GERMAN
(Deutsche Niederlassungs Gemeinde)--
Th. Rehm, chairman
St. Clausen, councillor
O. Kleemann, do. H. Schell,
do.
A. Woelcken, do.
0. Tenner, secretary
H. Grunert, inspector of police
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL, JAPANESE--Tel. No. 39
Chairman-K. Suzuki
Vice Chairman-S. Kikuchi Hon. Treasurer--Y. Fukuyama Councillor Y. Yasukawa
-K. Toyoda
do.
do.
H. Nishimura
do.
-K. Morimoto
do.
-M. Ohta
do.
dlo.
T. Kawabata
--S. Takeuchi
Secretary T. Nishimura Clerk T. Tanaka
do. K. Kurozawa
do.
S. Maki
do. T. Henimy
Engineer K. Akayama
房書局部工 EI Kung-pu-chu Shu-fang|
MUNICIPAL LIBRARY-Gordon Hall
Committee W. Henderson, H. Freke,
E. Gumpert, H. W. D. Schmidt
Mrs. E. Gumpert (hon. sec. and treas.). Mrs. E. O. Patey (librarian)
Mei-chang
NIPPON YUSEN KAISIA (Japan Mail Steam- ship Co.)-French Bund; Tel. Ad; Yuson
K. Toyoda, manager
K. Akiyama, signs per pro. K. Kojima
M. Ichiki
K. Suginoto
NORTH CHINA PRINTING AND PUBLISHING Co., LD., "China Critic", The (Evening) Paper), Published Daily -8, Gordon Road
F.R.G S..
Chas. L. Norris-Newmann,
F.R.S.A.,editor and managing-director W. E. Southcott, director R. S. Buck, chairman
E. O. Patey, reporter
Tom Candlin, do.
R. O. Simmons, works manager and
acting secretary
H. Fong, works foreman
* X X Nyai-ta-fu
NYE, DR. D. B., Dental Surgeon-No. 4,
Race Course Road; Telephone No. 1089
D. B. Nye, D.D.S., D.M.D.
A. E. Oliver, D.M.D.
Yung-shing
OLIVIER ET CIE:-15 Quai de France et Rue Courbet; Tel. Ad: Austrasia: eleph. No. 1164
P. C. de Hees, signs per pro. E. Charlot,
G.
M. Bategay
Feuerback,
(Hankow)
Agency
do.
skin
inspector
Comité des Assureurs de Paris
ORIENTAL PHARMACY, THE
S. J. Betines & Co., Tientsin and Peking S. J. Betines
E Grossmann, apotheker, Berlin James Henderson, M.P.S., Edin. P. J. Öreglia
J. Schedel, apotheker, Kiel (Peking)
#Ah Tung Sze.Po
OSTASIATISCHE NACHRICHTEN, East Asiatic
News Tientsin; Tel. Ad: Argus
J. Goennert, editor and manager
F. Thomas, correspondent
M. Mastani, proprietress
C. Wang, interpreter
立克 Ke-Lee
OTTO KLEEMANN & Co., Export and Import Merchan s-Corner of Taku and Bristow
Roads Tel. Ad: Kleemann; Telph. 1069
O. Kleemann
F. Pinnau, signs per pro. F. Breitung
V. Radwan
Agency
Yorkshire Insurance Co., York
PATON, GEO., A.M.L.M.E., Chief Engineer of the Tientsin Gas and ElectricLightCo.,Ld.
PECK, A. P., M.A., M.D., Physician and Surgeon, Foreign Medical Attache to the Pei Yang Government, Residence-- 17, Race Course Road; Office: Victoria Building; Telph., House, 1097; Office, 1305
司公福 Fu-kung-sze
PEKING SYNDICATE, LD,
Head Office: 110, Cannon St., London Head Office in China: No. 6, The Bund, Tientsin
J. R. Brazier, agent general
J. Morrison, chief accountant
J. W. Williams, assistant
E. Barker, stenographer and typist
24*
772
Honan Ja-Mei-Sen Mines:
TIENTSIN
J.P.Kenrick,A.M.I C.E. chief mining engr B. Slack, stenographer and typist A. C. Bryson, M.B., B.S. (London) R. R. Brown, colliery manager A. J. M. Shaw, M.I.M.E.. Surveyor, R. H. L. Lee, B.A., M.I.M.E.. instructor, engineering and mining school and assistant mining engineer
A. Anderson, mechanical engineer
F. Ferrier, asst. mechanical and elec-
trical engineer
H. L. Rawlins, brick works manager A. de B. Giolmia, accountant E. G. Griffiths, storekeeper G. Simmons, timekeeper
W. G. Greenland, coal inspector C. A. Walker, draughtsman
E. J. Weeks, coal disposals clerk J. T. Bush, boring superintendent G. Fisher, surface foreman A. M. Wilson, pumpшuan J. Holland, overman
J. Simpson, underground foreman
E. S. Ainsworth, underground foreman J. Bake, underground foreman
** Ching Tsin-pao Kuen
PERING AND TIENTSIN TIMES, Daily and Weekly Newspaper-49, Victoria Road; Proprietors Tientsin Press, Limited;
Tel. Ad: Press
Geo. Collinwood, general manager
W. A. Donaldson, acting editor
隆德 Teh-loong
PERRIN, COOPER & Co., Merchants and
Commission Agts.-No. 1, Rue de France;
Tel. Ad: Horseshoe; Teleph. No. 1085
Mrs. F. Perrin Cooper
W. H. Warmsley, signs per pro. W. J. Warmsley
T. H. Warmsley
R. Davis
A. R. Sanny
Agencies
General Accident Fire and Life Asce.
Corpn., Ld. (Fire)
Patriotic Assurance Co..
Cox & Co., London (Shipping)
POST OFFICE BRITISH (Chinese Engineer-
ing and Mining Co.'s Premises) Postmaster W. J. Thornton
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE; Tel. Ad:
Postos
Act. District Postmaster-Jules Gory Postal Accountant-A. Haslund Postal Officer T. Manners
Asst. Postal Officers-A. H. Lewis, T.A. Collaco (Tangku), F. Guaita, J. Ross (Tientsin City)
館信書國德大
Tu-te-kuo Shu-hsin kuan
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL GERMAN-Victoria
Road; Tel: Ad: Kronos; Teleph. No. 1373
Postmaster- H. Strecker
Post assistant-O. Welker
局便郵國密本日大
Ta-Jih-pen-tai-kuo-yo-pien-chu
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL JAPANESE-Tel.
No. 33. Japanese Concession, Tel. No.
1043 Branch Office
Head Office.
Postmaster- M. Okashima
Postal Officers-S. Hara, N. Yokoi, Y. Wada, T. Inouye, M. Hisatomi, M. Hayakawa, T. Tohi, G. Inouyé, E. Sugimura, A. Mureya
Branch Office, British Concession Chief Postal Officer-I. Aoki Postal Officer--K. Hirane Branch Office, Tongku
Chief Postal Officer-K. Nakamura Postal Employe-K. Esumi Branch Office, Shanhaikwan
Chief Postal Clerk-H. Miyachi Postal Officer-S. Masaki
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL RUSSIAN--Davon-
port Road, 15
Postmaster-S. A. Levitzky Assistant J. J. Puhre
PROTOPAPAS & Co.. E. D., Egyptian Cigarette Manufactures and General Tobacco Mers.-Factory and Head Office: Alexandria, Egypt; P. O. Box No. 310: Local Depot: Victoria Road; Tel. Address: Protopapas
PROVINCIAL COLLEGE-Paotingfu Director-Liu Chun Lin President-Fei Ch'i Hao, M.A. Professor of Chemistry and Physics- Jas. A. Russell Henderson, B.SC., F.C.S. Professor of English and French-D.
Lattimore
Professor of History and Drawing-
Ed. R. Long
Prefessor of Mathematics-Jesse B.
Wolfe, B A.
PUBLIC WORKS OFFICE, Japanese Concession
President Japanese Consul-General Secretary-Consular Staff
Lee-hsing
RACINE, ACKERMANN & CIE., Merchants
-16, Quai de France
G. Racine (Shanghai) G. Ackermann
do.
V. Blockhuys, (Shanghai)
A. Fabre,
do
J. Gautier (Hankow)
A. Nordman
G. Martin
Agencies
TIENTSIN
Societe des Ciments Portland
Artificiels
(Haiphong)
de l'Indo-Chine
L'Urbaine Paris Fire Insce. Co., Ld. La Confiance Fire Insce. Co., Páris
RECREATION CLUBS
GOLF CLUB
Hon. Secretary-Capt. C. B. O.
Symons, R.E.
Hon. Treasurer-W. I. Pottinger Captain-J. R. Brazier
TIENTSIN ROWING CLUB
Committee:-A. F. Algie (captain), S. E. Lucas, C. de Voss, H. Roding, D. F. A. Wallace, J. C. Vliegent- hart (hon. treas.), A. J. Dennys (hon. secretary)
TIENTSIN SWIMMING CLUB
Committee-H. J. W. Marshall, K. A. Mouncey (chairman), Wm. MacLeish, H. Roding, W. T Greenland, J. G. Anderson, E. J. Bourne (hon. secy.)
RECREATION GROUND TRUST, TIENTSIN
Trustees W. C. C. Anderson, (chair-
man), J. M. Dickinson, W. A. Morling, P. H. Kent, D. H. Mackin- tosh, C. R. Morling, K. W. Mounsey, R. G. Buchan (hon. secretary and treasurer)
REUTER, BROCKELMANN & Co., Merchants
--5, The Bund
C. Nonchen, signs the firm
A. Emanuel, signs per pro. L. Lange
T P. Lord
Agencies
Aachen & Munich Fire Insurance Co. Swan Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
REUTER'S TELEGRAMS
Tientsin Press, Ld.-49, Victoria Road
ROBINSON PIANO Co.--Tientsin
A. P. Bramley, manager
Liang-chi
ROUSSEAU, E., Merchant-17, Rue de Paris
Agencies
Societé John Cockerill, Seraing Union Assurance Society, Ld., London
ROTHKEGEL, C., Architect
行銀勝道俄華
Wah-ngo-tao-shing-yin-hong
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK
Count L. Jezierski, manager
V. Lugebil, signs per pro.
J. Steparoff,
do.
R. Bandinel, cashier
C. F. Kleys
Geo. Candlin
M. Voronetz
P. Hohkloff
豐瑞 Pui fong
773
SANDER, WIELER & Co., Merchants-Rue
Dillon
G. Wieler (Hamburg)
R. Becker, do.
A. Becker (Hongkong) A. Sander (Shanghai)
M. Alsberg, signs per pro.
P. Lehrs
B. Rowoldt G. Ritter
Agencies
Austrian Lloyd's Steam Navigation Co. Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin
Central Fire Insce. Co., London
SCHOOLS
館學美成
Cheng-mei Hsueh-huan
INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL-Taku Road
Rev. W. P. Chen, B.A., principal
O. J. Krause
Mrs. Davis
ST. LOUIS' COLLEGE-Off Wilhelm Strasse,
(For Boarders and Day Scholars), German Concession
Bro. Celestine, director
Bro. Louis Thésdat Bro. Onésime
Bro. Alexius
***** Hsin Hsueh to Shu-yuen
TIENTSIN ANGLO- CHINESE COLLEGE-Taku
Road
Principal S. Lavington Hart, M.A., D.SC. Vice Principal-J. B. Tayler, M.SC.
M. Graham Anderson, B.SC. A. H. Jowett Murray, B.A. Maurice H. Young
H. W. Carritt Moore Gordon
TIENTSIN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION
Committee -P. H. Kent (chairman), W. McLeish, Rev. G. H. Sedgwick, Dr. T. J. N. Gatrell, J. MacGregor, D. H. Mackintosh, Mrs. Griffith, Mrs. Gumpert, H. M. Hillier, Hugh Kirkhope (head master)
Miss E. Leitch, assistant mistress Miss E. F. Steel
do.
7
774
TIENTSIN
I Sin-yuen Di-a-sze SCHULTZ & Co., H. M., Merchants-24,
Victoria Road
Oscar Mordhorst (Shanghai) Arthur Dabelstein,
do.
O. Bremer, signs per pro. W. Kracke
Agencies
German Lloyd
Scottish Imperial Life Insurance Co. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co. Hamburg and Bremen Underwriters Baloise Fire Insurance Co. of Basle Norddeutsche Versich. Ges. (Marine) Nouveau Lloyd Suisse
Rheinisch Westfalischer Lloyd
Schweiz Allgem. Vers. Act. Ges., Zurich El Dia Cartagena
Fortuna Allgem. Versich. Act. Ges. Forsakings Aktiebolaget "Hansa,"
Stockholm
Germania Brauerei, Tsing-tau
SHEPPARD, P. A., Assistant to Chief Assist
ant Engineer Imperial Railways of North China; Code A.B.C. 5th Edition; Tel. Ad: Kinabalu
SHEWAN, TOMES & Co., Merchants-Rue de France; Tel. Ad: Keechong; Teleph.
1105
R. G. Shewan (Hongkong) C. A. Tomes (New York) A. Babington (Hongkong)
W. R. Robertson
H. March
C. Sutton
T. Bond
S. T. Wong
Agencies
Green Island Cement Co., Ltd. Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co.,
Ltd.
American Asiatic Steamship Co. Anglo-American Oil Co.'s steamers British Westinghouse Electric and
Manufacturing Co. Fraser & Chalmers, Ltd.
Lima Locomotive & Machine Co. Manning, Maxwell & Moore Incorp. Worthington Pump Co.
British Dominions Marine Insce. Co. National Union Society, Ltd.
Chan-chon
SIEMSSEN & Co., Merchants
E. Siebert
H. Sebes
S. Eichner
H. C. Rothhardt
Agencies
North German Insurance Co.
United Dutch Marine Insurance Co.
Providentia Alge. Vers. Gesellsch, Wien Salamandra Ins. Co., St. Petersburg Assicurazioni Generali, Trieste Martin's Bank. Ld., London
Allianz Insce. Co. of Berlin (Fire)
Ch. Le Jeune, Antwerp Marine Insce.
司公家勝
Sheng Chai Kung Sze
SINGER SEWING MACHINE Co. Office:
-
56, Rue Dillon; Salesroom: Corner Rue
Dillon & Rue de France
Peking salesroom: Hatamen Road
W. W. Guyett, manager
昌燮 Pao-chong
SMITH & BALLAUF, Exchange and Share
Brokers
Henry Smith Hermann Ballauf
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY
President-Wm. Henderson Vice-President-J. Macgregor Hon. Secretary K. C. Ö. Liddell Hon Treasurer-L. D. Tebb Committee A. F. Algie, J. R. Brazier,
E. L. Elliott, W. H. Steele
李美
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK; Teleph.
No. 269
Robert Coltman, jun., manager W. L. Carney, assistant
Clarence Clowe, assistant
Charles L. Coltman, do.
C. B. Sheridan,
C. A. Forbes,
do.
do.
D. J. Brady, wharfinger
HEL LE
STECHMANN, ARTHUR L., Import and Export Merchant, Sole Importer of the
"Minimax" for the Far East
發禮 Lee-fah
SYLVA, J. A.-10, Rue de Paris, Import
Export Commission Merchant and Pro- duce broker
J. A. Sylva
TABAQUEIRA FILIPINA, Variety Store, Cigar
Merchants and Tobacconists
TAGEBLATT FUR NORD-CHINA, Q.M.B.H.; Tel.
Ad: Publicatio
O. Tenner, manager
Br. Petzold, editor
E. Kirn
齋武 Wu-chai
TIENTSIN
TAKEUCHI & Co., Merchants-French Con.
S. Takeuchi
AMRNƒ Ta-ku Po-ch'um Kung-sze TAKU TUG AND LIGHTER COMPANY, LIMITED Directors-J. Stewart, W. A. Morling,
R. K. Douglas, C. R. Morling, II. J. W. Marshall
W. T. L. Way, secretary
W. E. Wade, A.C.LS., accountant
館賓西
Hsi-pin-kwan
TALLIEU & Co., L., Ladies' and Gentlemen's
Outfitters, Storekeepers, and Commission
Agents-16, Rue St. Louis
J. Travers Smith
T. U. Wendon
R. Fryer
C. H. Brooke
H. E. Price
P. A. Travers Smith
司公灰洋山唐
Tong-chan-yung-hui-kung-sze
TANGSHAN CEMENT WORKS;Tel. Ad: Cement
Viceroy of Chili, director general; Tel. No. 1309.
# Tap-hak-ma-cha-fon
TATTERSALL'S HORSE REPOSITORY, Coach Builders to the Imperial Court of China; Teleph. No. 1091
G. L. d'Arc
†€+ Chung-kuo tien-pao-chu TELEGRAPH ADMINISTRN., IMPL, CHINESE
H. F. Henningsen, superintendent Telephone Department
K. Rothe, superintendent and engineer
TELEGRAPH Co. (See Eastern Extension
and Great Northern)
來泰 Tailai
TELCE & SCHROETER, LD., Mchts-Taku Rd.
F. Sommer
Th. Carl, signs per pro.
E. J. Bourne
0. Dello
G. Mantler
工招礦金洲非南
Nun-fai-chan Kum-kung Chiu-kung
THE WITWATERSRAND NATIVE LABOUR ASSOCIATION, LD. (Chinese Section)-13
Meadows St., Tientsin; Tel. Ad. Flavus
(Tientsin, Hongkong, Chefoo) Teleph, No. 1,203 (Head Office), No. 225 (Allotment Office)
Head Office (Tientsin)
775
H. W. Kempster, gen manager in China W. S. Young Riddell, chief accountant E. K. Lowry, allotment office F.-P. Yearley, confidential clerk Depôt (Chinwangtao)
Dr. O'Neill, resident surgeon
Agency
"Cornabe, Eckford & Co., Chefoo
Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong Lavers & Clarke, Weihaiwei
TIENTSIN BAUGESELLSCHAFT (Tientsin Building Co., Ld.), Offices; Taku Road Directors-Chr. Noenchen. M. Alsberg,
Th. Rehm, C. Rump, C. de Voss Manager W. Heinemann Sub-manager-Th. Carl
Yu-e-tsin-hui
TIENTSIN CLUB ; Telephone No. 1311
General Committee-W. A. Morling (chairman), A. W. II. Bellingham, J. R. Brazier, K. W. Mounsey, W. T. L. Way, F. Percy Harrold, G. W. Sheppard, J. G. Anderson (secretary)
TIENTSIN FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION, F. R. Scott (chairman), K. G. O. Liddell (vice-chairman), A. F. Algie (secretary)
HABRE Chi-tien-ten Kung-sze TIENTSIN GAS AND ELECTRIC LIGHT Co., LIMITED- Cemetery Road; Electric Works: Bruce Road; Tel. Ad: Retori; Teleph. No. 1,354
Directors--J. Stewart (chairman), W.
E. Southcott, W. T. L. Way Secretaries Wm. Forbes & Co. Chief engineer-Geo. Paton, A.M.I.M.E, Asst. clo. -C. D. Stewart
TIENTSIN HORSE BAZAAR, LD., Livery Stables, Carriage Factory and Saddlery, Race Course Road; Tel. Ad: Hippogriff; Teleph, 1098
TIENTSIN INTERNATIONAL MINERAL WATERS
Co., LD. Shan-hai-kwan
-
RWX * Lee-Tsin-Teak-chong TIENTSIN IRON WORKS, LTD.
W. I. Pottinger, secretary Andrew Paton, works manager
P. Bell, asst. engineer
A
Sien-lon-kung-ze
TIENTSIN LAND INVESTMENT Co., LD., THE
Taku Road; Teleph. No. 1084
Directors-N. F. Drake (chairman), J. N. Hatch, E. L. Cockell, Dr. A. P.
776
TIENTSIN
Peck, Dr. R. J. Coltman, K. H. Chun,
Collins & Co., agents and genl. mgers. F. H. Pickwick, secretary
TIENTSIN LIGHTER CO., L.D.
Butterfield & Swire, managers
TIENTSIN MEAT SUPPLY COMPANY
S. C. Young, manager
TIENTSIN MINEN SYNDICAT, G.M.B.H. (Tien- tsin Mining Syndicate); Office at H. Mandl & Co., Meadows Road
#@#Tung-lok-sin-fa-chong
TIENTSIN NURSERY GARDENS
F. Bade, manager
#*#* Tientsin Yin-tze Kuan TIENTSIN PRESS, LTD., Proprietors "Peking and Tientsin Times," Printers, Publishers Book-binders, Stationers, Theatrical
Agents-49, Victoria Rd., Tel. Ad: Press
Geo. Collinwood, general manager Agencies
Reuter's Telegram Co, Ltd.
Statistical Department, I. M. Customs
ĐỀ THI ĐỀ Chich,chiu-lou
TIENTSIN TEMPERANCE SOCIETY,
President C. E. Ewing. Vice-president-G. W. Clarke Secretary-H. W. Carrett Treasurer-0. J. Krause
Librarian-Mrs. G. W. Clarke
司公絨選茂興
Shing-mow-sun-yong-kung-sze
TIENTSIN WOOL CLEANING FACTORY, LTD.
Hydraulic Press Packers; Tel. Ad:
Woolclean; Teleph. No. 1350
E. Luer, manager
TINGLE, A., PH. D., Chemist to the Pei
Yang Mint
司公險保壽八年永
Yung-mine-jen-shou-pao-shien-kung-sac
TIPPER & FENTON-35, Victoria Road; Tel.
Ad Adanoe; Teleph. No. 1310
A. E. Tipper
J. W. Fenton
R. P. Sanderson
District Managers for North China of
the China Mutal Life Insurance Co., Limited
TOILET CLUB
C. Ferretti, proprietor
P. Caprino, signs per pro.
A. Martelliti (Peking)
G. Castellano (Peking)
C. Menga (Chefoo)
L. Colombi
A. Rollo
A. Danese
N. Cordillo
斯羅克 Ko-los-ze
TROST & CO., J., Merchants-Rue de l'Ami-
raute, No. 5; Teleph. 1191; Tel. Ad: Trost
J. Trost
O. Gross
H. G. I. Washbrook
夾利烏
ULLMANN & Co., J.,Watch Importers, Jewel-
lers, &c. Rue de France, Teleph. No.
1326 Jacques Ullmann (Europe)
J. Battegay, manager
E. Clemann
E. Dreyfuss
堂拜禮國西 Hsi-kwo Li.pai-tang
UNION CHURCH-Extra Concession
Pastor Rev. J. S. Griffith, M.A.
隆合
VICCAJEE & CO., H., Stores-Victoria Road"
R. Hormusjee
R. Viccajee Solina
D. S. Wadia
B. M. Mugat
N. Shapoorjee (Peking)
P. N. Mehta
M. P. Altamira
Han.ta.li
VRARD & Co., L., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-Rue St. Louis, 22
G. Loup, manager
義德 Te-ye
WALTE & Co., A., Merchants-Taku Road
A. Walte (absent)
S. Clausen
C. de Voss
A. Marcus
F. M. Thomson
A. Döhn
Agencies
Manchester Assurance Company
Mannheim Insurance Company, Ld.
昌泰 Tai.chang
WALTER ZUR NEDDEN, Machinery and
General Importer-10, Quai de France,
Teleph. No. 1190; Tel. Ad: Zurnedden
司公水來自
TIENTSIN
Liang-chi-ya-fong
777
WATER WORKS COMPANY, I.D., TIENTSIN;
Works: Parkes Road; Tel. Ad: Works;
Teleph. No. 443
Directors J. Stewart (chairman), W.
E. Southcott, J. E. Foley William Forbes & Co., secretaries J. R. Gilchrist, engineer and manager
***EД Wa-sun-sz ta-yah-von Watson & Co., A. S., LD., Chemists and Druggists, Wine, Spirit, and Cigar Mer- chants Victoria Road
J. C. Carter, manager
WATTS & Co., Exchange and Share Bro- kers, Auctioneers and Estate Agents
J Watts, C.M.G.
T. E. Watts
WAVERLEY CLUB
General Committee-Rev, I. F. Drys- dale(chairman), Dr. D. B. Nyc, A. H. Mackay, J. B. Taylor, Rev. E. R. Ewing, J. G. Anderson (tres.), F. H. Pickwick (secty.)
WILLIAMS, F. H., acetylene engineer
興泰新 Hsin tai Hsing
WILSON & Co., Merchants and General
Commission Agents - Victoria Road;
Telephone No. 1143
James Wilson (absent)
R. A. Cousens
R. K. Douglas R. G. Buchan F. Douglas-Irvine A. Adaa
Y. Yasuda
Agencies
Dodwell & Co.'s Steamers
Northern Pacific Railway Company
Northern Pacific Steamship Company
Osaka Shosen Kaisla
Boston Steamship Company Boston Tow Boat Company Oregon Railroad and Navigation Co. North China Insurance Coinpany, Ld. Sun Fire Office
Standard Life Assurance Company South British Insce. Co., Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld Norwich Union Fire Insurance Soc.
Thames & Mersey Marine Insce., Co., Ld.
豐華
Wha-foong
WOLFF, CARL, General Storekeeper-Rue
de France
C.Wolff
WOOLLEN, VOsy & Co., Pharmaceutical Chemists and Wholesale Druggists; Tel. Ad: Vosy
J. J. Woollen
H. G. Riches, signs per pro. S. Feslau
W. P. Cook, M.P.8,
YANGTSZE VALLEY CO., LIMITED-Kwong Loong Road, and 110, Cannon St., London
行銀金正濱横
Hong-pin Cheong Chin Yin Hang
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK
K. Inouye, manager
K. Morimoto, sub-manager
T. Mamasliita, sigus per pro. (city
branch)
S. Matsumoto, signs per pro. I. Nakao (city branch) S. Nomura
H. Yamazaki T. Linamura S. Ksakari M. Kawada S. Kinoshita K. Miyabe T. Fukuda
S. Iwamura
M. Morita
H. Tomoda
會年靑敎督基
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
R. R. Gailey, general secretary
R. M. Hersey, assoc. do.
C. H. Harvey (national secty.)
R. S. Hall (on leave)
P. B. Tripp, teaclier
M. J. Brown,
L. N. Hayes,
do.
do.
H. W. Hubbard, do.
YUSING & Co., Branch Office of the Naigai- wata Kabushiki Kaisha, Osaka; Cotton, Cotton Yarns, and Cotton Piece Goods
Pui-ho
ZAECKEL & Co., A., Merchants-12, Rue
du Baron Gros
A. Zaeckel
J. L. Kloosterboer
Agency
East India Sea and Fire Ince., Co.,
Batavia and Amsterdam
778
TEINTSIN
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS
(For addresses see preceding pages.)
AERATED WATER MANUFACTURERS
Aquarius Mineral Water Co.
Tientsin International Mineral Water Co.
ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS
Adams & Knowles
Daniels, W. P.
Ford & Shaw
Loup, A.
Paton, Geo. Rothkegel, C. Sheppard, P. A.
AUCTIONEERS
Watts & Co.
BANKS
Banque de L'Indo-Chine
Banque Sino-Belge
Chartered Bank of India, Australia and
China
Deutsche Asiatische Bank
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corpn. Russo-Chinese Bank Yokohama Specie Bank BARRISTERS-AT-Law Kent & Mounsey BRICKWORKS
Calcareous San.lstone Brick Factory Marzoli, L.
BROKERS (Exchange)
Buck & Harroldi
Doney & Co.
Smith & Ballauf
BROKERS (General)
Liddell Bros, & Ca.
Sylva, G. A. Watts & Co.
BUILDINGS
Hotung Ban Gesellschaft Tientsin Ban Gesellschaft BUTCHERS
Tientsin Meat Supply Co.
CARPET MANUFACTURES
Kierulff & Co.
CARRIAGE FACTORIES
Kleeschulte, Wilhelm McDonald & Co., A. J. Tattersall's Repository CATTLE CONTRACTORS
McDonald & Co., A. J. Tattersall's Horse Repository Tientsin Horse Bazaar CEMENT MANUFACTURERS
Chee Hsin Cement Co. Tangshan Cement Works
CHEMISTS AND DRUGGISTS
Oriental Pharmacy Tingle, A. (Govt.) Watson & Co., A. S., Ld. Woollen. Vosy & Co.
CIGAR AND CIGARETTE MERCHANTS
Protopapas & Co., E. D. Tabaqueiria Filipina
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES
Amateur Dramatic Club China Association Cinderella Society Club Concordia
Golf Club
Recreation Ground Trust St. Andrew's Society
Tientsin Temperance Society Toilet Club
Tientsin Club
Tientsin Rowing Club Tientsin Swimming Club Waverley Club
Young Men's Christian Association COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
Anglo-Chinese College Imp. Army Medical College Imp. Medical College Provincial College Imperial University St. Louis' College
COMMISSION AGENTS
See Merchants (Commission)
CONSULATES
See pages 762-763
CONTRACTORS
Pearson & Son, Ld., S.
COTTON YARN AND PIECE GOODS
Yusing & Co.
CYCLE DEPOTS
International Bicycle Co.
DENTISTS
Nye, Dr.
DRAPERS AND OUTFITTERS
Jaques & Co.
La Belle Jardinière Tallieu & Co. EDUCATIONAL
Imperial University
Intermediate School Provincial College St. Louis' College
Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College Tientsin School
TEINTSIN
779
ENGINEERS MECH., ELEC., ETC.
Adams & Knowles
Bielfeld & Son
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Daniels, W. P.
Paton, George A.M.I.M.E.
Sheppard, P. A.
Tientsin Iron Works
Williams, F. H.
ESTATE AGENTS
Watts & Co.
FIREARMS IMPORTERS
McDonald, Sons & Co.
FORWARDING AGENTS
China Forwarding & Express Co.
FURNITURE MANUFACTURES
Hall & Holtz, Ld. Jaques & Co.
GAS WORKS
Tientsin Gas & Electric Co., Ld.
HORSE DEALERS
Tattersall's Horse Repository Tientsin Horse Bazaar
HORTICULTURISTS
Tientsin Nursery Gardens
General Hospital
Imperial Hospital
HOSPITALS
Isabella Fisher Hospital
Isolation Hospital
Ld.
Queen Victoria Diamond Jubilee Me-
morial
Women's and Children's Hospital
HOTELS
Astor House Hotel, Ld.
Hotel de la Paix
Imperial Hotel
The Bodega
HOUSE AND LAND COS.
Hotung Land Co., Ld.
LAND AND BUILDING COMPANIES
Tientsin Ban Gesellschaft Tientsin Land Investment Co.
LAND COMPANIES
Hotung Land Co.
LIGHTER COMPANIES,
Taku Tug & Lighter Co., Ld. Tientsin Lighter Co. INSURANCE COMPANIES.
China Mutual Life Ins. Co. Fire Insurance Association Tientsin Fire Insurance Assoc.
IRON WORKS
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co. Tientsin Iron Works
MACHINERY IMPORTERS AND AGENTS
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Buchhiester & Co.
MACHINERY IMPORTERS AND AGENTS-Con'd.
Carlowitz & Co.
Dallas & Co.
Diedericksen & Co., H.
Duering, von Wibel & Co. Fisher & Co.
Heath & Co.
Walter zur Nedden
MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS
Fisher & Co.
Heath & Co., P.
Kleeshulte, Welhelm
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
Gattrell, T.J.N., M.D.
Irwin & Brown
Peck, A. P., M.A., M.D. Tingle, A., PH.D.
MINES
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld. Crystal, Ld.
Hsinchí Boden & Bau Veringungg, M.B.H. Tientsin Mining Syndicate
MERCHANTS (Commission)
Blow & Co., H.
Buchhiester & Co.
China-Borneo Trading Co. China & Java Export Co. Dallas & Co.
Duering von Wibel & Co.
Ehlers & Co., A.
Fisher & Co.
Hardy, Walton
Heath & Co.
Kierulff & Co.
Lees & Co.
Liddell Bros. & Co.
MacDonald & Co., J.
McDonald, Sons & Co.
MacKenzie & Co., Ld. Olivier et Cie.
Otto Kleeman Perrin, Cooper & Co. Stechmann, A. L. Sylva, J. A. Vrard & Co., L. Walter zur Nedden Wilson & Co.
MERCHANTS (General)
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Batouieff & Co. Bavier & Co. Begue, H.
Bertram, R.
Bielfeld & Sun
Bilger & Gallusser
Blow & Co., H.
Buchhiester & Co., Ld. Butterfield & Swire Carlowitz & Co.
China-Borneo Trading Co. China & Java Export Co Collins & Co.
1
780
MERCHANTS (General)-Continued
Culty & Co.
Dallas & Co.
Diedericksen & Co., H. During, von Wibel & Co. Edward Meyer & Co. Ehlers & Co., A. Faust & Co.'
Forbes & Co., William
Gipperich & Co., E.
Hardy, Walton
Hatch, Carter & Co.
Heath & Co.
Holland-China Handels Compagnie
Jardine, Matheson & Co.
Kleeshulte, Wilhelm
Lees & Co.
Leykauff & Co.
Liddell, Bros, & Co.
Maclay & Co. McDonald & Co.
McDonald, Sons & Co.
Mandl & Co., H. Melchers & Co. Michels, August Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co. Olivier et Cie Perrin, Cooper & Co. Racine, Ackermann & Co. Reuter, Brockelmann & Co. Rousseau, E.
Sander, Wieler & Co. Schultz & Co., H. M. Shewan, Tomes & Co. Siemssen & Co. Stechmann, Arthur L. Takeuchi & Co. Telge & Schroeter, Ld. Trost & Co. Vrard & Co., H.
Walte & Co.
Wilson & Co. ·
Yangtsze Valley Co., Ld. Yusing & Co. Zaeckel & Co.
MILLINERS AND DRESSMAKERS
Blow & Co., H. La Belle Jardinère
Tallieu & Co.
MUSIC STORES
Moutrie & Co., Ld. Robinson Piano Co.
NEWSPAPERS
China Critic
China Times Courrier de Tientsin Le Journal de Chine Ostasiatische Nachrichten Peking & Tientsin Times Tageblatt fur Nord Chine
TIENTSIN
OIL COMPANIES
Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld. Standard Oil Co. of New York
OUTFITTERS
Blow & Co., H. Jaques & Co.
La Belle Jardinère Tallieu & Co.
PIANO DEALERS
Moutrie & Co. Robinson Piano Co.
POST OFFICES
See pages 762-763
PRINTERS, ETC.
China Times, Ld.
North China Printing & Pub. Co. Lee, E.
Tientsin Press, Ld.
RAILWAY COMPANIES
Imp. Railways of North China SEWING MACHINES
Singer Sewing Machine Co. SHIPPING AGENTS
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Butterfield & Swire Carlowitz & Co.
China Merchants' S. N. Co.
Forbes & Co., William Jardine, Matheson & Co.
Liddell Bros. & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Perrin, Cooper & Co.
Sander, Wieler & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co.
SHIPPING OFFICES
Butterfield & Swire Carlowitz & Co.
China Merchants' Steam Navigation Co. Diedericksen & Co., H.
Jardine, Matheson & Co.
Nippon Yusen Kaisha SOLICITORS
Allen, E. P. STOREKEEPERS
Blow & Co., H. Framjee Sorabjee & Co. Hall & Holtz, Ïd. Hirsbrunner & Co. Jaques & Co., A. H. Kierulff & Co., H.
Lee, E.
Viccajee & Co., H.
Wolf, Carl
SURVEYORS
Loup, A.
TELEGRAPH COMPANIES
Eastern Extension A. & C. Tel. Co Great Northern Telegraph Co. Reuter's Telegrains
TIENTSIN
781
TIMBER MERCHANTS Carlowitz & Co.
China Import & Export Lumber Co., Ld.
Ito & Co.
McDonald & Co.
TOBACCO MERCHANTS
Protopapas & Co, E. D.
Tabaqueira Filipina
Watson, A. S. & Co.
WATCHMAKERS AND JEWELLERS
Juvet, Mrs. V. L.
WATCHMAKERS ANDJEWELLERS-Continued
Ullmann & Co., J.
WATER COMPANIES
Water Works Co., Ld.
WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANTS
Blow & Co., H.
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co. Framjce Sorabjee & Co. Watson, A. S. & Co.
WOOL CLEANERS AND PACKERS
Tientsin Wool Cleaning Factory
INSURANCE OFFICES
OFFICES
Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance Company...
Albingia Assurance Company
Alliance Fire Insurance Company
Alleanza Insurance Society of Genou
Allianz Insce. Co., of Berlin (Fire) Assicurazioni Generali, Trieste
Atlas Fire Insurance Company
Baloise Fire Insurance Company, Basle
Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Company. British American Assurance Company
British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company Canton Insurance Office, Ld.
Ch. Le Jeune, Antwerp Marine Insurance Central Fire Insurance Company
Confiance Fire Insurance Company, Paris
China Mutual Life Insurance Company, Limited.. China Traders' Insurance Company, Ld.. Comité d'Assureurs de Paris
Commercial Union Assurance Company, Limited Equitable Life Assurance Society of U.S. Fatum Acci lent Insurance Company
Federal Marine Insurance Co., Limited, Zurich Fire Insurance Association
Fortuna Allgem. Versich. Act. Ges.
General Accident, Fire & Life Assur. Corp., Ld.(Fire) General Marine Insurance Co., Limited (Dresden) German Lloyd
German Lloyd Marine Insurance Company, Ld Globus Insurance Company of Hamberg (Fire) Guardian Assurance Co.
Hamburg and Bremen Underwriters
Hamburg Bremen Fire Insurance Company. Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Ld. imperial Insurance Company, Limited
Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin
Lancashire Insurance Company
Law Union and Crown Insurance Company. Liverpool and London Insurance Company Lloyd's
London Assurance Corporation.
London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company L'Union de Paris Fire Insurance Company, Ld.
L'Urbaine Paris Fire Insurance Company, Limited... Magdeburg Fire Insurance Company Manchester Assurance Company Maunheini Insurance Company, Ld.....
AGENTS
Reuter, Brockelmann & Co E. Gipperich & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co.
William Forbes & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co. Collins & Co.
H. M. Schultz& Co.
Holland-China Trading Co. Carlowitz & Co. Butterfield & Swire Jardine, Matheson & Co. Stemssen & Co. Sander, Wieler & Co. Racine, Ackerman & Co. A. E. Tipper, agent William Forbes & Co. Olivier & Cie.
Wilson & Co.
Melchers & Co. Holland-China Trading Co Bilger & Galusser A. F. Algie (sec.) H. M. Schultz & Co. Perrin, Cooper & Co. Holland-China Trading Co H. M. Schultz & Co. Carlowitz & Co. Melchers & Co. Butterfield & Swire H. M. Schultz & Co. Carlowitz & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Sander, Wieler & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. William Forbes & Co. E. Meyer & Co. William Forbes & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Collins & Co. H. Begue
Racine, Ackermann & Co
H. M. Schultz & Co. A. Walte & Co.
A. Walte & Co.
1
782
TIENTSIN
INSURANCE OFFICES-Continued
OFFICES
Manufacturers' Life Insurance Company Marine Insurance Company Netherlands Fire Insurance Company.
New Zealand Insurance Company (Fire and Marine) Norddeutsche Insurance Company
Norddeutsche Versicherungs Gesellschaft (Marine)... North British and Mercantile Insurance Company.. North China Insurance Company, Ed.. North German Fire Insurance Company Northern Assurance Company (Fire and Life) Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Nouveau Lloyd Suisse
Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corpu. Limited Palatine Insurance Company, Limited Patriotic Assurance Company Phoenix Assurance Company
Providentia Allgem. Versich. Gesellschaft, Wien Prussian National Insurance Co. (Fire & Life) Rheinisch Westphalischer Lloyd
Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation. Royal Insurance Company (Fire) ......................
Salamander Fire Insurance Company of Amsterdam Salamandra Insurance Company, St. Petersburg...... Schweiz Allgem Vers. Act. Ges. Zurich. Scottish Imperial Life Insurance Company
Scottish Union and National Insurance Company South British Fire and Mar. Ince. Co. of New Zealand South British Fire and Marine Insurance Co. (Marine) Standard Marine Insurance Company, Limited Standard Life Assurance Company State Fire Insurance Company, Limited
Sun Fire Office
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada
ACENTS
William Forbes & Co.
William Forbes & Co. Holland-China Trading Co. Mackenzie & Co. Carlowitz & Co. H. M. Schultz & Co. William Forbes & Co. Wilson & Co. Siemssen & Co. Mackenzie & Co. Wilson & Co.
H. M. Schultz & Co. Melchers & Co. Liddell, Bros. & Co. Perrin, Cooper & Co. Hatch, Carter & Co. Siemssen & Co. E. Gipperich & Co. H. M. Schultz & Co. Butterfield & Swire Collins & Co. Melchers & Co. Siemssen & Co.
H. M. Schultz & Co. H. M. Schultz & Co. Carlowitz & Co. Wilson & Co.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Butterfield & Swire Wilson & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Wilson & Co. Leykauff & Co. E. Bavier & Co.
Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance Company, Ld. Wilson & Co.
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld.. United Dutch Marine Insurance Company United Dutch Marine Insurance Company Upper Rhine Insurance Company, Mannheim Western Assurance Company, Toronto World Marine Insurance Company Yangtsze Insurance Association, Limited Yen Chai lo Insurance Co....... Yorkshire Insurance Company, York
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha E. Rousseau Siemssen & Co. Wm. Forbes & Co. William Forbes & Co. Faust & Co. Mackenzie & Co. Liddell Bros. & Co.
China Merchants' Steam Nav. Co Otto Kleemann & Co.
TAKU
沽大
Ta-ku
This village is situated at the mouth of the Pei-ho, on the southern side of the river, about sixty-seven miles from Tientsin. The land is so flat at Taku that it is difficult for a stranger to detect the entrance to the river. There are two anchorages, an outer and inner. The former extends from the Customs Junks to three miles outside the Bar, seaward; the latter from Liang-kia-yuan on the south to the Customs Jetty, Tz'chu-lin, on the north. The village is a poor one, and possesses few shops and no buildings of interest except the forts, now demolished. The only foreign residents are the employees of the Lighter Company, the Customs, and the Pilot Corporation. A railway from the adjoining town of Tungku (two miles up the river) to Tientsin was completed in 1888.
Taku is memorable on account of the engagements that have taken place between its forts and the British and French naval forces. The first attack was made on the 20th May, 1858, by the British squadron under Sir Michael Seymour, when the forts were passed and Lord Elgin proceeded to Tientsin, where on the 26th June he signed the famous Treaty of Tientsin. The second attack, which was fatally unsuccessful, was made by the British forces in June, 1859. The third took place on the 21st August 1860, when the forts were attacked from the land side and captured, the booms placed across the river destroyed, and the British ships sailed triumphantly up to Tientsin. The water on the bar ranges from about two to fourteen feet at the Spring tides. At certain states of the tide, steamers are obliged to anchor outside until there is sufficient water to cross. An experimental channel over the bar was made in 1906, having a minimum width of 100 feet, with gently sloping banks outside those limits. In October a steamer drawing 8ft. 10in. was able to pass through this channel while the depth on the Bar was only 7ft. 6 inches. The existing channel can only, however, be maintained by constant raking operations.
Taku and Tongku as naval bases have been very prominent in the history of China. In May, 1900, as the Boxer sedition came to a head, the European Powers assembled the greatest naval armament ever seen in the Eastern hemisphere, and one might almost add in the history of the World, at Taku Bar. Sir Edward Seymour, K.C.B., as Senior Naval Officer, was in command. The Admirals were called upon to protect the Legations in Peking and the foreign settlements of Tientsin, and in the second week of June, naval landing parties were sent ashore by the six European Powers, the United States and Japan. Russia, however, sent to Port Arthur for troops and landed very few sailors. On Saturday, June 9th, the situation in Peking became so alarming by the attitude of the Boxers that the Ministers wired for instant help. The message was flashed out to the fleet at midnight, and before morning a combined force of nearly 1,500 men of all nationalities was towed over the Bar, landed, and sent up to Tientsin by train, where, under Admiral Seymour's personal command, they at once entrained for Peking. Advancing as far as Lo-fa and Lang-fong, their further pussage was disputed by the Boxers in force, who were easily beaten off, but as they had torn up the line and destroyed the bridges, further advance by traiu became impossible. After June 17th, the Boxers were joined by the Imperial troops now in the rear of the Relief Column, who busied themselves by cutting up the railway, thus destroying the Admiral's communication with his base. He had now no military choice but to fight his way back to Tientsin. He had but two or three obsolete field-pieces with which to oppose the modern Krupps with the Chinese forces around Peking, and had no supply of food, as he had landed at almost a moment's notice. To have gone on and tried to cut his way through the Chinese and into the city under such circumstances would have been to court disaster, and as, even if successful, he could not possibly have returned, he would only have added to the difficulties of the Legations and besieged residents, whose supplies of food and ammunition were already perilously low. The retreat was masterly. The column came by train to the break in the line at Yangtsun, and then took to the old road, seized Hsi-ku arsenal five miles out of Tientsin native city, and stayed there till relieved on Monday, June 25th, by a column of Allied troops. On Tuesday, June 26th,
T
784
TAKU
the two columns marched back to the settlements, bringing in their wounded safely. After Admiral Seymour had left Taku, the Russian Admiral Hildebrant became senior officer.
During the week, June 10th to 16th, the general situation in Chihli became critical in the extreme, and it was a fine point to determine whether the Taku Forts command- ing the entrance of the Peiho should be seized. It will probably be a contentious ques- tion to the end of time if the ultimatum sent in by the Allied Admirals to the Comman- der on Saturday, June 16th, to hand over the Forts before next morning, precipitated the crisis in Tientsin and Peking or not. The official people in general held that it did, lay observers affirm that it made no difference; that the Imperial Government now captured by the Reactionaries was fully committed to the Boxer movement, and that the non-capture of the Forts would have involved the destruction of every foreigner and native Christian in North China, The admirals had to decide this fine point, and, with the exception of the American Officer, they took the line of men of action. After a council of war they sent in the ultimatum that they would open fire at daybreak next day if the Forts were not surrendered. Mr. Johnson, of the Taku Tug and Lighter Company and a Chinese scholar, carrying his life in his hand, delivered the ultimatum. His services have not been recognized by the British Authorities. The Commander referred the matter to Tientsin, and was ordered not only to resist but to take the initiative. He did so by opening fire at the six gunboats lying in the Tong- ku reaches of the Peiho, about 2,000 yards in a bee line above the forts (three miles by river). There is much general misapprehension about this brilliant feat of war. The allied Fleet had nothing in the world to do with it, lying as it was twelve miles distant with a shallow twelve foot bar between it and the forts. The entire weight of the business fell on six little cockleshells of gunboats-the British Algerine, French Lion, German Iltis, and the Russian Bobr, Gelek and Korietz--and two landing parties of British and Japanese numbering about 300 each. The residents of Taku village found refuge in the U.S. Monocacy, which, after getting a shell through her bows, steamed up the river out of range. Many refugees fleeing from Tientsin were on the merchant steamers at the wharves, and were under fire for some hours. The firing was somewhat wild during the darkness, but when dawn appeared, at 3.45, the gunboats, led at first by the Algerine and afterwards by the Itis, steamed down the river and took up a position close under the N. W. Fort. A single well-timed shell would have utterly destroyed any one of the six vessels, but Chinese gunnery was once more at fault. The naval guns soon mastered the heavy and modern weapons on the Forts, and before 5 a.m. the two landing parties had rushed the North-west Fort, and then proceeded along the causeway to the large North Fort at the river mouth. This was also escaladed and its great guns turned against the two fortifications on the South side of the river at close range. The whole affair was finished before 6 a.m. a large number of Chinese dead testifying to the accuracy of the Allies' fire. Four Chinese torpedo-boat destroyers were captured with conspicuous bravery by the British torpedo-boat destroyers Whiting and Fame, and distributed amongst the Allies. The demolition of the Forts was effected during 1901-2
Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
H. H. Brown, agent (Tongku)
Agencies
DIRECTORY
Tientsin Lighter Company, Limited China Navigation Co., I d."
CHINESE ENGINEERING AND MINING CO., LD.;
Tel. Ad; Maishan (Tongku)
J. H. Worth, shipping agent
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME-(Tongku)
T'surveyor-in-charge G. Knox Tidewaiters E. A. Eckert, G. Roberts, W. C. Prahl, M. Katz, D. R. Woods, T. K. Yu, M. Versini, J. E. Turner
I
Lightship "Taku"
Captain E. Nielson
Acting Second Mate-B, A. Anderson Acting Mate-N. Thus
Revenue Cruiser "Tienching"
Steam Launches "Kweishun," "Feifu"
HOTEL DU LOUVRE-French Concession,
Tongku
Mme H. Pauls, proprietress
POST OFFICE-IMPERIAL CHINESE
Officer in charge-T. A. Collaço
TAKU-PEI-TAI-HO--CHINGWANGTAO
水引沽天 Ta-ku yin shui
PILOT COMPANY, TAKU
J. Taylor, secretary
Ch. Saville, W. P. Chard, S. J. Strong,
J. W. Stavers, A. McTaggart, J. U. Gordon
TAKU CLUB
Hon. Secretary-S. H. Dorey
TAKU HOTEL
利德 Te-le
司公船駮活大
Ta-ku Po-ch'uan Kung-ssu
TAKU TUG & LIGHTER COMPANY, LIMITED.
Head Office: Tientsin; Tel. Ad: Calendar
785
Directors J. Stewart, W. A. Morling, R. K. Douglas, C. R. Morling, H. J. W. Marshall
W. T. L. Way, secretary W. S. Johnston, manager S. H. Dorey, clerk
Capt. W.S. Borrows, supt. of the Bar W. Brown, asst. supt.
A. B. Gaston, supt. engineer A. C. Crawford, engineer
Tientsin Lighter Co., Ld.
Butterfield & Swire, managers
Capt. H. H Brown, superintendent
J. B. Barclay, engineer
T. S. Morton, overseer of lighterage
PEI-TAI-HO AND CHINGWANGTAO
Pei-Tai-Ho is a watering place on the Gulf of Pechili, which the energy and enterprise of the foreign community of Tientsin have called into existence within the last few years. It lies some 22 miles S. W. by W. from Shanhaik wan, where the Great Wall meets the sea, in latitude 39 deg. 49 min. N., longitude 119 deg. 30 min. E., and is distant from Tientsin by railway 157 miles. Nine miles distant is the harbour of Ching- wangtao, which is practically ice-free. Under the auspices of the (British) Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Chingwangtao is being made into a safe, deep-water harbour, giving access in all weathers to ocean-going steamers all the year round: the necessary works to ensure this end have been pushed forward, and vessels drawing 18 feet can now be bertlied at the jetty. The original conception of this port was that of an outlet for the coal which is being worked in the hinterland, but the trade statis- tics show that the port is principally used as a winter jetty for Tientsin, and as such it is growing in popularity and importance. Another winter function of the port is the transhipment from steamer to railway and vice versa of trade passing by Shanhai- kwan to and from any place in the direction of Newchwang and bevond. This is a particularly promising feature of the port. The Customs Commissioner in his Report for 1908 pointed out that Chingwangtao is also doing very well as a distributer of imports on its own account in its neighbourhood. The boundaries of this Treaty Port extend along the foreshore of Shallow Bay for nine miles, and are then spread out as to include the 3 or 4 square miles on which the foreigners have settled at Pei-Tai-Ho. The fact that the watering-place lies within the port limits gives legal title to all land purchase, and will ensure some sort of foreign municipal control in the near future. An attempt has been made to obtain this from the Imperial Government; meanwhile the foreign community has made temporary arrangements and has submitted to voluntary taxation for combined sanitation. The net value of the independent trade of Chinwangtao, that is to say, exclusive of Tientsin Railway Cargo, in 1906 was Tls. 8,612,519 Pei-Tui-l at present is accessible only by rail from Peking, Tientsin, Taku and Newchwang, though the journey extends over two entire days from the Manchurian suaport. The railway station lies from four to six miles from the various settlements, and the journey is made by chair, donkey, or walking. Carriages cannot be used. There are six miles of beach of every possible variety, and the bathing is excellent from the middle of May to the first of October. The country rises at once from the shore to undulating uplands; and most of the houses are at an elevation of fifty or a hundred feet above sea level. At the west end the country is diversified by the Lotus Hills, a series of granite rocks which come close to the sea, and are an off-shoot from the Pittah Hill, twelve miles inland. The Lotus peaks rise to about 400 feet. The soil is chiefly a sand formed by disintegrated granite; it is very dry, fertile and non-malarial. The water is excellent. In 1896 there were about twenty tenements, in 1899 about one hundred; in July, 1899, the population was slightly over four hundred, chiefly from Tientsin, Peking and the mission stations of Chih-li. There were three major and two minor settlements; West End, Rocky Point and East Cliff being the designations of the former, but the
786
PEI-TAI-HO-CHINGWANGTAO-NEWCHWANG
settlements were wholly destroyed on and after 20th June, 1900. Most of the Tientsin and Peking laymen were then at West End; it had the advantage of proximity to the Hills and the Station, and had more pleasing scenery near at hand. Its demerits were a somewhat tame beach nothing but sand-and inferior bathing. The latter is due to stinging medusa or jelly fish, and to the nearness of the River Tai, which often discolours the water: both demerits have, however, been exaggerated. The missionaries were chielly at Rocky Point; there they had an Association which regulated their land tenure, sanitation, Sunday observance, etc. A strong body of laymen settled to the west of this 'Association' settlement, attracted by the central position, better beach and bathing. The East Cliff was originally a mission investment, but in time became a general settlement. Some thirty or forty foreign visitors who were in residence when the Boxer cyclone burst were taken off by the boats of H.M.S. Humber, and conveyed to Chefoo in June: immediately after which the natives joined a small party of soldiers in first looting and then burning every house in the place. The natives carried off every scrap of the building material that was portable; even the bricks and dressed stone, and in some cases they actually dug up the foundations. Their action was due to greed and not to anti-foreign malice-as a matter of fact, they had always been on good terms with their foreign neighbours, to whose presence they entirely owed their prosperity. The I-Ho-Chuan or Boxer sect is not known to have had any following in the district. The people simply believed the foreigners were to be exterminated, and would never return; and in this belief resolved to resume possession of their lands and as much else as was possible. During 1901-2 the German forces encamped at Pei-tai-ho and made roads a small gauge steam tramway was also constructed from the Railway Station to Rocky Point. In the early spring of 1902 many of the houses were rebuilt and during the summer quite a number of families were in residence for a short season. The rains are heavy in July and early August, but the sandy soil enables one to be out of doors at once after a heavy rain. The temperature varies from 4° to 10.* below that of Peking and Tientsin in the height of summer; there are no hot winds, as the prevailing breeze is nearly south and is sea-borne. During the summer the number of visitors in residence are between 300 and 400, including several from Shanghai,
NEWCHWANG
莊牛 子營
Niu-chwang Ying-tsz
Newchwang, in latitude 40 deg. 40 min. 38 sec. N., longitude 122 deg. 15 min. 30 sec. E. was opened to foreign trade in May, 1864, and was for more than forty years the only Treaty- port in Manchuria. Manchuria comprises the three Provinces of Fêngtien, Kirin and Heilungchiang, and is commonly called by the Chinese the "Tung San Sheng "or the Three Eastern Provinces. Newchwang is situated in the most southern of these three pro- vinces Fêngtien, also known as Sheng Ching-and lies about thirteen miles from the month of the Liao River, which empties into the Gulf of Liaotung, a continuation of the Gulf of Pechili. The proper name of the port is Yingkow, and not Newchwang, which is situated 90 li (30 miles) further up the river. The old town of Newchwang was designated by Treaty to be opened to trade, but the first foreigners finding Ying; kow more conveniently situated, and more adapted in every respect for the trade, quietly installed themselves there and got over the difficulty by the simple process of changing the name of Yingkow into that of Newchwang!
purposes
of
The country in the immediate vicinity of the port is flat and unpicturesque in the extreme, and the town itself has nothing in the way of attractions for the traveller. The climate, from the foreigner's point of view, is one of the best in China, the sum mers being comparatively cool, while the winters are cold and bracing. The hottest summer temperature rarely exceeds 85 (Far), but cold blasts from the North puli down the "mercury" in winter months often to 10 and 15° below zero (Far.). The river is generally frozen over for three months of the year, but navigation is practically suspended for four months, from December to the following April. Formerly Now
NEWCHWANG
787
chwang was shut off from the rest of the world during winter, but the advent of rail- ways has changed all this. The Imperial Railways of North China, through their branch line from Koupangtzu, maintain daily communication with Tientsin, Peking and Mukden; and the South Manchurian Railway, through its branch line from Tashih- chiao, maintains daily communication with Dalny, Port Arthur, Mukden, Tiehling and Kuanchengtze. At the latter place the Chinese Eastern Railway connects for Harbin and Europe by the Trans-Siberian Railway.
The Chinese population of Yingkow is estimated at 52,000 and the foreign popula- tion in 1908 numbered 2,538 souls, of which 2,396 were of the Japanese nationality.
The value of the trade of the port during the year 1908 was Hk. Tls. 41,199,047, against Hk. Tls. 32,294,663 in 1907, and Hk. Tls. 44,482,001 in 1906. Until a few years back Newchwang had the monopoly of the trade of Manchuria, but now she has power- ful competitors in Harbin in the North, and Dalny in the South. In spite of the com- petition she is holding her own and the trade for 1909 promises to be the largest on record. The chief articles of export are agricultural products-beans, millet, maize, etc., and their by-products beancakes, bean oil and saunshu, with a fair amount of bristles, ginseng, native medicines, wild and refuse silk and skins and furs thrown in. Another article of export has lately arisen in Fushun coal, and it is rumoured that the South Manchurian Railway, finding the cost of laying down the coal at Newchwang much cheaper than at Dalny, intends developing the export trade from Newchwang.
The greater part of the export trade here is with Japan and the Southern Chinese ports, but during 1909 some direct shipments of beans and beancake were made to Europe. There is considerable talk about the improvement of the upper reaches of the Liao River and the deepening f the Bar at its mouth, and if any such scheme could be successfully carried out, there is little doubt that the future of Newchwang would be assured, and increased prosperity of the port would result.
記瑞 Jui-chi
DIRECTORY
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co.-Tel. Ad: Kar-
berg
H. Finscher, signs per pro.
E. S. Leeds
F. Radloff
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd American & Oriental Line Weir's North China Line Messageries Maritimes
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld. Commercial Union Assce. Co., Ld. China Traders' Insurance Co. Ld. Aachen-Munich Fire Insce. Co. Ltd. London Assurance Corporation South British Fire & Marine Inse Co. Allianz Fire Insce. Co. of Berlin
ASTOR HOUSE HOTEL-Tel. Ad: Astor
W. S. Ward,
manager
Chee-chang
BANDINEL & Co., Merchants and Shipping
Agents; Teleph. No. 26
F. D. Farmer
G. Farmer
P. Farmer
C. John L. Rama
M. Yamanichi Y. T. Kwo
Agencies
National Bank of China, Limited Nippon Yusen Kaisha
China Shipowners' Association Norddeutscher Lloyd
Northern Pacific Steamship Company Dodwell & Co.'s Steamers
Russian Steam Navigation Company Baltic Steamship Co., of Riga Pacific Steamship Co., "Energia" Transatlantic Transport Insce. Co., Ld. Continental Insurance Company Imperial Marine Insurance Company Hanseatischer Lloyd Internationaler Lloyd Sun Fire Office
Standard Life Assurance Company Chee Chang Yuen Oil Mill
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ltd.
Boston Steamship Coy. Boston Tow Boat Coy.
State Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Yorkshire Insurance Co. North China Steamship Co. Java-China-Japan Lijn
The Batavia Sea & Fire Insurance Co. The Java Sea & Fire Insurance Co. The East India Sea & Fire Insee. Co. The Netherlands Lloyd
Yangtsze Insurance Co., Ld.
788
NEWCHWANG
司公烟美英
BRITISH-AMERICAN TOBACCO Co., LD.
A. T. Heuckendorff, district manager
來遠 Yuen-lai
BUSH BROTHERS, Merchants and Com-
mission Agents
B. H. Betts
E. A. Sargent, signs per pro.
P. F. Heisch
H. C. Trivedi
R. Schofield
Agencies
Canadian Pacific Railway
Pacific Mail Steamship Company Occidental and Oriental S. S. Co.
Peninsular and Oriental S. Nav. Co. Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
China Merchants' Steam Nav. Co. "Glen" Line of Steamers
Lloyd's
Germanischer Lloyd's, Berlin
Lloyd Allemand Compagnie D' Assce.
á Berlin
Nouveau Lloyd Suisse
Ocean Accident and Guarantee Asso-
ciation
Underwriting and Agency Association. Deutsche Lloyd Transport Ver. Act.Ges. British Dominions Marine Ince. Co., Ld. Nord-Deutsche Versicherungs-Gesells-
chaft (Fire Insurance)
International Sleeping Car & Express
Trains Co.
South Manchurian Railway Passenger
Ticket Agency
Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada
Dalny Branch
F. J. Bardens, signs per pro.
古太 Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
W. F. Harley, signs per pro.
D. Abbey
C. Edgecumbe
H. D. Bell
Agencies
China Navigation Company, Id. Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. China Mutual Steam Navgn. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld. Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co.
of Hongkong, Ld.
Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. London and Lancashire Fire Insurance
Co., L
Palatine Insurance Co., Ld. Guardian, Assurance Co., Ld. Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld.
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION Co.
Bush Bros., agents
CLUBS
MASONIC CLUB
F. A. Gee, secretary
NEWCHWANG Clur
C. V. Tanner, secretary
CONSULATES
AMERICAN, Consulate
Consul-Fred. O. Fisher
Vice Consul--C. L. L. Williams Marshal--C. E. Sargent
DENMARK, Consulate
Acting Consul-A, Beltchenko
FRANCE, Vice Consulate (with jurisdic
tion over the three provinces of Man- churia)
Elève Vice-Consul--H. Dozon
門衙事頜國德大
Ta-te-kuo beng-shih ya-měn
GERMANY
Acting Vice-Consul-J. Jaspersen
門衙事頜國英大
To Ying-kuo ling-shih ya-men
GREAT BRITAIN
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY, Consulate
Acting Consul-F. C. Wilkinson
Constable-J. Cook
門衙事頜國本日大
Ta-jih-pen-kuo Ling-shih Fa-mên
JAPAN, Consulate
Consul-K. Ohta
Chancellor K. Wakasugi
Do. -Y. Shimidzu
Elève interpreter-Y. Nodzu
NETHERLANDS, Consulate
F. D. Farmer
NORWAY, Consulate
Vice-Consul-F. D. Farmer
RUSSIA, Consulate
Consul A. Beltchenko
Vice-Consul J. Bobrovnikoff
SWEDEN, Vice-Consulate
B. Carlos
Shan Hai-kwan CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME Commissioner-F. A. Carl Assistants-F. W. Lyons, S. F. Wright (Nat. Utoms), C. B. W. Moore, Y. Hara (Native Customs), T. Aida Medical Officer-C. C. de Burgh Daly Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-
M. B. J. Strom
NEWCHWANG
Boat Officer-H. G. Wittsack Examiners-C. A. Swanstrom, F. R.
Borioni
Assistant Examiners-H. R. Gerulat, A. F. W. Voigt, K. Mackenzie (Nat. Customs)
Tidewaiters-F. A. Gee, A. G. Mc- Loughlin, U. F. Croawell, J. P. Jensen, E. Fasting, F. Luber (Nat. Customs), E. A. C. Friedrichsen Lightship "Newchwang"
Acting Captain-H. D. Holst
Mate M. Olaüssen
Acting Mate A. H. Hansen
Buoy Tender "Daphne"
Acting Captain-A. Andreasen
局政郵清大
Tai Ching Yu Chéng Chi
Post Office Imperial Chinese
Postal Officer A. Cavaliere
Mee-kee
DADY MEHERVANJEE & Co., Commission Agents, General Provision Importers, Wine and Spirit Merchants, Tobac
conists, etc.; Tel. Ad: Mehervanjee
Mehervanjee Dady
Mehervanjee Biccajee (Bombay)
Faly Victor
大地 Dady
DADY MEHERVANJEE & BROTHERS, General
Importers, Merchants and Commission
Agents; Tel. Ad: Dady
Mehervanjee Dady
Mehervanjee Bhiccajee (Bombay) Faly Victor
DALY, C. C. DE BURGH, M.B., B.CH. Medical
practitioner
EDGAR, J., Merchant and Commission Agent
E. Edgar (igns per pro.)
安泰 Tai-An
ETABLISSMENTS DE TONGKOU
G. Colinet, agent
FORD & SHAW, Architects
F. H. Ford
K. M. Shaw (Tientsin)
太仁
FUCHS, HARRY, General Variety Stores
J. Begelman
HOTEL
ASTOR HOUSE; Tel. Ad: Astor
W. S. Ward, manager
IMPERIAL RAILWAYS OF NORTH CHINA
D). Kelleher, traffic inspector
789
W. M. Bergin B.A., B.E., A.M.L.C.E.,
assistant engineer
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., LD.
W. R. C. Ford G. W. Henley Agencies
The Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. The Canton Insce. Office, Ld. (Marine)
The New Zealand Insurance Co., Ld.
The "Indra" Steamship Line
The Shire Line of Steamers
茂德 Teh-mow
JASPERSEN, JULIUS, Import and Export,
Commission agent
W. Droege, assistant
Agencies
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ltd., London Globus Insurance Co., Hamburg,
Preussische
National
Gesellschaft Stettin
Versicherungs
Scottish Union and National Insce. Co. The China Mutual Life Insee. Co., Ltd. Norddeutsche Versicherungs Gesellschaft
Hamburg
Germania Brauerei, A. G., Tsingtau Verein Hamburger Assecuradeure
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
KOMAN CATHOLIC MISSION Dans le
Province de Tinglien
Mgr. Choulet, Vicaire Apostolique, Mms. Viullemot, Lamasse, Baretto, Hérin, Corbel, Beaulieu, Villeneuve Canhiere J, Perreau, Etellin, Huchet, Canhierė A, Leausflet, Chometon, Remise, Perès, Mail- land, Montmaison, Saffroy, Soumireu, Daval, Carrère, Petiot, Sage, Guilton Goytino, Darles, Blois, Chabanel, Roger, Curier, Moncadé, Toudie, Lacroix Dans le Provinces de Kirin et Heiloing
Kiang
Mgr. Lalouyer, Vicaire Apostolique Mm Monnier, Landrin, Samoy, Cubizolles, Laréissière, Roubin, Delpal, Faure, Mailland, Gérard, Bourles, Mutillod, Monestier, Lacquois, Stoeffler, Dubas, Guérin, Marill, Obin, Tlemiet, Lebel, Gaspais, Revaux
San-ching.
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA; Tel. Ad: Mitsui
B. Taniguchi manager
Y. Ichikawa, signs per pro. Y. Inouye (Mukden) H. Ito (Tiehling)
S. Hasegawa (Changchung)
790
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
District manager-R. H. Scott
NEWCHWANG
NEWCHWANG CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Committee W. F. Harley (chairman), Wm Ford (vice-chairman), C. Mc- Caslin, H. Finscher, F. Frisk, C. V.
Tanner (secretary and treasurer)
NEWCHWANG FENCING CLUB
Dr. Phillips, hon. secretary
李同 Tung Fu
NEWCHWANG WHARF & GODOWN Co., LD,
Tel. Ad: Wharfdown
Irvin Thomson, manager
司公船輪清北
NORTH CHINA STEAMSHIP CO.
Bandinel & Co., agents
F. D. Farmer, general manager
director
C. John,
NORTHERN STAR OF CHINA LODGE, THE;
No. 2075, E. C.
W. M.-J. H Morgan S. W.-C. Thunder J. W.-K. S. Mckenzie C.--Rev. J. Webster T.-B. Carlos
S.-F. A. Gee
S. D.-F. A. Friedrichsen
J. D.-F. Luber
D. C.-F. A. Carl
St.-F. Borioni
St.-J. Marshall
I, G.-C. F. Croawell
PENSION DE LA STE. PROVIDENCE
Sister Rosine Bonhomme, superin-
tendent, and 14 sisters
ET2*1 Hing-kan hoich-tzu-fang PILOTS NEWCHWANG PILOT COMPANY
P. F. Lorenzen
Y. Saito
D. F. F. Lawrence A. Partridge
F. H. Nuttall
"Halcyon," "Ariel"
J. Edgar, agent
KENA Tai-ching yu-cheug-chu
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postal Officer--E. A. Cavaliere
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL JAPANESE; Teleph.
No. 53.
Postmaster-Shintaro Murata
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK
G. A. Tisdall, signs per pro.
A. Malevigne
B. Carlos, cashier
do.
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK
C. McCaslin, manager
J. H. Morgan
L. D. Fawcett
來遠
司公險保壽人明永理經
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA;
Head Office for the Three Manchurian Provinces.
Bush Brothers, general agents for
Manchuria
B. H. Betts, general manager for
Manchuria and Korea Hugh Gunn, Moukden district F. Wolpovitch, Harbin district F. Romero, Harbin district F. J. Bardens, Dalny district C. Mortimer, Shanhaik wan district
Tung Shun
THOMSON, IRVIN, Merchant and Com. Agent
Agencies
China Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Tientsin Iron Works
VAN Ess & Co., A., Merchants
A. Van Ess
C. G. Gunn, assistant
Agency
The China Mutual Life Ins. Co.
THUNDER, C., M.S.A., architect and surveyor
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LIMITED
Y. Sugihara, manager
S. Hongo, sub-manager
O. Kohno
S. Kawamoto
K. Yayo
R. Okawara
S. Okudai
S. Nakajo
S. Kagawa
M. Higuchi
S. Suzuki
I. Yamada
J. Obama S. Kitagawa K. Nakano T. Kajitani
NEWCHWANG-MANCHURIAN TRADE CENTRES-MUKDEN
Bate, Mrs. R.
Beltchenko, Mrs. A.
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Ford, Mrs.
Fuchs, Mrs. E. C. A. Harley, Mrs. W. F. Hunt, Mrs.
Lawrence, Mrs. D. F. F.
Lawrence, Mrs. H. S. Ledeboer, Mrs. A.
Betts, Mrs.
Bergin, Mrs.
Carl, Mrs.
Carlos, Mrs.
Carson, Mrs.
Cavaliere, Mrs.
Lyons, Mrs.
Daly, Mrs.
Dunn, Mrs.
McCaslin, Mrs.
Ota, Mrs. K.
Edgar, Mrs.
Farmer, Mrs.
Partridge, Mrs.
Fawcett, Mrs.
Sargent, Mrs. E. A.
Schulz, Mrs.
Smith, Mrs.
Stewart, Mrs. R, J. Sugihara, Mrs, Sprent, Mrs. Thunder, Mrs.
Tisdall, Mrs. van Ess, Mrs. Voight, Mrs.
Wilkinson, Mrs. F. E. Williams, Miss Wittsack, Mrs.
791
MANCHURIAN TRADE CENTRES
In addition to Mukden, the Treaties made with China in 1903 by the United States and Japan secured the opening of Antung and Tatungkow in Manchuria. By an additional agreement made between China and Japan in December, 1905, the following inland places in Manchuria were opened to trade on the dates specified-September 10, 1906, Tich-ling, Tong-chiang-tzu and Fakumen; on October 8, Hsin-min Fu; on December 17, Manchuli, Harbin, Ch'ang-ch'un (K'uan-ch'èng-tzu) and Kirin; on December 19, Tsitsilur (Pu-k'uei), the capital of the northern province of fiei-lung- chiang; and on June 28, 1907, the remaining seven places-Feng-huang-ch'ông (Ting), Liao-yang, Ninguta, Hun-ch'un, Sansing, Hailar and Aihun-were declared open as a preliminary step prior to the adoption of special settlement regulations. Only at Harbin and Antung are Foreign Consulates established.
MUKDEN
鼎穆
Mo-din
Mukden, the capital of the province of Manchuria and the ancient seat of the present reigning dynasty of China, was nominally opened to international residence and trade by the Commercial Treaty concluded by the United States with China in 1903, but it was not really opened until 1906, for in the Russo-Japanese war the city became one of the strongholds of the Russian forces, from which, however, they were eventually driven by the advancing Japanese army. When peace was concluded and the troops were withdrawn the trade possibilities of the province began to receive increased attention. The principal trade of Mukden has been in grain, such as beans and millet, and it has also been a curing centre for furs. Considerable indirect business has been done with the city in European textiles and hardware, sugar and kerosene oil. When foreign merchants begin to establish themselves in the Manchurian capital a steady development in this trade may be expected. Though consulates have been established, no arrangements liad been made to the end of 1909 for the establish- ment of a Customs-house.
Mukden is situated in slightly undulating country a few miles north
of the Hunho, a tributary of the river Liao, about 110 miles north-east of the port of New- chwang, and has a station on the Chinese Eastern Railway 1 miles to the west of the city. The city is trebly walled. The outer wall, which is circular and built of mud, encloses the suburbs and is 13 miles in circumference; the inner town, which is a mile square, is protected by a stone wall thirty-five feet high and fifteen wide on the top; it is pierced by eight gates, two on each side with high towers above them; another wall enclosos the ancient palace which stands in the centre of the inner city, like the palace at Peking. The streets of Mukden are broad and straight and the city has the appearance of being a busy place. The population is estimated at about 150,000. Nurachu, the founder of the Manelu dynasty, established himself at Mukden in 1625, and bis tomb, about seven miles east of the city, is an object of great interest. The great
792
MUKDEN
mound and funeral hall are enclosed within a high wall pierced by one large gateway which holds three arched portals, and the avenue of approach is spanned by two lofty stone arches elaborately sculptured. Two massive couchant lions guard the portal. There are many other objects of Manchu historical interest in the town and its vicinity. Accommodation for foreign visitors is at present very limited. There is a small hotel kept in semi-foreign style by Chinese called the Hai Tien Chun. Recently two small hotels in foreign style have been opened inside the city- the Astor House and Manchurian Hotel. There is also a semi-foreign hotel kept by Japanese situated close to the Railway station.
Mukden has long been an important centre of missionary activity. The terms upon which the town is opened to international trade had not been definitely settled up to the time of the publication of this volume. The Chinese wish to confine foreign merchants, as regards residence and trade, to a certain area outside the west gate near the railway station. This has not been agreed to by the Treaty Powers concerned, and Japanese and other foreign merchants are residing and trading within the town. Two vernacular newspapers are published in the city, the Sheng King Shih Poo and the Tung Soy Sheng Kung Pao. The four principal streets of the town are being macadamised and a good road has been made to the railway station; great improvements also are being made in police and sanitary measures as well as in the repairs of Government buildings and the walls of the town.
Sui-kee
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co.
Agencies
DIRECTORY
Commercial Union Assce. Co., Ld. Aachen Munich Fire Insce. Co.
Allianz Insurance Co., of Berlin
The Netherlands Fire Life Insce. Co.
ASTOR HOUSE HOTEL
M. Diedering, proprietor
BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO Co., Ld.; Tel.
Ad: Powhattan, Mukden
A. T. Henckendorff, district manager
for Manchuria
J. A. Brown
S. W. Purser
W. D'Arcy Hawkshaw
E. Arney (Kirin)
W. Hamill (Newchang) C. Lorenzen
E. O. Drake
CONSULATES
AMERICA
Acting Consul-Genl.-Frederick D.
Cloud
Marshall-M. G. Faulkner
GREAT BRITAIN
Acting Consul-Genl.-Robert Willis Vice Consul-V. L. Savage
FRANCE
Vice Consulate (with jurisdiction over
the three provinces of Manchuria) Vice-ConsulF. Berteaux Elève Vice-Consul-H. Dozon
GERMANY
Consul-Dr. Heintges
Interpreter-Dr. Fr. Siebert
Secretary-H. Witte
館事領總國帝本日大天泰在
JAPAN
Acting Consul-General-C. Koike
Elève-Consul-S. Sawada
Chancelier-S. Fukasawa
Do. -Z. Yamamoto
Do.
-Y. Nahano
Elève Interprete-R. Kasuya
Inspectors of Police T. Sasaki, R.
Swamoto, K. Yamaguchi
RUSSIA
Consul General-A. N. Grouchotsky Vice-Consul-V. Nikitine Civil Engineer--W. R. Hughes Architect and Surveyor-F. Howard
Fond
CUSTOMS
Commissioner-C.A.V. Bowra (attached
to Provincial Foreign Office)
Clerk and Secretary-King Yoon A¤ Writer-Li Hu
DUNN, E. C. A., B.A., B.E., Engineer to Kwan Cheng Tze and Kirin Provincial
Governments
FUCHS, HARRY, General Variety Store
Max. Fuchs, signs per pro.
MANCHURIA HOUSE HOTEL
Harry Fuchs, proprietor
MITHUI BUSSAN KAISHA
T. Yendo
K. Tsuji T. Hattori
K. Morita
K. Uyetani
M. Nagahara
MUKDEN-ANTUNG
MUSTARD & Co., General Merchants; Tel.
Ad: Mustard
A. T. Henckendorff, representative S. W. Purser
Agencies
South British Assurance Co. of New
Zealand
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld.
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LD., THE
E. Ono, manager T. Isobe, sub-manager Y. Uyeda
T. Nakamura
M. Sato
M. Yamasaki
H. Tonegawa
M. Mitsuhashi
1. Kageyama
MISSIONS
793
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Mgr. Choulet, Bishop of Zela, Apostolic Vicar de la Manchuria, Meridionale R. P. Ramasse, pro. vicaire
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postal Com'ner.-W. C. Haines Watson Acting Deputy Postmaster-E. A.
Schaumloeffel
Assistants-J. Frost, G. J. Beytagli Act. District Inspector-R. Forzinette Postal Officers-R. Prokopec (Harbin),
H. Marshall (Kuanchengtyu), A. Ca- valiere (Newchwang), P. Manners, (Kirin), A. von Wittemberski Architect and Surveyor-F. Howard-
Ford
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL JAPANESE
Director--S. Takagi
Agricultural-E. C. Parker Expert F. Tomhave
Electrical Engineer- G. Arnold
ANTUNG
東安
An-tung
The treaty port of Antung was opened to international trade by the Commercial Treaty between the United States and China of 1903, but, owing to the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese war, it was not till the spring of the year 1907 that the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs established a station here. Antung is situated on the right or Chinese bank of the Yulu River, 30 miles from its mouth. The Chinese native town has a population of some 20,000 during the winter, which is swelled to perhaps three times that number during the busy months when the port is open. The floating Chinese population are chiefly emigrants from Shantung. There is also a Japanese population of some 5,000, occupying a settlement with an area of about a square mile, which is surrounded by aram- part and a moat to keep out the summer floods and is laid with good roads. The river is closed to navigation by ice from about the end of November to the end of March. The staple exports of Antung are timber, wild raw silk, wild silk cocoons, beancake and bean products; flour and oil are largely imported. The Yalu battlefield is some 10 miles further up the river and a splendid panorama of the surrounding country, embracing a fine stretch of the Yalu may be obtained from the sunimit of Tiger Hill, which was the position occupied by the Russians before the battle. Wulungpei, ten miles distant from Antung, is a favourite resort on account of its hot springs. Antung is connected by railway with Mukden. The railway is a light one of 28 inches gauge and the journey to Mukden, passing the trade-mart of Fenghuangcheng and crossing over some remarkable mountain passes, notably the Motienling, is accomplished in two days. New Wiju, a mile below Antung on the Korean or left bank bank of the Yalu, is the terminus of the railway from Bout. This is a standard gauge railway and Seoul is reached in 15 hours from Antung. The river at Antung is navigable for steamers drawing 12 feet of water, when the tides are favourable, int the channel is a constantly shifting one and erosion and silting often interfere seriously with navigation. There are several small Japanese steamers of 400 tous plying between Antung and Chefoo, Dalny and Chemulpo. The larger ships anchor as a rule just below Yongampo, the Korean port at the mouth of the Yalu, or near Tatungkow, which is situated on the Chinese side and has a certain importance in connection with the lumber trade.
794
ANTUNG-HARBIN
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, JAPANESE
President T. Oba
Vice-President-K. Misaki
DIRECTORY
Standing Committee-T. Takahashi, Y. Kawaii, T. Fujihira, W. Shimo- mura, T. Hirano
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
Acting Vice-Consul- R. Willis (Resid-
ing at Mukden)
JAPAN
Vice-Consul--Morüche Kilee UNITED STATES
Consul-Frederick D. Cloud
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissioner-L. S. Palen Assistants-A. Casati, K. B. Surh, R.
Watanabe Tidesurveyor-A. Morrison
Assistant Examiner-W. R. Finlay,
(absent)
Tidewaiters-S. Otani, S. Fujimoto H. Yabashi, S. Miyasaki, T. Kawa-
hara, Y. Suzuki, M. Nanbu Tatungkow Station-
T. Ebara, assistant in charge Tidewaiters E. Brodd, W. A. Skuse
JAPANESE FIRMS, &c.
Dai Ichi Ginko Fifty-eight Bank Yokohama Specie Bank Akita & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Okura & Co.
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Agents for Nippon Yusen Kaisha
MISSIONS (See Missionary Directory)
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Sub-Dist. Officer-Woo Tien Tze
Sei-chang
CARL WOLTER & Co., Merchants; Tel. Ad:
Barbarossa
Carl Wolter (Hamburg) Paul Baumann (Chemulpo) Paul Schirbaum
do.
Hermann Henkel, do.
G. Meyer
Agencies
Yangtsze Fire Ince. Co., Ld. Hamburg Amerika Linie
Norddeutscher Lloyd
隆怡 Yi-Loong
SHAW, GEO. L.; Tel. Ad: Shaw
Geo. L. Shaw
T. K. Shiu
B. H. Lee
Agencies
Maatschappij tot Mijn-Bosch en Land- wouexploitatie in Langkat, Ld. (George McBain)
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. China Navigation Co., Ld. Ocean Steamship Co., Lal. China Mutual S. N. Co. Glen Line of Steamers
London & Lancashire Fire Ince. Co. Royal Exchange Assce. Corporation Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
Canton Insurance Office, Ld.
China Sugar Refining Co., Ld.
China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld.
YALU FORESTRY COMPANY
Managing Directors-M. Hashiguchi,
Hutsungying
HARBIN
Harbin, the junction of the railways from Irkutsk to Vladivostock, and from Harbin to Kwanchengtze, where it joins the Japanese line to Dalny, is made the seat of a Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs House to control the railway traffic.
Millions of of money have been spent in building operations at Harbin during the past few years by the Russians, and Harbin has grown in a wonderful manner.
DIRECTORY
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
Acting Consul General-R. Willis
(Residing at Mukden)
RUSSIA
Consul General-N. M. Poppe
Vice-Consul-L. Brodiansky
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul Roger S. Green (absent) Vice-Consul in Charge-Gordon Pad-
dock
Interpreter-William Morton
PORT ARTHUR
Lu-shun
JJ
Port Arthur, at the point of the "Regent's sword, or Liaotung Peninsula, was formerly China's chief naval arsenal, but was captured by the Japanese in the war with China in 1894 and its defences and military works destroyed. In 1898, when Russia obtained a lease of Port Arthur and Talienwan she fortified the former, making it into a great naval and military stronghold.
By the time the war between Russia and Japan broke out, an anchorage for battleships had at great cost been provided in the western harbour, and the hills surrounding the harbour had been so strongly fortified that Port Arthur had come to be regarded as an impregnable fortress. It was on the night of February 8th, 1904, that the Japanese squadron under Admiral Togo made its first attack on Port Arthur and succeeded in inflicting substantial injuries to the Russian ships. But the strength of the land defences and the dangers of a mine-strewn channel prevented the Japanese admiral from following up his success. He resolved, as the next best thing, to block the entrance to the harbour, and in this endeavour several old merchant ships and a few score of heroic lives were sacrificed, but none of the attempts proved entirely successful. It was not until May, 1904, that Port Arthur was beseiged by the Japanese land forces under General Nogi, and from then onwards down to the capitulation of the fortress on January 1st, 1905, there were repeated conflicts of a most sanguinary character. When on the 5th December, 1904, the Japanese army, after many unavailing attempts, succeeded at last in capturing 203-Meter Hill they obtained the key to the position. From this point of vantage they bombarded the Russian ships in the harbour, and sank or disabled every one of them early on the 8th of December. Thereafter Erlungshan Fort, Signal Hill and other minor forts were captured, but not without great loss of life on both sides, and General Stoessel, recognising the hopeless- ness of his position, proposed surrender, as before stated, on New Year's Day, 1905. The terms of capitulation allowed officers to bear side-arms and to return home on parole. The prisoners delivered to General Nogi were 878 officers and 23,491 men about half the number being sick or wounded. General Stoessel decided to give parole and return home, but other prominent generals and one admiral preferred to be sent to Japan as prisoners. The booty delivered included the occupation of 59 permanent forts, 546 guns, including 54 large calibre, 149 medium and 343 small calibre, 82,670 cannon balls, 30,000 kilos of ammunition, 35,252 rifles, 1,920 horses, four battleships, not including the Sevastopol, which was entirely sunk, two cruisers, 14 gunboats, and destroyers; 10 steamers, etc., besides 35 small vessels.
Port Arthur (called by the Japanese Riojun), is now the headquarters of the Japanese civil and military administration in the province of Kwantung. The town is divided into two parts, the old and the new. The old or east part is a business town existing from the Chinese régime, and the port admiralty, naval yard, Red Cross hospital, captured arms museum, the fortress commander's office, local civil government office, and the high and district courts, are located there. The new or west part was a poor village when the Russians entered into occupation. They erected here many fine buildings, among them being the Kwantung Government office, the naval hospital, naval barracks, and the Yamato Hotel, &c. As a memorial of the Japanese soldiers who fell in the assault on Monument Hill which commands the harbour, a high tower has been erected at the suggestion of Admiral Togo and General Nogi. The climate is bracing, and though the winter from December to February is cold the harbour is free from ice. March, April and May are lovely months, as the surrounding hills and fields are covered with verdure and flowers. June, July and August constitute the wet season, and are rather warm, though not so warm as other cities in Manchuria, as the sea breezes temper the heat. The rain is not sufficient to inconvenience travellers much, and in fact Port Arthur at this time of year attracts many visitors, who enjoy the sea bathing under the famous Golden Hill. September, October and November form a perfect autumn with mild climate, and there are abundant supplies of fresh fruits.
There is a branch line of the South Manchuria Railway, and through the junction (station Ch'ou Shui) several trains run daily between Port Arthur and Dairen. The journey occupies only one hour and a half by train. Drainage and waterworks are heing constructed and the place is also well lighted with electric light. The population of the town according to the latest returns is 13,044, including 5,882 Japanese (exclusive of the military officers and men), 7,145 Chinese and 17 of other nationalities.
796
PORT ARTHUR-DAIREN
KWANTUNG GOVERNMENT
Governor-General and Commander-in-Chief-General VISCOUNT Y. OSHIMA
Private Secretary--M. Takahashi Adjutant Captain-K.Noda
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
T. Shirani, civil governor
U. Ouchi, chief of general affairs T. Sato, chief of police affairs
U. Ouchi, acting chief of foreign affairs C. Royama, chief of financial affairs K. Yamaji, chief of public works
S. Irizawa, chief of correspondence
section
J. Yoshimura, counsellor
T. Kurihara, prison governor
ARMY DEPARTMENT
Major-General K. Hoshino, chief of
the staff
Lieut-General A. Saisho, commander
of the fortress
RIOJUN NAVAL STATION Vice-Admiral Baron S. Tomioka, com-
mander-in-chief
Rear-Admiral Y. Egashira, chief of
the staff
ROI UN HIGHER TECHNICAL SCHOOL
T. Shirani, director
GOVERNMENT MIDDLE SCHOOL T. Katsuura, chief
ROIJUN OBSERVATORY S. Mizuuchi, acting chicf
ROIJUN WATER WORKS OFFICE K. Yamaji, chief
ROIJUN ELECTRIC WORKS OFFICE
J. Kusakari, chief
GOVERNMENT AGRICULTURAL INSTITUTE
M. Ogawa, acting chief
GOVERNMENT MARINE PRODUCT INSTITUTE
T. Saotome, chief
LOCAL CIVIL ADMINISTRATION
Y. Chikaraishi, Dairen Prefecture T. Aiga, Riojun Prefecture
T. Murakami, Kinshu Branch Office of
Dairen Prefecture
GENERAL COMMUNICATION BUREAU J. Kato, director
HIGH COURT
U. Hiraishi, president
DISTRICT COURT
J. Manabe, chief judge
RIOJUN PUBLIC HOSPITAL Surgeon Colonel T. Hondo, director
MARITIME OFFICE
K. Matsuo, director
CENTRAL LABORATORY
K. Keimatsu, director.
DAIREN
Dairen (Dalny), the Southern terminus of the South Manchuria Railway, which connects with the Siberian system of Russian railways, is a commercial port in the Southern corner of the Liaotung Peninsula, Lat 38° 55′ 44" N. and Long. 121° 37′ 7′′E When Russia leased the place in 1898, it was only a small village. With remarkable push and energy the Russians laid out and built up in less than three years one of the finest towns in the Far East, with cathedrals and mansions, parks and roads, wharves and warehouses. Almost at the outset of the late war the town was occupied by the Japanese army and served as the principal base of supply. The climate being temperate, and sanitary arrangements such as drainage, waterworks, etc., being rapidly completed, the health of the loca lity is exceptionally good. The hottest temperature registered in summer is 30° C. (86°F.), and the cold winter season is short and invigorating.
Being the terminus of the railway the port is designed to accommodate the largest ocean steamers alongside the granite wharves, which have a vertical face with 28 feet depth at low water and a length of 3,150 lineal feet.
There are likewise other wharves of concrete blocks faced with granite to accommodate ships of various draughts up to 22 feet, these being in length 3,920 lin. feet. wharves is 350 feet wide, and the railway lines are brought right alongside the ship-
The narrowest of these
acres.
DAIREN
797
berths. Everything possible is being done to give facilities for working cargo unsurpassed by those of any other port in the Far East. The inner harbour is protected by a stone and concrete breakwater, the height of which is 10 feet above highest tide. The deep water area of the harbour inside the breakwater is 500 The wharves are lighted electrically and the channels by gas buoys. The entrance being very open, viz., 1,050 feet wide, shipping can enter the port at any time of day or state of tide. On the island of San-shantau, at the entrance to Dairen Bay, stands a lighthouse. There is a granite dry dock 380 feet long, 50 feet wide at entrance, and 20 feet on the sill, with extensive repair shops attached, leased to and managed by the Dairen Branch of the Kawasaki Dockyard Co., Ltd., of Kobe. Vessels of 700 or 800 tons can be built there, and repairs of any magnitude and demanding the highest skill for vessels up to 3,000 tons can be undertaken.
up
Electric tramways run along the principal streets. The town is lighted by electricity and gas and has ample telephone facilities, and a new electric power-house of 3,000 kilowatts has just been completed. The town has macadamized roads lined with rows of shady trees, and is well provided with drainage and sewage equipment. With the growth of trade, more particularly in Manchurian beans, a number of busi- ness houses of influence have established themselves at the port, and the foreign and Japanese communities in April, 1909, organized and opened the Dairen Club. The Dairen Golfing Association and a "Sailors' Home" are among other institutions that have been established. The Chinese quarter, situated on the western fringe of the city, has also grown considerably. The Railway Hospital is equipped with every modern appointment and can accommodate 200 patients. It is ably conducted by a competent staff of medical officers.
A direct tri weekly service is regularly maintained between Dairen and Shanghai by the South Manchuria Railway Company and connects with the tri- weekly express train service and the Trans-Siberian Route, making it possible to travel from Shanghai to London in a little over 10 days.
Regular steamship services are maintained to and from all the important ports of Japan, China and Korea, and Moji and Nagasaki can be reached in about 50 hours. For 1908, the trade of Dairen with Japan amounted to yen 41,364,533, and that with China, aggregated yen 14,810,215. Europe and America are represented by a total of yen 4,424,750, and other places with yen 1,761,594. According to the census taken on March 31, 1909, the Japanese population of the town was 22,039. Chinese numbered 40,499 and other nationals totalled 54.
DIRECTORY
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co., Merchants:
E. Goetz (London)
Tel. Ad: Karberg
Ph. Arnhold (London)
M. Nielassen (Berlin)
H. E. Arnhold (Shanghai)
A. E. Dowler (New York)
H. H. Richter, manager
Agencies
Hamburg-Amerika Linie
South British Fire and Marine Ins.
Co. (Marine Dept.) Commercial Union Assurance Co.
Yuen-lai
BUSH BROS, Merchants and Commission
Agents-215, Oku-machi, Nichome
B. H. Betts (Newchwang)
F. J. Bardens, signs per pro.
R. Schofield
G. R. Bardens
Agencies
S. Manchuria Ry. Co., Booking Agents International Sleeping Car Co.
Great Trans-Siberian Route
Cathay Mining Syndicate
Sun Life Assurance Co., of Canada British Dominions Marine Insurance
Co., Ltd.
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants W. T. Alway, signs per pro. S. Morii
Agencies
China Navigation Co., Ld. Ocean Steamship Co., Ld.
China Mutual Steam Navgn. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance Cropn. Guardian Assurance Co.
Union Insurance Socy. of Canton, Ld. British & Foreign Marine Ins. Co. Standard Marine Insurance Co.
CENTRAL LABORATORY
Dr. K. Keimatsu, director
CHINESE IMPERIAL MARITIME CUSTOMS
(Dairen)
Acting Commissioner-M. Tachibana
798
DAIREN
Assistants S. Kaneko, Leung Joo Wong, T. linai, N. R. M. Shaw, E. Miyamura, M. Morimoto Customs Sergeon-Dr. C. Ichinose Examiner T. Kai
Assist. Examiners-S. Kamimura, N. Nakagawa, S. Saiki, E. Shigenobu Tidewaiters K. Asaina, S. Ayabe. S. Hori, J. Kirisawa, M. Kobayashi, B. Okamoto, S. Sekita, R. Yada, Y. Sugawara, G. Ohta, K. Kikuta, R. Mizutani, M. Masuda, Y. Kidokoro, K. Koga, K. Maejima, J. Ono, Y. Mori Probationary Tidewaters.-J. Komaru,
D. Okamoto
Watchers M. Sashida, H. Yamada,
M. Hamada
COMMUNICATION BUREAU J. Kato, director
Ho-Kee
CORNALE, ECKFORD & Co., Merchants (of
Chefoo)
F. Larkins, agent
F. D. Trompson
K. Ishida
Agencies
Indo-China S. N. Co., Ld.
P. & O. S. N. Co.
Indra Line, Lil.
American Asiatic S. S. Co.
Royal Insurance Co., Ld. Sun Fire Insurance Co. Ld.
Genl. Accident Fire & Life Assce. Co., Ld. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ltd. Canton Insurance Office, Ld. Standard Life Assurance Co. Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld.
Hongkong & Shanghai Bankg. Corpn. Shire Line of Steamers Messageries Maritimes Co. East Asiatic Line of Steamers Austrian Lloyd
Green Island Cement Co., Ld. British American Tobacco Co., Ld. Hongkong Rope Manufg. Co., Id.
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
Acting Vice-Consul-E. L. S. Gordon
UNITED STATES
Vice-Consul in Charge-A. A. William-
son
RUSSIAN
Consulate-General--C.de Bologowskey
DAIREN CLUB
H.E. Gov. Gen. Viscount Y. Oshima,
hon president
Z. Nakamura, chairman.
E. L. S. Gordon, vice-chairman
DAIREN EAST PUBLIC HOSPITAL
Dr. K. Yamanouchi, principal
DAIREN GOLFING ASSOCIATION
S. Kunisawa, chairman.
DAIREN WOMEN'S HOSPITAL
Dr. Y. Takakashi, principal
EAST ASIATIC NAPHTA TRADING Co., Pro- ducts of the Naphta Production Com pany, Noble Brothers; Tel. Ad: Wato
Manager for South Manchuria and
Corea A. A. Krukow
GENERAL POST OFFICE (South Manchuria)
J. Kato, director
Post Office, Dairen (Dalny) S. Kawazuka, postmaster
GOUMENIONK, J. G., Estate Agent
GOVERNMENT AGRICULTURAL INSTITUTE
M. Ogawa, superintendent
H. I. J. M's. Civil ADMINISTRATION
(Minseisho)
T. Chikaraishi, administration Cr. Tanaka, chief of Police
HONGANJI TEMPLE
T. Mayeda, high priest
JAPANESE-CHINESE SCHOOL M. Asai, principal
KAWASAKI DOCKYARD CO., Ld.
K. Suda, manager
MANSHU NICHI-NICHI SHIMBUN (The Man-
churia Daily News)
K. Ito, proprietor
MARINE Bureau
K. Matsuo, director
S. Yano, chief doctor of the Quaran-
tine dept.
I. Sakurai, asst. harbour master T. Kamada, marine surveyor K. Shimamura, chief of General
Affairs
METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATORY
S. Mizuchi, chief
MEYER C. H., Commission Agent
MITSUI BUSAN KAISHA, LTD. E. Minowa, manager M. Kawabe M. Kurokawa T. Tsukemoto
Y. Moriyama Y. Saito
I
I
+
DAIREN
709
1. Ogi
8. Okumura 1. Yamamuro
J. Iwase
H. Akamatsu
R. Ishida
S. Achiwa
Cereal Department
K. Komuro, manager
K. Takashima T. Yasuhara
T. Uyenaka K. Sakamoto 1. Kobayashi
K. Matsushita
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, agents
NICHOLAS GOLD MINING Co.
M. Ginsburg & Co., managers
NISSHIN BEAN MILL
T. Suda, manager
ÚNADA CEMENT FACTORY
F. Nakazawa, manager
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA
$. Ishisaki, manager
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Rev. T. C. Winn, pastor
RACINE, ACKERMANN & CIE., Import and
Export Merchants-Yamogato Dori
E. Blanc, signs per pro.
Agency
Soc. des Cements Portland Artificiels
de l'Indo-Chine
RENISON&Co., Merchants. &c.; Tel. Ad;
Nosiner, Dairen
G. Renison, signs the firm
C. H. Meyer,
H. Renison, asst.
Agencies
do.
Cie. des Messageries Maritimes Chargeurs Réunis
Canadian Pacific Railway Mail S. S. Co.
Toyo Kisen Kaisha (Oriental S. S. Co.) Ben Line of Steamers
Portland & Asiatic S. S. Co. Pacific Mail S. S. Co. Norddeutscher Lloyd Lloyd's London
Correspondents to the Board of
Underwriters of New York Liverpool Underwriters' Association,
Liverpool
South British Insurance Co., Ld. (Fire
and Marine)
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Socy.,
Ltd, Norwich
Norwich Assurance Co., Ltd.
London and the Pacific Coast Con-
densed Milk Co.
RICHTER, H. H., agent for the Hamburg-
America Linie
RIOTO HOTEL
S. Yamada, proprietor
RIOTO SHIMBUN (Daily paper)
J. Suyenaga, proprietor
SAILORS' HOME
K. Matsuo, chairman
SALE & FRAZAK, LTD.
H. Sueda, manager
SAMUEL MCGREGOR & Co., Merchants;
Tel. Ad Claymore
C. U. Stewart C. J. White
H. S. Goddard
Penney
Agencies
North China Insurance Co., Ld. New Zealand Insurance Co., Ld. Commercial Assurance Co., Ld. China Mutual Insurance Co., Ld.
SANTAI BEAN MILL
K. Sasakuma, manager
SIEMENS - SCHUCKERT
KAKKOKU
DENKI
GOMEI KAISHA, Electrical Engineers and Contractors; Head Office: Tokyo
R. Ogawa, E.E., manager R. Kitabatake, assistant
SIMPSON & Co., of Manchuria E. Lenox Simpson, A.L.M.M
A. Holland, employe
G. Eliott,
do.
K. Kobayashi, do.
A. Hayashi,
T. Kotani,
do.
do.
SOUTH MANCHURIA RAILWAY Co., THE-
Tel. Ad: Mantetsu
President Z. Nakamura Vice-President-S. Kunisawa
Directors C. Seino (Tokyo), K. Kubota, N. Inuzuka, S. Tanaka, M. Kubota, Dr. S. Ókamatsu, K. Nonomura
Traffic Manager-S. Tanaka Chief Engineer and General Manager
of Fushun Colliery-Dr. B. Matsuda Secretary-M. Numata
Supt. Construction and Maintenance
Department-S. Hori
Manager, Wharf Office-Captain I.
Narasaki
800
DAIREN CHEFOO
Chief Accountant--S. Yasuda Supt., Auditing and Statistical Dept.-
R. Kawamura
Supt., Workshops-M. Yoshino Manager, Land Dept.-K. Shigeizumi Manager, Mining Dept.--D. Asakura Supt., Harbour Works-M. Numatu Supt., Electric Works-M. Numata Supt. of Stores-S. Yamamoto Supt. of Hospitals--Dr. K. Kasai Supt., Gas Works-T. Shima Supt., Capt. I. Narasaki
STANDARD OIL Co., of NEW YORK
V. G. Lyman, manager (Chefoo)
TOKYO PRINTING Co.
K. Kanazawa, manager
V. HELLER, Forwarding and Insce. Agent
Tanaka Jujiro, in charge
YAMATO HOTEL (South Manchuria Rail-
way); Tel. Ad: Yamoto T. Oshima, manager T. Shoji, sub-manager
ΥΟΚΟΗΑΜΑ SPECIE BANK
E. Narukawa, manager K. Mogami, sub-manager J. Kanda, accountant
罘之
CHEFOO
榮之 Chi-PM 臺烟 Yen-tai
Another
QA
Chefoo, in the Province of Shantung, is the name used by foreigners to denote this Treaty Port; the Chinese name of the place is Yentai, and Chefoo proper the opposite side of the harbour. Chefoo is situated in latitude 37° 33′ 20′′ N. and longi. tude 121° 25' 02" E. The port was opened to foreign trade in 1863. The number of foreigners on the books of the various Consulates is about 400, but more than half of them missionaries live inland. Chefoo has no Settlement or Concession, but a recognized Foreign Quarter, which is well kept and has good clean roads and is well lighted. A General Purposes Committee looks after the interests of the Foreign Quarter and derives the revenue at its disposal from voluntary contributions by residents. The natives are most orderly and civil to foreigners. There are two good hotels and several excellent boarding-houses, all of which are full of visitors from July to the end of September. The climate is bracing. The winter, which is severe, lasts from the beginning of December to end of March; April, May and June are lovely months and not hot; July and August are hot and rainy months; and September, October and November form a most perfect autumn, with warm days cool winds and cold nights. Strong northerly gales are experienced in the late autumn and through the winter, and the roadstead gives but an uncomfortable, though safe, anchorage for steamers. In 1906, nearly two months were lost to trade through stress of weather and the entire mercantile community appreciates the necessity for proper harbour works, including a protecting breakwater and quay. pressing need is a good water supply. There is a good club. The races take place towards the end of September.. Chefon is two days' journey from Shanghai, and communication is maintained by the Indo-China Steam Navigation Company, the Chin Merchants' S. N. Company, the China Navigation Company, the Russian East Asiatic Steamship Company, the Nippon Yusen Kaislia and the Osaka Shosen Kaisha. In 1870 the Chefoo Convention was concluded at Chefoo by the late Sir Thomas Wade and the former Viceroy of Chilli, Li Hung-chang. An enterprise has been recently established by a Wine Company of substantial standing; the soil of the locality lends itself to such an industry and the future success of the proprietors of the first l'ar Eastern wine growing concern is a matter of considerable interest. Chefoo is noted for its large and increasing fruit growing industry, supplying Shanghai, Vladivostock, Kobe and other Eastern ports with foreign fruits, which grow well with care and attention in that part of Shantung the native fruit growers having received foreign instruction so that which was at first a hobby is now a paying industry. Other very important industries are the manufacture of foreign silk and hand-made su laces, which in the hands of foreigners promise to assume large proportions. thread and silk twist are largely made and exported from here to France, Germany and America. Chiefoo uses a large percentage of the cocoons from Corea and Manchagia which come to China. Chefoc was in 1900 connected by telegraph cables with Tientan, Port Arthur, Weihaiwei, Tsingtau and Shanghai.
CHEFOO
801
The trade of Chefon, which is increasing, is principally in Beancake and Beans, of which large quantities are annually exported to the southern ports of China. In 1906 the net export of Beancake amounted to 1,144,814 piculs, as against 1,233,180 piculs in 1905, 1,117,658 in 1904, and 1,192,948 piculs in 1903. Silk, Strawbraid, Ground- nuts and Vermicelli are the other chief exports. The import of Opium was 603 piculs of Indian brands, as no supplies came from Manchuria. The net value of the trade of the port for 1906, after deducting re-exports, was Tls. 34,740,267, as compared with Ts. 39,131,384 in 1905.
Chefoo is much in need of railway communication as well as improvements in the harbour, and both of these undertakings are under contemplation by Chinese capital- ists. These improvements, in the estimation of business men, will greatly develop the importance of Chefoo as a trade centre. An extensive work known as the Chefoo City Bund and Reclamation Scheme is expected to greatly improve the port, and if present intentions are fulfilled, the first model town under native jurisdiction will arise on the reclaimed land. Chefou is an important port of call for large numbers of regular line and tramp steamers, being in the line of communication between Indian, South China, Japanese, Corean and Manchurian ports and the ports north. During the season from March to December as many as thirty to forty steamers per day often enter and clear the port. The cable and telegraph offices with chambers for employees, are the most substantial and imposing buildings of the kind in China, excepting the Shanghai buildings. The port supplies Vladivostock and Siberia with upwards of one hundred thousand coolies annually; the coolies leave for Vladivostock during the spring months and those returning reach Chefoo in the latter part of the year. This movement of coolies furnishes business for numbers of steamers,
和其
DIRECTORY
Arno & Co., T., Shipping Agents and Coal
and Marine Produce Commission Merchants
AMERICAN ASIATIC COMMERCIAL Co.
A. C. Taylor, manager
斯监
ANZ & Co., Merchants
O. H. Anz
AR-FZ
C. Benck (Tsingtau)
W. Busse, signs per pro.
C. W. Schmidt
W. Anz
C. Okabe
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd
do
Oesterreichischer Lloyd Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Rickmers' Line of Steamers
Shell Transport and Trading Co.
"Dollar" Steamship Lines Portland and Asiatic S.S. Co. Nippon Shosen Kaisha
Russian East Asiatic S.S. Co., Ltd.
Salamandra Insce. Co., St. Petersburg
Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges., Berlin China Traders Insurance Co., Ld. Northern Assurance Company Manheim Insurance Company, Ld. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Company Deutscher Lloyd Tranport V. A. G. Deutsche Ruck Mitvers. Ges., Berlin
Germ. Transport Vers. Akt. Ges., Berlin Eastern Carrying, I S. W. Co., St. Ptsbg, Verein Bremer Seeversicherungs Ges. L'Urbaine de Paris
Rheinisch-Westfal. Lloyd,M. Gladbach International Banking Corporation Java-China Japan Lijn
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld. Dampfschiffs-Rederei, "Union," A.G. Baloise Fire Insurance Co.
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society
"Albeingia" Tus. Co.
Yokohama Specie Bank
亞細亞 A-si-tu
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD., THE
Cornabe, Eckford Co., agents
ASTOR HOUSE HOTEL
E. Predolin
E. Berruchon
店餃 南 Nan-fan-din
BEACH HOTEL CO.
C. F. Wong, bookkeeper
K. S. Yu, derk
古太
Tai-Koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
M. Beart, signs per pro.
J. Cox Norman Hornsby
25
802
Agevoles
CHEFOO
China Navigation Company, Ld. Ocean Steamship Co., Id. China MutualSteamNavigationCo.,Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. British & Foreign Mar. Ins. Co., Ld. Hongkong & S'hai Banking Corpn.
CHANG YU (PIONEER WINE Co., LD., THE) Thio Tiawsiat, managing director
Chang Ching-king, manager Baron M. von Balio, do. Choa Joon Guan
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUST. & CHINA
Cornabé, Eckford & Co., agents
CHIEFOO CLUB
V. G. Lyman, hon. secretary
O. Anz, hon. treasurer
CHEFOO CUSTOMS CLUB
F. S. Unwin, president
C. A. Meyer, vice president
N. J. Uldall, hon. sec. and treas
A Ho-shun
CHING CHONG & Co., Naval Contractors and Storekeepers (Head Office: Shanghai)
Y. N. Dunn, manager Agencies
The British American Tobacco Co.
Ld., Depôt
The Hai-foong Roller Flour Mill
CONSULATES
***
Ta-mei-kuo ling-ya-mén
AMERICAN CONSULATE; Tel. Ad: Amcon
Consul--John Fowler
Clerk----A. W. Gilbert
Secretary-Wang Wei
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Vice-Consul-Baron M. von Babo
BELGIUM
Consul-0. Anz
DENMARK, Consulate
Acting-Consul-Ch. P. Kristy
FRANCE
CHEFOO INDUSTRIAL MISSION
Consul A. Guérin
James McMullan, director
Mrs. J. McMullan (absent)
署事領國德大
Ta-te-kuo ling-shi-sha
GERMANY
Miss E. M. Mosson
Miss A. E. Milne
George Nicoll
H. B. Niblock
CHEFOO MORNING POST
Jas. Silverthorne, proprietor and editor
CHEFOO PRINTting & Bookbinding Office
H. Sietas & Co., proprietors
CHEFOO WATERBOAT Co., Call flag "N"
H. Sietas & Co., managers
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION Co
E. Shun & Co., agents
司公限有務礦季開
Kai-ping Kwong-wu-yu-hien Kung sze
CHINESE ENGINEERING & MINING CO., LD.
Anz & Co., agents
記政
L I
Ching-kee
CHING-KEE & Co., Shipping Agents and
Coal Merchants
Chang Pen Ching
Y. Shinoda
Agencies
South Manchuria Railway Company Tokyo Marine Insurance Company Kobe Marine Transport and Fire
Insurance Co.
Consul-Dr. Ph. Lenz
Secretary A. Gelewsky
***** Ta Ying ling-shih-shu
GREAT BRITAIN Tel. Ad: Britain Consul-R. H. Mortimore Constable-J. Milbank
ITALY
Consular Agent-Dr. Ph. Lenz
JAPAN
門衙事領本日大
Ta-jih-pen ling-sih-ya-men
Vice-Consul-K. Tsuchiya
Chancelier C. Kawaguchi(in charge
of Consulate)
Chancelier---H. Miura
Do. -K. Takamori
Police Inspector-K. Sakaida
NETHERLANDS
Acting Consul-Dr. Ph. Lenz
NORWAY
Vice-Consul--Dr. O. Gulowsen
RUSSIA, Vice-Consulate
Vice-Consul-Ch. P. Kristy Assistant -N. P. Jijine
CHEFOO
SPAIN
Vice-Consul for France in
charge
Shing-chee
903
SVRDEN
Vice-Consul--Dr. O. Gulowsen
Fu Ho-kee
CORNABE, ECKFORD & Co., Tsingtau and
Dalny, and at Weihaiwei
A. M. Eckford (London)
V. R. Eckford
R. H. Eekford (Tsingtau)
F. Larkins, signs per pro. (Dalny)
W. Fell, signs per pro.
J. H. Stooke, do.
G. C. F. Russell (Wei-hai-wei)
M. Tonkin
R. Gardiner (Tsingtau)
T. D. Thompson (Dalny) W. Squire
J. V. Litarfield]
I. Tanabe
Agencies
Chartered Bank of India, A. and China Mercantile Bank of India, Limited Anglo-Japanese Bank Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Indo-China Steam Navgtn. Co., Ld. P. & O. S. N. Co., Ld.
Compagnie des Messageries Maritimes Canadian Pacific S. N. Co.
Pacific Mail Steamship Company Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Northern Pacific S. S. and R. R. Cos. Mogul Line of Steamers Shire Line of Steamers Union Line of Steamers Indra Line of Steamers Austrian Lloyd's S. N. Co.
"
Eastern & Australian S. S. Co., Ld. Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Imperial Fire Office Sun Fire Office
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Limited Genl Accident Fire & Life Ins. Co., Ld. Ocean Accident and GuaCrantee Corp Standard Life Assurance ompany Sun Life Insurance Co. of Canada Canton Insurance Office, Limited langtsze Insurance Association, Ld. South British Marine Insurance Co. Witwatersrand Native Labour Associa-
tion, Lil.
Hokee Lighter Company Whatai Filature
Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld. International Sleeping Carand Express
Trains Co.
British American Tobacco Co., Ld. Green Island Cement Co., Ld. Hongkong Rope ManufacturingCo.,Ldl.
CURTIS BROS., Manufacturers' Agents, Im- port and Export,Generaland Commission Merchants. Tel. Ad: Brothers
F. J. Curtis
R. F. Parker
Agencies
China Mutual Life Insurance Co. Lloyd's
Commercial Union Assurance Co. The British Dominions Marine Ince.
Co., Lil.
The Liverpool and London and Globe
Insce. Co.
B Tung-hai-kwan CUSTOMS. IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-F. S. Unwin Assistant--A. M. J. Porter
Do. --A. Wilson
Do.
Do.
-A. J. da S. Basto
-K. Yufu
Do. -J. M. Bandinol
Medical Officer-Dr. O. Gulowsen Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-
C. A. Meyer
Boat Officer--W. O. Lloyd
Chief Examiner C. H. Erskine Examiner E. V. Bono
Assistant Examiners-A. W. Sorms, S. Foyn, J. C. Jones, N. T. Uldall Tidewaiters-O.C. Millen, J.W. Ryden, K. Gulbrandsen, C. Klatt, W. Nash, M. Foyn, F. Ryan, A. Sorvig, G. B. Page, P. T. Coates
Lighthouses
Kung-tung-tao Light--W. Hammond Shantung N. E. Promontory Light-
G. J. Nott W. J. Knight
Howki Light J. H. Pommer, A. C.
Petersen
Shantung S. E. Promontory Light-
. Hansen, J. J. Vabó
Relieving Lightkeeper--M. Foyn
DIEDERICHSEN, & Co., H. Merchants: Tel.
Ad: Hadide
H. Diederichsen (Kiel) Ph. Moeller (Shanghai)
T. A. Graeber, signs per pro. Carl Schmitz
Karl Petersen
Agencies
Hamburg-Amerika Linie H. Diederichsen Line Jebsen Line
Far Eastern S. S. Co., Vladivostock. Verein Hamburger-Assekuradeure Guardian Fire Ince. Co., Ltd., London Oberrheinische Versicherung Gesell-
schaft in Mannheim.
Badische Schiffahrts AssekuranzGes
ellschaft in Mannheim.
801
CHEFOO
Savoia Insurance Company, Turin. Union Continentale Ince. Co. Turin. Deutsch-Asiatische Bank. Schantung-Bergbau Gesellschaft. Vacuum Oil Company, Rochester. Badlische Anilin-& Soda Fabriken Lud-
wigshafen
Salvage Syndicate
Trausatlantische Guetervers, Gesells,,
Berlin
順怡 E-ww
E-Surx & Co., Merchants
Li Tsoi-chee, manager
Chun E. Woon
J. Marque
Chan Kwuan
Lum Wan Ku
Loo Fung Chou
Agencies
China Merchants S. N. Co.
China Merchants' Insce. Co., Ld.
Foo An Insurance Co., Ld. (Hongkong) Kei Hsin Cement Works, Tongshan Yuen On Insurance Co., Ld.
EUROPEAN CHEFOO BUTCHERY
M. Koukoff, proprietor
FRANCISCAN SISTERS, Boarding Schools for Girls; also Work Room, opposite the General Hospital, managed by the Fran- ciscan Sisters
GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRApii Co., Ld. EASTERN EXTENSION, AUST. AND CHINA
TELEGRAPII Co., L".
R. Black, superintendent
G. E Cole, controller
S. Schwensen
C. Volkersen
W. L. Pedersen, electrician
R. J. Saunders
C. W. Soper
GULOWSEN, O., M.D., Medical Practitioner,
Surgeon to the General Hospital and
Medical Oflicer to the Imperial Maritime
Customs
司公船駁記大 Ta-l:ee
HOKEE LIGHTER COMPANY
Cornabé, Eckford & Co., managers
HÔPITAL GÉNÉRAL, tenu par les Religi
euses Franciscaines Missionaries de Marie Surgeon-in-charge-Dr. O. Gulowsen.
INDO-CHINA STEAM NAVIGATION Co., Ld. Cornabé, Eckford & Co., agents
LLOYD'S
F. J. Curtis, agent
LYELL'S POINT
Mr. and Mrs. J. Silverthorne
MASONIC--LODGE ST. ANDREW, No. 924
Master-V. R. Eckford Secretary D. Cappelen
Yan-tak
MCMULLAN&Co., James, ExportSilk Mets Manufacturers of Silk Laces, &c.: Tel. Ad Industrial
James McMullan H. B. Niblock
J. H. Clark
E. Naftaly
A. Paradisiss
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA, LD.
Cornabé, Eckford & Co., agents
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC, Order of S. Francis
Mgr. Césaire Schang, Bishop of Vaga
& Vicar Apost. of Eastern Shantung Mgr. Adéodat Wittner, Bishop of
Milet, coadjutor
K. Pére Henri Vielle, procureur R. Père Maviel
R. Père M. Masson R. Père Basile Papin R. Père Eugène Pandellé R. Père Anselme Clavel R. Pére Wilfrid Hallam R. Père Michel
R. Père Solano Tirot R. Père Yves Pouliquen R. Père Irénée Fréderic R. Père C. Stern
R. Père Cuvelier
R. Père Seyrés
R. Pére Kilian Menz
R. Père J. Gérenton R. Père M. Cormerais R. Frère Antoine Savy R. Père Francois Blanc R. Pére J. Damascène R. Père V. Guichard R. Père A. Dulson R. Père M. Santini
#Sun-ching
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LD., Merchants M. Fujise, manager (Shanghai)
I. Ayano S. Hayakawa
R. Fujita
NAN-CHAN ERMITAGE St. JBAN
Père J. B. Maviel
t
L
NATIONAL BANK OF CHINA, LD.
Cornabé, Eckford & Co., agents
CHEFOO
POST AND TELEGRAPH OFFICE, GERMAN-- Chefoo Telephone Ex.; Tel. Ad: Kronos
Postmaster-G. Beutel Foreman-C. Schmutz
POST OFFICE, BRITISH
Curtis Bros., postal agents
POST OFFICE, FRENCH
Receveur-R. C. Pouget
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Distr. Postmaster-F. S. Unwin Postal Assistant-V. Chieri
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL RUSSIAN Postmaster-J. M. Weinglass
POST OFFICE, JAPANESE
Postmaster-D. Nakagawa
Clerks M. Yendo, Y. Sugiyama, T.
Fujihara
RUSHOLME
F. J. Curtis
Russo-CHINESE BANK
L. H. Smith & Co., agents
E. Blacker, representative
H. Staeger
理復 Fuh-le
SÉMINAIRE CATHOLIQUE
R. P. Louis Gautié
R. P. M. Roscian
Shun-yi-koon-she
SHUN YI & Co., Shipping Agents and Coal
Merchants
Kú Den Len, manager
Agency
Asiatic S. S. N. Co., Ld. (Vladivostock)
利哈
Hu-lee
SIETAS & Co., H., Merchants, Navy Con-
tractors and Storekeepers; branches at
Tsingtau and Vladivostock
H. C. N. Plambeck (Hamburg)
H. C. Augustesen (Tsingtau) Constantin Hansen
J. Reincke
C. Hinz
Ayeney!
World Marine Insurance Company
泰順
SISUTAL & Co., L. W., Merchants, Naval
Contractors and Storekeepers
Agencia
Chefoo Bank
Chefoo Insurance Company
805
China Sugar Refining Company, Ld.
Chefoo Filanda
Wha-Tai Filature
美士
SMITH & Co., L. H., Merchants
Mrs. L. H. Smith
D. Cappelen, signs per pro.
A. V. Tofte
G. Krüper
Agencies
Russo-Chinese Bank
Comptoir National d'Escompte de Paris International Bank of St. Petersburg Russian Volunteer Fleet Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co.
Law, Union and Crown Insurance Co. Manchester Assurance Company Union Insurance Society of Canton Atlas Insurance Company
Union Assurance Society, London Equitable Life Insce. Society of U. S Netherlands Fire and Life Insce. Co. Fatum Accident Insurance Co. Oversoiske Compagni Kristiania and
• Copenhagen
Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. China Fire Insurance Co., Ltd.
North British and Mercantile Insce. Co.
ST. LEWIS SCHOOL
Rev. Bro. Dominic, director
Do. Romain
Do.
Frederick
Do.
Regis
Do.
Lonis
Do.
Alphonse
Do.
Leonide
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK; Tel. Ad:
Socony
V, G. Lyman, attorney
T. W. Stedman
E. S. Curtis
橋高
TAKAHASHI, T., Commission Merchant and
Shipping Agent
TAYLOR & CO., A. C., Wholesale Export and
Import Commission Agents
A. C. Taylor
Agency
New York Life Insurance Co. Swift & Co.
Shanghai Life Insurance Co.
Shantung Export Co.
TELEGRAPH COMPANIES
Great Northern Telegraph Co., Ed.
E. E., A. and China Telegraph Co., Ld.
R. Black, superintendent
G. E. Cole, controller
800
L. Schwensen C. Volkerson
CHEFOO-WEIHAIWEI
W. 1. Pedersen, electrician
R. J. Saunders
C. H. Soper
TELEGRAPII COMPANY-CHINESE
V. Y. Sheng, manager
S. Y. Kung, controller and clerk-in-
charge
W. S. Loh, assistant
THE WITWATERSRAND NATIVE LABOUR
ASSOCIATION, LIMITED
Cornabe, Eckford & Co., agents H. A. E. Emery
Anz, Mrs. O.
Anz, Mrs. W. Basto, Mrs.
Black, Mrs. R. C.
Busse, Mrs. Chieri, Mrs.
| TOURING CLUB ITALIANO
V. Chieri, president
TRANSVAAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY
Agent-E. H. Barrington-Brider
WHA-TAI FILATURE
Sun Mong Ku
Cornabé Eckford & Co., agents
L. W. Sing Tai & Co., managers
行銀金正濱横
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LD.
Anz & Co., agents
LADIES' DIRECTORY.
Guerin, Mrs.
Gulowsen, Mrs.
Hansen, Mrs. Jones, Mrs. J. C.
Lloyd, Mrs. W. O. Lyman, Mrs. Marco, Mrs. McMullan, Mrs. Meyer, Mrs. C. A.
Curtis, Mrs. E.
Curtis, Mrs. T.
Eckford, Mrs.
Emery, Miss
Milbank, Mrs.
Erskine, Mrs.
Porter, Mrs.
Gelewsky, Mrs.
Schmidt, Mrs.
Schwensen, Mrs.
Siemer, Mrs.
Silverthorne, Mrs. J.
Smith, Mrs. Stooké, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. A. U. Unwin, Miss D. Unwin, Mrs. F. S. Weinglass, Mrs. Wilson, Mrs.
Yufu, Mrs. K.
WEIHAIWEI
衞海威 Weihaiwei
Weihaiwei is situated on the south side of the Gulf of Pechibli near the extremity of the Shantung Promontory, and about 115 miles distant from Port Arthur on the north-west, and the same from the German port of Kiaochau on the south-west. Formerly a strongly fortified Chinese naval station, it was captured by the Japanese on 30th January, 1895, and was held by them pending the payment of the indemnity, which was finally liquidated in 1898. Before the evacuation by the Japanese an agreement was arrived at between Great Britain and China that the former should take over the territory on lease from the latter, and accordingly, on the 24th May, 1898, the British flag was formally hoisted, the Commissioners representing their respective countries at the ceremony being Consul Hopkins, of Chefoo, and Captain King Hall, of H.M.S Narcissus, for Great Britain, and Taotai Yen and Captain Lin, of the Chinese war vessel Foochi, for China. Weihaiwei was leased to Great Britain "for so long a period. as Port Arthur shall remain in the occupation of Russia," but though Port Arthur was surrendered to the Japanese on January 1st, 1905, Great Britain has not announced any intention to withdraw from Weihaiwei, which the Government regards as a sanatorium for the British squadron on the China station.
The leased territory, which lies in latitude 37 deg. 30 min. N, longitude 122 deg.10min. comprises the Island of Lin Kung, all the Islands in the Bay of Weihaiwei, and a belt of land ten English miles wide along the entire coastline, and consists of ranges of rugged mountains and rocky hills up to 1,500 feet high, dividing the plains into valleys and river beds. The island of Lin Kung is barren and nearly treeless, and is formes by a backbone of hills rising to some 500 feet. The hillsides on the mainland, of which Port Edward is the chief port, are either barren rock or planted with dwarf pine and mountain river beds, the streams are all torrential, and choke up the valleys with sand
scrub oak trees,
WEIHAIWEI
807
and debris from the hills. During three-quarters of the year these river beds are dry. All the hills are terraced for cultivation as far as possible. The total area of the leased territory is about 285 square miles.
The strata of the mountains are metamorphic, consisting of beds of quartzite, gneiss crystalline, and limestone, cut across by dykes of volcanic rock and granite. Gold is found in the territory, and has been worked by the Chinese, and silver, tin, lead, and iron are said to exist. Proper boring operations, under European management, for gold have now been undertaken. Good building-stone and a rich non-hydraulic limestone are found. The territory contains some 330 villages, and the population is estimated to be 150,000. There are four small market towns, where fairs are held every five days.
The Chinese inhabitants are either fishermen or farmers, and are a peaceful, law- abiding folk. The chief export trade is in salt fish, which is carried in Chinese junks to Southern China. On late years a large export trade in pea-nuts has also grown up. The import trade chiefly consists of timber, firewood, and maize from Manchuria, paper, crockery, sugar, and tobacco, kerosene oil, cotton yarn, piece goods, liquid indigo and other dyes.
The Government of Weihaiwei is administered by a Commissioner appointed under the Weihaiwei Order in Council of the 24th July, 1901. Under this Order the Commissioner is empowered to make Ordinances for the administration of the territory. There is a High Court established, in which all jurisdiction, civil and criminal, is vested, subject to an appeal to the Supreme Court in the Colony of Hongkong. District Magistrates' Courts are also provided for. The Commissioner resides on the mainland at Port Edward. The village communities are administered through their headmen in accordance with Chinese laws and usages, and the people have now entirely acquiesced in the newly-established régime. All purely civil matters are left as much as possible to the village headmen. There is perhaps, no place in China occupied by foreigners where labour is so cheap. Weihaiwei is now a fairly regular port of call for many China coasting steamers sailing northwards from Shanghai, and there is a regular weekly service subsidised by Government to run all the year carrying mails and passengers between Shanghai and Weihaiwei. This enables the public to reachi Weihaiwei via Shanghai at any time of the year. Weihaiwei is now the northern naval base of His Majesty's China Squadron. The harbour is well lighted by two light- houses at the castern and western entrances. The climate of Weihaiwei is exceptionally good, and the winter, though cold, is dry and bracing. A European school has been established, to which boys from other treaty ports, Hongkong, &c., are now sent. A land and building society, formed in Shanghai, has already erected several commodious European bungalows. There is a large hotel on the mainland capable of accom- modating over one hundred people. Both on the mainland and on the island good roads have been made round the coast by the local government for the convenience of foreigners, and there are recreation and parade grounds in both places. In addition to the leased territory there is at zone of influence over which Great Britain holds certain rights. It comprises that portion of the province of Shantung lying East of the meridian 12.40 extending over an area of 1,500 square miles.
The native city of Weihaiwei (which lies on the mainland opposite the island of Lin Kung) is a walled town of about 2,000 inhabitants. By the provisions of the Wei- haiwei Convention of 1898 this town still remains under the jurisdiction of the Chinese authorities. The town is a poor one, and the greater portion of the enclosed area not built on, but cultivated for vegetables. A Chinese sub-district deputy magistrate resides in the city of Weihaiwei.
No customs duties of any kind are collected at Weihaiwei. By agreement, the Chinese Government is permitted to make use of the Bay of Weihaiwei for its fleet, so far as is compatible with British interests. the Chinese.
Weihaiwei was originally strongly fortified by Twelve large forts in all were planned and erected for the Chinese Government by Mr. von Hanneken. Eight of these forts and all the guns were completely destroyed in the China-Japan war of 1895.
The revenue collected during the year 1908 amounted to $83,277, while the expen- diture amounted to $168,740. The grant in aid for 1909 was £4,400.
4
808
WEIHAIWEI
DIRECTORY
PORT EDWARD
GOVERNMENT
Commissioner-- His Honour Sir James
H. Stewart Lockhart, K c.M.G. Secretary to Government and Magis-
trate R. Walter
District Officer--R. F. Johnston
Med. Officers-Dr. Hickin, Dr. Muat Cadet E. Carpmael,
Financial Assistant-H. B. Ching
NAVAL ESTABLISHMENT
―
Executive Officer Commander E.
Yorke, R.N.
Chief Engr.-Engr. W. R. Parker, R.N. Fleet Surgn. F. Davidson Lumley.R.N. Assistant Paymr. in charge-L. J. P. G.
McSheehy, R.N.
Assistant Naval Store Officer-W. B.
Stanton
Writer to Commdr.-F. W, Knight,R.N. Dockyard Writer-P. French
Naval Storehouseman-E. Marsh Island Guard-Lieut. R. E. G. Barton,
R.M.L.I. (in charge)
Victualling Storehouseman
Bickle
- J. H.
Victualling Writer-J. W. Steel
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Inspectors--A. Whittaker, F. Forcey,
F. Crudge
POSTAL AGENCY In charge D. Clark
CALDBECK, MACGREGOR & Co., Wine and
Spirit Merchants
Lavers & Clark, agents.
CHINA IMPORT & EXPORT LUMBER Co.,
LTD., THE
Lavers & Clark, agents
CLARK & Co., D., General Mercantile, Naval and Military Contractors;Tel.Ad:Cleirach
D. Clark
G. Roberts
Y. C. Lee
F. H. Hsich
CLARK'S ISLAND HOTEL
D. Clark & Co., proprietors
CLARK'S MAINLAND HOTEL
D. Clark & Co., proprietors
記和 Ho-kee
CORNABE, ECKFORD & Co., Merchants
G. C. F. Russell, agent
Agencies
Chartered Bank of India, A. and China Yokohama Specie Bank
National Bank of China, Ld.
Peninsular and Oriental SteamNav.Co. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Compagnie des Messageries Martimes Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Nippon Yusen Kaisha Osaka Shosen Kaisha Occidental and Oriental S. S. Co. Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Pacific Mail Steamship Company Northern l'acific S. S. & R. R. Co. Royal Insurance Company
London and Lancashire Fire Ins. Co. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co.
South British Fire and Marine Ins. Co. Canton Insurance Office
Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of U.S.A. Japan Brewery Co., Ld.
Ariatic Petroleum Co.
Weihaiwei Lighter Company The Great Trans-Siberian Route Hamburg-Amerika Linie
EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA & CHINA
TELEGRAPH Co., LTD.
A. Cameron, superintendent
W. A. Powell, clerk A. R. Pfordten
FRANCISCAN CONVENT
Rev. Mother Superior M. Berchmans
+ Sisters
HICKIN, HERBERT J., M.B., Medical Prac- titioner and Government Medical Officer
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN.
Lavers & Clark, agents
茂泰 Tai Mon
LAVERS & CLARK, Merchants--Liu Kung
Tao; Tel. Ad.: Lavers, Weihaiwei
P. F. Lavers
E. E. Clark (Shanghai)
Agencies
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp.
China Navigation Co., Ltd.
Ocean Steamship Company, Limited. California & Oriental S. S. Co. Glen Line of Steamers
Taikoo Sugar Refining Co.
WEIHAIWEI
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Sun Insurance Office Alliance Assurance Co., Ld. Standard Life Assurance Company Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co. Green Island Cement Company, Ld. Hongkong Rope Manufg. Co., Ld. Weihaiwei Land & Building Co., Ld. China-Borneo Company, La. Aquarius Company
Nobel's Explosives Co., Ld. (Glasgow) China Impt, & Expt. Lumber Co., Ld. Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld. Standard Oil Co. of New York Weihaiwei Lighter Co.
WEIHAIWEI
KING'S HOTEL; Tel. Ad King's
D. Clark, proprietor
MUAT, W. M., M.R.,C.A., medical practitioner
and Government Medical Officer
POST OFFICE-IMPERIAL CHINESE
Clerk-in charge---Li Hua Ngo
RAMSEY, T. C., Commission Agent-Port
Edward
REUTER'S TELEGRAM Co., Ld.
P. F. Lavers, agent
ROYAL MARINE GUARD
809
Lieutenant-R. E. G. Burton, R.M.L.I.
SAILORS' & SOLDIERS' INSTITUTE
E. C. Ockenden
ST. JOHN'S CHURCH-Port Edward
Rev. A. E. Burne
ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC MISSION
Rev. Fr. W, Hallam, 0.F.M.
STANDARD OIL CO., OF NEW YORK
V. G. Lyman, manager (Chefoo) Fock Tai & Co., agents
UNION CHAPEL-Liu-kung-tuo
E. C. Ockenden, hon. sec. and treas. Preachers-Resident Missionaries
WEIHAIWEI LAND AND BUILDING Co., LD.
Lavers & Clark, agents
WEIHAIWEI LIGHTER Co.
Cornabé, Eckford & Co., Joint Lavers & Clark,
Jmanagers
WEIHAIWEI MISSION PRESS-Liu-kung-tao
E. C. Ockenden
WEIHAIWEI SCHOOL
Head-master-H. L. Beer, L.C.P.
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Mrs. Beer Mrs. Bickle
Mrs. Burne Mrs. Cameron Mrs. Carpmael
Mrs. Ching
Miss Gresham
Mrs. Hartley Mrs. Hamlin Mrs, Hickin Mrs. Hill
Mrs. Lambden Mrs. Lavers Mrs. Lumley
Mrs. Marsh Miss Muat
Mrs. Ockenden Mrs. Ramsey Miss Rout
Lady Stewart-Lock-
hart
Mrs. Steel Mrs. Thompson Mrs. Walter Mrs. Whittaker Mrs. Wilson
Mrs. Yorke
KIAOCHAU (TSINGTAU)
HHG Bio-เลน
Thington, situated at the entrance to the Kinochau Bay in Shantung, was dumad by a German squadron on the 14th November, 1997, in consequence of the murder of tes German missionarias. It is held on lease from Ching for the larm of ninety-nine years. The special attentionof the Administration has been devoted to agricultural, commercial and mining developpent in de Protectorate and Shantung. The locul administralin consists of a Council, which is composed of all the beads of the several administrative departments under the personal supervision of the Governor and four members chosen from the civil population and appointed for two years; the first is named by the Ger ernon, with the downt of the Council, the second is chosen from among the members of bee non-Chinese firme, the third from the list of taxpayers paying at fears 250 grenad lax without diatinction of nationality and the fourth from the Committee of the Chamber of Commerce. The Protectoraba has developed to an unlooked-for extent under this system of administration, which has enabled all the vital questions at Lava, such as legal rights, landed properties, land taxessment, school and Church matter 16 be satisfactorily artiled. The object of the Administration in dealing with the land question has been to socure for every settler the lasting possession of his plot, cherch epposing, unbrelthy and speculation. Tsingtau, un the 2ril September, 1809, was de clared a free port. The inbour has all the advantages of a Treaty port, noil in a frie port expecially renneraçnded itself as an enguriuos, since the merchant could store, free of duty, his wares from abroal or his raw material brought from the intovior of China. The Chiness import duties were at Grst levied only on g brought to Thingtan by sen, when they were transported beyond the borders of the Protectorate into Chinese territory. The Chinme export duties were at Best level only on goods brought from the interior of China, when they were shipped from d Genning Protelerate to any other place. But in 1908 a new Convention come ju fores whereby Tsingtau ceased to he à free port, sad the Imperial Maritime Castan now sollente ducies here we at all the other vesty ports of Obing at the Conser tion stipulates that 20% of the money so collected at Taington shall be paid to the Impariul German Government. The Commissioner of Customs in his report for 198 comments on the arrangement as follows"The principal object of the arrangement which morever afforded the opportunity of a political rapprochement and man concessions for mutual benefit on both sides, was the roution and promotion of law and commerce between the factorbict and the Chinese hinterland. The results of the fimt opoch have unlusively prevod the wisdom of this novel arrangement. Coker* truly developed beyond epistation and cos from a value of 2 million incls in 1800 22 million in 1905, and Tsingtau, the former dilapidated fishing village, grow ukur hauduomo city with a dourishing mercantile community and a considerable mutaber of mufacturing establishments, giving promise of good profits and further deret ment. Its success emboldened ulie merchants, foreign and Chinese, to usk for, and Government to agres to, going a step further and arrange for the limitation of the area, which formerly comprised the whole Peergebter, to the harbour on Jouch samo lines as the Charan tree parts Hamburg and Tromon, The chief advantageor this step lies in the removal of Customs conte from the railway stations to the urre, and the consequent freedom of goods and passengers to pass in and out, from to the hinterland, without hindranco or control of any kind trafic simplic Irwan which considerable increase in mule was expected." This expecte Was realised during the first goT. The total value of the import export trade of the year 20.7 million Huikwun bela-showed an increase of millions, or parceat, over thue of the previous year, Another feature descong of recent in this conuection is the influx of Chinees. The DCW ATTgement, the missioner added, has inspired coileace in the stability and fucure of the portal * attracting artigos, traders, and wealthy Chinese firms, which last, bither d with Chaloo, have anal now kept alost from this place. The genug daray, cuent of trade which sat in under the new Customs aroungement in 1906 comme
ÜBERSICHTSKARTE
ΤΟΥ
TSINGTAU UND UMGEBUNG
INNEN
RHEDE
**********
Baracken
KLEINER HAFEN
AUSSEN
RHEDE
Bakrk
#
Drawn and Engraved for the Directory & Chronicle
WASSERLEITUNG
**
50
Molthe Berg
Hang-
Pulverschapper
Garnison.
Thederichs
Barg
Barackm
* Lepelle
Schisan Stupid.
Bismarcks
Fake Ta
H
Booteship
INAUGUSTE VICTORIA-BUCHT
111
ZIERFIEA
PLATZ
TA
TUNG
TSCHES
Vogt
John Bartholomee & Co.Ed
1000)
ADVERTISEMENT
TSINGTAUER WERFT TSINGTAU
Cable Address:-"WERFT TSINGTAU"
16000
Tons
DOCK
16,000
Tons
•OCK
ALL KINDS OF
SHIPBUILDING, ENGINE BUILDING, & BOILER MAKING. FILE CUTTING SHOP.
ARRANGEMENT FOR NICKEL-
PLATING.
*
150
Tons
CRANE
#
**
150
Tons
CRANE
NEW LARGE FLOATING DOCK OF 16,000 TONS
CARRYING CAPACITY.
LIMIT OF DIMENSIONS FOR SHIPS 460 ft., × 83 ft., × 33 ft.
ALL ORDERS IMMEDIATELY ATTENDED ΤΟ
j**
L
F. SCHWARZKOPF & CO
TSINGTAU TSINANFU
CABLE
KLA
ADDRESS-
SCHWARZKOPF
TSINGTAU
TSINANFU
F BLACKHEAD
AND CO
HONGKONG
A.B.C. CODE
4TH
AND 5TH EDITION
FT I
ADVERTISEMENT.
F. SCHWARZKOPF & Co.
TSINGTAU.
S
F. SCHWARZKOPF & CO., TSINANFU (Shantung). F. BLACKHEAD & CO.,
HONGKONG.
Contractors to the Imperial German Navy, the Government of
Kìautchou and other large consumers.
Export, Import, Coal and Provision Merchants, Ship: chandlers, Sailmakers and Riggers, Soap, Soda and Disinfectant Manufacturers, Insurance Agents.
Large Stocks carried of all Ships' and Engine
Room Stores.
Building Materials and Furniture, Black and Fine Ironware, Lava- tory Fittings, Machinery, Wires, Cables, Fans, Pumps,
Light Railway Material, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, &c.
Wines, Spirits, Beer and Mineral Waters, Groceries, Canned
Goods, &c.
Glass, Porcelain, Enamelled Goods, Kitchen Furniture of every
description always in stock.
Complete Outfits for Hotels, Messes, &c., undertaken.
Estimates on application.
Toilet and Household Soaps and Soda manufac-
tured at our Soap Works, Hongkong.
KIAOCHAU
811
unabated during 1907 and 1908. The total value of trade has increased from 30.7 millions Haikwan Taels in 1906 to 37.9 million Haikwan Teals in 1908.
The Bay of Kiaochau is an extensive inlet about two miles north-west of Cape Jaeschke. The entrance is not more than 1 miles across, the east side being a low promontory with rocky shores, with the new town of Tsingtau ("green island," from a small grassy island close to the land) about two miles from the point of the peninsula. On the west side of the entrance is another promontory with hills rising to about 600 feet. The shore here is rocky, and dangerous on the west side, but on the east side is a good stretch of sandy beach. The bay is so large that the land at the head can only just be seen from the entrance (about 15 to 20 miles away), and the water gradually gets shallower as the north side of the bay is approached. The old Chinese Kiaochau city stands at the north-west corner of the bay about 5 miles from the sea and beyond the frontier of the German Protectorate. At Tsingtau there are two anchorages for big ships; the larger and better is round the point of the east promontory, on the north side, and the other, smaller one, on the south side. A new mole was "opened" on March 6th, 1904, which accommodates five vessels with berths. A second mole, was opened a few months later and a third mole for kerosene ships has since been constructed. Both have direct connection with the railway. The hills are nearly bare rock of granite and porphyry, but an extensive scheme of afforestation has been decided upon. The soil of the valleys between the ranges and the plain country on the north-east is alluvial and very fertile, and is carefully cultivated. Wheat, barley, millet, maize, and many other grains in smaller quantities are grown. The foreign residential quarter at Tsingtau has been well laid out, and there are some good foreign Hotels. The first sod of the Shantung Railway was cut by Prince Henry of Prussia in October, 1899, and the line to Chinanfu was opened on the 1st June, 1904. It did a prosperous business in 1905, and the returns for 1906 showed an increase of 30.4 per cent. in goods traffic and 6.2 in the passenger traffic. In 1907 the returns showed an increase of 5.74 per cent. in passengers and 9 per cent. in goods and cattle for 1908. The passengers carried numbered 828,735 and the goods approximated 486,981 tons. The coal mines are progressing favourably. The output of the Shangtung Mining Co. at Fangtse and Hung shan in 1908 was 322,682 tons. A brewery, soap factory, and a tannery are in full work. Fruit grafting is just becoming a promising enterprise. The development of the town of Tsingtau has made considerable progress; the town is partly lit by electricity, houses are springing up in all directions, and a system of water supply has now been completed. The new harbour works are nearly finished. The outer breakwater and two piers have been in use since March, 1904. The dry dock commenced operations in October, 1905, and continues to expand. The dock_employs 36 Europeans and an average of 1,300 Chinese workmen. There are two German newspapers published, a weekly paper called the Kiautschou Post and a daily paper called Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten. The climate is temperate, and it is expected that the Bay will in course of time become a summer resort for the residents of Shanghai, there being an excellent bathing beach. The net value of the trade of the port for 1908 was Tls. 37,878,225 against Tis. 34,341,499 in 1907 and Tls. 30,723,851 in 1906. These figures illustrate the way in which Kiaochau is advancing to the front as a trade emporiumi. Kiaochau has become the principal market in North China for straw braid. Passengers and goods now freely move to and from the hinterland without any Customs control or restriction. The revenue of the Colony for the current year is estimated at 3,020,597 marks, as compared with 2,725, 00 marks in 1908, and the treasury contribution is fixed at 8,545,005 marks, about one million less than in 1908.
$12
KIAOCHAU
DIRECTORY
KAISERLICHES GOUVERNEMENT VON KIAUTSCHOU
Kaiserlicher Gouverneur-Vizeadmiral Truppel, Excellenz, Chef der Zivil und Militar- verwaltung, oberster Befehlshaber der Besatzungstruppen, zur Zeit beurlaubt Stellvertretender Gouverneur-Alleröchst mit der Stellvertretung beauftragt, Kapitan sur See Meyer. Waldeck, Chef des Stabes Gouvernementesskretar-Bechnungsrat Nitschke
LANDESVERWALTUNG
Zivilkommissar-Gch. Reg. Rat. Gunther Kommissar fur Chinesische Angelegen- heiten Wirkl.Adm. Rat. Dr.Schirameier Sekretar der Landesverwaltung---Fischer Dolmetscher-Dr. Wirtz, Dr., Michelsen. Dolmetschereleven Trittel, Mohr, Dr.
Voigt, Thilo
CHINESISCHE KANZLEI
Vorstand Dolmetscher Dr. Michelsen
BEZIRKSAMT TSINGTAU
Bezirksamtmann Mootz
BEZIRKSAMT LITSUN
Bezirksamtmann-Dolmetscher Grosso Bezirksamtsurzt--Mar. Ob. Ass.Arzt Dr.
Karger
LANDAMT
Oberlandmesser-Goedecke
Katasterzeichner Jakoby, Angerstein
FORSTAMT
Gouvernementsoberforster-Hass Revierförster- Klimant
Forster Prediger, Forstaufseher Berkhahn
Gouvernementsgärtner--Krug
POLIZEJAMT
Polizeichef-Welzel
JUSTIZVERWALTUNG
Oberrichter-Dr. Crusen
Richter-Wegener, Lehmann
Referendare Dr. Klügmann, Rumpf,
Wible
Obersekretar--Bergemann Sekretare-Gerlach, Tabbert
Rechtsanwalte und Notare---Dr. Koch,
Zimmermann
Hilfsdolmetscher--Ferring
BAUVERWALTUNG
Hafenbaudirektor-Bökemanu
Hochbaudirektor Strusser
Regierungsbaumeister--Blaich, Schubart,
Vaske
Diplomingenieur--Steimnetz Werftverwaltungssekretar --Ciacdicke Obermarincintendantursekretar --- Rönne-
beek
Technische Sekretäre--Prüss, Lazarowicz,
Reichau
Garnisonbauassistent-Eissner Betriebsführer-Glaubitz, Wassmann
OBSERVATORIUM
Direktor-Dr. Meyermann
HAFEN-UND SEEMANNSAMT
Hafenkapitan Korv. Kapt. z. L. Janusen Hafenmeister-- Ziebe
Lotsen Matthiesen, Hense
SEELSORGE
Evangelischer Gouvernementspfarrer -
Winter
Mit der kath. Seelsorge beauftragt-
Pfarrer Dr. Kosters
GOUVERNEMENTSSCHULE
Leiter--Professor Tuczeck,
Oberlehrer-Dr. Dönitz, Küntzel, Roser,
Dr. Goerke
Lehrer--Gerlach, Schuhmann
Lehrerinnen- Frl. Siebert, Frau Crusen
DEUTSCH-CHINESISCHE HOCHSCHULE Leiter Professor Keiper
Dozenten und Lehrer-Professor Jerosch, Dr. Gutherz, Dr. Othmer, Lessing, Tietz, Berger, Janchen
Uebersetzungsbureau -- Dolmetscher Dr.
Wirtz
MILITARVERWALTUNG
Chef des Stabes --Kapitan zur Sec Meyer
Waldeck
I. Adjutant-Hauptmann Pinder Dolmetscheroffizier, zugleich Platzmajor-
i. V. Hauptmann Schering
HI. SEEBATAILLON
Kommandeur--Major v. Below
Hauptleute: - Lieber, Mansfeld, Hiuk,
Graf v. Brockdorff, Mueller
Oberleutnants Hoffmann, Barensprung, V. Bennigsen, Hüttmann, Stampe, Dronke, v. Zieguer, Mühlmann, Eck- stein, Bergere, Schroeder, Tietz, Francke, Zimmermann, Behrens,
Detten, Schade, Roller Leutnants-Hoffmann, Dauzer, v. Jise-
mann
Mar. Oberzallmeister- Wittig, Dauz Oberveterinar-Pfeiffer
KIAOCHAU
MATROSEN-ARTILLERIE-ABTEILUNG KIAUTSCHOU
Kommandeur-Freg. Kapt. Hahn Kapitanleutnant Gotting, Wossidlo,
Herrmann, Reichelt
Oberleutnant zur See Pauli, Steffen, Rode, Wolff, Hermann, Becker, Eltester, Höhlbaum, v. Kretschmar Mar.-Stabszahlmeister-Vorlaeufer
VERPFLEGUNGS-UND BEKLEIDUNGSAMT Mar. Oberzahlmeister Michaelis
FORTIFIKATION
Major-Klehmet, zugleich Ingenieurofi-
zier vom Platz
Hauptmann-Friemel
Oberleutnants-Chambeau, Dronke Festungsbauoberleutnant-Moslehner Festungsbauleutnant-Steffen
ARTILLERIEDEPOT
Korv. Kapt.-Orth, zugleich Artillerieoffi-
zier vom Platz
Feuerwerkskapitanleutnant-Falkenhayn
Feuerwerksoberleutnants
ger, Kaiser
HINENDEPOT
Korv. Kapt.-Orth
Muller, Klin
Torpederoberleutnant-Dreyer
Torpederleutnant--Scholz
FINANZVERWALTUNG. ETATS-UND
RECHNUNGSWESEN
Gouvernementsintendant-Mar. Int. Rat.
Winchenbach, Mar. Int. Rat. Klett Ober-Marineintendanturseckretar-Zöpke
Marineintendantursekretare -- Staffeldt,
Gebühr, Kluge
MARINE-GARNISON VERWALTUNG Direktor-Rechnungsrat Behrens
Mar. Garn.-Verw.-Insp. und Kontroll-
fuhrer-Weinland
Mar. Garn.-Verw.-Inspektoren
Walter, Herrmann, Bahr
GOUVERNEMENTSKASSE
Mar. Stabszahlmeister-Fichtner
―
Klein,
Mar. Oberzahlmeister-Stohr, Michaelis
LAZARETTVERWALTUNG UND KRAN-
KENPFLEGE
Gouvernementsarzt-Mar. General Ober-
arzt Dr. Uthemann
GOUVERNEMENTSLAZARETT
Chefarzt-Mar. Oberstabsarzt Professor,
Dr. Martini
Mar. Oberstabsarzte-Dr. Podestà, Dr.
Staby
Mar. Stabsarzte- Dr. Kautzsch, Dr. Pralil, Dr. Ploger, Dr. Wendt, Dr. Kobert,
Hubsch, Dr. Bengscli Mar.-Ob-Ass.-Aerzte
813
Dr. Karger, Dr. Schmidt, Dr. Fürth, Dr. Paul Mar. Oberstabsapotheker-Dr. Grothe Hilfsapotheker-Albrecht
Marinelazarettinspktoren-Freise, Dienst Oberschwester Maria Douglas, Schwe- stern-Katharina Branz, Kate Gusmar, Erna Reichel, Wilhelmine Ehlers
TSINGTAUER WERFT
(Tsingtauer Werft,-Shipbuilding, Engine- building, Boilermaking: Tel. Address "Twerft")
Leiter Marinebaurat-S. Breymann Marinebaumeister-Wendenburg Diplomingenieur-Momber Ingenieur-Winter
Marinewerkmeister-Woost Dockmeister-Voss
Werkführer Schmidt, Eisermann,
Meyer
Elektr. Techn. König Mechaniker-Limbach
Former Reploeg, Grösser Tischler-Todenhagen
Kesselschmiede-Vetter, Ritter Maschinenbauer-Cubasch, Kandul-
ski, Loffler, Schroeder
Schlosser-John, Hübner, Glockler,
Schmutnig Schmied--Schulz
Kupferschmied Pawelczyk Modelltischler-Rippert
Schiffszimmermann-Biermann
Dreher-Endrass
Aufseher-Weickert
Lehrling Bornmann, K. Meyer, H. Meyer, Löffler, Vierege, Dietrich
Kaufmännisches Bureau
Technischer Sekretär-Havemann Werftbuchfuhrer-Pesel, Fraatz Werkführer-Meyer Techniker-Fick
Magazinverwalter-Müller
Bureaugehilfen-Henke, Krantz, Ha-
ack
Lohnschreiber Harnisch, Kuhndt.
Ebert, Fürstenau
Kaufmann - Gabriel, Seydel
Konstruktionsbureau
Ingenieur-Poppe
Techniker-Wedel, Grote, Gundlach
Rechnungsstelle
Werftbuchführer-Wiesner
Bureaugehilfe-Wendler
ELEKTRIZITÄTSWERK
Betriebsingenieur-Henke Werftbuchfuhrer-Seemann
Elektr.-Techn.- Müller Monteur--Jauch
I
F
814
KAJENVERWALTUNG
Vorstand Rechnungsrat Solf Lagerverwalter-Mičknass
SCHLACHTHOF
KIAOCHAU
Vorstand Gouvernementstierarzt Egge-
brecht
KAISERLICH DEUTSCHES POST UND
TELEGRAPHIENAMT
Postdirektor-Philipp
Postinspektor-Schülz
Postassistents-Strecker, Maurer, Priess, Börter, Kloppel, Tittmann, Kruger, Hinzpeter
Leitungsaufscher--Zeitschel, Weymar
AHRENS, H., Baugeschaft und Fischlerei
AMTSBLATT FÜR DAS DEUTSCHE KIAU-
TSCHOU-GEBIET
Herausgegeben vom Kaiserlichen Govt.
ANZ & Co., Merchants
An-sz
O. Anz (Chefoo)
C. Benck (Tsingtau) E. Kretzschmar
F. Minal
Agencies
Lloyd's
China Navigation Co., Ld. Mogul Line of Steamers Java-China-Japan Lijn
Preussische National Vers. Ges., Stettin Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges., Berlin Equitable Life Assurance Society Cliina Mutual Life Insurance Co. British and Foreign Marine Insce. Co. Fatum Accident Insurance Co.
Nutura Milch Bosch & Co., Waren
Dimitrino & Co., Cairo
EL Soey-che 記瑞
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co., Merchants; Tel.
Ad: Karberg
Philipp Arnhold (London)
Harry Arnhold,
do.
E. Goetz (Hongkong)
M. Niclassen (Berlin)
A. E. Dowler (New York)
E. Munder, signs per pro. M. A. Wagner
W. Hausing
F. W. Batenian H. Behaghel
1gencies
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp. China Fire Jusurance Co., Ld. Royal Insurance Company
South British Fire & Marine Ins. Co. Aachen & Munich Fire Ins. Co.
Allgemeine Vers. Ges. fur S. F, und
Landtrpt, Dresden
Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corp., Ld. New York Life Insurance Company Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co.
Shell Transport & Trading Co., Ld.
Messageries Maritimes
"Prince" Line of Steamers
American & Oriental Transport Line
亞細亞 A-Bi-d
ASIATIC PETROLEUM Co., LD, THE
S. Riches
S. Mottis
J. Walker, installation engineer
BAUMANN, ARNOLD, Warenhaus
Tai-fong
BEERMANN, J.,Builder and House Furnisher,
Machinery
BERGER, H., Japanwaren Handling
DANA Bei-ni-goe-kung-sy BERNICK, H., & POTTER; Tel. Ad: Industrie, A.B.C. Code 4th & 5th Edition, Standt & Hundius Baugeschaft - Geschaftslokat Hamburger Strasse 413/4
Karl. Potter
H. Hardel
C. Fröhlich
BODIKER, CARL & Co., Kommandigesell-
schaft auf Actien
Carl Bodiker (Hamburg) A. Krauss, manager H. Grallert, clerk
BRITISH CONSULAR AGENT
R. H. Eckford
BUCHINGER, H., Prakt., Zahuarzt.
和禮 Li-ho
CARLOWITZ & Co., Merchants
C. von Bose (Hamburg)
C. E. Rayner (Shanghai)
M. March, (Hamburg), B. Rosenbaum (Shanghai) T. Rushmore (New York)
W. Schütter, signs per pro. Fr. Pramann G. Rohreke O. Heyer P. Paelz E. Brath
P. Valder
C. Henzler (Tsinanfu)
Agencies
China Mutual Steamship Co., Ltd. Navigazione Generale Italiana
KIAOCHAU
815
Ocean Steamship Company Pacific Mail Steamship Company Occidental & Oriental Steamship Co. Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Russian Steam Navigation in the East. Frank Waterhouse & Company Gothaer Lebens Vers.
Gegenseitizkeit
Bank auf
Manheimer Vers. Gesellschaft Hamburg-Bremen Feuer Vers. Ges. Basler Vers. Ges. Gegen Feuerschaden "Albingia" Versicherungs Act. Ges. London and Lancashire Fire Ins. Co. "Globus" Insurance Co. of Hamburg British America Assurance Company China Traders' Insurance Co., Ltd." Deutscher Lloyd Trans. Vers. Act. Ges Sea Insurance Company, Limited Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. Yokohama Specic Bank Ltd.
CENTRAL HOTEL
Pabst, manager
CHINESE IMPERIAL POST OFFICE
E. Ohlmer, district postmaster (ex officio) Hinrichs, J., chief postal officer
Ho-Kee
CORNABE, ECKFORD & Co., Merchants
A. M. Eckford (London) V. R. Eckford (Chefoo)
R. H. Eckford (Tsingtau)
R. Gardiner
R. Roche
Agencies
Royal Insurance Co.
New Zealand Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, L‹l.
General Accident Fire & Life Assce.
Corp.
New York Life Insurance Co.
UN
Kiao-hai-kuan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL CHINESE MARITIME
Indoor Staff
E. Ollmer, commissioner
W. R. Clouth, first assistant
K. W. H. Bode, 4th assistant
E. H. M. Pannenborg, 4th assistant
J. F. Puvogel,
W. E. Lochte
C. J. Gutt
Dr. Dipper, medical officer
Outdoor Staff
do
lo
C. A. Maasberg, acting tidesurveyor
G. Kopp, examiner
C. W. Griese, examiner
G. K. Goldau, assistant examiner
H. F. H. Goetze,
J. H. Schlager,
C. Gutwald,
do.
do.
do.
F. F. Henke, 1st class tidewaiter
W. A. Hempel, 2nd
do.
P. E. Schütz,
do.
H. W. Schlesiger,
do.
A. E. Hallgreen, 3rd class tidlewaiter W. C. B. Schoppe,
do.
H. Hensel,
do.
R. W. R. Rieck,
do.
J. G. Trimborn,
do.
F. E. Lotterшoser,
do.
E. P. Pretzsch,
do.
R. P. Schubert,
do.
J. van Hauten,
do.
J. F. M. Busch,
do.
P. M. Thiele,
do.
O. Christ,
do.
W. B. A. Jauer
F. J. T. Steitz, probationer tidewaiter H. H. P. Kaye, watcher
DEUTSCH-ASIATISCHE BANK
F. Schmidt-Decarli, manager
A. Schmidtbom, sub-manager H. Schmidt
6
R. Weise J. Janner H. W. Knoke P. Linke
Fu-tschang-schu-kų
DEUTSCH CHINESISCHE DRUCKEREI UND VERLAGS-ANSTALT, (Inhaber Gottfried Werner)German Printing and Publishing House; Tel. Ad: Werner
Gottfried Werner, proprietor
Walthen Schmidt, signs per pro.
Alfred Hallmeisten
司公絲 華德
De-choa-tsan-se-kung-sy
DEUTSCHI CHINESISCHE SEIDEN-INDUSTRIE
GESELLCHAFT(Kolonial-Gesellschaft);Tel.
Ad: Eichenlaub
E. Schnitzler, manager
司公易貿務磻華德
De-choa-kuan-wa-mau-i-kung-se
DEUTSCHE GESELLCHAFT FÜR BERGBAU UND
INDUSTRIE IM Ausland (Kolonial Ges.)
Betriebs Direction (Tsingtau)
Bergdie, Ed. Schmiedel, Ingineur Betriebs Abtheilung Chefoo (Manschau)
W. Führ Steiger
Tschie-tsch'eng
DIEDERICHSEN, & Co., H., Export, Import, Coal, Steam Brick Factory and Shipping; Tel. Ad; Hadide
H. Diederichsen (Kiel) partner Ph. Moeller (Shanghai) do
816
A. Thurn, signs per pro. W. Buesching, signs per pro. R. Helbritter,
W. Nilsson
C. Ziervogel
F. Baude
J. Schneider
A. Wolf
W. Pruess
H. Grantz
Agencies
do.
KIAOCHAU
Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremen Canadian-Pacific R. Co.'s R.M.S. Line Nippon Yusen Kaisha, Tokyo Great Northern Steamship Company Oesterreichischer Lloyd, Trieste Germanischer Lloyd
Bureau Veritas
Deutscher Rhedlerei Verein
Verein Hamburger Assekuradeure
Verein Bremer Seeversicherungs Ges., Deutsche Transport Versich. Ges.
Norddeutsche
Versicherungs
Hamburg
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
Royal Exchange Assurance
Ges.
DIEKMANN, H., Maschinenbau und Kunst-
chlosserei
威德 Doe-wee
EBERHARDT, BOLLWEG & Co., Merchants
(in liquidation)
W. Knoop (Tsingtau)-liquidator
Shih-Ch'any
EDDELBUTTEL, W., Restaurant Germania
Taitung Shen, Tsingtau
EH Shih Chung
EDUARD MEYER & CO.
Eduard Meyer (Tientsin)
F. Macke, signs per pro. A. Mohrstedt
EHRLICH, E., Baugeschäft, Contractor
GERMANIA BRAUEREI, Proprietors: The Anglo-German Brewery Co., Ld., Hong- kong: Tel. Ad. Brauerei, Tsingtau
E. Sicmissen, director
M. Wehle
H. Hensler
L. Ziech
GESHIRE, JOHS.
GOMOLL, CARL, Brewery
GRILL, MAX, Bookseller
HAFEN RESTAURANT-C. Dietrich
HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE, Tsingtau: Tel.
Ad. Hapag
F. Nicolai, manager
HANDELSKAMMER ZU TSINGTAU (Chamber of Commerce), Sitzungszimmer Prinz Heinrichestrasse 147
Vorstand K. Schmidt, I vorsitzender
C. Eichwede, II
C. Benck, schriftfulirer
F. Schmidt, Decarli, eassirer C. Miss, bibliothekar
do.
H. C. Augustesen, G. Boolsen, P.
Hildebrand, E. Hoeft, Fr. Oster,
W. Schuetters, J. C. Walther
Secretaer W. Geim
局書印岛青
HAUPT, ADOLF
Tsingtau Yin Schu tschü
Buchdruckerei, Buchbinderei, Pa-
pierhandlung,
Geschäftsbücher
und Stempelfabrik
Telegr. Ad. Haupt, Tsingtau Teleph. Nr. 72, Geschäftslokal Friedrichstrasse No. 405 Adolf Haupt, Inhaber
HEINRICH, P., General Outfitter
Gentlemen and Military tailors
HEINZEL, A. W., Spediteur
C. Buroh O. Henizel
HOTEL KIAUCHOU
W. Hinnery
HOTEL METROPOLE
A. Baumann
窩客利亨
HOTEL "PRINZ HEINRICH," Stadthotel,
Strand Hotel; Tel. Ad: Prinzhotel
A. Hundertmurk, first manager Grünwald, second manager Mrs. A. Hundertmark
ILTISBERG MINERALWASSERFABRIK
C. Wilde
A. Meyer
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., LD., Merchants
C. Wedemeyer
W. T. Susenuhl
Pogson
KAPPLER & SOHN, R., Brick & Tile Factory
R. Kappler
H. Kappler
KEINING, E., Café Restaurant
KLEES, H. Dr., Med. Pract., Agent
Chien-tai
KIAOCHAU
KLEESCHULTE, WILHELM-Tel. Ad: Klee-
schulte, Tsingtau
Corles-A.B.C. Code, 5th Ed. White- law's Code, Western Union Code, Private Codes; Telephone No. 2; Import, Export, Agencies--Honan Street
Wilhelm Kleeschulte (Tientsin) Agencies
Prussian National Insurance Co., Ld. Vereinigte Graetzer Bierbrauereien
Ak. Ges. Graetz, Posen
大保
KLIENE & Co., Export aud Import---Tel-
phone 481; Tel. Âd: Orion
H. von Koslowski
Agency
State Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
The United Netherlands Lloyd
East India Sea & Fire Insco. Co. Batavia Sea & Fire Insce. Co. Java Sea & Fire Insce. Co.
Kocn, DR, Rechtsanwalt and Notar
Attorney-at-law
KROGU, M., Contractor, Mineral Water Works, Import and Export Merchant, Horticulturist
LAENGNER GEER, Import and Export,
Brick and Dutch Tiles Factory
Martin Laengner
Franz Laenguer
B. Kalbein, manager, brick factory
基德
LAMPE, W., Restaurant
LEAGUE, Thomas, Missonary Agent
LEHMANN, FR., Restaurant
LIEDKE, FR., Gerberei
基
Jing-gi
LINKE, Orro, Merchant and Druggist; Tel.
Ad: Linke; Teleph. 16
Schlothauer
LUTHER, Miss H., Boarding House
司公匠匣此馬
MATZ, Erich, Malermeister Farbengeschaft.
Glaserei and Tapezirerei; Tel. Ad: Maler
matz; Code A. B. C. 5th Ed.; Telepli. As Geschaftslokal: Hamburgerstrasse Ecke, Bremerstrasse
MAUEREK, FR. XAVER, Mason
MILLER, PAUL, Hairdresser
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, Merchants
MOHRSTEDT, MRS., Boarding House
MISSIONS
817
For Protestant Missions See end of China
Directory
FRANCISCAN MISSION OF MARY, Convent
of the Holy Ghost, Tsingtau
Rev. Mother Maria della Strada,
Superioress, and 9 sisters
GERMAN BOARDING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
OBRTEL, FERD., Hair Dressing Saloon
特玉歐 Osta
OSTER FRANZ, Shipbuilding, Engineering and Iron Works Techn. Office Tel. Ad: Dampf
Отно, А. Л., Baker
PICKARDT, CARL, Painter-Prinz Heinrich
St. 144
興立
RACINE, ACKERMANN & Co., Import and
Export, Tsingtan
A. Pierrugues, signs per pro.
W. Roper
RICHARDT, T., Spedition.
RICHTER, P., Importer
RICHTER, PAUL FRIEDR.,Architect-Zweig-
bureau Tsinanfu
Otto Cellarius, kaufmann
Jol Eilts, ingénieur
A. Schillig, maurerpolier (Tsinanfu) K. Schafer
do.
RICKLER, W, Bakery and Flour Miller
ROEPER, A., Painter
斯羅 Lo-sy
ROSE, OTTO, Buch-Papier and Musikalien
handlung; Telph. 24
ROTE KREIBZ, Apotheke
A. Larz
H. Sanitz
F. Eter
P. Hukelhein
W. Meyer P. Schleif
26
818
·康利 Li-kong
SANDER WIELER & Co., Merchants
G. Wieler (Hamburg)
R. Becker
(do.)
A. Becker (Hongkong)
A. Sander (Shanghai)
KIAOCHAU
A. Seidel, signs per pro., manager
W. Fischer
F. Straube
M. Roeper
Agency
Central Fire Insur Co., Ld., London
A# Kwang-wu-kung-sy
SCHANTUNG BERGBAU GESELLSCHAFT-- Telegr. Adresse: Tungschan, Tsingtau; Codes: Broomhall Mining Code, A. B. C. Code, 5th. Ed., New General & Mining Code; Telepton, Bureau No. 32, Kohlenlager Mole 1 No. 117. Geschaeft- slokal Kaiser Wilhelm Ufer No. 117 Inhaber: Schantung-Bergbau-Ges, Bergbau-Direction Tsingtau
Bergassessor Dr. Max, Bruecher, berg-
werksdirektor
K. Schmidt, kaufmaennischer direktor Max Peters, Kaufmann
Aug. Meinke,
do.
Max Torkewitz, Buchhalter
Wilh. Friedhoff, Bureaubeamter
Herm. Deuter,
do.
Karl Fischer,
do.
Felix Marnitz,
do.
Oskar Beck, Verladebeamter
SCHEITHAUER & Tos
Wagenbau Austalt
SCHLACHTBAUER, K., Tapezier and De-
corations Geschaft, Tattlerei
SCHMIDT, F. H., Architect-Engineer
F. P. Schmidt (Altona)
J. Becker,
do.
C. Miss, signs per pro.
K. Kroeber, signs per pro,
B. Moser
W. Muller
S. Kalbein
E. Wesser
P. Buhlmann P. Bornmanu
Fu
Suing-hoa
SCHWARZKOPF & Co., F., Stammhaus: F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong, Filiale: F. Schwarzkopf & Co., Tsinan-fu, Import, Export, Versicherungen, Spedition, Shipping Spezialitat: Schiffsbedarfsar-
tikel Baumaterialien
F. H. Höhnke (Hamburg) F. Schwarzkopf (Hongkong) R. Behin (Tsingtau)
M. Bunsen, prokurist
A. Schwaff,
K. Stoffregen Th. Theen
C. Wendt
F. Hohnke
C. Krúschinski E. Engel
E. Kraschinski
do.
J. Sass, prokurist (Tsinanfu)
Agencies
Feuer Versichrungen
do.
Magdeburger Feuer Vers. Ges. M'burg Feuer-Assecuranz Co. v. 1877 Hamburg Salamander Fire Insur. Co., Londo Northern Assurance Co., Commercial Union Assurance Co., do. Lebens & Militardienst Vers.
Germania, Lebens Vers., Stettin Dtsch. Militardient-D. & L. V. G.,
Hannover
Commercial Union Assurance Co., L. See & Transport, Versich
Fortuna, Allgem. Versich Akt. 1 Ges.,
Berlin
Commercial Union Assurance Co., L. Spedition :
Unfall-Versicherung
Commercial Union Assurance Co., L. Transport Akt. 1 Ges., Hamburg Wilh. Losch & Co.,
do.
J. H. Bachmann, Bremen & Hamburg Karl Griffel, Wilhelmshaven Stets Lager folgd. Fabriken: Henkell & Co., Mainz Sektkelterei, Girard & Co., Cognac
E. & F. Cantor, Mainz, Rhein & Mosele-
webbie
Hofbrauhaus, Würzburg
Salvator-Brauerei, Munchen, Zacherl
& Paulanerbräu
Thomasfranerco Munchen Bavaria-Brauerei, Altona
M. B. Foster & Sons, London, Guinness
Stout and Ale
Alex. Ferguson & Co., Glasgow, P. & U.
Whisky
James Munroe & Sons, Ltd., London,
"House of Lords" Whisky Paul Erasmi & Co, Lübeck, Conserven 5. Arzt & Brother, Portsaid, Cigaretten Seifen & Sodafabrik., F. Blackhead &
Co, Hongkong
Geldschrankfabrik, H. C. E. Eggers &
Co., Hamburg
Germanen Oefenfabrik, Oskar Winter,
Hannover
Ofenfabrik Wilhelm Paul & Miller,
Magdeburg
Sparkochherdfabrik A., Senking,
Hildesheim
Anker Linoleumfabrik, Delmenhorst Continent Peganoid Akt. Ges., (refold
KIAOCHAU
819
Asbest & Gummiwerke Alfred Calmon,
Hamburg
Weber-Falckenberg,
brik Berlin
Dachpappenfa
Ransbacher Mosaikplattenfabrik Villeroy & Doch, Mettlacher Fliesen Eschebachsche Werke, Closet & Bade
Einr, Fliesen
Steingutfabrik Witteburg, Closet &
Badeeinrichtungen
Sanitas, Akt. Ges., Hamburg, Closet &
Badeeinrichtungen
Adlerwerke vorm. Hch. Kleyer, Frank-
furt, Schreibmaschinen
Felten Guilleaume, Lalineɣerwerke,
Coln, Kabel, Dratseile
Daimler-Motoren-Ges., Cannstadt Farbenfabrik Suter, Hartmann and
Rahtjens, London Berner Alpenmilch, Ges. Minimax-Feuer Losch Apparate
SIEMENS-SCHUCKERTWERKE, Techn Bureau
-Tsingtau
O. Muller, ingénieur
Tschan-tschen
SIEMSSEN & Co., Import, Export, Ship- ping, Insurance, and Banking-Kaiser Wilhelm Ufer, No. 310; Telephi. No. 27; Tel. Ad: Siemssen
A. Güeltzow (Hamburg) N. A. Siebs do.
A. Fuchs
do.
O. Struckmeyer (Shanghai)
H. A. Siebs (Hongkong)
E. Siebert (Tientsin)
E. Hoeft, manager, signs per pro. W. Gosewisch
E. Reichert
Agencies
Banks
Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China International Banking Corporation
Shipping
American Asiatic S. S. Co.
Apcar Line of Steamers
Ben Line of Steamers
Boston S. S. Co.
China Commercial S N. Co., Lıl.
China Merchants' S. N. Co.
Danish Russian Steamship Co., Lð, Eastern & Australian S. S. Co. East Asiatic Co., Ld.
Flensburger Dampfschiff. Ges. v. 1869 Glen Line of Steamers Mexican Oriental S. S. Line
do.
route
do
do. Tehuantepec
Northern Pacific Steamship Co., Ld. Northern Steamship Co, L, St.
l'etersburg
Oregon Railroad & Nav. Co.
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Osaka Shosen Kaisha, Pacific Line Portland & Asiatic Steamship Co. Svenska Ostasiatiska Komp. M. Struve, Blankenese
Insurance
Allianz Vers. A. G. Berlin L'Union Insurance Co., Ld., Puzia Sun Insurance Office, London Agrippina, Transport Vers. Ges. AllianzVors A.G. Berlin und Muenchen Comitato della Compagnie d' Assi-
curozioni Maritime di Genova De Private Assecurandeurer, Kopen-
hagen
Fjerde Soiorsikringsselskab, Kopen-
hagen
Fortuna Allgemeine Vers. A. G. Berlin Germania Transport Vers. A. G. Berlin Hall Underwriters' Association, L.,
Hull & Hamburg
Internationaler Lloyd Vers. A. G.Berlin. London Assurance Corporation Muenchener Rueckversicherungs Ges-
ellschaft, Muenchen
Niederrheinische Gueter Assecuranz,
Wesel
North China Insurance Co., Ld., S. Rheinisch Westfaelischer Lloyd, M.
Gladbach
Rheinisch Westfaelische Rueckvers. A.
G., M. Gladbach
Salamandra Vers. Ges., St. Petersburg Schweizerische National Vers. Ges. B. United Dutch Marine Ins. Cos., London Vaterlaendische Transport Vers. A. G. Versicherungs Ges. Jakor, Moskan Janus Lebens & Pensions V.G.Hamburg Koelnische Unfall Vers. A. G., Koeln. Standard Lebensversicherungs Ges. Hauptbureau fuer den O., Shanghai Maatschappij Tot Mijn Bosch en Land- bouwexploitatie in Langkat, Ld. (Petroleum Co., Ltd.)
福祥 Siang-fu
SIEMSSEN, ALFRED, Timber Merchant
Tel. Ad: Alemania
A. Siemssen (Tsingtau)
W. Schlottow
Agencies
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Ld. Norwich Union Insurance Society, Atlas Assurance Co. Western Assurance Co.
BRL PA
Ha-li
Sietas, Plambeck & Co.
J. J. Block (Hamburg) H. C. N. Plambeck H. C. Augustesen C. Rohde
26*
I
I
I
|
820
W. Scheel, signs per pro. Ad. Hackmack
H. Biehl
L. Witt
C. Behrens R. Henckel E. Knoll O. Wuschhof B. Ziegenhals L. Burmeister T. Brocking
K. Schwenke
H. Valk
H. Homburg A. Glathe
M. Bjórn H. Grefen F. Hennig E. Schaffner C. Juchleim J. Petersen
Agencies
KIAOCHAU
Union Assurance Society, Ld., London Nord-Deutsche Versicherungs Gesel-
schaft, Hamburg
"Nordstern" Lebens und Unfall Ver
sichering, Berlin
World Marine Insurance Co., Ld, Lon-
don
Tsinanfu Branch-W. Schroeder, signs
per pro.
SNETIILAGE & SIEMSSEN, Tsingtau Land
Investment Co.
A. Siemssen (Tsingtau)
W. Schlottow
STEFFENS, HERMANN, Baugeschaft
STOLZ & KIND, bildhauer
A. Stolz
Fr. Kind
SYFANGER MOLKEREI, J. Heisinger
TSINGTAUER NEUESTE NACHRICHTEN, Re- daktion und Expedition Irencstrasse Ecke Richthofenstrasse; Tel. Ad: Pub- licatio
Verantwortl. Redakteur--J. Walther Schriftleiter-Fr. Secker jr Sekretär-Ma Tscheng Hung
TSINGTAUER WERFT, Shipbuilding, En- gineering, Boilermaking, 16,000 tons Dock and 150 tons Crane; Tel. Ad: Werft Tsingtau
Director-S. Breymann, Bourat
Maschinenbau-Abteilung
Diplom Ingenieur-B. Momber Werkmeister F. Woost Ingenieur-C. Poppe
Techniker-H. Wedel, E. Grote, K.
Gundlach
Elektro-Techniker-H. Konig Mechaniker-W. Limbach Former H. Reploeg, H. Grosser Kesselschmied-E. Vetter, W. Ritter Maschinenbauer-K. Cubasch, B. Kan-
dulski, H. Loffler, H. Schroder Schlosser A. Glockler Schmied-K. Schulz
Kupferschmied-A. Pawelczyk Modell Tischler-E. Rippert Dreher-I. Endrass
Lehrling--B. Bornmann, K. Meyer, II. Meyer, E. Loffler, W. Vieregge, O. Dietrich
Schiffbau Abteilung
Schiffbaumeister H. Wendenburg Ingenieur L. Winter
Dockmeister-W. Voss
Werkführer-W. Seluidt, A. Eiser-
mann
Schlosser--H. John, A. Hübner, I
Schmutnig
Schillszimmermann-I. Biermann Tischler-W. Todenbagen Aufscher-Th. Weickert
Kaufmannische-Abteilung
Techn. Sekretär-H. Havemann Werftbuchführers--F. Pesel, H. Frantz Werkführer--H. Meyer Maschinen-Techniker-O. Fick Magazin Verwalter-R. Muller Kaufoann--A. Seydel, T. Gabriel Bureau Gehilfe H. Henke, G. Kr-
autz, K. Haack
Lohnschreibers-E. Harnisch, R. Für-
stenau, K. Raschdorf Rechnungsstelle
Werftbuchführer--H. Wiesner Bureau Gehilfe R. Wendler Lohnschreiber--M. Kuhndt
M ME
We-lin
VERING, C., Engineer (Road, Canal, Rail- way, River Correction and Harbour); Tel. Ad: Vering
(Branch Office: 12 Yangtsepoo Road,
Shanghai)
H. Vering (Hamburg)
Dr. C. Vering (Hamburg)
J. Stick forth (Tsingtau)
S. K. Lee, assistant
VOGT, B, Hotel
威佛
Foh. Wei
VORWERK, ZIMMERMANN & BUSING, Rechts-
anwälte; Tel. Ad: Anwalt
A. F. Vorwerk, Dr. jur.
Manfred Zimmermann, notar.
H. Busing, Dr. jur.
Joh. Müller, bureauvorstand
KIAOCHAU--TSINANFU
821
VON Duering, WIBEL & Co., Merchants
Agency
Sandler, Wieler & Co.
Li-zung
WALTHER, J. Geo., Merchant
J. Walther
Agency
W. Pacton Knuth
The Netherlands Fire Ins. Co. of 1845
WEBER, P., Baugeschaft
WEBER, J., Butcher
Wai-le
WINCKLER & Co. G. m. b. H. Merchants
P. Küss
E. Staeber
E. Ackermann R. Trenke
WOLF, F.,
Gartnerei
WUNSCH, D., med. prakt. arzt.-Tsingtau:
Prinz Heinrichstrasse
ZIMMERMANN & Co., M., Importers and
Exporters
TSINANFU
Tsinan (or Chinan, as it is sometimes written), the capital of the province of Shantung, has the distinction of being the first city in the Chinese Empire in which a Foreign Commercial Settlement was voluntarily opened by the Government of China. The date of its inauguration was January 10th, 1906. The city of Tsinan lies at the foot of a range of hills (Lat. 36° 50′ N ; Long. 117° É), and has a gradual slope from south to north. Situated in the south-west suburb are magnificent springs giving forth many tons of water per minute, and the streams from these natural fountains flow through the city to a lake situated on the north side. This abundance of water tends to make Tsinan one of the cleanest as well as one of the healthiest cities in the Empire. The population is computed to number about 300,000, about one-twentieth of whom profess the Mohain medan faith.
In an address delivered on the occasion
of the inauguration of the Foreign Settlement, the Governor of Shantung described Tainan as occupying a pivotal position with respect to northern and southern China and as being on the main route from Kaifeng Fu to the Yellow Sca. "An immense development," he declared, "must therefore await this Settlement, and though it may never equal the largest commercial centres of Europe and America, yet it may well hope to enter into rivalry with them." A number of foreigners and foreign institutions are establishing themselves in the Settlement, including the German Consul and staff, the Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Messrs Carlowitz & Co., Schwarzkopf & Co., Gutend & Co., and others; while lots have already been reserved for Messrs. Diederichsen, Jebsen & Co., a Japanese Consulate, the Yokohama Specie Bank, and the Mitsui Bussan Kaisha. Many Chinese houses have been built and more are in course of erection in the Settlement. The Tientsin-Pukou Railway Co. has acquired a large piece of ground in the Settlement, and is building offices and dwelling-houses for members of the Stuff
thereon.
Tsinanfu is connected by rail with Tsingtau (Kiaochau), distance 412 kilometers, and by canal with Yang Chiao Kou, on the Gulf of Chilli, distance 146 miles, whence there are occasional steamers to Chefoo. The Shantung Railway in 1906 carried 846,840 passengers and 381,649 tons of goods as against 803,527 and 310,480 respectively in the previous year, and the income rose from $1,912,296 to 82,168,897 with an increase of less than $1,400 in expenses ($911,787 against $910,382). The line paid a dividend of 44 per cent. In 1907 it carried 896,027 passengers and 109,430 tons of goods; and the income rose to $2,359,185, of which $1,018,268 went in working ex- peres. A dividend of 43 per cent, was paid. For 1908, the gross receipts rose to $2,590,08, while the working expenses only totalled $799,652; but, owing to loss on exchange, the dividend remained the same as the previous year. Tsinan stands five miles south of the Huang-ho or Yellow River, and in spite of some difficulties of naviga- tion, there is a considerable junk traffic between its river port of Lo-kon and the Graud Canal, which enters the river eighty miles higher up. This trade is almost if not quite, entirely with the south, to Chining-chou and beyond, since the canal from the Huangho northward to Liu-ching-chou has been unnavigable for several years. The high road from Tsinan to the north crosses the Huang-ho by ferry at Chi-ho Hsien, distant When railway communication is established with Tientsin and with Pakou the commercial prospects of 'Tsinan will be brightened.
sixteen miles.
822
TSINANFU
Tsinan is the head-quarters of the fifth division of the Chinese army, whose camp is a few miles south-west of the town. There has been an arsenal since 1874, north of the town, near Lok'ou on the Yellow River. There is also a military college. Since January, 1906, the main street of the city, the Governor's yamen, and some other public buildings have been lighted by electricity. Great activity has recently been evinced in building colleges and schools and among the interesting institutions of the town the Museum established by the English Baptist Mission should not be overlooked. sacred mountain of China, Tai Shan (5,100ft.) is distant some 35 miles (60 by road) to the south. Küfu, the birthplace and the tomb of Confucius, and the residence of the Confucian duke are about 100 miles away in the same direction. The control of the Settlement is vested in a Bureau whose members are appointed by the Governor of the province.
DIRECTORY
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co., Agents for Asiatic
Petroleum Co.
C. Zachariae
BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO Co.
W. A. Lewis
CARLOWITZ & Co., Merchants
C. Henzler, manager, signs per pro. Th. von Borries
CONSULATES
GERMANY
Consul--Dr. Betz Secretary R. Prehl Interpreter-F. Holzhauer
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-E. C. C. Wilton
DEUTSCH-ASIATISCHE BANK
H. Pfeiffer, agent
GUTEND & Co., R., Export and Import
Merchants
Baron R. von Seckendorff-Gutend
HOSPITAL
Dr. M. Kautzschi
Dr. Kobert
HUA HO Co., Stationers, etc.
K. Tajimi, manager
MISSIONS
For list of Protestant Missionaries See
end of China Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Bishop Eplirem Giesen, Vicar Apos-
tolic, Chinan-fu (absent)
Fr. Pius Trovarelli, Provicar, Hung
Chia Lon near Chinan-fu
Fr. Laetus Kovai, Professor, Hung
Chia Lou near Chinan-fu
Fr. Cyrillius Jarré, Hung Chia Lou
near Chinan-fu
The
Bro. Corbilianus Paugger,lay brother, Hung Chia Lou near Chinan-fu Bro. Caecilius Schluter, Hung Chia
Lou near Chinan-fu
Bro. Heironymus Peseli, Hung Chia
Lou near Chinan-fu
Bro. Hadrianus Kauert, Hung Chia
Lou near Chinan-fu
Fr. Sebastien St. Martin, Tai- an-fu Fr. Eobanus Danne, Man-erh Chu-
ang near Tai-an-fu
Fr. Damescenus Herthenrath, Ch'en-
chia Chuang, Lai-wu Hsien Fr. Arsenius Volling, Hu-ti, in Chang
ch'iu Hsien
Fr. Eleutherius Ermert, Hu-chia Chu-
ang, Ping-yin Hsien
Fr. Leander Misony, Pai-yün Ku, Ping
yin Hsien
Fr. Silverius St. Martin, Shin-k'ou-
Shan, Tung-p'ing Chou
Fr. Pius Meyers, Kao-chia, Lao Chu
ang, Tung-p'ing Chou
Fr. Ildefonsus Heiligenstein, Pei-chang
Chuang, Jen-p'ing Hsien
Fr. Marinus Van der Klei, Tung-ch
ang-fu
Fr. Daniel Lorenzini, Shih-erh-li, Chu.
ang, Wu-ch'eng Hsien
Fr. Vitalis Lange, Te Chou
Fr. Willibroulus Eischenbüscher, Liu-
chia Chai, Lo-p'ing Hsien
Fr. Joseph Vila, Pang-chia Chuang
Yü-ch'eng Hsien
Fr. Aemilianus Stappert, Hsü-chia
Lou, Chang Ch'ing Hsien Fr. Faustinus Cacopaglia, Chiang
Chia, Hui-min Hsien
Fr. Adalbertus Schnucker, Ch'en-chia,
Yang-hsin Hsien
Fr. Raphael Marino, Hsing-chia Chu-
ang, in Hsin-ch'eng Hsien
Fr. Wolfgang Wand, Chang Tien n
Hsien-ch'eng Hsien
華日
NIKKA DISPENSARY, THE
T. Suzuki, manager
TSINANFU
823
POST OFFICE, GERMAN
E. Schulte, postmaster
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
J. P. Donovan, Postal Commissioner A. M, Chapelain, asst. postal officer
and acting accountant
W. F. H. Berends, asst. postal officer C. Behrens, assistant
42 clerks and 174 agents
PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIO
Tsuyoshi, proprietor
RAILWAY
West Station-R. Aurisch, H. Friedel East Station- J. Graf
Railway Police -Supt. R. Sterz
SANATORIUM
Dr. M. Kautzsch
W. H. Robert, assistant Fr. H. Mathes
SCHOOLS
GOVERNMENT HIGH SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
Miss E. Whitewright
LAW SCHOOL
Professor Hirai
PROVINCIAL COLLEGE
D. P. Lucht
F. G. Whittick, prof. of English M. Jordan, prof. of German
SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE
Profs. Yatsue, Kawakame and Fukui
SHANTUNG COMMON & HIGHER NORMAL
SCHOOL
Professors -T. Akita, Ueda, H. Ka- wase, T. Sawamura, and I. Tosaba- yashi
SHANTUNG HIGHER NORMAL SCHOOL.
Shuen-Hoa
SCHWARZKOPF & Co., F.
Staminhaus-F.Blackhead & Co., H'kong.
Zweighaus-F.
Tsingtau
Schwarzkopf & Co.,
Import, Exp., Versicherungen, Spedition
F. H. Hohnke, (Hamburg)
F. Schwarzkopf (Hongkong) R. Behn (Tsingtau)
J. Sass (Procurist) Agenturen
"Feuer Versicherungen
Feuer Assecuranz Co., 1877, Hamburg Salamander Fire Insce. Co., London Northern Assurance Co., London Commercial Union Assce. Co., London Lebens & Militärdienst Versicherungen Germania Lebens Vers. Ges., Stettin Dutsch. Militardienst & L.V.G.,
Hannover
Commercial Union Assce. Co., L❜don. See & Transport Versicherung
Fortuna, Allgem. Vers. Ges., Berlin Spedition
Wilhelm Loesch & Co., Hamburg Transport Akt. Ges.,
do.
J.H. Bachmann, Bremen & Hamburg Karl Griffel, Wilhelmshaven
SETTLEMENT POLICE
Sai Ping Chuan (superintendent) 67 Chinese constables
540 Chinese officers and constables
for the entire city
SIETAS, PLAMBECK & Co. W Schroder, agent
TRENDEL'S HOTEL
A. Trendel, proprietor
WITTICK, F. G., Travelling Representa- tive in China of Messrs. Macmillan & Co., Ld., and The Macmillan Co. of New York, Publishers, c/o Kelly and Walsh, Ld.
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Ahrends, Mrs.
Gabler Gumbert,
Mathes, Mrs.
Aurisch, Mrs. R.
Miss
-
Mueller, Mrs.
Betz, Mrs.
Graf, Mrs.
Bloch, Mrs.
Harmon, Mrs.
Pfeiffer, Mrs.
Boehne, Miss
Harmon, Miss
Reinholz, Mrs.
Neal, Mrs. J. B.
R. vou (senior) Simonton, Miss
Martha Slotnarin, Mrs. Spindler, Mrs,
Borkowetz, Mrs.
Harnau, Mrs.
Rettig, Mrs.
Trendel, Mrs.
Bundgens, Mrs.
Holzhauer, Mrs.
Rosenberger, Mrs.
Thierbach, Mrs.
Chussel, Mrs.
Jandl, Mrs.
Sass, Mrs.
Wagner, Mrs.
Chang, Mrs.
Dodd, Mrs. A. B.
Johnston, Mrs. W.
W.
Friedel, Mrs.
Dorpumeller, Mrs.
Kohler, Mrs.
Funke, Mrs.
Linow, Miss
Massow, Mrs.
Schmidt, Mrs. Schreck, Mrs.
Seckendorff, Miss
von (junior) Seckendorff, Mrs.
Whittick, Mrs.
Witte, Mrs.
Yung, Mrs. Zachariae, Mrs.
Werthern, Mrs. von
SHANGHAI
Bhang-kas
Although situate early milway between Hongkong aud Tienesik, Slungbai was the moss northerly of the Five Poets opened to loveiga boule maker the provisions of the British Treaty of Nanking, and for many Festa cutituted the orb Cra limit of the external trade of Chinn. It lies in the alluvial peninsula [arwed between the main mouth of the Thugtze River and Hangchow Day in the extrue south- past of the province of Kinugan, in lacitude 81 15 N. and longitude 121° 20′ des MĚ Greenwich, sad an the junction of the Iwangpa River with the Ancient Wonxung cla later now sinced to the dimensions of an ordinary tidal ereck, and known to kiviga residents as the Soenaw Creek. The Foreign Sutelhanent is situated two be re miles above the junction of the wrgpe with the roast snerhorn urma of the Yang, and at this junction is situated the tower of Wonsung, which a few youta ago the Chinese Government Normally converted into a ampänolę gors open to ioveiņu commerce Except as a place of sail for the junge steaners which now murry on the rapidly growing Trus Pacific Lovie of Northern China, and as a couvenient plans of Anchorage for the larger wall while waiting for favourable tiles or wouker, this convenamsen is not much availed of, wring usinly to the constricted and exposed Eaton of the anchorage ground available within the entrance of the weapa da river the Hangou of comparatively recent origin, zonely dating Seyond the Mirtel entory, before which it was merely aŭ unimportant engin the p drains of the lower province being carried by the Wissing, and the relative importance of the two screuns being the onnet rcvors of the present. Lower Kiangu focus on intense plein, the gift of the Yangtser, and which is still growing at the rate of appavinmerly two square miles per unum: a few isolate bills, formerly constituting islands in the seu, alone rise from this plain, the unstreat of which, the Foxe-bwong shun, unnsisting of some sir debachist samomile, que exceeding 950 few in altitude, oul distant frown £fteen to twenty miles, pre visible from tile higher
wildings of shanghai,
This Kianges plain has been called the Garden of China nod the population is pechage denser than in any other portion of the Empire of equal excuril; esticos varying to the absence of any elatistical seues on Uchalf of the Chinese A MATÍM, but by famigners it has been naually accepted as from eight howlred to a tonwand per aquace mile. The soil, cousinsing entirely of alviura carried down by the Yangt je fairly fertile, anil the and boing maily Weigated owing to the numerous valerings which Ravense is in orety divention, kenry crops of this various staples are goma. Owing to the latitude aril the fact that the rainfall is pretty well distributed threegli the year, two unge per annum are regularly prosil, and thear an of resi diferent types, the spring crop, getherril in May on Faveing similar to that o northern Baperue regions elsewhere; while the autumn crop, gachenal in September and noben is liabinetly topical or sub-wopical. The swing cORN HUGIN OF wheat, non or three distinct varieties of barley, rape, and "repuningas plants of manges desertions, benos and Incense wwlorinating. The Tauen fregnancy p into the long without gathering to make manure for the sea vikable man produous. The anomer Proje onksist roniniy of cotton and rizes the enllivan of th former laying of luce veses, owing to the growing demand for use at how, albe Expert to the western and northern proviners, nu well as to Japan whom the spinning wil woving industries here for several years ) taken a kro bakt Busimy processed, recompanied by a similar deurse in the acreage and tu Cultivation. This decrease is, however, to a certain extent terhalamon by increase in the vibration of winter west, partly owing to an enlarged arson, de probably wore to improvel coltivation, stimulated by the introduction of benim but als Besties these staple crops there we grown during the super pear wind, Demeul several descriptions, oil beating coops ench a sosamm, and such domestic proven tallages, carrots, releas, ecumbers, brinjals, etc. Although Shanghai is
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Court
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STREET PLAN of the
FOREIGN SETTLEMENT
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ADVERTISEMENT
GEORGE FARMILOE & SONS, Ltd.
LIMITED
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BEST INCORRODIBLE TEA LEAD, £20 TO £50 PER SQ. Foor
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SHANGHAI
825
adjacent to the great silk producing region of China, so great is the demand on the soil for other purposes that a comparatively small area is under mulberry cultivation, The large superscssion of rice cultivation in favour of dry crops, such as cotton and oil plants, has certainly had an ameliorating effect on the climate in summer, and has much reduced the liability of European residents to malarious complaints, which now are, as a rule, of extremely mild types.
Although the growth of forest and fruit trees is heavily handicapped by the small depth at which permanent subsoil water is always to be found, Shanghai produces several varieties of fruits belonging to temperate regions. Mainly this is due to the long and late spring which continues till well into June. Cherries of small size and poor flavour are common about the beginning of May, fair strawberries are now also to be had towards the latter half of the same month, and are succeeded by the eriobotrya, known locally as the bibo. As the summer proceeds plums, nectarines, apricots, etc., of various varieties enter the market, to be succeeded by fair peaches and grapes. None of these fruits, however, attain perfection, partly owing to the nature of the soil and the absence of proper sub-soil drainage, but chiefly to the want of skill and the absence of knowledge of the most elementary principles of fruit culture on the part of the native growers. Persimons, apples, pears, walnuts, grapes, and other more northerly fruits are largely imported from the north, and more recently from Japan, or the west coast of America. Oranges of various descriptions and pumeloes come from the more southern coast ports from Wenchow to Canton; while from the Philippines and Indo-China come the varied fruit products of the tropics. Of trees, willows take the first place, but are followed by at least two species of elm, the salis- buria (maiden hair tree) pines, yews, bamboos, oaks and chesnuts, etc. Flowering trees, such as the magnolia in three or more species, the melia, paulownia, wistaria and later gardenia and lagerstromia and many more lend variety in their various seasons to the landscape, while up to the latter end of June the ordinary cultivated flowers of Europe grow well and abundantly. In winter, too, orchids and the finer tropical plants grow well under glass, and both publicly and privately considerable attention is paid to horticulture, the public parks and gardens having within the last few years increased considerably in area, as well as in being attended to regularly by trained botanical experts. The native flowers most in evidence are the chrysanthemum and peony, though roses are largely cultivated for their scent.
Owing to the thickness of the population the native mammalian fauna has been almost exterminated, being practically confined to a single species of small deer, the hydropotes inermis, the badger, and one or two of the stoat family. The avi-fauna is, however, extensive, pheasants and partridges being still fairly abundant in certain localities, while during the cold season the snipe and wild duck and other species of wild fowl are plentiful about the numerous marshes and river channels. The other birds are nearly identical with the palearctic fauna of Europe. Reptiles are little in evidence, the most noteworthy being a small species of alligator not exceeding six feet long. This animal is a resident of the lower Yangtsze, especially about Wuhu, but young individuals have been occasionally found in the marshes of the Hwangpu opposite Shanghai. No single work of commanding authority has yet been published on the Natural History of the Kiangnan Provinces, and the works of the principal explorers, the late Robert Swinhoe, FL.S., and Pere Heud, S.J., have to be searched for in the proceedings of various learned societies. A work specially interesting to sportsmen. "With Gun and Boat in the Yangtze Valley," by Mr. H. T. Wade, pub- lished in 1805, gives much varied and useful information on the subject.
That portion of the Hwangpu river opposite the original British Settlement, now known as the Central Settlement, was formerly a canal, cut, according to tradition, by an officer bearing the name of Hwang, to open a communication with a lake opposite the town of Tsipao, some seven miles above the native city, but it now constitutes the principal drainage channel from the upper country. This was formerly accomplished by the ancient Woosung, now in its turn reduced to the dimensions of a creek, which, however, still forms the main water approach to Soochow, the capital of the lower province, and the seat of the Futai or Governor. The Hwangpu was at the time of the opening of the port some 2,000 feet across at low water, but is now much reduced in width Owing to the embankment of both shores to form wharves. As this narrowing of the stream has been accompanied by an improved training of the banks the actual decrease of the navigable channel is of no great importance. A similar optimistic view cannot however, be taken of the changes in the reaches of the river between Shanghai and Woosung, where the deterioration of the navigable channel has been progressive since the opening of the port in 1843.
When first frequented by foreign shipping an extensive
826
SHANGHAI
widening of the channel was found immediately inside Woosung, and this led to a shallowing of the stream; presently an island commenced to grow up in this shallow part, which divided the stream into two channels and at the same time deflected the current towards the right bank, with consequent erosion on that side. The result of these causes has been that both channels are now blocked by bors, impassable at low water to all but the most shallow-draught river boats, and the large ocean- going steamers can only enter the river at high water springs. At other periods goods. intended to be landed at Shanghai have to be conveyed some thirteen miles in lighters. The enforced detention of the vessels as well as the cost of lighterage are heavy charges on the commerce of the port.
The unsatisfactory condition of the lower river has been a constant cause of complaint to the Imperial Government at Peking, since about 1850, when the de terioration of the channel commenced to assume alarming proportions, and has been urged by the foreign Governments having the largest interest in the commerce of the port. Unfortunately in this, as in many other things concerning the good of the port. the reactionary authorities at the Capital were able to shelter themselves behind the representatives of the Powers less interested in commerce, and as by traditional arrangements numbers alone count in such affairs, Peking was always able to evade its responsibilities. The Imperial Government, largely guided by statesmen of whom the laté Li Hung Chang was a characteristic type, looked upon the Bar at Woosung as a powerful aid in their policy of exclusion, and refused to do anything towards the improvement of the navigation, or deliberately took measures which they knew would prove ineffective. The foreign merchants, assisted by the Municipality, took steps to have the lower river surveyed and reported on by competent foreign hydraulic engineers. After the defeat of the anti-foreign party in 1900, and the capture, by foreign troops, of Peking, these reports were accepted, and a River Authority on the model of that formed for the port of London, wherein local as well as Imperial interests were represented, was agreed on by all parties, and it was hoped that the difficulties, entirely political, of the case had been surmounted, and that work would be immediately commenced. It is not necessary here to go into details, but the same retarding influences were still at work. A reactionary viceroy of the Kiangnan provinces was the tool chosen; he offered to undertake the work of controlling the river under the advice of a foreign engineer, over the appointment of whom the foreign Powers were to have a veto; and ever ready, with China, to accept the promise for the deed, the foreign representatives, apparently impressed by the engagement that the viceroy should undertake the whole of the financial burden, instead of its being shared by the beneficiaries, as in the accepted scheme, agreed to the new proposition. The result so far has been that Mr. De Rijke, the gentleman formerly consulted by the mercantile community of Shanghai, an engineer of standing who has carried out several important works in connection with the Japanese Government, was appointed, and dredging work commenced in 1907.
Under the control of the Coast-Lighting department of the Imperial Maritime Customs, and out of the Tonnage Dues provided in the original treaties with China, the approaches from the sea to Shanghai are now well lighted and buoyed and the dangers of the continually shifting banks and shoals well guarded against. Lighthouses have been erected, served by powerfullights, at West Volcano, Shaweishan, North Saddle, Bonham and Steep Islands, Pehyu-shan, Gutzlaff and Woosung, and there are two light- ships in the entrance of the River Yangtze. In this respect the interests of the shipping frequenting the Port have been well considered, and the entire installation takes a high rank amongst similar undertakings elsewhere. The same department has also inaugurated a system of buoys and lighting on the Yangtze as far as Hankow, six hundred miles above Woosung, admirably suited to present requirements, and which leaves little to be desired. The northern mouth of the Yangtze, which serves as the main passage for coasting steamers from Shanghai to the northern ports, has also been carefully surveyed and buoyed and lighted by the same authority.
HISTORY
in
The origin of the name "Shanghai," which literally means "Upper Sea," has hort much debated, but probably like Kaoch'ang, "High Reeds," and Kiangwan, "liver Bend," names still existing in the neighbourhood, was merely the vernacular titie given to the place when still an island at the mouth of the Yangtze. It does not appear history till the time of the Mongol Empire. We find at various periods from after Han downwards that K'wenshan, Changsha, Kiating, etc., were constituted into separate Hsiens, and that in the year 1292 Shanghai was like wise erected into a separate district and placed under Sungkinng-fu, which itself had only fifteen years previously beer
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divided from Kiahsing-fu, now in the province of Chekiang. Prior to that it had been made a Customs station on account of its favourable position for trade, but its growth had been slow, and for centuries the chief tradle of the lower district had been cou- centrated at the mouth of the Liu Ho, now an insignificant creek which, passing Tait- sang, joins the Yangtze some twenty-five miles above Woosung.
With the silting up of the Liu Ho and its eventual extinction as a navigable channel, largely brought about apparently by the opening of the Hwangpu before alluded to, Shanghai became the principal shipping port of this region; and such it had been for some centuries when it was visited in 1832 by Mr. H. H. Lindsay, head of the late firm of Lindsay & Co., accompanied by the Rev. Chas. Gutzlaff, in the Lord Amherst, with a view to opening up trade, and from that time begins its modern history. Mr. Lindsay in his report of the visit says that he counted upwards of four hundred junks passing inwards every day for seven days, and found the place possessed commodious wlarves and large warehouses. Three years later it was visited by the Rev. Dr. Medhurst, who confirmed the account given by Mr. Lindsay. On the 13th June, 1842, a British fleet under Vice-Admiral Sir William Parker, and a military force of 4,000 men under Sir Hugh Gough, captured the Woosung forts, which mounted 175 guns, and took the hsien (district) city of Paoshan. On the 19th, after a slight resistance, the force gained possession of Shanghai, the officials and a large proportion of the inhabitants having fled the previous evening, although great preparations had been made for the defence, 409 pieces of cannon being taken possession of by the British. The people, however, rapidly returned and business was resumed. The same force afterwards captured Chapoo and Chinkiang, after which the fleet having blockaded the Imperial Canal, and anchored opposite to Nanking, the treaty of Nan- king was signed, and the ports of Swatow, Amoy, Foochow, Ningpo and Shanghai were opened to trade. The city was evacuated on the 23rd June. The walls, which are three and a half miles in circuit with seven gates, were erected at the time of the Japanese invasion, in the latter part of the sixteenth century,
The ground selected by Captain Balfour, the first British Consul, for a Settle- ment for his nationals, lies about half a mile north of the city walls, between the Yangking-pang and Soochow creeks, and extends backward from the river to a ditch connecting the two, since called the Defence Creek, thus forming what may be called an island, a mile square. The port was formally declared open to trade on the 17th November, 1843. Some years were occupied in draining and laying out the ground, which was mostly a marsh with numerous ponds and creeks. The foreigners in the meantime lived at Namtao, a suburb between the city and the river, the British Consulate being in the city. In two years a few houses were built in the Settlement, and by 1849 most foreigners had taken up their residence in it. By that time twenty-five firms were established, and the foreign residents numbered a hundred, including seven ladies. In that year an English Church was built, and on 21st November the foundation of the Roman Catholic Cathedral at Tungkadoo was laid. The French were in 1849 granted the ground between the city walls and the British Settlement on the same terms; and, in exchange for help rendered in driving out the rebels who had seized the city in 1853, got a grant of the land extending for about a mile to the south between the city walls and the river. They have since by purchase extended the bounds of the Concession westward to the
Ningpo Joss House,
a mile from the river. Negotiations were instituted for au extension of the Concession to Sicawei, a village chiefly occupied by the Jesuits and their converts, situated at the end of the French Municipal road and five miles from the French Bund, but in this the French were only partially successful, a surall extension as far as the Old Cemetery being granted them in 1899. Later on the Americans rented land immediately north of Soochow Creek, in the district call Hongkew, so that the ground now occupied by foreigners extends for nearly eight miles on the left bank of the river. Including the Creeks there are now fifteen miles of the Settlement with water frontage.
JJ
The last land assessment was made in 1907; on land in the Central District the assessment was on an area of 2,2244 mow, Tls. 77,205,106. This shows an increase of 156 *r cent. over the value in 1902 of 1ls. 30,086,586. The Northern District, area 2,127 now, was assessed at Tls. 23,146,844, increase of Tls. 13,432,310, or 1384 per cent. on that of 1902: the Eastern District, 5,753 mow, at Tis. 24,306,233, an increase of 9 per cent, and the Western (foreign residential) District, 5,538 mow, at Tls. 26,389,074, against Tis. 8,091,572, at the previous quinquennial period, an increase of 2263 per cent. a total on 15,643 mow of Tls. 151,047,267, against Tls. 60,423,773 on 13,126 mow in 1902, equal to 150 per cent. for the whole Settlement (exclusive of the French).
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SHANGHAI
The assessment of the British and Hongkew divisions, respectively, was in 1880 Tls. 6,118,265 and Tls. 1,945,325, total Tls. 8,063,590; in 1890 Tls. 12,397,810 and Tls. 5,110,145, total Tls. 17,507,955. The totals now are thus nearly twenty times those of 1880 and over eight and a half times those of 1890. One piece of land in the Nanking Road, assessed in 1867 at Tls. 4,000 per mon, the then basis of assessment on the best Bund lots, in 1899 at Tls. 13,000, and in 1903 at Tis. 27,500, was recently sold for Tls. 85,000 per mow. The Overseer of Taxes in a late Report said: On the Bund and in Nanking Road east of the Fokien Road the value per mow would be at least Tls. 100,000." The average for the whole Settlement is Tls. 9,656 per mow, and for the Central District (old British Settlement), Tls. 31,706; the highest being Tls. 110,000. A great rise in values took place during the later months of 1895, and this has continued steadily ever since, chiefly caused by the influx of native capital seeking safe investment under foreign protection and by the great increase in population resulting from the establishment of numerous cotton mills, silk filatures, and other industries.
The total number of foreign houses in the four divisions of the general concession on 31st December, 1908, was 2,628 assessed at Tls. 4,484,696, against 2,721 assessed at Tls. 3,928,656, 2,567 assessed at Tls. 3,423,956, 2,472 assessed at Tls. 3,235,311, and 2,129 assessed at Ts. 2,189,940 on the corresponding dates in 1907, 1906, 1905, 1904 and 1903. On 50,826 native houses the assessment was $8,238,267, against 49,482, assessed at $8,146,048, in 1907, 47,210 assessed at $7,225,491 in 1906, and 45,328 assessed at $6,830,461 in 1905,
$5,218,894 on 43,792 houses in 1903, and $4,450,623 on 43,048 houses in 1902. In addition six per cent, half rate, is now collected on 239 foreign houses assessed at Tls. 207,322 and 3,327 native assessed at $328,643 outside the Settlement limits, but supplied with water by the Shanghai Waterworks Co. In the Budget for 1909 of the French Concession, the land was valued for assessment at Tis. 20,000,000; the rental assessment of foreign houses was Tls. 325,000, and of native houses Tls. 1,167,000. The British and French Settle- ments, exclusive of the extensions acquired in 1899, are now all built over, and the vacant spaces in Hongkew are being rapidly covered. Many of the best foreign houses, both in the Settlements, and outside roads, are now occupied by Chinese, retired officials and merchants.
A greatly enlarged boundary for the Settlement was granted in 1901. This new territory has been thoroughly surveyed and many new roads are being formed. The area within Municipal limits is now 83 square miles, or 5,618 acres, with a population of 97 per acre. Of this area 641 acres approximately are covered by European build- ings, 1,009 by Chinese buildings and 2,720 acres are still agricultural land. There are in the whole Settlement (exclusive of the French) 2,515 occupied European houses, with an average of 5 inhabitants per house, and 46,123 occupied Chinese houses, with an average of 11 occupants. There are 87 miles of roads, and considerable additions, mostly in the extension, are planned. The Japanese Treaty of 1896 gave that Power the right to a separate Settlement at Shanghai, but although about 3,000 Japanese now reside in Shanghai, no definite claim has yet been made for such an area. Most of the land at Pootung, on the opposite bank of the river, is now also rented by foreigners, but natives have recently been considerable purchasers of landed property within the Settlements. All ground belongs nominally to the Emperor of China, but is rented in perpetuity, a tax of fifteen hundred copper cash, equal to less than two taels per mow, being paid to the Government annually. The Settlement land was bought from the original proprietors at about $50 per mow, which was at least twice its then value. Some lots have lately been sold at Tls. 80,000 to Tls. 110,000 a mow. Six mow equal one acre.
As a port for foreign trade Shanghai grew but gradually until it gained a great impetus by the opening in 1861 of the Yangtze and northern ports, secured by the Treaty of Tientsin, and a further increase by the opening up of Japan. In March, 1848 owing to an assault on some missionaries near Shanghai, Mr. Alcock, the British Consul, blockaded the port and stopped the passage outwards of eleven hundred grain junks. This drastic measure, by which grain for the North was cut off, brought the authorities to their senses, and after sending a man-of-war to Nanking the matter was arranged. The first event of importance since the advent of foreigners was the taking of the city by the Triad rebels on 7th September, 1853, who held it for seventeen months, although repeatedly besieged and attacked by the Imperialists, This caused a large number of refugees to seek shelter within the foreign Settle- ments, and the price of land rose very considerably.
At that time a Volunteer force was formed among the foreign residents, under the command of Captain, (afterwards Sir Thomas) Wade, which did really good service. The battle of "My Flat" was fought on 4th April, 1854, when the Volunteers in conjunction with
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the Naval forces, consisting in all of 300 men with one field piece, drove the Imperialists, numbering 10,000 men, from the neighbourhood of the Settlements and burned their camps. Two of the Volunteers and one American were killed, and ten men wounded. Owing to the occupation of the city the authorities were powerless to collect the duties, which for a short time were not paid, and it was in consequence agreed in July, 1854, between the Taotai and the three Consuls (British, French, and United States), that they should be collected under foreign control. This was found to work so much to the advantage of the Chinese Government that the system was, subsequently to the Treaty of Tientsin, extended to all the open ports. The Foreign Inspectorate of Customs was established in 1861, the head-quarters of which were for some years, and, according to the original regulations, ouglit still to be, at Shanghai. In 1861 the Taipings approached Shanghai, occupied the buildings of the Jesuits at Sicawei, and threatened the city and settle- ments. The capture of Soochow on 25th May, 1860, had driven a large number of the inhabitants of that city and the surrounding districts to Shanghai for protection, so that the native population increased rapidly. It was variously estimated at from four hundred thousand to a million, but the smaller number is probably nearer the truth. By 1861 provisions had increased in price to four times what they had been some years previously. Efforts were made to keep the rebels at a distance from Shanghai; a detachment of British Royal Marines and an Indian Regiment garrisoned the walls, while the gates on the side towards the French Settlement were guarded by French Marines. In August, 1861, the city was attacked, and the suburbs between the city walls and river were in consequence destroyed by the French, the rebels being ultimately driven back. In December the rebels to the number of one hundred thousand again threatened the Settlements. The approaches were barricaded and the Defence Creek constructed and fortified at an expense of forty-five thousand taels. Before the close of 1862 the rebels had been driven by the British Forces beyond a radius of thirty miles around Shanghai. So immensely did the price of land rise that it is stated ground which had originally cost foreigners fifty pounds per acre was sold for ten thousand pounds. At this time the old Race Course and "Cricket Ground, situated within the British Settlement, was sold at such a profit that after the shareholders had been repaid the original cost there was a balance of some forty-five thousand taels, which the owners generously devoted to the foundation of a fund for the use of the public, to be applied to the purposes of recreation only. Unfortunately thirty thousand taels of this amount were lent by the treasurer on his own responsibility to the Club, in which institution he was a shareholder. As the shareholders were never able to repay this loan out of the profits on the Club, the building and furniture were taken over in 1869 by the trustees on behalf of the Recreation Fund, to which the building still belongs. This fund has proved very useful in rendering assistance to some other public institutions, besides having purchased all the ground in the interior of the Race Course which is now leased by the Municipality and, with the exception of the steeplechase course at training seasons only, set aside as a Public Recreation Ground, by which name it is known. More recently steps were taken by the Municipality, in conjunction with the trustees of the fund, to acquire, in connection with the new Rifle Range adjoining the Hongkew Settlement, an additional park for public recreation. This, which covers some fifty or sixty acres, has now been laid out, and is fully available for public use, relieving the congestion of the ground in the interior of the Race Course where, during summer on a Saturday afternoon, one may see in progress at the same time half a dozen cricket matches, baseball, polo, golf and several tennis matches. The swimming bath in the Hongkew Ground was opened in 1907.
At the time the local native Authorities were severely pressed they availed themselves of the services of an American adventurer named Ward, who raised a band partly composed of deserters from foreign ships and rowdies of all nations, who had congregated at Shanghai, with whose help he drilled a regiment of natives. This force, notwithstanding its unpromising commencement, attained under Ward a considerable amount of efficiency, and did good and useful service. This was acknow- ledged in a manner unusual, where foreigners are concerned, with the Chinese authorities, who after his death reared in the city of Sungkiangfu a temple to his memory, where services are still maintained. After Ward was killed the force passed under the command of another American of the name of Burgevine, who proved unfaithful to his flag and subsequently transferred his services to the Taiping rebels. Imperial Authorities found it impossible to control these raw and undisciplined levies, and at their earnest request Admiral Sir James Hope consented to the
The
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SHANGHAI
appointment of Major, afterwards General, Gordon, R.E., to the command. Having by him been made amenable to discipline, this force now rendered the greatest service in the suppression of the rebellion; indeed it is generally believed that the Taipings would never have been overcome but for the assistance of "The Ever Victorious Army," as this hastily-raised band was named. Amongst other services they regained possession of the important city of Soochow on 27th November, 1863, which virtually ended the rebellion. There is, however, much room for doubt as to the wisdom of foreigners aiding in its suppression, many of those best capable of judging being of opinion that the civilization of the Empire would have had a much better chance of progressing had the decaying dynasty been overthrown. Certainly European nations, merely in exchange for the promise of neutrality, might have made almost any terms with the Taiping rebels. A monument in memory of the fallen officers of this regiment which for many years stood at the north end of the Bund has recently been transferred to the Public Garden. From 1880 to 1866 one British and two Indian Regiments and a battery of British Artillery were stationed at Shanghai.
Since that time there have been few historical events worthy of record in a brief sketch. On Christmas Eve, 1870, the British Consulate was burned down and most of the records completely lost. In May, 1874, a riot occurred in the French Settlement, owing to the intention of the Municipal Council to make a road through an old graveyard belonging to the Ningpo Guild. One or two Europeans were severely injured, and eight natives lost their lives. A considerable amount of foreign-owned property was lestroyed. An extensive fire in the French Concession in August, 1879, destroyed 221 houses; the loss was estimated at Tls. 1,500,000. The foreign Settlements celebrated their Jubilee on 17th and 18th November, 1893, when, it is estimated, 500,000 strangers visited Shanghai. A medal was struck as a memorial of the occasion. In 1894 a fire outside the native city along the river bank having cleared away a great and noisome collection of huts and hovels, advantage was taken of this clearing by the native Authorities to make a broad Bund on the model of the Foreign Settlement roads. This Bund extends from the south corner of the French Bund, along the river some three and a half miles, to the Arsenal at Kao Chang Miao,
It was formally declared open by the Taotai in October, 1897. A Council was formed to supervise this Bund and attend to other native municipal matters; its offices are situated in the Bureau for Foreign Affairs, in the Bubbling Well Road. It controls a special force of police composed of Sikhs and Chinese. A riot occurred on 5th and 6th April, 1897, in consequence of an increase in the wheelbarrow tax. It was suppressed by the Volunteers and sailors from the men-of-war in port, without loss of life. The Consuls and Municipal Council having submitted to the dictation of the Wheelbarrow Guild, an indignation public meeting was held on the 7th April, the largest meeting ever held in the Settlements up to that date. At this meeting the action of the Authorities was so strongly condemned that the Council resigned. A new Council was elected and the tax enforced, the French Municipal Council increasing their tax in like proportion. Another riot took place on 16th and 17th July, 1898, owing to the Authorities of the French Settlement having decided to remove the Ningpo Joss House." The
which
French Volunteers were called out and a force landed from men-of-war, measures speedily suppressed the riot, fifteen natives being reported killed and many wounded. "In 1900, Great Britain, France, Germany, and Japan landed troops at Shanghai for the protection of the Settlements, the presence of the troops being deemed necessary owing to the threatening aspect of the natives at the time operations were being conducted in the north. They remained as a garrison until December, 1902, when they were withdrawn. In December, 1905, differences arose between the local Chinese and British Officials regarding the jurisdiction of the British Assessor of the Mixed Court, leading to a situation that called for the intervention of an armed foreign force. Inflammatory placards were posted throughout the native city and in the Settlement itself urging a general strike for the purpose of asserting so-called Chinese rights, and on the 18th December serious rioting occurred in the streets when several foreigners were subjected to rough usage at the hands of the moh. Determined attacks were made on the Hongkew and Louza police stations. The latter station was set on fire and partially wrecked. Encouraged by this success the rioters directed their incendiary efforts to the annexe of the Hotel Metropole. Their designs were happily frustrated by a force of bluejackets and volunteers who arrived on the se but it was not before shots had been fired and a few of the rioters killed that the mob dispersed. In the Nanking Road also the police found it necessary to fire on the mub with ball cartridge, two rounds of blank cartridges having failed to overawe them, In addition to the volunteers, the Municipal police, European and Sikh, who appeared
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on the streets armed with rifles and fixed bayonets, upwards of 3,000 bluejackets were landed from warships of various nationalities for the protection of the Settlement. The men behaved with great moderation, but speedily convinced the rioters that their conduct was ill-advised. The Viceroy himself came to Shanghai to settle the dispute, and the Mixed Court, after being closed for a fortnight, was re-opened with Mr. Twyman, the British Assessor (whose dismissal the Taotai had demanded), still on the Bench. The Corps Diplomatique at Peking somewhat unfortunately yielded to the demand of the Chinese Officials and this has prevented any satisfactory conclusion being arrived at both parties, the Municipality and the Chinese Magistrates, being unsatisfied.
GOVERNMENT
As at all the open ports, foreigners are in judicial matters subject to the immediate control of their Consuls, British subjects coming under the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, which was opened in September, 1865. Subjects of His Britannic Majesty have to pay an annual fee of two dollars, for which they have the privilege of being registered at the Consulate and heard as plaintiffs before the Court. There is enforced registration at several of the other Consulates, but it is free of charge. During the Autumn of 1906, the United States Government established a High Court for China on much the some lines as H.B.M.'s Supreme Courts. Chinese residents in the Foreign Settlements are subject to their own laws, administered by a so-called Mixed Court, which was established at the instigation of Sir Harry Parkes in 1864, and originally sat at the British Consulate. It is presided over by an official of the rank of Tung-chi or sub-prefect. The cases are watched by foreign assessors from the principal Consulates. The working of the Court, especially in regard to civil suits, is far from satisfactory, as the judge has not sufficient power to enforce his decisions, and is notoriously open to outside influence. The matter has for some years been supposed to be engaging the attention of the authorities at Peking. For the French Concession there is a separate Mixed Court, which sits at the French Consulate. There is a Court of Consuls which was established in 1870, the judges of which are elected by the Consuls annually, its purpose being to enable the Municipal Council to be sued.
C
ל
In local affairs the foreign residents govern themselves and the natives within the Settlements by means of the Municipal Councils, which exist under the authority of the "Land Regulations." These were originally drawn up for the British Settlement by H.B.M. Consul in 1845, but have since undergoue various amendments. In 1854 the first general Land Regulations-the city charter, as they may be called-were arranged between the British Consul, Captain Balfour, and the iocal authorities, acting under Imperial instructions, by which persons of all foreign nationalities were allowed to rent land within the defined limits, and in 1863 the so-called American Settlement" was amalgamated with the British into one Municipality. The "Committee of Roads and Jetties," originally consisting of "three upright British Merchants," appointed by the British Consul, became in 1855 the "Municipal Council," elected by the renters of land, and when the revised Land Regulations came into force in 1870, the "Council for the Foreign Community of Shanghai North of the Yang-king-pang, elected in January of each year by all householders who pay rates on an assessed rental of five hundred taels, or owners of land valued at five hundred taels and over. The Council now consists of nine members of various nationalities, who elect their own chairman and vice-chairman, and who give their services free. The great increase of municipal business, however, is proving so much a tax on the time of the councillors, the chairman especially, that some new arrangement is generally considered necessary. A move in this direction was made in 1907, by the creation of a paid Board, exercising much the same functions as a Company's Board of Directors, for the supervision of the Electrical Department. The Secretariat was in 1897 strengthened and its efficiency increased, but no move in the direction of a change in the Council's constitution has yet been made. A committee of residents was appointed in November, 1879, to revise the Land Regulations, and their work was dered and passed by the ratepayers in May, 1881, but the co-operative policy," under which a voice is given to small Powers having practically no in- terests in China, equal to that given to Great Britain, caused a delay of seven- teen years. The Regulations were again revised and passed by the ratepayers in March, 1898, and in November the Council received a formal notification that the additions and alterations and by-laws had received the approval of the Diplomatic Body at Peking, and they have the force of law in the Anglo-American Settlement. They give the Council the power which it had been for nearly twenty years trying to obtain, including the compulsory acquisition of land for new roads, and the extension and improvement of already existing thoroughfares, the promotion of sanitation, and
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the enforcement of building regulations. All these had been foreshadowed in the Original Land Regulations of Captain Balfour, but these, being unskilfully drafted and their immediate necessity not appearing evident to the struggling community, wore permitted to fall into temporary abeyance. The rights of the foreign renters and native owners concerned are most carefully guarded, for which purpose a board of three Land Commissioners has been constituted, one being appointed by the Council, one by the registered owners of land in the Settlement, and one by resolution of a meet- ing of ratepayers. At the time of the Taiping rebellion it was proposed by the Defence Committee, with the almost unanimous consent of the land renters and residents, to make the Settlements and City with the district around a free city, under the protection of the Treaty Powers. Had this proposal, which was thoroughly justifiable owing to the Imperial Government having lost all power in the provinces, been carried out, Shanghai would have become the chief city in the Far East, and it is safe to say would have acted as a leaven, to the ultimate immense benefit of the whole Chinese Empire. A separate Council for the French Concession was appointed in 1862, and now works under the 'Règlement d'Organisation Municipale de la Concession Française," passed in 1868. It consists of four French and four foreign members, elected for two years, half of whom retire annually. Their resolutions are inoperative until sanctioned by the Consul-General. The members are elected by all owners of land in the Concession, or occupants paying a rental of a thousand francs per annum, or residents with an annual income of four thousand francs. This, it will be noticed, approaches much more nearly to "universal suffrage" than the franchise of the other Settlement. The qualification for councillors north of the Yang-king- pang is the payment of rates to the amount of fifty taels annually, or being a householder paying rates on an assessed rental of twelve hundred taels. Several efforts have been made to amalgamate the French with, the other Settlements, but hitherto without success. Meetings of ratepayers are held in February or March of each year, at which the budgets are voted and the new Councils instructed as to the policy they are to pursue. No important measure can be undertaken without being referred to a meeting of ratepayers, any twenty-five of whom can call a "Special Meeting," whose findings are of equal validity with the Regular Annual Meeting. The Council divides itself into Defence, Finance, Watch, and Works Committees. This cosmopolitan system of government has for many years worked well and, the peculiar needs of the community considered, economically, so that Shanghai early earned for itself the name of "The Model Settlement."
It is indicative of the wisdom of the principles laid down by Captain Balfour, and subsequently extended by Sir Rutherford Alcock, which, while granting the foreign. residents full and complete power to manage their own municipal affairs, and holding them responsible for the peace and good order of the Settlements, carefully refrained from any interference with the sovereign rights of the Emperor of China as Lord of the Soil, that for a space of upwards of sixty years no clashing of authority, which could not be at once removed by the exercise of a little common sense on both sides, was found to occur.
Twice, indeed, it may be said, the Foreign Settlements proved the salvation of Imperial rule over the whole Empire. It was, indeed, owing to the fact that the Imperial troops, aided by Gordon's "Ever Victorious Army," were able to make the Foreign Settlements their base of operations, that the capture of Soochow in November, 1863, and after it the complete suppression of the Taiping Rebellion was due. Later, in 1900, when the Emperor was a prisoner in his own palace, and the insurgent troops of Prince Tun and Tung Fusiang were actually besieging Peking, it was the loyal conduct of the Nanking Viceroy, the late Liu K'wenyi, backed up by the loyalty of the Chinese residents in the Foreign Settlements, that finally brought about the restoration of order in the North, and saved the empire from extinction and partition. These things were perfectly well understood by a long run of distinguished statesmen, who in turn held for half a century the reins of power at Nanking, and in this category we may include such names, illustrious for their loyalty, as the late Tseng Kwohfan and Liu Kwenyi. It was not, indeed, till the advent in 1904 of a reactionary Viceroy, who under the specious pretext of seeking to restore the dimmed prestige of the Imperial Court, was really desirous of recommencing an anti-foreign campaign, with all the methods of the eighteenth century, that any interruption of the previous good relations took place. Under him an equally reactionary Taotai was appointed, and a system of petty attempts at interference was at once inaugurated; the methods were worthy of the men, who did not hesitate to call to their aid the elements of disorder always to be found beneath the surface in China.
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The administration of the Salt Gabelle, a monopoly of the Central Government, has ever been unpopular in China, and with the relaxation of a strong administration in any of the provinces, one of the first symptoms is sure to be a revival of an organised system of salt smuggling, often encouraged secretly by over-greedy officials desirous of illegal gain. There has at all times existed a considerable amount of clandestine salt manufacture on the northern shore of Hangelow Bay. Its existence is well known to the provincial authorities, who, however, have not the means nor the desire to provide an adequate coastguard to effectually repress it. The proprietors of these illegal salines are in touch with a widely-organised band of ruffians, who dominate the Pootung country, and are a constant source of trouble to the police of the Foreign Settlements. Under the administration of the Ex-Viceroy, Cleo Fu, and his then lieutenant, the Taotai Yuan, these bands of salt smugglers grew in numbers and audacity, and have so far advanced their organisation as to reach to the west of the T'ai Hu. As in carrying the salt from the coast to the interior they must of necessity cross the river above or below the Foreign Settlements, nominally the stream is guarded by the River Police, mainly composed of a small body of foreigners under the orders of the Maritime Customs; they are, however, few in number for the distance to be guarded, and, moreover, by the express order of the high Chinese officials are not permitted to carry arms, while the smugglers are well armed and organised. Although it is no part of the business of the Municipal Police to undertake the thankless task of protecting the Imperial Revenue, they are occasionally called on to intervene when some outrage worse than usual takes place on the outskirts of the Settlements. Cases of this sort have of late become rather numerous, many cases of murder, of gouging out of eyes, and of mutilation having occurred in the immediate suburbs, and so complete is the terrorism that in few cases have the actual culprits been successfully traced, the country people not daring to give evid- Under these circumstances, at the annual ratepayers mecting in 1906, the Municipal Council were ordered to increase the force of Sikh Police to a thousand men. In a few cases where the perpetrators of these outrages have been arrested and brought before the Mixed Court, every possible means have been brought to bear to defeat the ends of justice by inadequate sentences, or by procuring that the accused should, under one pretext or other, be sent to the City Court for judgment; the almost invariable result in the latter event being that in a month or so the prisoner has been permitted to escape to renew his depredations.
ence.
It was to these disturbers of the law that, in December, 1905, as mentioned on page 630, the provincial officials made their appeal at what they alleged to be attempts to interfere with the dignity of the Lord of the Soil. As a fact of course the Munici- pality has shown itself all through more regardful of the Imperial interests than the Provincial authorities. It is only necessary to refer to the pages of the Peking Gazette within the last two years to understand the dangerous state of disorder existing in the lower Province. Unfortunately the headquarters of the Smuggling Association are in the immediate vicinity of the Foreign Settlements, and though very willingly the Municipality would prefer not being in any way forced into contact with any of the political parties of the State, with which it has no concern, the case becomes different when the lives and properties of the residents with which it is charged are endangered.
FINANCES
The Ordinary Revenue of the " Anglo-American" Settlement for 1908 amounted to Tls. 2,403,164 and was derived from the following sources :--
Land Tax, ix-tenths of 1 per cent. less 20 per cent. General Municipal Rates, Native Houses, 12 per cent.
Do.
T+
P
do. on houses beyond Settlement limits, G per cent. General Municipal Rates, Foreign Houses, 12 per cent....
do. on houses beyond Settlement limits, 6 per cent. Licences, principally vehicles, and opium shops
Do.
Dues on Merchandise
Rent of Municipal Properties...
Contribution from Public Gas Companies
Tls. 685,104.54
635,756.54
10,512.08
453,659.88
10,451.72
30,357,34
157,957,04
40,180.22
18,184.80
Tls. 2,403,164.16
The Revenue for 1908 was the highest on record, although it fell short of the Budget estimate by Tls. 2,756, chiefly owing to the continued depression in trade uu- favourably affecting the receipts from Wharfage Dues
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The Ordinary Expenditure for the same year was Tls. 1,987,652, and was divided among the different departments as under
Police, Tls. 614,559.23; Jail, Tis. 40,247.39, Stock; Tls. 29,835.43... Tls. 684,642,05 Public Works, General, Tls. 117,072.50, Parks, Tis. 36,290.74...
Do.
Lighting, Tls. 76,953.58, Buildings, Tls. 35,312.51
Do. Creeks & River, Tls. 41,233.83, Drainage, Tls. 35,570.63 569,834.30 Do. Roads, Ts. 199,075.18, Stock and Stores, Tls. 28,325,33... Interest, Tls. 85,992.79, Redemption of Debentures, Tls. 119,500.00... 205,492 79 Secretariat, Tls. 147,430,45, Legal and General, Tls. 55,531.07 Health Department, including Hospitals and Cemeteries Volunteers, Tls. 67,198.38, Fire Dept., Tls. 48,997.86... Educational Grants, Tls. 32,819.64, Band, Tĺs. 41,319.70
202,961.52
134,385.32
116,196.24
74,139.34
Tls. 1,987,651.56
The surplus of ordinary income over expenditure, namely, Tls. 415,513 and Tls. 400,000 raised by debentures, was expended in new works, mostly municipal buildings, roads and land for same, and new bridges.
The Ordinary Municipal Revenue for 1909 was estimated at Tls. 2,469,700 and the Ordinary Expenditure at Tls. 2,245,331; the Extraordinary Revenue including estimated surplus of Tls. 224,366 and Tls. 400,000 to be raised by debentures, at Tls. 634,428, and the Extraordinary Expenditure, including Tls. 148,950 for purchase of Land for municipal buildings, and Tls. 120,000 for land for making roads, at Tls. 633,625.
The Revenue of the French Concession for 1908 was Tls. 577,169. The sources from which it was derived were:-
Native House Tax, 12 per cent.
Licences, principally vehicles and opium divans
Land Tax, tive-tenths of 1 per cent.
Interest, Tls. 8,093.61; Water Supply, Tls, 35,235,97
Rent of Quays and Jetties and Wharfage Dues...
Taxes
Slaughter, Houses, Tls. 9.916.07; Miscellaneons, Tls. 23,437.50
Foreign House Tax, 8 per cent.
Impôts extérieurs
---
Tls. 140,669.21
130,122.37
71,815.24
59,096.47
43,329.58
35.023.57
33,353.57
22,759.28
11,481.70
29,517.78
TIS. 577,168.77
The Expenditure of the French Municipality in 1908 amounted to Tls. 559,700
Sale of Land and Sundries
and was divided as under:-
Police Department
+
Budget de provisions Public Works Extraordinary
Public Works
..Tls.132,634.37
115,255,05
112,773.46
Medical and Sanitary, 23,977.21; Hospitals, Schools, etc., Tls. 35,639.09 Tls. 59,616.30 Secretariat (Staff and General Charges)
++
Lighting, Tls. 20,667.42; Water, Tls. 13,407.08... Interest, Tls. 29,417.81, Sundries, Tls. 38,523.36...
+++
37,404.89
34,074.50
67,941.17
Tls. 559,699.74
The Revenue for 1909, including the balance of Tls. 51,375.45 from 1908, and fixed deposit in bank, Tls. 125,000, was estimated at Tls. 721,356, and the Expenditure, including Tls. 202,600 for the budget de prévisions, at Tls. 720,911.
POPULATION
The Foreign population increased rapidly up to 1865, but declined considerably during the next ten years. The census of 1865 gave the number of foreign residents in the three Settlements as 2,757, army and navy (British) 1,851, shipping 981, a total of 5,589. In 1870 the total in the Anglo-American Settlement was 1,666; in 1876, 1,678; in 1880, 2,197; in 1885, 3,673; in 1890, 3,821 ; in 1895, 4,684. By the census of 26th May, 1000, there were in both Settlements a total of 7,396 foreigners; 1,436 in the English division, 4,510 in Hongkew, 828 in Western district, Outside Roads and Pootung, and 622 in the French Settlement, an increase of 45 per cent. during the latter five years, against 24 per cent, during the previous five. In the next five years the foreign population increased nearly seventy per cent. (over 80 per cent. in adults and 37 per cent. in children) A census (inclusive of the French Settlement) was taken on October 14th, 1905, when the total number of foreigners was 12,328; of these 6,144 were male adults 3,417 female adults, and 2,767 children (1,303 males and 1,464 females) against 3,181
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The
males, 1,776 females, 1,817 children in 1900; 2,068 males, 1,227 females and 1,389 children in 1895. The foreign population in the middle of 1908 was, exclusive of the French Settlement, estimated at 14,500. The population in 1905 was located, in the Central district (British Settlement) 1,444, Northern 6,018, Eastern 1,891 (the two latter being the extended Hongkew or American Settlement), Western residential suburb 1,286, Outside Roads 505, Pootung and bulks 353, French Concession 662, French Outside Roads 169. The fluctuations in the foreign population have been very remarkable. Between 1870 and 1880 the number of adult males decreased, while in the next five years it increased by over fifty per cent. In the nine years, 1876 to 1885, the whole foreign population more than doubled, but in the next five years it showed an increase of only 148, of whom 144 were children. The increase has been mostly in the Hongkew district, where the population is now eight times what it was in 1880, while during the same period the increase in the British Settlement has been under fifty per cent. While the foreign adult males have increased only four and a quarter times since the census of 1876 the number of women has increased over ten and of children nearly seven times. A curious fact is that of children under fifteen in the French Settlement only 26 were males, while 136 were females in 1895, 52 were males and 143 females in 1900, and 47 males and 221 females in 1905. The proportion of the different nationalities in all the Settlements in 1905 was as follows, the figures at the time of the 1900 census being given within parenthesis:-British, 3,872 (2,762); Japanese, 2,230 (831) a far larger rate of increase than that of any other nationality; Portuguese, 1,382 (1,013); American 1,012 (575); German, 832 (538); French, 667 (394); Russian 414 (50); Austro-Hungarian 163 (96); Italian 162 (66); Spanish 151 (113); Danish 126 (77); Norwegian 93 (45); Swedish, 81 (64); Swiss, 92 (37); Dutch 63 (44); Belgian 63 (44); Greek 39 (12); Turkish 28 (41); other Europeans 31 (11); Indians 619 (323); Malays 194 (157); and 47 other Asiatics. Eurasians in the Settlements numbered 353, against 582 in 1900. These figures do not include the population afloat, which at the date of the last census was 2,510, against 3,953 in 1900, 1,306 in 1895, 1,009 in 1890, and 803 in 1885. Although the Chinese have no right of residence within the Foreign Settlement, and indeed were not recognised by the original Land Regulations, some twenty thousand songht refuge within the hound- aries from the rebels in 1854, and when the city was besieged by the Taipings in 1860 there were, it is said, at least five hundred thousand natives within the Settlements. As they found some amenities from "squeezing" when under the protection of foreign- ers, and foreigners themselves being able to obtain a much higher rental for their land, and finding native house property a very profitable investment, no opposition was nade to their residence. In 1870 there were in the three Settlements 75,047; in 1880, 107,812; in 1890, 168,129, in 1895, 240,995. The numbers by the last census (October, 1905) were, in the Central district, 120,289; Northern district, 130,399; Eastern district, 73,609; Western district, 66,100; in Foreign hongs, houses and mills, 12,458; in villages and huts within the limits, 37,503; in shipping and boats, 12,358; a total of 452,716, 212,517 meu, 118,432 women, and 121,767 children, as compared with 345,276 in 1900. The Chinese population for the middle of 1908 was calculated at 530,000. native population of the French Concession in 1905 was 84,792 (against 80,526 in 1900, 45,758 in 1895, and 34,722 in 1890), the boat population 4,340, and in transit 7,000. This rapid increase has occurred notwithstanding that rents have risen from thirty to sixty and in some cases even one hundred per cent. and that provisions and cost of living generally both of natives and foreigners have increased. The majority are immigrants from other provinces who followed in the wake of foreigners, attracted by the high wages paid to skilled and unskilled labour required for the many industries. The palation of the native city is estimated at 183,000. This large congregation of over half a million natives in the Settlements and outlying roads, eight and two-thirds square miles, is kept in admirable order by a police force of 235 Europeans, 435 Indians, and 986 natives for the north of the Yang-king-pang, being Que constable for about each three and a third acros, and for 330 head of population. There are 47 European, 49 Tonkinois, and 214 Chinese police for the French Concession, or about As the natives have to be tried by their
one constable for every 400 inhabitants, own authorities, and bribery and obstruction have to be contended against, and there is a want of the facilities founri elsewhere, the difficulties of organizing and efficiently working such a small force are considerable. In few places are life and property more secure. In August, 1889, the Captain Superintendent stated that twenty-four hours had passed without one defaulter being reported, an unique police experience for any city in the world of its population.
The
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CLIMATE
The climate of Shanghai is generally allowed to be fairly healthy. The death rate amongst the resident foreign population during the past two decades has ranged from 24.6 per thousand (in 1891) to 11.2 per thousand (in 1905). The rate including non-residents was considerably higher; it reached 34.6 per thousand in 1902, which, however, was exceptional. The number of deaths of foreign residents, including non- Chinese Asiatics, was 231, and of non-residents 73 in 1908. Partial outbreaks of cholera have occurred at intervals, but the larger proportion of the cases were among the ships in harbour. The highest recorded number of deaths from this cause among foreigners was 32 in 1890. Of these, 11 were amongst residents. In the years 1899 to 1894 and 1897 to 1901 inclusive there were no deaths from cholera among foreign residents, and an average of five per annum in the subsequent seven years, The highest number of deaths of foreigners from small-pox was 21 in 1907. There were no deaths of foreigners from this cause in 1900, three in 1902, seven in 1903, eleven in 1904, fourteen in 1905, none in 1906, and five in 1908. In winter, cases of small-pox and typhoid are frequent among the natives. Amongst the shore population the death rate was 12.1 per thousand in 1906, of which 1.5 per thousand were from zymotic causes, against a rate of 2.19 per thousand from these diseases in England. The rate in 1907 was 17.9, and in 1908 15.9. These rates compare favourably with those of large towns in Europe and America. The Health Officer in a late Report says that "out of the seventy-five deaths registered there were but nine which can in any sense be termed climatic." There were reported 8,156 deaths amongst the natives in the " Anglo- American Settlement" in 1908 (against 10,217 in 1907, 10,801 in 1902, 7,380 in 1904, 6,413 in 1905 and 5,689 in 1906), which makes the rate 15.4 per thousand (against 30.9 in 1902, 21.2 in 1903, 19.2 in 1904, 14.2 in 1905, 11.9 in 1906 and 20.0 in 1907). Small-pox,
which in 1901 claimed only 31 victims, was the cause of 434 deaths in 1902, 241 in 1903, 759 in 1904, 246 in 1905, 29 in 1906, 863 in 1907 and 143 in 1909; cholera, which was responsible for 1,500 deaths in 1902 and 162 in 1903, was entirely absent in 1904 and 1905, but reappeared towards the close of 1906 and was the cause of 193 deaths among the Chinese in that year and of 655 in 1907, but of only 8 in 1908; scarlet fever for 1,500 in 1902, only 2 in 1903, none in 1904 or 1905, 5 in 1906, 79 in 1907 and 33 in 1908; and tuberculosis for 2,000 in 1902, 1,978 in 1903, 1,872 in 1904, 1,414 in 1905, 1,000 in 1906, 960 in 1907 and 938 in 1908. The thermome ter ranges
from 25 deg. to 103 deg. Fahrenheit, the mean of eight years having been 59.1 deg., the average being 41.0, 65.1, 77.8 and 52.5 for first, second, third and fourth quarters, respectively. Shanghai approaches nearest to Rome in mean temperature, while the winter temperature of London and Shanghai are almost identical. The mean daily range averages 15.6, being from 13.3 during the first to 16.6 during the second quarter. In October and November there is generally dry, clear, and delightful weather, equal to that found in any part of the world; but when the winter has fairly set in the north-east winds are extremely cold and biting. On January 17th, 1878, the river was frozen over at Woosung. The heat during July and August is sometimes excessive, but generally lasts only a few days at a time. In late years very severe gales have become more fre- quent. The mean of the barometer is from 29.76 in the third to 30.26 inches in the first quarter. The annual average of rainy days in Shanghai during eight years was 124 55 wet days occurred in winter, and 69 in summer; the annual rainfall averages 43.46 inches, 13.77 in winter and 29.68 in summer; the heaviest shower was on the 24th Octo- ber, 1875, when 7 inches fell in 3 hours. The mean degree of humidity is from 77 in the winter to 80 in the summer months.
DESCRIPTION
The streets of the British and French Settlements all run north and south and east and west, mostly for the whole length of both, crossing each other at right angles. They were when first laid out twenty-two feet wide, but have since at very great expense been mostly made much wider. Under the new Regulations power to compel the sale of land required for public purposes has been secured. Not- withstanding the soft nature of the soil the roads are kept in remarkably good order, at least the main thoroughfares. In consequence of the introduction of trams the whole track of the Maloo, one mile in length, has been laid with Jarrah hardwood blocks and the section of Nanking Road, between Kiangse Road and the Bund has been so paved in its entire width. The Municipal Council now leases a quarry at Pingchiao, in Chekiang, about 150 miles south-west of Shanghai, from which they obtained 1,445 tons of good rock and 36,501 tons of good stone, and 8,138 tons of
stour
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rotten stone and decomposed sand and stone for road-making in 1908. Owing to the nature of the ground, expensive piling or concrete foundations are necessary before any building over One story in height can be erected, and all stone has to be brought from a long distance. The Soochow Creek, between the British Settlement and Hongkew, is now crossed by seven bridges, six of which are adapted for carriage traffic, and the French concession is connected with the other settlement by eight bridges crossing the Yangking-pang. Six new bridges were erected in 1901 to connect the extended settlements. A new steel bridge over the mouth of the Soochow Creek was completed in 1908, replacing the wooden "Garden Bridge" erected in 1873. It has two equal spans of 171 2, the width is 60 feet with a carriage way of 30 feet 9 inches; the gradient of the approaches is 1 in 30; the headway above high water from 6' 6" to 11". It has been proposed to culvert and fill in the Creek between the General and French Settlements and to make a broad throughfure along its line, but the scheme is in abeyance. There are several good driving roads extending into the country, two leading to Sicawei, a distance of about six miles, and one to Jessfield by the banks of the Soochow Creek, for five miles, with an extension measuring some thirteen miles to the extreme limits of the Shanghai Isein district. A sclieme for the construction of a road from Sicawei to the hills, eighteen miles, has been sanctioned, and marked out, but owing to official obstruction it has not yet been commenced. Another broad thoroughfare, Yangtzepoo Road, runs by the side of the river for five miles, which it is intended ultimately to extend to Woosung. The termini of Jessfield Road and Yangtzepoo Road now mark the limits in their separate directions of the Foreign settlement. The land for a new road from Sicawei to Jessfield was acquired in 1905. Several other roads have been proposed, but although foreigners are prepared to pay high prices- for the land, the opposition of the officials has hitherto prevented their construe- tion. Now, however, by the granting of the extension of the Settlements the Muni- cipal Council has the right to build and police roads in certain adjacent districts. At the time the Taipings approached Shanghai, some roads for the passage of artillery were made by the British military authorities at the expense of the Chinese Govern- ment, one of them extending for seventeen miles into the country; but, excepting those close to the settlement, they have now been turned into ploughed fields. The foreshore in front of the settlement has been reclaimed, raised, turfed, and planted with shrubs, and forms a delightful and spacious promenade. The trees planted some- years ago having now attained a good height, and several more imposing buildings having been completed, the English and French Bunds form as magnificent a boulevard as any in the East.
Many foreign houses, some with several mow of garden ground, have been, and more are still being, erected near the outside roads, especially on the Bubbling Well, Sicawei, and Sinza Roads, which are the main outlets froin the settlement, and from which most of the other roads branch off. These roads are planted with trees on both sides, forming fine avenues of about five miles in length. A small but well laid-out and admirably kept Public Garden was formed about 1868 on land recovered from the river in front of the British Consulate. It has been considerably extended in area by reclaiming the foreshore, and a further extension of five and a half mow by diverting the Souchow Creek was completed in 1905. A general Public Garden, intended for Chinese, eight mow in extent, by the bank of the Soochow Creek, was opened in December, 1890. A Park measuring 364 ft. by 216 ft. is laid out in Hongkew. The Public Recreation Ground has also been thoroughly drained, turfed and laid out, in spaces not devoted to sport, with flower beds.
Immense sums have been wasted in various attempts to drain the settlements, principally from the want of skilled direction; but the great difficulties in this matter arising from the low-lying and level nature of the ground have now been fairly overcome, though very much work of this nature has still to be undertaken in the recently acquired area.
The settlements are well provided with telephonic fire alarms. The desire of the Municipal Councils to keep the monopoly in their own hands retarded for many years the inauguration of waterworks, but a public company is now established, which furnishes a continuous supply of filtered water at moderate rates, and so successful has it been that the capital was doubled last year. A separate system of waterworks for the French Concession is being inaugurated, and Chinese- waterworks, to supply the native city, were completed in September, 1899. The electric light was introduced in 1882, and are lamps are erected on all the principal thorough- fare, and wharves. In 1893 the Municipality purchased the property and business of the Electric Company, but the administration of the Electric Light Department has
638
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not given entire satisfaction. The French Municipality has an excellent electric light service, and the native Bund is lighted by a Chinese Electric Light Company.
Shanghai can boast of several fine buildings of various and varied styles of architecture. The first English church, built in 1847, did not long exist, for in 1850 the roof fell in. It was, however, patched up, and continued in use till 1862, when it gave way to a building professedly only temporary. On the 16th May, 1866, accordingly the foundation stone was laid of a new building which was opened for public worship in August, 1869. Although at the time considered extravagantly large, the congregation has already outgrown the accommodation. It possesses a fine organ, and a full and highly-trained choir. It is Gothic of the thirteenth century, according to the practice of the day, 152 feet long, 583 feet wide, and 54 feet from the floor to the apex of the nave. The structure was not completed, however, until 1892, when the spire was erected, the cross being placed on the top on the 4th October of that year. It attains a total height of 100 feet and, like the body of the edifice, is built of red brick, with stone dressings. There is a Roman Catholic Church in the French Concession called St. Joseph's, built in 1882, and another in Hongkew known as the Church of the Sacred Heart. There are also the Union Church on the Soochow Creek, a church with spire and bells in Yunnan Road, belonging to the American Methodist Episcopal Mission, a chapel belonging to the London Mission, and two to the American Episcopalians, and recently erected in the Broadway, Hongkew, the church of St. Andrew, which besides serving as a Seamen's church, acts also as a chapel of ease to the Anglican Cathedral, besides several mission chapels for natives. The Jesuit Fathers have an extensive mission establishment and orphanages at Sicawei, where a mission has existed for over a hundred years. The present church was built in 1851. To this mission is attached a museum of natural history, etc., and an astronomical and meteorological observatory. In connection with the latter there is a time-ball on the French Bund, and the Fathers hope to introduce Marconi's system of wireless telegraphy between Sícawei, Shanghai, and Woosung for signalling purposes. Under the direction of this institution, a complete system of meteorological observations, embracing the whole of the China Seas, is carried out. The Shanghai Club occupies a large and elaborate building at one end of the English Bund. It cost £42,000, and at that is said to have ruined three contractors. It was opened in 1864 and has passed through a varied and peculiar history. It has long been found too small for its membership and the erection of a new Club House on the same site has been decided on, On the 22nd October, 1904, by Prince Adelbert of Prussia, was laid the foundation of a new German Club to replace the old Club Concordia. The new building is a large edifice, with some pretension to architectural display in German Renaissance style. The present buildings of the British Consulate and Supreme Court, at the other end of the Bund, were opened in 1872. Near to them is a fine Masonic Hall recently partially rebuilt. Amongst the other conspicuous buildings may be mentioned those occupied by the Russo-Chinese Bank, the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, a new building for the Eastern Extension and Great Northern Telegraph Companies, the new "Palace" Hotel, and several blocks of mercantile offices regarding which it is understood that the Municipality has interlicted the excessive height lately become fashionable in America. The Lyceum Theatre, situate in Museum Road, is a fair building seating 700 persons, opened in January, 1874, and extensively altered and improved during 1901 and again in 1906. A new Custom-house was completed in 1893 on the site of the old building on the Bund. It is in the Tudor style, of red brick with facings of green Ningpo stone, and has high pitched roofs covered with red French tiles. The buildings have a frontage on the Band of 135 feet, and on the Hankow Road of 155 feet. In the centre of the main building a clock tower, supplied with a four-faced clock striking the Westminster chimes, rises to a height of 110 feet, and divides the structure into two wings. The late Mr. John Chambers was the architect, and the new building adds an imposing feature to the Bund. Another fine building is the Central Police Station in Foochow Road, large and spacious, of red brick with stone dressings, but lacking frontage and surround- ing space to set it off to full advantage. The new Town Hall and Public Markets were completed in 1899, and form the first block of buildings erected by public funds for public use. They occupy a prominent site, which is bounded by four roads; the principal front being upon the Nanking Road, after the Bund the main thoroughfare of the Settlement. The plan divides the block into two portions, the moiety facing Nanking Road being for use by the Europe community as a Town Hall and Market, and the portion in the rear as a Chinese Market
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This latter is an airy open building 156 feet by 140 feet, two storeys high, constructed entirely of iron and steel with concrete floors and a roof glazed in such a manner as to admit the north light only. A four-way staircase connects the two floors and is sur mounted by an octagonal dome 40 feet in diameter. The front building is of red brick with stone dressings. The lower floor consists of the European market, 156 feet by 80- feet, and an arcade, 156 feet by 45 fect, employed for the same purpose. A special and striking feature of the building is the handsome staircase entered from Nanking Road and leading to the Town Hall on the first floor. The walls and arches of this staircase are finished in clean red brickwork with stone dressings, the steps being of concrete- with stone handrails and ballusters, and encaustic tile floors to halls and landings. The Town Hall is also used by the Shanghai Volunteers for drill purposes. It presents an imposing appearance, being 156 feet long, 80 wide, and 26 feet high, to the tie- beams of the roof, a massively timbered gallery crossing one end. The floor is of teak laid on steel joists and concrete.
The windows are of cathedral glass and the joinery and dado in this room are of polished teak. It is heated by large stoves, and special attention. has been given the ventilation. Adjoining this Hall arc other large rooms used for public meetings, a Volunteers' Club and other purposes. The buildings are lighted throughout by incandescent electric lights, the Town Hall having six 300 candle-power incandescent lamps besides the numerous side lights. The whole of the buildings form an effective group, although the narrowness of the streets on the East and West sides considerably detracts from the possibility of obtaining a good view of the block. They took about eighteen months to erect and were built from the designs and under the superintendence of Mr. C. Mayne, C., the Municipal Engineer, and Mr. F. M. Gratton, F.R.L.B.A., of the firm of Morrison & Gratton, of Shanghai, as joint architects and engineers. A new Mixed Court was completed in 1899. A monument to the memory of Mr. A. R. Margary, of the British Consular service, who was murdered by Chinese in Yunnan, was unveiled in June, 1880, and a statue of the late Sir Harry Parkes, British Minister to l'eking, was erected in 1890. A bronze monument in memory of the heroic death of the crew of the German gunboat Iltis, lost in a typhoon off the coast of Shantung on 25th July, 1896, was erected on the Bund, at the end of the Peking road, in November, 1898. The principal buildings on the French Concession are the Municipal Hall and the Consulate. A bronze statue of Admiral Protet, who was killed when directing an attack on Nau-yao on 17th May, 1862, stands in front of the Municipal Hall. The Public Markets of the Frenchi Concession are large and well built and are perfect as regards sanitary arrangements.
The Council of the French Settlements voted in 1902 the amount of 90,000 Taels for the building of a street tramway-line from the Place de l'Est via the French Bund and the Rue de Consulat to the French Camp, but not a rail has yet been laid The tramway scheme in the International Settlement is now in a more advanced state. A contract was entered into with a British firm early in 1908, but owing to general financial depression the firm asked for an extension of time which the Council refused to grant and the company thereupon abandoned the conces sion. A contract having been entered into with another British firm, the permanent way is now completed and the line opened for traflic.
Í
INSTITUTIONS
Among the institutions of the place may be mentioned the Volunteer Defence Force, composed of members of all nationalities, under the command of Major A. A. S. Barnes (Wiltshire Regiment) with Major Brodie A. Clarke as second in command. It consists of Staff 14, Light Horse 54, Artillery 23, Mounted Infantry 47, Maxim Company 67, "A" Company 105, "B" Company 70, German Company 52, Customs Company 60, Japanese Company 52, American Company 50, Portuguese Company 73, Chinese Company 104, Ambulance Section 11, Signallers 16, Reserve Company 77, German Reserve 39, Mounted Scouts 24, 12-Bore Company 32, total 50 officers and 941 non-commissioned officers and men, and ten retired officers. These numbers are exclusive of the Medical Staff and the Band. Originally formed in 1861 the Volunteer Force gradually went to decay, until the fear of attack after the Massacre at Tientsin in 1870 caused its revival with considerable vigour. It again dwindled in numbers, but the last re-organisation under the late Major Holliday proved successful, and in 1900, during the China crisis, the membership of 300 was more than trebled and included an American and Naval Companies, since disbanded. The annual inspection was made in April, 1909, by Colonel Bayard, D.s.o., for the General Commanding the Hongkong Garrison, and the Corps was awarded high praise. The infantry is armed with the Lee-Metford rifle. A separate Company of Volunteers, under the order of the French Consul-General, was formed in
640
SHANGHAI
May, 1897. The Fire Brigade consists of 60 Foreign volunteers with a paid departmental Engineer, and Native assistants, and is composed of three Fire Engine and one Hook and Ladder Companies, a sparo fire engine and fire float. It attended 136 fires in 1908, It is pronounced to be one of the most efficient volunteer brigades in the world. Owing to the increased numbers of fires an independent brigade for the French Settlement was formed in April, 1908. There is now a Public Health Laboratory at which bacteriological investigations and chemical analyses are carried out, vaccine lymph prepared, and the Pasteur treatment of rabies undertaken. The Settlements are well provided with hospitals. In addition to the large General Hospital, recently rebuilt and forming a four-storied block on the northern bank of the Soochow Creek, there is the Victoria Nursing Home, presented by the community as a Jubilee Memorial, with 25 beds and an efficient English nursing staff available for outside attendance, and a large isolation hospital for infectious cases, native and foreign, all these being directly under Municipal control. A bungalow to be used as a sanatorium in connection with the Nursing Home was purchased in 1907. There are likewise several private institutions under the control of the various missionary bodies. The other public institutions may be enumerated as, a Subscription Library containing about 23,000 volumes, a branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, with the nucleus of a Museun, a Masonic Club, a Sailors' Home, a Polytechnic Institution for Chinese, a Seamen's Library and Museum, a Wind Instrument Band of ten European and twenty-nine Manila men, paid by the Municipality, which gives concerts in the Public Gardens every day during the summer months, a Race Club, possessing a course of a mile and a quarter, and which holds race meetings in May and November, a Country Club on the Bubbling Well Road, Parsee, Portuguese, and Customs Clubs, also Pony Paper Hunt, Cricket, Rifle, Yacht, Baseball, Racquet, Golf, Skating, Football, Swimming and various other Clubs, Philharmonic and Choral Societies, English and French Amateur Dramatic Societies, and other institutions for amusement and recreation. There are sixteen Masonic bodies, with over 500 members. In 1876 a District Grand Lodge for North China was constituted under the Grand Lodge of England; and in 1902 the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts also erected a China Province with a District Grand Lodge under a District Deputy Grand Master, both having their headquarters in Shanghai.
INDUSTRIES
There are five Docks at Shanghai. The one at Tangkadoo, opposite the city, has a length of 380 feet over all, with a depth at spring tiles of 21 feet; the Old Dock at Hongkew is 400 feet long and 18 feet deep at springs; the New Dock at Pootung, at the lower end of the harbour, measures 450 feet on the blocks, 50 feet wide at bottom, and 34 at top, is 80 feet wide at entrance between pierheads, with a depth at high water springs of 22 feet; the works connected with this clock cover an area of 16 acres; the Cosmopolitan Dock, on the Pootung side about a mile below harbour limits, is 560 feet long on blocks, and 82 feet wide at entrance. The International Dock is a new and larger dock. All steamers and most sailing vessels now discharge and load at the various public and private wharves, The premises of the Associated Wharf Companies have a frontage of about three- quarters of a mile. The Chinese Government has an Arsenal, Dock, and Shipbuilding establishment at Kaoch'ang Miao, a short distance above the native city. It com- menced as a small rifle factory in 1867. The Great Northern Telegraph Com- pany's cable was laid to Shanghai in 1871, and that of the Eastern Extension Com- pany in 1884, and in 1906 was opened a German cable line connecting Shanghai with the American Trans-Pacific line at Manila: there being now three distinct lines of communication with Europe. An overland line to Tientsin was opened in December, 1881, subsequently extended to Peking, and in 1894 connected with the Russian land lines through Siberia to Europe. There is also a line west to Kashgar and south as far as Laokay on the Yunnan border, there connecting with the French Tonkin lines and to Bhamo, connecting with the Burmah line. During the operations in 1900, the Allied Powers found it necessary to be independent of the Chinese landlines, and submarine cables were laid connecting Shanghai with Kiao- chow, Weihaiwei, Chefoo, and Port Arthur. A railway constructed by a foreign company was opened to Woosung in June, 1876, but after running for sixteen months it was purchased and taken up by the Chinese Authorities. During the short time it was running the passenger traffic alone covered the working expenses leaving sufficient profit to pay a small dividend. Towards the close of 1895 consent was given by the Throne for the construction by the provincial authorities of a line of railway from Shanghai to Soochow, a distance of about eighty miles. This is now in course of construction, the portion between Shanghai and Woosung having been opened to traffic on 1st September, 1898. On 9th October, 1904, the control of the line
SHANGHAI
841
was taken over by the Chinese Imperial Railway Administration and vested in the Board of Commissioners of the Shanghai-Nanking Railway. The Shanghai terminus is too far from the Settlement to permit of the lines being of any use in handling cargo from Woosung. The line is to be extended to Chinkiang and Nanking. In April, 1904, the first sod of the Shanghai-Nanking line was cut by H. E. Sheng Kung Pao, as Director General of Railways. On November 18th, 1905, a section of twelve miles to Nanziang was opened to traffic and extended to Soochow in 1906. Considerable progress has since been made in the construction of the Soochow Chinkiang section, where a great deal of tunnelling is required. There are several locally-owned lines of steamers running on the coast and the river Yangtsze. Many manufactories under both native and foreign auspices have sprung up of late years, and would have done so in large numbers long ago, had it not been that the native authorities offered strong opposition to any manufactures under the control of foreigners and tried to strangle the importation of foreign machinery. Although the right under the Treaty to import machinery is quite clear, the British Government hesitated to enforce it; but the Japanese, in the Treaty of 1895 which closed the war, obtained the insertion of a clause specially authorising its importation. The consequence was that five cotton spinning and weaving com- panies were floated, the Ewo under the auspices of Messrs. Jardine, Matheson & Co., the International under those of the American Trading Company, the Laou Kung Mow under the management of Messrs. Ilbert & Co., the Soey Chee by Messrs. Arnhold, Karberg & Co., and Yah Loong by Messrs. Fearon, Daniel & Co., of from 40,000 to 60,000 spindles each. With the number of mills working and others in course of construction, the place is rapidly assuming the appearance of a thriving district in Lancashire. At the present time there are nine Cotton Mills in operation, with about 167,000 spindles, and four Chinese-owned, with about 146,000 spindles. It is probable, how- ever, that not more than an average of 60 to 70 per cent. of the foreign-owned spindles are at work at one time, taking slack and busy periods together. The mills, however, have not proved so profitable as was expected owing to difficulties connected with the supply of the native raw material and the increased cost of labour. consequence of this Messrs. Fearon, Daniel & Co.'s Yah Loong Mill was closed and the machinery sold by public auction in December, 1901. Recently the mills have been showing more favourable results and handsome profits were realized by all the foreign- owned ones in 1906. Approaching Shanghai from Woosung the extensive mills of the Shangliai Cotton Cloth Administration (a native-owned business) meet the eye; the old premises were destroyed by fire in 1893, and the present buildings were completed in 1895. These mills were the first erected in Shanghai, and the late ex-viceroy, Li Hung-chang, had a considerable interest in them. Above these on the river side are the Laou Kung Mow, Ewo, and Soey Chee mills referred to above; while on the opposite or Pootung shore stands the large and busy mill of the International Cotton Manufacturing Co. There are also a number of ginning factories, foreign and native-owned. Much of this cleaned cotton is exported to Japan. Of Silk Filatures Shanghai has 25, with a total of 8,000 basins, of which five are foreign-managed. The export in 1895 was 6,276 bales of one picul (1331 lbs.) each; in 1905 it was 12,791, but in intervening years the export was considerably larger; in 1900, for instance, the export was 14,738 piculs. One only of these Filatures is the property of a private firm; the others being owned by Foreign or Chinese Companies. These Filatures, which give employment to 20,000 Natives, are scattered over the Hongkew and the Sinza districts, with the exception of a large one fbasins at Jessfield-the Hing Chong Filature. Of other industries we may note Hydraulic Packing Factories, foreign and native-owned Paper Mills, two Chinese owned Match Factories, turning out between them some 80 cases, containing each 100 gross of boxes, per day. There are also large foreign Flour Mills (for grinding native what, which, it is said, makes excellent flour), two Kerosene Tauk Oil and Tinning establishments and works, and various other industries which are fast increasing in number.
In
No notice of the important place taken by Shanghai in the industrial progress of the East would be complete without a reference to the large engineering and shinbuilding establishments which now form a conspicuous feature in the business of the place.
Already in the early 'fifties, Mr. William Muirhead, an engineer officer in the service of the P. & O., had conceived the idea of starting a reparing shop. With the exception of the P. & O. S. N. Co., which then rana fortnightly mail service from Hongkong, there was no regular line of steamers trading with the port, and the visits of coasting steamers were few and far between. Still, as the northern terminal port in China, occasional jobs came in. the pening of Tientsin and the northern ports, and more especially after the opening
After
812
SHANGHAI
of Japan, the business commenced to increase, and room was found for another small establishment to begin, Messrs. Nicolson & Boyd. Towards the end of the sixties Mr. Muirhead retired owing to failing health, and his business passed over to his former competitors. Meantime, as a number of sailing ships then entered the port, many of which came from the United States, two enterprising American shipwrights, S. C. Farnham and C. P. Blethen, hart started, in connection with the "Old Dock," a general shipbuilding and repairing establishment under the style of S. C. Farnham & Co., and this from small beginnings rapidly grew in importance. The opening of the Suez Canal enormously increased the number of steamers visiting the port, and the Japanese daimios of the old régime were seized with a general desire to become steamer owners, so that the trade got a considerable fillip, and in the way of docking and repairs a large amount of local business commenced to spring up, and competition finally became strong. About 1890 both the old partners in S. C. Farnham & Co. having died, their successors conceived the idea of converting the old business into a limited liability company, and this was finally accomplished in 1893. In 1892 another limited liability company, the Shanghai Engineering and Dock Company, entered the field, and com- menced to build a larger and more commodious dock than had up to that time existed in the place. They had, however, under-estimated the cost, and the new dock having met with a mishap, the Company found itself in financial straits. Overtures were made, with the result that the two concerns amalgamated. Finding themselves now in possession of nearly all the docking facilities of the port, the idea of combining all
in
one large concern presented itself and negotiations were commenced with Nicolson & Boyd, the partners of which, finding that they would now have increasing difficulty in carrying on in face of the superior advantages possessed by their competitors, consented to an amalgamation; and, the style of the new combination was changed to S. C. Farnham, Boyd & Company, Limited, with a nominal capital of upwards of five and a half million taels. Practically the new firm had the complete command of the market, possessing all the dry docks, and all the machine shops of any size. The capital, it was generally considered, was too large; at all events it seems to have tempted to over-speculation, and, as not infrequently happens in similar cases, there was found a disposition on the part of the business to go clsewhere. This led to more or less complaint on the part of the shareholders. Outsiders soon commenced to find openings for competition, and the result was the winding up of the old company, and the formation of a new one in 1906, under the title of the "Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Limited."
By another company the dock owned by the Chinese Government at the Arsenal at Kao- chang Miao has been acquired under competent European management. and forms & formidable competitor; while one or two private firms have started to undertake ship- building and engineering on a large scale, and with well-equipped works. From the well-appointed yards of the Dock and Engineering Co. several steamers, both river and sea-going, lave of late years been turned out, up to a tonnage of fifteen hundred to two thousand, with engines complete, which in their general style are fully equal to European-built vessels, and on account of saving the heavy expenses of steaming out, have proved satisfactory to their owners, so that steel and iron shipbuilding may be considered as one of the regular industries of the port. Shanghai bids fair to soon outrival Bombay as the largest manufacturing centre in Asia.
The "Astor House" in Hongkew, the "Palace," formerly known as the "Central," in the British, and the "Hôtel des Colonies" in the French Concession, besides many second-class houses, give hotel accommodation equal to that of any port in the East. There are five daily newspapers: the North-China Daily News, The Shanghai Times, and L'Echo de Chine, morning; the Shanghai Mercury and the China Gazette, evening; and the weeklies include the North-China Herald, Celestial Empire, Ostasiatische Lloyd, The Union, Sportand Gossip. There are upwards of a dozen native daily papers, the leading ones being the Shun-pao, the Hu-pao, the Sin-wan-pao, the Shi Po, and the Universal Gazette, the latter representing the Reform movement. These are sold at the prices of ten and eight cash, equal to about a farthing. Some of them have a circulation of 10,000 per day. In one matter, that of postal accommodation, Shanghai is over-supplied, much to the disad vantage of the resident community, there being British, French, American, Japanes German, Russian, and Imperial Chinese Post Offices. The latter was organized by, ai is at present being conducted under, the auspices of the Maritime Customs. The former Municipal Local Post was in 1808 incorporated with it. It undertakes the transmission of small sums of money and accepts the registration of letters. It will probably be some years before the difficulties inevitable in a country like China am overcome, and foreigners are, justly or unjustly, doubtful as to the inviolability of
SHANGHAI
843
All
their correspondence. It is understood that China will apply for admission to the Postal Union. Shanghai was made a port of Registry for British ships in 1874. foreign hongs and even private houses have to give themselves fancy Chinese names, by which only they are known to the natives. The system is, however, found to have its conveniences. No less than 8,173 jinrickslas, 7,000 passenger and cargo wheel- barrows, 767 ponies, and 595 horse carriages ply for hire in the settlements, besides large numbers outside. Of private vehicles there were licensed in 1908, 4,719 rickshaws, 916 carriages, 119 motor cars, and 1,122 ponies. The water conveyances licensed numbered 65 foreign cargo boats, 1,434 native cargo boats, 63 ferry and passenger boats, 1,556 other boats, 736 sampans, and 113 steam launches. There are 15 foreign and 22 native theatres registered within the Anglo-American Settlement.
The
The currency of Shanghai is the tael weight-equal to 579.84 grains troy, of fineness 0.916, but reckoned at 98. That is to say, that an actual weight of 98 taels is counted as 100. The Shanghai tael thus contains, or should contain, 520.43 gr. troy of pure silver, but varies owing to the crude methods of assay. This is, however, the mean. silver known as "sycee" is cast into "shoes" of fifty taels, more or less. The foreign banks issue notes of the value of one dollar and upwards for both taels and dollars. Smaller transactions are conducted in clean Mexican dollars, or equivalent dollars from the various provincial mints, smaller subsidiary provincial silver coins and copper cash. There are eight foreign and numerous native banks in the settlement. In 1896 the Imperial Chinese Bank, under Chinese and European management, was opened by Imperial Decree.
TRADE AND COMMERCE
Shanghai is the great emporium for the trade of the Yangtsze and Northern and Corean ports, and to some extent for Japan. The total import and export trade of 1868 amounted to sixty-five million taels. It steadily increased each year until 1881. when it reached Hk. Tis. 141,921,357, but afterwards showed a great decline, the total for 1884 having been twenty per cent. less than that of 1881. There was, however, a rapid recovery up to 1905; the total trade in foreign bottoms, import and export, for the last nine years, as given by the Customs Statistical Depart- ment, being :-
$627,849,603
>J
>>
1d., £37,809,802 2s. 11., £44,224,159 28. 7 d., £44,995,972 25. 7 d., £46,338,969 2s. 10 d., £58,059,210 3s. 0,d., £66,778,120 3s. 3 d., £69,447,006 3s. 3d., £63,818,885
8d., £52,947,580 ·
1890... Hk. Tls. 243,606,777 at Ex. 1.55 Mex.
1901...
>>
298,454,780
1.52
35
}
1902...
346,122,864
1.51
11
77
1903...
351,200,609
1.54
37
1
$377,590,504 at Ex. 3s. $453,651,286 $522,645,525 $541,348,938
}}
1904...
**
405,064,260
1.55
**
1905...
443,954,262
1.55
**
11
1906...
11
421,956,496
1.54
*
13
1907.
392,731,600
1.51
77
1908...
++
397,106,850
1.48
}}
++
$688,129,106 $649,813,033 $593,024,716 $587,718,138
>>
+
2s.
The following tables show the export of Tea and Silk for eight years:-
Tea- Black Brick Green
1902... 1903... 1904...
1901...
piculs 178,075
Silk
Wild
Waste
Cocoons
168,877
192,277
1901...71,358
14,115
36,668
4,823
]]
185,255 101,643
250,560
1902...63,370
10,819
39,515
9,493
]]
231,025 181,832
294,861
1903...38,162 15,945
45,692
15,633
11
182,810 137,532 243,341
1904...54,135
27,276
35,626
6,958
1905. 1900.
11
104,323 98,380
259,077
1905...45,765 19,201
55,570
9,247
1907
נ
1908.
31
175,803 269,485 223,837 1906...50,520 18,865 49,708 197,824
311,138 279,031
1907...54,031 16,952 168,835 214,297 295,862 1908...58,875
8,443
71,438
8,850
26,593
51,492 9,308
The Import trade in Foreign Goods for 1908 was as follows:-
From Foreign Countries and Hongkong
From Chinese Ports
+
Hk. Tls. 176,196,782 2,299,293
Hk. Tis. 178,496,075
.844
SHANGHAI
The following were the values of the principal classes of Foreign Goods imported during that year-
Cotton Goods. Tls. 53,726,347 | Seaweed... Tis. 1,008,129 | Match
|
8,850,655 Matches...
6,938,206 Gunny&StrawBgs. 729,474 Pearls
Glass and G'ware
Cotton Yarn
24,518,276 Soap...
Opium...
Metals
17,277,886 Wine, Beer, Spirits 11,199,105 Flour...
Kerosene Oil
991,486 Materials Ils 843,881 Lamps & Lampware 378.677 779,026 Hardware 763,895 Clocks & Watches
Tls.
381,970
371,177
362,212
Sugar Coal
++
360 801
4,898,940
727,102 Shark Fins...
348,240
Candles
+
623,058 Sandalwood
+
Beche de Mer... 599,546 | Oil Electric Materials&c.583,631 Pepper
322,630
300,555
298 135
544,242 Braid
240,406
+
1,668,829 Cement
472,312
Condensed Milk...
228,153
1,592,059 Birds' Nests...
412,312
Needles
205,483
1,177,852 Haberdashery, &c.
394,246
Silk & Ribbons...
199,900
1,049,039 Umbrellas
392,551
Tobacco, Cigars, &c. 4,417,204 Dyes and Colours 3,823,272 Woollen Goods 2,769,053
Timber
Machinery Paper...
---
Railway Plant
Piece Goods Cotton, Raw
+++
+++
1,779,188 Soda
1,018,408 Household Stores... 386,485
Telegraph Material 193,874 Sundries
15,018,274
Total Hk. Tls. 176,196,782
Of the total an amount to the value of Haikwan Tls. 143,109,841 was re-exported, namely, to Foreign Countries and Hongkong Hk. Tls. 11,143,971, and to Chinese Ports (chiefly to Northern and Yangtsze l'orts) Hk. Tls. 131,965,870, leaving for local con- sumption a stock to the value of Hk. Tls. 35,386,234,
Imports to the value of Tis. 1,9-16,855 were sent to the Interior under Transit Passes. Native Produce to the value of Hk. Tls. 140,728,990 was imported from Chinese Ports, almost all of which was re-exported, namely, to Chinese Ports Tls. 33,708,703 and to Foreign Countries and Hongkong Tls, 82,487,286, the net native imports amounting to Hk Tls. 24,533,001,
The total values of Exports and Re-exports of Native Produce to Foreign Countries, Hongkong and Chinese ports in 1908 were :- Silk
Tls. 39,058,969 | Cloth (Nankeens)Tls.2,920,817 | Musk
Silk Manufactures 16,941,747 Flour
Tea...
++
Cotton, Raw
16,816,540 Bristles
11,921,885 Medicines
CottonGds.& Yarn10,517,779 Books (Printed)
I
+++
2,835,929 Feathers... 2,096,695 Eggs (Alburaen 1,822,587 and Yolk) 1,489,252 | Lily lowers
Seeds & Seed Cake 9,102,622 Hemp,Jute,Ramie&c.1,491,811 | Bran..... Oils(Vegetable)... 5,952,070 | Grass Cloth
Straw Braid
5,484,366 | Sugar
Fur & Fur M'tures 5,457,609 Tallow...
Tls. 016,409 585,836
: 555,432
531,627
485,024
1,340,945 Wax
468,727
1,323,905 Fungus
463,630
1,098,744 Hair
160,628
907,377 Wheat
356.683
+++
4,604,400 Varnish...
828,696 Lard
285,096
4,285,797 Chinaware...
4,184,599 | Eggs (Fresh & Salt'd)
793,967 Rice (Duty Free) 169,889
780,495 Sundries
13,443,702
742,058
4,027,044 Nutgalls
705,813
Total Hk. Tls. 194,077,774
Beans & Beancake 5,209,125 Fans....
Rice (Tribute)
Wool
Opium
Hides
Tobacco, cigs., &c., 4,039,439 Pottery & E'ware
Rice (Ordinary) 3,451,915
The goods for export brought down under Transit Passes amounted to Tls. 6,423,235. This was an increase of Tls. 450,186 as compared with that of 1907.
The total carrying trade, entrances and clearances for the year 1908 was divided amongst the different flags as under:
British...
Steamers Tonnage Sailing Tonnage Total Tonnage
Duties
Japanese...
3,985 7,055,789 37 3,552 2,9 1,037 8,708
10,272 4,022
7,066,0 1
Tls. 5,327,098
236,039 12,320
Chinese
3,137,976
+
1,198,449
++
++
5,591 2,243,354 24,342
696,405 20,933
German
2,939,759
"
786
1,565,599
5
1,130
701
French...
1,566,72)
888,551 868,678
J
652
1,277,213
100
2,751
752
1 279,964
American
נג
146
845,086
4
3,564
150
848,650
N'wegian & S'dish 382
366,288
332
Austrian...
366,288
365,179 161,678 120,051
2)
50
192,804
50
192,804
110,574
Russian
88
169,390
86
169,390
Danish & Dutch
31
92
146,484
92
146,484
42,831 117,085
**
Korean...
800
809
Opium
LLL
+++
411,945
}}
Totals
15,325 16,764,753 33,256
950,161 48,581 17,714,914
**
9,613,519
SHANGHAI
843
Of these 4,262 steamers and 4,980 sailing vessels entered, and 3,984 steamers and 14,206 sailing vessels cleared in ballast.
The total Customs Revenue, Hk. Tls. 9,613,524 for the same year, consisted of:-
Opium Likin
Import Duties Export Duties
+
...Hk. Tls. 5,476,407
>>
+++
1,480,350 1,098,522
Tonnage Dues ..
Hk. Tis.
816,855
Coast Trade Duties
11
573,262
Transit Dues
41
168,128
Total Tls. 9,613,524
The above tables show that more than half of the whole trade of China in foreign vessels belongs to "the commercial metropolis of China."
DIRECTORY
Le-Tui
ABBASS, S. H., Coal, Iron, Machinery and Railway Material-9 Hankow Road, ground floor; Telephone 217
Zeang-kee
ABDOOLALLY, EBRAHIM& Co., Merchants and Commn. Agents-38, Rue de Montauban
A. C. Ebrahim,
Noordin Ebrahim,
A. N. Ebrahim,
Bombay
do.
Abdoolcader A. Ebrahim, do.
do.
M. M. C. Jannaty, manager
S. M. Hoosainally
C. K. Yü
Yik-fong
ABRAHAM, D. E. J., Mercliant-46, Kiangse
Road
R. D. Abraham
M. H. Abraham
盆進 Ching-Yeck
AFSHAR & Co., M. M. B., General Export
and Import Merchants and Commission
Agents
M. M. B. Afshar (Bombay)
Hermani Ali Asghar, manager
H. S. Madan
A. Laon
J. S. Somekh
C. King Chong
G. D. Jackson
Mie-coo-el
ALBERT, MICHAEL, Merchant, Commission Agent and General Broker: Office-9, Hankow Road; 40, Nanking Road (Re- sidence)
ALGAR, A. E., Architect and Surveyor-
1, Balfour Buildings
A. E. Algar
T. Van Corbach
G. May
Ting Shu Chang, compradore
Lip-sin
ALLANSON, WILLIAM, Merchant and Com- mission Agent-1 bis, Quai de Yang King pang
ALMA ESTATES, LTD.-4, Canton Road;
Tel. Ad Alma; Tel. No. 1129
Hugo Reiss & Co., secretaries
泰禮 Li-tai
ALOIS, SCHWEIGER, & Co., LTD.; Branches:
Vienna, Hamburg, Milan, Bombay, Cal-
cutta, Karachee, Bangkok, Sydney, Winnipeg
Ernst L. Kohler,
manager
AMATEUR DRAMATIC CLUB-See Clubs
AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY
Associations
See
AMERICAN BAPTIST (SOUTHERN) MISSION AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY'S AGENCY
AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN MISSION PRESS-
See under Prot. Missions in China
司公華美
AMERICAN CHINESE Co.-24A, Kiangse R. F. W. Sutterle, managing director, for China
AMERICAN COLLEGE CLUB-See Clubs
846
泰滙
Way-Tai
SHANGHAI
AMERICAN SHOE Co.-Palace Hotel Building,
2D, Nanking Road
R. Weil
Mow-Sung
AMERICAN TRADING Co.--53, Szechuen Rd.
W. L. Merriman, agent
P. L. Byrne, sub-agent
E. H. d'Aquino Miss M. Ashly H. E. Collins I. Hatana
A, G. Leppere E. J. Pereira S. H. Tinsley
Agency
The Queen Fire Insce. Co., Liverpool
Sun-cheong
ANDERSEN, MEYER & Co., Engineers and Contractors, General Merchants and Commission Agents, Shanghai 4 and 5, Yuen Ming Yuen Road; New York: 116, Broad Street; Copenhagen: 6, Kvaes- thusgade
Vilhelm Meyer, Danish vice-consul E. W. Measor, signs per pro.
Miss E. M. Bradley
Arthur Eveleigh
K. Hara
Miss E. Holroyd
P. H. Neubourg
F. B. Rigby
K. Uyeno
R. Wesselhoeft, Electric Dept.
P. F Disner
Agencies
Equitable Fire & Accident Office, Ld. South British Fire & Marine Insurance
Company, Limited
An-ta-sung
ANDERSON, A. L., Stock, Share and General Broker, Member Shanghai Stock Ex-
change-19, Yuen Ming Yuen Road;
Telephone 828 and 450; Telegrams: Gradatim
和協 Hip-wo
ANDERSON & Co., RoBT., Tea Merchants
-6A, Peking Road
Chas. Schlee (London)
Edward White
Henry Schlee (New York) A. M. Lester
Mei-foong
ANDREWS, VON FISCHERZ & George, Ltd., Manufacturers' Representatives, Agents and Commission Merchants-12, Kiu- kiang Road Tel. Ad: Aandg;Telephone 454
H. W. Andrews (Yokohama) B. von Fischerz, manager
R. S. Dougal V. E. Wakeford H. W Robjohn L. Adler
J. H. Richards F. W. White
F. X. Meira
E. A. da Silva
ANGLO-CHINESE COLLEGE
ANGLO-CHINESE SCHOOL-Ser Schools
司公織紡華振海上
Shang-hai-ching-wha-fung-chih-kung-sz
ANGLO-CHINESE COTTON MANUFACTURING
Co.-300, Tientsin Road, Yangtsepoo Yue Dah-ziang, general manager Chang Ling-Kwei, chairman Yih Zung-Tsah, treasurer Zih Li Kung,
do.
H. Horrocks, engineer-in-chief
Pe-lau-sui-chang
AQUARIUS COMPANY, Manufacturers of High Class Table Waters from Pure Dis- tilled Water-2, Muirhead Road
M. Wallace
H. T. Allan
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., general
managers, 4, Foochow Road
記順 Zung-ke
"ARIEL," British Ship, Cawasjee Pallanjee
& Co., owners
J. R. Cooke, commander
L. Carion, purser
記瑞 Soey-che
ARNOLD, KARBERG & Co., Merchants-6,
Kiukiang Road; Tel. Ad: Karberg
Ph. Arnhold (London)
E. Goetz
do.
M. Niclassen (Berlin)
H. E. Arnhold (Shanghai) A E. Dowler (New York) W. Carter, signs the firm
do.
do.
do.
P. Hannesen, signs per pro. Joh. Stampff, W. K Stanion, Fr. Gruenwald, C. H. Arnhold J. W. Bateinan J. Baurmeister Ch. Boissezon F. Britto C. Buy M. Chapeaux G. Chapeaux
SHANGHAI
847
A. J. Cooper
R. da Costa
F. G. M. da Costa
W. W. Cox
E. Delblanco L. Encarnação E. H. Erlanger C. D. Field E. Gerz
H. Glaeser
T. R. Gonsalves
Ed. Groesser L. Haas
A. Hampe
H. L. Hutchinson
L. Junginger, Civil Engineer
R. Kunicke
E. Lindemann
L. F. Lopes F. Mehler
- F. J. Marques
D. W. Munton
P. E. Nettle
A. R. Patterson C. E. Peacock M. Pereira Hans Philipsen E. J. E. Rozario
A. Rozier
V. F. Senna
J. Sequeira
General Managers
Anglo-French Quicksilver and Mining Concession of China, Ltd. (Kweichau Province)
R. H. Bergman
The New Engineering and Shipbuild-
ing Works, Ld., Shanghai
The Soychee Cotton Spinning Co., Ld.,
Shanghai
The Soylan Silk Filature, Shanghai Agencies
Shipping
American & Oriental Line of Steamers Rickmers Reismuehlen-Rhederei &
Schiffbau A. G.
Insurance
London Assur, Corptn. (Marine & Fire Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co. Lancashire Insurance Co., Fire & Life South British Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
Electrical Machines, etc. Allgemeine Electricitats Gesellschaft,
Berlin
Gesellschaft fuer Electrische Zug-
beleuchtung, Berlin
Stotz & Schlee, Stuttgart & Biberach,
Fittings
Arms and Ammunition Schwartzkopff's Torpedoes and Mines Skodawerke, A. G. Pilsen. Guns
Vereinigte Koeln-Rottweiler Pulver-
fabriken A. G., Berlin, Gunpowder Rendrock Powder Co., New York. "Rackarock"Patent Blasting-Powder Deutsche Waffen & Munitionsfabriken
Berlin-Karlsruhe
Waffenfabrik Mauser, A. G. Oberndorf
(Neckar)
Dynamit A. G. vorm. Alfred Nobel &
Co., Hamburg
Shipbuilding
Stettiner Maschinenbau A. G."Vulcan"
Bredow-Stettin
Carl Meissner, Hamburg. Motorboats Union Iron Works, San Francisco
Railway Material and
General Machinery
Arthur Koppel Ld, Berlin. Portable
Railways
A. Borsig, Berlin-Tegel. Steam Engines
and Boilers, etc.
Deutsche Niles-Werkzeug-Maschinen- Fabrik, Berlin. Heavy Machine-Tools Ludw. Loewe & Co., A. G. Berlin. Ma- chine-Tools and Arsenal Machinery A. S. Cameron, Steam Pump Works,
New York Ingersoll-Rand Co., New York. Rock-
drills
Pneumatic Engineering Co., New York Davis Calyx Drill Co., New York Asa Lees & Co., Ld., Oldham, England.
Cotton Mill Machinery
Trussed Concrete Steel Co., Detroit
(Mich.) Kahnbars
Nordyke & Marmon Co., Indianapolis
Flour Mill Machinery
Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelp. Klein, Schanzlin&Becker, Frankenthal
(Pfalz). General Machinery
Meinecke & Co., Breslau.Water-Meters Diesel Engine Co., Ltd., London. Diesel
Engines
4
Niles-Bement-Pond Co. New York,
Machine, Tools
Gebrüder Sulzer, Winterthur, General
Machinery
Ideal Concrete Machinery Co., South Bend, Indiana, U.S.A. Concrete Block and Cement Brick Machines The MeKelvey Machinery Co., New York, Concrete Mixing Machines Deutsch Oesterreichische Mannes- mannroehren Werke, Dusseldorf, Seamless Tubes in Steel, Copper, etc.
Sundries
Panzer" A. G., Berlin, Safes, etc., Jonas & Colven, Ltd., Sheffield, Steel
of all kinds
David Corsar & Sons, Arbroath,
Canvas
Port Costa Milling Co., SF'cisco, Flour
148
SHANGHAI
Rheinische Emulsions Papierfabrik,
A. G., Dresden
A. Darracq & Co., Ltd. Suresnes,
France, Motorcars
The Gardy Belting Co., Baltimore
Belting
Kung.nee
ARTHUR & Co., LD. (Export), Manu- facturers and Merchants (Glasgow and London)
Robert F. Benson, representative, 79,
Szechuen Road
ARTS AND CRAFTS LIMITED, Interior Ar- chitects, Decorators and Contractors for Marine and Institution Furnishing- 44, Nanking Road
S. J. Hicks
P. J. Fitzgerald A. L. Tayler
B. G. Newshan
Agency
Liberty & Co., Ld., London
Sin-yoong-fah
ASHLEY C. J., Sailmaker, 1, Tsingpoo
Road, Hongkew
M. S. Ashley
司公汕火亞細亞
A-SI-A-Ho-Yu-Kung-Sze
ASIATIC PETROLEUM Co., LD. THE-Tel.
Ad: Doric; Teleph. No. 3292
W. Meischke-Smith, general manager
for Central and North China General Department: J. P. D. Griffin, N.
L. Watson, C. G. Humphreys, A. E. Jones, H. Lambooy, R. van der Woude Installation Department: F. O. Rey- nolds (acting resident engineer), H. Forrester, H. Stavers, P. Kae- merer, G. B. Eldridge, F. Staley, J. Moore, J. Shearer
Accountancy Department: F. B. S. Bur- rett, A. M. Brown, A. C. Lightfoot Shipping Department: W. B. Lunt,
Miss D. Emrlicott
Miss M. Price Agencies
The Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ld. The Bataafsche Petroleum Mij
ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES
AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY OF
SHANGHAI
Rev. C. E. Darwent, M.A., president R. C. Howlett, vice-president A. W. Sweetingham, hon. sec. and
treas., 1, Jin Kee Road
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF CHINA
President--Murray Warner Vice-President-W. H. Jefferys, M.D. Hon. Secty.-W. A. Read
Hon. Treasurer-Chas. Sturmann Executive Committee-J. N. Jameson, S. Fessenden, J. R. Patterson, A. §. Fobes, Rev. Gilbert Reid, D.D.
ASSOCIAÇÃO MACAENSE DE SOCCORRO MUTUO DE SHANGHAI-Care of Club União
Committee L. A. Lubeck (president), B. A. da Cruz (hon. secretary), J. M. d'Almeida (hon. treasurer), L. d'Encarnação, M. de Sousa (vogues)
ASSOCIATION OF LANCASTRIANS IN CHINA
-10, The Bund
President J. E. Birgham Vice-President-G. H. Charlton Hon. Sec. and Treas. -H. E. Pollard
BELGIAN BENEVOLENT SOCIETY
President M. Chaumont
Secretary --E. Sengier
CHINA ASSOCIATION
Chairman W. A. C. Platt Committee J. O. P. Bland, O. M. Green, F. C. Haffer, H. E. P. Hun- ter, A. M. Marshall, D. Landale, G. A. Richardson, R. N. Macleod, G. Miller
Hon. Secretary-L. E. Canning, 6,
Peking Road
LADIES' BENEVOLENT SOCIETY
Hon. Secretary-Mrs. Bremer.
SHANGHAI AMATEUR ATHLETIC ASSOCIA-
TION
President
K.C.M.G.
Sir Pelham Warren,
Vice-President-W, H. Barham General Committee--A. E. Algar, A. A. Brady, Capt. E. T. M. Bar- rett, C. M. Bain, Rev. R. G. Winning, B.A.
Hon. Treasurer W. L. Gerrard Hon. Secretary-Frank W. Whitet
SOCIÉTÉ DRAMATIQUE FRANCÁJSE President-Dr. Fresson
Hon. Secretary--M. de Laforcade SOCIETY OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL (Conference of St. Joseph)-21, Nan- king Road
President H. A. Pereira Vice-President-A. J. Diniz Secretary H. C. Lubeck
Spiritual Dir. Rev. H. Moisan, S.J. Hon. Treasurer F. X. M. Gutteres
SHANGHAI
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY
President David Landale Vice-President-Geo. Miller Hon, Treasurer-E. M. Ross Hon. Secretary-Gavin L. Campbell
ST. GEORGE'S SOCIETY
Vice-President-E. Jenner Hogg
ST. PATRICK'S SOCIETY
President-H. P. Wilkinson Vice-President J. McDowell Hon. Treasurer-W. H. Bell Hon. Sec.-A. A. Brady
ASTOR DRAPERY STORE, THE-15, Broad-
way, Astor Block
Oscar Landau, proprietor
Yosef Katz, manager
查禮 Lce-zo
ASTOR HOUSE HOTEL Co., LD.-7, Hangpoo
Road
W. Brauen, manager
A. W. Whitlow, secretary
FL Tung-wo
ATKINSON & DALLAS, Civil Engineers and
Architects--1, Peking Road
Arthur Dallas
AUSTIN & MEYLAN, Opticians and Nau-
tical Instrument Makers--2, Broadway, Tel. Ad: Adusterj
友華 Wa-yew
BAESSLER, JOHN, & Co., Ship and Freight
Brokers and Commission Agents--2, The Bund
Ba-lien-e-sung
BALEAN, H., M.D., F.R.C.S., B.S. (Lond.) 4,
Hongkong Road, Medical Practitioner (Goode & Balean
勒巴 Poh-lar
BALLARD & HUNTER, Insurance Agents,
Brokers and Adjusters-2. Canton Road; Tel. Ad: Drallab; Teleph. 387
A. C. Hunter
L. A. Lubeck
H. M. Pereira
J. M. Machado
Agencies
North British and Mercantile Ince. Co. World Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of U.S.A.
Fah-lan-so-yen-hong BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE, Quai de France and Quai du Yang King Pang; Tel. Ad: Indochine
G. Henriot, manager
J. Thesmar, acting controller
H. Gautherin, accountant R. Hervy, cashier
J. Xavier F. L. Place F. G. da Costa
J. G. da Costa J. E. da Costa
A. G. da Costa
U. A. Vieira
L. G. da Costa
Tai-loong
849
BARLOW & Co., Merchants-5, Kiukiang Rd.
G. S. Lindsay
A. D. Bell C. H. Carrée M. de Souza G. L. Allen
Agencica
New Zealand Insurance Company Patriotic Assurance Company National Union Society, Ld. Union Marine Insurance, Liverpool National Bank of China, Limited
BASSETT, THOS.-5, Ferry Road
BAYES-DAVY, S., Marine and Cargo Sur- veyor-11, Yuen Ming Yuen Rd. ; Teleph.
711
Surveyor for the:--
National, New York
San Francisco and Boston Board of
Mar. Underwriters
American Bureau of Shipping and
Local Insurance Companies
BECKER, H., & BAEDEKER, Architects-24,
Kiangse Road
H. Becker
C. Baedeker
德恩貝 Bei-en-teh
BEHREND, K., Consulting and Supervising
Architect, and General Contractor-44, Peking Road, First Floor
BELGIAN
BENEVOLENT
Associations)
SOCIETY (See
A Lian-chi-kuan-ze
BELGIAN TRADING CO., LD. (in liquidation)
Agents, Austro-Belgian Trading Co.
Ch. Jedlicka, liquidator
General Managers-The Cork Factory
安利 Lee-on
BENJAMIN & POTTS, Share and General Brokers-2, Kiukiang Road; Tel. Ad: Potation, Shanghai; Teleph. 398
27
1
850
S. S. Benjamin G. H. Potts
H. J. Clark
C. E. Ellis
W. B. Lockhart
G. Souter
Miss Brand
納百
SHANGHAI
BERNARDI BROS., Pastrycooks, Wine Mer-
chants and Commission Agents-20, Nanking Road
Poo-wei-yah-hong
Bertuel, C. (Established 1893), Whole- sale, Export and Import Druggist, Manufacturer Disinfecting Fluids, Pharmacutical Preparations, Compressed Tablets and Chinese Patent Medicines, Works and Warehouses: 12, Robison Road; Town-Office: 5, Honan Road. Telephs. 1150, Town-Office 1336, Works, Robison Road 1330 Private Extension; Tel. Ad: Berthel, Shanghai; Codes used i A. B. C., 4th & 5th Ed., A. 1. Branches at Hangchow, Suchien, Anking, Sian- fu, Wuhu, Canton, Singapore, Hongkong
C. Berthel
H. Burda, signs per pro.
G. Malade (Retail Department)
F. Martin
Mark Gni
Sing-ba-wei-an
BERTHEL & BURKHARDT, Successors to E.
Bavier & Co.-10, Hankow Road
E. M. Berthel
W. Wilmer
D. Ford
J. Emery Carl Bloch
Agencies
Tronworks Sopron-Graz Ld., Graz Johann Puch Motor Cot, Ld., Graz Machine Works N. Heid, Ld., Stocke-
rau
Maschinen Fabriks Actien Gesell-
schaft, vormals Tanner, Laetsch &
Vienna
Co,
BICKERTON PRIVATE HOTEL-102, Bubbling Well Rd.; Telph. 1471; Tel, Ad: Bickerton
Say-shing
BICKERTON & Co., T. L., Merchants and Commission Agts.-102, Bubbling Well Road; Tel. Ad: Bickerton, Shangliai;
Teleph. 1471
T. L. Bickerton
發
Bay.fan
BIELFELD & Co., ALEX., Auctioneers, Brokers
and Valuers-6, Szechuen Road
R. H. Elias
N. S. Zae, assistant
BILLINGHURST, W. B., M.A., M.B., B. CH, OXON., M.H.C.S., ENG.-3a, Peking Road; Tel. No. 165
Asst. Surgeon, Shanghai General
Hospital
Leh-dah
BIRCHAL & Co., Merchants -20, Foochow
Road; Tel. Ad: Challenge
E. F. Birchal H. F Birchal
Chang-le
BISMARCK & Co., C. W., General Merchants,
Ship-Chandlers, and Stevedores
BISSET & Co., J. P., Private Bankers, Land Agents and Share Brokers, &c.-48, Szechuen Road
C. W. Ure
R. Ure Hummel F. II. Crossley
C. H. Butler
C. A. M. Marques Miss Richards
Foo Sung
BLUMENFELD, JACQUES, Import and Export Merchant and Commission Agent-1, Elgin Road
BODEMEYER & Co., H. H., Tobacco, Cigars,
Cigarettes, and General Merchants,
Technical Advisers, Assaying Offices- 26, Szechuen Road
H. H. Bodemeyer
襟百
BOHLER BROS. & Co., LD., Steel Works, &c
China Branch:
10, Kiangse Road,
Shanghai: Tel. Ad: Robur; Teleph. 3201,
F. Materna, manager for China
C. Blix
生醫女 Vin E. Sung
BOONE, H. W. M.D.-4A, Minghong Road
BORAX CONSOLIDATED Co., Lp.-13
Kinkiang Road
The Eastern Trading Co., Ld., sole
agents
Po-ne-man
BORNEMANN, & Co., FERD., Merchants and Commission Agents-6, Quai du Yang. kingpang; Factory 17, Chengtu Road Ferdinand Bornemann (Germany) H. Schumacher
I
I
SHANGHAI
831
J. Kruse
H. Frestcher R. Stalmann W. Schell
Agency
Deutscher Lloyd Marine Insurance
Co., L., Berlin
大寶 Pou-da.
BOTHAS & Co., S. G., Importers and
Exporters-17A, Nanking Rond
源公 Kung-Yuen
BOYD & Co., H. R., Stock and Share
Brokers-72, Szechnen Road
H. R. Boyd
Fah-teang
BOYER, MAZET, GUILLICE & Co., Silk Mer-
chants-6, Hankow Road
J. Sanvayre
G. Fezay
司公坊染華麗
Lai-wuh-im-fong-kung-sze
BRADFORD DYERS' ASSOCIATION, LD. (of
Bradford, England)
Shanghai Office No. 4, The Bund
Tuk-Kee
BRADLEY & Co., Merchants-8, Kiukiang
Rd., Telephone 925
T. W. Richardson (London)
R. H. Hill (London) A. Macgowan (Swatow) A. Forbes (Hongkong) G. Arthur Richardson
G. F. Johnson
T. G. Drakeford
J. M. C. de Souza
Agencies
Atlas Assurance Co., Ld., London Shan Steamship Co.
Banan Steamship Co., Ld.
C. F. de Cabotages des Mers de Chine Manufacturers' Life Assurance Co.,
Toronto (sub-agency) Northern S. S. Co., St Petersburg Wilkinson, Heywood & Clark, Ld.,
London
Chemische Fabrik Grieshein Elektron,
Frankfort-on-Main
Way-tong
BRAGA & Co., V. E., Merchants and Com-
mision Agents-19, Szechuen Road
Eyuen
BRAND BROTHERS & Co., Merchants--10, The Bund; Tel, Ad: Thomasine; Telph. 87
I. P. Cullen (London)
C. Selby Moore
G. U, Robins (London)
James A. Brand, signs per pro.
C. R. S. Cooper
W. Goulbourn
Agency
Sun Insurance Office
利泰 Tui-Lee
BRANDT & RODGERS, Architects, Land
and Estate Agents-131, Szechuen Rd.; Teleph, 1119
BREMNER, A. S., Exchange Broker,
Shanghai Club
華魯普 Poo-loo-wa
-
BREWER & Co., LD. Booksellers, Stationers,
Printers, Newsagents, and Fancy Goods
Dealers, Tobacconists-31, Nanking Rd.
Edney Page, managing director
W. F. Brewer (Hongkong)
H. E. Brewer
E. H. Pond (Hongkong) R. T. Atkinsol
T. S. Pereira
BRIDDEN & FOWLER (of Manchester) Flour
Mill Engineers- 10, Hankow Road
兆大 Daitsaw
BRIGHTEN, MALCOLM & Co., Ld., Engineers
and Importers-8, Kiukiang Road
E. R. Brighten, managing director
W. R. Malcolm,
Z. D. King,
Sole Representatives of
do.
do.
Callender's Cable and Construction
Co., L. (London)
Hayward, Tyler & Co., Ld. (London) Meldrum Bros. Ld. (Manchester) T. W. Brooke & Co., Ld. (Lowestoft) The Beck Flame Lamp Ld. (Middlesex) Burroughes & Watts, L. (London) Ferranti, Ld. (Lancashire) Rhodes Motors, Ld. (Doncaster) Coyselles, Ld. (Bedford)
The Pekin Syndicate Ld. (Tientsin)
* Da-in-yean--kung-sz BRITISH CIGARETTE Co., D.-Head Office: No. 22, Museum Road; Cable Address: Cigarette; Teleph. No. 874; Factory Poo- tung, Teleph. No. 343
Directors J. A. Thomas (chairman), E. Kempffer (general manager), R. H. Gregory, L.Andersen, H.Cunliffe-Owen, W. R. Harris, A. G. Jeffress
Shanghai Factory
P. H. Millard, factory manager T. E. Skidmore, asst. manager R. L. Bell
A. J. Bishop
27*
852
A. Blanckensee
H. Cudnian
S. Henry
G. M. Hoffinan
T. Ikeda
C. B. Ludwig
A. Muller
P. R. Parkes
E. Potts
H. G. Tilley T. G. Yard W. E. Yardl
F. Xavior
Printing Factory
W. A. Stcehler, factory manager
F. W. Baker
K. Endo
K. Ito
J. Koichi
R. Morgan S. Murakami T. Namura H. Schmidt
K. Susugi A. Yamamoto Office Staff
G. O. Ackernian J. E. Cameron J. D. Dyer A. F. Evans F. Francis C. E. Harber H. W. Kaigler G. Komor H. F. Landers F. R. Manning H. J. McCubbin K. Maruyama J. Noodt
H. N. Olsen
J. Ruffino
G. W. Rucker
R. W. Scott
C. C. Walker
A. Yamashita
Leaf Department, Hankow
R. H. Gregory, manager F. H. Henderson
W. O. Moore
H. E. Morton
M. J. Doong
Factory, Hankow
F. W. Tower, manager G. W. Frodsham
H. J. Whitelock
F. E. McGarvin
H. H. Strangman R. T. Strangian Office Staff, Hankow
C. L. Jackson B. P. Digmanese P. A. P. Doong C. E. A. Hance
SHANGHAI
Leaf Department, Moukden E. B. Gregory, manager S. P. Clement
J. G. Covington J. Pickering
Factory, Mouk‹len
A. H. Mallett, manager
E. Bolitho
H. Dannberg
A. B. Loster
Office Staff, Moukden A. E. L. Burgoyne S. W. Purser
V. J. S. Rumble
Factory, Chemulpo
A. S. Hamilton manager
司公限有險水平保 Pao Ping
BRITISH DOMINIONS MARINE INSURANCE CO.,
Ld. 48, Szechuen Rd.; Tel. No. 1,481
H. E. Stearns, manager
R. Botelho
A. S. Kong
Head Office: 37, Royal Exchange, London
E. M. Mountain, underwriter
BROAD, WALLACE, F.G.S., Consulting Min- ing Engineer: Tel. Ad: Broad, Shanghai; British P. O. Box 225
BROADWAY DRAPERY
AND OUTFITTING
STORES-1B,Broadway; Est. 1894; Tel. Ad:
Knit; A.B.C. Code 5th Edition; Teleph.
2323
F. D. Allen
Mrs. F. M. Richard
Miss Sequeira
Miss Rozario
師律易博 Pok-ye-lu-szi
BROWETT, HAROLD, Solicitor and Advocate,
-5, Balfour Buildings, Yuen-ming-yuen
Road
R. M. Jonas, clerk
Tsu Yong-ling, interpreter
廠船朗伯弥
BROWN & Co., Ld., John, Shipbuilders and
Steel Manufacturers-24 a, Kiangse Rd.
Tel. Ad: Mesmeric; Telc. 2063
H. P. King, resident representive
R. W. Archer, assistant resident
representative
白聘 Pin-pah-ne
BRUCE, PEEBLES & Co., LD.-8, Museum Road
W. Jamieson, A.M. INST. C.E., repres
entative
W. G. Hamilton, M.I.E.E., asst. engr. W. H. Beilby, M.I.M.E., M.L.E.E., 2596.
engineer
J. Gibson F. Carmo A. Leach
M. Loggey
H. Blatchford
J. Coull
BRON, W.
SHANGHAI
H. - Office: Sino-French
Engineering Syndicate (F. Caissial &
Co.); residence: 47, Bubbing Well Road
司公限有門內卜
Pu-nei-men-giu-hsien-kung-sz
BRUNNER, MOND & Co., LD., Manufacturers
of Pure Alkalies-12, Kiukiang Road
E. S. Little, general manager for China
P. Fowler, accountant
R. Brock
C. P. Schjoth
Miss K. Wade, typist and stenogher.
#*# Wei-chi teh-yoau-fong BURBLING WELL DISPENSARY, THE-P. 352, Nanking Road, orner Lloyd Road; Telephone 1134
L. G. H. Mueller, chemist
-
BUCHANAN & Co., JAS., LD. (Shanghai Branch), Scotch Whisky Distillers, London and Glasgow
Garner Quelch & Co., general agents
Say-sung
BUCHHEISTER & Co.-1, Ningpo Road; Proprietors of The Shanghai Machine Co.
C. Stepharins
R. Lundt
F. Dostal
H. Hierling J. Nolasco
K. Bartels signs per pro. (Tientsin) B. Tielcke (absent)
J. Schuchardt, sigus the firmo
(Hankow)
F. Heise
E. van Assum, elec. engineer (Pekin) Agencies
Sir W. G. Armstrong, Whitworth & Co., L., Elswick Works, Newcastle- upon-Tyne
Dobson & Barlow, Ld., Bolton, Textile
Machinery
The Mint Birmingham Limited, Mint
Machinery
Sachsen werk, Licht and Kraft Actien Gesellschaft, Niedersetlitz-Dresden, Dynamos, Motors, etc.
Gimson & Co., Leicester, Boot-Making
Machinery
Wadkin & Co., Leicester, Woodworking
Specialities.
853
Schuchardt & Seliuette, Berlin, Mach-
ine Tools, etc.
William Whiteley & Sons, Lockwood,
Woollen Cloth Machinery
John Haigh & Sons, Ld., Huddersfield,
Woollen Cloth Machinery
Edward White, Redditch, Needle-
Making Machinery;
(See also under Shangliai Machine Co.)
***@ Pau-van-lee-foo
BUME & REIF, Piece Goods and General Importers, Mechanical and Electrical Engineers, Machinery Importers and Engineering Contractors-2, Yuen-ming- yuen Road Teleph. 2; Tel. Ad: Inverno
F. E. Bume (Hamburg)
B. Reif (Bradford)
Th. Bume, manager, signs per pro. H. Feimann, signs per pro. J. M. Britto, jr.
Engineering Department
M. W. Loebell, manager, mech, and
electrical engineer
C. Rosemanu," mech. and electrical
engineer
BUND, THE-12 Nanking Road, A Weekly
Journal of Comment
C. W. Clifford, editor
I. R. Delbourgo, general manager and
regel. owner
'E Ku-cheong
BURKHARD, L. R., PublicSilk Inspector and
Commission Agent-63, Rue Montauban
Zeang-mau
BURKILL & SONS, A. R.--2, Kiukiang Road
A. R. Burkill (absent)
A. W. Barkill
C. R. Burkill
H. C. Davis G. H. Thomson N. Thomson J. V. C. Davis I. B. de Senna J. S. Watson
Agencies
Manchester Assurance Co. Royal Exchange Assurance Co. Shanghai Waste Silk Boiling Co. Cheang Mow Steamship Co., Ld. Anglo-French Land Inv. Co., Ld. Secretaries Major Bros. Ld., Proprie-
tors Kiangsu Chemical Works General Managers-Vulcan Ironworks,
Lal.
G * X A ⭑Pao-wei-ta-ya-hong BURROUGHES, WELLCOME & Co.-44 Sze-
chuen Road
854
SHANGHAI
Me-lee-fung
BURR PHOTO Co.--2, Broadway
J. D. Sullivan, manager
H. C. Smith, accountant Rudolph Herman, photographer A. C. Ackers,
F. Magasaki,
do.
do.
DAN Put-de-la-kung-sze BUTLER CEMENT TILE WORKS, LD., THE A.
Offices 123, Szechuen Road; Works: Soochow Creek; Office Teleph. 1892
:
F. E. Schnorr, agent and managing
director
G. Greiner, supt. of works
Ta-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE-French Bund
J. H. Scott
John Swire
(London) do.
G. Warren Swire do.
E. F. Mackay
G K. Nuttall, signs per pro. (absent)
N. S. Brown, signs per pro.
W. C. Barrett
J. Cochrane
H. A. Cornaby K. Denniston G. H. Edwards T. J. Fisher C. M. Forrest
A. R. Fullerton
A. D. Galloway (absent)
A. H. Gillingham H. Grillin
T. Griffin A. H. Hatherly
F. E. Hodges S. G. Kennedy J. MeH. Leckie W. E. Leckie J. H. Little
J. R. Lyness (absent) A. M. Maclean D. Manson (absent) A. R. W. Menzies W. D. B. Miller
H. J. Nairn
11. Neale (absent)
E. J. Newman
A. J. Noronlia F. C. Rawlins F. Richardson S. S. Roberts G. A. Robinson
C. F. Shackleton
R. H. Shearer
H. E. Shadgett (absent)
G. E. Stewart
J. A. Urquhart
F. A. Wells
D. M. Whamond
W. A. Willis
L. W. C. Lorden, A.R.I.B.A., architect J. A. Offor, assistant architect J. Whittle, marine superintdt. (abt.) R. Nelson, marine do. (act.) F. D. Northcombe, asst., marine
superintendent (acting)
J. S. McGavin, supt. engineer (act.) M. M. Murray, assistant engineer W. J.E. Forsyth, godown superintdt. J. Davies, wharfinger (French Bund) W. J. Barkhus wharfinger (Watung
and Pootung)
F. A. Tappenden, shore steward Agencies
China Navigation Company, Ld. Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. China Mutual S. N. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co.
of Hongkong, Id.
London & Lancashire Fire Ins. Co., Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance Corporn. Palatine Insurance Company, Ed. Orient Insurance Company Guardian Assurance Company, Ld. British & Foreign Marine Insce. Co. Sea Insurance Company, Ld. Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Tientsin Lighter Co., Limited
A
Hoi-tat-kung-kun
CAINADAN, O., Attorney and Counsellor-
at-Law-9A, Hankow Road
CAISSIAL, F. H., Civil Engineer, E.C.P., M.
+
INST.C. E. Paris Oflice, "Sivo-French En-
gineering Syndicate". 2, Yang-kin pang, F. C.; residence: 27, Rue du Consulat
和廣正
Ching-kurang ho
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co. Whole-
sale and Retail Wine and Spirit Mer-
chants 4, Foochow Rd.: Telph. No. 16
E. J. Caldbeck (London)
J. Macgregor,
do.
E. F. Bateman (Shanghai)
C. J. Jafrentz (Hongkong) K. A. Stevens (Singapore)
E. Gumpert (Tientsin)
H. C'. Woodroffe (Kuala Lumpur)
F. C. Brans
J. W. Lowry
J. F. Macgregor
Y. S. Sung A. J. Watson J. E. Watson
A. J. Willis
Y. S. Wong
Tientsin Branch, 15, Consular Road Hongkong Branch, 15, Queen's Rd. Singapore Branch, Raffies' Quay London Branch, 1 Rangoon Steret
Crutched Friars, E.c
SHANGHAI
Glasgow Branch, St. Enoch's Square Agencies: Chefoo, Weihaiwei, Hankow, Dalny, Foochow, Canton, the Philip- pines, Straits Settlements, British North Borneo
General Managers The Aquarius Co.
I-kuo-san-huei
CAMERA DI COMMERCIO ITALIANA, care of
Italian Consulate-112 Bubbling Well
Road
G. A. Fasilla, secretary
裕天 Teen-es
CAMPBELL & Co., ALEX., Tea Merchants-
6. Jinkee Road; Tel. Ad: Alexcamp;
Telph. 716
Alex. Campbell
R. E. Wilson
K. W. Cargill
A. S. Campbell
Robert Kay
司公興昌
Chong-shing-kung-82
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY'S
ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIP LINE - Corner of
Peking and Yuen Ming Yuen Roads;
Tel. Ad: Nautilus; Telph. 1668
A. R. Owen, agent
C. A. McLellan
H. Thomas
Agency
The Dominion Express Company in connection with Canadian Pacific Railway Company
Yue-lung
CANTOROVITCH & Co.;-11 Broadway, Gent.'s and Ladies' Outfitters, Vienna, English and American Boots and Shoes
Sophia Cantorovitch
CARDWELL, Rev. J. E.-17, Range Road
和禮 Lainwo
CARLOWITZ & Co., Merchants--16, Kiukiang
Road; Cable Ád: Carlowitz; Telephone No. 148
Chas. von Bose (Hamburg)
Charles E. Rayner
M. E. F. March (Hamburg),
Townsend Rushmore (New York)
Bertram C. Rosenbaum
C. R. Lensmann (Hongkong)
C. Landgraf, signs per pro.
C. Hoffmann,
A. Arnaud-Coste
R. Bernarconi
L. Berthoud
do.
W. H. Birchenougla
C. Claussen
O. Crasemann Carl. Diehl
E. Durlach C. Eckhardt A. H. Glaeser H. Godat J. Hammink G. Heusser
E. Huber
J. Kimmelmann H. Lauenstein
H. Mertens (Techn. Dept.)
H. K. W. Muller
H. Pieleke
E. Roehrecke
E. Sachs
A. Schenk
R. Schuenemann A. Stiebritz C. Stoldt Ed Tiêche H. Timcke W. Winter Carl. Born
Miss H. Hartwig E. J. Rosario
P. J. Tizon
855
F. Kunze, for the Actien Gesells- chaft fur Anilinfabrikation, Berlin. H. F. Lawson, inspector of the Scot- tish Union & National Ins. Co., Edlingburgh
Yangtsze Wharf & Godown Co., Ld.
Ed. Krietsch, manager
A. Steffen, accountant A. R Senna
Thomas Wade
Central & North China Godown &
Press Packing Co., Ld.
C. Bohl, accountant
Agencies
}
Union Line of Steamers
Navigazione Generale Italiana (Bom-
bay Line of Steamers)
Fried. Krupp, Act. Ges. Gussstahl-
fabrik, Essen
Fried. Krupp, Act. Ges. Grusonwerk,
Magdeburg
Fried. Krupp, Act. Ges. Stahlwerks-Verband Act. Ges. Duessel-
dorf
Vereinigte Koeln Rottweiler Pulver-
fabriken, Koeln
Sprengstoff Werke, Dr. R. Nahnsen &
Co, Hamburg
Henschel & Sohn, Cassel
Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfa-
briken, Berlin
Ludwig Loewe & Co., Berlin
Waffenfabrik "Mauser," Oberndorfa/N. "Telefunken" Gesellschft fur draht
lose Telegraphie, Berlin
Action Gesellschaft fur Anilin Fabrik.,
Berlin
856
SHANGHAI
The Central Agency, Ltd., Glasgow The Apollinaris Co., Ltd., London
Heidsieck & Co. "Monopole" Cham-
pagne, Reims
The Niles Bement Pond Co., New
York
Lubricating Oil Import Co., Antwerp
Fire Insurance
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co.,
Hamburg
Baloise Fire Insurance Co., Basle Prussian National Insce. Co., Stettin Scottish Union & National Insurance
Co., Edinburgh
Marine Insurance
German Lloyd Marine Ins. Co., Berlin The Mannheimer Ins. Co., Mannheim
Life Insurance
Gothaer Life Insurance Bauk, Gotha
General
General Agents of the Yangtsze
Wharf & Godown Co., Ld.
Central & North China Godown &
Press Packing Co., Ld.
CASTILHO & Co., General Storekeepers and
Commission Agents--z 927, Miller Road
S. P. Castilho
豐茂
Mow-fung
CASTLE BROTHERS, Shipping and Comsn. Merchants and Manufacturers' Agents, Geddes & Co., Agents-15, Canton Road
Kwon-tsan
CAWASJEE PALLANJEE & Co., Merchants Owners Receiving Ship "Ariel"-19,
Kiukiang Road
Rustomjee Cooverjee,
Hormusjee Cooverjee,
Eduljee Cawasjee,
Pestonjee Cooverjee,
F. Bomanjee
R. B. Cooper
P. P. Sechina, manager
(Bombay)
do.
do.
do.
Put-de-la-kung-sze
CEMENT TILE WORKS, LD., THE A. BUTLER
Office: 123, Szechuen Road; Works:
Soochow Creek; Telph. 1892
F. E. Schnorr, agent and managing dir.
G. Greiner, superintendent
房棧司公富致
CENTRAL AND NORTH CHINA GODOWNS AND
PRESS PACKING Co., LD.
Carlowitz & Co., general agents
C. Bohl, manager
Quan mey-moi-ziang
CENTRAL COAL Co., Godowns Cc 2,010 corner of Yuhang Road and Fearon Rd.
Central Trading Co., agents
房藥惠普 Po Wei Yah Fong
CENTRAL DRUG STORE AND PHARMACY-5. Honan Road (between Kiukiong and Hankow Roads); Retail Department of C. Berthel, Wholesale Chemist, Estab- lished 1893; Dealer in Chemicals, Drugs, Perfumery, Toilet and Hospital Sundries, Patent Medicines, Soaps, Surgical Instru- ments and Compressed Tablets; Teleph. 1150; Factory 12: Robison Road; Tel. Ad: Berthel
Charles, Berthel
H. Burda, signs per pro.
G. Malade (retail dopartment) F. Martin
Gni. Mark
Wong Tze Shing (compradore)
中匯
Wei-chung
CENTRAL STORES, LIMITED-8, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Central; Wine, Spirit, Provision and General Importers, Mer- chants and Commission Agents
G. J. Shekury, managing director M. J. Nathan, secretary L. Castro, asst. secretary A. A. Marçal, godownkeeper
Quin-wo
CENTRAL TRADING Co., Merchants and Commission Agents-Telephone Building
T. Suffert
C. S. King
和祥
CENTURY STONE CO., THE
W. H. Pierce, C.E., manager
CERCLE SPORTIF FRANCAIS
Comité-Docteur Fresson (président), L. Bourgeat (secrétaire), A. Rozier (trésorier), R. Fano, A. Muguet
A
Ho-ming
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE SHANGHAI GENE- RAL-Office: 1, Yuen-ming-yuen Road
Lionel E. Canning, secretary
CHARIGNON, A. J. H., Engineer, E. C. P. Conseiller Technique du Ministere des Communications, Pekin
* Ma-ka-lee
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA-18, The Bund; Tel. Ad:
Salamander; Telephones:
Manager's Residence-1905 Accountant-367 General Office-3 Junior Mess--2797
Compradore's Office-1533
do.
Residence-2837
George Miller, manager
SHANGHAI
857
P. E. Beeston, accountant
J. Macdonald, sub-accountant
A. O. M. Forrest
H. C. McGeachin
J. Gibb
G. H. Gowland,
H. G. L. Milles,
W. J. Ralphs
A. Diniz, chief clerk
H. J. N. Lopez
J. Martinho Marques
P. Carneiro
J. M. Britto J. F. Marques I. da Silva C. F. Collaço
C. F. Ozorio
F. Baptista
A. J. U. da Silva
A. Maher
G. M. Sequeira
P. A. da Silva
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
Wong Hien-Chung, compradore
Chet-sze-tuck
CHESTER, RICHARD, Advertising Agent--6,
Park Road
# XI
CHINA ADVERTISING Co.-79, Szechuen Rd.;
Telph. 1368
CHINA ASSOCIATION (See Associations)
CHINA CORK FACTORY (Morducovitch, Jedlicka & Co.), Importers and Ex- porters; Tel. Ad: Austrobel
CHINA EUROPEAN FILATURE Co., Ld.
P. E. Lintilhac & Co., agents
信謙 Chien Hsin
CHINA EXPORT-IMPORT-AND-BANK
PAGNIE-9, 10, 11, Kiangse Road
Paul Ehlers, manager (Hamburg)
J. Grodtmann, signs per pro.
Heinrich Rix
Hans Meyer
Heinrich Conradi Albert Hesse
Wm. Foegal
COMTM
CHINA FLOUR MILL COMPANY, LIMITED
Walter Scharff & Co., gnl. managers
A. C. Stratton, head miller
H. Pasche, assist. do. Sigmatsumo
Che-pao-kwan
CHINA GAZETTE, Daily and Weekly
Newspaper-Balfour Road
Henry D.O'Shea, editor and proprietor
司 公器機總亨信
CHINA GENERAL ENGINEERING Co.-15,
Canton Road; Tel. Ad: Machinery; Tel.
1661.
O. Janson, E.E., M.E., manager
G. Jensen, M.E.
M. J. B. Medina
Ying-shang Yeh-foong
CHINA GENERAL TRADING & NAVIGA
TION Co., THE, Importers, Exporters, and Commission Agents--3, Range Road
泰祥 Tseang tah
CHINA IMPORT & EXPORT LUMBER CO., LD. THE-TownOffice: 6, Kiukiang Road; Saw Mill at 80, Yangtszepoo Road; Lumber Yards at 80, Yangtszepou Road and Point Directors-J.M. Young, E.W.Clements,
E. Schulze and Harry Arnhold E. Schulze, general manager
C. L. Seitz,
do.
W. Edwards, accountant
C. J. Butsch (Tacoma, Wash. U.S.A.) H. Roding (Tientsin)
O. Fritze (Hankow)
A. Bunting (Tsingtau) H. G. Harmer, architect W. Linke,
do.
E. S. Hall, interpreter
T. P. Baptista, clerk
J. M. B. Medina, do.
F. X. Botelho, typist
Mrs. E. F. Carrigan, typist
CHINA INLAND MISSION-For Protestant
Missions see end of China Directory
裕豐 Foong -yuh
CHINA AND Japan Trading Co., LD., Im
porters and Commission Agents-3,
Sungkiang Road; Head Office: New York
Harry De Gray, manager
J. T. Disselduff, acting asst. mangr. A. E. Stewart
W. Leonard Thompson
W. A. Kirschstein
B. de Berniere Smith
A. M. da Silva
J. Machado J. A. Collaço C. M. Basto-Silva R. Gulamali
L. A. M. Ozorio
C. P. Simões
S. Rivero
S. G. D. Remedios
J. M. Baptista
A. F. Vieira
Agencies
Western Assurance Co., A.D. 1851 Fireman's Fund Insurance Co.
J
I
858
SHANGHAI
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
Patriotic Assurance Co.
Tel-tah
CHINA & JAVA EXPORT CO. 24A, KiangseRd.)
Import and Export; Branches: Tientsin
and Hankow
Chas. Sturmann, general manager
Wm. Martin, manager G. Robt. Henkel
Guy Manwaring
Max Friedrichs (Tientsin)
C. O. Frericks (Hankow)
Chang Yue Chee, compradore
勝業 Yih Shing
CHINA LAND & FINANCE Co., L.D., THE
10, Canton Road
Charles Rieveley, sec. and manager G. W. Cooper
局總險保和濟仁
Zung-che-wo Pao-hsien Chung-chok
CHINA MERCHANTS' MARINE INSURANCE CO.
Tong Fung Chee, manager
Chun Fai-ting,
do.
局總商招船輪
Lun-chien Chau-shang-tsung-kiuk
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION
COMPANY--Head Office: 1, Foochow Road
Chung Mun-yu, managing director
Shen Nang-hoo,
do.
do.
Wong Chun-lisin, director
Tong Fung-chee,
do.
Chun Fai-ting,
do.
T. Weir, marine superintendent E. W. Clements, do.
Shipping Office: 9, The Bund
Tong Fung-chee, manager Chun Fai-ting,
do.
S. C. Tsang
W. Hunter, wharfinger and ware-
houseman
Yang Kah Du Wharf
T. H. Harris, general manager
R. C. Howlett, acting accountant Chas. Amner, wharfinger and ware-
houseman
Kin Lee Yuen Wharf
T. H. Harris, manager of foreign goods
warehouse
Fai Hong-sing, manager
G. S. Burgess, wharfinger and ware-
houseman
司公壽保年永
Yung-nien-pao-sou Kung-sze
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LD.-
10 Canton Road
Directors and Officers-Alex. McLeod, (chairman), J. H. McMichael, Lee Yung Su, C. Stepharius, C. R. Burkill, J. A. Wattie (managing director), A. J. Hughes, (secretary), S. B. Neill, F.I.A., F.S.S. (actuary), E. Alex. Slee C.A. (travelling auditor) Inspectors-Capt. W. H. Denk, L.
Mooser
Medical Directors-G.E.Goode, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., H. Balean, M.B., B.S., F.R.C.S., Lond.
Staff
M. Wallace, cashier
A. F. C. Baring
E. A. Belbin J. C. Burgess E. Burrows R. J. Collaco
do.
H. C. Colman
C. A. Connor
Kwan Chi-ming, asst. manager Chun Chiu-tung, do. Kwan Seu-ping, do. Central and Hongkew Wharves
T. H. Harris, general manager
R. C. Howlett, acting accountant S. Madar
F. X. de Senna
E. Collingwood T. W. Tye P. G. Marceau
C. W. Chai
T. Au-yang
Chang Bo-chuen
S. H. Hollamby, wharfinger and
warehouseman
H. F. G. Colpoys, asst. wharfinger
Eastern Wharf
T. H. Harris, general manager
A. D. Lambert, sub. accountant
L. H. Richards
T. J. Ellis
A. G. Crane
J. G. Costs J. D'Aquino
J. C. D'Assumpção J. Deighton C. Emamodeen M. A. Farrow W. C. Henderson R. Killalee K. F. Kruger M. F. Land C. E. Lawder R. Macdonald D. Marshall F. E. Marye W. Prescott
T. Rangel
C. C. dos Remedios
R. B. Roach
W. J. Roope
C. M. da Rosa
R. W. Skinner, B.A.
C. A. Tavares
V. W. Victal
SHANGHAI
859
C. Wallace
Geo. Mooser, agency manager, Shang-
hai
and River ports
H. A. Britten
C. R. Greenburg F. X. Gutierrez G. Tripmacher Dzing Tel Gyi Leong C. Weng Hsu Shu Bing
Agents
BANK Ta-koo-lung-zen-kung-szę CHINA NAVIGATION COMPANY, LIMITED Butterfield & Swire, general agents
W. J. E. Forsyth, general godown
superintendent
F. A. Tappenden, supt. steward
French Bund-Wharves and Godowns
J. Davies, wharfinger
Watung-Wharves and Godowns
Pootung-Wharves and Godowns
W. J. Barkhus, wharfinger
局紙噐機章倫
Lin-chang Che-chi Cho-tsze-chok
CHINA PAPER MILL COMPANY-Mill: 32,
Yangtszepoo R.; Town Office: N. 381-A, Hankow Road
Cho Pea-chu, director
Hung-ven-kung-so
CHINA PRINTING CO., LTD.-Works: 33-A, Haskell Road; Town Office, 27, Nanking Road
J. Delbourgo, secretary and general
manager
Lithographic Department
C. W. Clifford, superintendent
Letterpress Department
E. A. Nottingham, superintendent
Miss A. Blow
General Office
J. B. Katz
F. S. Wong, assistant
K. Skoy, assistant
Town Office
P. Kolm
H. Leon, assistant
司公業營國中
CHINA REALTY COMPANY, LD., Land and
Estate Agents, Financial Agents, Ar-
chitects and Builders-New Telephone
Building, Kiangse and Hankow Road: Teleph. 2820; Tel. Ad: Realty
F.J. Raven, managing director
CHINA TEA ASSOCIATION-6A, Peking Rd. Committee-Alex. Campbell (chair- man), Ed. White, Jas. N. Jameson, H. A. J. Macray, A. M. Lester (hon. secretary)
健保 Pao-ning CHINA TRADERS' INSURANCE COMPANY,
LD.
(Marine Insurance)-4, Jin Kee Road;
Tel. Ad: Traders; Telph. 107
Agents-The Union Insurance Society
of Canton, Ltd.
Teh-Fah
CHINA TRADING COMPANY, Merchants and
Commission Agents-77, Rue du Wham-
poa, French Concession
J. Malcampo
S. Y. Soo, manager
會總務商海上
CHINESE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE--526,
Elgin Road
= ||] Nữ Tung-men-bao
CHINESE CHRISTIAN INTELLIGENCER--18,
Peking Road; published weekly inShang-
hai by the Presbyterian Missions in China
Rev. S. Isett Woodbridge, editor in
chief, 32, Range Road
司公務鑛平開
Kai-ping kwang-wu-kung-sze
CHINESE ENGINEERING & MINING CO., LD.
1, Jinkee Road
R. N. Truman, agent
T. E. Dunn F.C.Frischling H. N. Wienberg A. W. Sweetingham S. J. Calder W. G. Smith
BBWC Zung-che E-kwan
CHINESE HOSPITAL-5, Shantung Road
Medical Officer-C. J. Davenport
Consulting Surgeon-W. J. Milles
Matron of Women's Ward-Miss Halley
報月報新圖畫
Wa-du-sin-pao Yuih-pao
ORINESE ILLUSTRATED NEWS, AND SUNDAY SCHOOL CHILD'S PAPER (both in Chinese);
Published by the Chinese Tract Society,
Shanghai-61, Range Road
Rev. J.M.W. Farnham, D.D., editor
Rev. J. E. Cardwell
do.
Ke-chih-wie-pien
CHINESE SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL MA-
GAZINE 407, Hankow Road
John Fryer, LL.D., editor and proprietor
室書致格 Ke chih shu shih
CHINESE SCIENTIFIC BOOK DEPOT, THE-
407, Hankow Road
John Fryer, LL.D., proprietor
860
祿邵 Cho Lo
SHANGHAI
CHOLLOT, J. J., Ingenieur des Ponts et
Chaussées, Civil Engineer, Surveyor and
Architect-53, Quai du Yang King Pan;
Resilence; 30, Rue Eugene Bard."
CHOTIRMALL & Co., K. A. J., Direct Impor- ters and Silk Merchants, Retail and Wholesale 574, Nanking Road
C. Sadhooniall, chief manager T. Rochiram, manager
R. Ruttonmall T. H. Motiram B. Dingomall
Head Office-Singapore
Branches Tsingtao, Batavia, Sourabaya, Saigon, Bangkok, Hongkong, Canton, Kobe and Yokohama
CHURCHES AND MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions in China see
end of China Directory
堂德望
Wang-te-tung
AUGUSTINIAN (SPANISHI) MISSION- 10,
Yangtszepoo Road
Rev. Fr. G. Castrillo, procurator
Rev. P. Alvares, vice do.
院學旦震灣家羅
Lo-kia-wan tchen-tan hio quen
AURORA UNIVERSITY-Route Dubail 55
Rev. H. Allain, S.J., director
Rev. E. Monti, s.J.
Rev. J. de Vibraye, S.J.
Rev. G. Guérault, 8.9.
Rev. J. B. Pé, s.j.
Rev. V. Suen, S.J.
Rev. J. de Lapparent, 8.3. P. Tcheng, S.J.
EXEN
Sing-noi-lo-tin-chi-tong
CHURCH OF THE
IMMACULATE CON-
CEPTION Chinese City
Rev. M. Sen, S.J.
Rev. A. On
HOLY FAMILY, INSTITUTION OF THE
20, North Honan Road
Rev. Mother St. Bernard, superioress
**
Ta Le-pa-tang
HOLY TRINITY CATHEDRAL
Bishop Elect-Rev. H.J.Maloney,B.A. Archdeacon Ven. A. E. Moule, B.D. Dean-Rev. A. J. Walker, M. A. Trustees E. Jenner Hogg, J. L.
Scott, F. A. de St. Croix
**DD Way Way Chiaou-tang
MAHOMEDAN CHURCH-1, Chekiang Road
and Corner Canton Road
Trustee E. Pabaney
Officiating Priest (Mulla) Mahomed
Saleh
FA± Kiau-sz-kung-saw MISSIONARY HOME & AGENCY--38 Quin- san Rd.; Tel. Ad: Evangel; Telph. 493
Edward Evans
Miss F. M. Buck Miss E. Spurling
T. Hong, bookkeeper Y. C. Ng, compradore
The Book Room and Educational De- pository-30, North Szechuen Road; Tel. Ad: Evangel; Teleph. No. 493 (switch) Edward Evans
Miss M. F. Askin Miss L. Porter Mr. Hugh McKay Miss E. H. Taylor
Mr. W. K. Lee
Mr. H. Y. Chen
堂善首 Cheou-chen-tang
PROCURE DES LAZARISTES-Rue Chapsal 4
C. M. Guilloux
M. Bouvier
F. Schraven
Ch. Barrière
J. Joly
Poai-tang
PROCURE DES MISSIONS BELGES-Avenue
Paul Brunat 395
Rev. Jos. Hoogers
Rev. P. Regaert
Rev. F. Scheirs
San-teh-tang
PROCURE DES MISSIONS ETRANGERES
2, Quai du Yang-King-Pang
Kev. A. Brun Rev. F. Sallou,
Rev. A. Biottean
***°* Hong-kew Tien-chu-tang ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH, "Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus," Hongkew -21, Nanzing Road
Rev. H. Moisan, S.J. Rev. Van Dosselaere, s.J. Rev. J. Savary, S.J.
C. Helg, S.J.
V. Mouly, S.J.
SHANGHAI FREE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Secretary-Geo, Howell Treasurer A. C. Hunter
SPANISH AUGUSTINIAN MISSION
SHANGHAI
Pérez Right Rev. L. Tit. Bishop of Corico & Vicar Apostolic of Northern Hunan Rev. S. de la Torre, v.-provincial Rev. B. Gonzalez Rev. J. Pons Rev. A. Martinez
Rev. A. Diego Rev. F. Bernardo Rev. A. Gonzalez Rev. L. Ramirez Rev. N. Puras Rev. S. Palomino Rev. A. Fernandez Rev. A. Arroyo Rev. E. Fernandez Rev. V. Martinez Rev. J. Hospital Rev. B. Ibeas Rev, A. V. Gallo
Rev. A. de la Paz Rev. V. Ferrero Rev. B. Fernandez Rev. H Martinez Rev. P. Pelaz
Rev. V. Avedillo
Rev. E. Rodriguez Rev. A. F. Gonzalez Rev. L. Revilla
Rev. P. Cerezal
ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH, BROADWAY (in connection with the Mission to Seamen of London, England)
Rev. F. Perry, chaplain, 31, Broad-
way; Teleph. 1442
T. N. Hayward, hon. treasurer and
lay reader
FC.
F. C. Flack, hon. organist
***** Tung ka do tin chi tong
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER'S CHURCH
Rev. L. Platel, s..J., superior
Rev. V. Marchi, S.J.
Rev. Ph. Grillo, S.J.
Rev. A. Tschere, S.J.
Rev. J. Ling, S.J.
J. Herve, s.J.
堂主天戳糨洋
ST. JOSEPH'S CHURCH (Roman Catholic Mission) - 29, Rue Montauban, Right Rev. P. Paris, s.J., Bishop of Silando, Vicar-Apost. of the Kiang-pan Mission Rev. H. Gilot, 8.J., Vicar-general, Superior of the Kiang-nan Mission Rev. J. Ducoux, s.J., Rector of Zi-
Ka-wei
Rov. Y. Lemercier, s.J., Sup. of St. Joseph's Church, Procurator-genl. of Kiang-nan Mission Rev. Stan, Le Gal), s.J. Rev. C. Frin S.J.
Rev. J. Verdier S.J. J. Yang, S...
A. M. Avice, S...
J. M. Le May, S.I.
J. Eckle, $.J.
Th. Kio, S.J.
堂主具数太鴛
Yu-t'oi-chiaou chen-tsu-tang
861
SYNAGOGUE "BETH EL"--16, Peking Road
President D. M. David
Vice-President-S. A. Levy
Hon. Treasurer-F. Ezra
Hon. Secretary-E. J. Ezra
*** Sin Tien-on-tang
UNION CHURCH-The Manse, 25, Yuen-
ming-yuen Road
Minister-Rev. C. E. Darwent, M.A.
ZI-KA-WEI MUSEUM
Curator-Rev. F. Courtois, 8.J.
拉刻
Ka-lah
CLARK, J. D., Commission Mercht., Valuer
and Broker-25, Nanking Road
Shu-sun
升旭 Shat-8U12
CLARKSON & Co.-2, Canton Road; Tel.
Ad: Clarkssuvor
D. M. Clarkson (Vladivostock)
A. C, Hunter
CLUBS-
AMATEUR DRAMATIC CLUB
Hon. Secretary-0. H. P. Hay Hon. Treasurer A. D. Brent Business Manager--W. Armstrong
AMERICAN COLLEGE CLUB
Secretary A. J. Osgood
CLAY PIGEON CLUB-Siccawei Road
Committee--J. Ambrose (president), W. A. Kent, A. P. Nazer, N. E. Woller and A. H. White (hon. secy. and treasurer)
TUNA‡ Tah-E-ta le-tsung-way
CLUB ANSONIA-4, Mohawk Road
會總德天
Ta-tei-tsoong-way
CLUB CONCORDIA-22, The Bund
President C. Stepharius
Vice-President-Rud. Mabnfeldt
Secretary-F. W. E. Koeppe
P. Ratke K. S. Van
C. K. Cheng
CLUB DEL BALIN-192, North Szechuen
Road Extension
I
862
SHANGHAI
CLUB UNIÃO--32, North Szechuen Road
President-R. C. da Silva e Souza Hon. Secretary-J. B. da Roza Hon. Treasurer-H. J. N. Lopes Committee J. M. Marques, E. Mar- ques de Souza, C. E. Lopes e Ozorio, B. M. Corion
COUNTRY CLUB-120, Bubbling Well Rd. Committee-W. S. Jackson (chairman) Rev. G. Hayter, H. A. J. Macray, J. McKie, L. Midwood, W. A. C. Platt, G. M. Wheelook, C. W. Wrightson, E. Brook (secretary)
## Hsin-kwan Tsung-way
CUSTOMS CLUB--80, Chapoo Road ; Telep-
hone 779
President-The Commissioner Vice-President-C. P. Dawson Hon, Treasurer-W. Armour Hon. Secretary--G. M. Kidd Hon. Librarian-T. Shirdan Hon. Steward-W. B. Andrews Asst. do. -G. Sherman Committee A. H. Budgen, R. J. White, J. B. Jack, C. B. V. Golding
CYCLING CLUB
President B. A. Clarke Vice President-M. Collins Hon. Secretary-T. E. Dunn
PAPER HUNT CLUB
Master A. W. Burkill Secretary-A. W. Olsen
RACE CLUB
Secretary-A. W. Olsen
Clerk of Course-S. W. Pratt, M.R.C.V.S.
RECREATION CLUB
Vice President-W. H. Jackson
President Geo. Lanning
Hon. Secretary-F. P. Fegan
Asst. Hon. Secy.-A. W. Peake
ROWING CLUB-Lower Boat House, Soo-
chow Creek
SHANGHAI CLUB-3, The Bund
Secretary-Capt. C. G. Close Assistant H. Andersen
SHANGHAI GOLF CLUB
Secretary-G. D. Main
SHANGHAI MINIATURE RIFLE CLUB-Yu
Yuen Road, Bubbling Well
Thomas Freeman, secretary
SHANGHAI RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB-18b,
Szechuen Road
SWIMMING BATH CLUB
President-C. Mayne
Hon Treasurer-E. B. C. Hornell Hon. Secretary-C. W. Beswick
TOURING CLUB ITALIANO
President A. Clerici, c/o Jardine.
Matheson & Co., Ld.
YACHT CLUB-N. Soochow Road Hon. Secretary-F. B. Walker
林高 Kao-lin
COLLINS & Co., Merchants-4,Canton Road;
and at Tientsin and London
C. H. Rutherford, signs per pro.
E. Payne
C. S. Bignell
司公報電務商洋平太
Tai-ping-yang-Shang-wu Tien-pao-Kung-szo
COMMERCIAL PACIFIC CABLE COMPANY-7,
The Bund
D. Coath, superintendent
O. Crewe, supervisor
司公茂公老
Lau-kung-mow Kung-chi
COMMERCIAL UNION ASSURANCE CO., LD.- 22, Kiangse Road; P. O. Box No. 26; Fire,
Life, Marine, Accident, Fidelity Guaran-
tee. Plate Glass and Motor Car
W. H. Trenchard Davis, manager for
China
J. D. Keith Sim
A. F. M. d'Oliveira S. E. Wong
A. Encarnaçao H. Encarnaçao
General Agents Ilbert & Co.
Agents
Mustard & Co.,
Lo-tai-tchang
COMPAGNIE COMMERCIALE D'EXTREME OB- LENT, Wholesale Wine, Spirit and General Provision, Merchants, Import and Ex- port-73, Rue du Consulat; Teleph. 304; Paris, London and Shanghai
Jacquet, Maurice, manager
A. Colomb
A. Remy
E. F. Pereira
A. Thritard
COMPAGNIE FRANÇAISE DES INDES ET DE
L'EXTREME ORIENT
J. C. Changuex, manager for Szechuen
Branch
Paul Biè P. Lefranc
SHANGHAI
863
司公國萬吏大
Ta-tuny-van-kwok-kung-se
COMPAGNIE INTERNATIONALE D'ORIENT
20, The Bund; Teleph. 1421
E. Sengier, M.E., E.E., agent
COMPAGNIE ASIATIQUE DE NAVIGATION
Racine, Ackermann & Cie, genl. mangrs.
C. M. Joyce
E. Bigel
COMPAGNIE FRANÇAISE DE TRAMWAYS ET D'ECLAIRAGE ELECTRIQUES DE SHANGHAI
-75, Avenue Dubail
Direction
M. Coursier, general manager P. Chuteau, sub-manager
Tramway Department
Clement, traffic manager Galian, traffic inspector
Bibė,
do.
Electric Light Department.
Briand, electrician
François, do.
Leacli, do.
Fitting Shop
Harrisson, foreman fitter
Water Works Department
Camu, engineer
Lorton, do.
Brun, foreman plumber
Donnart, do.
do.
Delannoy, do.
Alfonso, do.
Office
F. de Wolf, chief accountant and sec
C. d'Encarnação, assistant accountant
J. D. Bono,
L. de Sh, storekeoper
do.
Teh Kau
COMPANIA GENERALDE TABACOS DE FILI-
PINAS-12, Nanking Road
J. Delbourgo, agent
義敦 Teng-nid
COMPTOIR D'IMPORT ET D'EXPORT
DE
BELGIQUE-125, Szechuen Rd., Tel. 2385
1. Dumonceau
Ef Hang-chang
COMPTOIRS LAMQUET (Soc. An.), Antwerp ant Shanghai 125, Szechuen Road; Tel. 2386
J. del Marmol, managing director
Kung-lec
CONNELL BROS. & Co., Importers and Ex-
porters-9 Hankow Road
Fu Kung-woo-loog
CONNOISSEUR, LTD., High Class Outfitters,
Tobacconists and General Retailers
Directors- E. Sparke, P. Crighton
Manager-W. R. Sim
CONSULATES
門衙事領總國加馬斯奧大
Ta Ao-sz-mah-ka-kwoh tsing ling-shi Ya-mén
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY, Consulate-General-
2A, Kiukiang Road; Tel. Ad: Austung; Telephone 363
Acting Consul General-Dr. Karl
Bernaner
Vice-Consul-H. Schumpeter
Do. -Dr. F. Stümvoll
Secretary--Jos. Krill
Clerk Johann Severinus
Lettres-HuMing-yü, HsuShou chien
Physician-0. von Schab, M.D.
門衙事領總國時利比大
Ta Pe-li-sz-kwoh Tsung-ling-shi Yamén BELGIUM-101, Bubbling Well Road;
Residence: 104, Rubbling Well Road;
Tel. Ad: Belgique; Telph. 447
General-Consul-D. Siffert
Vice-Consul-M. Watteew
do, -G. van Schendel
Interprète-J. Hers
1st Chinese Clerk-Ngai-di tsin
Second do.
Pei Yao Ting
門衙事總國巴古大
Ta Ku-po-kuo Tsung-hing-82' Yam'on
CUBA Consulate General of the Re-
public of Cuba-121, Bubbling Well Rd.
Consul-Genl. and Chargé d'Affaires
in China Colonel Benjamin Giberga
Vice Consul-Capt. B. Vieta
NABД
DENMARK
Ta Tan-kwoh ling-sa Yamen
Consul General and Consular Judge
for China-T. Raaschou
Vice-Consul-V. Meyer
Chinese Secretary-Chen Kit-cling
門衙事領總國法大
Ta Fah-kwoh Tsung-king-shi Yu-mên
FRANCE, Consulat-Général- Rue
Consulat
Consul-Général-L. Ratard
du
Consuls Suppléants-M. Feit, M. de
Laforcade
Vice-Consul, Chancelier-A. Danjou Vice Consul, Interpréte-E. Point (en
congé)
Eleve Vice-Consul-Ch. Gayot Elèves Interprètes-Goubault, H.
Quesvin
:
;
||
864
Médecin-Dr. Fresson ler Lettré--Tchang Tche Ing
2e
do.
Telang Si-seng
SHANGHAL
Secrétaire Interprète-E. Zi Zeng Zé Cour Mixte Française
Assesseur Français-G. Goubault
Magistrat Nich Tsong Hi
Secrétaire-E. Zi Zeng Zé
門衙事領總國德大
Ta Te-kwoh Tsung-ling-shi Ya-men
GERMANY, Consulate-General -9 and 10,
Whangpoo Road
Consul-General--P. von Buri, Wirk).
Legationsrat
Consul--Max. Muller
Vice-Consul--Dr. Ney
Do. -0. Mezger
Do.
Do.
Do.
-Dr. Marckwald
B. von Hahn
-Dr. Crull
Mixed Court Assessor-K. Schirmer
Interpreter-Dr. Peruitzsch
Do. --Dr. Braklo
Technical Attaché-H. Schellhoss
Secretary-H. Gatjen
Do.
Do.
-P. Klingner
-K. Jecke
Clerk of the Court-W. Kirsten
Clerks C. Bellmann, P. Gunther,
K. Wacker, G. During
Constable-O. Keil
Physician. von Schab, M.D.
Do. -P. Krieg, M.D.
門衙事領總英大
Ta Ying Tsung-ling-shi Ya-mên
GREAT BRITAIN,ConsulateGeneral -Bund
Consul-General
Sir Pelham
Warren, K.C.M.G.
Senior Vice-Consul
S. Barton
L.
Vice-Consul (Mixed Court Assessor)
-J. T. Pratt
Do. (Land Office)-H. H. Bristow
Do. Brett
Shipping Office-H. J.
Assistaut-0. I. Coales Interpreter-W. J. B. Fletcher Asst. (Records Office)-L. King Registry Office of Shipping
Registrar The Consul-General Govt. Surveyor-J. H. P. Parker Consulate Gaol, Soochow Creek Chief Constable-J. Chandler
do.-F. Elvins.
Second
Third do.-W. Dobinson
署總部工英大
Ta Ying Kung-pu Tsung-shu
H.B.M. OFFICE OF WORKS for the
Treaty Ports of China, Japan, Corea,
and Siam-Yuen-ming-yuen Road
H. M. Architect and Surveyor-C. J. W. Simpson (absent), H. Ashmead Asst. Surveyor-J. M. Davidson
A. Scott, A.R.I.B.A.
Do.
Clerk of Works-R. C. Groves
Do.
Do.
Do.
--H. Walker
-W. O. Keats
-W. W. Selanders
Accountant J. G. Manley
門衎事頜國利大意大
Ta E-ta-lee-kwoh Ling-shi Ya-mén
ITALY-112, Bubbling Well Road
Consul-General-A Monaco
Interpreter and Mixed Court Asses-
sor G. Ros
Secretary Chancelier-G. A. Favilla
門衙事頜總本日大
Ta Fil-pen Tsung-ling-shi Ya-mên
JAPAN, Consulate-General-1, North
Yangtze Roarl, Hongkew
Consul, Sec. of Legation and Acting
Consul-General-Y. Matsuoka Vice-Consul-G. Miho
Do. -G. Ukita
Chancellor-K. Yokoyama
Do.
-T. Kinari
Do.
-S. Nakahata
Do.
-N. Ichikawa
Do. -S. Yamasaki
Chief Constable--T. Takishima
Marine Inspector-N. Kimura
Do.
I. Tokunaga
門衙事領國蘭和大海上
Shanghai Da O-lan-Kwok Ling-Sz Yamen
NETHERLANDS
Consul-General-L. J. C. von Zeppelin
Obermüller
Vice-Consul-Th. H. de Meesten
Chinese Secretary-K. C. Dzao
NORWAY, Consulate General-6, Jin Kee
Road; Tel. Ad: Noreg
館公事頜總國洋西大
T'a Se-yang-kwoh Tsung-ling-shi Koong-kwan PORTUGAL, Consulate-General-12, Ferry Road
Consul-General--O. G. Portier (abt.)
Vice-Consul in Charge-J. F. Chagas
Acting Chancelier--A. R. L. Madeira
Chinese Secretary-Woo Pa-kwei
門衙事領總國斯羅俄大
Ta Ngoo-loo-shi-kwoh Teung-ling-hi Ya-men
RUSSIA Whangpoo Road, 12
Consul-General-H E. C.Kleimenov
Vice
do. W. Bratzow
Secretary-J. Priadilow
Interpreter --Chủn
門衙事頜國亞泥巴斯日大
To Jih-s-pa-ne-ya-kowk-ling-shi Famen
SPAIN-10, Iankow Road
Consul-Carlos de Sostoa
Interpreter-V. Vizenzinovich
SHANGHAI
Chinese Secretary-Wu Ming-yu
館公國儌哪晪喘大
Ta Sui-tin -kwoh Koong kwan
SWEDEN, Consulate-Gen 502, Avenue
Paul Brunat
Consul General for China and Hong-
kong-R. Bagge
Commercial Attaché-E. G. Sallin
門衙事領總國美大
Ta Me-Roul Tsung-ling-shi Ya-mên
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Consulate-
Genera-136, Whangpoo Road
Consul-General-Amos P. Wilder Vice and Deputy Consul-General-
W. R. Dorsey
Vice-Consul General and Mixed
Court Assessor-W. B. Hull Vice-Consul General and Mixed
Court Assessor-F. W. Hadley Deputy Consul-General and Mixed
Court Assessor J. I. Viney Deputy Consul-General and Marshal
Consular Court-T. C. White Deputy Consul-General J. P.
Jameson
Public Health and Marine Hospital
Surgeon Dr. S. A. Ransom Clerk-Miss D. Ferris
Compradore-S. D. Wong
WG
Yin-tsung-kong-t'sang
COSMOPOLITAN Dock, Shipbuilding Yard
and Boiler Shop
Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Ld.,
proprietors
廠紗局新汸
Fang-chik-sin-kink Sha-tsang
COTTON SPINNING COMPANY, CHINESE
NKW-22, Yangtsze-poo Road
G. Pilkington, manager and engineer
↑
Sia-kiu Tsoong-way
COUNTRY CLUB (See Clubs)
COURTS OF JUSTICE
See Supreme Court (II.B.M.'s), also
United States Court
茂豐 Fung-mow
Courts, Guo, D. Bill and Bullion Broker,
Shanghai Club, and 12, Siccawei Road
865
COVENTRY ORDNANCE WORKS, LD., Field and Naval Gun Manufacturers--24A,
Kiangse Road; Tel. Ad: Mesmeric; Telpli
2,063
H. P. King, resident representative
R. W. Archer, asst, ditto.
生醫高
Ko-e-sung
Cox, Dr. K. H., F.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., Port Health
Officer
4 Ko-sze-e-sung 生醫師柯
Cox, Dr. S. M., M.D. (T.C.D.), L.R.C.S., L.M.,
L.R.C.P. 39, North Soochow Rd.; Teleph.
179; Acting I. M. Customs Surgeon,
Medical Officer Nanyang College; Tel.
Ad: College, Hunbury School
益公 A
Kung Vil
CRAIG & Co., L.--44, Szechnen Road
H. J. Craig, managing director
N. B. Ramsay, director
Chun Liang Yue, do.
H. Burkhardt, silk inspector
G. C. Dew
M. G. Beck A. L. Barrera C. D. Kay
P. Rull
General Mangers Shanghai Tannery
Co., L.
Ziang-sing
CRAIG, MARSHALL & Co., Import and Export Merchants and Commission Agents-1A, Jinkee Road; Tel. Ad: Craigmar; Telep. 1991
J. T. Craig (London) Partners
R. C. Marshall
G. D. Craig
CRAIG, RAMSAY & Co., E., Merchants-42, Szechuen Road; Branches: Tientsin and Hankow
Ly-kee
ÜRAVEN, J. H., Tea Merchant and Commis-
sion Agent-5, Peking Road
昌公 Kung Chong
CRAVEN, SIMPSON & Co., LD-1,311 Pek-
ing Road
塲球拋內塲馬跑
Bau-mo-zang-noi-p'au-jew-zang
CRICKET CLUB-(See Clubs)
CROMPTON & Co., LD.-3F, Pekin Road;
London Office: Salisbury House, Lon-
don Wall, E.C.
S. S. Sellick, manager Matheson & Co., agents
866
SHANGHAI
*** S Kuh-ping-i-sung CULPIN, MILLAIS, M.B., LOND. F.R.C.S., ENG.
-47, Kiangse Road; Tel. No. 266
CUMMING, E. O., Exchange Broker-Shang- hai Club; 21, Connaught Rd; Telph. 2791
禮克
CURRIE & Co., A. M., Shipbrokers, Coal and Freight Brokers, General Merchants and Commission Agents-132, Szechuen Rd.: Tel. Ad Currieco
:
A. M. Currie
HG Kiang-nan Hai-kwan CUSTOMS-IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-H. E. Hobson Acting Deputy Commers.-V. E. J.
Dent, R. C. Guernier
Chief Assts.-N. E. Bryant, E. Laporte First Assts.-C. Kliene, D. Percebois, A. M. de Souza, A. J. E. Allen, A. Berthet, A J. Hadley
Second Assistants-C. W. de Bérigny, A. Scagliotti, F. R. C. Surplice, H. J. Sharples, F. H. Bell, G. Bocher, N. H. Schregardus, J. N. Segerdal, A. W. Leach, P.P. P.M. Kremer, B. D. Bruce, E. B. Howell
Third Assistants-T. A. M. Castle, R. T. Nelson, F. W. A. Scott, P. E. Huber, J. Déveria, L. Peel, A. C. Biesterfeld
Fourth Assistants-R. L. P. Baude, R.M J. Delastre, N. R. M. Shaw, E. H. Hunter, S. Nishigori, G. Tsunashima Clerks F. W. E Dülberg, P'. Poletti,
J. Berthelot
Transport Officer--R. von der Leithen,
W. A. Roberts
Surgeons--R. H. Cox, J. W. Jackson, T. B. Sia, H. Fresson, O. von Schab Chief Tidesurveyor.-C. P. Dawson Tidesurveyors W. Stebbins, E.
Molloy, W. L. Parker Assistant Tidesurveyors-J. Clark, C.
P. C. Lynborg, F. Wolfe Act Assistant Tidesurveyor-C. P. R.
Hansen
Boat Officers C. Tonkin, C. F. Goodhart, Y. M. Mudes, W. B. Andrews, C. B. V. Golding Chief Examiners-R. MacGregor, C. S. J. Grainger, W. Armour, J. H. Pearson
-
Acting Chief Examiner A. G. Elder Examiners A. A. Godwin, T. W. Laidler, J. J. McGrath, C. W. P. Teichert, W. J. Lye, J. H. M. Noodt, E. Bernard, J. E. Harris, J. B. Jack, G. M. Kidd, R. J. White, G. A. F. Schneider, P. J. J. Stellingwerff, T.
Shirdan, J. T. Manley, R. P. Hansen. J. Ferguson, T. H. M. Schneider, G.P. Civilini, P. Mannheimer, P. H. Smith F. E. Jackson, M. Finlayson, S. Smith Assistant Examiners-G.G.Thogersen, A. W. Sorms, J. Fischer, H. G. Burton, V. Gaeta, S. J. Taylor, F. Bénard, M. C. Shirazee, W. Campbell, C. B. Miller, J. A. Peach, F. Powelka, J. J. Gorman, P. H. Nolting Tidewaiters, 1st class-J. A. da Costa, J. Owen, F. Galignani, W. Mc. F. Robb, P. F. McMahon, G. W. M. McKie, J. C. H. Schmüser, H. E. Trepkowski
Tidewaiters, 2nd class--St. C. C. da Silva, W. E. Guttschick, R. C. Star- ling, H. C. Starling
Tidewaiters, 3rd class--H.N.D. Rosen, G. E. Sherman, H. Storrs, A. W. Jappe, A. K. Thommessen, A. Fenus, W. Lloyd, O. A. Andresen, F. Kittel, H. Lyons, L. Due, O. E. M. Ólive, D.B. Izatt, J. Kennedy, C.F.Knudsen, C.S. Goddard, G. McLorn, R. A. V. Árm- our, G. B. Stormes, S. A. Magnussen, M. O. Albertsen, J. Hammel, V. Pilipenko, H. H. Powney, E. Lundin, A. Darlington, A. L. Temlett, C. E Davies, W. J. Schmit, F. C. F. Novik, F. F. Peck, F. Campbell, J. Stewart, A. B. B. Harris, J. A. Power. J. G. Arnesen, A. C. Tudhope, E. A. Anderson, S. Fowler, A. Jones, A. Limbird, A. W. Johnson Probationary Tidewaiters-5 Watchers-2; Super'y Watchers-20
ENGINEERS' DEPARTMENT
Acting Engr.-in-Chief-L. T. Stodart Assistant Engineer R. Robinson Clerks M. Chaumont, P. L. Raeburn Clerks of Works--J. G. Thomas, H. M.
Thompson
Mechanics--E. A. Clatworthy, J. J.
Hourihan, A. Fairgrieve
COAST INSPECTOR'S DEPARTMENT
Coast Inspector-W. F. Tyler Dep. Coast Insptr-G.T.B.J. Eldridge Clerks C. S. F. Lloyd, A. S. Hocking Asst. Surveyors-H. C. Muller, T. H.
Bülow-Ravens, S. V. Mills
HARBOUR DEPARTMENT
Harbour Master-W. A. Carlson Berthing Officers--C. P. R. Hansen, L. Antoncich, A. Hotson, J. A. Samples, J. A. Winling Clerk-A. B. Budgen
Divers-B. Hansen, T. A. Ehtman Godown Keepers-C. W. Cunningham,
J. T. Jespersen, J. Ratcliffe Signalman C. Villanova
RIVER POLICE
Inspector-T. Mellows
SHANGHAI
Sergts.-J. W. Lansberg, F. O. Petter-
sen, C. D. Murphy Constables-14
REVENUE STEAMER "PING CHING"
Commander-W. S. Wyles
First Officer-. J. M. Flemyng
Acting Second Officer-- N. T. Sjöstedt
Third Officers-H. J. Hodges, H. G.
Garden
First Engineer-T. O. B. Hurman
Second do.
T. J. R. Johns
Third do. -A. B. Belbin
REVENUE STEAMER "CHUENTIAO'
Commander-F. W Callsen
Second Officers-W. C. H. Knight, S.
Porter
Third Officer-C. N. Larsen
First Engineer-G. W. Appleby Second do -D. Grahain Third do. -C. A. Martienssen Gunner J. MacArthur
REVENUE STEAMER "LIUHSING" Commander-C. I. Williamıs
First Officers-J. W. MacGregor, J.
P. Gibson
Second Officer--H. H. Wales
Third Officers-J. E. F. A. Laursen,
W. T. B. Terry, L. R. Carrel First Engineer-W. J. Harrison
Second. do. -T. E. Taylor,
Third Engineers-A. J. Miller, A. J.
Clements
處册造司務稅總
Tsung-shui-wu-ssu Tsao-tsê-chu
OF
INSPECTORATE GENERAL-34, Hart Road
CUSTOMS STATISTICAL DEPARTMENT
Statistical Secretary and Actg. Deputy
Postal Secretary-J. L. Chalmers
Actg. Asst. Statistical Secry.-Ting
I-hsien
Deputy Commissioner-E. L. Lépis-
sler
Assistant-D. Pecorini
Clerks-Woo Shuk-ü, Lo Tung, Ling Boo Ying, Pin Wei, Lee In Kai, Hong Dzoe Dziang
Printing Office
Manager H. E. Sandys (on leave) Acting Manager-J. W. H. John Printer-E. Poskitt (on leave) Acting Printer-G. Honniball Foreman E. Hanggi
Proof Readers-Wm. Bright, manager. W. P. Brown (on leave), N. F. Miller, G. W. Waite, A. G. Merrilees, R, Davidson
867
Assistant Proof Readers-Fee Cum- ming, Wah Che Lien, Wong Siau
Yang, Wong Kya Tsoong, Yang Hsi
Tao, Dzung Sing Vuong
惟大
CYCLERY, THE CHINA-376, Nanking Road-
Dealers in Bicycles, Arms and Am-
munition; Tel. Ad: Loodiana
J. A. Sudka, proprietor
會商傅大 Ta fao tsong way
DAIBUTSU & Co. (from Japan) 257A and 258, Broadway, Hongkew, Manufacturers and Dealers in Boots and Shoes, all
other kinds of Leather Goods, Curios &c.; Telph. 1698
泰裕 Yu-tai
DALLAS & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents-6,Hongkong Rd.; Tel. Ad: Sallad
Richard Dallas
Y. Saudine
H. dos Remedios
J. Seafoot
I. Confu
司公限有泰裕老
Lau-yn-tai-yau han-kung-sze
DALLAS HORSE REPOSITORY, Co., LD.-2
Mowhawk Road, Merchants, Auctioneers. and Commission Agents, Livery and Training Stable Proprietors, Carriage Builders, Harness Makers, Farriers, Horse and Pony Dealers, and Importers and Exporters of Live Stock; Tel. Ad: Frederick; Telph. 613
Frederick Dallas, managing director
S. F. Drakeford, secretary
A. H. Remedios
Charag Din
Jen Hong Sung, compradore
DANFORTH,
丹 Dan-fo
DANFORTH, A. W.--8, Kiangsi Road,
Consulting and Mill Engineer
Yue-kang
DAVID & Co., Merchants-16A, Peking Rd,
D. M. David
HE Day-vee 惟臺
DAVID & Co., S. J., Merchants-36, Nan
king Road
Sir Sassoon David (Bombay)
A. J. David (Hongkong)
M. J. Moses (Kobe)
Evelyn David
Edward I. Ezra
868
M. Myer
S. R. Minny
E. Hackham Shibbeth
D. S. Jeplison
E. S. Nathan, godowns
**
SHANGHAI
DAVID J. A., Import and Export-360
Nankin Road; Tel. Ad: Amara
J-A. David
D. J. David S. David
Sing-zay-ooh
DAVIES & Thomas, Civil Engineers and Architects, Land and Estate Agents- 10, The Bund
Gilbert Davies, M.S.A. (Lond.), M.C.
INST. (Lond.) Chas, W. Thomas
Guy Magree, C.E.
J. T. W. Brooke, A.M.I.B.A.
Geo. H. Charlton W. H. Butland Miss Miller
T. O'Driscoll
D. H. Benjamin
Ling Yung-chow, arch. assist.
Liu Zay-chin, compradore
司未德
DAVIS & LAWRENCE Co.-16, Nanking Rd.,
Manufacturing Chemists with Labora-
tories in New York, and Montreal,
Canada
Harvey H. Watkins, manager
Henry Jackson, assistant Geò. B. Ray, salesınan
Da-vee
DAVY, S. BAYES, Marine and Cargo Surveyor-11, Yuen Ming Yuen Road; Tel. No. 711. Surveyor for the National New York, San Francisco and Boston Board of Marine Underwriters, American Bureau of Shipping, and Local Insurance Companies
捷
Chet.hing.
DE SOUZA & Co., Job, Book and Colour Printers, Bookbinders, Stationers, Ac- count Book and Stamp Manufacturers, --16, Peking Road
P. C. Souza
Miss Souza
Chan A. Tong, foreman
高得
Teh-bau
DELBOURGO, J., Import, Export and Com-
mission Agent--12, Nanking Road
J. Delbourgo
I. Delbourgo
M. Bangaken
H. S. Delbourgo
N. Avadineff
D. S. King
利德 Teh-lee
DENEGRI, M., Silk Mercht.-244, Kiangse
Road; Tel. Ad: Madenegri; Telph. 1891
M. Denegri
Mei-chong
DENHAM & ROSE, Architects and Civil
Engineers-16, Szechuen Road
J. E. Denham
Robert Rose
B. C. G. Burnett
Ching Kwong Foo, compradore
泰美 Maintai
DENNISTON & SULLIVAN & THE INTERNA- TIONAL CYCLE Co., Photo Supplies,
Developing, Printing, Books, Stationery,
Magazines, Periodicals,&c.-573,Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Densum; Telph. 1,186
J. É. Bauld
J. J. Gilmore G. A. Nelson L. R. Ruchwaldy E. J. Burgoyne
Pau-zung
DENT&Co., ALFRED, Mehts.-5,Kiukiang Rd. Sir Alfred Dent, K.C.M.G. (absent) Edward Wheeley
F. A. de St. Croix
F. P. Pratt, inspector, Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society, Ld. (temporarily residing at Yoko- hania)
Agencies
British North Borneo Company Norwich Union Fire Insurance Soc., Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance, Marine
Tik-wa yin-hang DEUTSCH-ASIATISCHE BANK-14, The Bund;
Tel. Ad: Teutonia
H. Figge, manager
R. Timmerscheidt
C. Lauroesch, sub-manager H. Suter, sub-manager
R. Willkomm, signs per pro. C. Rebbein,
do.
H. Kummert,
do.
A. Reiss,
do.
H. Pfeiffer,
do.
G. Baerwald
E. Baerold
A. Willeke
P. Ilmer
F. Nebel
R. Scheidges J. A. Panny
豐利
Lifong
SHANGHAI
DEUTSCHI CHINESISCHE HANDELS AGENTUR
8, Kiangse Road
DEUTSCH-EVANGELISCHE KIRCHE
P. von Buri, Consul-General, chairman
Z. Fleischer, postrat
E. Gerecke, treasurer
K. Oldorp
C. Rasmussen
C. H. Stürmanını
O. Struckmeyer
Suter, Bankdirektor
司公報電德和大
Ta-té-wo-tien-pao-kung-tze
DEUTSCH NIEDERLAENDISCHE TELEGRAPHE
GESELLSCHAFT, A. G. (German Dutch
Telegraph Co.)-51, Szechuan Road
O. Stoecker, manager
W. Behrendt, superintendent
K. Thorade, operator
O. Scheffer,
W. Gaede,
do.
do.
G. Wiegner (Woosung)
Tek-wun-shu-chuk
DEUTSCHE DRUCKEREI
UND VERLAGS-
ANSTALT (German Printing and Publish- ing House) 25, Nanking Road, 2nd floor; Telephone 347
P. Konig, general manager
Te-kou-hoh-tong
DEUTSCHE SCHULE-I A, Astor Road
Committee --TheGerman Consul-General (Chairman) C. Fink, E. Gerecke (treasurer), C. Michelau, O. Meuser, Dr. Sokab, C. Stepharius Teachers
Dr. M. Müller, oberlehrer Miss Th. Hanstein
Miss H. Thierfelder
H. Boehmer
A. Heyer
Mrs. E. E. Merrilces Mrs. Konnowski C. Pulfar
DEUTSCHE VEREINIGUNG
C. Michelau (chairman), M. Hoerter (vice chairman), C. Fink, H. Figge, Th. Meyer, B. Rosenbaum, C. Step- harius; O. Struckmeyer, A. Ficker- mann, R. Kunze (secretary)
Te-kou-shu-yuen
DEUTSCHES SERMANUSITEIM-8, Dent Lane Leiter: W. Rulmer, pastor, 22, Whang- poo Rd.
Hausverwalter: W. Fólise (absent)
869
DEVLIN, CHARLES A., D.D.S, Dentist-
Whiteaway, Laidlaw Building, 2nd floor;
Office: Nanking Road
大志 Tze-dah
DICKESON, JONES & Co., Merchants, Man-
chester and Shanghai--3E, Peking Rd.;
Tel. Ad: Notliar
R. H. Dickeson (Manchester)
C. W. Jones
do
W. B. O. Middleton, agent
J. A. Hayes
A. E. Anderson
A. Madar
A. R. Madar
成提 Jit-sing
DIEDERICHSEN & Co., H., Merchants-18A,
Kiangse Road; Tel. Ad: Hadide
H. Diederichsen (Kiel)
Phil. Moeller (Shanghai)
A. H. Kruse
C. Stalil
II. W. Clarke
B. Stein
R. Halbritter
Fr. Schmidt F. Locht Wm. Ahrends K. Hamann K. Mauerer
F. Meyer
J. Miller
Fred. J. Howard, Watch Department Ed. Luchsinger, C. E., Engineering
Department
Agencies
Jebsen Line of Steamers
Farbenfabrik, Hansa G. M. B. H., Kiel Deutscher Rhederci Vercin, Hamburg Nordischer Bergungsverein,
HH Mao chung
DIETRICH, M.-25, Nanking Road
司公限有耀光
Kwong you yu haien kung sze
do.
DITMAR, BRUNNER BROS. LD., R.,Importers-
Head Office for China: Shanghai, 13, Hankow Road; Tel. Ad: Lampenact; Teleph. No. 3412; Factories in Vienna and Milano
Josef Boch, manager
A. Schmidt
E. Andrén, M.E.
E. Josefi, accountant
Z. Laisson
Branches in Europe-Vienna, Hamburg, Berlin, Paris, Gablonz, Budapesth, Graz, Lemberg, Prague, Trieste, Lyons, Milan, Warschau
870
SHANGHAI
局藥生醫士亷韋
Branches in India Bombay, Calcutta
Branches in China-In all Chinese
Treaty Ports
祥天
Tien-zeang
DODWELL & Co., LD., Merchants-1. Can- ton Road; and at Hongkong, Hankow, Yokohama, Kobe, Foochow, Colombo, Tacoma (Wash.), Portland (Oregon), Vancouver and Victoria (B.C.), and London
A. J. H. Carlill, drector H. A. J. Macray, manager Jas. Valentine, sub-manager
P. A. Crosthwaite
H. S. Goodfellow H. L. Norcock R. G. MacDonald
H. T. Bingham A. P. Nazer J. W. Barber
B. S. Laurence A. T. White L. O. Wagner R. A. Covil T. Sayle W. Reid
F. C. Focken
W. S. Campbell C. W. O. Mayne
J. C. P. d'Assumpção A. M. d'Oliveira A. M. Guterres Miss H. Hamlyn
Agencies
The Bank Line, Ld.
Weir's Steamship Lines Mogul Line
Dodwell's New York Line Barber's Line
Natal Line of Steamers
Union Assurance Society, Ld. Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld.
Thames and Mersey Marine Insce., Ld. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insce., Co.
United Asbestos Oriental Agency
Underwood Typewriter Co.
John Dewar & Sons, Ld.
女士都
Doo sz mun
DOUSMANIS, N., General Merchant-34, and
35 Nanking Road (second floor)
達道
Dow-dall
DOWDALL, W. M., Architect and Civil
Engineer-5, Peking Road
W. M. Dowdall, F.R.I.B.A., A.M.I.C.E.
L. P. de C. Dowdall
G. W. Mason
i⇓ ✔ Yah-chi-shu-za
社書才育
DOWIE, ROBERT G., Ellis Kadoorie Chinese
Schools Society-15, Burkill Road
Wei lens-c-shan-yar-cho
DR. WILLIAM'S MEDICINE Co., THE-88,
Kiukiang Road
S. W. Wolfe, manager
T. A. Davidson, assistant
W. H. Kerr,
J. A. Jackson P. Kirchner V. Davies
do.
J. B. Pillow (Chungking) Zee Vee Kong
Tai-wun DRUMMOND, WHITE-COOPER & PHILLIPS- 11, Peking Road; Tel. Ad: Attorney, Shanghai
W. V. Drummond, barrister-at-law, H. I. C. M's. chief law officer for foreign affairs of southern ports
A. S. P. White-Cooper, M.A., solicitor
T. Morgan Phillips, barrister-at-law
H. S. Oppe, solicitor
G. J. T. Newman
華榮 Yung-wah
Duering (Von), WIBEL & Co.-5, Jinkee Rd.
Henry von Duering
Kurt Wibel (Tientsin)
Té-fu
DUFF, JAMES SPIRO, Merchant-la, Jin
Kee Road
J. S. Duff
H. D. Duff
Ho-tak
DUNN, WALTER, Surveying, Nautical and Drawing Instruments, Drawing Ma- terials, Surveying, Navigating and Engineering Books, Admiralty Charts, Engine Stores, etc.-29, Kiangse Road
Walter Dun111
Y. S. Wong
Miss Duun, typist
# Sing-ching-loong
DUNNING & Co., Ld., Storekeepers and Importers--32A, Nanking Rd., Tel. Ad: Dunnings
John S. Dooly, managing director
Alex. W. Belyea C. F. Tappin
A. R. Davies Chas. Friedrickson Miss R. Boyol P. F. Sun
1
Tun-sin
DYCE & Co., Merchants-1, Kiukiang Road
E. Denegri
E. J. Cornfoot
SHANGHAI
DZIONK, M. F., Land and Estate Agent,
194, Tiendong Road
Pow-lung
EAST ASIATIC Co., LTD., Copenhagen, Singapore, Bangkok, Shanghai, Steam- ship Owners and General Merchants- 2, Canton Road
P. N. Forum, agent
S. Bagger
F. Olsen
A. Borselman
J. Ollerdessen
Agency
Russian East Asiatic Steamship Co., Ld.
Swedish East Asiatic Co., Ltd.
康滙
EASTERN COAL Co., THE, Coal, Flour, and
General Merchants-79, Szechuen Road; Telephone 2871
W. W. Houfe
司公報電朿大
EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA & CHINA
TELEGRAPH CO., LD.-7, The Bund
W. Bullard, manager in China
P. Marshall, superintendent T. Toledano, electrician E. Hobden, accountaut
Supervisors-E. Hobden, J. D. Harris, J. Ingram, W. G. Baker, J. Davidson, Operators H. W. Lapsley, J. H Logan, F. Medina, L. J. Gutierrez, A. Z. Cameron, J. Wade, J. G. Tomlin, L. J. Rozario, M. V. de Rago, J. A. Sinclair, F. R. Ribeiro, J. A. Sullivan Counter Clerks -J. F. Riberio, M. Barros, V. V. Vianna, J. E. Macain, F. de la Pena, G. M. Baptista, Z. F. X. Gonsalves
Tung-tih-tsang
EASTERN IRON WORKS, THE, Shipwork and General Engineering-Yangtszepoo and Ewo Roads; Telephone 1164
W. P. Daniels, consulting engineer F. Krenziger, engineer in chief
EASTERN PRODUCE COAL CO., THE-I
North Soochow Road
G. O. LaBrooy, agents
報繪方東
EASTERN SKETCH, THE 33a, Haskell Road,
an Illustrated Weekly Published every
Sunday, printed for the proprietor by
the China Printing Co., Ld.
行証信 Sing-chee-hang
EASTERN TRADING COMPANY, LD., THE-13,
Kiukiang Rond; Tel. Ad: Terntra; Telephone 841
871
Owen S. Little, managing director in
China
E. S. Little, jun.
R. G. Still
F. C. Roberts
F. A. Maher
Export Department
Ň, A. Viloudaki, manager
Shun-fat
EBBEKE & Co., Mer'ts.-17, Museum Road
C. Ebbeke
P. Kamp
Ed. Wilkens
N. Jungmann C. R. Slowe G. Unterberger J. M. Gonsalves
Tohung-fa-hoci-pao
ECHO DE CHINE, L'-54, 57, Yang King Pang
(French Daily Paper with a Weekly
Edition)
A. Monestier, redacteur-en-chef G. Sabard, rédacteur
EDBLAD, H., Bill and Bullion Broker-19,
Wei-hai-wei Road
EDUCATIONAL--See under Schools
E-lee-see
EHLERS & Co., A., Merchts. -5, Hankow Rd.
Aug. Ehlers (Bremen)
Th. Meyer P. Borkowsky
F. W. Seegelken, signs per pro. R. Brill
Harold Weber J. Lambooy R. Happel
J. P. Roche
E. Sanches
P. Stave, signs per pro. (Tientsin)
A. R. Donnelly (Ningpo)
Agency
Hanseatic Fire Insce. Co., Hamburg
泰宏 Hung-ta
ELIAS, J. R., Broker-6, Szechuen Road or
8, Seymour Road, Bubbling Well Road
#21* Ai-lee-souleh-se
ELLIS & HAYS, Solicitors and Advocates-
3F, Peking Road
Francis Ellis, solicitor
John Hays,
do.
Edward W. Godfrey, barrister-at-law
ELSWORTH, CHAS. W. T., Representing Schloss & Co., L., Manchester-9, Kui- kiang Road
872
E-mo-din
SHANGHAI
EMAMOODEEN, S., Merchant, Commission Agent, and Land and Property Agent- 59 and 61, Rue du Consulat
ENDICOTT, R. R., Ship, Freight, Share,
Customs, Land and Real Estate, General
Broker and Commission Agent-Grand Hotel, Bubbling Well Roarl
司公險人保安永
Yung-an-pao-yun-hsien Kung-se
EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF
UNITED STATES, Eastern Branch 13, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Deva
J. T. Hamilton, general manager
R. J. Sloan, M.D., consulting medical
director
Lionel B. Strect, medical director
R. J. Marshall, M.D., medical examiner T. Veitch, secretary
Ballard & Hunter, general agents
培沙意 E-sau-pay
ESSABHOY, A.M., General Merchant and
Commission Agent-39, Szecliuen Road;
Telph. 1302
A, M. Abdulhusein, manager
T. S. Nooruddin
Fut
和謙
Ching-wo
EVANS & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents and Brokers, Land and Estate
Agents; Tel. Ad: Validation
A. M. A. Evans
P. L. Bojessen
A. Wagstaff A. Adams Yip Yue Sun Agencies
Inshallah Dairy Farm & Stock Co.
A. Wagstaff, manager
#TEXP E-yun-se-su-kien EVANS, EDWARD, The Book Room Educa- tional Depository; Depot for the Estey Organs and the "Sun" Typewriter-30, N. Szechuen Road, Corner Haining Road
Hugh Mackay Miss M. E. Asken Miss E. H. Taylor Miss L. Porter W. K. S. Lee
H. Y. Chen
EK E-wo-chik-pu-kiuk Ewo COTTON SPINNING & WEAVING COM- PANY, LIMITED-46, Yangtszepoo Road Directors D. Landale (chairman), A. McLeod, E. E. Clark, Zec Quay Ying
Jardine, Matheson & Co., gl. managers Jas. Kerfoot, M.I.M.E., mangr, &
W. K. Smith
J. Harrop
E. B. Broadrick
chgr.
FAR EASTERN REVIEW, TUE-13, Nanking
Road
Geo. Bronson Rea, proprietor
***** Da-ying New-na-bang FARM, THE-Sicawei Road
R. W. Shaw
Yah-loong
FEARON, DANIEL & Co.-214, Szechuen Rd.
J. S. Fearon (absent)
C. W. Wrightson
J. R. Patterson (Tientsin)
F. L. Fearon
D. R. McEwen
W. G. Higgins
W. Schulz
D. M. G. Guterres
P. Marques
H. A. de Figueiredo Miss Clifton
Agencies
Northern Assurance Company Norwich Union Fire Insce. Society
F. P. Pratt
K. S. Kim
General Agents
Mutual Life Insce. Co. of New York
FEDERAL LIFE ASSURANCE Co., Hamiltou,
Canada-1, Yuen Ming Yuen Road Agents: Gibb, Livingston & Co.
FELTEN & GUILLEAUME--Lahmeyerwerke Actien Gesellschaft, Carlswerk, Mül heim-on-Rhine
FERGUSON, JOHN C., Counsellor to the Viceroys of Nanking and Wuchang-16, Love Lane
Nee Zung FINOCCHIAROBROS,&Co., Importand Export Merchants, Land and Estate Agents-4, Woochang Road; Telep. 2061; Tel. Ad: Finocchiaro
生福 Fuk-san
FIRTH AND SONS LTD., THOS., Steel and
Projectile Manufacturers-24A, Kiangse
Rd.; Tel. Ad: Mesmeric; Tele. 2,063
H. P. King, resident representative R. W. Archer, asst.
do.
FISHER, A. (.-18, Yuen Ming Yuen Road;
Telph. 3400;
Representing Toison & Chisnall, Manchester
Lee-ming
SHANGHAI
FLEMING, WM. S., Attorney and Counsellor- at-Law-38, Kiangse Road; Telph. 1147
Heng-fong
FOBES & Co., Commission Merchants-12,
Siking Road
藥西
安兜
Foa-an-tze-se-yah-kung-sze
FOSTER-MCCLELLAN Co.-9, Siking Road
H. E. Gibson
Emil Bauer
G. A. Derby Bert. Markham W. T. Bryant D. Francisco L. Ollerdessen T. S. Cheng
Fah-lin-jee
FRAMJEE, SORABJEE & Co., Wine and Spirit Merchants and Storekeepers--364, P. Nanking Road, 1, Broadway and at Han- kow, and Tientsin
Fook-lun
FRANKAT & Co., LD., ADOLPHIA, Jinkee Rd., Cigar and Cigarette Merchants and Manufacturers of Smokers' Requisites; Telephone 3,257
泰豐
Foong-t'a
FRAZAR & CO., Merchants-8, Hankow Rd.
J. H. McMichael
W. S. Emens
H. H. Taylor, signs per pro.
A. Puthod, silk inspector
J. S. Emens
E. H. McMichael
F. Emens
D. Hartley
R. Bassett
J. L. Gutten
Agencies
New York, Boston, and San Francisco
Board of Underwriters
American Bureau of Shipping
Natl. Board of U'writers of New York
Fah-ping-fang
FRESSON, H., M.D., PARIS (DRS. FRESSON
Ruor), French Municipal Health Officers and Surgeons to Customs-3,Peking Road
Tak-sing
FRIEDRICH WILHELM HOFFMANN & Co.-18,
Kiangse Rond; Telephone 2370
F. W. Hoffmann
E. de Marteau, ingénieur civil Fok Sing
Frch-lai-tah
873
FUHRMEISTER & Co., Exporters and In-
surance Agents-9, Jinkee Road Fr. Fuhrmeister (Hamburg)
A. Hartmanı
P. Fritz,
R. Herbertz,
T. Artindale
signs per pro.
do.
H. Aschmoneit (Hankow)
H. Hildebrand
O. Klein (Hankow)
J. Schubert
E. W. Sharples
E. W. Titus
Agencies
(Hankow)
Albingia Assurance Co. (Marine) Basler Lebens-Vers.-Ges. (Life)
Fatum Accident Insurance Co.
Netherlands Fire & Life Insurance Co.
Property Ince. Co. (Fire & Plate Glass)
和度 Pao Wo
FUNDER & Co., W., Auctioneers, Brokers
and Commission Agents -111, Szechuen
Road; Telephone 1152
William Funder
河古 Koo-hok
FURUKAWA MINING CO., THE (Furukawa Kogyo Kaisha); Proprietors of Ashio, Ani, Nagamatsu, Furogura, Kusakura, Otori, Mizusawa and Kune Copper Mines; Innai Gold and Silver Mine; Shakanoo, Shiogashira, Shimoyamada and Katsuno Collieries, and various Manufactories of Copper, Copper Wire, Coke, &c.-3c, Peking Road; Telph. No. 2169; Tel. Ad: Furukawa; Head Office: Tokyo
M. Ogino, manager
S. Kozu
K. Nohara
T. Asano
S. Uyeshima
S. Kotani (Dairen)
O. Kanemoto (Hankow)
Z. Nishida
ENT
Teh-loong-ngau-nuek-tsong
FUTTERER, WILHELM, Butchery and Saus-
age Manufactory-1,106, Broadway
Futterer, Wilhem
Fritz Feine
C. C. Lane
GAILLARD, J., & Co.,
Importers and
Exporters-25, Rue du Consulat; Tele-
graphic Ad: Gaillard
和源 Yuen.ho
GANDE & Co., J. W., Wine, Spirit, Ale, Stout and Mineral Water Merchants-41 and 42, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Sphinx; Telph. 205; A.B.C. Code 4th & 5th editions
874.
J. W. Gande
W. J. Gande
G. A. F. Bidwell
泰嘉
SHANGHAI
and
GARNER, QUELCH & Co., Wholesale Wine
Merchants Corner Kiukiang
Kiukiang and Kiangse Roads; Codes: Western Union, A. B. C. 5th edition
Chas. E. Garner Henry Quelch J. J. Sheridan John B. Dixon
GARNETT, W. T. & Co., Ld., Manufacturers, Merchants and Commission Agents-9A, Hankow Rd.; Tel. Ad: Topaz-Bradford and Shanghai
W. H. Pallan, H. Stell, dir. (Bradford) W. T. Bowen, manager W. Dutton, sub-manager
Mee-yer
GARRELS, BORNER & Co., Merchants-73,
Szechuen Road
J. H. Garrels (Hamburg)
H. Boerner
H. Nellner, signs the firm P. Westendorff
do.
C. Rieck, signs per pro.
C. Fiebig
O. Hoerler
G. Klopp
C. Meyer
H. Ockermuller
R. Smith
A. Stieler
Agencies
Chem. Fabriken vorm. Weiler ter
Meer (Uerdingen a/Rhein)
C. F. Boehringer Soeline (Waldhof-
Mannheim)
Knoll & Co. (Ludwigshafen a/Rhein) United Alkali Co., Ld. (Liverpool) British Anti-fouling Composition and
Paint Co., Ld. (London))
American Waltham Watch Co. (Wal-
tham, Mass.)
Imperial Insurance Co., Lel. (London)
**** Ta-Ying-Chi-lay-hoo-vong GAS COMPANY (SHANGHAI)
Dirs.-E.Jenner Hogg (chairman), J. M.
Young, F. Ayscough, A. Hide Geo. R. Wingrove, secretary
H. K. Hiller, engineer
F. W. Potter, assistant engineer
J. W. Mackay,
do.
W. Gater, assistant secretary
26 Foreign Staff
Hai-lee
GENSBURGER & JUDAH, General Importers and Commission Agents--1, Yang King Pang
H. Gensburger
J. J. Judah
GERECKE, E., Bill Broker-Route Pichon;
Shanghai Club
時吉 Get-30
GETZ BROS. & Co., Wholesale Merchants and Manufacturers, Importers of American
Groceries, etc.-9, Hankow Road; Cable Address: Getzcat; Telephone 376
Leonerd Everett, manager
GIBSON & Co., JAMES, Auctioneer-34
Kiangse Road
Zung-ke
GIBB, LIVINGSTON & Co., Merchants-2
Jinkee Road
A. McLeod
H. R. Kinnear
J. W. C. Bonnar (Hongkong)
G. L. Campbell
J. F. M. Gutterres D. MacDonald
F. A. Ozorio
H. Posar
E. B. Heaton Smith
A. P. Simócs
Yung Ling
Agencies
Shanghai Land Investment Co., Ld.
Philip Peebles
N. Sparke C. C. Stevenson Jas. Turner
D. Brown
Insurance: Fire
China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. North British & Mercantile Fire Ins. Co.
Insurance: Marine
Allianz" Vers. Aktien Ges. in Berlin United States Lloyd's
Indemnity Mutual Marine Ins. Co., Ld. Lloyd's London
The London Salvage Association The Liverpool Salvage Association Maritime Insurance Co., Ld., Liverpool The Underwriting and Agency As sociation (composed of Underwriting Members of Lloyd's only)
Queensland Insurance Co., Ld. Australian Alliance Assurance Co. Allianza Societa Di
in Geneva
Bume & Reif
Steam
Assicurazioni
Eastern & Australian S. S. Company
Ben Line of Steamers
SHANGHAI
875
豐寶 Pow.foong
GIESEL & Co., Lal.
A. Giesel
W. Brehmer (Bangkok)
E. Adler, signs per pro.
F. L. da Cruz
Agency
"Upper Rhine Insurance Co., Ld.,
A Koong-wo
GILMOUR, D., Public Silk Inspector-24
Kiangse Road
Kung-bay
GINSBURG & Co., M., Commission Mer-
chants, Import and Export-2, Bund
隆興
Shing-loong
GIPPERICH & Co., E., Merchants--11, Siking
Road
E. Gipperich
泰怡 Yie-tai
GLEN LINE OF STEAMERS--5, Canton Road
Samuel, McGregor & Co., Ltd. agents
McGregor, Gow & Co., London (owners)
Mcgregor, Bros. & Gow, Hongkong agents
** Wan-chou-se-fun-tien GLOBE HOTEL-336 Nanking Road
GODDARD, D. JOHN-36, Nanking Road
GOETSCHEL, L.-129, Szechuen Road, Agent for the Kirin BreweryCo., Ld., Yokohama
K. Sato
GOODE & BALEAN, Medical Practitioners-
4, Hongkong Road
G. E. Coode
H. Balean
Koo-fah-lee
GORDON & CO., Heating, Lighting and
Sanitary Engineers; Tel. Ad: Hardware;
Telph. 1108
J. D. Gordon
J. J. Horsfall
GORE-BOOTH, R. H.-Shanghai Club
師律大沙拉蓋
Ka-lah-so-tah-lih-se
GRAÇA, P. M. A. DE, Solicitor and Public
Accountant-29, Kiang-se Road
Get-sing
GRAHAM, WALTER D.-6, Kiangse Road, General Manager in the Far East for Wilkinson, Heywood, and Clark, Ltd., Varnish and Paint Manufacturers, London
利巴
Bar-lee-
GRAND HOTEL-2-9 Bubbling Well Road
Chas. E. Shepherd, manager
H. W. Jones, clerk
V. Andro, conductor
GRAY, JAS., Upper Yangtse Pilot-19,
Sinza Road: Telephone 737
BAWEŁ★ Ta-pei-tien-pao-kung-ze GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPH Co., LD.-
7A, The Bund
J. J. Bahnson, general manager in
China and Japan
W. J. Schonau, chief engr. A. H. Eriksen, accountant J. M. Timm, chief mechanician H. B. Frikke, superintendent
A. C. M. Andersen sub-engineer N. P. Bendixsen
C. G. Christensen
J. H, M, Christensen J. A. Erichsen A. Z. Frisenette
F. P. C. Hesselberg II. W. B. Johansen J. P. Jenssen O. A. Jorgensen T. Kring A. Landt E. K. Pagh
V. A. Petersen
H. G. R. R. Poulsen
A. Reeve
C. B. Rich
J. I. Sörensen A. T. Britto L. A. Perpetuo B. Pintos R. A. Segueire F. F. da Silva
J. M. da Silva
P. Tomlin, and others.
Woosung Station
M. L. Justesen, electrician T. H. Frikke Gutzlaff Station
V. K. Bjerre, electrician S. S. "Pacific
E. Suenson, commander C. F. T. Tofte, chief officer J. P. Jensen, chief engineer
S. S. "Store Nordiske"
H. C. A. Petersen, commander H. J. Christiansen, chief officer A. M. V. Matzen, chief engineer
FFR Lian-chi ya fong
GRENARD & Co., L., "Pharmacie Fran- çaise," Chemists, and Dealers in Photo. graphic and Lithographic Materials- corner Hankow and Honan Roads
L. Grenard
H. Reding
-876
泰竽 Fu tai
SHANGHAI
GREENWOOD, C. F., High Class Tailor and
Outfitter 37, Nanking Road
C. F. Greenwood
O. L. Horton
Chan Yur Shing
茂瑞 Say-mow
GYZEMAN, HUGO, Certified Accountant-
82, Szecheun Road
J. C. Botelho
A. Robarts
##
Hai-mo-we-chi
HAIMOVITCH, M., Pianoforte and Music
Warehouse-17, Nanking Road
D. Haimovitch, signs per pro.
Fuh-lee Kung-sze
A HALL & HOLTZ, LIMITED, Provision Impor
ters, Stationers, Wine and Spirit Merchants, Furniture Manufacturers, Drapers, Outfitters, Tailors, Uphols terers, House Furnishers, Bakers, &c. Office and Stores-14, Nanking Road; Furniture Factory and Bakeries, Soochow Road; Tel. Ad: Tuhlee; Telephone 44; Factory No. 3294; Manager 3464 W. J. Vine, managing director E. R. Palmer, secretary
S. Bowness
V. Meier G. W. Ellis J. C. Shaw F. J. Stanley L. J. Beardon A. J. Brown Miss Vieira W. W. Thompson J. G. Noakes W. Evans Miss Emeriach Miss Ferris
Miss A. Dissemeyer
Miss Deitz
Miss Coton
Miss Carnoglian
Miss Juster
Miss Remedios
W. Herbert
G. Randall
O. B. Payne Miss Ferras
E. Martins
M. S. O. Sullivan
H. E. Kimpton
J. S. S. Nunes
F. X. Senna
G. Bennett
S. H. Ward
(Tientsin)
.S. G. Wrentmore
do.
E. Walduck
do.
W. S. Sims
do.
J.Munro
A. E. White
(Hankow)
do.
S. A. Spencely
E. Tuck
do. (London)
do,
do.
Hang-pao
A. H. Parks
Mrs. Byrne
HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE-Office: 2a,Kiu- kiang Road, first floor; Tel. Ad: Hapag; Telph. 486
K. Oldoerp, general-manager F. H. Kirchhoff, manager
Gust. E. Pappier
Otto Marechal W. Holl
B. V. Schweinitz
A. Herzberg F. Harcks
G. Daniels, sup. engineer H. Metzenthin, sup. captain
HAMILTON, J. T., General Manager Equit- able Life Assurance Society of the United States; Manager, Eastern Branch, The Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corpu, Ld. 13, Nanking Road
T. Veitch, agent
HAMWELL, GERALD - 3A, Peking Road
HANBURY, T., SCHOOL-See under Schools.
興東
Tung-shing
HANDA MENKO & Co., Importers, Exporters and General Commission Mehts, -514-5, North Soochow Road; Teleph. 583; Tel. Ad: Handamenko. Head Office: Osaka; Branches: Hankow and Tokyo
易高 Kaou-yin
HANSON, MCNEILL & JONES, Solicitors and
Advocates-24, Yuen Ming Yuen Road;
Tel. Ad: Professo
Duncan McNeill, barrister-at-law
Loftus E. P. Jones,
G. H. Wright, solicitor
do.
Bathurst Walker, solicitor
F. G. Kirk, solicitor
Geo. Lindsay
A. E. Fenton
處發批厰鐡鋼陽漢
HANYANG IRON AND STEEL WORKS-Sales
Office: 45, Szechuen Road; Tel. Ad:
Hansteel; Telephone 2731
Chan Chi Lan, general and sales agent
Chan Tau Woon, assistant Y. M. Yung,
do.
Wong S. Piao, shipping clerk C. M. Manners, wharf manager Y. F. Wong, wharf accountant
局總滬治洋漢轅行盛
SHANGHAI
HANYANG STEEL & IRON WORKS, THE; Ping- hsing-Chuchow Railway, Pinghsing &
Tayeh Mines and Imperial Bank of China-110, Bubbling Well Rond
HARDOON, R. J., Share and General Broker,
Stock Exchange-1, The Bund
HARDY PATENT PICK Co., THE (of Shef-
field)-10, Hankow Road
太華 Wah-tai
HARRIS, SON & Co. of 5, Mark Lane, London,
Importing and Commission Agents-14, Peking Road
Wai-lce
HARVIE & COOKE, Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-3, Foochow Road; Tel.
Ad: Monogram
Jas. Harvie
H. S. Cooke
F. Large, signs per pro.
D. H. Cooke
L. Freitas
J. Rodrigues
Hah-fe
HARVIE, JAMES ALEX., Merchant, The "Neuk" Rifle Butts Station; Tel. Ad: Neuk
HARTLEY, JOHN, Commission Agent, Fire,
Marine, Life, Insurance Agent, etc. (London)-244, Nanking Road
華妤 How Wah
HAWORTH & Co., LD., RICHARD-15A,Peking
Road; Tel. Ad: Fidens; Telephone 1347
Arthur Woods, manager
James Scotson, assistant do.
H. Butler
L. Ashton
順謙
Chien-shun
HEATH & Co., P., Merchants and Manu-
facturers Agents; and at Tientsin and
Hankow
P. Heath (Shanghai)
H. Capel (Tientsin)
J. Sullivan (London)
General Agents
Beeston Humber, Limited, Ind. Coope & Co., Burton
HEFFER, F. C., Public Silk Inspector -2,
Kiukiang Road; Telephone 467
Chih-ting
877
HERBERT, HUTCHISON & Co.-21, Nanking
Road; Tel. Ad: Pegaway; Telph. 915
H. D. Hutchison
A. J. Richardson
D. S. Davies
Yu-ch'ong
HEWETT & Co., W., Merchants-9, Ningpo
Road
H. J. Such
G. Grayrigge H. H. Chettle S. Fernihough W. E. Keay H. W. Lowry V. M. Britto
Agency
Northern Assurance Company
Wo-ping
HILLEBRANDT &Co., Merchants-7, Kiangse
Road
Yuen-chang
HIRSBRUNNER & Co., Watchmakers, Jewel lers, and Importers-1, Nanking Road
Paul Zurn
Paul Marchand, signs per pro. L. Nellemann
J. Phelps
Kung-tah
HOFFMANN & Co., WM., Merchants and
General Commission Agents and Premium
Bond Dealers-2, The Bund
Win. Hoffmann, M.D.
豐兆 Chaou-foong
HOGG, E. JENNER, Mercht.-10, Peking Rd.
E. Jenner Hogg
師律大公魯候
Hou-loo-kung-ta-luh-sz
HOLCOMB, C. R., Attorney and Counsellor-
at-Law
時好 Ho-shi
HOLLAND-CHINA HANDELS COMPAGNIE
(Holland-China Trading Co.)Merchants--
7&8, Szechuen Road; Telephone 415
J. H. Collignon (Rotterdam)
J. S. R. de Monchy, do.
F. B. s'Jacob, Shanghai
H. E. Krol, signs per pro.
H. W. L. Steenstra Toussaint V. de Carvalho
V. F. Rangel A. King
878
Agencies
Java-China-Japan Lijn
SHANGHAL
General Marine Insurance Co., L., of
Dresden
East India Sea & Fire Insurance Co.,
Ad. 1832
記義 Ne.ke
HOLLIDAY & Co., CECIL, Merchants, Kiangse
and Foochow Roads
Cecil Holliday, manager
R. C. Phillipp, sub-manager
A. L. Ahmed L. Barretto
K. McKelvie
Y. Madar
O. A Madar
Agencies
The Central Insurance Co., Ld.
The Essex and Suffolk Equitable Ins.
Soc., Ld.,
National Provincial Plate Glass Ins.
Co., Ltd.
HOLY TRINITY CATHEDRAL-See
Churches
門郝 Hao-me
HOME & DOUGLAS-5, Peking Road
under
N. C. Home (absent) barrister-at-law
(English Bar), counsellor-at-law-
(American Bar)
J. C. E. Douglas, barrister-at-law Allan G. Mossop,
do.
Jas. E. Cooke, interpreter and clerk
***** Dah-ching-che-ch'i-tsang HONGKEW ENGINE WORKS-1, Yuen Fong
Road; Telph. 484;
R. A. Ord, proprietor and manager
N. Isaacs
0. Starro
T. Ah-yue
RBAADE Hong.kew Ta-ying E-yune HONGKEW MEDICAL HALL-1, The Bund
A. H. Mancell, agent for the General
Managers
a
Way-foong-Ngan-hong
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING COR-
I'ORATION-12, The Bund
H. E. R. Hunter, manager
H. G. Gardner, acting sub-manager E. D. Sanders, accountant
E. E. Deacon, sub-accountant
F. W. Barff
A. C. Padday
A. D. Brent
L. J. C. Anderson
S. Wheeler
T. F. Longmuir
A. S. Henchman
H. P. Dudley V. M. Grayburn H. C. Aspinall A. Tilbrook J. Waddell H. S. Lindsay T. H. Covil G. J. Ievels E. B. Owen
J. C. Hanning H. E. D. Hancock G. H. W. L. Brown E. H. Murphy E. J. S. Tanner R. L. Hibberdine
T. M. Leitch
D. Brand
Miss L. McInnes
R. V. Dent
E. E. Soares
J. M. B. dos Remedios A. M. Diniz
J. A. dos Remedios
B. M. Carion
J. A. Ferrás
F. X. Gutterres P. A. Pereir L. G. d'Azevedo
R. P. Remedios M. A. Pereira
J. M. Diniz
A. S. Remedios
L. J. Silva
L. C. Lemos S. J. Rangel V. A. Luz E. P. Campos I. Silva R. E. Maher J. M. de Senna
A. P. Marques J. A. Cruz
D. M. F. Corte-Real
P. M. Lobo
F. R. Luz A. J. S. Basto C. M. Diniz J. M. F. de Senna J. C. Canavarro J. R. Rangel V. A. Noronha J. A. Maher F. X. Silva A. J. Xavier A. B. Castilho M. S. Gutterres S. Xavier J. M. Oliveira F. H. B. Silva A. F. Diniz, Jr. L. C. d'Encarnação C. G. Lubeck S. J. Carion
J. M. P. Rozario
J. M. d'Almeida C. A. d'Aquino J. M. Botolho A. C. d'Azevedo T. Chensun Wu Zou Chen
Tam Fook Sang Char Kien Fah Woo Foo Chong T. Chang Shou
Chang Kien
Tsing Chang
Loh Ve Nay
大和 Wo-ta
HOOLE, W. W.-16, Szechuen Road
利達亨
HOPE BROS. & Co., LD., Jewellers,
C. C. Wood, manager
件壳 Ko Chien
SHANGHAI
HOPKINS, DUNN & Co., Ld., Auctioneers,
Ship, Coal, Oil, Metal, and Land Bro-
kers-6 and 7, Yang King Pang; Tel.
Ad: Kochien
B. A. Clarke, T. B. Webster,
director
do.
A. W. Bahr,
do.
Fredk. Griffin,
do.
C. Kock
Chen Tsz Yuen
Agency
The Kochien Transportation and
Tow-boat Co., Ld.
Shanghai Disinfecting Co.
Tek-shun
HOPKINS', L., Butchery-corner of Ningpo
and Szécliuen Roads
V. Vizenzinovich, manager
飛龍 Loong-fe
HORSE BAZAAR Co., LD., Auctioneers, Livery Stable Keepers, Horse Dealers, Carriage Builders and Repairers, Sad- dlers and Harness Manufacturers, Grain and Forage Merchants, Farriers, Motor Car Repairers, Animal Exporters and Importers, Commission Agents-Head Office: 36, Bubbling Well Road; Tel. Ad: Hestehov, A. B. C. Codes 4th and 5th Editions and A. 1; Telph. Nos: Carriage Hires and Livery Instructions 38, Ac- counts Departinent 48, Saddlery and Harness Department 43, Gordon Road Branch 423, Veterinary Surgery and Infirmary 423, General Manager 1344, Motor Garage 1138
H. E. Keylock, F.R.C.V.S.L., general
manager
879
I. Andersen, secty, and accountant H. E. Hann, stenographer
W. E. Meugens, do.
L. Senna, clerk
J. P. Butt, do.
N. Hadley, telephone attendant F. Naftaly,
F. Scull, trainer
do.
R. Newman, yard assist.
Carriage Manufactory Department
L. Ashing
K. Z. Ting
Veterinary Surgery and Infirmary and Canine Hospital, 15, Gordon Road; Telephone 423; Telegrams, Keylock, Shanghai
H. E. Keylock, F.R.C.V.S., LOND,
S. W. Pratt M.R.C.V.S., LOND.
Motor Garage, Telephone 1138
Reginald Page
舘醫薺仁 Zang-tse-e-wan
HOSPITAL, CHINESE-5, Shangtung Road;
Tele. 96
Dr. Davenport, medical officer (men's
hospital)
Dr. Y. C. Chang, house surgeon (men's
hospital)
Miss Alice Charke, matron (men's
hospital)
Dr. Ethel Tribe, medical officer (wo-
men's hospital)
Miss Halley, supt. women's dept. V. M. Grayburn, hon. treasurer A. Hide, hon. secretary
#
Voo-dzü e-yön
HOSPITAL, MARGARET WILLIAMSON (WO- MEN'S UNION MISSION) "Stevenside," outside West Gate
-
Phyn. in charge-Eliz Reifsnyder, M.D.
A Kung-che E-yuen
HOSPITAL, SHANGHAI GENERAL
Physicians and Surgeons--Drs. Mac-
leod, Milles, Marsliall and Marsh Assist. Surgeon Dr. W.B. Billinghurst Secty. and Treasr.-E. E. Clark
# Kwang-zung-e-yuen HOSPITAL, ST. ELIZABETH's-4, Avenue
Road; Tel. 521
RCA Doong-zung E-yuen HOSPITAL, ST. LUKE'S-12, Seward Road
Surgeons-Dr. H. W. Boone, M.D., Dr. W.
H.Jefferys, M.D., Dr. A.W.Tucker, M.D. House Physician-K. D. Wancy, M.D. House Surgeon-U. K. Koo, M.D. Head Nurse-M. Tongetton Hon. Treasurer-S. E. Smalley
880
SHANGHAI
行銀商通國中
HOSPITAL, ST. MARY'S (KIANGNAN MISSION)
-97, Route Père Robert
-
Sisters Bondivena (Superior) Tsu
Capdeboscq, Leang,
Chatagnon
Delbecque, Lasnet, Lientier
Mih-ts'öy-le
. HOTEL DES COLONIES LD.-Rue Montauban
隆金 Kin-loong.
HOTEL METROPOLE Co., LD,, THE--1/9,
Bubbling Well Road
HOUFE, W. W., M.I. MECH.E., M.L.MAR.E. Con-
sulting Engineer, Surveyor, and Ma-
chinery Agent; British P. O. Box 260; Tel. Ad: Houfe, Shanghai; Telph. 2871
華厚 Hau-wa
HOWARTH ERSKINE, LD, Civil Engineers
and Contractors-2, The Bund
HOYER, L. DE, Imperial Russian Financial
Agent-11, Seymour Road
茂豐
Foong-mow
HUEBER & Co., TH., Merchants-21, Nan-
king Road
Th. Hueber
HUNT & Co., Tea Merchants--6A, Peking
Road
Fu Ho Chee
HUTCHISON & Co., JOHN D., Merchants-
17, Peking Road
John D. Hutchison.
G. H. Phillips
S. Berry
E. S. Elliston
A. R. Robinson
#
Lou-kung-mow
ILBERT & Co., Merchants-22, Kiangse Rd.
F. Anderson (absent)
E. C. Pearce
H. E. Campbell
W. Pratt
L. M. Beytaglı
H. P. Souter G. A. Turner
P. J. Rivero
J. M. Oliveira F. X. d'Aguiar
J. J. Rago
A. S. Rago Mrs. Snowdon
Agencies
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada Laou Kung Mow Cotton Spinning and
Weaving Company, Ld.
Tsoon-kok-toon-song-yin-hong
IMPERIAL BANK OF CHINA-6, The Bund, Shên Tunho, Wong Tsuen Shan, Ku
Jen Chang, managing directors
H. C. Marshall, chief manager
J. M. Place Remedios Kwok Wan Kai
Wong Yuet Fong Yen Cheng Te
Fat-sin-wai-poo
IMPRIMERIE FRANÇAISE, LD.-55 and 56 Quai du Yang King Pang, Societé Anonyme par Actions, propriétaire de la Presse Orientale" et de "l'Echo de Chine"
DAHAWK E-wo lan-so Kung-sze 司公船輪和怡 INDO-CHINA STEAM NAVIGATION Co., LD.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., agents. G. Payne, marine superintendent G. C. Wilson, superintendent eng.
INDUSTRIAL MISSION DEPOT (Lace, Drawn- thread Work, Silks, &c.)-21, Nanking Rd.
Mrs. A. Hueber Miss J. Hueber
INNISS & RIDDLE, Consulting, Electrical and Mechanical Engineers-132,Szechuen Road; Cable and Tel. Ad: Powerful; Shanghai; Telph. 3236
J
A. M. Currie, signs per pro.
T. E. Leeman, engineer
INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS IN CHINA (In-
corporated)-4, Peking Road
W. M. Dowdall, president
A. Dallas, vice-president
G. Davies,
do.
Council--A. E. Algar, J. Ambrose,.
J. Christie, J. E. Denham, R. M Saker (acting secretary)
行銀旗花 Fa Ki Ngan Hong
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION
(Head Office: New York)-LA, Kiukiang.
Road
H. C. Gulland, manager
E. Quelch, accountant
R. de L. Horden, sub-accountant
-
D. B. Clark,
do.
W. D. Whittemore,
do.
J
J. H. Brett,
do.
F. H. Forde,
do.
do.
A. G. Nugent,
C. E. L. Ozorio A. Rodrigues R. R. Allemão J. M. P. Rocha
J. J. da Silva e Souza
F. D. Guedes
F. A. M. Almeida J. M. Mendonça F. C. Ozorio
A. M. Ferreira
Miss Mary Brandt
SHANGHAI
INTERNATIONAL CHESS CLUB-29, Kiangse
Road
Sir H. W. de Sausmarez, president Dr. S. M. Cox, vice-president C. Matthews, hon. secretary R. Chester, hon. treasurer
Han-show-hsias-t'ong
INTERNATIONALCORRESPONDENCESCHOOLS-- 11c, Nanking Road; General Agency for China; Tel. Ad: Intertext
A. R. Hager, general agent for China, Japan, Korea, Philippine Islands
H.H. Kenagy, local agent for Shanghai
司公限有織紡源鴻
INTERNATIONAL COTTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, LIMITED 15, Szechuen Road, Directors C. Rayner (chairman), A.
Hyde (vice-chairman), F. Ayscough,
H. de Gray, Jas. N. Jamieson G. Wuilleumier, secretary A. Collaço
Mill, Pooting-
W. C. Wood, M.1.M.E., manager
P. H. Robinson, master carder
Ch. Hall, master spinner H. G. George, engineer A. W. T. Rose, clerk
Quai-lee
INTERNATIONAL CYCLE Co.-575, Nanking
Road
Wo-fung:chi-ch'i-t'sang
INTERNATIONAL DOCK, SHIPBUILDING YARD
AND ENGINEERING WORKS
Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co.,
Idl. proprietors
Hemg. Yeh
INTERNATIONAL ESTATE & FINANCE Co., Ld-No. 4, Quai du Yang King Pang
C. E. Roach
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE 290, Avenue
Paul Brumat
司公煙和星 Sheng-Wo
INTERNATIONAL TOBACCO
Co., Cigar,
Cigarette. Tobacco, and Smokers' Sun-
dries Importers--426, Nanking Road
5月業國上
INTERNATIONAL TRADE JOURNAL,
TRE
(Chinese Monthly)-79, Szechuen Road
龍雙 Shuang-loong
881
ISMER & Co., C., Watch and Chronometer
Makers, Jewellers and Opticians-23,
Nanking Road
C. Ismer
C. Treppenhauer
Chin-zing E-sang
IVY & ROBINSON, DRS., Dental Surgeons-
Ewo Buildings, 3A, Peking Road
Robert S. Ivy, D.D.S.
F. A. Robinson, D.D.S.
4
Han-wei E-sang
JACKSON, HANWELL & JACKSON-54, Sze-
chuen Road
JACKSON, N. C., Naval Tailor, &c.-A. 1131,
Broadway
Kwang-le
JAMIESON & Co., Brokers & Commn. Agts.
W. B. Jamieson
JANOWITZER, A., Import and Export-54, Quai du Yang King Pang; Tel. No. 2720
B. Janowitzer (Vienna)
P. Janowitzer, do.
W. O. Moebius, manager, signs per pro.
和怡 E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Merchants
The Bund
W. J. Gresson
Henry Keswick
D. Landale
Jas. McKie
C. E. Anton, signs per pro. W. F. Inglis
B. D. F. Beith C. W. Beswick J. Boyce-Kup W. Brand
do.
R. J. S. Brandt N. C. Brodie A. Brooke Smith L. Camera D. Campbell A. Clerici
A. K. Craddock W. Davidson
E. C. Emmett
G. P. Forster
J. E. Gresson
C. F. Gram
F. C. Hall
N. Hickling H. V. Holt E. B. C. Hornell G. M. Jameson F. Kulin
V. H. Lanning
28
682
B. Judkins
I. C. Macdougall E. A. Mackay
H. Macphail
G. Mayne
W. J. Milne
H. D. Morrison Geo. Payne H. K. Peters A. Piercy G. Purton
C. H. L. Symons R. S. Smith S. Spooner R. St. John P. Tod
D. L. W. Williams
W. Wilson
G. C. Wilson M. Winteler
A. Zanchi
Miss Brand Miss Mayne Miss Ellis R. Borgia E. Carneiro F. M. da Costa F. J. D'Almeida F. M. Guedes A. Gulamali
Q. J. Gutierrez
F. X. Machado J. R. Madeira F. Mendonça T. G. Oliveira T. Ozorio J. L. Rangel
F. Placé dos Remedios
A. Remedios
F. X. Remedios
J. R. Remedios
A. P. Simoes
S. A. de Souza
Agencies
Banks
SHANGHAI
Russian Bank for Foreign Trade, St.
Petersburg
The Mercantile Bank of India, L'd.
R. Miller, sub-agent
Insurance Marine
Canton Insurance Office, Ld.
Alliance Marine and General Insur
ance Company
Triton Insurance Company
Reliance Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Insurance: Fire
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Alliance Assurance Co. Eastern Insurance Co.
The Liverpool & London & Globe
Insurance Co.
Steam
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld., Capt. Payne, marine superintendent
Indra Line of Steamers Receiving Ship "Yuen-fah"
Capt. Purton, comtr. Ewo Timber Depot
Miller's Karri & Jarrahı Co., Ed.
P. V. Davies
#KE-wo-sze-chang
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co.'s SILK FIL-
ATURE--14, Chengtu Road (Sinza)
D) Beretta, manager
C. Bedoni, sub-manager Mrs. F. Monteggia Miss G. Lazzati Miss A. Cassani
Miss M. Beretta
Miss V. Beretta
Miss M. Sala
生醫燕
In-e-sang
JAYNE AND SON, DR. D., Philadelphia, Pa.,
U.S.A.
Mustard & Co., 22 Museum Road, Shanghai, sole agents for China Dr. D. Jayne & Son's Family Medicines
BAKURK Jin-kong-t ́sau-sz-kung-as JBAY KHONG SILK FILATURE-54, North
Soochow Road; Teleph. 228
JERNICAN AND FESSENDEN, Law Office-3, Hongkong Rd.; Tel. Ad: Barfields, Code A.B.C. 5th edition
T.R.Jeringan, atty. and counslr.-at-law
do. S. Fessendon,
JOHANNSEN, EDM.-c/o China Export, Im- port and Bank Co., 10, Kiangse Road Agencies
Clyco Metal Co., Wiesbeden
Manganesit Works
Dr. Andrae's Carbo-Zink-Soda
Buman & Berblinger, Hongkong
和同 Toong Woo
JESUS, J. M., Undertaker, Monument Maker,
Carpenter, Painter, House Decorator and
General Contractor, &c.-1 and 2, Yuhung
Road Telph. 2394
J. M. Jesus
A. C. Oliveira P. M. Jesus Tong Shen Dee Seng Zeang Ting
Say-chang-zang
JOHNSON & Co., Y., Furniture Manufac tures, General Importers, and House Furnishers, 127-128A, Szechuan Road, be- tween Hong kong and Peking Roads
Y. C. Jolinson, manager Y. F. Johnson
臣赞 Tsei-tson
SHANGHAI
JOHNSEN & HERLOFSON Coal, Freight and
Ship Brokers-7, Kiangse Road
J. H. Johnsen
H. Herlofson
Zung-sing
JONES BROTHERS, L., General Merchants
and Manufacturers-4, Peking Rd.; Tel. Ad: Jowbro; Teleph. 2321.
R. P. Whitham, manager
F. Ezra
S. D. Wong
JONES, FRED-c/o Shanghai Club
JOSEPH, J. M., Share and General Broker-
12, Nanking Road; Residence 7, N.
Honan Road; Teleph. No. 3265
S. M. Joseph
喴有
JUVET, LEO., Importer of Watches, Clocks,
Musical Boxes, &c.-1, Nanking Road
Paul Zurn, agent
行理道嘉士利伊
B-lee-sz Ka-dau-li-hong
KADOORIE & Co., ELLIS, General Brokers
and Commission Agents-31A, Szechuen
Road; Telphe, 367
利客 Ka-lee
KALEE PRIVATE HOTEL, LD-25a, Kiangse
Road
A. Mildner, manager
乾開 Ka-gee
KATZ & Co., WM., Merchants, Shipping and
Commission Agents, and Soap Manu- facturers-1A, Jinkee Road (1st floor) Branches San Francisco, Vladivostock,
Chefoo
Wm. Katz (Vladivostock)
do.
M. A. Katz
Martin Katz (Chefoo)
M. R. Katz (San Francisco)
Jos. Katz
J. B. Berelson
E. Drakeford
H. Berkowitch
do.
do.
Ka Chin Kee (compradore)
Hsia Chin San (asst. compradore}
泰開 Kay-tan
KAYE, JERVIS & Co., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents 10, Hankow Road
KEELING & Co., F. G., Wine and Spicit
Merchants-27, Nanking Road
發別 Bin-fair
883
KELLY & WALSH, LD., Printers, Publishers,
Booksellers, Stationers, News Agents,
Tobacconists and Commis, Agts.-Bund
Jolin West
John Morris George Brinkworth
T. Brown (London)
J. M. Castro
A. E. Glover
A. S. Jesus
F. S. Ramplin
A. J. Waller
-directors
|_ Bih-fah yin-ze-vong
Printing Office, Canton Road
John Morris, managér
4
Kee-Loo-mo-e-sung KEYLOCK & PRATT, Municipal Veterinary Surgeons; Veterinary and Canine Sur- gery, Infirmary, and Canine Hospital-- 15, Gordon Road; Tel. Ad: Keylock; Telephone 423; Codes A. B. C., 4th and 5th Ed. and A. 1.
H. E. Keylock, F.R.C.V.S., LOND. S. W. Pratt, M.R.C.V.S., LOND.
A **NA
KIANGNAN ARSENAL
Kao-chang-miao
Principal Directors-Chang Tajen, Sze
Hun
Assistant Directors -Chang Hsi Fan,
Li Shou Yen
Engineering and Steel Works Dept.
Supt.-N. E. Cornish (acting)
Ordnance and Projectile Department Superndt.-N. E. Cornish, M.I.C.E.,
Powder Works
C.E.
Superintendent T. Ishito (Smokeless
Powder Works)
Translator V. P. Suvoong, M.D. Foreign Secretary-B. Tse Yen Lo Secretary-Tsae Suy Che
Military and Engineering College
Principal-Wong Wei-tai
Professor of Chemistry-L. W. Dupré
KIANGNAN MISSION'S HOSPITAL ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL
(See under Hospitals)
AKI Kia-sü yeak-shui-tsong KIANGSU CHEMICAL WORKS Soochow
Creek, near Ferry Road
Major Bros., Limited, proprietors
J. C. Shengle, B.A., B.SC., genl. magr. H. Nethercott, foreman
恒有 Yu-hang
KINGSMILL, THOS. W., 3, Yuhang Road GERALD KINGSMILL, architect
28*
884
Sun-lee
SHANGHAI
KIRCHNER& BÖGER, Merchants-19,Kiangse
Road; Tel. Ad: Kirchner; Teleph. 1619
A. Kirchner (absent)
R. Kupsch (Hamburg)
O. Kirchner
. von Alemann, signs per pro, R. Teichmann
Geo. Marçal
J. Gregory (Manchester)
Agencies
Fire Insurance Co. of 1877, Hamburg Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Albingia Assurance Co., Hamburg
KLEY, CAPT. G., German Admiralty Yang-
tse Pilot-c/o German Consulate
Ka-loo-san
KLOSE, Wilhelm, , Kiangse Road
Wilhelm Klose (Hamburg) Hermann, Arlt, signs per pro. Liquors and Provision Dept.
Emil Widler Electricity Dept.
P. Müller, engineer
Woollen Dept.
Cheing Chok Rom
Agency
"Nord-West Deutsche Ins. Co. (Marine)
Fu Ho-shun
KOBER & Co., H., Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents-10, Hankow Road
H. Kober
KOCHIEN TRANSPORTATION & TOW-BOAT Co., LD.-6 and 7, Yang King Pang; Tel. Ad: Kochien
Hopkins, Dunn & Co., agents
A. W. Bahr
P. J. Bahr
W. R. Butchart
W. Hughes
W. Madsen
Capt. Brown, Tug "Shun Fung
門
Capt. Lehmann, Tug "Shun Yuen "
KOLKMEIJER & ROCKSTROH-6, Siking Rd.;
Tel. Ad: Rockolk
A. Haase, signs per pro.
L. J. van Beusechem
H. R. da Costa
Kah-lee-e-sung
KRIEG, DR. PAUL-11, Whangpoo Road;
Teleph. 665
Prof. Dr. Paul Krieg (19, Avenue Rd.) Prof. Dr. von Schab (20, Whampoo Rd.) Dr. Gerngrop (19, Whampoo Rd.) Dr. Schultze (22, Whampoo Rd.) Dr. Bieger
do.
大美
KRONIG & Co.--7, Yang King Pang
Th. Webster, agent
KUHN & Co., Japanese and Chinese Fine
Art and Curio Dealers-35, Nanking Rd.
G. M. Boyes
S. Asano
C. F. Cheng Agency
Mappin & Webb, Ld., Sheffield and
London
Auto Strop Safety Razor Co.
茂康 Hong-mow
KUHN & KUMOR, Art and Curio Dealers- 2, Nanking Road; Palace Hotel Building
I. Komor
Toyo Murakami
LADIES' BENEVOLENT SOCIETY-See Asso-
ciations
BL
Le-che
LALCACA & Co., Exchange, Share and
Gen. Brokers-12, Museum Road
B. P. Lalcaca
LANCASTRIANS' ASSOCIATION IN CHINA-
See Associations
LANDAW & Co., C. A., Brokers, Commis
sion Agents, Bill Collectors and General Information Office--11A, Nanking Road, Telephone 1910
A Ta-hsing LANE, CRAWFORD & Co., LD., Shipchandlers, Tailors, Outfitters, Drapers, Milliners, Dressmakers, House Furnishers, Provi- sion Importers, Wine Merchants, and Shipping Agents--11, Nanking Road
D. W. Crawford, managing director
D. Campbell, manager
C. R. Graham
R. I. Bowerman A. J. Machado A. C. Newcomb Miss Broomfield Miss Manning J. C. Travess W. J. Lewis J. E. Lucas
W. S. Featherstonhaugh, secretary W. Leigh
Miss Benham
Miss Everitt W. Cope (London) W. W. Ray H. H. Bourman G. Deitz
LANGLEY, J., U. S. Pilot-3, Thorburn Road
SHANGHAI
885
LANG-NIVEN, Mrs., Boarding House-
North Soochow Road
LAOU KUNG Mow COTTON SPINNING AND
WEAVING COMPANY, LIMITED
Directors-E. C. Pearce (chairman),
C. Michelau, J. M. Young, Chung Liang-yu
Ilbert & Co., general managers
W. Pratt, secretary
A. R. Murphine, manager,
H. Foox,carding and spinning master
do.
H. G. Talcott, assistant
J. Sharples, engineer
R. Spunt, mill clerk
平太 Tai-ping
LAVERS & CLARK, Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents-4A, Peking Road; Tel. Ad: Taiping
P. F. Lavers (Weihaiwei)
E. E. Clark
J. R. Weeks
G. Wallace
Agencies
London County and Westminster
Bank, Ltd.
Bank of Montreal
Ulster Bank, Ld., Belfast
Wei-hai-wei Land & Building Co., Ld. Shanghai Licensed Pilots' Association
Ming-ching
LAZARUS, N., Oculist Optician-566 P.,
Nanking Road; Teleph. 3251
華利 Lee-war
LEVER BROTHERS, LD., Soap Manufacturers
-17, Kiangse Road
Walter Nutter & Co., agents
J. Quin, representative
威利 Lee-wei
LEVY HERMANOS-See Sennett Frères
Mow-loong
LIBBY, MCNEILL & LIBBY of Chicago, U.S.A., Packers and Preservers of Canned Meats, Provisions, Meat Extracts, Pickles and Condiments; Tel. Ad: Libby; Telph. 1423 32, Nanking Road
C. G. Hannan, manager
A. G. Wolf, accountant
Y. F. Wong compradore
Z. M. Tuh
院書文洋
Yang-wen shu-yuan
LIBRARY SHANGHAI, Town Hall
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-W. C.P.Austin Librarian-Mrs. H. Allen
Fr
Bing-00
LIDDELL BROS. & Co., Commission Mer- chants, Wool, Hide, Skin, and Produce Brokers, 42 and 47, Szechuen Road, 12 and 14, Foochow Road, and Birt's Wharf
C. Oswald Liddell John Liddell
G. H. Purcell C. H. Purcell W. Brown A. M. Pryce R. H. Purcell
V. H. Liddell
LINCOLN HOUSE, for Missionaries and Boarders-7 Seward Rd.; Teleph. 1191; Tel. Ad: Shaftesbury
Mrs. and Mrs. A. A Crago, proprietors
德利 Leo-ten
LINNESTAD, O. R., Ship and Freight
Broker -6, Hanków Road
Yue-tsang
LINTILHAC & Co., P. E., Silk Merchants-
18, Museum Road
A. F. de Lapro Barradas, signs per pro.
Chung-ho
LITTLE & Co., WM., Silk Brokers and Merchants-11, Hankow Road; Tel. Ad: Westall
Wm. H. Dalgliesh (London) Wm. D. Little
R. McEwen Dalgliesh
H. W. Daldy
H. Martin Little
J. M. Machado H. S. Robertson Norman Smith
Agencies
State Fire Insurance Co. of London Phoenix Assce. Co., Ld., of London
LITVINOFF & Co., S. W. (Hankow), West- phal King & Ramsay, Ltd., Agents-- A-237, Szechuen Road
LIVERPOOL SALVAGE ASSOCIATION
Gibb, Livingston & Co., agents
記德老
Laou-te-che
LLEWELLYN & Co., J., LIMITED, "Shanghai
Medical Hall," Chemists, Druggists,
and Aerated Waters Manufacturers
E. J. Chatburn, general manager
W. L. Gerrard, secretary
A. A. Whyte
E. Kidger
886
和錦
Ching-wo
SHANGHAI
Locksmith & Co., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-26, Canton Road
H. S. Locksmith
J. J. Dawe
P. Biehayn
H. W. Wickham (London)
S. A. Ismail
LONDON MISSION See P. Missions in China
飛龍
Loong-fe
LOONG FE-See Horse Bazaar Co., Ld.
時佐克
LOWE, BINGHAM & MATTHEWS, Accoun- tants and Auditors 11, Yuen Ming Yuen Road; Cable Ad: Explanate; Tel. 2788
A. R. Lowe, chartered accountant J. E. Bingham. Fellow Ins. Accts. (N.Z.) F. N. Matthews, chartered accountant
E. A. M. Williams, A.S.A.A.
R. Paterson, Ç.A.
E. M. Ross, C.A. C. W. Ponter, C.A. J. E. Melchior M. Mencarini
W. Leigh
T. Tripp
豐和
Wo-fong
LUTZEN, BROOK & Co., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-6, Siking Road; Teleph. 1894; Tel. Ad: Lutzbrook
LUX LIGHTING AGENCY-Nanking Rd.
J. E. Bauld
L. R. Ruchwaldy
LYCEUM THEATRE
Se-lok-hse-yuen
Business Manager-W. Armstrong Hon. Treasurer-A. D. Brent
MAATSCHAPPIJ TOT-MIJN-BOSCHEN LAND- BOUWEXPLOITATIE IN LANGEAT, Ld.-2, The Bund
George McBain, general agent
茂松
Soong-mow
MACDONALD & Co., THOMAS, Undertakers
and Monument Sculptors--28, Sinza Rd.; Tel. 466
J. P. Lowe J. Law
Way-zse
MACEWEN, FRICKEL & Co., Import and Export Merchants, Forwarding Agents (Cliina Parcel Express) 26, Szechuen Rd., Head Office; Hongkong (established 1844) Tel. Ad. "Frolic," Teleph, No. 1965
G. L. Duncan (Hongkong)
E. O. R. Vollbrecht, do.
D. K. Blair (Shanghai), signs the firm
George Thornton
W. G. Clarke
MACGREGOR, ROBT., Bill and Bullion Bro-
ker-Shanghai Club
茂隆 Loong-mo20
MACKENZIE & Co., LTD., Hydraulic Press
Packers and Commission Agents-14,
Szechuen Road, and 7A, Canton Road
W. H. Poate (absent)
Arthur Hide, managing director John Stenhouse
K. O. Mackenzie
John H. Osborne (London Agent)
K. W. Campbell F. W. Poate C. D. Dixon C. M. Watson
Agency
London & Lancashire Fire Ince. Co.
MACLEOD, MILLES, MARSHALL & MARSH, Medical Officers to H.B.M. Consulate- General, and Surgeons, Shanghai General Hospital-Consulting Rooms: 36. Peking Road; Tel. No. 165
Neil Macleod, M.D., C.M. ED., 405, Avenue Paul Brunat, Tel. No. 444 W. Jennings Milles, M.D, F.R.C.S. ENG, L.R.C.P. LOND., 63, Carter Road; Tel. No. 47
R. J. Marshall, M.D., C.M., 118, Bubbling
Well Road; Tel. No. 409
E. L. Marsh, M.B., C.M., 17, Whangpoo
Road; Tel. No. 86
W. B. Billinghurst, M.A., M.B., B.CH., M.R.C.S., ENG. OxON, 36, Peking Rd.; Tel. No. 165
Pah-e-sang
MACLEOD, NETL, M.D., &C., EDIN, Surgeon, General Hospital; Physician H. B. M. Consulate and Municipal Surgeon; Con- sulting Rooms: 3G, Peking Road; Teleph. 165; Res.: 105, Avenue Paul Brunat; Teleph. 444
MACMILLAN Co., OF NEW YORK, THE,
Publishers care of Kelly & Walsh
F. G. Whittick, travelling represen
tative in China
B X X X Da-ying E-yuen MACTAVISH & LEHMANN, Wholesale and Retail Chemists and Druggists, In- porters of Wines and Spirits, Con- fectionery, Cameras, Kodaks, Films, &c. The British Dispensary-1, North Soo- chow Road (Hongkew Medical Hall); Telegraphic Address: "Mahle"
J. C. Carter J. J. G. Hay
H. Dewbury
SHANGHAI
MACY & Co., GEO. H., Merchants-2A, Kiukiang Road; Tel. Ad: Cartermacy
Sin-fu
MADIER, H., Silk Merchant and Commis- sion Agent-79 and 83, Rue du Consulat, French Concession
H. Madier
J. Madir
P. Servanin
Mow foo
MAFEL & Co., Furniture Manufacturers, Upholsterers and General Artistic De- corators Contractors and Importers- P 187, Nanking Road; Tel. 600
Lo-tu-tchung
MAGASIN FRANCAIS D'ALIMENTATION (French Store), General Storekeepers, Wine and Spirit Merchants, Navy Con- tractors, Tobacconists and Coal Mer- chants-Rue du Consulate 73, and Rue Montauban; Teleph. 304
A. Colomb, manager
#
Ma-fi-ta-lih-ze
MAHNFELDT, RUD, Lawyer-16, The Bund;
Telephone 2,334
芳元
Yuen-fong
MAITLAND & CO., LIMITED, Merchants and
Piece Goods Auctioneers-8, Canton Rd.
Harry Maitland, manager
C. M. Bain, signs per pro.
K. D. Stewart
R. W. Wells
安費倫美
MAITLAND & FEARON, Bill and Bullion
Brokers-6,
No. 2077
Hankow Road; Teleph.
N. G. Maitland
R. I. Fearon
MAISONNEUVE, J. G. S., Civil Engineer, E.C.P.-Office: Sino-French Engineering Syndicate, F. Caissial & Co., 9, Yang-
kingpang; residence: 47, Bubbling Well Road
查美 May-zo
MAJOR BROS., LIMITED-2, Kiukiang Road,
Proprietors of Kiangsu Chemical Works
A. R. Burkill and Sons, secretaries
Directors-J. N. Jameson, H. J. Such,
A. McLeod
義信
887
MANDL & Co., H. Successors: Carlowitz
& Co.-16, Kiukiang Road.
MAPPIN & WEBB, LD.-35, Nanking Road
G. M. Boyes
S. Asano
C. F. Cheng
邊麥 Mah-pin
MCBAIN, GEO-2, The Bund
R. S. F. McBain
John Elmore
S. W. Roberts
S. R. Lempriere
K. H. Martin
Agency
Maatschappij tot Mijn Boschen Land-
bouwexploitatie in Langkat, La.
**
Chang-ming-tien-che-tai
MCLAUGHLIN ELECTRO VIGOUR CO., DR.-
Head Office: 38, Kiangse Rd.; Branches:
Peking, Tientsin
S. Z. Chang, agent
利宏 Hung-li
MANUFACTURERS' LIFE INS. Co. OF CANADA H. Herbert Horsey, manager for Asia
Kee-hu Tsoong-way
MARINE ENGINEERS' INSTITUTE-13, Nan-
king Road
President A. W. Brankston
Secretary D. M. M. Griffiths
昌怡 E-Chang
MARKT & CO., SHANGHAI, LD., Merchants
and Commission Agents, Import and Ex-
port-18, Kiangse Road; Tel. Ad: Markt
R. Wortmann, manager
A. Wortmann,
do.
J. C. Dupuy, signs per pro.
Franz Eggers
B. Men Kow
✰✰ Tu-foo-way-kwan
MARINE OFFICERS' ASSOCIATION, MERCAN-
TILE-6, North Soochow Road; Tel. Ad Mariners
Capt. S. Baddeley, president
Capt. P. A. Miller, secretary
利瑞南 Na-za-lee
MARLBOROUGH HOUSE, a High-Class Resi
dential Boarding Establishment-31-32, North Soochow Road
Mrs. Nazer
Doong. Wo
MARSHALL, F. L., Stock and Share Broker c/o Shanghai Club; Tel. Ad: Miyako
888
MASONIC
Kway-chri-dong
SHANGHAL
MASONIC HALL-30, The Bund
Executive Committee-R. S. Ivy, (president), W. C. Murray, A. M. A. Evans, Edney Page
Hon. Secy. and Treas.-H. J. Clark J. Gould, caretaker
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED SCOTTISH RITE, Southern Jurisdiction, U.S.A., and Legate for China and Japan
John T. Griffin, 33° (Yokohama) Geo. A. Derby 32°, registrar and sec.
ANCIENT LANDMARK LODGE, F. & A. M., Massachusetts Constitution, U.S. A CATHAY COUNCIL OF KADOSH No. 2, 30° A. & A., Scottish Rite, Southern Juris- diction, U.S.A.
Preceptor-A. B. Rosenfeld-32 1st Sub-Preceptor-Geo. Mooser-32 2nd Sub-Preceptor-J.M.Darrah-32 Chancellor T. F. Morrison-32
Orator-Frank Jones-32 Almoner J. S. Dooly-32
Recorder-Geo. A. Derby-32 P. Pr. Treasurer J. Moosa-32
M. of C.-A. H. Aiers-32 P. Pr. Turcophilier--W. Cohen-32 Draper J. McDowell-32
1st Deacon-Dr. S A. Ransom-32 2nd do. -C. L. Seitz-32
Bearer of White Standard-G. S.
Burgess-32
Bearer of Black Standard-Leon
Mooser-32
Lient. of the Guard-A. R. Murphine
-32
Sentinel J. Y. Gould-32
CELESTIAL PRECEPTORY, E.C.
COSMOPOLITAN LODGE, No. 428, S.C.
R. W. M.-Bro. W. J. C. Budd I. P. M.-Wor. Bro. A. H. Petersen S. M.-Bro. T. W. Spottiswoode D. M.-Wor. Bro. J. A. Solly W. S. W. Bro. S. Bayes-Davy W. J. W.- do. G. Mollison Secretary do. A. Whitlow
Treasurer do. W. Brauen Chaplain do. A. W. Marshall
S. D.-
do. J. Waddell
J. D.-
do. C. Tofte
B. B.
do. C. Josefsen
D. C.
do. W. T. Bissett
S. S.
do. H. J. Christiansen
J. S.
do. P. Le Bris
I. G.
do. T. W. Hay
Tyler-
do. J. Gould
DEPUTY DISTRICT GRAND LODGE, Massa- chusetts Constitution, China Masonic District No. 1
D. D. G. M.-G. A. Derby D. G. S. W.-C. Sturman D. G. Secretary-G. Mooser D. G. Marshal J. S. Dooly
DISTRICT GRAND LODGE OF N. CHINA
District G.M.-R. S. Ivy
Dy. District G.M.-W. C. Murray D. S. G. W.-E. R. Palmer D. J. G. W.-J. McLleland D. G. T.-J. H. Longhurst D. G. R.-H. J. Clark D. G. Sec.-C. H. P. Hay
KEYSTONE ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER, 1
China Masonic District, U.S. Const.
MASONIC CHARITY FUND
Trustees R. S. Ivy, D.G.M., B. A.
Clarke
President-W. C. Murray
Hon. Treasurer-J. H. Osborne
Hon. Secretary-W. J. N. Dyer
Hon. Physicians R. J. Sloan, M.D.,
E. L. Marsh, M.B., C.M., DP.II.
✰ Kwei-chû P'soong-way
會總矩規
MASONIC CLUB-30, The Bund Secretary-A. H. Campbell
NORTHERN LODGE OF CHINA, No. 570, E.
ORIENT CONSISTORY, No. 1, 32o A. & A. Scottish Rite, Southern Jurisdiction, U.S.A.
V.M.K.-W. C. Wood-32 Prior-George Mooser-32 Preceptor-A. H. Aiers-32 Chancellor A .B. Rosenfeld-32 Minister of State-J. M. Darrah-32 Almoner J. S. Dooly--32
Registrar-G.A.Derby-32P.V.M.K. Treasurer--J. Moosa--32 Prelate-T, F. Morrison-32 M. of C-Frank Jones -32 Expert-W. Cohen-32
Assistant Expert-J. McDowell-32 Capt. of the Guard-L. Mooser-34 Steward-J. Y. Gould-32
ORIENT MARK LODGE
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE FOR CHINA
AND HONGKONG
(See Hongkong)
RISING SUN R. A. CHAPTER,
M. E. Z.--R. D. Neish M. E. H.-E. M. Berthel M. E. J. Geo. Wilkins
No. 129, S.C
Scribe E.-A. Petersen Do. N.-A. G. Elder Treasurer-J. Moosa
SHANGHAI
Hoyal Order OF SCOTLAND, H.R.M. of
K.L.W.N.S. and the R.S.Y.C.S.
ROYAL SUSSEX LODGE, No. 501, E.C.
SHANGHAI CHAPTER ROSE CROIX, No. 3, 18 Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Southern Jurisdiction, U.S.A.
W. M.-J. M. Darrah-32
S. W.-A. H. Aiers-32 J. W.-J. McDowell-32 Orator-T. F. Morrison-32 Almoner J. S. Dooly-32 Secretary-G. A. Derby-32 P.W.M. Treasurer J. Moosa-32
M. of C.-A. B. Rosenfeld-32 Expert-W. Cohen-32
Asst. Expert-George Mooser-32 Standard Bearer-Frank Jones-32 G. of the Temple-G. S. Burgess-32 Tyler-J. Y. Gould-32
YANGTSZE LODGE OF PERFECTION, No.3, 14° A. & A., Scottish Rite, Southern Jur- isdiction, U.S.A.
V. M.-J. McDowell-32
S. W.-T. F. Morrison-32 J. W. Frank Jones-32
Orator-Dr. S. A. Ransom-32 Almoner J. S. Dooly-32
Secretary-G. A. Derby-32 P.V.M. Treasurer J. Moosa-32
M. of C.-A. B. Rosenfeld-32
Expert W. Cohen-32
Asst. Expert-George Mooser-32
Capt. of the Host-G.S. Burgess-32 Tyler-J. Y. Gould-32
ZION ROYAL ARCII CHAPTER, No. 570, E.C.
時最美 Mei-che.sz
MELCHERS & Co.-82 and 83, French Bund
Hermann Melchers (Bremen)
A. Korff
C. Michelau
do.
John W. Bandow (Hongkong)
G. Friesland (Hongkong)
Ad. Widmann
C. Hoppenberg, signs per pro.
Fr. Bohm,
W. O. Koehler
E. R. Vennewitz
John Meinke
0. Bosse
O. Reutter
H. Breuer F. Loepthien H. Spuring W. H. Leslie
do.
J. Knaack
W. Lindemann E. Bertram
A. Schilde H. Borné W. Wragge
889
M.A.Stempel(Farbenfabriken vorm.
Friedr. Bayer & Co.)
A. Schweizer (Farbenfabriken vorm.
Friedr. Bayer & Co.)
E. Seidler, engineer (Machinery De-
partment)
H. Kaufmann (Diamond Depart.) B. Plaschke (Nord. Lloyd inspector) A. Boyken (Capt. tender "Bremen") F. Mende, hide inspector
H. Meyer, asst. E. P. Botelho F. X. Rodriguez F. X. Tavares Pootung Wharf
do.
C. Hansen, manager
P. Victal, accountant Chang Kah Pang Wharves
Geo. Sinnecker, manager
J. M. B. da Silva, accountant R. C. da Costa
M. Flores
C. König, N. D. L. cargo overseer Chan Yuen Shan, compradore
General Managers
Melchers & Co.'s Pootung Wharf Melchers & Co.'s Chang Kah Pang
Wharf
Nordd. Lloyd, Melchers' Yangtsze Line Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd (Imperial Ger-
man Mail Line
Farbenfabriken vorm. Friedr. Bayer
& Co., Elberfeld
Dampfschifffahrts Ges. "Hansa' Bremen Underwriters
Germanic Lloyd
Basler Transport Vers. Ges. Allgemeine Vers. Ges. "Helvetia "Rhenania" Vers. Actien Ges,, Koeln Providentia" Frankfurter Vers. Ges. United Swiss Marine Insurance Co. Consolidated Marine Insurance Co. Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co. Württembergische Transport Vers. G. Internationaler Lloyd
Maschinen Fabrik: Van der Zypen
and Charlier
Portand Cement Fabrik: Dyckerhoff
und Soehne
"Globus" Insurance Co., Hamburg "Salamander" Fire Insurance Co. of
Amsterdam
"Nordstern" Lebens Versicherungs
Act.-Ges., Berlin
Bergmann Electricitaetswerke, Berlin
890
SHANGHAI
Briegleb & Hansen, Gotha, Water-
turbines
Dr. Cassierer, Charlottenburg-Berlin,
Electric Cables
Duesseldorf-Rat. Rohrenkesselfabrik
vorm. Duerr & Co., Steamboilers Louis Eilers, Hannover, Bridges and
Steel Constructions
Carl Francke, Bremen, Contractors for
Gas and Waterworks
F. R. Gebauer, Mining and Textile
Machinery, Lifts, &c.
D. Goedkoop, Jun., Amsterdam, Kero-
sine Motors and Motorboats Goerlitzer Machinenbau Anstalt A. G.
Goerlitz, Steam Engines Gebr. Koerting A. G. Koertingsdorf, Gas, Suction and Pressure Plants, Engines
Dr. Max Levy, Berlin, Electric Fans
and Medical Instruments
Liegnitzer Eisengiesserei and Mac- hinenfabrick, Teichert and Sohn, Liegnitz, Tools and Machinery for Wood
Noddeutsche Machinen und Arma- turenfabrik G. m. b. H. Bremen, Steam Turbines, Engines Telephon Fabrik A. G.
vorm. J. Berliner, Hannover, Telephones Eduard Weiler Machinenfabrik, Ber-
lin, Cranes and Winches Werf Conrad, Haarlem, Dredgers,
Lighters, Tugboats
Leopold Ziegler, Berlin, Ice-plants
and Refrigerators Vereinigte Fabriken fuer Labora-
toriumsbedarf, Berlin.
Vereinigte Stickstoffwerke, Spandau- Berlin, Intensite (tempering powder)
Breslauer Metallgiesserei, Breslau,
Watermeters
利有 Yun-lee
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA-3B, Peking Rd.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., agents
C. T. Berth, sub-agent
AX Da-fu-kung-sze
MERCANTILE MARINE OFFICERS' ASSOCIA- TION -6, North Soochow Road; Tel. Ad:
Mariners; Telph, 264
Captain S. H. Baddeley, president
Captain P. R. Miller, secretary
***
Mai-ta-jên Kung-kuan
MESNY, General WM., F.R.G.S.-9, West End
Lane, off Quinsan Road
館報通會英華
Lua-ying-hu-tung Pao-kuan
MESNY'S CHINESE MISCELLANY OFFICE, 9,
West End Lane, off Quinsan Road
General Wm. Mesny, F.R.G.S., editor
司公船輪火國法大
Ta-fuh-kwoh ho-lan-so Kung-sze
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES, COMPAGNIE DES-
French Bund; Tel. Ad: Messagerie
Brasier de Thuy, agent-general in the
East
A. Meynard, sub-agent,
A. Le Breton, chief assistant L. Lesdos, assistant
J. Marguant,
do.
M. Broadbecker, do.
E. Bastien, accountant
F. de Portaria, customs and ship.asst. J. M. Gilbert, master, M. M. tender
"Whangpoo
Agency
}}]
Compagnie des Chargeurs Reunis
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH SOUTH, U.S.A., BOARD OF FOREIGN MISSIONS- See under Protestant Missions in China
辰書美華
METHODIST PUBLISHING HOUSE--10, Woo-
sung Road; Tel. Ad: Publishing
Wm. H. Lacy, manager
J. L. Cowen, superintendent
I. L. Brooks
J. Thompson
E. N. Lacy
N. Klyhn
達禮 Lee-dan
MEYER BROS., LD., Sugar, Export and Im-
port Merchants-21, Foochow Road; Telephone 571
Ernst Meyer (Hamburg)
Herin. Meyer (Tangermunde)
G. Martiny, manager
U. Schlettwein C. Schmidt
F. F. Siqueira
И
San-gee-loong
MEYERINK & Co., WM., Merchants and Commission Agents-10, Kiukiang Road
Wm. Meyerink
M. Tiefenbacher (absent)
P. Fock
R. Holl F. Martin
J. G. Pereira
H. d'Assumpção
而古買
Mei-kul.lee
MICHAEL, ALBERT, Merchant, Commission Agent and General Broker --No. 9, Han- kow Road; Residence: 40, Nanking Road
MICHAEL, I. R., Share and General Broker and Commission Agent-121, Szechuan Rd., and Shanghai Stock Exchange; Teleph. No. 504
SHANGHAI
891
MICHAEL, SAM, Share & General Broker-
12, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Hawthorn
MILITARY
陈勇義海上
SHANGHAI VOLUNTEER CORPS
Commandant-Lieut. Col. A. A. A.
Barnes, Wiltshire Regt.
Second in Command-Major Brodie
A. Clarke
Commanding Infantry Battalion-
Major T. E. Traeman
Corps Adjutant - Captain G. F.
Collyer
Engineer Staff Officer-Captain Wm.
Dowdall
Captain J. M. Davidson (attached) Hon. 2nd Lieut R. Buck, Bandmaster Sergt-Major-Sergeant-Major A. W.
Studd
Orderly Room Sergeant Co.-Quar-
ter Mr.-Sergeant C.Matthews Musketry Instructor--Quarter Mr.-
Sergeant E. C. Fry Drum Major-J. J. Mansfield Sergt. Bugler A. Rosenfeld Light-Horse
Captain- W. J. N. Dyer 39 N.C.O's and men 2nd Lieut.-P. Crighton
Do. -A. Crighton Artillery
Lieutenant-L. E. Canning
Do. -R. W. Davis N.C.O's and men Mounted Infantry
13 N.C.O's and men
"Maxim" Company
Captain-G. E. Stewart Lieut.-R. H. Gaskin
2nd. Lieut. H. B. Emerson
52 N.C.O's and men "A" Company
Captain-H. W. Pilcher Lieutenant-R. J. Fearon 2nd Lieut.--G. M. Jameson
Do. -W. Brand 98 N.C.O's and Men "B" Company
Captain-H. B. H. Thomas Lieutenant-W. S. Burns
Do. -J. D. D. Gordon
60 N.C.O's and men
Customs Company
Captain W. G. Lay
55 N.C.O's and men
Japanese Company
Captain-S. Koaze Lieutenant-T. Asano
54 N.C.O's and men
Portuguese Company
Captain--J. Nolasco
Lieutenant--B. M. Carion
N.C.O's and men
German Company
Captain-H. Schellhoss Lieuts.-H. Rix, H. Stecn
55 N.C.O's and men American Company
Captain S. A. Ransom 40 N.C.O's and men Chinese Company
Captain-L. J. Cubitt Lieutenant-G. Grayrigge 2nd Lieut.-R. M. Saker 99 N.C.O's and wen Engineer Company
Lieutentant-C. H. Godfrey 2nd Lieut.-S. S. Sellick
Do. -H. King Hiller 51 Rank und File Medical Staff
Captain-G. Hanwell
Do. -R. J. Marshall
-H. C. Patrick
Do.
Do.
-W. B. Billinghurst
Signallers
Lieutenant-E. Carlsen
39 Rank and File Reserve Company
Captain-G. R. Wingrove Lieutenant-W. H. Bell 2nd Lieut.-E. Selly Moore
80 N.C.O's and men German Reserve Company Captain J. Stepharius 39 N.C.O's and men Mounted Scouts
Lieutenant-A. W. Burkill 2nd Lt.-L. Midwood 28 Rank and File 12 Bore Gun Company
Lieutenant-D. McNeill 34 N.C.O's and men
SECOND RUSSIAN MILITARY AGENT IN
CHINA-Club Concordia
Colonel R. Walter
Financial Agent-L. von Hoyer, 11,
Seymour Road; Teleph. 512
May-e-sang.
MILLES, WALTER JENNINGS, M.D., F.R.C.S. ENG., Surgeon General, Hospital Muni- cipal Surgeon, and Physician H. B. M.'s
Consulate-General-63, Carter Road;
Teleph. 47; Office: 36, Peking Road; Teleph. 165
所學化務彍致格惠爾
MINING INSTITUTE & ANALYTICAL LAB-
ORATORY; Tel. Ad: Liviosilva
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions in China
see end of China Directory
892
Sang-ching
SHANGHAI
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA (Mitsui & Co.)-
49, Szechuen Road
M. Fujise, manager
D. Hatabu
H. Obata
T. Takeda
T. Nagano K. Yebara I. Morita
T. Takahashi S. Kanzaki M. Nodaira K. Adachi J. Iizuka
K. Tsukahara
K. Inuzuka
M. Shimada
K. Hasegawa
S. Takahashi
H. Sonomoto
S. Kodama
Y. Ogishima I. Higuchi H. Shimizu T. Kawa S. Tanaka Y Ohta M. Kitora H. Koi
會暑避山干莫
THUTH Mo-kan-skan-pi-sih-wei MOKANSHAN SUMMER RESORT ASSOCIATION President-Rev. W.H.Hudson, Kashing Vice-Pres.-Rev. R.T. Bryan, D.D., S'hai. Treas. Rev. J. N. Hayes, D D., Soochow Secretary-Rev. J.L. Hendry, Huchow Directors-Rev. H. L. W. Bevan, Kev. J. M. Blain, Rev. D. H. Davis, D.C., Rev. J. R. Goddard, D.D., Rev. R. A. Haden, Rev. George Hudson, Rev. C. G. Keen, Rev. A. Langman, Rev. L. I. Little, Rev. E. L. Mattox, C. Pape Esq., Rev. P. F. Price
賜寶 Lay-3%
T. Shimizu
MOLLER BROS.,
J. Suzuki
S. Matsusaki
Eric Moller
J. Ida
T. Mukai
I. Abe
T. Mori
T. Takikawa
T. Ijichi
H. Matsuo
Agencies
M. Ohmori
K. Ishida.
K. Murai (wharf)
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co. Meiji Fire & Life Insurance Co. Kyodo Fire & Marine Insurance Co. Nippon Fire Insurance Co.
Shanghai Cotton Manufacturing Co.,
Ltcl.
Santai Cotton Manufacturing Co., Ld. Yuen Lung Cotton Ginning Mill Onoda Cement Works Ltd. Nitta's Leather Belt Works Hirano Mineral Waters Co.
Dai Nippon Beer Brewery Co.
Osaka Paper Mill
Sanritsu Paper Mill
Hanyang Steel & Iron Works
司公菱三
Mitsu Bishi Co.--7, Canton Road; Tel.
Ad: Iwasaki, Shanghai
T. Matsuki, manager
T. Nakashima
Y. Mashda
R. Awoyagi
T. Honjyo
K. Furaya
隆美 Mei-loong
MITTAG, MAX, Merchant and Commission
Agent-24, Kiangse Road
M. Mittag
O. Halben
C. Steenhouwer
Alfred Mittag J. R. Xavier M. A. Gaan
BROS., Merchants,
Merchants,
Shipping
Agents, Ship Owners-9, Hankow Road
J. A. Moller
F. Milner
Miss M. Moller
S. King
Koo Shun Chat Woo Tshung Ling Japanese Department
Tokosaburo Satoh (manager)
T. Satoh
U. Uchida
S. Iwanaga
R. Kiso
Coal Metal and General Department
S. H. Abbass (in charge)
Wong Su Aào
Agencies
JJ
Camillo Eitzen & Co. of Christiania The Japanese Ship Owners' Assoc. The S. S. "Canton S. S. Co., Ld. The Whangpoo Tug & Lighter Co., Ld. S. S. Kamor" 949 Tons Reg.
}
S. S. "Elger" 877 S. S. " Selun 865 53
*
S. S. "Canton" 1134
}}
J
#1
MOLNAR & GREINER -2a, Kiukiang Road;
Head Office: Budapest
Agencies
Fire Insurance Company
Assecurazione Generali, "K.C.K. priv.,
Trieste
羅大
Tah-loh
MONDON, LD., E. L., General Storekeepers, Wine and Spirit Merchants, Navy Con tractors, Tobacconists, Forwarding and Commission Agents-67, Rue Montauban
G. Duplessis, manager
J. Buisson
C. Stellingwerff
摩師意魯
SHANGHAI
Loo-e-sz-mo
MOORE & Co., L., Brokers, Auctioneers,
Appraisers and Commission Agents,
Kiangse Road
E. Q. Cooper F.A.I., M.P.S.
G. V. T. Marshall, signs per pro.
W. Hutchinson
J. Goldman
J. Hadley
利得安 E-tehalee
Piece Goods Office, 43, Kiangse Road
Mo-hai
MOORHEAD & HALSE, Civil Engineers, Architectsand Surveyors-13, Yuen Ming Yuen Rd.; Tel. Ad: Moorhead, Shanghai, Telephone 142
R. B. Moorhead, B.A., B.A.I., A.M.I.C.E., S. J. Halse, A.R.I.B.A., P.A.S.I.
O. Abbass
E. Scorrar
Moosa, J., Share and General Broker and
Commission Agent-4, The Bund
Mooser, George, District Manager China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ltd., 13A, Canton Road. Branches: Hankow, Chinkiang, Nanking, Kiukiang, Nan- changfu, Wuhu; Tel. Nos.: Office 2034; Residence: 790; Cable Address: Mooser Shanghai
MORDUCOVITCH, M. A.-53, Szechuen Rd.
A. L. Zellensky
A. Tiede
S. Y. Foug Agents-
Imperial Russian Volunteer Fleet
師立馬 Ma-le-sz
MORRIS & Co., Commission and Ship
Agents-8, Kiangse Road; Tel. Ad: Morris
John Morris
**** Mos-be-nga-e-sang
MOSBERO, CARL, D.D.S., Dental Surgeon-
2, Kiukiang Road
MosquE-See under Churches
MOTOR HOUSE THE, Sale and Repairs of Motor Cars, Garage of Cars, Vulcaniczine, Sale of Tyres, Oils &c., &c.-23, Med- hurst Road, corner of Avenue Road; Teleph. 687 Tel. Ad: Guianto
G. T. Guignard
F. C. Eitter
### Mow.teih-le
893
MOUTRIE, S., & Co., LD., Pianoforte. and Organ Manufacturers and Inipor- ters, Musical Instruments and Music-3, Nanking Road; Factory: North Honan Road; Tientsin and Hongkong
Directors-E. C. Pearce (chairman),
W. C. Murray, J. M. Young J. H. Hinton, managing director L. Jupp, sub-manager Robt. T. Brimer, secretary J. J. Mansfield C. N. Galton W. R. Hooper D. Harvey A. C. Mack W. Lent
A. C. Remedios C. L. Lowry H. G. Brand F. J. Hinton
G. Paine, Factory, North Honan Rd. W. S. Watson (Piano Player Dept.)
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL FOR FOREIGN
SETTLEMENT
Councillors-D. Landale (chairman), H. de Gray, F. C. Heffer, W. D. Little, O. Meuser, J. Prentice, H. A. J. Macray, W. A. C. Platt, T. E. Trueman
部工
Kung-pu
SECRETARIAT, 23, Kiangse Road
Secretary W. E. Leveson
Asst. Secretaries-J. C. A. Mackin-
non, A. Corbett Smith Accountant-E. F. Goodale Sub-accountant- J. C. Bosustow Assts. E. S. B. Rowe, L. D. Le- maire, A. W. Macphail, H. E. Middleton, T. H. Hutchison, J M. McKee, E. W. Munsie Overseer of Taxes-A. Johnsford Assistant do. -E. L. Allen Assts.-F. A. Sampson, T. E. Wilson Inspector of Vehicles-D. McAlister
Do. of Taxes-A. K. Henning
Tax Collectors-G. Crank, A. Dahl, F. George, J. Gould, J. A. J. Johanssen, I. Konsberg, C. E. Larsen, G. E. Marshall, E. Mellows, J. Powles, J. B. Roberty, H. C. W. Schroder, E. Zillig
糯字寫務工理管部工
Kung-boo sia-zz-vong
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT
Engineer and Surveyor-C. Mayne
Deputy Engineer and Surveyor-C.
H. Godfrey
Chief Engineering Asst.-C. Harpur
1,
894
SHANGHAI
Divisional Engineer, North and East-
ern Districts-J. E. Needham Divisional Engineer, Western and Central Districts-F. G. Helsby Engineering Assistants-C. Luthy H. E. Pollard, I. Harpur, J. B. Johns
Chief Architectural Assistant R.
C. Turner
Architectural Asst.-R. C. Young Chief Surveying Assistant - W. E.
Sauer
Surveying Asstistants- F.P.Bartley,
J. C. Beckhoff, R. W. Gunson, L. W. D. Hoffman, G. H. Rendall, R. E. Scatchard
Chief Clerk-A. Diercking Clerical Assistants-W.B.Ö. Mayne, T. Thuruheer, T. W. R. Wilson Typewriter and Stenographer-Miss
G. McInnes
Building Surveyor-H. Ross Building Inspectors-W. J. Bidgood, A. T. Gray, H. E. Jones, M. Mac- Lennan
Supt. of Parks and Open Spaces
D. MacGregor
Asst. Supt. of Parks and Open Spaces
--J. Giles
Clerks of Works--J. Eitter, W. A. B.
Leach Overseer
H. Schultz Asst. Overseer of Pingchiao Quarry
-F. Curtis
of Pingchiao Quarry-
Overseers E. Brown, W. Burn, J. Fisher, W. S. Hibbard, F. P. Jovino, D. Lewis, J. W. D. Murray, W. H. Mudditt, A. R. White Custodian of Town Hall - G. W.
Davies
Park-keeper, Hongkew Recreation
Ground W. J. Roberts
Dzing-boo-vong
POLICE DEPARTMENT, Central Station Captain, Super.-Lt. Col. C.D.Bruce Deputy, Super.-K. J. McEuen First Asst. Super. for Indians--Capt.
E. I. M. Barrett
First Asst. Super. for Chinese-
Capt. A. Hilton-Johnson Second Asst. Supers. A. H. Fenton, R. M. J. Martin, M. O. Springfield Cadet E. C. Creasy
Chief Inspector-J. Ramsay Chief Det❜ive Inspr.--W. Armstrong Storekeeper and Drill Instructor-C.
Dewing
Asst. Storekeeper-W. H. Howell
Central Station Inspector in Charge-G. Matheson Traffic Inspector-W. R. Kinipple
Sub-Inspectors-T.W. Spottiswoode (trooper), W. D. Morey, Detective A. Eek
Louza Station
Inspector in Charge T. M. Wilson Sub-Insps.-R. Bourke, G. Johnson Detective Sub-Inspector -M. Fitz
Gibbon
Hongkew Station
Inspector in Charge-J. Bourke Detective-Inspector-J. McDowell Sub-Inspectors-H. G. Helyer, J. E.
Johnson
Harbin Road Sub-Station Sub-Inspector in Charge-G. W.
Morrison
Bubbling Well Station Inspector in Charge-J. McGregor
Yangtszepoo Station
Inspector in Charge- A. H. Aiers.
West Hongker Station
Inspector in Charge-S. Chilver Sinza Station
Inspector in Charge-P. W. Mac-
kintosh
Wayside Station
Inspector in Charge-E. H. Lynch
Depot
Inspector in Charge C. Dewing
FIRE DEPARTMENT, OFFICE AND WORK-
SHOP 4, Scott Road
Fire Stations
Central Station-Honam Road Hongkew
Victoria Le Torrent
-Hanbury Road
+1
H
-Soochow Road -Rue du Consulat
1
>>
Avenue Rd. -Avenue Road Chief Engineer-G. S. V. Bidwell Departmental Engr.-H. D. S. Parkhill
HEALTH DEPARTMENT
Health Officer Arthur Stanley,
M.D., B.S. (LOND), D.PH. Assistant Health Officers-Alfred
Moore, M.D. (DUB.), D.PH., C. Noel Davis, M.B. (LOND.), D.PH. Assistants-F. G. C. Walker, E. 0.
Wilson
Clerk and Interpreter A. Watson Sanitary Inspectors-C. Hill
Do. Do.
Do.
-E. Kilner
-H. Bland -T. N. Hugall Assistant Sanitary Inspectors- C. Champion, W. J. Dean, T. E. Cholerton, G. S. Benson, B. Dixon, E. Bray, C. Houghton, F. J. W. Melville, T. Moran, B. T. Prideaux, H. V. Starling, W. J. Terrill, A. Watson, H. H. Pool, E. A. Wright N. B. Gregory
SHANGHAT
Matron, Victoria Nursing Home-
Miss Hock
Matron, Isolation Hospital-Miss
A. Bradford
Matron, Isolation Hospital for
Chinese-Miss M. M. Murphy Matron, Mokanshan Sanatorium-
Miss A. A. Fletcher
Nurses Misses A. Dench, C. Hut- ton, A. B. Land, M. Macmillan, E. Summerskill, M. Gittins, E. M. Robinson, L. H. de Gruchy, M. S. A. Grimes, E. A. Dove, E. R. Barclay, S. R. Hodge, K. Wilkerson, Mrs. E. Thomas, Miss I. Hall, McBean, M. L. White, L. A. Arnolt Probationers E. Denham, A. Hard- ing, E. Hurley, Miss L. Hamilton Custodian, Isolation Hospital-R. J.
Broad
Attendant, Victoria Nursing Home
--L. Mackintosh
ELECTRICITY DEPARTMENT
Elec.Engr.-T.H.U.Aldridge,M.I.E.E. Deputy Elec. Engr.-A. H. Blagden,
A.M.LE.E.
Station Supts.-F. G. Payne, A. M. I.
MECH, E.
Assist. Engineers-W. E. Nops, O. L. Ilbert, A. Wright, G. Ewart, J. W. Laidlaw
Assts.-H.W. Thwaites, W.J.Furness Foreman Mechanic-P. B. Critchley Mains Foreinen M. Loggey, J.
Behean
Chief Clerk-W. J. C. Budd Clerks-H. B. Woodford, W. S. Clay,
W. T. Bertenshaw, A. H. Leslie Collectors-A. Kane, C. Wagstaff, W. Anderson, M. Conlon, T. Murphy Meter Inspectors-S. T. Nilson, F.
Dearn, F. Ward
GAOL,
Supt. Lt. Col. W. M. Watson Asst. Supt.-A. H. Fenton
VOLUNTEERS
Commandant-Lt. Col.A.A.S.Barnes Adjut. Capt. G. F. Collier Sergeant-Major A. W. Studd Orderly Room Serg.-C. Matthews
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL (FRENCH)
CONSEIL D'ADMINISTRATION de la Conces-
sion Française de Shanghai
M. Feit, président, W. M. Dowdall,
vice-president Councillors-M.M.R. Brazier de Thuy, J. Gaillard, Th. Eckhardt, H. Madier, E. Ghisi, W. A. La Gro, G. Laferriere (sec.), J. Daulin (asst. sec.)
房廳捕巡國法大
Ta Fah-kwoh Dzing-boo-ting-vong
895
FRENCH POLICE Central Station, Rue du
Consulat
Capt. Superintendent Capt. P. Nallet
局部工國法大
Ta Fah-kwoh Kung-boo-jook
SECRÉTARIAT
Secrétaire-G. Laferrière Secrétaire-adjoint-J. Dantin Comptable R. Maigre Commis-Comptable J. Hamon Percepteur en Chef-L. Berthon Percepteur-L. Boccheciampe Do. -H. Guillabert Do. -J. B. Audigier
Commis de Perception-A. Latour Commis Auxiliaire-C. Magy
ABATTOIRS
Vétérinaire-sanitaire-G. Patrigeon Inspecteur des Abattoirs-F. Lespi-
nasse
CONTRÔLE ET CADASTRE
Ingénieur H. Lecoy de la Marche. Electricien F. Pada
Commis-P. Legendre
SERVICE MEDICAL
Médecin de l'Administration-Dr. H.
Fresson
Infirmier J. Gilis
BRIGADE DES POMPIERS
Captain.-M. Chapenux Adjudant-mécanicien E. Leconte Aide-mécanicien-H. Richer
SERVICE DES TRAVAUX PUBLICS
Ingénieur en Chef-H. Arnould Ingénieur-adjoint, Chef du Service de
la Voirie J. Cornic
Agentvoyer-B. Tissot Dupont Conducteur des Travaux-M, Chauvin Commis des Travaux-E. Fau
Commis aux écritures-G. Philippas Serveillant des travaux-J. Thalamot
Do. Do.
SERVICE DES ECURIES
-G. Le Put -L. Labau
Inspecteur des Ecuries-J.P. Bourricot
MURAI BROS. Co., Lv.-22, Museum Road
Directors-J. A. Thomas, Thos. F. Cobbs, E. Kempffer, L. Andersen
Po-wu-yuen
MUSEUM, SHANGHAI-Museum Road Hon. Curator-Dr. Stanley
896
Ching-loong
SHANGHAT
P. M. Elberg
A. C. M. Tak
MUSTARD & Co., General Importers, and Commission Agents-22, Museum Road
L. Andersen, managing director
Geo. P. Godsey, director
J. A. Thomas,
do.
Thos. F. Cobbs, do.
Managers for:-
The British-American Tobacco Co., Ld.
NANKING,"
京南 Nan-ehin
"British Ship, E. D. Sassoon
& Co., Owners
S. S. David, commander
C. Robarts, mate
A. Robarts, purser
Sin Tsi-tsan
NABHOLZ & Co., Merchts.-12, Nanking Rd.
F. Schwyzer
R. Steger
Agency
"La Suisse" Cie Anonyme d'Assurances
o Hà Chung tung
NAKAKIRI & Co., General Merchants and Machinery Importers-550, North Soo- chow Road: Telph. No. 1044; Head Office and Iron Works: Hiranogocho, Osaka; Branches and Agencies: Hankow, Tien- tsin and Bombay
H. Nakakiri (Osaka) S. Miyake, manager
S. R. Okusli K. Yokoyama
I. Nakakiri
K. Tsumura (Hankow)
Agency
The Kobe Marine, Transport and Fire
Insurance Co, Ld.
報西論公國中
Chun-kok-koon-lun-si-po
NATIONAL REVIEW, THE, Weekly News- paper and Review of Chinese Affairs- 25, Nanking Road; Telph. No. 459 ; Tel. Ad: Notrik
Capt. W. Kirton, managing editor
W. S. Ridge, B.A., F.G.S., F.R.C.S., editor
A. Slettengren
J. B. Leon
C. T. Ku, translator
C. T. Wang do.
1
Wo-lan-ning-hong
NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL MAATSCHAPPIJ (Netherlands Trading Society)--7, Nan-
king Road
W. Lagro, manager B. G. J. Wijnberg
E. L. C. M. Mouwen
J. M. E. Pereira
NEILL, S. B., F.L.A., F.8.5., Consulting Actuary, Actuary China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld.-10, Canton Rd.
Chim-ma-che
NEMAZEE & Co., H. M. H.-12, Peking Road H. M. H. Nemazee (Hongkong)
M. Jaffer (Samarkand)
R. S. Kermani
Agency
The Bombay-Persia S. N. Co., Ld.
源匯
NETHERLANDS-FRENCH HARBOUR WORKS
Co., LD. Head Office: Amsterdam
A. Schumacher, managing director Jhr. J. de Graeff, signs per pro. Fred. C. Quien, do.
Yung-sung
NEUBOURG & Co., A., General Brokers and Commission Merchants-3, Foochow Road; Tel. No. 2053
NEUMANN, RICHARD, Butcher, Purveyor to the German, Russian, American, and British Navies, North German Lloyd, etc. -corner of Astor Road and Broadway
Carl Weigel, book-keeper
K. Racsfeldt, assistant
F. Gorsin,
do.
泰匯
NEW BUILDING & CONSTRUCTION CO., LD.,
THE-44, Szechuen Road
Directors M. Hoerter (chairman), E. W. Clements, K. B. Mauchan, R. Bauld
J. C. Thomson, A.M.I.M.E.. manager
and secretary
* M 4 * Zeang-sang zeen-au
NEW DOCK & SHIP YARD
Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Ld.,
proprietors
NEW ENGINEERING AND SHIPBUILDING WORKS, Lo.-37, Yangtzepoo Road; Tel. Ad: Speedy; Proprietors, Yangtszepoo Dock
James Reynolds, M.I.M.E., managing
director
A. W. Brankston John McPherson A. L. Blechynden S. Rosario P. H. Bowen G. McMurdo
J. B. Taylor
C. E. Hall
G. Kay
H. Zimmermann
SHANGHAI
NEW POINT HOTEL 93, Yangtszepoo Road
F. Pasche
利美 Me-Li
NEW YORK EXPORT & IMPORT Co.-13,
Nanking Road, Exporters, Importers and
Manufacturers' Agents; Tel. Ad: Eximco
Herbert S. Boone, manager
F. S. Spencer
W. W. Rossiter
V. A. Dodge (New York) H. T. Seymour do.
Yung-ping
NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Andersen, Meyer & Co. general agents for China-4-5, Yuen Ming Yuen Road
Neil MacLeod, M.D.,.
R. J. Marshall, medical examiner
E. R. Marsh,
W. J. J. Milles,
W. B. Billinghurst,
dlo.
do.
do.
T. Saito D. Hakata
Agencies
Great Northern Steamship Co.
South Manchuria Railway Co.
司公船輸清日
Sse-Chin-Lin-Zue-Kung-Ssü
NISSHIN KISEN KAISHA-5, The Bund
K. Kobata, manager
Capt. T. Suga, marine superintdt. Y. Ishikawa, asst.
S. Noichi
S. Satow
K. Awai
Y. Yatabe
F. Gotoh
K. Kishida
S. Sangu
do.
S. Takayama (Pootung Wharf) M. Mori
do.
827
H. Takahira (Inland S. Nav. Dept.) W. Yamanari,
T. Sasaki (Soochow)
do.
H.Tobi (Hangelow) T. Machida (Chinkiang) G. Takeda,
do.
F. Misonoh (Kiukiang)
U. Eitaki
do.
K. Matsuoka (Wuhu)
Agency
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
宏保 Pao-hung
NEW ZEALAND INSURANCE CO., Ld.--8,
Kiukiang Road; Tel. Ad: Zeus
E. E. Parsons, manager
R. N. Anderson
DAĦĦU Jih-pen yew-zay-wag-za NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA (Japan Mail Steam- ship Company)-3, North Yangtze Rd.; Cable Address: Yusen
Y. Ito, manager
S. Fukano, assistant manager
S. Kurokawa
S. Koaze
Y. Yebiko
R. Sawamoto
T. Okubo
K. Hotta
Y. Suganami K. Yamaguchi W. Miura N. Abe S. Ikawa
E. Maruyama T. Nakashima M. Tanaka Y. Suzuki K. Nishioka
Leong Yop-Long N.Y.K. Wharf I. Hirouchi
H. Takahashi T. Ishikawa
N.Y.K. Wayside Wharf
Tsay-wo
NOEL, MURRAY & Co., LD., Auctioneers, Share and General Brokers and Commis- sion Agents-78, Szechuen Road.
Geo. W. Noël, managing director W. C. Murray, manager
P. Crighton, signs per pro. A. A. Brady,
J. L. Carneiro
J. E. Cooke
M. J. Gaan
L. Joseph P. Wood
Y. Churtong
Publications:
do.
Shanghai Piece Goods Trade Report
Cotton Yarn Report
恒壁 Picheng
NOESSLER & Co., MAX, Booksellers, Sta-
tioners, Tobacconists- 38, Nanking Rd.
H. Ziegenspeck
Max Nossler (Bremen)
Ad. Hildebrandt, signs per pro.
J. D. Herklotz
Otto Selke
G. Bätjer
W. C. Herm. Müller
O. Zehrfeld
898
SHANGHAI
NORBURY NATZIO & Co., LD. (Manchester), Lithographic Printers- 26, Szechuen Rd.; Tel. Ad: Prismatic
H. E. Railton, agent
NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD (Imperial German
Mail Line)-Melchers & Co., agents Norddeutscher Lloyd, Melchers & Co.'s
Yangtsze-Line
Melchers & Co., general managers; Tel.
Ad Nordlloyd
林字 Tse.lin
NORTH CHINADAILY NEWS AND HERALD, LD. Publishers of the "North China Herald and Supreme Court and Consular Gazette" (Weekly), and "North China. Daily News" (Morning Newspaper)-17,
The Bund
H. T. Montague Bell, editor
Harry L. Giller, general manager O. M. Green, assistant-editor W. J. Hunnex
H. G. Woodhead G. B. Sayer W. R. Parkin L. F. Pratt
T. Cunningham W. Johansen
W. Watson, accountant E. J. Siqueira, clerk Miss Grunberg, typist Chang Niet Yün, translator
R. W. Davis, printing manager Jas. Brewer, printing overseer
Pau-ka-hong
NORTH CHINA INSURANCE COMPANY, LD,-
Head Office: 16, The Bund
H. G. Simms, secretary
R. H. Beauchamp
S. J. Chiuchen
Z. D. Shen
London Branch: 78, Cornhill, E.C.
W. G. Bayne, manager
Agencies
Commercial Union Assurance Co.
Western Assur. Co. of Toronto (Mar.)
發公
Kung-fah
NUTTER & Co., WALTER, Merchants-17,
Kiangse Road; Tel. Ad: Nutter; Tele-
phone No. 551
Walter Nutter (London) Walter J. Nutter (London) Percy Nutter (London)
P. Holdsworth, manager
H. H. Fowler
J. M. Barretto-Gutierrez C. E. Carneiro J. Cariss
Agencies
W. H. Scales & Co. (Bradford and Man
chester)
Blundell, Spence & Co., Ltd. (Paints,
Oils, Varnishes, etc.) Lever Bros, Ltd. (Soaps) Cadbury Bros, Ltd. (Cocoa, etc.) Mellin's Food Ltcl. (Infants' Food) Cerebos (1903) Ltd. (Salt)
John Moreton & Co., Ltd. (Hardware) Lockwood Bros., Ltd. (Cutlery) Cooper Pegler & Co. (Fancy Goods) Marks & Cohn (Jewellery) Walsam & Co. (Electro Plate) Vinolia Co., Ld. (Perfumery and Soaps) Crockett & Jones (Boots) Holbrooks, Ldl. (Sauces, etc.)
J. & J. Colman, Ld. (Mustard and Starch) Carr & Co. Ld. (Biscuits) Hodgson & Simpson, Ld. (Soaps) D. & J. McCallum (Whisky)
Tien-wen-tai
OBSERVATORY-Zi-Ka-Wei; Telph. 71
Rev. L. Froc, s.J., director Rev. J. Tardif de Moidrey, s.J. Rev. H. Gauthier, S.J.
P. Souron, S.J.
OBSERVATORY, Zô-Sè
Rev. S. Chevalier, s.J., director Rev. A. Weckbacher, s.J.
Rev. P. Tsutsilassi, s...
A. Aguinagalde, s J.
OCEAN ACCIDENT AND GUARANTEE COR-
FORATION, LD-13, Nanking Road
J. T. Hamilton, Manager for the East
登格
Oh-kah-ting
OGDEN BROS-21, Nanking Road
Wm. A. Ogden
廠器機澳船老
Laou-zern-au-chi-chi-t'sang
OLD DOCK, Engine Works,. Foundry and
Ship-Yard
Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co,
Ld, proprietors
順華
Wha Zung-siang
OLD NINGPO WHARF
Jardine, Matheson & Co., agents
OLIVER TYPEWRITER CO., LD. (London)
General-Agents for China: Andrews, von
Fischerz & George, Ld.
R. S. Dougal
H. W. Robjohn
與永 Yung-shing.
OLIVIER & Co., Merchants-6, Museum Rd.
E. Binder, signs per pro.
A. Vogel do.
SHANGHAI
899
R. Dreysse, silk inspector
A. C. Cabouret
J. Deschamps
L. Maingon
L. Pernot
Bing-dz-mung
OLIVIER IMPORT & EXPORT Co.-Olivier
Building, 18, Nanking Road
Maurice Benjamin
Charles H. Black (Seattle)
H. Benjamin
F. Stone
廠氷器機方東
Tung-fong-chi.ch'i-bing.t'sang
ORIENTAL ICE CO., LD.-Works: 8, Thorne
Road, near Range Road
H. R. Hearson, manager
J. Allan, engineer
司公船輪旗花
PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP Co., Toyo KISEN
KAISHA-1, Nanking Road
R C. Morton, acting agent
H. H. Solomon, chief clerk
O. H. Ritter, cashier and accountant W. P. Neeson, ticket clerk
A. G. Hill, outside supt.
Wei-chung
PALACE HOTEL-The Bund, corner of Nan- king Road; Tel. Ad: Palace; Teleph. 39
Central Stores, Ld., proprietors
B. Bay, manager
Miss A. M. Gallagher, matron
E. K. Chandler, bookkeeper
W. Milner, clerk
Y. S. King, do.
L. Varriano, commissionaire
豐保 Po-fung
king Road
Anderson, Meyer & Co., general agents PARISIAN HAIRDRESSING SALOON-19, Nan-
Pao-shing Yim-su-kwan
ORIENTAL PRESS, Printers, Publishers
Engravers, Lithographers, Bookbinders,
&c.-55-56, Quai du Yang King Pang
M. Bos, manager
J. E. Tardé-Lambert
J. B. Wilson, bookkeeper L. Abramowich, lithographer
D. Kitami,
do.
J. M. Conceicao, assistant
Julien Tsar,
do.
報新女德 Teh-wen-sing-pao
OSTASIATISCHE LLOYD, DER, Daily Tele-
gram Service and Weekly Newspaper-
25, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Publicatio
C. Fink, managing editor
Dr. M. Krieger (Peking) assist.editor E. Kunze, sub-editor
P. Koenig, business manager
A Pa-pol-le
PABANEY, EBRAHIMBHOY, Merchant- 8A,
Kiukiang Road
S. Valjibhoy, manager
N. Rajabally
P. S. Mowjee
司公木興昌商英
Chong-shing Mo-kung-sze
PACIFIC COAST LUMBER MILLS, LD., THE,
(The Pacific Coast Lumber Mills, Ld..
of Vancouver, B. C., Canada)
Brighten, Malcolm & Co., Ld., agents,
8, Kiukiang Road
生立柏 Par-li-seng
Parisienne, A. LA, Ladies' Tailor and Mil-
liner- 45, Nanking Road; Telph. 1629 嘉派 Pi.ka
PARKER, ROBB & Co. (Established 1880), Consulting Marine Surveyors, Engineers, Appraisers and Surveyors of Cargo; Surveyors to Germanischer Lloyd and Local Agents of Various Underwriters and Insurance Companies-1A, Jinkee Road; Teleph. No. 2267; Cable: Veritas
J. H. P. Parker, A.I.N.A.
J. M. Robb, M.E.
Chan Minkwan Wong Ahsu Agencies
Bureau Veritas
Det Norske Veritas & Clubs (Mutual),
Norway
PAPPADOPOULOS, M., Importer of Turkish and Egyptian Cigarettes-115 Broadway, and Rue Montauban, No. 36 (French Store)
M. Pappadopoulos
Pa-e-seng
PARROTT, A. GEORGE, M.R.C.S. (England) L.R.C.P. (London) General Practitioner-
31, N. Szechuen Road; Teleph. 559
PASCHE & Co., FRITZ, German Butchers-
7, Broadway
Hans Doller, asst.
PATEL, A. C.-8, Yang King Pang
900
生醫力得寶 Pau ti li e sang
SHANGHAI
PATRICK, DR. H. C., Successor to Dr. Burge
-5, Hongkong Road; Telephone 28
PATRIGEON, Dr. G., French Vetery. Surgn, -19, Avenue Paul Brunat; Teleph. 1638
利百 Pah-lee
PATUREL, C-2, Yang King Pang, Ex-
porter and Importer; Tel. 954 and 930
C. Paturel
A. Muguet
Miss A. Duval
A. Chapeaux
P. Meira da Costa
F. Gandossi
PAULSEN, W., Ship's Engineer, Surveyor
to Lloyd's Register and Local Offices
-1, Yuen-ming-yuen Road
生醫福及生醫實
Poo-e-sang kap Fu-e-sang
PAULUN, VON SCHAB, & KRIEG, DRS.
Medical Practitioners
PAVITT, J. M., Commission Merchant-
13, Nanking Road
司公成大
Ta-chen-kung-sze
PEARSON & SON, LIMITED, Public Works Contractors-13, Yuen Ming Yuen Road, and London
R. B. Moorhead, B.A., B.A.L., A.M.LO.E.,
agent
PEEK BROS. & WINCH, L., Merchants-6A,
Peking Road
A Fu-kung-sze
PEKIN SYNDICATE, LD. 110, Cannon St.,
London, E. C.; Tel. Ad: Sindacato
Shanghai Agent-Brighten, Malcolm
Co., Ld., 8, Kuikiang Road
行司公 英大
Da-Ying-Koong-Sz-ong
PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL STEAM NAVI-
GATION COMPANY--24, The Bund
A. M. Marshall, agent
E. C. Richards, chief clerk.
P. Alderton, clerk
W. R. Lemarchand, clerk G. de V. Havilland, do. F. E. Olsen,
D. M. Hay, gunner
J. Evans,
do.
do.
The Marine Insurance Company, Ltd.,
London
Head Office, 20, Old Broad Street,
Shanghai Branch
A. M. Marshall, agent
The Marine & General Mutual Life Assur. Soc., 14, Leadenhall Street, London, Shanghai Agency A. M. Marshall, agent
A
Pi-kung-kwan
PEREIRA, H. A.-34, Quinsan Road
Pe-ri-laud
PERILLAUD & Co., C. (late E. Geo. Mar- guet), Merchants and Commission Agents
12, Szechuen Road; Teleph. No. 1373 C. Perillaud
E. Geo. Marguet (Paris)
A. Richard
PERINDORGE, DR. G. DE, D.E.D.P., Dontal Surgeon, Diploma: Paris; Member of the Association Générale des Dentistes de France
PETERS & Co., G. C. (London) Manufac turers of Railway Rolling Stock Supplies ---10, Hankow Road
闢
Hop-pis
PIKE, T. J. ALBERT, Mauufacturers' Agent
-10, Hankow Road; Teleph. No. 2796
BABE Van-kwok-kung-sze PETERSEN, & Co., E. S., General Merchants and Commission Agents-8, Yang King Pang; Tel. Ad: Jupiter; Teleph. No. 459
PHOENIX ASSURANCE Co., LD.(London), Far Eastern Branch-5, Hanków Rd.; Fire, Life, Accident, etc.
H. Crombie, manager
H. M. Hind T. J. Cocks J. H. Costa
Shanghai Agents :
Wm. Little & Co.
The China & Japan Trading Co., Ld.
National Union Society Ld. (Barlow
& Co.)
刺筆 Pela
PILA & Co., ULYSSE 4, Kiukiang Road,
PILOTS' ASSOCIATION-11, Yuen Ming Yuen
Road; Tel. Ad: Pilot; Telph. 168
K. K. Johnsen, manager
R. Ahrens
F. C. Armistead S. Baddeley A. H. Best
W. Boyd
F. Bremer
G. Buchanan M. Bull
W. V. Carmichael
W. Ehrhardt
E. A. Emanuel
P. Fenwick
A. Getley G. Gundry J. E. Inch W. Inman
H. Jannicke
J. S. Symons
J. Johns
F. Kalkofen
W. E. Kent
SHANGHAI
F. A. A. Kofod F. Lesage
B. Lundholm W. Mahon
T. F. W. Mammen
J. McCracken
J. W. S. Neeson
M. L. Nigg
P. E. Nova
W. Puton
F. Rafen
C. Rasmussen
G. B. Rea L. Sorensen H. Spear
J. Vaughan
D. L. Watson
司公燈電福品
Pin-foh-dien-ding-kun-sze.
PINFOLD, F., Electrical Engineer and Con- tractor, Lighting, Bells, Fans, Telephs.
Shipwork, etc.-17, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad Pinfold, Shanghai; Teleph: Office 2225, Godown 3225
W. L., Coggin, electrician. S. Hunsen,
do.
L. A. Aquino, salesman
Wholesale Department
H. W. Leang, accountant Y. S. Sha, compradore
Ké-chi-shu-yuen
POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION AND READING
ROOMS (CHINESE)--corner of Kwangse and Pakhoi Roads
爾普 Poo.te
POOLE, LAUDER & Co.--2, Yang King Pang; Tel. Ad: Glabellar; Codes: Lieber's,
Western Union, A.B.C. 5th. edit., and
Engineering Telegraph 22nd ed.
Geo. T. Poole
F. V. Lauder (London)
廠生祥
Zeang-sang-che-ch'i-tsang
POOTTING ENGINEERING WORKS AND SHIP
BUILDING YARD.
Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co.,
Ltd., Proprietors
POOTUSO
AND TUNGKADOO WILARVES Jnline, Matheson & Co., agents P. A. Chambers, local manager
A. W. Marshall, wharfinger (Poʊ-
tung)
M. J. Timmins, whartinger (Tung-
kadoo)
901
PORTER & Co., Ltd., E. E., Electrical Engineers and Contractors-14, Canton Road; Tel. Ad: Electrical; Telph. 570
POST OFFICES
#Mé-kwoh Su-sing-jooh
AMERICAN-36, Whangpoo Road; Tel, 136 Postal Agent John M. Darrah
Deputy Postal Agent-Harold M.
Hykes
Chief Clerk-Homer H. Wong
署公務驛英大
Ta-ying Yik-mo Kung-sze
BRITISH-7, Peking Road
Postmaster W. J. Solly (absent)
Act. do.-J. C. Kaye
Clerks S. Kahn, A. Bastien, F. F. Silva, C. A. Lopes, L. E. Bastien, F. M. G. Gutterres, G. Tadir, Chun Kwei, Ning Woo Siuyuen, Chang Kun Son, Wong Jih Chuan
館信書國法大
Ta Fah-kuo Su-sing-kwan
FRENCH-61, Rue Montauban
Receveur Principal-H. Dopfeld
Commis.-A. Trithard, E. Sauvage,.
L. Schibler
局政郵海上
Shang-hai Yau-ching-jooh
IMPERIAL CHINESE POST OFFICE 9, l'e-
king Road; Teleph. No. 443; Cable: Postos
Postal Commissioner-W. C. Lay
Actg. Deputy Postal Commissioner-J.
M. C. Rousse
District Acct. and Post. Asst.-J. H.
Cubbon,
Sec. and Postal Assistant-V. W. S.
Cotton
Actg. Deputy Postmaster-F. Scott Postal Officers A. M. Montell, W Scott, F. Hostnig, H. E. Borck, J. Rudland, F. Ahrendts, W. O'Neill, W. J. Singer, W. R. Smyth, R. M. Caudron, EA. L. Chaudoin, A. Abron
Auxiliaries H. P. Miller, T. P. F.
- -
Konig (caretaker)
局便郵國帝本日大
Ta Jih-pen Tie-ko Yu-pien-chu
JAPANESE-2, North Yangtse Road,
Hongkew
Postmaster and Acct.-T. Hino Postal Officers-S. Kubota, T. Shi- mizu, K. Iwanaga, K. Akana, A. Sugito, J. Yamagata, H. Iwasaki, Y. Takagi (asst. accountant), K Matsumura
902
SHANGHAI
Asst. Postal Officers-I. Nozomi, T. Eguchi, G. Kojima, T. Watanabe K. Iwasaki, Tung
Postal Clerks
Keng Shu, Ken Barm Ling, Wong jo Sen
局政郵國德大
Ta-te-kuoh-yau-chéng-chu
KAISERLICH DEUTSCHE POSTDIREKTION-
corner of Szechuen and Foochow Rds.
Postrat-C. Pleischer
Postinspeklerc―0. Grundmann
Postassistent--H. Buddeberg
館政郵國德大
Ta te-kuoh-yu-cheng-kuan
KAISERLICH DEUTSCHES POSTAMT - cor-
ner of Foochow and Szechuen Roads
Postdirektor Henniger
Postinspektor-W. C. A. Schmidt
Postsekretär-F. Pape
Postassistenten-Thies, Kox, Barkis,
Kloeppel
館信書國俄大
Ta-Ngoo-Kuo Su-sing-kwan
RUSSIAN 42 Boone Road
Postmaster-M. I. Musicant
First Assistant-E. O. Grosskopf
Second do. -W. L. Ingersleben
do. -G. W. Troizky
師律托華哈
* Hah-wo-tah
Platt, Teesdale & Macleod, Advocates
and Solicitors-Alexandra Building, 11
Yuen Ming Yuen Road; Tel. Ad: Retsam;
Telephone 127
Winfrid Alured Comyn Platt, barrister-
at-law
John Hermann Teesdale, solicitor
Ronald Neil Macleod,
Alfred Sidney Wilson,
do.
do.
Richard Eustace Stockdale Gregson,
barrister-at-law Geo. Villas, clerk
London office-
Stephenson, Harwood & Co.,31,Lom-
bard Street, E.C.
Park-lo
PREW & Co., W. F., Aerated Water Manu- facturers, Importers, Exporters, and General Commission Agents-22 Pao- shan Road, N. Honan Rd. Extension
O. A. da Cruz, manager
PROCURE
DES LAZARISTES--See under Churches and Missions
PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH, U.S.A.- See under Protestant Missions in China
PUBLIC HEALTH AND MARINE HOSPITAL SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES-15, Whangpoo Road
S. A. Ransom, M.D., medical officer in
charge
Fat-Young
PUBLICITY CO., THE-129, Szechuen Road, Advertising Agents, Bill Posters, Sam- ple Distributors, Advertisement Wri ters for Newspapers, Magazines, Pam- phlets, Folders, Booklets, etc.
C. H. Green, manager
*
Sung-quailing
QUAILING, S., General Contractor, Builder and Land and Estate Agent-80, Avenue Road
S. Quailing
QUEENSLAND GOVERNMENT AGENCY-41, Peking Rd. (private ad: Shanghai Club)
彚嘉
QUOIKA, A., Mechanical and Electrical
Engineer-104, Szechuen Road
RACE CLUB-See Clubs
Lih-shin
RACINE, ACKERMANN & CIE., Merchants-4,
Quai du Yang King Pang.
G. Racine
G. Ackermann A. Fabre
J. Gautier (Hankow)
A. Nordman (Tientsin)
M. Permezel
E. Blanc (Dalny)
H. Bonchoux (New York) F. G. Meira da Costa
T. Meira da Costa
A. Deronzier
A. Encarnacao P. Jaubert
C. Lorioz
A. Pierrugues (Tsingtau) R. B. Remedios M. Résillot
G. Rheims
A. de Rose
G. Sax
L. Vallet
R. Witschi
General Manager's
Compagnie Asiatique de Navigation
C. M. Joyce
E. Bigel Agencies
L' Urbaine of Paris Fire Insurance Co La Confiance of Paris Fire Insce. Uo. Forges et Chantiers de la Mediterranee,
(La Seyne), Shipbuilders
SHANGHAI
Cie. Internationale des Wagons-Lits Societe des Ciments Portland Artificiels de I'Indo-Chine (Haiphong) Permezel & Cie., Lyon Saint Galmier Water Co.
Booking Agents South Manchurian
Railway
RAILTON, H. E., Merchants, Patent Agent, Piece Goods and Sundries Broker-26, Szechuen Road; Tel. Ad: Railtonch,
RANGEL & CO., I. M., Commission Agents, General Store and Provision Dealers, and managers for Santo Antonio Bakery, -1051v, North Szechuen Road Ext.
I. M. Rongel J. P. Smyth
Jacob Pin Hing
RANSOM, S. A., M.D. Physician and Surgeon, Med. Officer, U. S. Consulate-General- 15, Whangpoo, Road; Tel. Ad: Ransom
Tsao-shen-chang
RECREATION CLUB-Ser Clubs
Yung-fung
REIBER, FR., Exporter-19, Kiangse Road;
Factory: 5, Hanbury Road
Fritz Reiber, manager
Oskar Reiber
A. Steinbach
泰履 Le-tia
REID, EVANS & Co., Merts.--5, Peking Rd.
J Samson
J. H. Craven
A
Kong-kahleekung-sz
REINFORCED & GENERAL CONCRETE WORKS --Office, Shop and Works: 4 and 6, Yang- tszepoo Road
Mow-woo
REISS & Co., HUGO-4, Canton Road; Tel.
Ad: Hannibal; Tel. No. 1129
Hugo Reiss
J.T. Tyack
F. E. Danenberg
Miss E. Pearson
Secretaries to-
Alma Estates, Ltd. Agents for-
David Sandeman & Sons, Ltd. London Assurance Corporation Lawson, Wilson & Co., Ltd.
Fu
Ta-wo
REISS & Co., Merchants-7, Hankow Rd.
F. H. Gamburg
H. E. Tomkins (Hongkong)
H. H. Girardet, signs per pro. P. W. Massey
(Silk inspector)
E. C. Belbin (insurance)
A. M. Cannan G. H. Dalton J. A. Dobbie A. E. Lanning V. R. Lightbody T. H. Orchardson E, Schwabe E. Pugh W. Siegler C. Smith
H. R. Staff
S. von Sulerzyski
H. Vogler
Agencies
do.
903
Law Union and Crown Insurance Co.
Yorkshire Insurance Company
美利 Li-me
REMY & Co., ALBERT, Commission Agents, Import and Export, Provisions Speciali- ties-2, Museum Road
利美 Mai-lee
RESTAURANT AUGUSTE Co.-57 and 59, Rue
Montauban
A. T. Barberini, manager
蝶簪 Loo.ling
REUTER, BROCKELMANN & Co., Merchants
-8, Peking Road; Tel. Ad: Heyn
Heinr, Heyn (Europe)
R. Fuhrmann (Hongkong)
H. Rümcker, signs the firm
W. Baur, signs per pro.
R. Pollak
H. Cheetham
F. S. Gonsalves
Agencies
Continental Insurance Co., Mannheim
Aachen & Munich Fire Ins. Co.
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co.
The Ocean Marine Insce. Co., Ld.
London
泰福 Fuh-tai
REUTER'S TELEGRAM COMPANY, LIMITED--
9, Kiukiang Road
Horace W. Griffiths, manager
*# Lu-lee-sxe-tai-lih-s
RICE, JOSEPH W., Attorney and Counsellor- at-Law-1A, Jinkee Road; Tel. No. 981.
RICHTER & Co., Importers, Exporters and Manufacturer's Agents-9a, Kiangse Road; Teleph. 2588
904
SHANGHAI
RICOU, M.D., Dr. (Drs. Fresson & Ricou)
R. P. Robert
弼匯 Wei-ber
ROBERT WEBER-Tel. 1118,
Frank, Jones, signs per pro.
J. Ezra
M. Michalowitz
J. Murray
來大 Da-lay
ROBERT DOLLAR Co., THE, Lumber, Ship-
ping and Flour-13, Nanking Road
E. K. Howe, manager
J. H. Dollar, assistant
Mrs. V. M. Pereira
A. J. Clark
Agencies
Dollar S.S. Lines Nelson Lumber Co.
Hammond Milling Co. Carnation Cream
ROBERTS & PAULSEN
W. C. Paulsen, Surveyor Lloyds' Re- gister of Shipping, Lloyd's Agents,
Local Insurance Offices and others
類百 Pak.shen
ROBERTSON, HORATIO, Commission Agent
and Freight Contractor-2, The Bund, second floor
Horatio Robertson
ROBERTSON, W. BRUCE, Bill and Bullion
Broker123, Bubbling Well Road
VEQ
Lo-pui-sun-kun-hong
ROBINSON PIANO Co., LD., Manufacturers, Importers, Tuners and Repairers, Music and Musical Instrument Sellers, Theatre and Concert Agents; and at Hongkong, Singapore, Panang, Bangkok, Tientsin; Tel. Ad Pianomaker; Telplı. 868
+
W. V. Robinson
J. Hervey Longhurst
C. Butcher
F. C. Flack
W. Pattison
Fu
Yung-wo
RODEWALD & Co., Merchants 41, Whang-
poo Road
J. M. Young
10-fa-wuy
RODEWALD & HEATH, Merchants
J. F. Rodewald
A. H. Heath
D. Fleming
亨魯 Lu-hting
ROBHRICH, F.(Representative of W. Wolf &
Sons)--9, Siking Road; Teleph. No, 2357
Yue-shing
ROHDE & Co.-11, Siking Road
Otto Meuser
H. Goecke
U. Streib
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCHES-See under
Churches and Missions.
Mow-zung
Rose, Downs & Thompson, Ltd. Engineers and Import Merchants, Manu- facturers of Oil Mill Machinery, Grab Dredgers & Excavators- Head Office and Works: Hull, England; 13, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Rosedowns; Teleph. No. 3407
A. E. C. Hindson, manager
Fu
Lau-wo-zung,
ROSENBAUM, Jos., Commission Agent-23
Nanking Road
利
Ching Lee
ROSENBAUM, F. W. (Successor), Saddle, Harness and Carriage Factory-Office: 31, Kiangse Road
H. Spathe, proprietor and manager J. Christophi, accountant
Factory-Wei Hai Wei Road
O. Reitzig, saddlery dept. (Peking) G. Wirt, carriage dept.
Mr 簿名行商通
Trung-sang-trong-ming-pe
ROSENSTOCK PUBLISHING Co., LD, THE Publishers of Rosenstock's Directory of
China and Manila; U.S. P.O. Box 974; Tel. 3009; Cable Address: Rosenstock- 27, Nanking Road
C. W. Rosenstock, dir. and genr, mang. E. W. Bauckliam,
Hongkong and China
manager for
Morgan Robinson, assistant
L. Wilson,
M. Fowler,
Miss P. Jorge,
do.
do.
do.
記華 Wha-che
Ross & Co., ALEX., Merchants
Alex. Ross (Liverpool)
A. C. Crighton, signs the firm
D. M. Graham
A. E. Lockyer B. B. Burnett A. A. Honnex
T
Loo-tah
SHANGHAI
L. Saubolle
905
Rora & Co., B., Commission Merchants-15,
Foochow Road
TAo-dou San-pan-tsang
ROWING CLUB-See Clubs
↑ ** Ta-ying-wei-ske
ROYAL SOCIETY OF ST. GEORGE-16, Sze-
chuen Road
Sir Pelham Warren, president
E. Jenner Hogg, vice
J. E. Denham, hon. treas.
B. A. Tarrant, hon. secty.
do.
院物博 Po-wen-Yuen
ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY (NORTH CHINA
BRANCH)-Museum Road
President-Sir Pelliam Warren, K.C.M.G. Vice-President T. W. Kingsmill
Do.
Charles Denby
Hon. Sec. John C. Ferguson, PH.D. Hon. Treasurer E. S. Little Hon. Librarian-Mrs. F. Ayscough Hon. Curator A. Stanley, M.D. W. E. Leveson, M.A. Lieut.-Col. C. D. Bruce Dr. S. P. Barchet
W. G. Lay
Rev. W. Nelson Bitton
A
Kung-ping
ROYAL INSURANCE COMPANY, LIMITED--10,
Nanking Road-Branch Office
C. A. Graves, resident secretary
C. J. G. Hill
A. J. Berthet
行銀勝道俄華
l'ah-ngo-tao-sheng-ying-hong
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK-15, The Bund; Tel.
Ad: Sinorusse
J. C. Berzendahl, manager
M. Speelman,
do.
S. Ermolaieff, sub-manager
A. Schulz, signs per pro.
C. J. L. Stewart do.
E. Hegenbarth do.
E. Kann,
do.
Q. F. Schick,
do.
C. Beckmann
J. V. Benavitch
G. S. V. Bidwell
W. A. Birchal
K. Boutyrskoff
E. Dietrich
F. A. Joseph
G. Lion
E. J. W. Loureiro
R. de Préville
E. Sandri
F. Schramek M. Shibbeth H. Staeger E. d'Almeida
L. H. Barretto A. P. Campos E. M. Carion R. P. Carneiro A. M. Collaço M. C. Collaço F. da Cruz
A. C. Danenberg L. A. G. Franco H. Fernandes A. F. dos Remedios J. M. dos Remedios
F. R. Xavier
R. F. Xavier P. M. Xavier G. A. Xavier A. Li Wen Cih K. S. Tcheou Ong Joseph Y. King-Zen H. F. Kung
RUSTOMJEE, R. V. & Co., Commission
Agents-3291, Seward Road
德怡 Yeentek
SAMUEL MCGREGOR & CO., LTD., Shanghai,
Dairen and Changchun
Douglas E. McGregor, managing dir. L. Walker, director
F. Hussy, accountant
Thos. L. Blair, secretary
W. H. Barham, shipping department H. M. Tibby,
E. Bruce Ball,
do.
F. Lange, M.I.M.E., M.I.E.E.
A. R. Duncan
M. Marshall
A. C. Burn
C. F. Harriss
J. E. R. Harris
W. A. H. Thomas
R. F. Wrench
F. B. de Roza
Miss G. M. Burnett
Miss E. Gande
Miss D. B. Hill
Miss J. McMurray
Dalny Branch- Č. U. Stuart
C. J. White
A. A. Penney
H. Goddard
W. H. Pearlman
Agents for
M. Samuel & Co., London
Samuel Samuel & Co., Ltd., Japan
906
SHANGHAI
Insurance
Royal Insurance Co., Ld. (Fire)
New Zealand Ins. Co., Ld. (Marine)
Shipping
"Glen " Line of Steamers
康利 Lee-Icong
SANDER, WIELER & Co., Importers, Ex-
porters and Shipping Agents-5, Jinkee
Road; Tel. No. 386; Cable Ad; Sander
Gustav Wieler (Hamburg)
Robert Becker
do.
Arthur Becker (Hongkong) Albrecht Sander (Shanghai) Carl Albers, signs per pro.
B. Mielek
M. E. Croissant Uhde Walther Henn Miss G. Heard
J. M. J. Silva
A. C. Souza
F. X. Ozorio
Agencies
"Austrian Lloyd's Steam Navigation.
Co., Trieste
Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin
K. K. Priv. Versigerungs Ges., Donau,
Vienna
Continental Caoutchoue and Gutta
Percha Co.
Lau So-sang
SASSOON & Co., LTD., DAVID, Merchants-
23, The Bund
Sir Ed. Sassoon, Bart., M.P. (England) Arthur D. Sassoon (England) Frederick D. Sassoon, do.
E. Shellim (Hongkong) D. M. Nissim (Shangliai).
A. Howard
M. Nissim J. I. Jacob
I. A. Levi D. M. Gubbay N. Isaacs E. M. Joseph
E. Joseph J. P. Alarcoun
S. J. Jacob
A. E. Legge I. S. Guffay
Agencies
do.
"Apear & Co.'s Calcutta-Yokohama Strs. South British Fire and Mar. Insce. Co.
Sin So-sang
SASSOON & Co., E. D., Mers.-9, Jenkee Rd.
Jacob E. Sassoon (London)
Edward E. Sassoon (London) Meyer E. Sassoon
S. A. Hardoon
Simon A. Levy
A. S. Gubbay
le.
S. J. Solomon E. M. Ezra
S. Moosa
N. E. B. Ezra E. Jonahı
J. Aaron
H. W. Booker
A. Benjamin J. Bennett J. Isaac
J. H. A. Toeg
J. Benjamin
Agency
China Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
SCANDINAVIAN SAILORS' HOME-22, 23,Dent
Lane, Hongkew
Tsang-yue
SCHÄRFF & Co., WALTER, Merchants-
33B and C, Nanking Road
Walter Scharff
O. Ritthausen, signs per pro. W. Rüdenberg F. H. Castro A. M. Larcina General Managers
China Flour Mill Company, Ld, Scharff's Oil and Bone Mills, Ld.
SCHÄRFF'S OIL & BONE MILLS, LTD.
Walter Schärff & Co., gen. managers
J. Schwarz, miller
A. Rohde, do.
W. C. Gillon, overseer
和世
SCHILLER & Co., Coal Merchants and
Parcel Express Agents-80, Szechuen
Road; Tel. Ad: Juvenile; Telph.: Office,
204; Godown,350
W. Poignand
G. Nielsen
T. Wigton, accountant
I. T. d'Aquino
T. Poignand
Agents for the Trans-Siberian Railway's
Baggage Department
SCHOOLS
Et Chung-si Shuyuen ANGLO-CHINESE COLLEGE
Rev. J. W. Cline, D.D., president Rev. J. Whiteside, B.A., bursar Geo. B. Fryer
Mrs. J. W. Chine, LIT. B. Miss M. G. Layer, PH. B.
Ying-hwa Shu-kwan
ANGLO-CHINESE SCHOOL (Church Mis sionary Society)-90, Range Road
W. A. H. Moule
G. F. C. Dobson, M. A.
SHANGHAI
907
E-vu-nse
BOOK ROOM & EDUCATIONAL DEPOSITORY-
30, North Szechuen Road
Edward Evans
Hugh Mackay
Miss M. E. Asken
Miss E. H. Taylor Miss Mason
Miss L. Porter Wm. K. Lee
IF EAT th Kong-shin-hol tong
CANTON GUILD SCHOOL--10, Ningpo Rd-
Z. H. Yoen, headmaster
Chang Soa Lim, Li Shui Chee,
Chang Chung Lun, asst. masters
Branch Schools: Wuchangand North
Szechnen Roads
堂拜禮大 Ta Lepatong
CATHEDRAL SCHOOL, SHANGHAI---Holy
Trinity Cathedral Compound
Committee Sir Havilland de Saus-
marez (chairman), The Trustees of the Cathedral, K. H. Beauchamp (treasurer), Dr. Milles, G. K. Nuttall and Rev. A. J. Walker (secretary) Staff
Headmaster Rev. F.Perry, B.A.(L'don) Asst. Rev. C. W. Pullen, M.A. (Oxon) Asst. Rev. A. J. Walker, M.A. (Cantab)
Asst.-Rev. R. G. Winning, B.A. do Asst.-Miss E. E. Newbery
館書務商文英海上
Shanghai-Ing-ven-song-wu-sze-kwan
ENGLISH COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, THE
2161B, North Thibet Road
L. H. Gabb, head master and pro.
Mrs. Gabb, head mistress
Liang Ping-kwan, teacher of English
and Mathematics
Zeen Zao-tsong, teacher of Chinese
Ling Tseng-sung, drill instructor
院學國德 Te-kwok-shio-yuen
GERMAN SCHOOL-1A. Astor Road
Committee-Consul General Dr. von
Buri, C. Fink, E. Gerecke, O. Meuser, Schab
C. Michelau, V.
Teachers-
Dr. M. Müller
H. Böhmer
A. Hozer
Miss Th. Hanstein
Miss H. Thierfelder
Mrs. Konnowski Mrs. A. Merrilees
E. Pultar
* Yung sui-yuen
HANBURY THOMAS SCHOOL-15, Boone
Road, Hongkew
Boys' Department
Supdt. and Headmaster W. T. Price 2nd Master-C. Vaughan
3rd Do. -W. C. Divers
Asst. Mistress--Miss A. W. Wilson Girls' Department
Head Teacher-Miss Mayhew
Assistant do. -Miss Stunt
Asst. Mistress-Miss Rust
Matron Miss Graham
堂學業實等高部傳郵
Yu-chuan-pu-kao-teng-shih-yeh-heuch-tang
IMPERIAL POLYTECHNIC COLLEGE -- 18,
Sicawei Road; Teleph. 306
堂學友洋西口虹
INSTITUTION
OF THE HOLY FAMILY
-See under Churches and Missions
Jeu-sa-oh-tong
JEWELL, MISS, Private Day and Boarding
School-31-32, Quinsan Road
Misses Janette Rosbrook, Evelyn L. Adams, B. PED., A. V. Smith, B.A.,. Helen F. Dearborn
Chung-hsi-nu-shu
MOTYEIRE SCHOOL-21, Hankow Road
Miss H. L. Richardson, principal Miss Elizabeth Claiborne
Miss Bessie Houser
Miss Lelia Tuttle
Miss Clara Park
Miss Julia Wasson
學公童華海上
Shanghai Wor-dung-kung-hoh
PUBLIC SCHOOL FOR CHINESE-Elgin and
Cunningham Roads
Committee: Rev A. J. Walker, M.A.
(chairman), J. C. Ferguson, H. A. J. Macray, Shen Tunho, Tso Lan- faung,
Head Master-G. S. Foster Kemp Assistant Masters--James Gill, H. E.
Gooch, Samuel Rayner
Até Si-tung Shu-yuen
SHANGHAI PUBLIC SCHOOL-Boone Road
Committee (appointed by Municipal Council)-A. S. P. White Cooper (chairman), D. E. J. Abraham, Dr. R. S. Ivy, H. de Gray, A. Sidney Wilson
Headmaster-G. M. Billings, B.A..
OXON.
908
SHANGHAT
Asst, Master-M.F.Gray, B.A., CANTB.
Do.
―
Do.
Do.
A. J. Stewart
-F.K.Ward, B.A.,CANTB.
-A. R. Cavalier
Do. -Wang Tzu Hung Teacher of Chinese (Mandarin)
Asst. Mistress-Miss F. Astill (Music)
Do. -Miss K. Binney
Miss E. Black
--Miss M. Cardwell (Art) --Miss E. Chaning-Pearce (Kindergarten)
Miss G. Martin
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
-Miss J. Patterson
Do.
Mrs. F. L. Garner, L.L.A.
MissL.Goodfellow(K'ton.)
-Miss M. Mercer
Mrs. M. G. Stuart
Do. -Miss Wheen (Kind'ton.)
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER'S SCHOOL, Conducted
by Marist Brothers--23, Nanzing Rd.
Rev. Bro. Antonin, director
Rev. Bro. Alboin, sub-director
·
Rev. Bro. Eustase, procurator
堂學女瑟若聖
Shen-ya-hei ne-ho-dong
ST. JOSEPH'S INSTITUTION-28, Rue Mon-
tauban, French Concession
Superioress-Mère M.deS.Philomène
Sz-nah-erh
SCHNORR, F. E., Import, Export and Com- mission Agent-123, Szechuen Road; Telph, 1892; Private Ad: 7, Wong Ka Shau Gardens
Agent and General Manager
A. Butler Cement Tile Works, Ltd.
Chic-sing
SCHOEN & Co., LOUIS-9A, Hankow Road
赫蜀 Chau-kah
Schuchardt & Schutte-24, Kiangse
Rd.; Machinery and Tools, Berlin,
London, New York, Vienna, Budapest,
Stockholm, Copenhagen, St. Petersburg, Shanghai, Tokyo; Tel. Ad: Initiative.
James G. Brown.
C. E. Schellhorn H. Fabig
Yuen-hang
SCHULDT & Co., Merchants, Export and Import-84, French Bund; Tel. Ad: Ostasia; Telph. 42
Ad. Ernst Schult
G. Harling (Hamburg)
I. Wiegand, signs per pro.
G. Friedrichs
F. Locht
J. M. Rencken
L. T. Tetley
F. M. do Rosarie
士亞地 Di-a-
SCHULTZ & Co., H. M., Merch.-24-20, Sze-
chuen Rd.; also at Hamburg and Tientsin
Oscar Mordhorst
Arthur Dabelstein
O. Bremer, signs per pro.
H. Berghanger
G. Kleffel
利嘉 Chalce
SCHWARZ, GAUMER & Co., Importers and
Exporters-36, Canton Road,
Max. Schwarz
Otto Gaumber (Hankow) Heinrich Thomsen (Hankow) Karl Schnabol (Hamburg)
H. Carsten A. E. Golding A. Schuetz General Manager's
The Sino-German Ore Co., Ltd.
泰禮
Li-Tai
SCHWEIGER & Co., LTD., ALOIS-5, The Bund; Teleph. No. 2344; Tel. Ad: Schweigera; Head Office: Vienna
Ernst L. Köhler, manager
H. Nichtenhauser
Paul Kunze (Hongkong) Richard Marle (Tientsin)
Ye-shing-loony.
SCHWEIGER IMPORT & EXPORT CO., LTD- 9A, Hankow Road; Head Office: Milan (Italy); Branches: Singapore, Manila, Hankow
R. A, Schweiger (Milan) M. Giuliani, manager
C. Carugo, accountont
C. Giannotti, bide inspector
SCOTT & BOWNE LD, (London)-53, Szechuen
Road
Agency
The American Trading Co.
Ma-li-sun
SCOTT, CHRISTIE & JOHNSON, Architects and Civil Engineers-27, Kiangse Road
Walter Scott, A.R.I.B.A.
J. Christie
G. A. Johnson, A.R.1.B.A.
R. E. Stewartson, A.R.L.B.A. H. Veitch
H. Robinson
J. W. Harris
泰祥 Zeang-thu
SHANGHAI
SCOTT, HARDING & Co., Merchants, Impor- ters of Piece Goods, Machinery, Sundries
-6, Peking Road; Tel. Ad: Scothar; Telph. 173
Partner
F. Ayscough Do.-L. J. Cubitt L. E. Canning G. D. Main
H. Reeve
K. Watson, engineer
R. Dennison, do.
C. Matthews, lift erector
R. Linnerstad, elec. engineer
Agencies
Liverpool and London and Globe Insce Bombay Fire & Marine Insce Co., Ld. with which is incorporated The Genl. Accident Assurance Corporation, Id. British Insulated and Helsby Cables
Ld., Cables, Telephones, etc. Archibald Smith & Stevens, Lifts Wailes, Dove & Co. (1906), Ld.,
Bitumastic Enamel
Joseph Booth & Bros., Cranes
W. H. Allen, Son & Co., Ld., Engines,
Dynamos, etc.
Mackie & Co., Islay and Glenlivet
Whisky
SCOTTISH UNION & NATIONAL INSURANCE
COMPANY-16, Kiukiang Road
H. F. Lawson, manager for the Far East
SBAMEN'S MISSION-See under Churches
and Missions
SEITZ F., Bill and Bullion Broker-16,
The Bund, or c/o Shanghai Club
威利 Lee Wei
SENNET FRERES, Jewellery, Watches, and Fancy Goods Dealer-31A, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Sennet; Tel.965; Branches in Hongkong, Tientsin, Harbin and Peking
M. Scnnet (Paris)
I. Halbronn
A. Aftalion M. Heimendinger
Y. Heimendinger
Auto-Palace, Motor Car Garage, &c.,
Avenue Paul Brunet; Teleph. 3465
E. Pinguet
0. Horner
*** Shu-shr-wai-dong 堂會手水
SHAFTESBURY HOUSE, For Sailors and
Solliers 6, Seward Road; Teleph. 1191;
Tel. Ad: Shaftesbury
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Crago, proprietors
Wee-fony-kung-sz
909
SHANGHAIBUILDING CO., THE--13A, Canton Road; Tel. Address: "Bellbros"; Codes: A. B. C. 4th and 5th Ed.; Tel. No. 2239
E. Bell, manager
Proprietors of Saw Mill and Lumber Depot, off Haskell Road and Thome Rd.
SHANGHAI BOOK STORE, THE-360, Nanking
Road and 60, North Szechuen Road
J. E. Ellis
Mrs. C. E. M. Hales, manageress
F. Limm
E. Jones
司公廣
Hwei-kwang Kung-sze
SHANGHAI BUILDING AND INVESTMENT Co.,
LTD., 13A, Canton Road; Tel. Ad: Invest-
ment; Telph. 540
C. Stepharius, chairman
J. A. Wattie & Co., secretaries and
general managers
G. W. Cooper
Doo Kin Pian
W, S. Chang
Tsoony-way
SHANGHAI CLUB-See Clubs
司公限有紗新海上
Shanghai-fong-san-yew-hien-kung-sz
SHANGHAI COTTON MANUFACTURING Co., LD. Mill No. 1: 68, Yangtszepoo Road;
Mill No. 2: 90, Yangtszepoo Road Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, agents
SHANGHAI CYCLING CLUB-See Clubs
威利 Le-vee
SILANGHAI DENTAL PARLOUR-48, Szechuen
Road, Suppliers of Dental Accessories,
etc.; Lessons given in Dentistry
Dr. R. Reid
Dr. J. Remedie Dr. F. McDonald
H. Fugita, asst.
***** Hwa-ing-da-yok-fong SHANGHAI DISPENSARY, THE, Wholesale and Export Druggists and Manufactur- ing Chemists-586, Foochow Road
Ya-soong
SHANGHAI Dock & ENGINEERING CO., LTD. (late S. C. Farnham, Boyd & Co., Ltd.), Dock Proprietors, Shipbuilders, Engi- neers, Electricians, Founders, Boiler- makers, &c.
Docks and Works:
Old Dock, Tunkadoo Dock, Cosmo- politan Dock, International Dock, New Dock, and Pootung Works
910
SHANGHAI
Head Office (Old Dock): 26 Broadway:
Teleph. No. 7; Tel. Ad: Farnham John Prentice, chairman of directors A. M. Marshall, director
Carl Michelau,
do.
David Landale,
dlo.
R. S. F. McBain, do.
H. A. J. Macray,
do.
do.
H. J. Craig,
Jas. H. Osborne, secretary
W. S. Burns, acting manager F. W. Alexander
G. von Arnim
J. R. Anding James Adamıs Wm. Bisset
J. G. Chambers John Conacher Jas. Crichton Jas. Grieve R. K. Hamilton Robt. Hawson1 Thomas W. Hay T. Hutchison W. M. Low Wm. McCrone Thos. McLelland R. McNeillage Thos. MeNidder W. P. Monro W. Y. Morrison H. Oclkers Jas. S. Ogilvie James Park G. Rattenbury Thos. N. Rennie Chas. Richards Jas. Ritchie Hugh Rodger Alfred Robinson T. J. Rowland Thos. Sands E. A. Singer Wm. Sinclair Arch. Taylor S. Terry William Todd W. H. Train D. Turnbull
James Vallance
M. E. H. Wells
W. S. Williamson
John Wilson
G. T. Wilson
Miss E. McPherson
Miss G. Rowland
J. Johnson, apprentice
T. Kagi, apprentice
耀廢
Kwany-yu
SHANGHAI ELECTRIC CO., Electrical and
Mechanical Engineers-131, Szechuen
Road; Tel. Ad: Kuangyu; Tel. No. 1119
W. Brandt, manager
麟威 Wei Lin
Shanghai Electric and Asbestos Co., Ld., Electrical Engineers and Government Contractors, Rubber, Oil and Paint Merchants-11A,Nanking Rd; Tel. Ad: Ohm
J. Frost, A.M.L.E.E., manager R. W. MacCabe, secretary
G. T. Finch, electrical engineer N. G. Beale,
W. A. Perry,
do.
do.
C. W. Lightbody, storekeeper
H. T. Allan, accountant
F. M. R. Remedios
L. J. Rodrigues
Sole Agents
Bell's Asbestos Eastern Agency, Ltd. Bowers' Rubber Works, San Francisco,
California
Easton Lift Co., Ld.
Express" Marine Oils
Suter Hartmann and Raltjen's "Red
Hand" Paints
Werner, Pfliederer and Perkins, Ld, Hotel Furnishers; Teleph.: Secretary and General Office, 286; Manager and Electrical Dept., 1196.
SHANGHAI FREE CHRISTIAN CHURCH-See
under Churches and Missions
SHANGHAI FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION
-11, Yuen Ming Yuen Road
Committee-W.D. Graham (chairman), J. Cochrane, G. Diestel, E.C.Emmett G. L. Campbell, C. A. Graves, W. A. Kirschstein, E. E. Parsons, J. E. Bingham (secretary)
SHANGHAI FURNITURE FACTORY, THE-88,
Avenue Road; Teleph. 3218
H. Konig
H. Covinth
V. Schneider
SHANGHAI GREEK BAKERY, THE-KI,
Boone Road.
S. C. Bothas & Lambros.
MZ Kung-wo.chang-mo-don
頭碼祥和公
SHANGHAI AND HONGKEW WHARF Co., LD. Jardine, Matheson & Co., generalagents
Duncan Glass, superintendent A. R. Wilson, accountant
C. J. Head, clerk
A. B. Severin do.
E. M. de Souza do.
J. Perpetuo
do.
E. F. da Silva do.
do.
do.
do.
C. J. Watson
W. Divens
W. Laidlaw,
G. M. da S. Rozario, clerk
S. da Luz, clerk Chucksan, do. J. Britto,
do.
SHANGHAI
R. H. Nash, wharfinger and ware-
houseman
J. Wheeler
J. Henderson,
C. Peters,
N. Martin,
do.
do.
do.
do.
A. H. Oliver, police inspector
P.A.H.Chambers, local mgr., Pootung A. W. Marshall, wharfinger, do.
W. P. Hamlin, local manager, Old
Ningpo Wharf
M.J.Timmins, wharfinger, Tunkadoo
wharves
司公氷造昌華
Wha-chong-cho-peng-Jung-se
SHANGHAI ICE, COLD STORAGE
AND
REFRIGERATION Co., LD., THE-Works: Yang-tze-poo
Directors A. D. Lowe (chairman), John Prentice, W. S. Burns and J. Grant Mackenzie
Geddes & Co., agents, 15, Canton Rd.
A Yip.Kwang Kung-sze SHANGHAI LAND INVESTMENT COMPANY,
LTD-2, Jinkee Road
E. Jenner Hogg, chairman
J. M. Young
C. W. Wrightson
H. R. Kinnear
E. C. Pearce
P. Peebles, F.S.I., manager
N. L. Sparkes, P.A.S.I., assistant
C. C. Stevenson, do.
J. Turner, overseer
D. Brown, do.
Agents-Gibb, Livingston & Co.
司公限有險保壽八洋華
Wha-yang-yun-shou-pao-hsien-yn-hien-
kung-sz
SHANGHAI LIFE INSURANCE CO., LD. - Heal
Office: New Telephone Building
R. H. Parker, managing director
A. J. Israel, secretary
S. A. Ransom, M.D., inedical referee Y. T. Lin, Chinese secretary E. A. Prince, accountant
F. G. Eça da Silva
Miss D. Russell
A. Lyons
F. Vida
Representatives at Branch Offices
R. A. Frost
T. C. M. Killeen
A. Ross
F. Abbot
H. S. Brand
P. Leyte
T. P. McAran
J. M. Eça da Silva Hijos de J. S. Tuason C. A. Landaw
C. G. Edwards J. P. Schooner
D. J. Reyneke F. Rairden
F. Heise
W. C. Wickersham J. J. Phillips J. H. Monson W. S. Neibulır
A. C. Taylor & Co. J. F. Eca da Silva Wang Po Chun Speidel & Co.
Sam Salomon
J. A. Simpson
所列陳器機生瑞
Say-sung-che-ch'e-xung-lit-so
911
SHANGHAI MACHINE Co.-Machine Show Rooms and Offices: 33, Nanking Road;
Tel. Ad: Ferro.; Telph. 831
Bucheister & Co., proprietors
Wm. Kuepper, signs per pro. L. Schmidt
A. Lindsay
H. Oliveira
A. McGregor (Hankow)
A. Brand
Sole Agents
do.
Schuchardt and Schuette, Berlin
Schaffer and Budenberg, Magdeburg
Kueppers Metallwerks, Bonn
Kirchner & Co. Leipsig
(See Buchleister & Co.)
舘旅家商
SHANGHAI MERCANTILE AND FAMILY HOTEL
-18, Nanking Road
J. A. Jackson, proprietor
匯女 Wen-wei
SHANGHAI MERCURY, LIMITED, Publishers, Printers and Bookbinders; Proprietors of "Shanghai Mercury," Evening News- paper; Celestial Empire," Weekly Newspaper
Directors--J. D. Clark, M.J.I. (chair- man and managing director), G. W. Noel, C. Fink, J. Morgan (secretary) Editorial Department
J. D., Clark, M.J.I., editor-in-chief R. D. Neish, editor
T. Sahara, sub-editor S. Hammond, reporter R. Wood,
do.
G. Wilkins, do.
912
Business department
J. Morgan, general manager
J. C. Porter, bookeeper
T. Y. Hung, clerk
Printing department
A. W. Starling, manager
F. da Silva, foreman
C. Timm, engineer
司公風力得
SHANGHAI
SHANGHAI MUTUAL TELEPHONE Co., LD.,
Directors N. Macleod (chairman), H. R. Hearson, F. C. Heffer, G. Henriot, Cecil Holliday, E. C. Pearce
L. Gustaf Oberg, sec. and genl. manager
J. H. Coggan, accountant F. J. Lamouroux, clerk H. Philip Cole, chief engineer John Crey, assistant engineer H. W. Strike
H. Linde
G. Milward
P. J. Conn
E. Linquist W. W. Monk
E. Tandberg, godown keeper, Yang-
tzepoo
M. Stoloff, assistant Miss L. Gaywood, superintendent
exchange
Supervisors Miss C. Trumm, Miss E. Bloch, Mrs. M. Mercer, Miss C. Taylor, Miss M. Herzberg, Miss B. Somme, Mrs. G. Evans, Miss F. Bloch, Miss B. Kaplan, Miss G.
Ferguson, Miss M. R. Thomson, Miss
F. A. Catelle, Miss E. Bourke, Miss D. L. Clifford
局路鐵金
SHANGHAI-NANKING RAILWAY (Imperial
Chinese Railways)
Board of Commissioners
Taotai
Chung Mun Yew (chairman and man- aging director) A. W. U. Pope, C.J.E. (engineer-in-chief), Taotai S. T. Sze, Jas. McKie, H. G. Gardner General Manager's Office; Tel. 3454
A. W. U. Pope, C.I.E., general manager E. R. Morriss, secretary and deputy
general manager
C. G. Golding, clerk Engineering Department; Tel. 888
A. C. Clear, engineer in charge of way
and works
F. W. W. Valpy, assistant engineer I. Tuxford, assistant engineer
J. S. Lee, chief draughtsman
W. J. Grey, electrical engineer
D. McKay, permanent way inspector
J. McKay
R. Frame,
C. G. Collis,
do.
do.
lo.
Accounts Department; Tel, 1925
H. Middleton, chief accountant C. C. Connell, asst. accountant E. Hall,
(lo.
J. D. Read, travelling insptr. of accts. P. Gaussen, asst.
do.
H. Harris, asst.
do.
W. O. Lancaster, clerk
J. A. Burke-Scott, do.
F. W. Jones
do.
H. E. Molloy
do.
do.
J. F. Pereira
R. M. F. da Roza do. Locomotive Department
E. J. Dunstan, M.I.M.E., superintendent A. G. Martyn, foreman boilermaker A. Brombilla, foreman
G. Tyler,
do.
A. T. Holt, locomotive inspector F. D. Mulvey, workshop foreman G. Lee, stores clerk
Traffic Department; Tel. 1929
A. W. U. Pope, C.I.E., manager H. P. Winslow, district do.
C. T. Liu, Chinese assistant manager H. T. Mousley, clerk
U. Alarakia,
C. A. Pike,
do.
do.
G. A. Johansen, do.
W. Burnell, station inspector P. G. Bigel, asst. do.
A. W. Beer,
do.
R. Glendenning, traffic inspector P. H. Phillips, J. T. Smith,
W.T.Gifford,travelling ticketexaminer
F. B. Clough,
S. M. Bander,
J. Glendenning,
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
Stores Department; Tel. 900
W. S. Andrews, actg. chief storekeeper Medical Department
J. P. Ziervogel, F.R.C.S., medical officer M. Urbanek, assistant
do.
SHANGHAI PILOT BOAT Co., Ld.-11,
Yuen Ming Yuen Road
K. K. Johnsen, managing director
SHANGHAI PUBLIC SCHOOL-See Schools
Wha-chang
SHANGHAI PULP AND PAPER Co., LD.-4,
Quai du Yang King Pang
Directors G. Racine (chairman), M. Spulman, C. E. Roach, V. Meyer, J. R. Patterson, Chu Pao San Mill at Pootung
C. O. Bojesen, accountant T. Suko, superintendent D. Emaroodeen, assistant
L
SHANGHAI
SHANGHAI RIFLE ASSOCIATION; Tel. Ad:
Trajectory
President D. Landale, chairman of the Municipal Council, Vice-Presi dents the Commandant, S. V. C., the Capt.-Supt. of Police, W. D. Little
L. A. Chill
C. Matthews
C. Richards
J. T. A. Zi
G. Kingsmill, hon. secretary (3, Yuhang
Road)
司公粉麵器機興中 Chung Hsing
SHANGHAI ROLLER FLOUR MILL Co., LD.-
Office: 277, Shantung Road
Fobes & Co., agents
SHANGHAI RUGBY UNION FOOTBALL CLUB
-See Clubs
SHANGHAI SOCIETY OF ENGINEERS AND ARCHITECTS-Meeting Room: 1, Yuen Ming Yuen Road
SHANGHAI & SOOCHOW TRADING CO., General Contractors, Horse and Cattle Dealers, Importers, Exporters, and
Commission Agents-5, Foochow Road;
Tel. Ad: Zandkoor
W. Rance, manager
C. S. J. Boland, secretary
司公皮確噐機新振海上
Shanghai Tannery Co., Ltd., The,
Tanners and Leather Merchants, 44,
Szechuen Road
P. Komor, secretary
T. R. Murphy, manager
Tai-woo-sze
SHANGHAI TIMES(Morning Paper)--18,Nan- king Road, John C. Ferguson proprietor,
John O'Shea, editor
J. W. Bains, sub-editor
A. M. Arue, sub-editor
Anderson, translator
J.
S. Hammond, reporter
R. Wood, D. F. Santos
N. A. Segueira
do.
Way-tuh-foorg
SHANGHAI TUG AND LIGHTER Co., Lo.- French Bund; Tel. Ad: Wheelock; Telph. 18.
Wheelock & Co., agents
B. Firth
P. L. Jones (Hankow)
E. B. Hayes
T. D. Gram E. C. Williams
D. Henry
Tug "Alexander"-O. Olin "Victoria "-H. S. Andersen "Samson A. J. Anderson
Vulcan" -C. Josefsen
64
D
"Siu Fuyun"-W H. Corneck
Fuble"-W. J. White "Rocket"-Wm. Ellis "Fokelin"-Wm. Jones
913
Wm. McMurray, superintendent
engineer
PADKEK Hsu-chang se-tau-kung-sz
SHANGHAI WASTE SILK BOILING Co.-Soo-
chow Creek
À, R. Burkill & Sons, agents
孕日 Yah-foo
SHARP & Co., H. J., Import and Export
Merchants-5, The Bund
SHELDON, BAKELS & Co.
B. P. Sheldon P. Bakels
J. Joannot C. A. Cable C. W. Wong
Shi-ko-lee
SUCKURY, Ĝ. J., General Broker and Com-
mission Agent-Palace Hotel
Ying-cheong
SHEWAN & Co., W., Merchants-3A, Canton
Road
Jack E. Ellis
J. Oller lessen
Y. Mano
J. L. Hang
Sin Kee-cheong
SHEWAN, TOMES & Co., Mchts.-8, Yuen- ming-yuen Road; Tel. Ad: Keechong; Telephone 287
R. G. Shewan (Hongkong) C. A. Tomes (New York) A. Babington (Hongkong)
N. H. Rutherford, manager R. A. Whitamore
D. E. Donnelly
H. McGhee
J. E. Burgess, engineering dept.
R. M. Smith,
do.
J. B. Guterrez
do.
A. E. H. Parrott
B. B. dos Remedios
E. A. de Garcia
29
A. M. Ferras
914
S. P. Lee
Y. L. Shen
Agencies
SHANGHAI
China and Manila Steamship Co., Ld. American Asiatic S. S. Co.
J. Marke Wood's Steamers Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Green Island Cement Company, Ld. Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co. Ld. China Light and Power Co., Ld. General Managers
The Whangpoo Wharf and Godown
Co., Ld.
Shun-pao-kwan
SHUN-PAO (Chinese Daily News)-163
Shantung Road
H. A. Pereira, manager and editor
SIA, T. B., M.D., D.D.S., Physician aud Dental Surgeon, Surgeon to Imperial Maritime Customs
Tei-tsang
SIEBER & Co.-6, Hankow Road
J. Sauvayre
G. Fezay
司公氣電子門西國德 Tuk-Kwok- Sai-Moon-Tsze-Dan-He-Kung-Sze
SIEMENS
SCHUCKERTWERKE, Technische
Bureau, Electrical Engineers, Manufac turers and Contractors, Szechuen Road-
A 105, Corner Jinked Road; Tel. Ad:
Motor; Telep. 1427
H. Meyer, chief engineer
G. Kroll, asst.
P. Eyme, engineer
do.
F. Thrue, do
Chr. Bonus,
clerk
O. Thieue,
do.
W. Bornhorst
do.
H. Scheppelmann do.
F. Engels, installation foreman
W. Handel,
O. Meywald,
Siemens Schuckertwerke G. m. b. H.,
Berlin and Nuernberg
Siemens & Halske A. G., Berlin and
Nonnendamm
Gebrueder Siemens & Co., Berlin and
Lichtenberg
Zay-züng
Siemssen & Co.
A. Gueltzow (Hamburg) N. A. Siebs do. A. Fuchs
do.
O. Struckmeyer
H. A. Siebs (Hongkong) E. Siebert (Tientsin)
G. Diestel, signs per pro. P. Kohlschmidt, do." F. Berndes C. H. Rogge W. Schmidt F. Hach
F. Gates
W. Lüehrss
O. Schneider
C. W. Rost
Miss E. Buhmann
G. R. Barry, fur inspector
M. Pfenninger, silk inspector
A. Rauchholz, M.E. (engr. dept.)
R. Stutzke, M.E.
L. Block
G. Weber
H. Zernin, E.E. (electrical dept.)
T. Artindale
J. C. d'Aquino
J. C. d'Aquino, Jr.
J. Xavier
F. Huebe, signs per pro. (Hankow) Edo A. H. Siebs
H. von Appen
Th. Kleinschmidt, M.E. (engr. dept.) W. Gosewisch
H. Sebes (Tientsin)
H. Rothhardt
S. Eichner, fur inspector
do.
Agencies
do. (Kirin)
K. Boloni, godown keeper
Osw. Mueller, engineer (Tsingtau)
H. Schlichtinger, installation foreman
(Tsingtau)
J. Kreutzer,
E. Holitscher,
(Tientsin)
do.
R. Liessmann, installation foreman do. Bernhardt,
do.
do. (Hankow)
do.
G. Wielandt, engineer F. Metzger, clerk A. Herden, installation foreman do. Agencies
Siemens Bros. Dynamo Works, London
and Stafford
Siemens Bros. & Co. Ltd., London and
Woolwich
Martins' Bank, London
Steamship Companies Flensburger Dampfschifffahrt's Ges-
ellschaft von 1869
M. Struve, Blankenese
Fire Insurance Companies Sun Fire Insurance Office, London L'Union Fire Insurance Co. Ld., Paris Allianz, Versicherungs Aktien Ges,
Berlin
Marine Insurance Companies Allgemeine Seevers. Ges., Hamburg Allianz Vers. Aktien Ges., in Berlin Associated Assur. Cos. Ld., London Assecuranz Union v. 1865, Hamburg Badische Assecuranz Ges. A. By
Mannheim
Bayrischer Lloyd, Muenchen
SHANGHAI
Comitate delle Comp d'assec. Marit.
di Genova
Duesseldorfer Duesseldorf
Allgem. Vers. Ges.,
Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges., Berlin Deutsche Rüeck & Mit Vers., Serlin El Dia Comp. Anon de Beguros
Cartagena
Fortuna Allg. Vers. Act, Ges, Berlin Forsakring Actiebolaget Hansa, Stock-
hohm
Fonciere Pester Versich., Anstalt,
Budapest
Hanseatischer Lloyd, Hamburg Hull Underwriters' Association, Ld. Heilbronner Vers. Ges., Heilbronn Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin Jakor, Moskau
Münchener Rueckversicherungs Ges.
Muenchen
Neptunus Assecuranz Co., Hamburg Niederrheinische Güter Assec. Ges.
Wesel
Norddeutsche Versich. Ges., Hamburg Nord. West Deutsche Vers. Ges. H'burg Oberrheinische Vers. Ges. Mannheim
rovidentia Wien
Phoenix, K.K., priv. Oester., Wien Rheinisch Westfl. Rueckvers. A. Gos.
M. Gladbach
Rheinisch Westfl. Lloyd, M. Gladbach Salamandra, St. Petersburg
Samarang Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Schweizerischer Lloyd, Winterthur Schweizerische National, Vers. Ges.,
Basel
Union Internationale Cie. Ass., Antwerp United Dutch Marine Insurance Cos.,
London
Universal Underwriting Assoc., L'don United Companies of Maritime Insur- ance, first section of Austrian Lloyd, Trieste
United Rhenisch Marine Insurance
Cos., Bradford
Vaterlandische Transport Vers. A. G.,
Elberfeld
Würtembergische Transport Vers Ges.
Verein, Hamburger Assecuradcure,
Hamburg
司公限有絲繅昌信
SIN CHONG SILK FILATURE COMPANY-37,
Jessfield Road; Office: 1, Kiukiang Road
E. Denegri, agent and manager
Mrs. M Fasciolo, assistant
Miss M. Marnello,
Miss M. Paiori,
Don Tz Wey
do. do.
Wong Yon Kong Chinese managers
915
司公限有館報聞新
Sin.wan-pao-kwan
SIN WAN PAO, LTD., Chinese Daily News-
paper-19, Hankow Road
J. D. Clark, M.J.I., proprietor and editor J. Morgan, manager and accountant J. B. Wong, translator
A
Sing-ka-kung-sz
SINGER SEWING MACHINE Co.-P. 470 Nan-
king Road; Tel. Ad: Regnis; A 1. Code
行銀比華
'ha-ps-n ny-hong
SINO-BELGIAN BANK-20, The Bund: Head
Office: Brussels; Tel. Ad: Sinobe
}co-mana
P. Ramlot, W. A. Hòelin, M. Demets O. Walter L. Straetmann L. Le Hane G. Fesch
P. Rickmann
o-managers
F. G. M. Marques
A. Marques-Silva
A. J. R. Roza
Woo Kee May, compradore
法華 Haw-fa
SINO-FRENCH ENGINEERING SYNDICATE 9,
Yang King Pang, French Concession Tele. 952
Tien-foo
SLEVOGT & Co., Merchants-6 and 7 Yuen-
ming-yuen Road
M. Hoerter
H. Beck, signs the firm K. Blickle, signs per pro. M. Hayneшan, F. Peltner C. Frischen
C. Lolirentz W. Schoenebeck J. M. Botelho
Agencies
do.
Rhenish Marine Insurance Assoc., Ld. Union Assurance Society of London Anglo-German Brewery Co., Ld.
Sze-loan-ye-sang
SLOAN, ROBT. J., M.D., Consulting Medical Director Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States-153, Bub- bling Well Road; Tel. Ad: Fortibus
Ma Fuh-zin
SMITH & Co., R. LAWRIE, Furniture Manu
facturers, Cabinet Makers-28 and 29, Nanking Road
1
29*
916
fq**
SHANGHAI
Nee-foong-ning-hong
SOCIETÀ COLONIALE ITALIANA, Filiale Bancaria di Shanghai-30, Szechuen Road; Head Office: Milan
Agents
L'Universo Marine Insurance Co. Generali Marine Insurance Co.
Alleanza Marine Insurance Co.
Transito Forwarding Agency
耣美
Mei-lun
SOCIETA COMMISSIONARIA, d'ESPORTAZIONE,
Merchants (Piece Goods and Sundries)-
63, Szechuèn Road; Tel. Ad: Milanco; Telph. 1118
SOCIÉTÉ DRAMATIQUE FRANÇAISE See
Associations
SOCIETY OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL-See
Associations
SOLINA & Co., R. V., General Store and Wine Merchants -3,291,Seward Road and 9, Bubbling Well Road, and Hankow Rd.
R. Viccajee Solina (absent)
R. Hormusjee
P. Bezonjee Shroff
M. B. Shroff
Rutton Viccajee
A. Dorabjee (Hankow)
K. Sarkari
do.
咪沙 So Mee
SOMERH & Co., B. A., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-14, Peking Rd.; Tel. 1660
B. A. Somekh
Saul Somekh
美蘇 Sn-mei
SOMEKH, D. SILMAN, Real Estate and
General Broker-c/o Palace Hotel
司公織紡記瑞
Soy-che-fang-ché-kung-tz.
SOY CHEE COTTON SPINNING CO., LD.-14,
Yangtzepoo Road
M. Mittag, chairman
A、 Hoettler, vice-chairman
Directors M. Stempel, Woo Saw-chin,
Ho Hsien-chuen
H. E. Arnhold, general manager
Ed. Grosser, secty.
J. Saxon, mill manager
R. H. Heard
A. Holroyd
Edwin Redmond
William S. Ford
SOY LUN SILK FILATURE Co.,
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., gl. managers
嘉瑞 Soy-ka
SOYKA, L., Import and Export-54 and 55,
Szechuen Road; Tele. 456
L. Soyka
O. Soyka
M. Weil, sigus per pro.
E. von E. Gamburg Egon Pokensy O. Drechsler A. Woflgumich
O. Spitz
O. Souza
司公粉麵利寶賜
Se-pau-lee-min-fun-kung-sz
SPERRY FLOUR Co.- 13, Nanking Road
J. R. Hargreaves, manager for North China
Mow-sang
SPUNT & ROSENFELD, Importers and Ex-
ports-55, Range Road
J. Spunt
A. B. Rosenfeld M. Simmons A. Saliter
H. T. Lee
Woo Ping-wah
Chan You-say, compradore
Agencies
Alex. Ferguson & Co., Glasgow, P.&O.
Whisky
Victor Clicquot, Reims, Champagne Lyrophon Werke, Berlin
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY-See Associations
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER SCHOOL-See under
Schools
喬 Jo-Ge
ST. GEORGE'S HOTEL Co.-205, Bubbling
Well Road; Tele. 184
社會英大 Taying-wei-she
ST. GEORGE'S SOCIETY-See Associations
ST. JOSEPH'S INSTITUTION
ST. PATRICK'S SOCIETY-See Associatious
福永 Yung-folk
STANDARD LIFE ASSURANCE Co.,,
Eastern Branch-2, French Burd
Far
Directors H. R. Kinnear (chairman),
Leslie J. Cubitt, Duncan McNeill,
Geo. Miller
Neil Macleod, M.D.,-medical officer F. Loch Trevor, secretary George F. Collyer, assistant S. M. Wallace, cashier
李美 Mei-foo
SHANGHAI
葉寶 Pao-yek
917
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK-
21, The Bund
manager
H. T. Hancock, asst, lo.
C. H. Blake,
H. J. Everall
R. S. Adams, auditor
H. Barlow, capt.
J. D. Bentley, wharfinger
J. H. Bontkés
E. J. Brown
W. J. Brown Clinton, Burns Miss M. Cattelle
M. C. De Souza
H. V. Devereux
Miss M. Goodfellow
A. Theo. Harr, asst. accountant
N. O. Hashaghn
C. H. Kragli
S. H. Lawrence, constraction engr.
Geo. Lynch
Robt. Leisk
J. Mills
Wm. Me. Kee
Miss J. McPherson R. P. Mofftit
Miss M. M. Owres
H. A. Peterson
S. J. Powell, construction engineer
C. W. Quelchi
Wm. L. Richard, chief accountant
W. Richter
W. H. Rogers
D. M. Sinclair, engineer
W. C. Sprague
J. Stellingwerff
K. Takaiwa
W. H. M. Taylor
E. Thacher
Ivor Thomas
B. Thompson, asst, wharfinger
C. Thompson
E. M. van Bergen
J. W. Waddilove
F. B. Walker
T. Wood
A. N. Woodward
E. B. Wyatt
興世
STECHMANN, ARTHUR L., Import and
Export, Sole Importer of the "Minimax"
for the Far East-1A, Peking Road
K. Behrand
Sz-teng-peh
STEMPEL, M. A., General Agents-c/o Mel- chers & Co.; residence: The Bund, No. 6
M. A. Hempel
Le Schweizor J. L. Sequeira
STRAUS & Co., Feather Dealers - -7, Kiangse
Road, Factories: Berlin;
Hans Koch, representative for China
and Japan
富徒司
See-do-foo
STRUVE, H., Ship and Freight Broker-1A,
Jinkee Road, Ist floor
Da-tsang
SULZER, RUDOLPH & Co.-12, Hankow Rd.
Ed. Sulzer (Zürich)
Ed. Rudolph, do.
Chas. Rudolph, do.
A. Jost, signs per pro.
C. Muller
G. G. da Costa
#A 松公 Kung-elü
SUN INSURANCE OFFICE, Far Eastern
Branch-4B, Peking Road
W. D. Grahanı, manager
H. M. Gorton
V. H. Webber
C. M. Maher
J. Pereira
J. Rodrigues
Shanghai Agents-Siemssen & Co.
Brand Bros. & Co.
司公壽人明永理經茂公老
Lau-kung-mow-ching-lee-yung-ming- zing-sui-kung-sz
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE CO., OF CANADA
Head Office: Montreal; North China
Branch: 22, Kiangse Road
Moss Barnes, manager
Ilbert & Co., residont secretaries
門衙司使錢刑英大
Ta Ying hsing-ch'ien-shih-ssu Ya-mên
SUPREME COURT FOR CHINA AND COREA-
H.B.M.'s
Judge Sir H. W. de Sausmarez (abt.)
Asst. Judge-F.S.A.Bourne,C.M.G.(abt.) Actg. do. Lindsey Smith
Crown Advocate--H. P. Wilkinson Registrar and Coroner---G. W. King Chief Clerk-W. R. Strickland Act. Asst. Clerk-A. A. Macdonald Marshall T. E. N. Rosser Usher E. H. Barnett
SUZUKI & Co.-40, North Soochow Road; Kobe, Moji, Osaka and Shanghai; Tel Ad: Yanagida, Shanghai
918
法美施商瑞 Sze Mei Fan
SHANGHAI
SWEDISH-ASIATIC CONSULTING ENGINEER-
ING Co., L., Civil and Hydraulic En-
gineers 24, Kiangse Road
J. G. Richert, C.E., M.P., director
(Stockholm)
Carl Schmidt, C.E., magr. (Stockholm)
Hugo, von Heidenstam, c.E. (S'hai.)
德寶 Pau-tek
SWEETMEAT CASTLE, Collaço Brothers,
Proprietors, Pastry Cooks, Confectioners
Bakers, Wine and Spirit Merchants-36,
Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Leojoe
J. R. Čollaço
R. J. Collaço
J. L. Rozario
隆茂 Mow-loong
SWIFT & COMPANY of Chicago, U.S.A.,
Manufacturers of Provisions and all An-
imal Products-32, Nanking Road; Tel. Ad: Swift; Telph. 1423
C. G. Hannan, manager
Aug. G. Wolf, accountant
SWIMMING BATH CLUB-See Clubs
SWISS FARM-87, Bubbling Well Road
Jas. Robinson, proprietor
SYS COMPANY, PETER, Manufacturers and sole Proprietors of the Peter Sys Re- medies-20, Broadway
P. O'Brien Twigg, manager
Fu Fuh-wo
TABAQUERIA FILIPINA, Commission Agents, Manufacturers of Manila Cigars, Impor- ters of Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco & Smokers Sundries-39 and 40, Nanking Road
J. Whey, manager
P. C. King, accountant
S. I. Zau
T. Dzau
H. Mailong S. W. Sung
S. T. Canning
T. Y. May
C. Quien
Y. Wood
T. Polking
Factory
P. S. King, manager
T. C. Zeang, sub-manager
Ch. Zurn, foreman
T. Wong
Agencies
Anglo-Egyptian Cigarette Co., Cairo Army & Navy Tobacco Co.
Fellow's Compound Syrup of Hypo-
phosphites
培泰 Ta-pei
TABBAH SALEH & AREF, General Merchants and Commission Agents-117, Szechuen Road
Saleh Tabbah (Beyrouth)
Aref Tabbah
Omari Mahomed (Calcutta)
Kang-hsing
TATA Sons & Co., Merchants and Com- Agents-65, Rue du Consulat HeadOffice: Bombay; London Office: Tata, Ld., 6, Lombard Court. Branches: Tuticorin, Rangoon, Shanghai, Kobe, Osaka, Yoko- hama, Paris and New York
D. J. Tata
R. J. Tata (London)
R. D. Tata (Paris)
B. D. Tata, signs per pro.
B. H. Dastur
D. Framjee
Agency
The Tata Iron & Steel Co., Ld., Bombay
Kwang-foong
TAUMEYER & Co., Merchants-corner of Kiangse and Foochow Roads; Tel. Ad: Taumeyer; Telephone 1939
A. Hoettler
H. Steen
TELEFUNKEN EAST ASIATIC WIRELESS TELEGRAPH Co., Ld.-1, Astor Rd.; Tel.
Ad: Telefunken; Tel. No. 2033
J. W. Bargmann (Berlin)
局報電國中
Chung-kwoh deen-pau.kiuh
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
W. P. Chow, director general
Y. C. Tong, chief supdt.
T. K. Tow, traffic supt.
F. N. Dresing, foreign chief supt.
Ta-lay
TELGE & SCHROETER, Mchts.-16, The Bund
Max. Struckmeyer
Arnold Berg
F. Bahnson
W. Meller
F. Bergmann
Geo. S. Aveyard
THACHER, W. J., Yangtsze Pilot-20, Haskell
Rd.; Teleph. No. 1937
THOMAS BROS., Merchants and Commission Agents-16, Szechuen Road; Tel. Ad: Tartarean; Telep. No. 1379
H. R. H. Thomas
SHANGHAI
919
P. J. Williams J. Main
A. J. Souza
THOS HANBURY INSTITUTE AND SAILORS HOME-16, Broadway, Hongkew; Tel. No. 1140
Manager-F. J. Drakeford
Committee Rev. A. J. Walker, M.A. (chairman), W. F. Inglis, C. Studd, C. M. Manners, F. H. Armstrong, H. J. Brett, D. Landale Hon. Treasurer A. R. Duncan
Director-Rev. R. G. Winning, B.A.
THOMSON, G. H. & N., Chartered Account-
ants-2, Kiukiang Road
亨信 Sun-hang
THORESEN & Co.-15, Canton
;
Road Tel. Ad: Over, Shanghai; Shipping Agents, Merchants and Engineers, Head Office: Det Oversoiske Compagnie, Christiania; Branch Office: Aagaard, Thoresen & Co., Hongkong
Olaf Thoresen
Bjarne Aagaard
(Hongkong)
A. Schou-Sorensen ( do.
Olaf Janson, E E., M.E., engineer
Gustav Jensen
Erling Koren
Miss M. E. Roberts
Tai-zun
TIMM, C. F., Merchant and Commission Agent 122, Szechuen Road; Tel. Ad: Chinatim
Toh-sze
TоCHE & CIE.,.).-4,Quaidu YangKing Pang
J. Toche
L. Marthoud
F. Vin
P. Marthoud
Tu-e
TORG & READ, Share and General Brokers
-2, The Bund
RE. Toeg
A. H. Read
G. J. W. Morgan
Too, S. E.-2 The Bund; Residence: 6
Seymour Road
TOURING CLUB, ITALIANO-See Clubs
TRENCHARD DAVIS, W. H.-22, Kiangse Rd.
Agencies
Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Merchants Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Henry Heal & Co., Lri., London
TREVOR, F. Locu 2, French Bund; Secretary of Far Eastern Branch of Standard Life Assurance Co.
Tuh.wo-sz
TREVOR-SMITH & Co., J., Merchants--8, Kiangse Road; Tel. Ad: Trevor: B. P. O.
Box 139
J. Trevor-Smith
W. J. Monk
Agency.
National General Insurance Co., Ld.
TUCKER, G. E., Bill and Bullion Broker-co
Shanghai Club
廠渡家董
Tuong-ha-doo isang
TUNKADOO DOCK AND SHIPYARD
Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Ld.,
proprietors
Sing kung wo
TURNER, E. W., Consulting Engineer-12,
Quai du Yang King Pang
房藥濟普美英
Ying-mei-poo-chi-yah-fong
TWIGG, P. O'BRIEN, Family Dispensing and
Wholesale Chemist 20, Broadway,
H'kew
P. O'Brien Twigg, M.P.S.
D. Lewis
H. K. Maynard N. G. Crymble
X
Oo-li-man
ULLMANN & Co., J., Watch Manufacturers, Jewellers, Opticians, and Fancy Goods Dealers-564P, Nanking Road, and at Hongkong, Tientsin, and Chaux-de- fonds; Telph. 329
J. Ullmann (Europe)
M. Bernheim
E. Bernheim (Hongkong)
L. Blum,
G. Blum
L. Dreyfus
M. Goldschmidt
do.
Hang Tah
UNDERWOOD AND UNDERWOOD,Stereoscopic Goods; No. 1 Broadway (First Floor); Tel. Ad: Views
*** Kah-tsiu Sin-wun.che UNION, THE, Weekly Newspaper-244,
Nanking Road
W. R. Kahler, M.J., editor and pro.
UNION CHURCH-See under Churches
920
安保 Pau-an
SHANGHAI
UNION INSURANCE SOCIETY OF CANTON,
LIMITED (Marine Insce)-4, Jin Kee Rd.;
Tel. Ad: Union; Telph. 107
James Whittall, agent
C. H. P. Hay
T. C. Vernon
Agencies
China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld.
London & Provincial Marine & Genl.
Ins. Co., Ltd.
安來 Lei-an
UNION OF PARIS, L., Fire Insce. Co., Ltd.-
31, Rue du Consulat; Tel. Ad: Uniocie
UNITED ASBESTOS ORIENTAL AGENCY, LD.-
4, The Bund; Tel. Ad: Unibestos; Teleph.
3326; Dodwell & Co., Ld., Agents
F. C. Focken, superintendent
W. S. Campbell
C. W. O. Mayne
門衙使察按國美大
UNITED STATES COURT FOR CHINA
Judge Hon. Rufus Thayer
U. S. Attorney A. Bassett
Clerk of Court-F. E. Hinckley
Marshal-M. II. O'Brien
UNITED STATES STEEL PRODUCTS EXPORT
Co.-24A Kiangse Road, Room 13
J. W. Gallogher, genl. representative
W. H. Dietrich, resident engineer
昌 普 Poo Chang
UNIVERSAL SUPPLY Co.-18, Nanking
Road; Tel. 2330
Maurice Benjamin
II. J. Ossenbeck
J. John
F. Hazel
H. James
通匯 Wei-tung
UNIVERSAL TRADING Co.-66A, Szechuen
Road (corner of Szechuen and Ningpo
Roads); Telephone No. 1474
Chas. Child, manager
H. T. Lamb
C. D. Woo, clerk
行油噐機裕光
Kwany-yue-ke-she-yu-hong
VACUUM OIL COMPANY-1, The Bund;
Tel. Ad: Vacuum
A. H. Bottenheim, general manager
W. J. Reid, asst.
P. Klyhu
W. A. Duncan
do.
J. Hunter C. A. Sullivan C. H. Morita R. M. Nobleton Miss B. Coulson A. R. Burtenshaw C. Pulun
H. Henry
(Hankow) dlo.
(Tientsin)
P. S. Stellingwerff, do.
H. Diederichsen & Co., (Tsingtau,
Chefoo, Vladivostock) Mitsui Busan Kaisha (Dairen) N. S. Piersdorf (Chinking) T. Y. Pierson & Co. (Ningpo)
VAN DER LOO & Co., F. A., Manufacturers Agents and Commission Merchants-2, Jinkee Road; Cable Address: Nemoj Telephone 2530
F. A. van der Loo, partner
J. H. W. Reynvaan, do.
C. van Dongen
Miss J. Ozorio
Agencies
"Veluvine" Paints and Varnishes for Houses, Ships, Roofs, Railroads, etc., etc.
Horlick's Malted Milk Co.
The Kny-Scheerer Co., New York, Berlin Surgical Instruments, Hos- pital and Laboratory Supplies Spyker Motor Cars
James B. Clow & Sons, Sanitary
Plumbing
Wan-lai
VAN LAER & Co. Merchants-8B., Kiu-
kiang Road
J. L. van Lacr
E. Dommisse
Koo Sing Gee
Agencies
Samarang Sea and Fire Insurance Co.
Java Sea & Fire Insurance Co. Trans-
atlantische Guterversg; Gesells.
林維 Tee.ling
VERING, C., Engineer and General Con- tractor, Dredging and Harbour-Works, Channels, Railroads, River Corrections, Wharves, Reinforced Concrete Works, etc.-12, Yangtszepoo Road; Teleph No. 2399; Lower Pootung (C. S. S. Co.'s New Wharves); Teleph. No. 3060 H. Vering, C. E. (Hamburg) C. Vering, Dr. jur. (Hamburg) J. Stickforth, c. E. (Tsingtau) 12, Yangtszepoo Road
C. Heisch, office manager and account. W. Ling, clerk
Lower Pootung
F. Selinock, managing engineer
H. Bohne, diploma engineer
SHANGHAI
Foremen H. Schuett, J. Dlugosch,
P. Seidel, C. Peters, W. Boege, M. Reimann, G. Froehlich, O. Breitag, L. Euler
Kung shing
VICCAJEE & Co., F., General Merchants and Commission Agents-15, Foochow Road VICKERS, SONS & MAXIM, LD.-32, Victoria
St. London
R. Bauld, technical representative, 51,
Bubbling Well Road
Nga-kouh-yu-yin-cho
VICTORIA NURSING HOME-Range Road
Miss Lee, matron
VICTORIAN GOVT. COMMERCIAL AGENCY
J. M. Sinclair, agent
W. E. Stanley
# Ko-fa ya fong Kung see Voelkel & Schroeder, Ld. "Pharmacie de l'Union," Wholesale Chemists-37, Nanking Road
H. Schlotten
A. Gammie
A. Goehring
F. Eter
A. Meyer
Agency
Bukefeld Filter Co.
VOLUNTEER CORPS-See under Military
師律大威佛
VORWERK & VOIGTS, Rechtsanwälte--6,
The Bund; Tel. Ad: Anwalt; Telephone
273; also at Tsingtan
F. Vorwerk, Dr., jur., lawyer
F. Voigts,
do.
VULCAN FOUNDRY, LD, Locomotive Buil- ders-244, Kiangse Road: Tel. Ad: Mes- meric; Tel. 2063
H. P. King, Resident Representative
R. W. Archer, assistant do.
隆萬 Van-loong
VULCAN IRONWORKS, L.-Head Office
and Works: 45, Yangtzepoo Roarl;
Engineers, Shipbuilders, Boilermakers,
etc.; Telephones 1882 and 1884
J. D. Strang, manager
C. A. Skinner, secretary
R. C. B. Fennell
C. A. Fromm
F. Lloyd
T. Nimmo C. E. Pearson
K. R. Simpson H. Tod W. J. Wilson
R. Young
Miss Mansfield
司公皮象 Puen pe Kung sce
VULCANIZATOR CO., THE-1, Dent Lane
A. M. Corti
Wm. Hoffmann, manager
Wha-sing
921
WADMAN, H. P., Corresponding Associate, Association of Average Adjusters, Lon- don-5, Hankow Road
D. Edwin Jones
S. Kusaba
Wah-lee
WALLACE & Co.-Tel. Address: Wahlee
British P.O. Box 225
綸
Wa-loong
WALLEM & Co., Shipowners, Gen'l. Brokers, and Steamship Agents, Coal Contractors
and Merchants-94, Hankow Road; Tel. Ad: Wallem; Telph. 1188 and 2299
H. J. Wallem
Bernt Rein, signs per pro.
A. E. Robson
A. Kjoss, capt. s.s. "Oscar II."
O. Stoltz, signs per pro. (Hongkong)
Agencies
Ping-An S. 8. Co.
Norwegian Trading Co.
Kyriazi Frères of Cairo
Hammond Milling Co., Seattle
Norsk Skibs Composition, Bergen, Norway
Kung-ping
WARD, PROBST & Co., Mers.-13, Nanking Rd.
W. C. Ward (London)
E. A. Probst (London)
C. L. H. Iburg L. Midwood
J. Ambrose J. K. Brand A. Blum A. A. Drew L. A. Chill
Horace Hanbury
E. M. Hornabrook P. M. Lancaster
A. R. Moores
F. Rayden C. L. Tebbutt P. Thomas
W. A. White
Agencies
Royal Insurance Co. (Fire and Life) Sea Insurance Company
New Zealand Insce.Co.(Marine Branch) British American Assce. Co. (Fire and
Marine)
Western Insurance Co. (Marine Branch)
922
Foo-sing
SHANGHAI
WARNER & Co., MURRAY,International Bank Building-2A, Kiukiang Road, Engineers
and Contractors, Machinery and Metal Importers
司公水來自洋上
Shang-yang Sze-lai-sui Kung-sz
WATERWORKS Co., LD.-69, Kiangse Road Directors A. McLeod, L. J. Cubitt,
W. D. Little, A. Hide
A. P. Wood, M.1.C.E., engineer-in-chief
and secretary
F. B. Pitcairn, A.M.I.C.E., asst. engineer C. D. Pearson, asst. engineer
T. Wallace, accountant
A. J. d'Almeida, clerk
J. Hawes,
do.
C. J. Beale,
do.
A. S. Rozario,
do.
T. Main,
do.
S. R. Owen,
do.
E. M. Barradas, do.
T. Spring, foreman plumber A. Rothery,
do.
M. Switzer, general assistant R. Neut, storekeeper
S. Goldstein, collector
J. Brown,
do.
H. L. Hamlyn, inspector J. Priest,
do.
H. J. Andrews, overseer, ship. dept. Pumping Station, Yangtszepoo
G. Mollison, foreman
J. G. Munz, assist.
Show Room, No. 2A, Nankin Road
S. A. Perris, clerk
EXFE Was-un-sz Ta-yah-vong 房藥大氏臣屈
WATSON & CO., LIMITED, A. S., "Shanghai Pharmacy," Chemists and Druggists, Wine, Spirit, and Cigar Merchants-- Nanking Road Tel. Ad. Dispensary
J. D. Humphreys & Son, general
managers (Hongkong)
A. H. Mancell, agent in Shanghai and North China (Office: No. 1, The Bund); Tel. Ad: Receipt
Way-toong
WATTIE & Co., J. A., Financial, General and Commission Agents--10 Canton Road; Cable Address: Wavito
J. A. Wattie
W. B. Clayton
W. S. Davidson (member Shanghai
Stock Exchange)
G. W. Cooper
A. J. Welch
S. S. Nazer
W. A. Duncan T. H. Porter
General Managers:
The China Mutual Life Ins. Co., Ld. Secretaries and General Managers:
The Shanghai Building & Investment
Company, Limited
The Tebong Rubber & Tapioca Estate,
Limited
The Chempedak Rubber and Gambier
Estate, Limited
Kroewoek Java Plantations, Limited Java Consolidated Rubber and Coffee
Estates, Limited
The Tjicoppo Java Tea Plantations, Id. Soeka-Warna Tea Estate
Agencies
The China Land & Finance Co., Ld. The Scottish Union & National Ins.
Company (Fire)
司彙 Wei-sze
WEEKS & Co., LD., Drapers, Outfitters, Milliners, Cabinet Makers, House Fur- nishers and Decorators-Corner of Nan- king and Kiangse Roads
T. E. Trueman, general-manager A. Taylor, sub-manager A. H. Brooks, secretary
Miss L. d'Almeida B. Carneiro Miss G. Chathau J. C. Cole
F. X. Conceição E. Cutforth
J. F. Dodman (Hankow) H. G. Evans
Miss S. M. B. Gutierrez P. Johns
Mrs. Laidrich (Hankow) F. Mattos
J. Naylor Miss L. Oliveira Miss M. Oliveira N. W. Peach C. M. S. Pereira H. E. S. Pickering G. Roeper Miss A. Rozario Miss G. Rozario J. C. Silva (Hankow) P. Smith
E. E. Soares, jur. Millinery Department
Miss H. M. W. Benn Miss M. A. Seagrave Mrs. J. M. Senna
Kung-shun
WELCH, LEWIS & Co., Merchants-13, Nan
king Road
Agency
Scottish Union and National Insurance National Union Society
-
源滙
SHANGHAI
WENYON, W. F. (Glasgow)-13, Nanking
Road, 3rd floor
Joseph Wilson
WENTZENSEN, J. H., Commission Merchant
-1A, Jinkee Road
Kum-loong
WESTPHAL, KING & RAMSAY, LIMITED- A236-9, Szechuen Road; Teleph. No. 910; Tel. Ad: Crowquill
W. A. Westphal, chairman of directors W. S. King, managing director H. E. Ramsay (Hankow) director A. P. Simpson (London)
W. H. Bell (Shanghai)
H. A. Westphal, director
C. E. Sparke, signs per pro.
T. M. Ainscough
H. G. Allen
Cecil. J, Bell
E. H. Gilson J. S. MeNider D. H. Read Miss Surplice H. Twigge O. A. Westphal
A. Youngson
A. F. das Caldas
Agencies
S. W. Litvinoff & Co.
do.
dlo.
General Accident, Fire & Life Ins.
Corporation, Ld.
General Insurance Co., Ld.
Excess Insurance Co., Ld.
W. & A. Gilbey, Ld.
Joseph Lyons & Co., Ld.
Laddite Incandescent Mantle Co.
WHANGPOO CONSERVANCY BOARD--1, Kiu-
kiang Road
Directors H.E. Taotai, Tsai Nai Huang
H. E. Hobson-Commsr. of Customs Chinese Members of Staff-Ku Hung- ming, Ho Wei-pu, Quann Tchoung- yaen, Kuo Tseng-i, Kuang Han-kuang, Shen Le-kong, Huang Wen-hao Engineer's Department (Tel. No. 2272)
J.
de Rijke-Engineer-in-Chief 3d, Peking Road (Telephone No. 1995) H. C. de Rijke Private Sec. (Teleph.
No. 1995)
First Engineer--H. W. Forbes
Asst. Engineer-H. van der Veen
Do. Do.
-D. Stratton
-D. Boomsma
Draughtsman-D. Brand,
Ma Lien-sung
Survey Department:-
Surveyor-H. C. Muller Asst, surveyor-Y. Utne Draughtsman-F. d'Almeida
Tracer-Hor Say Nien Do. Zing Pão Tsao Do. -Chen Vong Shan Clerk-Pai Ki Sung
923
Overseers of Works W. H. Swets, C. A. Swets, A. Visser, L. van Elzelingen,
H. W. van Elzelingen, P. van den Bout, C. Kooymans, C. de Keyzer, H. Esmeyer, W. Moret, Th. Westerhout, A. van Driel, S. P. Jorgensen, A. Nederlof, A. Popp, C. E. L. Gumley, J. Henry, T. French, C. H. Prest, Ë. W. Messenger, J. D. Monroe, A. Fragri Storekeeper-Ě. Á. Smith
Sec. and Acct.-A. G. H. Carruthers Clerk-K. D. Ting
Wei-tuh-foong
WHEELOCK & Co., Auctioneers, Coal, Ship Oil, and Freight Brokers-2, French Bund; Telephone 587
T. R. Wheelock (absent) G. M. Wheelock
W. J. N. Dyer
H. C. J. Wilson
A. Habekost
Thos. W. Mitchell P. G. Tate
Agency
Shanghai Tug and Lighter Co., Ld.
泰榮 Yung-tan
WHEEN, EDWARD, Woollen Merchant,
Import and Comsn. Agent-Kiangse
Road; Telephone 890
Edward Wheen
A. F. Wheen F. P. Fegan S. R. Nune
K. D. Ching
Laou-chung-yung
WHITE BROS, Bill Brok. -127, Szechuen Rd.
Harry Owen White
Aug. Harold White
S. Tokiwa
Chung-yung
WHITE & Co., C. J., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-6, Liking Road
A Way-loo-kung-sz
WHITEAWAY, LAIDLAW & Co., LTD.-13,
Nanking Road
A. W. Prior, governor
A. L. Bellamy, manager
J. H. Faulkner
G. W. Bennett
H. F. Knott H. H. Ladd
J. Keenor F. J. Long W. J. Ward
924
L. C. Esser E. Wanderleach L. Roth
Miss A. Lake
Mrs. A. R. de Senna Miss L. Gutierrez Miss L. Ozorio Miss M. Remedios Miss C. Carion Miss C. Roberts Miss A. Almedia Miss C. Almedia Miss P. Almedia Miss Swenson Miss Moses Miss A. Cotta Miss M. Betines
Miss A. Roza
Miss Oliveira
Wee-chong
SHANGHAI
WIJK & Co.'s (OLOF), EAST ASIATIC AGEN- CIES (LTD.)--6,Kiangse Rd Tel. Ad: Wijks
Hakon Wijk (Gothenburg)
Bertil Wijk
do.
L. Voigt (Hamburg)
G. Svalander (London)
W. von Normann, manager
Otto Strufe, sub-manager A. J. Grant Paper Department
B. Lundberg Engineering Department Fred C. Jones, E.E., M.E. R. Lindgren (Gothenburg) R. Just
King-tsang
WILCK & MIELENHAUSEN, Tailors and Out-
fitters 26, Nanking Road
W. Trautmann
G. Peterhansel
Mrs. M. Trautmann
生金威 Way-king-sun
WILKINSON, H.P., Barrister-at-Law, H.B.M's
Crown Advocate
WILLIAMS, K. J., Jeweller and Dealer in Precious Stones-1, North Soochow Road
K. C. Williams
K. S. Thomas
WILMER, W.. Accountant and Auditor-30,
The Bund; also 10, Hankow Road
茂源
Yuen-mow
WILSON, A., Land and Estate Agent-29,
Kiangse Road
4
Wei-erh-sang
WILSON, E. G., Draper, Hosier and General
Storekeeper-22, Nanking Road
Miss Wilson
Miss G. E. Wilson
Miss K. E. Wilson
記羅 Lo-kee
WINGROVE & BURRETT, Share and General
Brokers-6, Jinkee Road W. F. Wingrove
F. J. Burrett
WINSTON & ISENMAN., Dental Surgeons-
11 Kiukiang Road
Doong-foo
WISNER & Co., Merchants-3,kiukiang Rd
J. F. Seaman
Jas. N. Jameson
G. E. Burgoyne W. P. Lambe
B. A. da Cruz P. da Silva P. F. Wisner R. H. Gaskin Percy Lambe B. Molnar
M. Karpeles
1. Komór
亨魯 Lu-hang
WOLF & SONS, W., Dealers in Cotton and Cotton Waste--9, Siking Road; Head
Office and Works: Stuttgart-Untertuerk-
Rheim (Germany); Tel. Ad: Wolverine Shanghai A..c. Code 5th edition; Tele- phone 2357
F. Roehrich, manager
WOMEN'S UNION MISSION
WOMEN'S WORLD'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION--See Protestant Missionaries in China
*
Say-ling
WUREH & Co., S. Importers and Exporters, and Commission Agents-5, Rue du Nouvelle (French Concession), Shanghai
S. L. Wureh Hankow Office
Salim Wareh Roza Wureh
Tofic Wareh
WYCHGEL, DR. G. J., Dutch and German M. D.-16, Nanking Road: Telph. 692 YACHT CLUB-See Clubs
SHANGHAI
$25
A
Yang-tsze Kung-sz
YANGTSZE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION, LD.-
26, The Bund
W. S. Jackson, secretary
F. A. Cumming
T. A. Clark
H. H. Llewellyn
S. A. Sleap
R. C. de Silva e Souza
G. C. Nazer
E. M. d'Oliveira
S. M. Oliveira
W. C. Paulsen, engineer surveyor
London Office, Leadenhall Buildings, E.C.
Richard Blackwell, agent
Agencies
Insurance Company of N. America
Federal Insurance Co. of New York
YANGFSZE PILOTS' ASSOCIATION, THE (Han-
kow-Woosung Pilotage)-20, Nanking
Road; Tel. Ad: Sentinel, Shanghai; Tele- phone 886
J. M. S. Burr, manager
房棧頭碼子揚
YANOTSZE WHARF AND GODOWs Co.,
LIMITED THE; Telephone 268
Carlowitz & Co., general agents
Ed. Krietsch, manager
A. Steffen, accountant
T. S. D. Wade, clerk
行銀金正灒横
Wang-ping-tsun-ching-nhing-hong
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LTD-31, The
Bund
S. K. Suzuki, manager
Y. Hara, sub-manager
Y. Matano, accountant
Y. Suitsu, signs per pro
1. Asakawa
A. T. Betines
L. R. Barrera N. Fujimaki T. Honda F. Hori
S. Itoi
H. Kamiyama
K. Kitawaki K. Masuda
M. Matsumura K. Matsuoka M. Nakamura T. Nishiyama Y. Noguchi T. Seki
I. Tada
A. Testubayashi
R. Tsuruda
K. Yokoyama
T. Yoshimochi
和養
Yung-wo
YOUNG, J. M.-41, Whangpoo Road
辦委總會合年青敎督基韓中 Chung-hun chi-tu-chiao-ch'ing-nien ho-hui-tsung-weipan
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF
CHINA & KOREA-(See Missionary List)
會年青女婦
Fu-nui-ching-nein-hai,
YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
OF SHANGHAI.
(See Missionary List)
Yuen-fah
"YUEN-TAH," British Ship, Jardine, Ma-
theson & Co.
G. C. Purton, commander
ZI-KA-WE MUSEUM-See under Churches
and Missions
美滋 Jee-mei
ZIMMERMAN & Co., S., Merchants, Shipping and Commission Agents - No. 1a, Jinkee
Road (1st Floor); Branches: San Fran-
cisco, Vladivostock, Chinwangtao, Chefoo
S. Zimmerman
H. Zimmerman (Vladivostock)
Wm. Cohen
Thos. Brown
1. Goldman (Chinwangtao) P. Fingerut (Chefoo)
י
I
1
926
SHANGHAI
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS
(For addresses see preceding pages.)
ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS
Graça, P. M. A. de Gyzeman, Hugo
Lowe, Bingham & Matthews Thomson, G. H. & N. Wadman, H. P. Wilmer, W.
ADVERTISING AGENTS Chester, Richard
China Advertising Co. Publicity Co.
ERATED WATER MANUFACTURERS
Aquarius Company
Prew & Co., W. F.
Watson & Co., A. S.
AGENTS See Commission Agents; also
Manufacturers' Representatives
ARCHITECTS
Algar, A. E.
Arts & Crafts, Ltd. Atkinson & Dallas
Becker, H., & Baedeker Behrend, K. Brandt & Rogers Chollot, J. J.
Davies & Thomas
Denham & Rose
Dowdall, W. M.
Kingsmill, Thos. W.
Moorhead & Halse
ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES-Continued Mercantile Marine Officers' Association Mokanshan Summer Resort Association Polytechnic Institution and Reading
Rooms (Chinese)
Royal Asiatic Society
Royal Society of St. George
Shanghai Amateur Athletic Association Shanghai General Chamber of Commerce Shanghai Society of Engineers and Ar-
chitects
Société Dramatique Francaise Society of St. Vincent de Paul St. Andrew's Society
St. George's Society St. Patrick's Society Yangtsze Pilots' Association Zi-Ka-Wei Museum
AUCTIONEERS
Bielfeld & Co., Alex.
Funder & Co., W.
Gibson & Co., James
Hopkins, Dunn & Co. Loong Fé
Maitland & Co. Moore & Co., Ltd.
Noel, Murray & Co. Wheelock & Co.
BAKERS
Shanghai Greek Bakery
Banque de l'Indo-Chine
Bisset & Co., J. P.
Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China
Deutsche Asiatische Bank
Scott, Christie & Brown
BANKS
Scott, Walter
ARSENAL
Kiagnan Arsenal
ART DEALERS
Daibutsu & Co.
ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES
Kuhn & Co.
Kuhn & Komor
Amateur Photographic Society
American Association of China
Associação Macaense de Soccorro Mutuo
Association of Lancastrians in China
Belgian Benevolent Society
Cercle Sportif Francais
China Association
China Tea Association
Chinese Chamber of Commerce Deutsches Seemanusheim
Institute of Architects in China Institution of the Holy Family International Institute Ladies' Benevolent Society Marine Officers' Association
Hongkong & Shanghai Bank
Hoyer. L. de
Imperial Bank of China
International Banking Corporation.
Mercantile Bank of India
Russo-Chinese Bank
Sino-Belgian Bank
Yokohama Specie Bank
BOARDING HOUSES
Lincoln House
Marlborough House
Missionary House & Agency Mrs. Lang-Niven
Shaftsbury House (Soldiers and Sailors) Shanghai Mercantile and Family Hotel BOOKSELLERS
Book Room & Educational Depository Brewer & Co., Ltd.
Chinese Scientific Book Depot
BOOKSELLERS-Continued
Dunn, Walter
Kelly & Walsh, Ltd. Nossler & Co., Max Shanghai Book Store BREWERY AGENT
Goetschel, L.
BROKERS (Bullion and Exchange)
Bremner, A. S. Coutts, Geo. D. Cumming, E. O. Edblad, H.
Edmondston & Maitland
Gerecke, E.
MacGregor, Robt. Maitland & Fearon
Robertson, W. Bruce
Seitz, F. Tucker, G. E.
BROKERS (General) Albert, Michael Anderson, A. L.
Ballard & Hunter
Benjamin & Potts
Bielfeld & Co., Alex.
Clark, J. D.
Elias, J. R. Gore-Booth R. H. Hardoon, R. J. Hopkins, Dunn & Co. Jamieson & Co. Joseph, J. M. Kadoorie & Co., Ellis Lalcaca & Co. Landaw & Co., C. A. Liddell, Bros. & Co. Linnestad, O. R. Little & Co.
Michael, A.
Michael, I. R.
Michael, Sam
Moore & Co. Moosa, J.
Neubourg, & Co. A
Noel, Murray & Co. Railton, H. E. Seitz, F.
Shekury, G. J.
Somek b, D. S.
Toeg & Rend
Tucker, G. E.
Wallem & Co.
Wheelock & Co.
White, Bros.
Wingrove & Burrett
BROKERS (Ship and Freight)
Baessler & Co., John Currie & Co., A. M.
Endicott, R. R.
Johnsen & Herlofson
Linnestad, O. K.
Struve, H.
Wheelock & Co.
SHANGHAI
BROKERS (Stocks and Shares)
Anderson, A. L. Benjamin & Potts Bisset & Co., J. P. Boyd & Co., H. R. Endicott, R. R. Hardoon, R. J. Joseph, J. M.
Kadoorie & Co., Ellis
Lalcaca & Co. Marshall, F. L.
Michael, A.
Michael, I. R. Moosa, J.
Noel, Murray & Co. Toeg & Read
Wingrove & Burrett BUILDING COMPANIES
927
New Building & Construction Co., Ltd. Shanghai Building Co.
Shanghai Building & Investment Co.
BUTCHERS
Futterer, Wilhelm
Hopkins' Butchery
Neumann, Richard
Pasche & Co.
CANNING Co.
Libby, McNeill & Libby
CARRIAGE BUILDERS
Dallas Horse Repository Co., Ltd. Horse Bazaar Co., Ltd. Loong Fe
Rosenbaum, F. W.
CHEMICALS (Manufacturers of)
Berthel, C.
Borax Consolidated Co. Brunner, Mond & Co., Ltd. Burroughs, Wellcome & Co. Davis & Lawrence Co. Kiangsu Chemical Works Major Bros., Ltd.
CHEMISTS AND DRUGGISTS
Bubbling Well Dispensary Central Drug Store & Pharmacy Davis & Lawrence Co. Dr. William's Medicine Co. Grenard & Co., L.
Hongkew Medical Hall
Jayne & Son, Dr. D.
Llewellyn & Co., Ltd.
Mactavish & Lehmann
Shanghai Dispensary, The
Sys Co., Peter
Twigg, P. O'Brien
Voelkel & Schroeder, Ltd.
Watson & Co., A. S.
CHURCHES
Church of the Immaculate Conception
Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
Deutsch-Evangelische Kirche
Holy Trinity Cathedral
Institution of the Holy Family
928
CHURCHES-Continued
Mahomedan Church
Shanghai Free Christian Church St. Andrew's Church
St. Francis Xavier's Church
St. Joseph's Church
Synagogue "Beth El " Union Church
CLOISONNÉ
Industrial Mission Depôt
CLUBS
Amateur Dramatic Club American College Club Clay Pigeon Club Club Ausoniu Club Concordia Club del Balin Club União
Country Club
Cricket Club
Customs Club
Cycling Club
Deutsche Vereinigung International Chess Club
Marine Engineers' Institute Paper Hunt Club
Race Club
Recreation Club
Rowing Club
Shanghai Club
Shanghai Golf Club
Shanghai Miniature Rifle Club Shanghai Rugby Football Club Swimming Bath Club Touring Club Italiano Yacht Club
COAL MERCHANTS Abbass, S. H.
Central Coal Co. Eastern Coal Co. Eastern Produce Coal Co. Furukawa Mining Co. Mitsu Bishi Co. Schiller & Co.
Wallem & Co.
COAL STORAGE
Shanghai Ice & Cold Storage Co. COLLIERY OWNERS
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co. Furukawa Mining Co. Peking Syndicate, Ltd.
SHANGHAI
COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND AGENTS
Abbass, S. H.
Abdoolally Ebraliim & Co.
Afshar & Co., M. M. B.
Albert, Michael
Allanson, William
American Chinese Co.
Andersen, Meyer & Co.
Andrews, von Fischer & George, Ltd. Baessler & Co., John
COMMISSION MER. & AGENTS--Continued
Bassett, Thos.
Bickerton & Co., T. L. Blumenfeld, Jacques Bodemeyer & Co., H. H. Bornemann & Co., Ferd. Braga & Co., V. E.
Brighten, Malcolm & Co., Ltd. Burkhard, L. R, Castle Brothers Castilh& Co.
Camera di Commercio Italiana Central Stores, Ltd.
Central Trading Co. China Cork Factory
Chinn General Trading and Nav. Co. China Trading Co.
Clark, J. D.
Connell Bros, & Co.
Craig, Marshall & Co.
Craven, J. H.
Currie & Co., A. M. Dallas & Co.
David, J. A.
Delbourgo, J.
Deutsch Chinesische Handels Agentur Dickeson, Jones & Co. Dietrich, M.
Ditmar, Brunner, Bros., Ltd., R. Dousmanis, N.
Dunning & Co., Ltr.
East Asiatic Co., Ltd. Eastern Coal Co. Emamoodeen, S. Essabhoy, A. M. Evans & Co.
Felten & Guilleume Finocchiaro Bros. & Co. Fobes d Co
Framjee. Sorabjee & Co. Fuhrmeister & Co.
Funder & Co., W.
Gaillard, & Co., J.
Garnett & Co., Ltd., W. T.
Geusburger & Judah Ginsburg & Co., M. Goddard, D. J. Hanwell, Gerald Handa Menko & Co. Hardy Putent Pick Co. Harris, Son & Co. Harvie & Cooke Harvie, J. A.
Hartley, John
Hoffmarin & Co., Wm.
Hoffmann & Co., F. W.
Hoole, W. W.
Hueber & Co., Th.
Jamieson & Co. Janowitzer, A. Johannsen, Edm. Jones, Fred.
Katz & Co. Wm. Kaye, Jervis & Co.
SHANGHAI
929
COMMISSION MER. & AGENTS-Continued.
Kober & Co., H
Klose, Wilhelm
Kolkmeijer & Rockstroh
Kronig & Co.
Landaw & Co.
Lavers & Clerk
Litvinoff & Co.
Liddell Bros. Locksmith & Co. Lutzen, Brook & Co. Mackenzie & Co., Ltd. Macy & Co. Madier, H. Maitland & Co. Mandl & Co., H. Markt & Co, Ltd.
1
Meyerink & Co.
Michael, Albert Michael, I. R. Mittag, Max
Molvar & Greiner
Moore & Co.
Moosa, J.
Morris & Co.
Murai Bros. & Co.
Mustard & Co.
Nakakiri & Co.
Nemazee & Co.
Neubourg & Co.
New York Import & Export Co.
Noel, Murray & Co.
Oliver Import & Export Co.
Patel, A. Č.
Paturel, C.
Pavitt, J. M.
Perillaud & Co., C.
Peters & Co., G. C.
Prew & Co., W. F.
Railton, H. E.
Reiber, Fr.
Remy & Co., A.
Richter & Co.
COMMISSION MER. & AGENTS-Continued
Somekh, & Co., B. A.
Soyka, L.
Spunt & Rosenfeld
Stechmann, A. L.
Stempel, M. A.
Tabbah, Saleh & Aref Tata Sons & Co.
Thomas, Bros.
Timm, C. F.
Trenchard Davis, W. H.
United Osbestos Oriental Agency Universal Supply Co.
Van der Loo & Co. Viccajee & Co, F.
Warner & Co., Murray
Wattie & Cu.
Wentzensen, J. H.
Westphal, King & Ramsay, Ld.
Wheen, Edward
Wureh & Co.
CONCRETE WORKS, ETC.
Century Stone Co.
Reinforced & General Concrete Works
CONFECTIONERS
Sweetmeat Castle
CONSULATES
Austria-Hungary
Belgium Cuba Denmark France Germany
Great Britain
Italy Japan
Petersen & Co., E. S.
Queensland Government Agency
Rangel & Co., I. M.
Robert Dollar Co.
Robertson, Horatio Roehrich, F.
Rose, Downs & Thompson Rosenbaum, Jos. Roth & Co.
Rustomjee & Co.
Samuel, McGregor & Co.
Sander Weiler & Co.
Schnorr, F. E.
Schwarz, Gaumer & Co.
Schweiger Import & Export Co., Ld.
Scott, Harding & Co.
Shanghai & Soochow Trading Co. Sharp & Co.
Shekury, G. J.
Sheldon, Backels & Co.
Sieber & Co.
Netherlands
Norway
Portugal
Russia
Spain
Sweden
United States of America
COPPER MERCHANTS
Furukawa Mining Co. Mitsu Bishi Co.
COTTON SPINNING COS.
Anglo-Chinese Cotton Manuf. Co. Cotton Spinning Co., New Chinese Ewo Cotton Spinning & Weaving Co. International Cotton Manuf. Co. Laou Kung Mow
Shanghai Cotton Manufacturing Co. Shanghai Cotton Spinning Co. Soy Chee Cotton Spinning Co.
CURIO DEALERS
Daibutsu & Co. Kuhn & Co. Kuhn & Komor
CYCLE DEALERS
Cyclery, The China
International Cycle Co.
930
DAIRY FARM Farm, The
Swiss Farm
DENTISTS
Devlin, Chas. 4.
Ivy & Robinson
Mosberg, Carl
Perindorge, G. de
Shanghai Dental Parlour Winston & Isenman
Docks
Cosmopolitan Dock
SHANGHAI
International Dock & Shipbdg. Works New Dock and Shipyard
Old Dock Engine Works & Shipyard Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co. Tunkarloo Dock & Shipyard
Drapers, etc.
Astor Drapery Store Broadway Drapery Stores Hall & Holtz, Ltd. Parisienne, a la Weeks & Co., Ld.
Whiteway, Laidlaw & Co. Wilson, E. G.
DRAWN-THREAD WORK
Industrial Mission Depot DRUGGISTS-See Chemists DYERS
Bradford Dyer's Association, Ld.
EDUCATIONAL
Anglo-Chinese College Anglo-Chinese School Aurora University Deutsche Schule
Ellis Kadoorie Chinese Schools Society Hanbury, T. School
International Correspondence Schools (See also under Schools in Directory) ENGINEERS (Civil)
Atkinson & Dallas Bruce, Peebles & Co., Ld. Caissial, F. II.
Chollot, J. J.
Davies & Thomas
Denham & Rose Dowdall, W. M. Hoffmann & Co., F. W. Howarth, Erskine, Ld. Kingsmill, Thos. W. Maisonneuve, J. G. S. Moorehead & Halse Scott, Christie & Brown
ENGINEERS (Consulting)
Brighten, Malcolm & Co., Ld. Broad, Wallace
Bruce, Peebles & Co., Ld. Brun, W. H.
Caissial, F. H.
Charignon, A. J. H.
Danforth, A W.
ENGINEERS (Consulting)-Continued
Houfe, W. W. Inniss & Riddle
Swedish-Asiatic Consulting Eng. Ch Turner, E. W.
ENGINEERS (Electrical)
Bume & Reif
Comp. Interationale d'Orient Inniss & Ridelle Pinfold, F.
Porter & Co., Ld., E. E. Quoika, A.
Shanghai Electric Co. Shanghai Electric & Asbestos Co. Siemens-Schuckertwerke, Tech. Bureau ENGINEERS (Marine)
Hongkew Engine Works
New Engineering & Shipbuilding Works Old Dock Engine Works Pootung Engineering Works ENGINEERS (Mechancal)
Andersen, Meyer & Co. Bridden & Fowler
Brun, W. H.
Bume & Reif
China General Engineering Co. Comp. Internationale d'Orient Coventry Ordnance Works, Ld. Eastern Iron Works Gordon & Co.
Hongkew Engine Works Inniss & Riddle Paulsen, W. Quoika, A.
Rose, Downs & Thompson Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co. Shanghai Machine Co.
Siemens-Schuckertwerke, Tech. Bureau
Sino-French Engineering Syndicate Thoresen & Co.
Vering, C.
Vickers, Sons & Maxim, Ltd.
Vulcan Foundry
Vulcan Ironworks, Ltd.
Warner, Murray & Co.
ESTATE AGENTS
Bisset & Co., J. P. Brandt & Rogers China Realty Co. Davies & Thomas Dzionk, M. F. Emamoodeen, S. Evans & Co.
Finocchiro Bros & Co.
Quailing, S.
Somckl, D. S.
Wilson, A.
FANCY GOODS DEALERS
Brewer & Co., Ltd. Kelly & Walsh, Ld.
Sennett Freres
FEATHER DEALERS
Straus & Co.
FIREBRICKS & FIRECLAY
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co.
FLOUR MERCHANTS
China Flour Mill Co., Ltd. Robert Dollar Co.
Shanghai Roller Flour Mill Co., Ld. Sperry Flour Co.
FORWARDING AGENTS
MacEwan, Frickel & Co. Schiller & Co.
FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
Johnson & Co., Y. Mafel & Co.
Shanghai Furniture Factory
Smith & Co., R. L.
Weeks & Co.
GAS COMPANY
Shanghai Gas Co., Ld.
HAIRDRESSERS
Parisian Hairdressing Saloon. HARNESS MAKERS
Dallas Horse Repository Co., La. Horse Bazaar Co., Ld. Loong Fé
Rosenbaum, F. W.
HORSE DEALERS
Dallas Horse Repository Co. Ld. Horse Bazaar Co., Ld.
Loong Fé
Shanghai and Soochow Trading Co.
HOSPITALS
Chinese Hospital
Hospital St. Mary's
Kiangnan Missions Hospital
Margaret Williamson Hospital St. Elizabeth's Hospital Shanghai General Hospital St. Lukes Hospital
HOTELS AND BOARDING-HOUSES
Astor House Hotel
Bickerton Private Hotel
Globe Hotel
Grand Hotel
Hotel des Colonies
Hotel Metropole
Kalee Private Hotel
Lang-Niven, Mrs.
Lincoln House
Marlborough House
New Point Hotel
Palace Hotel
SHANGHAI
Shaftsbury House (Soldiers and Sailors)
Shanghai Mercantile and Family Hotel St. George's Hotel
HOUSE FURNISHERS AND DECORATORS
Arts & Crafts, Lél.
Hall & Holtz, Ld.
Jesus, J. M.
Johnson & Co., Y.
Lane, Crawford & Co.
Smith & Co., Laurie,
ICE MANUFACTURERS
Oriental Ice, Co., Ld.
931
Shanghai Ice, Cold Storage and Refri-
gerating Co., Lt‹l.
INSURANCE OFFICES
(See Special List, Page 937-940) JEWELLERS
Hirsbrunner & Co. Hope, Bros. & Co., Ltd. Isnier & Co., C. Juvet, Leo
Levy Hermanos Mappin & Webb Sennett Freres
Ullmann & Co.
Williams, K. J.
LACE, HAND-MADE
Industrial Mission Depot
LAND AGENTS
(See Estate Agents)
LAND, BUILDING AND INVESTMENT Cos.
China Land & Finance Co.
International Estate & Finance Co. New Building & Construction Co. Shanghai Building Co., The
Shanghai Building & Investment Co. Shanghai Land Investment Co., Ld.
LAWYERS
Browett, Harold
Cainadan, O.
Drummond, White-Cooper and Phillips
Ellis & Hays
Ferguson, John C.
Fleming, W. S.
Graça, P. M. A. de
Hanson, McNeil & Jones
Holcomb, C. R.
Home & Douglas
Jernigan & Fessenden
Mahnfeldt, Rud.
Neil, S. B.
Platt, Teesdale & Macleod
Rice, J. W.
Rodgers, M. L.
Vorwerk & Voights
Wilkinson, H. P.
LEATHER GOODS DEALERS
American Shoe Co.
Daibutsu & Co.
Shanghai Tannery Co.
LIGHTING
Lux Lighting Agency
LITHOGRAPHERS
Oriental Press
Norbury Natzio
LIVERIES & TRAINING STABLES
Dallas Horse Repository Co., Ld. Horse Bazaar Co., Ltd.
Loong Fé
932
LUMBER IMPORTERS
SHANGHAI
China Import & Export Lumber Co., Ld. Pacific Coast Lumber Mills, Ld. Robert Dollar Co.
MACHINERY IMPORTERS
Abbass, S. H.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co.
Fobes & Co.
Hardy Patent Pick Co.
Houfe, W. W.
Jardine, Matheson & Co.
Schuchardt & Schutte
Shanghai Electric & Asbestos Co., Ld.
Shanghai Machine Co.
Siemissen & Co.
Singer Sewing Machine Co.
MANUFACTURERS' REPRESENTATIVES (See also Commission Agents)
Andrews, von Fischerz & George, Ltd.
Castle Bros.
Connell Bros. & Co. Elsorth, Chwas. W. T. Fisher, A. O.
Garner, Quelch & Co.
Graham, Walter D.
Heath & Co., P.
Hoffmann & Co., Wm. Peters & Co., G. C.
Pike, T. J. Albert
U. S. Steel Products Export Co.
Underwood & Underwood
Universal Supply Co.
Universal Trading Co.
Warner. Murray & Co.
Wijk & Co., Olőf
MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS
Balean, H.
Billinghurst, W. B.
Rieger, M.
Boone, H. W.
Cox, R. H.
Cox, S. M.
Culpin, Millais
Fresson, H.
Gerugrop
Goode & Balean
Jackson, Hanwell & Jackson
Krieg, Paul
Macleod, Milles, Marshall & Marsh
Parrott, A. G.
Patrick, H. C.
Patrigeon, G.
Ransom, S. A.
Ricou, Dr.
Schab, von Schultze
Sia, T. B.
Sloan, Robt. J.
Wychgel, G. J.
MERCHANTS (Cotton and Piece Goods)
Craig, Marshall & Co.
Haworth & Co., Ltd., Richard Wolff & Sons, W.
MERCHANTS (General)
Abdoolally Ebrahim & Co. Abraham, D. E. J. Afshar & Co., M. M. B. Allanson, William
Alois, Schweiger & Co., Ld. American Trading Co.
Anderson, Meyer & Co.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co.
Arthur & Co., Ltd. Barlow & Co.
Belgian Trading Co., Ld. (in liq.)
Berthel & Burkhardt
Birchal & Co.
Bornemann & Co.. Ferd. Bothas & Co., S. G.
Bradley & Co. Brand Bros. & Co. Buchheister & Co. Bume & Reif
Butterfield & Swire
Campbell & Co., Alex.
Carlowitz & Co.
Cawasjee, Pallanjee & Co.
China Export, Import & Bank Co.
China & Japan Trading Co.
China & Java Export Co.
China Trading Co.
Clarkson & Co.
Collins & Co.
Compagnie Française des Indes et de
l'Extreme Orient
Comptoir d'Import
Belgique
Comptoirs Lamquet Craig & Co.
Craig, Ramsay & Co.
et d'Export de
Craven, Simpson & Co., Ld. Crompton & Co., Ld. Dallas & Co.
David & Co.
David & Co, S. J. Dent & Co., Alfred Dickeson, Jones & Co. Diederichsen & Co., H. Dodwell & Co., Ltd. Duering von, Wibel & Co. Duff, J. S.
Dyce & Co.
East Asiatic Co., Ltd.
Eastern Trading Co.
Ebbeke & Co.
Ehlers & Co, A.
Essabhoy, A. M.
Evans & Co.
Fearon, Daniel & Co.
Firth & Sons, Ltd., Thos. Foster-McClellan & Co. Frazar & Co. Fuhrmeister & Co. Garner, Quelch & Co. Garrels, Börner & Co. Getz Bros. & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co.
MERCHANTS (General)-Continued
Giesel & Co., Ltd.
Gipperich & Co., E.
Handa Menko & Co. Harvie & Cooke
Heath & Co., P.
Herbert, Hutchinson & Co.
Hewett & Co. Hillebrandt & Co. Hoffmann & Co., Wm. Hogg, E. Jenner Holiday & Co., Cecil
Holland-China Handels Co.
Hunt & Co.
Hutchison & Co., John D. Ilbert & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd.
Jones, Bros., Ltd. Katz & Co., Wm. Kaye, Jervis & Co. Kirchner & Boger Klose, Wilhelin Kober & Co.
Lavers & Clark
Locksmith & Co. Lutzen, Brook & Co. MacEwan, Frickel & Co. Macy & Co., Geo. H, Madier, H.
Maitland & Co.,
Mandl & Co.
Ltd.
Markt & Co., Ltd.
McBain, Geo. Melchers & Co.
Meyer Bros., Ld.
Meyorink & Co. Michael, Albert
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha
Mitsu Bishi Co. Mittag, Max Möller Bros.
Murai Bros. & Co.
Mustard & Co.
Nabholz & Co.
Nakakiri & Co.
Netherlands Trading Society
New York Export & Import Co. Noel, Murray & Co.
Nutter & Co, Walter Olivier & Co.
Pabaney Ebrahimbhoy Peek, Bros. & Winch, Ld. Peking Syndicate, Ll. Perillaud & Co., C. Pila & Co., Ulysse Poole, Lauder & Co. Racine, Ackermann & Co. Reiber, Fr.
Reid, Evans & Co. Reiss & Co. Reiss & Co., Hugo
Reuter, Brockelmann & Co. Richter, G. W.
Robert Dollar Co., The
SHANGHAI
MERCHANTS (General)-Continued
Rodewald & Co. Rodewaldi & Heath Rohde & Co.
Ross & Co., Alex.
Sander, Wieler & Co. Sassoon & Co., David, Ltd.
Sassoon & Co, E. D.
Scharff & Co., Walter
Schuldt & Co.
Schultz & Co., H. M.
Schoen & Co. Louis
Schweiger, Alois & Co., Ld. Scott & Bowne, Ld.
Scott, Harding & Co.
Shanghai & Soochow Trading Co. Sharp & Co., H. J.
Sheldon, Backels & Co.
Shewan, Tomes & Co.
Shewan & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Slevogt & Co.
Socicta Coloniale Italiana
933
Societa Commissionaria d'Exportation
Soyka, L.
Stechmann, Arthur L.
Sulzer, Rudolph & Co. Suzuki & Co.
Swift & Co.
Tabba Saleh & Aref Tata Sons & Co. Taumeyer & Co. Telge & Schroeter Thomas Bros. Thoresen & Co. Toche et Cie.
Trevor Smith & Co., J.
Van Der Loo & Co. Van Laer & Co. Wallace & Co.
Ward, Probst & Co.
Weber, Robert
Welch, Lewis & Co.
Wenyon, W. F.
Westphal, Ring & Ramsay, Ld.
White & Co., C. J.
Wijk & Co., Olof
Wisner & Co. Zimmerman & Co.
(See also Commission Merchants)
MERCHANTS (Silk)
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Boyer, Mazat, Guilliee & Co. Burkill & Sons, A. R. Chotirmall & Co., K. A. J. Denegri, M.
Jardine, Matheson & Co. Lintillac & Co., P. E. Little & Co., Wm. Madier, H. Nabholz & Co. Toche et Cie
934
MERCHANTS (Sugar)
Butterfield & Swire Meyer Bros., Ltcl.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd
MERCHANTS (Tea)
Afshar & Co., M. M. B.
Anderson & Co., Robt.
Campbell & Co., Alex.
Craven, J. H.
Hunt & Co.
MERCHANTS (Woollen)
Wheen, Edward
MINING
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co. Furakowa Mining Co. Peking Syndicate, Ltil. MONUMENT SCULPTORS
Macdonald & Co., T.
MOTOR GARAGE
The Motor House
MUSIC STORES
Haimovitch, M.
Moutrie & Co., S.
Robinson Piano Co.
NEWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS
Bund, The
China Gazette
Chinese Christian Intelligencer
Chinese Illustrated News
SHANGHAI
Chinese Scientific & Industrial Magazine
Eastern Sketch
Far Eastern Review
International Trade Journal
L'Echo de Chine.
Mesny's Chinese Miscellany National Review
North-China Daily News & Herald
Ostasiatische Lloyd
Rosenstock's Directory
Shanghai Mercury
Shanghai Times
Shun Pao
Sin Wan Pao
The Union
OIL MERCHANTS
Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld.
Maatschappij Tot-Mijn-Boschen Land-
bouwexploitatie
Standard Oil Co. of New York
Vacuum Oil Co.
OPTICIANS
Austen & Meylan
Hirsbrunner & Co. Ismer & Co., C. Lazarus & Co., N. Ullmann & Co.
Underwood & Underwood
OUTFITTERS
Broadway Drapery & Outfitting Stores Connoisseur, Ltd. Contorovitch & Co. Greenwood C. F. Hall & Holtz, Ltd. Lane, Crawford & Co. Weeks & Co., Ltd. Wilck & Mielenhausen PAPER MANUFACTURERS
China Paper Mill Co. Mitsu Bishi Co.
Shanghai Pulp & Paper Co., Ltd. PARCEL EXPRESS AGENTS
MacEwan, Frickel & Co. Schieler & Co.
PASTRYCOOKS
Bernardi Bros. Sweetmeat Castle
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Burr Photo Co.
PHOTOGRAPHIC GOODS DEALERS
Denniston & Sullivan
Grenard Co., L.
Mactavish & Lehmann
PIANOFORTE MAKERS
Moutrie & Co., S.
Robinson Piano Co.
PONGEES
Industrial Mission Press
PRESS PACKERS (Hydraulic)
Mackenzie & Co.
PRINTERS
American Presbyterian Mission Press China Printing Co., Ltd. De Souza & Co.
Deutsche Druckerei und Verlagsaustalt
Imprimerie Francaise, Ltd.
Kelly & Walsh, Ltd.
Mesny's Chinese Miscellany Office Methodist Publishing House N. C. Daily News, Ltd.
Norbury Natzio & Co. (litho.) Oriental Press
Shanghai Mercury, Ltd.
PROVISION IMPORTERS
Central Stores, Ltd.
Comp. Commerciale d'Extreme Orient
Getz Bros. & Co.
Hall & Holtz, Ltd.
Lane, Crawford & Co.
Libby, McNeill & Libby
Rangel & Co. I. M.
Remy & Co.
Swift & Co.
PUBLISHERS
Deutsche Drucherei und Verlagsaustalt Kelly & Walsh, Ltd.
Macmillan Co. of New York
Mesny's Chinese Miscellany Office
PUBLISHERS-Continued
Methodist Publishing House N. C. Daily News, Ltd. Oriental Press
Rosenstock Publishing Co. Shanghai Mercury, Ltd.
RAILWAYS
Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Shanghai-Nanking Ry.
RESTAURANTS
Restaurant Aguste Co.
SAILMAKERS
Ashley, C. J.
SHIPBUILDERS
Brown & Co., Ltd., John
Eastern Iron Works
SHANGHAI
New Engineering & Shipbuilding Works
Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co. Vulcan Ironworks, Ld.
SHIPCHANDLERS
Bismarck & Co., C. W. Lane, Crawford & Co.
SHOE STORES
(See Leather Dealers)
SHIPOWNERS & SHIPPING AGENTS
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Butterfield & Swire
Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Castle Brothers
China General Trading & Navigation Co,
China Merchants' S. N. Co.
China Navigation Co.
Compagnie Asiatique de Navigation East Asiatic Co., Ltd.
Hamburg-Amerika Linie
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd. (Indo-
China S. N. Co., Ltd.)
McGregor & Co., Samuel (Glen)
Melchers & Co. (N. D. L.)
Moller Bros.
Morris & Co.
Messageries Maritimes
Nemazee & Co. (B.-P.S.N. Co.)
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Nisshin Kissan Kaisha
Pacific Mail S. S. Co.
Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co. (P.&O.)
Robert Dollar Co.
Sander, Weiler & Co. (Austrian Lloyd)
Sassoon & Co., Ltd., David (Apcar Line) Thorensen & Co.
Toyo Kisen Kaisha Wallem & Co.
SILK BOILERS
Shanghai Waste Silk Boiling Co. SILK FILATURES
China-European Filature Co., Ld. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Jeay Khong Silk Filature Sin Cheong Filature Co. Soy Lun Filature Co.
SILK INSPECTORS
Burkhard, L. R. Gilmour, D. Heffer F. C.
SKIN & HIDE EXPORTERS
Reuter, Brockelmann & Co. Liddell Bros. & Co.
SOAP MANUFACTURERS
Lever Bros. SOLICITORS
(See Lawyers) STATIONERS
Brewer & Co, Ltd. De Souza & Co. Dunn, Walter
Denniston & Sullivan Kelly & Walsh, Ltd. Nossler & Co., Max
STEAMSHIP AND MACHINERY INSPECTORS
Buyers, W. B.
STEEL MANUFACTURERS
Bohler Bros & Co., Ld. Brown & Co., Ld., John Firth & Sons, Ld., Thos. Hanyang Iron Steel & Works STEVEDORES
Bismarck & Co., C. W.
STOREKEEPERS
Bulsara & Co.
Castilho & Co.
Central Stores, Ld. Connoisseur, Ld. Dunn, Walter Dunning & Co., Ld. Framjee Sorabjee & Co. Hall & Holtz, Lel. Magasin Français Mondon, Ld., E. L. Solina & Co., Ld. Teiffenberg, M. Venturi, F.
Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co.
SURVEYORS (Engineer)
Algar, A. E.
Bassett, Thos.
Houfe, W. W.
Paulsen, W.
SURVEYORS (Marine)
Bayes-Davy, S. Paulsen, W. Roberts & Paulsen
TAILORS
Greenwood, C. F. Hall & Holtz, Ld. Jackson, N. C. Lane, Crawford & Co. Wilck & Mielenhausen TAILORS (Ladies')
A la Parisienne
935
ا
936
TANNERY
Shanghai Tannery Co.
TELEGRAPH Cos.
Commercial Pacific Cable Co. Deutsch Nederlaendische Eastern Extension Tel. Co. Great Northern Tel. Co. Imperial Chinese Tele. Co. Reuter's Telegram Co.
SHANGHAI
Telefunken, East Asiatic Wireless Tel.
Co.
TELEPHONES
Shanghai Mutual Telephone Co., Ld.
THEATRES
Lyceum Theatre
TILE & CEMENT MANUFACTURERS
Butler Cement Tile Works, The A.
TIMBER MERCHANTS
China Import & Export Lumber Co., Ld. Pacific Coast Lumber Mills, Ld. Robert Dollar Co.
TOBACCO MERCHANTS
Bodemeyer & Co., H. H. British Cigarette Co., Ld.
Compania Gen. de Tabacos de Filipinas Delbourgo, J.
Frankau & Co., Ld., Adolph International Tobacco Co. Murai, Bros. Co., Ld.
Tabaqueria Filipina
TOBACCONISTS
Bodemeyer & Co., H. H. Brewer & Co., Ltd. Connoisseur, Ltd. Kelly & Walsh, Ltd.
Nossler & Co., Max
Pappadopoulos & Co., M.
Tabaqueria Filipina
TRAMWAYS
Compagnie Francaise de Tramways
TUGS & LIGHTERS
Kochien Transportation & Tow-boat Co. Shanghai Tug & Lighter Co. TYPEWRITING, ETC.
Oliver Typewriter Co. Shanghai Typewriting Office UNDERTAKERS
Jesus, J. M.
Macdonald & Co., Thomas
VETERINARY SURGEONS
Horse Bazaar Co., Ld. Keylock & Pratt
WATCHMAKERS
Hirsbrunner & Co. Hope, Bros & Co., Ld. Isnier & Co., C. Juvet, Leo
Ullmann & Co., J.
WHARVES AND GODOWNS
Central & North China Godown Co. Central & Hongkew Wharves Eastern Wharf
Kiu Lee Yuen Wharf
Old Ningpo Wharf
Pootung and Tunkadoo Wharves Shanghai & Hongkew Wharf Co. Yang Kali Du Wharf
Yangtse Wharf & Godown Co,
WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANTS
Bernardi Bros., Ld. Buchanan & Co., Jas. Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co.
Central Stores, Ld.
Comp. Commerciale d'Extreme Orient
Framjee Sorabjee & Co.
Gande & Co., J. W.
Garner, Quelch & Co. Hall & Holtz, Ld. Keeling & Co. Lane, Crawford & Co. Solina & Co., R. Y. Sweetmeat Castle
SHANGHAI
INSURANCE OFFICES
937
OFFICES
Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance Company
Accident Assurance Corporation Limited. Albingia Assurance Company, Hamburg Albingia Assurance Co. (Marine).. Alleanza Marine Insurance Co.
Allgemeine See Versicherungs Ges., Hamburg Allgemeine Versicherungs Gesellschaft Helvetia Alliance Assurance Company (Fire)
Alliance Marine & General Insurance Company Allianza Società di Assecurazione in Geneva Allianz Vers. Aktien Ges. in Berlin
Allianz Versicherungs Aktien Gesellschaft, Berlin.. American Bureau of Shipping.
Assecurazione Generala K. C. K., Triaste Assecuranz Union von 1865, Hamburg..
Associated Assurance Companies, London (Marine).. Atlas Assurance Co., Ld., London Australian Alliance Assurance Co. Badische Assecuranz Gesellschaft A.G. Baloise Fire Insurance Company, Basle Basler Lebens Versicherungs Ges. (Life) Basler Transport Versicherungs Gesellschaft Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Company Bayrischer Lloyd, Munchen
Bombay Fire & Marine Insurance Co., Limited Bremen Underwriters...
British American Assce. Co. (Fire & Marine)
British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company... Bureau Veritas
Canton Insurance Office, Limited Central Insurance Co., Ld.
China Fire Insurance Company Ld. China Fire Insurance Conipany, Limited.. China Merchants Marine Insurance Company China Mutual Life Insurance Company
China Traders' Insurance Company, Limited..... Comitate Delle Conp. d'Assec. Marit, di Genova Commercial Union Assurance Company, Limited... Commercial Union Assurance Company "Confiance" of Paris Fire Insce, Co. Consolidated Marine Insurance Company, Berlin Continental Insurance Company, Mannhein Deutsche Rueck & Mitversicherungs Gesellschaft Deutsche Transport Versicherungs Ges., Berlin.... Deutscher Lloyd Marine Insurance Co., Ld., Berlin Duesseldorfer Allgem-Vers. Ges., Duesselderf. East India Sea and Fire Insurance Co., A.D., 1832 Eastern Insurance Company,
El Dia Comp. Anon, de Seguros, Cartagena. Equitable Fire and Accident Office, L. Equitable Life Assurance Society of U. S. A. Equitable Life Assurance of U. S. A., Eastern Branch Essex & Soffolk Equitable Insurance Society Ld. Excess Insurance Company Limited
Fatum Accident Insurance Co..
Federal Insurance Company of New York Federal Life Assurance Co., Canada
Fire Insurance Company
AGENTS
Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co. Scott, Harding & Co. Kirchner & Böger Fuhrmeister & Co.
Societá Coloniale Italiana
Siemssen & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Sienissen & Co. Frazar & Co. Molnar & Greiner Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co Bradley & Co.
Gibb, Livingston & Co. Siemssen & Co. Carlowitz & Co.
Fuhrmeister & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Kirchner & Böger Siemssen & Co. Scott, Harding & Co. Melchers & Co. Ward, Probst & Co. Butterfield & Swire Parker, Robb & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Cecil Holliday & Co. E. D. Sassoon & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Tong Fung Chec, manager A. J. Hughes, secretary Union Ins. Society of Canton, Ld. Siemssen & Co.
Ilbert & Co., agents
North China Insurance Co., Tal. Racine, Ackermann & Co. Melchers & Co.
Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Ferd. Bornemann & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Holland-China Trading Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Ld. Siemssen & Co.
Andersen, Meyer & Co. Ballard & Hunter
J. T. Hamilton, general manager Cecil Holliday & Co.
Westphal, King & Ramsay Ld. Fuhrmeister & Co.
Yangtsze Ins. Association, Ld. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Molnar & Greiner
938
SHANGHAI
OFFICES
Fire Insurance Company of 1877, Hamburg. Fireman's Fund Insurance Co..
Foncière Pester Versicherungs Anstalt, Budapest Forsakring Actiebolagat Hansa, Stockholm.... Fortuna Allgemeine Versicherungs Act. Ges., Berlin General Accident Fire & Life Insce. Corp. Ld. General Insurance Company, Limited
General Marine Insurance Company, Dresden. Generali Marine Insurance Co.....
German Lloyd Marine Insurance Company, Berlin
Germanic Lloyd...
Globus Insurance Co., Hamburg Gothaer Life Insurance Bank, Gotha Guardian Assurance Company, Limited
Hamburg Bremen Fire Insurance Co., Hamburg.. Hanseatic Fire Insurance Company of Hamburg Hanseatischer Lloyd, Hamburg
Heilbronner Versicherungs Gesellschaft, Heilbronn Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Limited Hull Underwriters' Association, Limited
Imperial Insurance Company, Limited, (London) Indemnity Mutual Marine Ince. Co., Ld. Insurance Company of North America Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin Internationaler Lloyd
Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin
Jakor Moskau.....
---++
Java Sea & Fire Insurance Company
Ld.
K. K. Priv. Versigerungs Geselsstaft, Donau, Vienna. Kobe Marine Transport & Fire Insurance Co., Kyoto Fire and Marine Insurance Co.
La Suisse Cic. Anonyme d'Assurances
Lancashire Insurance Co., Fire and Life Law Union and Crown Insurance Company
Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co..... Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co. Liverpool Salvage Association.
Lloyd's, London..
London Assurance Corporation
London Assurance Corporation Marine and Fire London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Co., Ld. London and Provincial Marine & General Ince. Co. London Salvage Association..... L'Universo Marine Insurance Co. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Company Manchester Assurance Company Mannheimer Marine Insurance Co...
Manufacturers' Life Assce. Co., Toronto, sub-agency Manufacturers' Life Insurance Company of Canada Manufacturers' Life Insurance Company Marine and General Mutual Life Assurance Society Marine Insurance Company, Limited Maritime Insurance Company, L., Liverpool Meiji Fire Insurance Company, Limited Merchants Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Munchener Rückversicherungs Gesellschaft Mutual Life Insurance Co., New York
National Board of Underwriters of New York National General Insurance Co, Ld....
National Provincial Plate Glass Insurance Co., L... Neptunus Assecuranz Co., Hamburg.
AGENTS
Kirchner & Böger
China & Japan Trading Co., Là Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Westphal, King & Ramsay Ld. Westphal, King & Ramsay Ld. Holland-China Trading Co. Societá Coloniale Italiana Carlowitz & Co. Melchers & Co. Melchers & Co. Carlowitz & Co. Butterfield & Swire Carlowitz & Co. A. Ehlers & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siessen & Co.
Jarrline, Matheson & Co., Ld. Siemssen & Co.
Garrels, Börner & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co.
Yangusze Insce. Association L‹l. Siemssen & Co. Melchers & Co.
Sander, Wieler & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Van Laer & Co. Sandler, Wieler & Co. Nakakiri & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Ld. Nabholz & Co.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Reiss & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Scott, Hardling & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Hugo Reiss & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Mackenzie & Co., Ld. Butterfield & Swire
Union Ince. Society of Canton, Ld. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Societá Coloniale Italiana Arnhold, Karberg & Co. A. R. Burkill & Sons Carlowitz & Co. Bradley & Co.
H. Herbert Horsey, magt. for Asia Shewan, Tomes & Co.
A. M. Marshall, P. & O. S. X. Co. A. M. Marshall, P. & O. S. N. Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Ld. W. H. Trenchard Davis Siemssen & Co.
Fearon, Daniel & Co., gen. agents Frazar & Co.
J. Trevor-Smith & Co. Cecil Holliday& Co. Siemssen & Co.
OFFICES
SHANGHAI
Netherlands Fire & Life Insurance Co......
New York, Boston, and S. Francisco Board U'writers New Zealand Insurance Company
New Zealand Insurance Conipany (Marine Branch) New Zealand Insurance Company
New Zealand Insurance Co., Id. (Marine) Niederrheinischer Güter Assecuranz Gesellschaft. Nippon Fire Insurance Co.
Norddeutsche Versich Ges., Hamburg
Nordstern Lebens and Unfall, Vers. A. G., Berlin Nord-West Deutsche Insurance Company (Marine) Nord-West Deutsche Versich, Ges., Hamburg. North British & Mercantile Fire Insurance Co. North British und Mercantile Insurance Company North China Insurance Co., Ld. Northern Assurance Company. Northern Assurance Company..
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society. Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Ld.. Oberrheinische Versicherungs, Mannheim.. Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation, Ld. Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ld. of London Orient Insurance Company
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company Palatine Insurance Company, Limited
Patriotic Assurance Company
Patriotic Assurance Company of Dublin Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld., London Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
Phoenix, K. K. priv. Oesterr, Wien...
Property Insurance Co. (Fire aar Plate Glass) Providentia Frankfurter Versicherungs Ges. Prussian National Insurance Co., Stettin... Queen Fire Insurance Company, Liverpool.. Queensland Insurance Co., Ld...... Reliance Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Rheinisch Westfl. Lloyd M. Gladbach..
Rheinisch Westfl. Rueckvars, A.G., M. Gladbach Rhenania Versicherungs Action Ges., in Koeln Rhenish Marine Insurance Association
Royal Exchange Assurance Co.
AGENTS Fuhmeister & Co. Frazar & Co.
E. E. Parsons, manager Ward, Probst & Co. Barlow & Co.
Samuel, McGregor & Co., Ld. Siemssen & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Ld. Siemssen & Co. Melchers & Co. Wilhelm Klose Siemssen & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Ballard & Hunter H. G. Simms, secretary Fearon, Daniel & Co. W. Hewett & Co. Fearon, Daniel & Co. Alfred Dent & Co. Siemssen & Co.
939
J.T.Hamilton, mangr. for the East Reuter, Bröckelmaŭn & Co. Butterfield & Swire
Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co. Butterfield & Swire
Barlow & Co.
China & Japan Trading Co., Ld. Wm. Little & Co.
China & Japan Trading Co., Ld.. Siemssen & Co.
Fuhrmeister & Co. Melchers & Co. Carlowitz & Co. American Trading Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Jardine Matheson & Co., Ld. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Slevogt & Co.
A. R. Burkill & Sons
Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation of London Butterfield & Swire
Royal Exchange Assurance (Marine)
Royal Insurance Company, Ld.
Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool (Fire & Life)
Royal Insurance Co., Ld. (Fire and Life)
Salamander Fire Insurance Co. of Amsterdam
Salamandra, St. Petersburg.....
Samarang Sea & Fire Insurance Co.
Samarang Sea & Fire Insurance Company
Schweizerische National, Vers, Ges. Basel
Alfred Dent & Co. C. A. Graves, secretary Ward, Probst & Co.
Samuel, McGregor & Co., Ld. Melchers & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Van Laer & Co.
Schweizerischer Lloyd, Winterthur
Scottish Inion and National Insurance Co.
Scottish Union and National Ins. Co., Edinburgh... Scottish Union & National Insurance Co. (Fire).. Sea Insurance Company, Limited
Sea Insurance Company.
Shanghai Fire Insurance Association. Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Ld.
South British Fire and Marine Insurance Co., Ld. South British Fire and Marine Insurance Co. South British Fire & Marine Insurance Co. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.
Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Welch, Lewis & Co. Carlowitz & Co. J. A. Wattie & Co. Butterfield & Swire Ward Probst & Co. J. E. Bingham, secretary A. J. Israel, secretary Andersen, Meyer & Co. David Sassoon & Co., Ld. Arnhold Karberg & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld.
940
OFFICES
SHANGHAI
Standard Life Assurance Company Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld. State Fire Insurance Company of London Sun Fire Insurance Office, London... Sun Insurance Office
Sun Insurance Office
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance, Ld. Tokyo Marine Insurance Company, Limited Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co. of Berlin.... Triton Insurance Company
Underwriting and Agency Association, London.... Union Assurance Society of London Union Assurance Society Ld.
Union Fire Insurance Company Limited, Paris Union Insurance Society of Canton (Marine).. Union Internationale Cie. d'Assurance, Antwerp Union Marine Insurance, Liverpool Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Union of Paris Fire Insurance Co.
United Cos. of Maritime Insce., Austrian Lloyd's United Dutch Marine Insco. Companies, London United Rhenisch Marine Insurance Cos., Bradford... United States Lloyd's
United Swiss Marine Insurance Company Universal Underwriting Association, London.. Upper Rhine Insurance Company, Limited.. Urbaine of Paris Fire Insurance Company
AGENTS
F. Loch Trevor, secretary Butterfield & Swire Wro. Little & Co. Siemssen & Co.
W. D. Graham, manager Brand Bros. & Co. Ilbert & Co.
Dodwell & Co., Ld.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Ld. Melchers & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld Gibb, Livingston & Co. Slevogt & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Siemssen & Co.
James Whittall, agent Siemssen & Co. Barlow & Co.
W. H. Trenchard Davis 31, Rue du Consulat Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Gibb, Livingston & Co. Melchers & Co. Siemssen & Co. A. Giesel & Co. Racine, Ackermann & Co.
Vaterlandische Transport Versicherungs Aktien Ges. Siemssen & Co.
Western Assurance Company, A.D). 1851 Western Assurance Co. of Toronto (Marine). Western Insurance Company (Marine Branch) World Marine Insurance Company, Limited, Wurtembergische Transport Versicherungs Ges. Würtembergische Transport Vers. Ges. Verein)
Hamburger Assecuradeure, Hamburg. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Limited. Yorkshire Insurance Company. Yorkshire Insurance Company, Limited
China & Japan Trading Co., Ld. North China Insurance Co., Ld. Ward, Probst & Co. Ballard & Hunter Melchers & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
W. S. Jackson, secretary Reiss & Co.
Dodwell & Co., Ld.
STREET PLAN
OF THE
NORTHERN & EASTERN DISTRICTS
OF THE
FOREIGN SETTLEMENT
AT
SHANGHAI
Scale of Kalt " JELE
H
To Banking
5
Jam
Cemeter
SKANGHAI
RAILWAY STATION
RAILWAY ROAD
ROAD
Watch
Hart Bow
Staff
To Hoowong
0
R
T
H
Rifle Range
Anglo Chinese
College
S T
LOAD
R
Customa Club
T
kool
of China
Bland Mission
Hongker
*Fire Stātie
Templo
of Hear
Water Tows
E
Garden
Boathous
TT
STOF ROAD
H.A.M. Consulate
Masonic
Hall
Public
Garden
Ever Vinfanianus,
Memorial
Hospital
Shed
SZZA
Eastern Patice
Sub Stalibú
Depot
(Polic
Central Whar
Heards Wharf
*XK. Whart
East Hongleew
Market
S
T
MUNDJAO ROAD
Muide Talice
MAUL
анманант кала
CONNA
носл
ROUTE
#ICHOR
PORTIO
SOOCHOW
STERI DISTRICT
AVENDE
ROUTE STANDA
E. 1. RAILWAY
SHANGHAI STATIO
Armt BumĖS
NORTHERN
Now Recreation
Crouzd
*LE RANGE
RIFLE
SKETCH PLAN
OF THE FOREIGN SETTLEMENT
AT
SHANGHAI
WBAY G
P O O
POOTUNG
Native
City
OF)
D
T
Hurt's Wharf
Shanghai and Honghew and Jardines
C.M. Lower Whart
Aerociated Whorwes
Lowan What
Jardine's
W H
AN G
GP00
R I VE R
Drawn and Engraved for the Directory & Chronicle
Shangha
Paper Hill
로
Shanghai
Water Works
EISTRICT
Li hi
Joule of Mitar
THE POINT
幼
Jolm Bartholomae & Co.Edin
SHANGHAT
ROADS IN THE CENTRAL DISTRICT
EAST END
The Bund
Yuen-ming-yuen Road
路
Museum Road
Szechuen Road
Kiangse Road.
Honan Road
Sbuntung Road
Kien-kie-lee
Shanse Road
Woo Foo Loong.
Chibli Road .
Sungkiang Road
SOUTH END
Sungkiang-loong
Pakhoi Road
Wahu Road King-loong-ka Canton Road Siking Road
Swatow Road
Foochow Road
Albany Road...
Hankow Road
Kiukiang Road
Nanking Road
Bun-tong-loong
WEST END
North Thibet Road
Winchester Road
Jehul Road...
Kan-enh Road
North Chekiang Road.
Cunningham Road
North Fokien Road. Ban-tai Road
North Shanse Road
North Honan Road Purdon Road....
North Kiangse Road Haskell oad
North Szechuen Road.. West End Lane....
Park Line
SOUTH END
North Yangtsze Road.....
North Soochow Road
Whang-poo Road Broadway (part of). Tiendong Road... Alabaster Road.
Toug Dong Ka Loong Seward Road..
Tsung Ming Road Kaifong Road Tsepoo Road
路內
NORTH AND SOUTHI
路院
路閲院路路路路里路衡路 子明物川西南東西福滿
潞
洋園博四江河山乾山五直
Fokien Road..
Koo-ka-loong
Hoopeh Road
Hoihow Road...
Chekiang Road...
Bing-vong-la
Yin-wo-ka
Kwangse Road
Kweichow Road
Yunnan Road Lloyd Road Thibet Roudl
EAST AND WEST
路江 松 Hiang-fun-loong 術江 Tientsin Road
街
北
江江海湖隆東涇頭州而让江京湯 松松北蕪金廣 汕福阿漢九南盆
·弼路路路街
Jin-kee Road
蕪,Taiwan Rond
Ningpo Road
Newchwang Road
South Woosich Road North Woosieh Road
Chefoo Road
Peking Road
Halfour Rond
路江九 Hongkong Road
I
Amoy Road
) Soochow Road....
ROADS IN THE NORTHERN DISTRICT
Woochang Road (part of) Boone Road (rart of} Hanbury Road
路
路
NORTH AND SOUTH
跻江
路脱
嵗司路路江海建路西南路西格川恩術 西極河肅浙髯習泰山河頓江司四司克 北文熱甘托克北三北北伯北海北南派 路路路 路路 路而路街
路路 路 脫衙路
子州路路司宋德路路路路師禮 韫蘇老涼拉唐華明封浦昌 璧
北北黄百天阿東西崇婼七武文漢
路路
Chapoo Road
Hannen Road
Durpoe Road
Lou Kwan Road
Woosung
Road
+----
Broadway (part of) Market Road
Miller Road
Astor Road
Tiendong Road (part of)
Woochang Road (part of).
Ming-hong Road..
Old China Street
Nanzing Road
Tsingpoo Road
Boone Road (part of).
Fearon Kond
EAST AND WEST
子租北|Quinsan Gardens..
忠武
Quinsan Road
Yuhang Road
Morrison Road
Yalu Road.... Haining Road Elgin Road Range Roa
Thorne Road..
Kashing Road
Boun lary Road
N. :zechuen Rd. Extension
Barchet Bond
Wonglo Road
P1110
Honda.
蹓
路建
路北
踏
路
路門
941
乍海頭老吳百賣密禮天武閲南青文
路街路路路家街路路路路路 建街北口江瑤華西州南合 福頤湖海翡平英廣段雲泥西
衖路路路路路錫路路福路路路 粉沐記灣波莊無無罘京爾捲門州 香天仁臺寧牛南北芝北百香度蘇
路路路路路帷悅路路路路路里路 師 浦能壩關淞老克勒查滝昌行遠海滩監倫
川脫 路路孫路路根路路路 山山恒禮綠而子恩與路四格 崐崑有獁鴨海愛把湯嘉界北白
花
路路
路
路潼
路昌
路行
里德
路灩
將
園
路球
路槑
路遥
路
路路
1
942
SHANGHAI
ROADS IN THE EASTERN DISTRICT
NORTH AND SOUTH
Hailar Road
Yuen-fong Road
Hwa-kee Road
Singkei Pang Road.
Tungchow Ro d
Chaou-foong Road
Kalgan Road...
Dent Road..
Kung-ping Road
No:TH END
路
Dalny Road
Jansen Road
Ford Lane
Thorburn Road
Whashing Road.
Wetmore Road
Tsitsihar Road
WEST END
Dixwell Road
Taiping Road
Harbin Road. Sawgin Road.
路沉
路戥思韂|Chusan Rond..
路邙太 Muirhead Road.
Alcock Road E-wo Road
路克
Wuchow Road
Arthur Road,
Yuen Chang Road
路洲梧 Macgregor Road
Paoting Road..
路
路口
Lay Road
路順保| Secul Road..
公| Flour Mill Road
家克鶻有漢安華市老嘉山州
東墨東東東西西百歐塘岳
威路 路路路路路路路浜路路口路路 狲 登錄恒碧路德街滙路路路
路路路禮 路路
路
East Kashing Road
Mukden Road...
East Yalu Road
East Yuhang Road
East Hanbury Road
Hsian Roal.
East Seward Road.
Market Street.. Broadway East
Urga Roid
Tongshan Road
Yochow Road,
EAST END
Cemetery Road.
West Thibet Road
Changsha oad
EAST AND WEST
Dent Lane.
Kwenming Road
Ward Road
Yangtsze-poo Road
Wayside Road
Baikal Read
Yuliu Road
atavin Road
Yangchow Road
Rangoon Road
Saigon Road
Colombo Road
ROADS IN THE WESTERN DISTRICT
跻
NORTH AND SOUTH
境酋長温祳
路藏路路路 路絡橋路路路路路路 山西沙州克 省白撒克度都通德根
路路
Wenchow Road
Park Road
Sans Souci Temace Tai Sing Road Myburgh Road Stone Bridge Road Mohawk Road Chungking Road Chenglu Road. Ta ung Road....
Carter Road
Markham Road (part of)
SOUTH END
Great Western Road
Manila Road.....
Taku Road
Weihaiwei Road
Love Lane
Mandalay Road
Bubbling Well Road .. Burkill Road Yu Yuen Road Nanyang Road Kuling Road. Avenue Road Tsingtao Road Pingchiao Road Sinza Road
··
路
踏
路考
路而
項| Yates Road..
泰美新馬成大卡
Medhurst Road
Moulmein Road..
Moji Rond
Tonquin
Gordon Road
Seymour
Road
Tsongchow Road Ferry Road..
Hardoon Road
Annam Road
Hart Road
Kiaochow Road.. Siccawei Road
Jessfield Road
EAST AND WEST
路拉路衛路蘭寺而路路路羲路路路
浜李沽海橋德安克圖襻嶺文島橋剛 長孟大威斜孟靜白愚南孤愛青平新
路 路 路路路
Tokio Road
Markham Road (part of) Connaught Road Singapore Road Haiphong Road Penang Fond Robison Rond... Macao Road Mokanshan Ho d... Ichang Road
Outside Rd.
West Foochow Road
Brenan Road Rubicon Road
Hungjao Road.. Edinburgh Road
Covnaught Road Extension
路路考路立路樹路衖路 路廠 哈 山海而和格定速生區盛股路湖粉 升控实枬保大勤常韜華★谤雷西鹦
衒銘路浦路爾路維路路路波 腌明锃樹賽同林泰州江艾倫 鄧長華揚威培榆培楊漼西哥
路灣
路
路路亞
路亞
路
路臓游赫特
路盖
学特爾 京登摩州汝同南德州宋司 同本莚 東戈西滄小合安克膠徐極 孟 路路渡路路區路詐 路而
路波
路路路波路路生路山路州乃根路堡脫 京根腦嘉豐掷白門于蘇利白橋定腦 東半縻星海檳羅莫宜西白谍虹安康 路 路 路路路 路路
路
路而
西行
943
自八周
來經
火橋
Quai de France
Rue du Whampoo
SHANGHAI
ROADS IN THE FRENCH SETTLEMENT
EAST END
灘外西
街
街
EAST AND WEST
西街路河街堂街街街門街 磨水街火
開行州城安主聖祥來北當街輪家橋來
法洋京東永天典吉紫老典新火鄭新自
浜
街
Rue de Chinchew
Quai des Komparts
Bue la Guerre
"
15
Montauban.
de la Mission
Petit
Disery
Porte du Nord
Protét
de l'Administration........
du Moulin
Tourane
des Pères
街大
街
街
房镝
Rue de Saigon
Rue Palikao
Quai de l'Ouest..
Quai de l'Extension..
Rue Brodie A, Clarke Hennequin
**
33
du Cometiêrc..
J
Vouillemont
Galle
Bluntschili
Lemaire
Kouei Ling Chan,
Song Chan......
Ameral Bayle
Brenier de Montmorand...
Chapsal...
Paul Beau
路
桂暠
山路
NORTH AND SOUTH
NORTH END
Quai du Yang-king-pang
路渲巡洋
Rue Kraetzer..
"
那
Wagrer
du Weikwé
Ratard......
du Consulat
Hoai Ho
Avenue Paul Brunat
Rue de Ning po
Quai de la Breche..
5
de Fossè...
Rue Colbert
Sœur Allegre
Pass'ejo.
Marcel Tillot....
問
路馬
興館昌波
街興響
Rue Eugene Bard
Buissonet
du Song Kiang
de Lagrene
Voisin
Orion
路江松
"
公
Millot
*
"
Paroy Gros
Formose
Chusan
浪河
Takou
>
du Fokien
路鸿東街安永
Passage Nézian
Rue Ming-hong
路橋仙八
路路路路养路太
弄
TJ
de la Paix de l'Est
街太興
街大門東小
臺舟大福神閔 小
邊山古建財行興
+
Avenue Dubail
Route Voyron
門
Pe e Robert
des Sœurs
לנ
ROUTES EXTERIEURES
小路灣家羅
Avenue Pottier
Route de Say Zoong
Prosper Paris
Ferguson
Stanislas Chevalier
Pichon
Doumer.........
小路宅家劉
de Zikuwei
++
路菫券
路林海隔
+
路會家徐
SOOCHOW
Sú-chau
Soochow, the capital of the province of Kiangsu, lies about eighty miles west by water and fifty-four by railand alittle north of Shanghai, with which it is connected by excellent inlaul water-ways. The Shanghai-Nanking Railway, supplies still better connection. The city is a rectangle, its length from north to south being three and a half miles and its width from east to west two and a half, the total circumference being about 10 miles. It lies not far from the eastern shore of the great Taihu lake. Past its walls runs the southern section of the Grand Canal, which joins Hangehow to Chinking; and in every direction spread creeks or canals, affording easy communication with the numerous towns in the surrounding country. It is an important manufacturing centre, with a popula tion of over half a million. Its two chief manufactures are satins and silk em broideries of various kinds. In addition, it sends out silk goods, linen and cotton fabrics, paper, lacquerware, and articles in iron, ivory, wood, horn, and glass. Since the opening of the port manufactures on foreign principles have been introduced and there are now three silk filatures and one cotton mill. Before the Taiping rebellion Soochow shared with Hangchow the reputation of being the finest city in China, but it was almost entirely destroyed by the rebels, who captured it on 25th May, 1860. Its recovery by Major (afterwards General) Gordon on 27th Nov., 1863, was the first effective blow to the rebellion. Since that disastrous period it has recovered itself greatly and is once more populous and flourishing, though it has not yet attained to its former pitch of prosperity. It was declared open to foreign trade on the 20th September, 1896, under the provisions of the Japanese Treaty. The Foreign Settlement is under the southern wall of the city, just across the Canal, and is a strip of land about 14 miles long and a quarter of a mile broad. The western portion has been reserved for a Japanese Settlement. The government has made a good carriage road along the Canal bank extending the whole length of the settlement, and as far as the railway station, a distance of five and a half miles, on which carriages and ricshas ply, and on fine days the road is crowded with people from the city, amusing themselves, walking and driving. The Chinese and European school was opened in 1900. The net value of the trade of the port passing through the Foreign Customs in 1908 was Tls. 3,872,298 as against Tls. 4,307,540, in 1907, Tls. 5,729,980 in 1906, and Tls. 4,240,013 in 1905. But this represents only a small portion of the total trade of the port, most of which passes through the Likin.
亞世亞 A-si-a
DIRECTORY
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD., THE
Chien Kung Say, agent
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
T. R. Morrison, agent
CONSULATE, JAPANESE
Consul
Chancelier in charge--K. Ohga Inspector of Police K. Koreyeda
Soo-chow Hsin-kuan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-F. J. Smith
Assistants-A. J. L. Macgregor,
Fukumoto
J.
Medical Officers-Benussi-Bossi and
J. M. Suell, M.D.
Acting Tidesurveyor-H. R. Schweiger Examiner P. H. Martin
Tidewaiters-C. P. Winkel, W. Moore,
D. P. W. Jones
Kiangsu Likin Collectorate
Dpty. Commnnr.-E. Alabaster
院學醫東日
MEDICAL PRACTICE & MEDICAL SCHOOL
M. Toyabe, M.D.
J. Takata, assistant
MISSIONS
SOOCHOW CHINKIANG
For Prou. Missions see end of China
Directory
NEW YORK LIFE Insurance Co., LD.
R. S. Anderson
司公船輪清日
NISSHIN KISEN KAISHA
H. Tobi, manager
POLICE
Exclusive Chinese Service
局政郵清大
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
District Postmaster-F. J. Smith
Do. Postal Officer
J. B. Boyers
Soochow District comprises:-
Head Office
6 City Sub-offices
3 Inland Offices
29 Inland Agencies
局便郵州蘇本日大
Ta-jih-pen Soo-chow-yu-pien-chri
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL JAPANESE
Postmaster M. Hattori
Assistant Clerk-H, Aratake
Soo KING SILK FILATURE
Chou Hon-ying, director
Minoretti
廠紗耣蘇
Soo-lung-sou-chang
945
Soo LUNG COTTON SPINNING MILL CO., LD
Cho Sou-ying, Q., general manager
Walter C. Wood, M.I.M.E., man.ger
Won Me-foo, assistant manager
興蘇
Soo SIN & Co., Merchants
**ARK Tung-woo-ta-hok-tong 堂學大吳東
SOOCHOW UNIVERSITY
President-Rev. D. L. Anderson
Professors W. B. Nance, N. G. Gee,
R. S. Anderson, R. D. Smart, C. K. Campbell, W. A. Mitchell, B. D. Lucas, L. G. Lea
WU SING SILK FILATURE
Ting Ju-ling, manager J. Berthelot, clerk
CHINKIANG
IET Chinhng
The port of Chinkiang, which was opened to trade by the Treaty of Tientsin, is situated on the south bank of the Yangtze, about 150 miles from its mouth, and near the entrances of the southern and northern sections of the Grand Canal. This position gave it formerly great importance and it was at one time believed that the port must eventually become a serious rival to Shanghai. But the neglect of the inland waterways, and especially of the Grand Canal, which is closed to steam traffic for some months during each year, either because the water is too shallow or because it has risen so much that the wash from launches would injure the embank- ments, is causing the trade to be gradually diverted to Hankow and Tsingtao. When the Tientsin-Fukou Railway is completed more of the trade will be diverted to Nanking. A railway from Kwachow, at the mouth of the Grand Canal on the north bank of the river, along the Canal to Tsingkiangp'u, is projected and may do something to save the situation, but there are fourteen tax barriers along this mute and it remains to be seen whether this railway, if built, will not have the same difficulty with the Likin officials as is now experienced by the Shanghai- Nanking Railway. The north bank opposite the Concession is being eroded rapidly, and a spit from the island of Cheng Jen Chou, to the west of the Concession, is extending eastwards, and threatens to become a grave inconvenience to shipping. The future prospects of the port are, therefore, not so bright as they appeared a
few years ago.
Chinkiang is one of the pleasantest ports on the river. It is now within a few hours' railway journey of Shanghai, which enables ice and other necessaries to be delivered promptly, while the Shanghai morning paper is received the same evening. The surtounding country is very pretty, and there is fair shooting, wild pig being plentiful within a few miles of the Concession. Electric lighting was installed in
30
946
CHINKIANG
1908, but a scheme for waterworks fell through. The water question is particularly important, as the band in summer is lined with hundreds of native boats, and water for all purposes has to be obtained from the river. This is probably why the port is not as healthy as it should be.
The population of the Native City is estimated at about 150,000.
There is a Tartar garrison, and a Regiment of the new foreign-drilled infantry. To the west of the Concession is a handsome temple adorned with a pagoda standing on a con spicuous elevation, and known as Golden Island. It is interesting to record that in the time of Marco Polo this hill was on the north bank of the river. In 1842 it was an island near the middle of the river, and the British fleet anchored where the railway station now stands.
The total tonnage entered and cleared during 1908 was 7,244,996 tons, of which 2,916,516 tons were British. The value of the net total imports from Foreign countries was Hk. Tls. 17,512,881. The only trade that makes steady progress is the importation of kerosene oil, both the Standard Oil Company of New York and the Asiatic Petroleum Company having installations for tinning. A new paper mill, recently erected and to be run under Chinese management, has not succeeded, and the Electric Light Company, under Chinese management, has not proved lucrative. There are no local industries of importance, and the trade of the port is with the districts to the north of the river.
E
Lih-toon
DIRECTORY
ALLISTON, S., Cattle Exporter, Merchant
and Commission Agent
亞世亞 A-si-t
ASIATIC PETROLEUM & Co., LD., THE,
Local Manager -A. P. Vandamm
Installation Manager-R. J. Roberts
Agents for the Anglo-Saxon Pe-
troleum Co., Ld.
Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
Harold Bell, signs per pro.
Agencies
China Navigation Company, Limited Ocean Steamship Company, Limited China Mutual Steam Nvgtn. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld. "Shah," hulk pontoon (receiving ship) "Lancefield," hulk
Royal Exchange Assce. Corporation London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Palatine Insurance Co., Ld. Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld. Russo-Chinese Bank
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
E. Starkey, chairman (pro. ten.) L. H. Tamplin, hon. secretary
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION
Co.'s Hulk "Express'
**
Chu Pin King, agent
Agency
China Merchants' Insurance Company
CHINKIANG CLUB
Committee-F. E. Taylor (chairman), A. J. Basto (hon, sec. and treas.), R. Kähs
CONSULATES
門衙事領英*
Ta-ying ling.sze ya-mun
GREAT BRITAIN
Also in charge of Austro-Hungarian,
French and German interests
Consul-G. D. Pitzipios
Constable-C. S. J. Boland
Writer-Kno Hsin-por
官事領國美大
Ta-mei-kwoh ling-sze-kwan
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Consul at Nanking
Chin-kiang-kwan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-F. E. Taylor Assistant J. D. D. de la Touche
Do. -A. J. Basto
Do.
-M. F. Hey
Do. -H. St. J. Wilding Medical Officer-Dr. M. Urbánek Chief Tidesurveyor and Harbour Ma
ter-L. A. Byworth
Boat Officer-F. H. Siemsen Acting do.-H. Bone Examiner T. J. Edwards Assistant Examiners-J. A. Dick H. E. McGowan, F. Spence, H. P.
Singer
CHINKIANG
Tidewaiters-J. W. Harrison, A. H. Rasmussen, J. H. Hunter, T. J. Wells, E. A. C. Kopp, G. Varale, P. Pedersen, J. J. Delahunty Proby. Tidewaiter-J. J. C. Sömme Salt Searchers-R. Dudley, C. Mork
Ukong
DAVID, D. M., Merchant and Comsn. Ågt.
E. Starkey, agent
Sin-shun-chang
DUFF & Co., Shipping and Comsn. Agents
Agencies
International Lloyd
Ewo TIMBER DEPOT
Jardine, Matheson Co, Ld.
L. H. Tamplin, manager
和监
Fung-ho
GEARING & Co., Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents-3, Paoshun Buildings
E. Starkey
Agencies
Imperial Fire Office
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Imperial Marine Insurance Co., Tokyo North China Insurance Co., Ltd. Mitsu Bishi Co.
Fu
E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Ld. Merchants
Lewis H. Tamplin Agencies
Hongkong & Shanghai Bankg. Corpn. Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Company Glen Line of Steamers
Shire" Line of Steamers, Limited Canton Insurance Office, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Company Alliance Assurance Company Green Island Cement Company, Ld. Hulk "Chinwo," E. Hamilton, master
#Teh-hsing
KILLEEN & Co., General Merchants, Ex- port and Import Commission Agents and Contractors
Thur, C. M. Killeen Agency
The Shanghai Life Insurance, Co., Ld.
MASONIC DORIC LODGE No. 1433, E, C.
W.M.-Ivon Tuxford
I. P. M.-Jesse F. Newman S. W.-William H. Reynolds J. W.-Urban John Kelly Treasurer--James W. Banbury Secretary-Charles Tonkin S. D.-Matthew John Grey
J. D.
Thomas James Wells D. C-Frank Ware Dees I. G.-.
Steward John Landen Tyler-Fredrick Siemsen
Mei-cha-sz MELCHERS & Co., Merchants
Hermann Melchers (Bremen) A. Kortf
do.
C. Michelau (Shanghai) John W. Bandow, do. G. Friesland (Hongkong) Ad. Widmann (Shanghai)
Robert Kähs
947
Hulk "Shanghai" A.Lange,hulkkeeper Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd
Hamburg-America Line
New Zealand Insurance Co.,
China Traders' Insurance Co., Id. Salamander Fire Insurance Co. of
Amsterdam
Globus Insurance Co. of Hamburg Nordstern Life Insurance Co. of Berlin
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
昌美 May-chong
PIERSDORFF, N. S., Mechanical, Electrical and Marine Engineer, Consulting En- gineer, Inspector of Steamers and Machinery, Customs Surveyor, Merchant and Commission Agent; Tel. Ad: Favelles; Code: A. B. Č. 5th Edition Agency
Chiukiang Electric Light Co.
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
District Postmaster (ex officio)-F. E.
Taylor Acting Deputy Postmaster in charge
of District-A. L. Kauffmann First Postal Officer-W. Scott Assistant Postal Officers-H. Reeks,
W. A. Dalgarno
District Accountant-C. Tonkin
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL GERMAN Post Director-R. Kahs
Shun-ch'ang
SCHIELE & BYRNE, Merchants and Ship-
ping Agents; Tel. Ad: Rhine
E. G. Byrne
Agency
Royal Insurance Company
李美 Mei-foo
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK; Tel. Ad:
Socony
J. F. Newnan, attorney
30*
948
M. J. Grey
J. W. Banbury
CHINKIANG-NANKING
W. H. Reynolds, engineer (oil tank
installation)
局報電國中
Chung-kook-dien-bao-chuck
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Chung Liang Wong, manager
Y. K. Shen, controller
P. K. Sun, chief clerk in charge.
!
Y. K. Tam, assistant in charge 34 operators
# B B * * Ta Ying-kwoh E-shih URBANEK, DR. R. M., Customs Medical
Officer
WỪ CHOU SHAN BUNGALOW
Trustees H.B.M. Consul, and Com-
missioner of Customs
Hon. Secy, and Treas.-L. A. Byworth
NANKING
Kiáng-ning
The city owes its present name, "Southern capital," to having been many times the capital of the Empire, the last occasion neing in the Ming dynasty at the commencement of the 15th century. It is also known as Kiang Ning Fu, being the chief city of the prefecture of Kiang Ning, and the seat of government for the provinces grouped under the designation of Kiang Nan. In official documents it is not considered proper to call the city Nanking, since the Government acknowledges but one capital. Besides Kiang Ning Fu, an elegant Chinese name commonly used is Kin Ling or "golden mound From the 5th or 6th century B.C. to the present there has been a walled city at this place. Nanking was specified in the French Treaty of 1858 as one of the Yangtze ports to be opened to trade, but was not formally opened until May, 1899.
Nanking is situated on the south bank of the Yangtze, 45 miles beyond Chinkiang and 205 from Shanghai. From the river little can be seen of it except the long line of lofty grey brick walls which encircle it. The walls have an elevation varying from 40 to 90 feet, are from 20 to 40 feet in thickness, and 22 miles in circumference. They enclose a vast area, a large portion of which is wilderness or uncultivated land, The inhabited portion lies towards the south and west, and is several miles from the banks of the river. Whatever of architectural beauty or importance belonged to Nanking perished or was reduced to a ruinous condition at or before its occupation by the Taiping rebels. The world-famous Porcelain Tower, the most beautiful pagoda in China, was completely destroyed during this period of its history, and now only broken and scattered bricks remain of the structure that was once the glory of Nanking. It stood outside the walls on the south side of the city. The celebrated mausoleum of the Emperor Hung Wu, founder of the Ming dynasty (who died in 1398), with other tombs and monuments, known as the Ming Tombs, are just outside the eastern walls. There are many other interesting ruins in or near the city, including the remains of Hung Wu's Palace. Nanking was first brought into notice among Europeans in 1842, in which year the first British Treaty with China was signed here. During the Taiping rebellion no place suffered more. It was first taken by assault by the Taipings on the 19th March, 1853, and after sustaining a prolonged siege was recaptured by the Imperial forces on the 19th July, 1864, a fatal blow to the rebels.
Although Nanking has recovered to a small extent from the prostration which attended its ill-treatment during the rebellion, it has never yet attained any commercial importance, but a brilliant future is predicted for the port if the railway schemes are carried out. A new and brilliant era," wrote the Commissioner of the Imperial Chinese Maritime Customs in his report for 1900, "should dawn upon the port of Nanking, on account of its excellent position as a terminus for the railways which will bring down the immense mineral and other wealth of the provinces of Anhwei, Honan, and Shansi. The distance from either Honan or Shansi is about the same to Nanking as to Hankow, and the engineering difficulties of a railway down to the river opposite Nanking are no greater than those of a line to Hankow. The great advantage, then,
il
NANKING
949
which should secure to Nanking its position as the outlet for these rich provinces is the fact of its being so much nearer the sea than Hankow and accessible to the deepest draught ocean vessels at all seasons of the year. It is therefore only natural that a line should have been projected from the mineral fields of Shansi to the village of P'u-k'ou, on the other side of the river to Nanking. Yet another line, from the mineral district of Hain-yan in Honan, through Anhwei, with its terminus at P'u-k'ou, is also in contempla- tion. These two lines should revolutionise the commercial conditions at Nanking. The line from Shanghai to Nanking does not seem to have given the impetus to commercial life anticipated. Trains are running daily from Shanghai to Nanking and a short line has been completed connecting Hsiakwan, the port of Nanking, with the southern part of the city, a distance of six to eight miles. During the past two or three years there has been quite an air of progress," especially in building, and quite a Western aspect is being given to the ancient Capital of the Mings, as the new government buildings are all in foreign style and so also are a growing number of shops and residences recently built for Chinese. The Naval College, a large pile of buildings, was opened in 1890. A dozen teachers and instructors are employed, including two foreigners. The Nanking University was founded in 1888 by the Central China Mission of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and is now an imposing and well-appointed school, with a large roll of scholars. The Arsenal and Powder Mills, for many years in charge of foreigners, are now entrusted to native direction. They are situated just outside the South Gate, A macadamized road has been built from the steamer landing clear through the city to the Tung-Tsi Gate in the south wall, a distance of eight miles, and many similar roads in other parts of the city have been added during the last few years so that it is now posssible to go "almost anywhere" in carriages. The carriages and jinrickhas which have been introduced are much appreciated by the people. British, American and German Consulates were opened in 1900. As the seat of the viceregal government, and by virtue of its historic associations, Nanking is of import- ance, and will, no doubt, regain before long a degree of its lost prestige. The net value of the trade of the port for 1908 was Tls. 9,855,892 as compared with Tls. 10,415,071 in 1907 and Tls. 9,668,934 in 1906.
DIRECTORY
Tung-wo
A
Chau-shang-nan-kok
Agency
ATKINSON & DALLAS, Civil Engineers and CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION CO.›
Architects
W. L. Atkinson, A.M.I.C.E.
BRIDGE HOUSE HOTEL
Proprietress-Miss Alliston
局總務洋省通江兩
Leung Kiang Tung Siung Yung Mo Truny Kok
BUREAU FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF LIANG
KIANG PROVINCES
古太 Taikoo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
E M. Kirkwood, signs per pro. Agencies
China Navigation Company, Ld. Ocean Steaniship Company, Ld. China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. London & Lancashire Fire Ins. Co. Guardian Assurance Company Orient Insurance Company Union Insurance Society of Canton Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld.
Chuen Shan Chwang
China Merchants' Insurance Co.
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-H. F. King
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul-H. F. King
H. I. GERMAN M'S. CONSULATE --Tel. Ad:
Germania
Consul-F. Wendschuch, Dr. Jur. Interpreter--J. Schulze, Dr. Jur. Secretary-Kanter
Chinese Assistant Interpreter
Pei-yuan
Chinese Clerk--Yü Kuai-chen
H. I. JAPANESE M'S. CONSULATE
Consul-M. Ihara
Assistant-K. Uchiyama Inspector of Police-C, Suzuki Constable-R. Tani
▬▬
Li
950
UNITED STATES
Consul--Jas. C. McNally
關金 Chin Ling Kuan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissioner-E. O. Reis
Assistant R. de Nully
Do. -C. A. S. Williams
MedicalOfficer---W. E. Macklin Tidesurveyor-J. H. Barton Examiner--H. A. Farrell
NANKING
Asst. Examiners-H. F. Brackstone J. C. Power, E. C. Charrington Tidewaiters--S. G. Pedersen, W. T. Somerville, P. F. Jonsen, H. H. Macaulay, W. Paul, S. R. Shields
DIESING, A. & Co's. HOTEL
A. Diesing
DIESING & Co., A., General Merchants, Auctioneers and Commission Agents
A. Diesing
Director Taotai Wang Kwan
Councillor Taotai U. K. Cheng (ex-
pectant)
English Inptr.-K. Y. Liao
Do.
Wang Hsun
Branch Office at Hsia Kwan
Deputy-Kwan Chao Kih
Tu E-woo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Ln., Merchants
W. L. Ingram
Agencies
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. "Shire" Line of Steamers Canton Insurance Office, Ld. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co. Green Island Cement Co.
KILLEEN & Co., General Merts., Imp. and Exp. Commission Agents and Contractors
Thur. C. M. Killeen
LIANG KIANG VICEROY'S YAMEN,
His Ex. Yang Icheng, advisor to H.
E. the Viceroy
Taotai K. K. Woo, secretary Taotai Spenser L. Tseng, attache
METHODIST HOSPITAL (PHILANDER SMITH
MEMORIAL)
Dr. Robt. C. Beebe, M.D., superintendent Mrs. M. E. Burns, suptg. nurse (absent)
24Mbhi Kiang-nan-lu-sz-heio-tang
MILITARY ACADEMY
Commissioner Yü Ming Chen
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of China
Directory
堂主天
Tien-chu-t'ang
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rev. Fr. L. Gauchet, s.J.
堂主天門西漢
Ilan-si-men-tien-chu-tain'g
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Father G. Gibert, S.J.
院書文匯
Wei-wen-shu-yuan
NANKING UNIVERSITY
Rev. A. J. Bowen, B.A., president Rev. Wilbur F. Wilson, dean of College of Liberal Arts & professor of English Rev. H. F. Rowe, dean of Fowler School
of Theology
A. W. Martin, prof. of Applied Science Dr. R. C. Beele, M.D., A.M., clean of
Medical School
William Millward, professer of Natur-
al Science
W. F. Hummel, prof. Eng. Literature
and Economics
proctor of preparatory School
Li Kwei, principal of Chinese Dept.
E. K. Gifford, instructor in English
堂學軍海洋南
Nan-yang Shui-shih hsio-t'ang
NAVAL COLLEGE-IMPERIAL NANKING
Commissioner-Chiang Cheow-ying,
Capt. L.C.N., Lieut.-Colonel
Director Hwang Siang-tsi Paymaster--Shih Tsi Executive Branch
Chief Instructor--A. E. Monro, K.N. Second Do. -Lin Chi-ying Third Do. -Tsau Tsi-kwei Supt. of Cadets-- Tong Chen-yuen Engineering Branch
Chief Instructor E. P. St. Jolin
Benn, R.N. Second Do. -Chen Tsing-tsih Third Du. -Hsee Chin-yu Drilling Do. -Lew Kwang Wen Secretary-Li Chao Tang Supt. of Cadets-Wang Foo Lin
MKB Chin-ling-yu-cheng-kok POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE Postmaster-E. O. Reis
Dy-Postal Officer-L. C. Arlington Assist. Office-E. T. Slight
POST OFFICE, JAPANESE
Postmaster-S. Inaba
Postal Clerk-M. Ota
李美 Mee-fu
STANDARD OIL Co. of New York -Tel. Ad:
Socony
J. F. Newman, manager
S. S. Chang, agent
of
WUHU
B Wi-hú
This port (the name of which signifies grass and lakes," ie, swamps) was opened to foreign trade, by the Chefoo Convention, on the 1st April, 1877. It is situated on the river Yangtsze, in the province of An-hwei, and is a half-way" port between Chinkiang and Kewkiang, though nearer to the former. It has the appearance a thriving and busy town, and is admirably located for trade. This is mainly owing to the excellence of its water communication with the interior. A large canal, with a depth of five to six feet of water in the winter and ten to twelve feet in the summer, connects the port with the important city of Ning-kuoh-fu, in southern An-hwei, fifty miles distant. Another canal runs inland for over eight miles in a south-westerly direction to Taiping-hsien, an extensive tea district. This canal, which is only navigable in the summer, passes through Nan-ling and King-hsien, where the cultivation of silk iş carried on, and may some day be of importance. The silk districts of Nan-ling and King-hsien are situated within fifty miles of Wuhu. Besides the canals leading to Ning-kuch-fu and Taiping-hsien, there are two others communicating with Su-an and Tung-pó.
It will be seen from the above enumeration of the facilities for water carriage from Wubu that it is calculated to prove an emporium for commerce. The value of the trade of the port for the year 1907, Hk. Tls. 21,390,455, was lower than it has been for many years, but in 1908 the more satisfactory figure of Tls. 27,429,894 was reached. It compares with Tls. 30,623,809 in 1905, Tls. 23,223,383, in 1904, and Tis. 24,542,783 in 1903, Coal may some day become a considerable article of export from Wuhu, both native and foreign capital having been directed to the great coal fields of the province. The China Merchants' Steam Navigation Company are interested in several coal districts and have expended large sums in the opening of their mining property; the output has thus far been small, owing to the lack of proper machinery and management. The Chin Kang Company, a wealthy native syndicate, have a government permit to open mines in several districts and have been prospecting with a view to developing their property in the near future. A number of smaller companies are operating at present with the sanction of the above Corporation, to whom they pay a royalty. Two companies representing foreign capital-the Yangtsze Land and Investment Company, Limited, and the I Li Coal and Mining Company, Limited-have purchased a number of the most valuable mining properties in the immediate neighbourhood of Wuhu,
There is a large trade in timber in Wuhu, but that, like all other trades, is in the hands of the Chinese. There is a steam flour mill and a soap factory. The soap does not sell well. The preservation of egg yolk and albumen is an industry which was started in 1897, and has been carried on with several changes of proprietorship. A brick and tile manufactory is being erected.
The town is fairly well built, with rather broader streets than most Chinese cities possess, and is tolerably paved. The tract of land selected 30 years ago for the foreign settlement was definitely cerled in 1906, and sites were allotted to the Anhwei Railway Company and to varions shipping companies, each lot having a river frontage of 600 to Lion fent, Bunding operations have progressed satisfactorily, and the place has taken on a decided air of prosperity. The bund when completed will be about one mile in length. The roads in the Foreign Settlement have just been completed and are well laid out, forming a good promenade for those who care to avail themselves of walking exercise. Four large godowns have been built by Messrs. Butterfield & Swire on their ground in the New Settlement for storing rice. On the plots of ground. acquired by the Asiatic Petroleum and the Standard Oil Companys below I-Chi-Shan, ahill which forms the lower boundary of the Foreign Settlements, the former company has erected oil godowns and the latter have premises in course of erection. The Electric Light Co, appear to be doing well, for electric Lighting has superceded that of oil to a great A railway is projected to Kwangtehchow but funds, are said to be lacking, bridge across the creek. The population of Wuhu is estimated at 80,750. and the only work noticeable at the Wuhu and is that piers have been erected for a
extent.
952
WUHU
DIRECTORY
1st Class Tidewaiter-C. F. O'Brien
ANHWEI RAILWAY Co.
Hans Berents, civil engineer
1st
do.
-S. Woxen
2nd.
do.
-G. T. Voyce
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD., THE
E. Middleton
3rdl.
do.
-J. A. Graudon
3rd.
do.-A. A. Z. vonStockhausen
3rd.
do.
古太 Tai-koo
3rd.
do.
3rd.
do.
3rd. do.
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
Geo. E. J. Rose, signs per pro. Agencies
"China Navigation Co.'s Hulk "Le-Tai"
Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Union Insce. Society of Canton, Ld. London and Lancashire Fire Insce.Co. Roya Exchange Assurance Corpn. Palatine Insurance Company Guardian Assurances Co. (Fire)
Taikoo Sugar Refinining Co., Ld.
Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co.
of Hongkong, Limited
局商招
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION CO.
Hulk "Bombay"
C. C. Lee, manager
A. Y. Williams, translator
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Actg. Consul-H. H. Fox Constable-J. Shields
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul-Jas C. McNalley, residing
at Nanking
門衙事領國英大
Ta Ying Kuo ling-sz Ta-mén
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-H. H. Fox
Constable-S. Sheils
BAT Wu-hu hsin-kwan
關新湖蕪
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissioner-F. J. Mayers
Assistant-L. P. G. de Cartier
Do. -G. K. Leach
Do.
-H. C. Lowder
Do. -A. W. T. Palin
Medical Officer-E. H. Hart
Tidesurveyer and Harbour Master-E.
C. Tregillus
Boat Officer--J. Power
Chief Examiner-G. D. Sharnhorst
Examiner
Asst, do.
do.
do.
R. J. Chard
-A. A. du Bord
-W. Howard
-C. E. G. Rhoderick
3rd. do.
-K. Stangaard
-P.S.Dsenis
-W. Pettersson -D. Bartolini -N. G. Murray
DENNY, GETZ & Co., Consulting and Mining
Engineers
A. Denny
M. Getz
昌華
Wha-cheong
GEDDES & Co., Ship'g Agts.; Hulk"HungOn
Ch'en Ching-an, agent
Agencies
Hamburg America Linie
Wang Sheng-chih, agent
4
Hulk Wulu"
Capt. F. Tessensolim, bulk-keeper
HOSPITAL, WUHU GENERAL
Dr. Edgerton H. Hart, superintendent Dr. Henry S. Houghton
Dr.Chung, HousePhysician and Surgeon Mrs. Edgerton H. Hart
Mrs. H. S. Houghton
Miss Alice E. Maddock, principal, Wu-
hu Foreign School
Miss Edith M. Crane
Miss Kate L. Ogbom
和怡 E-o
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Merchants
R. Johns, agent
Hulk Madras"
Agencie
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Glen Line of Steamers
Canadian Pacific Railway Company Canton Insurance Office Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. China Sugar Refining Co., Ld. Green Island Cement Co., Ld.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC
Tien-chu-tang
Rev. Père E. Rouxel, s.J.
I. Richet, S.J.
A. Tcheng, S.J.
邊麥 Ma-piz
WUHU KEWKIANG
Wu-hu-tien-ehu
NISSEX KISEN KAISHA; Hulks "Thistle and TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
"Tanais"
局政郵清大 Taching-yu-cheng-chii
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Dist. Postmaster-F. J. Mayers
Clerk-in-charge-Pau Yu Sung
Branch Offices at Lüchowfu, Ningkuofu
Showchow, Liuanchow, Vingchowfu and Cheng Yung-kwan
Tatung Sub-District
Sub-Dist. P'mast.-C. Thorne
Asst. Postal Officer-in-charge-F.
Guaita
Assistant Postal Clerk--Sun Lau-
foh
STANDARD OIL Co. OF NEW YORK--Tel. Ad:
Socony
J. F. Newman, manager S. P. Gracey, agent
Zee Chien Kion, manager
953
Hsin Chen Ching, clerk in charge
T. Y. Sze, C. L. Li, assistants and 13
clerks
TATUNG
**OEG Wan-an-yen-li-teung-chu
ANHUI SALT LIKIN COLLECTORATE, TATUNG
Acting Deputy Commr. in charge-C.
Thorne
AKB Ta-ching-yu-cheng-chu 局政郵清大
POST OFFICE IMPERIAL CHINESE, Tating
Postal Officer-
Inspecting Clerk-Sun Lan-foh
Anking Branch Office
Clerk-in-charge-Han Kwan-tsang
KEWKIANG
Kiú-kiang
Kewkiang (now more generally written Kiukiang) is situated on the river Yangtsze near the outlet of the Poyang Lake, and is a prefectural city of the province of Kiang-si. It is distant about 187 geographical miles from Hankow and 445 miles from Shanghai. Kewkiang was, before the Rebellion, a busy and populous city; but it was occupied by the Taiping rebels in 1853, and before it was given up to the Imperial troops was almost entirely destroyed. When the Foreign Settlement was established there, how- ever, the population soon returned, and has continued to increase rapidly: it is now estimated at 55,000.
The city is built close to the river, the walls running along the banks of it for some 500 yards. Their circumference is about five miles, but a portion of the space enclosed is still unoccupied. The city contains no feature of interest. There are several large lakes to the north and west of it, and it is backed by a noble range of hills a few miles distant, among them being Kuling some 3,600 feet high, which has become a well-known summer resort, especially of Missionaries. The foreign settlement lies to the west of the city and is neatly laid out.
It possesses a small bund lined with trees, a club, a small Protestant church, and a Roman Catholic cathedral.
The idea which led to the opening of Kewkiang was, no doubt, its situation as regards communication by water with the districts where Tea is produced. But the hopes entertained respecting the port have never been wholly realised, Hankow having become the market for Black Teas. The general trade of the port, however, has in- creased considerably in recent years, a large development of Inland Steam Navigation in the Poyang Lake contributing to this result. Its connection by rail with the provincial capital, Nanchang (begun in 1906), may further improve matters. The Tea expert in 1908 was 229,443 piculs as compared with 252,396 piculs in 1907 and 200,016 in 1906. Kewkiang is the port from whence the ware made at the far-famed porcelain factories at Kin-té-chén is shipped. The specimens sent to the Paris Exhibition in 1900 secured a silver medal, in competition with European porcelain. The export of chinaware reached the record in 1906 of 59,874 piculs; in 1908 it was 52,571 piculs. Large quantities are also sent away in Junks. Beans, and peas, hemp, indigo, paper, melon and sesamum seeds, and tobacco leaf are also important exports. The net value of the trule of the port for 1908 was Tls. 30,093,412, as compared with 30,237,377 in 1907 and Tls. 22,731,011 in 1906.
954
KEW KIANG
DIRECTORY
和協
Hip-wo
ANDERSON & Co., ROBT., Merchants
R. Anderson (absent)
C. Schlee (London) H. Schlee (absent) E. White (Shanghai)
Agencies
China Mutual Steam Navgn. Co., Ld. China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. China Traders' Insurance Co., Ľd. Marine Insurance Company, Limited
ASIATIC PETROLEUM Co., LD., LONDON, THE
Local Manager-A. E. Jones Engineer-G. Homewood
Ta-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
J. McIsaac, signs per pro. Hulks "Pasha" and "Sultan" Agencies
China Navigation Company, Limited Ocean Steamship Company, Limited China Mutual Steam Nvgtn. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. British and Foreign Marine Insce. Co.
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld.
North Borneo Trading Co., Ld.
司公險保和濟仁
Jen Chi Ho Pao Hsien Kung Sze
CHINA MERCHANTS' MARINE INSURANCE CO.
Cheng Yuet Ngam, agent
Chou Shan Shin Chu
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION Co.
Cheng Yuet Ngam, manager
Wong Singhu, Yu Ting Fai, clerks Agency
China Merchants' Marine Insurance Co.
CLINDENING, F. T. D., M.R.C.S. ENG., L.R.C.P.,
LOND.
Lambert,, A. C., M.D., C.M., Toronto
CONSULATES
FRANCE, Consular Agency
Consul M. Rafard (Shanghai)
官事頠英大
*** Ta Ying-ling-shih-kwan
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-E. T. C. Werner (absent)
Consul (officiating) H. F. King Constable-Jeremiah Cronin
JAPAN
館事本日大
Consul-K. Takahashi (residing at
Hankow)
Vice-Consul--S. Yada
Chancellors-J. Sugimoto, H. Take-
nouchi,
Interpreter-D. Yoshiwara
Constable-Z. Nakamura
RUSSIA
Consul-A. N. Ostroverkhow (Han-
kow)
官事領國美大
Ta-mai-kwok ling-shih-kwan
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Vice-Consul Genl. in Charge-Hubert
G. Baugh (H'kow)
HIL Kiu-kiang hsin-kwan CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-A, Lay Assistant E. Ruhstrat Do. --A. Michie
Do.
-I. P. F. Zokl Medical Officer A. C. Lambert Tidesurveyor-W. I. Mason Actg. Boat Officer-F. Williams Examiners-C. E. Meyer, H. H. C.
Halberg
Assist. Examiners-L. J. Bahr, T. F. Anderson, O. H. Schmitto, J. Jardon Tidewaiters-W. Hill, G. M. Pezzini, E. Atwill, A. R. Theisen, H. E. Olsen, P. Wimmel, F. Page, S. L. Paterson, J. Mahood, R. Sebenico
River Cruiser "Chiang Hsing"-E. A.
Koosache, launch officer Imperial Chinese Post Office-V.Smith,
asst. postal officer
Lekin Collectorate-A. Lay, commis-
sioner
River Inspector-H. E. Hillman
都約翰
DUFF & Co., J. L. General Provision Mer
chants and Manufacturers-Kewking and Kuling
J. L. Duff
*
ZB Sien-ang-ka-nieu
FAIRY GLEN, Private Hotel -Kuling
J. L. Duff & Co., agent
1
記瑞
KEWKIANG
HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE Co.-Tel. Ad:
Karberg
Wong Chili Shung, agent
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd Hamburg Amerika Linie Yangtze Steamers
South Br. Fire & Mar. Insce. Co. of N. Z.
和怡 E-200
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., LTD., Merchants
Willis O. A. Shepherd
Hulk "Wandering Jew
Agencies
Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. Indo-China S. N. Co., Limited Canadian Pacific Railway Company Shire Line of Steamers Glen Line of Steamers
Indra Line of Steamers
Canton Insurance Office, Limited Flongkong Fire Insurance Co., Limited Green Island Cement Co., Ltd.
KULING ESTATE
J. Berkin, manager
J. Robertson, asst, manager
Shoon-foong
LITVINOFF & Co., S. W., Tablet and Brick
Tea Factory
D. M. Melnikoff, signs per pro.
Agency
Royal Insurance Company (Fire)
MISSIONS
China Directory
·
955
Sisters of Charity, Yao-Tcheou- Soeur Tourrel (superioress), Sceurs Duprat, Castelain, François Kiangsi Septentrional (North Kiangsi)
Bishop Ferrant,
Lazarists Pères-Lefebvre, Fatiguet, Braets, Rossignol, Domergue, Pis- tone, Hauspie, Theron, Vernette, Zigenhon, Martin, Brulant, Mon- teil, Perotti, Th. Reymers, Verrière, Thieres, de Stolberg, Frère Pénen Secular Priest-Megnant Sisters of Charity, Kewkiang
Orphanage-Sœur Foubert, supe- rior; Sœurs Marzi, Hacard, Rougier, Pillot, Binaud, Santos Hospital SourSauvignon, superior; Sœurs Dupare, Cazares, Carbon- nell, Giguas
Fow-cheong
MOLCHANOFF, PECHATNOFF & Co., Mer chs
*I** Ta Ying Kung-mo-kok MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
H. F. King, H. B. M. Consul, adminis-
tering the affairs of the Council
Inspector of Police--J. Mears
社會船溆清日
NISSEN KISEN KAISHA
F. Misonoh, agent Y. Eitaki
For Protestant Missions see end of
局政郵清大
Taching-Yu-cheng-chü
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Kiangsi Méridional (South Kiangsi)
Bishop-Cicéri, apostolic vicar Pères-Festa, Shottey,
Legris,
Thieffry, Verrière, Lecaille, Pruvot, de Jenlis, Watthe, Von Arx, Mo- linari, Bonanate, Schirm, Moglioni, Houchon
Sœur
Sisters of Charity, Kingan
Leport (superior), Sœurs Mossar- dier, Merle, Ramos
Kiangsi Oriental (East Kiangsi) Bishop-Vic, Vicar apostolic Pères-Dauverchain, Tamet, Don- joux, Rameaux, Clabault, Briant, Dellieux, Gonon, Clerc-Renand, Chasle Sageder, G. Thieffry, Her- mans, Abeloos, Poisat, Duvigneau, Van Swet, J. Reymers, Scialdone, Crapez, Verdini, Estampes
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
District Postal Officer--V. Smith
STANDARD OIL CO. OF N.Y.-Tel. Ad: Socony
Herbert Everall, manager
W. H. M. Taylor, assistant
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH
Trustee H. F. King
Committee H. F. King (treasurer)
Rev. C. F. Lindstrom
Rev. C. H. Judd (secretary) W. O. A. Shepherd
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
V. C. Chow, manager K S. Kao, controller G. T. Li, clerk-in-charge N. Y. Fong, assistant
30 clerks
HANKOW
口漢 Han-kaw
Hankow is situated on the river Han at the point where it enters the Yangtze, and is in lat, 30 deg. 32 min. 51 sec. N., and long, 114 deg. 19 min. 55 sec. E. It was formerly regarded as only a suburb of Hanyang, which it immediately adjoins, and which is a district city of the province of Hupeh, but Hankow has outstripped the older city in wealth and importance. These two towns lie immediately facing the city of Wuchang-fu, the capital of the province, which is built upon the south bank of the Yangtze, Hankow is distant from Shanghai about 600 miles.
Attention was first drawn to Hankow as a place of trade by Huc, the French missionary. Captain Blakiston, in his work "The Yangtsze," gives the following correct description of the place and its surroundings:-"Hankow is situated just where an irregular range of semi-detached low hills crosses a particularly level country on both sides of the main river in an east and west direction. Stationed on Pagoda Hill, Hanyang, a spectator looks down on almost as much water as land even when the rivers are low. At his feet sweeps the magnificent Yangtze, nearly a mile in width; from the west and skirting the northern edge of the range of hills already mentioned, comes the river Han, narrow and canal-like, to add its quota, and serving as one of the highways of the country; and to the north-west and north is an extensive treeless flat, so little elevated above the river that the scattered hamlets which dot its surface are without exception raised on mounds, probably artificial works of a now distant age. A stream or two traverse its farther part and flow into the main river. Carrying his eye to the right bank of the Yangtze one sees enormous lakes and lagoons both to the north-west and south-east sides of the hills beyond the provincial city.
The port was opened to foreign trade in 1861. The British Settlement is located at the east end of the city, which it joins, and is, together with the Race Course, included within the city walls, which are quite moderu, having been built at the time of the Taiping Rebellion. It is well laid out, the roads being broad and all lined with well grown trees. The Bund affords a very fine and pleasant promenade, and has ap imposing appearance from the river. There are a large Roman Catholic and small Protestant and Greek churches, the latter a rather handsome structure built by the Russian residents. Several Brick Tea factories owned by Russians are located in the Settlement. A capital club, with tennis and racquet courts, bowling alley, billiard and reading rooms, library, &c., is kept up. The river steamers go alongside hulks inoored close to the shore; ocean steamers anchor in mid-stream. The current is very strong in the river. The native city of Hankow presents no distinctive features. Like all Chinese cities it is a crowded agglomeration of narrow lanes. The popula tion of Hankow is estimated at 800,000. Cotton cloth mills established by the Viceroy Chang Chih-tung commenced running in 1892, and the ironworks at Hanyang have developed into a large and important enterprise employing about 3,500 men. Hangyang iron is now being placed on the American market at a price which enables it to hold its own against the Steel Trust product. In August, 1895, the Wuchang Mint was established. The Mint has had to be considerably enlarged in recent years to enable it to keep pace with the demand. In April, 1906, there were 170 coining
presses at work.
The local manufacturing industries include besides the Government ironworks and arsenals, cotton and silk weaving. A carriage and wagon works to supply rolling stock to the Yuet-Han Railway, closely allied with the Hanyang Ironworks, which is turning out bridges and girders for railways, has been established on the Hankow side of the river. There is a quasi-official coal-mining company in connection with the ironworks, the pits being at Ping-hsiang in Kwangsi. The coal is brought down in lighters from the railhead, fifteen miles above Changsha. The Wuchang Cotton and Hemp mills, together with the silk filature, were leased by the Viceroy in 1902 to a company of Chinese capitalists for 100,000 taels a year, for a period of 20 years. Apart from the Hemp mill, which began operations in 1904, under Japanese management, the concern is doing a flourishing business. A tannery was start ed in 1906, and three four mills. Other four mills are now being erected, and the lean pil milling industry is also well established in the port.
HANKOW
957
During the last few years foreign interests at Hankow have undergone a marked development, the chief factor in producing the growth being the construction of the Lu Han Railway, a trunk line connecting Hankow with Peking, the contract for which was let to a Belgian syndicate in 1897. It was opened in November, 1905, when trains passed over the Yellow River Bridge, which was immediately closed again as unsafe. Since December, 1905, through traffic with Peking has continued without interruption. Early in 1906 "trains de luxe" were started. The line has diverted much of the traffic that went by water to Chinkiang. Germany, France, Russia, and Japan have since 1895 acquired concessions, and the British concession has been extended. The German, Russian and British have Municipal Councils. Thus while there was formerly a bund of only half a mile in length, in front of the British concession, there is now a continuous line of concessions measuring in all over two miles of river frontage. Houses and godowns have been springing up fast of late years and the Commissioner of Customs in his latest report remarks that for some years yet Hankow will have to divert large sums out of all proportion to the value of its trade for converting swamps into building sites and destroying old building to make room for others more suitable to the requirements of a great city. The English Church was re-built, and consecrated in May, 1904. Messrs. Vrard & Co. a few years ago imported and erected, on the Wuchang side of the river, machinery for crushing antimony ore, which is dried, packed in bags, and exported abroad. These were taken over by Messrs. Carlowitz & Co., who are making large additions to the plant. Antimony, lead and zine ores are crushed. A large business is also done by a match factory, as well as by albumen factories. Messrs. Arnhold, Karberg & Co., who are agents for the Shell Transport Company, Limited, of London, have erected on the foreshore, several miles below the Foreign Concessions, oil tanks for storing bulk oil, to be tinned On the premises. Two tanks have a capacity of 2,500 tons of oil each. During the low-water_season small tank- steamers will bring the oil from Shanghai. The Royal Dutch Petroleum Company, Langkat, has followed suit and erected an installation. The Standard Oil Co. had three large tanks erected at the end of 1904. Each installation added another tank in 1906. An English Company commenced an export trade frozen pork, eggs, poultry and game in 109, the refrigerating plant costing upwards of £30,000.
Tea is the staple export. The total export in 1908 was valued at Tls. 14,900,000, representing about one-sixth of the exports. The net value of the trade of the port in 1908 amounted to Tls. 120,038,293 against Tls. 115,071,383 in 1907, Tls. 97,142,377 in 1906 and Tls. 111,043,046 in 1905.
DIRECTORY
Hip-wo
ANDERSON & Co., ROBT., Tea Merchants
Chas. Schlee (London)
H. Schlee (New York)
Ed. White
A. M. Lester
*** ANGLO-CHINESE DISPENSARY, Chemists and Druggists, Dealers in Patent Medicines, Photographic Apparatus, Chemicals, Sundries, etc., Manufacturers of Aerated Waters -Wongbika
Chong-ying Tai-yuck-fong
S. M. Ong, manager
T. Hong Ch'u sub-manager
Dr. Samuel Wong, physician and sur-
geon
Swi-ki
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co., Merchants-
Tel. Ad: Karberg
W. Herensperger, signs per pro.
Chas. E. Arnhold,
F. Brandeis
W. Meyer E. Oelsner
I. Paschen
do.
M. Wallach, electr. engineer E. Wollheimi
F. Zimmermann F. C. Da Costa L. Fonseca
A. Brandes
A. Appel F. Stucki
958
Agencies
Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co.
HANKOW
South British Fire and Marine Insee. Lancashire Insurance Company
The China Import and Export Lumber
Co., Lil.
American and Oriental
Steamers
司公油火亞世亞
Ah-si-ah For-u-kung-zse
Line of
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., Ld., THE -Tel.
Ad: Doric
H. Griffin, local manager
L. F. H. Hake
W. Mansel Smith
H. Koehler, installation engineer
Tron-tung
in t
ATKINSON & DALLAS, Civil Engineer and
Architects
S. O. Limby, signs per pro.
R. N. Hewitt
師律大裴英大
BAILEY, H. G. C., Solicitor No. 1 British
Municipal Building
師造營部支度大
BAKER, Henry E., Civil Engineer-Rue
d'Autremer
行銀理滙方東
Tong Fang Houi-ly-ying-hong
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE
M. Trouillet, acting manager
X. Dezaunay, accountant
A. Lions, cashier
濟 食 Liang-che
BELGIAN TRADING Co., LD. (in Liquidation)
Chas. Monbaron, liquidator
女璃波 Bornemann
BORNEMANN FERD. Augusta Street; Tel. 90
F. Bornemann (absent)
H. Schumacher (Shanghai)
A. Kramar, signs per pro.
G. Philipp
F. Le Roux
Agencies
Deutscher Lloyd, Transport
Versicherungs, A. G., Berlin
Feuer Assecuranz Comp. von 1877,
Hamburg
招行琴也衣波口漢
Han-kou Boo-e-yar-kau-hong Chau
BOYACK, LAURENCE B., Piano, Organ and
Musical Instrument Dealer-Rue de la Mission
Chin-lung
BRANDT & Co., A., General Merchants and
Commission Agents; Tel. Ad: Brandus
A. Brandt
P. Bregendahl Agencies
̈S. Moutrie & Co., Ld. Louis Roederer, Reims T. & F. Martell, Cognac
BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO Co., LD.
V. L. A. Fairley, manager
M. L. Johnson
S. Potten
J. Lipman A. Zinow C. E. Laflel
"BRITISH," THE
A. J. Martin, agent Y. C. Wong, clerk
TAXA Tai-Ying-yen-kung-sze
BRITISH CIGARETTE Co., LTD.
Head Office: No. 22 Museum Rd., Shang-
hai; Hankow: Wilhelmstrasse, German Concession
Leaf Department
K. H. Gregory, manager
F. H. Henderson
W. O. Moore H. E. Morton
M. J. Doong
Factory
F. W. Tower, manager
G. W. Frodsham
H. J. Whitelock
E. McGarvin
H. H. Strangman R. T. Srangman
Office Staff
C. L. Jackson
B. P. Digmanese
P. A. P. Doong
C. E. A. Hance
BROOKS, F. M., Attorney-at-law
Say-sung
BUCHHEISTER & Co.-Teleph. 71
Joh. Schuchard, signs the firm
E. F. G. Heise
Proprietors of-
Shanghai Machine Co. (Hankow
Branch)
Agents for:
Aachen-Munich Fire Insurance Co.
Sir W. G. Armstrong, Whitworth & Co., Ld., Elswick Works, Newcastle upon-Tyne
Dobson & Barlow, Ld., Bolton, Textile
Machinery
HANKOW
The Mint Birmingham, Ld., Mint
Machinery and Coins Schuchardt & Schuette, Berlin, New
York, Machinery & Tools Aachen & Munich Fire Insurance Co.,
Aix-la Chapelle
Sachsenwerk, Licht and Kraft Action Gesellschaft, Niedersetlitz-Dresden, Dynamos, Motors, etc.
Gimson & Co., Leicester, Boot-making
Machinery
Wadkin & Co., Leicester, Woodwork-
ing Specialities
William Whiteley & Sons, Ld., Lock-
wood, Woollen Cloth Machinery Edward White, Redditch, Needle-
Making Machinery
(See also under Shanghai Machine Co.)
* Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
G. M. Young, signs per pro.
P. Bond
A. S. T. Parkhill
W. A. Ruy
Agencies
China Navigation Co., Ld. Ocean Steamship Co., Ld.
China Mutual Steam Navgn. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld. Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co.
of Hongkong, Ld.
London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
British & Foreign Marine Insce. Co.
Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Union Insce. Society of Canton, Ld.
裕天 Teen-yit
CAMPBELL & Co., ALEX., Merchants Tel.
Ad: Alexcamp; Telph. 716, Shanghai
Alex. Campbell
R. E. Wilson
A. S. Campbell
K. W. Cargill
Robt. Kay
C. Sdoo
和禮 Le-to
CARLOWITZ & Co., Merchants
G. Köhreke, signs the firm
W. Hermes
K. Haessler
E. Faber
K. Floeck
G. Philippi
E. Hüschelrath
W. Hasche F. Pramanu
W. Wagner E. Sickel H. Sobbe
K. Kretschmar E. Boettger O. Roehreke W. Wichmann E. Buchholz W. Diez
J. McKinlay
Carlowitz & Co., Wuchang Office
H. Dierks, signs per pro. R. Kirchhoff
W. Rust
K. Fraulob, Ing. E. Budich
F. Loch
Agencies
Hamburg-Amerika Linie Union Steam Ship Co. Navigazione Generale Italiana
959
Royal Exchange Assurance Corpora-
tion, London
Scottish Union & National Ins. Co. Western Assurance Co.
Hamburg-Bremen Feuer Vers. Ges.
Hamburg
Basler Vers. Ges gegen Feuerschaden,
Basel
Nord Deutsche Versicherungs Gesell-
schaft, Hamburg
Albingia Vers. Ges. A. G., Hamburg Mannheimer Versicherungs Gesell-
schaft, Mannheim
Nord West Deutsche Vers. Ges., Ham-
burg
Deutscher Lloyd, Berlin
Gothaer Lebens Versicherungs Ges.,
Gotha
CAVES DU TERMINUS, Wine Merchants
R. Saint-Pol, proprietor
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE HANKOW GENL., Committee J. J. Dunite, (chairman), P. A. Angier, W. Herensperger, K. Lindemann, G. Rohreke, A. N. Rassadin, S. A. Spenceley (secretary)
Mah-ka-lee
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA - Tel. Ad: Milkmaid Percy A. Angier, acting agent
T. P. Nailer, sub-accountant
CHEMINS DE FER IMPERIAUX CHINOIS,
LIGNE PEKIN-HANKOW
(Imperial Chinese Railways Peking-
Hankow Line)
(See Peking Section of the Directory)
司公粉麵龍金
Kum-loon Min-fun Kung-sze
CHIN LUNG FLOUR MILLS
A. Brandt & Co., general managers
960
CHINA HIDE & SKIN EXPORT CO., LD.
Willy Moos, manager
L. Schulze,
do.
HANKOW
CHINA IMPORT & EXPORT LUMBER CO., LD.
Fuhrmeister & Co., agents
G. Caissial, representative
泰德 Tet-ta.
CHINA AND JAVA EXPORT Co.
C. O. Frericks, manager
H. R. Gegg
司公險保和濟仁
Jen-chi-ho-puo-hsien-kung-sze
CHINA. MERCHANTS' MARINE INSURANCE CO.
See Tze-ching, agent
屇漢商招
Chau-shang-han-chok
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION Co.
See Tze-ching, manager
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LD.
Gerdes & Co., fiscal agents
F. H. Hiscock, agency manager
CHINESE EASTERN RAILWAY Co.
CHINESE ENGINEERING & MINING CO., LD.
Chas. Monbaron, sales and shipping
agent
堂學務農 Nung-wu-Heioh-tang
COLLEGE, AGRICULTURAL
Director-H. E. Chang H. S. Taotai
Ne-cheong
COMPAGNIE FRANCAISE DES INDES ET DE L'EXTREME ORIENT (India & Eastern French Trading Co.)-Head Offices: Paris,
19-19 bis Rue Richer; London Office:
19-20, Water Lane E. C.
L. Rozet, director
AI Ta-fa-kouo Kong-pou-kin 局部工國法大
CONSEIL MUNICIPAL DE LA CONCESSION
FRANÇAISE
Chef des Services Municipaux-M.
Coquet
Chef de la Police-Nussbaum
CONSULATES
A Ta Mei-kung-kwan
AMERICAN CONSULATE-GENERAL
Vice-Consul Gen. in charge-Hubert
G. Baugh
門衙事領國比大
Tá-pi-kwo-ling-shih-ya-men
BELGIUM
Consul-F. Drion
DENMARK
Vice-Consul-A. Brandt.
官事頜西蘭法大
Ta Fah-lan-se-ling-sze-kwan
FRANCE
Consul-G. Morisse
Chancelier--M. Beauvais (absent)
Chancelier p.i.-L. Eynard
Interprète J. Médard
Docteur J. Mesny
GERMANY - -Tel. Ad: Germania
Acting Consul-Baron vou Müßling Interpreter Jankowsky Secretary Frederking Clerk-Schoeps
Do. -Weidemann
***** To Ving-ling-sze-foo
GREAT BRITAIN, Consulate-General
Also in charge of Austro-Hungarian
and Spanish interests
Consul-General-E, H. Fraser, C.M.G. Vice-Consul and Registrar-B. Giles Assistants A. J. Martin, S. Wyatt
Smith
Constable L. B. Boyack Postal Agt.-A. J. Martin
ITALY
Consul-F. Medici di Mariguano
*** To Jih-pen-ling-sze-kway
JAPAN
Consul-K. Takahashi
Vice-Consul-S. Yada
Chancellor-J. Sugimoto
Interpreter-D. Yoshiwara
Constable-Z. Nakamura
館公事頜國蘭荷大
Ta IIo-lan-kwoh-ling-sze-kung-kwan
NORWAY
Vice-Consul-K. Lindemann
RUSSIA
官事領國俄大
Tu Ngo-kwoh-ling-sze-kwan
Consul-General-A. N. Ostroverkhow Vice-Consul-M. P. Kourenkow
府事領國瑞大
Ta Soi-tin Kwoh Ling-sze-foo
SWEDEN
Vice-Consul-H. E. Ramsay
CORSANE, W. H., Hankow Ice Works
Ly-kee
HANKOW
Agencies
CRAVEN, J. H., Tea Merchant-1 Taiping
Road
#
Kiang-han-kwan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-F. A. Aglen Acting Commr.-A. H. Sugden Assistant J. B. Fitz Gibbon, A. H. F. Edwardes, S. Tsuda, G. Müller, C. E. Dehio, O. Hood
Medical Officer-J. A. Thompson, B.Sc.,
M.A., M.B., CH,B.
Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-R.
H. Strangman
Act. Asst. Tidesurveyor-W.S. Jackson Boat Officer A. Brammer Chief Examiner J. A. Tipp
Examiners-G. A. Schwarzer, F. G. Browne, C. Ahlberg, R. Sarran, S. Burton
Assistant Examiners--O. W. Lund, C. Mandelkoff, C. E. A. Sachau, F. G. Veitch, J. Lelas, W. O. Pinkerton, H. A. Andersen, H. Surplice Tidewaiters-P. C. Petersen, J. Stamm E.A. Young, T. White, F. H. Cradock, F. R. Mann, J. O. Connell, H. Walpole, H. McFarland, H. Spicer, R. S. Pike, J. McLorn, A. N. Lovland, H. H. Jones, F. E. Samuelsen, O. H. Fuglesang, U. Torresani, R. F. Braner, A. F. Kelsey, 1. O. Scutt, H. G. K. F. Westphal, W. E. Jantze, G. T. Watson, P. J. McCabe Salt-Watchers--J. de la Cruz, H. de la Vega, B. Manaban, Lucas Pating, G. Verde, J. Raz
DEUTSCH-CHINESISCHE SCHULE
C. Kaiser, teacher
DEUTSCHE ASIATISCHE BANK- Tel. Ad:
Teutonia
G. Rust
Ernst Wirsig, accountant
Tien-chang
DODWELL & Co., LIMITED, Merchants
Hongkong, Shanghai, Foochow, Colombo, Yokohama, Kobe, Tacoma (Wash.), Portland (Oregon, U.S.A.), Vancouver and Victoria (B.C.), and London
H.A. J. Macray, manager
P. A. Crosthwaite
R. G. MacDonald
J. W. Burtwell, signs per pro.
J. R. Baker
J. H. Clegg
R. A. Covil
A. M. d'Oliveira
Northern Pacific Line Boston Steamship Co.
Dodwell New York Line Mogul Line of Steamers Warracks' Line of Steamers
961
Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance United Asbestos Oriental Agency Underwood Typewriter Co. Union Assurance Society Ld.
en
DUTCH ENGINEERING WORKS (Nederlandis-
che Fabrick van Werktingen Spoolweg-Materieel, Amsterdam
Kolkmeijer & Rockstrok, agents
J. Bruins, engineer
順寶 Paou-shun
EVANS, PUGH & Co., Merchants
H. Whistler (London)
H. E. Howard
H. C. Norris
J. S. Dickson
Ewo LUMBER Co.
Jardine Matheson & Co., Ld. A. H. Stewart, in charge Agencies
Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. Phoenix Fire Insurance Company. North China Insurance Company, Ld. Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society
A
Da-wo-pow-Kungchu
FECHNER & KAPPLER, Architects and Gen. Building Contractors-Tel. Ad: Fechner
師律大士褉福
FROST, RALPH A., Attorney and Counsellor-
at-Law
Fah-lai-tae
FUHRMEISTER & Co., Merchants
R. Herbertz, signs per pro.
O. Klein
F. Schramm
(. Fritze, Lumber and Cask dept. Agencies
China Imp't & Exp't Lumber Co., Ld. James Buchanan & Co., Ltd., Glasgow Bernese Alps Swiss Milk "Bear Brand" Netherlands Fire & Life Insurance Co. "Fatum" Accident Insce. Co., Hague "Albingia" Assurance Co. of Hamburg
Basler Lebensversicherungs Ges. (Life)
* Me-ya
吔咪
GARRELS, BURNER & Co., Merchants-Tel.
Ad: Hérodot (late Meyer & Co.)
J. H. Garrels (Hamburg)
H. Boerner
clo.
962
P. Westendorff (Shanghai)
Fr. Muller, signs per pro. B. von Gimborn
D. Klopp
E. Büsch
C. Rahf
Agencies
HANKOW
Liverpool & London & Globe Insce.
Co., Liverpool
Prussian National Insce. Co., Stettin Chemische Fabriken vorm. Weiler ter
Meer, Uerdingen a/Rh
C. F. Boehringer Soehne, Waldhof-
Mannheim
United Alkali Co., Ld., Liverpool Aachener Thermalwasser
Brunn" A. G. Aachen
Wha-chong
GEDDES & Co., Merchants
C. E. Geddes
Kaiser
P. Douglas-Jones, signs per pro. A. V. Rose
J. W. Breen
T. H. Croucher, Hide Inspector Agencies
National Bank of China, Limited River Steamers "Changon," and "Teh
Hsing
**
Austrian Lloyd's Steam Navgn. Co. Ben Line of Steamers
American-Asiatic S. S. Co.
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Standard Life Assurance Co. Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of U. S. Tlie Ocean Accident and Guarantee
Corporation, Limited
The China Mutual Life Insce. Co., Ld. Sun Insurance Office
London Assurance Corporation Palatine Insurance Company, Ld. Imperial Marine Insurance Co., Tokyo David Sassoon & Co., Ld.
Shewan, Tomes & Co.
Gibb, Livingston & Co.
BISK Da-teh-keong-loo-kuok
GEMEINDERAT DEN DEUTSCHEN NIEDERLAS-
SUNG (German Menicipality)
K. Zindermann, chairman
Ernst Mirow, B. von Gimborn, E.
Finger,
W. Herensperger, P. Scholz (Sec. Ger-
man Police Station)
C. Grapow, inspecter of Police
Gee-ley-sze-pin
GILLESPIE & Sons, L. C.
A. L. Sarle, attorney
GIOVANNI, M. De, Medical Practitioner
司公毬打
A Tur-kow-kung-se
GOLF CLUD
President-S. Murray
Hon. Sec.-A. Crosbie
Hon. Treasurer-W. H. Corsane
A Kung-hsing
GROSJEAN & Co., ADOLPHE, Merchants
Adolphe Grosjean
E. Friedrich, signs per pro. G. Fellhauer
Agencies
L'Union Incendie de Paris
The State Fire Ince. Co., Ld., Liverpool The General Accident Fire & Life
Assurance Corp., Ltd., Perth
商英
GROVE & Co., G. R., Architects and
Surveyors--Shanghai-Hankow
HALL& HOLTZ, LD., General Storekeepers-
Rue Dubail; Tel. Ad: Fuhlee
J. Munro
J. E. White
司公源富
HANKOW BRICK & TILE WORKS-Tel. Ad:
Fechner; Telepli. No, 53
HANKOW CLUB
Po-lau
Committee-W.B.Garriock(chairman), E. G. Byrne, P. W. O. Liddell, K. Lindemann
S. W. Spenceley, secretary
HANKOW DAILY NEWS
F. Nervel, manager
T. Ross-Reid, editor
HANKOW DISPENSARY, Chemists Druggists, Aerated Water Manufacturers, Wine, Spirit and Cigar Merchants
H. J. Ling, M.C.S.
HANKOW HOTEL
G. Rapanakis, proprietor
廠冰利和
HANKOW ICE WORKS
Corsane, Anderson & Co. proprietors
HANKOW LIGHT & POWER Co., LD.-Tel. Ad:
Powercold
A. J. Fippard, A.M.I.E.E., engineer and
manager
W. B. Turner, asst. engineer J. A. Jameson, accountant
I. D. Wong, cashier
HANKOW
司公限有電水濟旣辦商口漢 HANKOW WATER WORKS AND ELECTRIC LIGHT Co. (Head Office, Taiping Road) Sung Wei Chen, managing director
do.
Sun Li Woo, asst. mangr. Whang Tat Foo, technical mangr. Hoe Shun-yuan, secretary
Faterworks
R. St. George Moore, M. inst. C. E.,
engineer
Electricity Works
A. J. Fippard, A.M.L.E.E., consulting
engineer
Chen Yun Hai, asst. electrical engineer Chan Yung Hoey
dlo.
HANYANG GOVERNMENT POWDER FACTORY &
CHEMICAL WORKS
H. E. Tsai Chee, general director
H. E. Yo Ting Ping, director
Dr. Rultishauser, tech., director
廠鐵鑛陽瘼
HANYANG IRON AND STEEL WORKS
V. K. Lee, general manager
V. T. Tsang, asst. general manager
E. Ruppert, M.E., C.E., technical mgr.
Wong Kokshan, commercial mgr.
T. C. Yen, secretary
E. von Raemdonck,M.D., medical officer
Blast Furnaces Department
Th. Richter, M.E., engineer
Z. T. K. Woom, asst. do. J. Grof, foreman
M. Grof,
do.
Steel Works Department
J. P. Soisson, M.E., engineer A. Gelsinus, foreman
Ch. Munster,
A. Doloffre,
H. Meier,
do.
do.
do.
C. W. Kuchons, do.
D. Lizin,
do.
Rolling Mill Department
J. P. Soisson, M.E.. engineer
J. Martin, overseer
L. Busold, foreman
L. Graindorge, do. M. Polard,
do.
L. Lechanteur, roll turner
Mechanical & Electrical Drapftsment
B. Ducharber, M.E., engineer
F. H. Kox, M.E., asst. engineeral
K. G. See, E.E., asst. electric engr. N. Collard, foreman
A. Busch,
do.
R. Baenitz, M.E., draghtsman Laboratory
Dr. Arend, chemist
East Whart
Yu Poh An, wharfinger
The Mines
Pinghsiang Colliery
H. H. Ling, general manager
G. Leinung, M.E., engineer-in-chief H. Seevers, secretary
V. C. Su, chief interpreter
W. Zimmerman, medical officer W. Schmidt,
engineer
Fr. Lux
do.
W. Strenger,
do.
C. Riemann,
do.
Ch.
Brandt,
do.
C. Buechner, railway engineer E. Schmidt, electrician
H.
Schlifter, overviewer
E. Boehm,
do.
G. Saotweber, viewer
J. Ilger,
do.
963
W. Osenbrueck, viewer and trans-
port Service
Tayeh Iron Mine
S. P. Wong, general manager
C. Budde, mining engineer
Shanghai Sales Office
Chan Chi Lan, agent
S. H. Yung, assistant agent
Marine & River Service
S. S. "Hanping," Capt. Ferguson
Tugboats, Launches and Lighters
司公限有礦廠鐵煤遝冶·漢
HAN-YEH-PING IRON AND COAL Co., LD
H. E. Sheng Kungpao, president V. K. Lee, vice-president
Board of Directors-Wong Tse-tsan,
Ku Yung-tsien, Tsung Tse-chai,
Nien Yun-tai, Hu Peh-liang, Lu Hui-chang, Chang Yueh-char, Nien Tse-chun, Lee Yun-hsu
Auditors-Ku Tsin-chuen, Sze Lo-
sung
JE PA
HARVEY & Co., Merchants--Rue de la Miss- ion; Tel. Ad: Harvey; Sole Agents for
The "Star" Chemical Fire Extinguisher
for Hupeh, Hunan and Szechuen
順謙 Chien Suun
HEATH & Co., P., Merchants and Manu-
facturers' Agents
P. Heath (Shanghai)
H. Capel (Tientsin)
Agency
Humber, Ltd., Beeston
盛新
HEES, René DE, Engineer and Architect
Pierre de Hees, successor
HEMMINGS, R. E, Architect and Civil
Engineer Russian Concession
904
師程工貝韓
HANKOW
HEMPEL, G. L., Architect and Civil Engr.
French Concession, Rue
Telephone 87
R. Sachse
Way-foong
-
Dubail:
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN
J. D. Taylor, agent
HULK
B. C. M. Johnston, assistant J. P. Trousdell.
F. B. Winter,
HANKOW"
F. M. Vipan, master
HUPEH ENGINE WORKS
do. do.
Black and Christie, Engineers and Pro-
prietors.
HUPEH GOVT. COTTON SPINNING MILLS, The Ying Chong Co., Ld., Lessees, Wuchang
HUPEH SALT LEKIN COLLECTORATE
Commr. F. A. Aglen, in charge
局報電國中大
IMPERIAL CHINESE TELEGRAPH ADMINIS-
TRATION
Tuotai Chén Isee Yen, manager
A. Helsgaun, superintendent
G. F. Chèn, asst.
do.
T. H. Chang, clerk-in-charge
Y. K. Sung, assistant
S. L. Woo,
do.
Y. K. Yang, accountant
V. L. Yeh,
dlo.
INTERNATIONIAL BANRING CORPORATION
C. D. H. Grant, acting manager
C. Machado, clerk
行銀旗花
INTERNATIONAL EXPORT Co,, Ld., The
信日 Jih-sing
JAPAN COTTON TRADING CO., LD.-2, Hokai
(Nippon Menkwa Kaisha); Head Office:
Osaka; General Merchants and Commis- sion agents
和怡 E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON &Co., Ltd., Merchants
J. J. Dunne, agent
C. Pfister
A. H. Stewart
W. Davidson
A. B. Brown
T. F. Singer
U. M. Carion
W. Grantz
Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Limited Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Company Glen Line of Steamers
Indra Line of Steamships to New York Lloyd's
Canton Insurance Office, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Alliance Assurance Company, Ld. Nobel's Explosives Co., Ld. Merryweather & Sons, Ltd. Ewo Timber Depôt
A. H. Stewart
JOHNSON & PHILLIPS LD., Electrical and
General Engineers; Tel. Ad: Juno
A. J. Fippard, A.M.LE E., manager in
China
E. Wright, assistant
Ho-chang
KOLKMEIJER & ROCKSTROH-Rue de Tan- anariva, French Bund; Tel. Ad: Rockelk
Fr. Kolkmeijer
E. Rockstroh (Hankow and Hamburg)
A. Hamann
O. Sandri
O. Bonn
Agencies
Samarang Sea and FireInsurance Co. Netherlands' Lloyd, Batavia Transatlantic Marine Insce. Co, Ld,
Berlin
KRACKE, PAUL, Tea Inspector of W. Wissotzky & Co., Moscow and London, with Branches at Calcutta, Colombo and Hankow
Fu Bing-00
LIDDELL BROS. & Co.
P. W. O. Liddell
C. Palmer
Agencies
Mather & Platt Ltd., Manchester
LINDMEYER, J. B., Exchange Broker (in partnership with Mr. Geldmacher)
Shun-fung
LITVINOFF & Co., S. W.
S. W. Litvinoff, founder (Hankow) O.J. Molotkoff, depositor (Kasan)
M. S. Oveyrin S. W. Unjeniu W. W. Hochloff C. M. Benzeman J. S. Vereschagin W. P. Golikoff A. Stegman W. P. Stelekin
C. Caines
4
HANKOW
965
W. 1. Shimonaeff
W. M. Yadrishnikoff
A. J. Volodin
D. M. Melnikoff (Kiukiang)
利保 Pao-lee
LOTHAR, MARCKS & Busen, Civil Engi- neers, Architects and Building Contrac-
tors, Saw-Mill and Woodworking Fac- tory; Tel. Ad: Marcksing
Lothar Marcks
Emil Busch
W. F. Dubber, signs per pro..
L. Koenigsbauer, saw-mill manager
A. Zobel, architect
L. Dietmayr, do.
MANFREDI, DR. F., Chemist
MASONIC LODGE FAR CATHAY, No.2855, E. C.
J. C. F. Jess, W.M.
F. H. Cradock, secretary
MAX MITTAG
May Lo.ng
M. Mittag (Shanghai)
O. Meusser, signs per pro.
時最美 Mei.che-see
MELCHERS & Co., Merchants
Hermann Melchers (Bremen)
A. Korff (Bremen)
C. Michelau (Shanghai)
John W. Bandow (Hongkong) Ad. Widmann (Shanghai) G. Friesland (Hongkong) K. Lindemann, signs per pro.
W. Wilshusen D. Luerssen O. Trefurt E. Bunge J. Wagner F. Le Roux F. Wohlgemuth
Java-China-Japan Lijn
H. Bass Ad. Schultze
F. Engel H. Rohde J. Rohde C. Loske
C. Handro
T. Ebert
Agencies
Nordd. Lloyd, S. S. Co.
Nordd. Lloyd, Melcher & Co.'s Yang-
tsze Line
Farbenfabriken, Vorm. Friedr. Bayer
* Co., Elberfeld
China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. New Zealand Insurance Co.
"Globus" Insurance Co. of Hamburg "Salamander" Fire Insurance Co. of
Amsterdam
"Nordstern" Life Insce. Co., Berlin Bremen Underwriters
Forsaekrings Aktiebolaget "Hansa " Badische Assecuranz Gesellschaft, A. G.
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA, LIMITED,
Jardine, Matheson & Co., agents
MESNY, DR. J. E., Medical Practitioner,
French Consulate
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
CHURCH OF ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST Trustees P.Douglas-Jones, G.W.Cock-
burn (hon, secretary and treasurer) Chaplain-Rev. A. M. Sherman
***±X Tien-choo-tang E-yuen
HOSPITAL
Sister Agnese Tecchioli
do. Viola Luigia
do.
Anna Corradini
do. C. Luigie
ORPHANAGE
Yu.in-tong
Mother Vincenzina Bellocchio, super
Seventeen Sisters
Wuchang
Three Sisters
Tien-choo-tong
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Right Rev. Fr. G. Gennaro, Bishop titular of Gerico, and Vicar Apostolic of Eastern Hupeh
Rev. Fr. Diego Lera (Wuchang), vicar
general
Fr. Remegius Götte
Fr. A. de Mérona, procurator Fr. C. Kleinenbroich
Fr. E. Dodici
Fr. J. Casagrande
Fr. V. Fernandez
Fr. V. Palencia Fr. Ber. Buzio Fr. Aug. Melotto Fr. P. B. Turk Fr. Ch. Basilio Fr. B. Sesano Fr. Bengoa
Fr. S. Sommavilla, vice procurator Fr. Rog. Covi
Fr. V. Cavallini Fr. E. Terzi Fr. S. Espelage
966
Fr. P Massignan
Fr. P. Belli
Fr. Arsenius Moullins
Fr. P. Despertes
Fr. G. Madiscal
RUSSIAN CHURCH MISSION
Rev. Adrian Turchinsky A. F. Ghertovitch, psalmist
SPANISH AUGUSTINIAN MISSION
HANKOW
Right Rev. Luis Perez, Rev. S. de la Forre, Rev. B. Gonzalez, Rev. J. Pons, Rev. A. Martinez, Rev. A. Diego, Rev. F. Bernardo, Rev. A. Gonzalez, Rev. L. Ramirez, Rev. N. Puras, Rev. S. Palomino, Rev. A. Fernandez, Rev. A. Arroyo, Rev. E. Fernandez, Rev. V. Martinez, Rev. J. Hospital, Rev. B. Heas, Rev. V. Andrés, Rev. A. de Paz, Rev. V. Ferrero, Rev. B. Fernandez, Rev. P. Pelaz, Rev. H. Martinez, Rev. V. Avedillo, Rev. E. Rodriguez
San-ring
MITSU BISHI Co., LTD.--Tel. Ad: Iwasaki
H. Miyagawa, manager
H. Nagayasu
J. Morita
T. Hama
K. Uchida
I. Moteki
#Sam-ching
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LD.
Y Niwa, agent
K. Takeda K. Matsuzaki R. Takagi
N. Yokoyama
S. Wada
K. Tanaka
S. Watanabe
Y. Sahara
R. Sagara
T. Adachi
Agencies
Meiji Fire Insurance Co.
Nippon Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Kyodoh Fire Insurance Company, Ld.
Fow-chang
MOLCHANOFF, PECHATNOFF & Co., Merchants also at Foochow, Tientsin, Colombo and Kiukiang and Moscow
N. M. Molchanoff (St. Petersburg) S. A. Pechatnoff (Moscow)
J. K. Panoff, signs per pro. John Findlay
G. W. Titoff N. P. Cheliagin
M. E. Sinukoff (Colombo) M. N. Golovin A. G. Ivanoff John K. Panoff
J. M. Michaleff
A. A. Moosatoff
P. P. Martzinkevich
A. Grosbie
Agency
Russian Volunteer Fleet
濟食
MONBARON, CHARLES, Insurance, Shipping
and Commission Agent
C. C. Monbaron
Agencies
Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld. North China Insurance Co., Ld. Law, Union & Crown Insurance Co. Batavia Sea & Fire Insurance Co. East-India Sea & Fire Insurance Co. Java Sea & Fire Insurance Co.
Great Eastern Life Assurance Co., Ld,
石馬 Ma-sack:
MOSER, J. H., Architect and Civil En- gineer-German Bund; Teleph. No. 32
#
Chan-po-yang MUNICIPAL COUNCIL (BRITISH)
H.E. Ramsay (chairman), H.E. Howard (vice-chairman), P. Douglas-Jones P. W. O. Liddell, H. C. Tweedie (secretary)
Police Department
G. Byth, superintendent J. Law, inspector C. D. Scott, do. Works Department
A, Burnett, superintendent
BINX Ta-teh-qua-kung-bu-chu MUNICIPAL COUNCIL, GERMAN-Telph. 99
K. Lindemann, chairman E. Mirow, councillor Von Gimborn, do. W. Herensperger, councillor Ed. Finger
P. Scholz, secretary Police Station, Telephone 99 C. Grapow, supt. of police
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL, RUSSIAN
President--Th. de Krzywoszerski Vice do. G. J. Tooritsin Members-C. M. Benzeman, S. W.
Unjenin, S. D. Malashkin Secretary-W. T. Ostapenks Chief of Police-Z. Popoff
HANKOW
987
Hi cfs Chung trung
NAKIRI & Co., General Merchants and
Commission Agents
NATIONAL BANK OF CHINA, LIMITED
Geddes & Co., agents
NEW ENGINE & IRON WORKS-Tel. Ad:
Hülsemann, Hankow; Telephone 64
G. Hulsemann, manager and proprietor
信日 Jih-sing
NIPPON MENKWA KABUSHIKI KAISHA (Japan Cotton Trading Co., Ld.), General Merchants andCommission Agents; Head Office: Osaka; Branches and Agencies: Shanghai, Kobe, Bombay, New York-2, Hokai; Tel. Ad: Menkwa
H. Ohoka, manager
K. Kometani K. Shiozaki
U. Itsuji
T. Umehara K. Nishida M. Sunada
C. Oki
S. Yatsugi U. Uhara T. Kiuoshita
Y. Nakao
Y. Higachi
K. Taniguchi
H. Tsugi, engineer
Factories
Cotton and Bean Pressing Factories,
Hanyang
Bean and Cotton Seed Oil Factories,
Hankow
Agency
Nippon Marine Transport and Fire
Insurance Co., Ld.
司公船輪淸日
NISSHIN KISEN KAISHA----Tel. Ad: Nisshin-
kisen
T. Tsunoda, manager
S. Nagamine, signs per pro.
M. Yonesato
T. Makita
N. Higuchi
M. Minakami I. Yokota N. Ohya
S. Mori
H. Haneda
Agencies
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Tokyo Marine Insurance. Co.
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society
OKURA & Co.
S. Tachibana, signs per pro.
OLIVER, A.E., (D.M.D.)Dentist, Representing Drs. Ivy Robinson and Nye---Office and Residence: Rue d'Antremer
興永 Yung-shin
OLIVIER & Co.
H. Duprat, signs per pro. G. Feuerbach
Agencies
Comité des Assureurs Maritimes de Paris, Bordeaux, Havre and Marseille Hauts Fourneaux et Fonderies de
Pont-a-Mousson
Tabaes de la Régie Françaíse
PATELL & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents
M. J. Patell (Hongkong)
C. M. Karanjia D. H. Guzdar P. Edulji
J. B. Patell
PEARCE & GARRIOCK, Commission Agents, Auctioneers, Bill and General Brokers- Tel. Ad: Pearce
H. C. Pearce
A. B. Garriock'
P. D. Weeks, signs per pro.
Agencies
Yorkshire Fire Insurance Co.
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co.
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld.
房藥濟良
Lian-chi-yao-fang
PHARMACIE CENTRALE, French Concession,
Dispensing Chemists, Druggists, &c.
Bernard & Monhonval, proprietors
P. Monhonval, manager
F. Racot, assistant
處發批焦煤鑛
Ping-kwang-mae-tsiao-pee-fah-chu
Pinghsiang Colliery Shipping &
Sales Office, Hankow-1, Poyang
Road; Teleph. No. 175; Cable Address:
Pingcoal, Hankow; Code: A. B. C. 5th edition
E. Schmersahl, agent
局務鑛鄉萍
Ping-hsiang-kuang-mu-chun
Pinghsiang Colliery-Address: Ping- hsiang, via Changsha, Hunan; Cable Address: Coalmine, Pinghsiangki; Codes: A. B. C. 5th edition, A.1. & Engineering Head Office
H.E. Sheng Kung Pao, dir. general
(Shanghai)
Ling Fu Hou, Taotai, manager
G. M. E. Leinung, technical director H. Seevers, secretary
Su Voo Chu, chief interpreter
Mining Department
Fr. M. E. Lux, superintendent egnr.
:968
HANKOW
H. Schlifter, overviewer
do.
K. Boehm,
G. Saatweber, viewer
J. Ilger,
do.
W. Ŏsenbrueck, do.
Herm. Rother, do.
O. Meyer,
do.
Mechanical Department'
W.W.E. Schmidt, superintendent engr. W. Strenger, mech. engineer Ch. Brandt,
do.
E. Schmidt, electrician
Medical Department
Dr. W. Zimmermann, surgeon
Mining School
Dr. W. Schmidt, professor
Railway Departruent
H. Buechner, superintendent
Transport Service
R. Gericke, supt. transport inspector
(Chuchow)
Fr.
Nilsson,
(Chenglin)
transport inspector
O. Reinhardt, transport inspector
(Wuchang)
Shipping and Sales Office (Hankow)
E. Schmersahl, agent
POST OFFICES
BRITISH
Agent A. J. Martin
Clerk-Y. C. Wong
MKB Ta-ching Yau-cheng-chü
CHINESE IMPERIAL
Acting Postal Comsur.-A. H. Hyland Acting Deputy Postmaster-J.
Kompolthy
Dist. Accountant-A. W. D. Lee
Assistant-M. Comencini
von
Postal Officers-F. M. Marçal, M. de
Latoulière
Assist. Postal Officers-J. H. Ulrichs,
G. J. A. d'Urbal Assistant-Jules Jary
CC‡D# Fa-kouo-chü-sin
FRENCH
C. Jasson, receveur principal
J. Hemmel, commis principal
風律得局政郵國德
Tak-kok-yau-tsing-kok-tak-lat-pong
IMPERIAL GERMAN POST OFFICE AND
TELEPHONE-CENTRAL STATION
Postmaster-K. Holzapfel
Post Assistant-W. Braems Electrical Engineer-F. Adam
CBX Tu-Jih-pen-yu-pin-chu
JAPANESE
Postmaster-Y. Watanabe
Postal Officers-N. Tsujino, K. Shimo-
saka, K. Kobayashi, T. Mukai AssistantClerks-T.Tsunoda,S. Matsuo Chief of Branch Office-Japanese Con-
cession-Y. Nakamura
Wuchang, Postal Agency-N.Imamura
Do.
Taye,
-T. Ono
Kiukiang, Do.
-S. Sudzuki
RUSSIAN
Postmaster-J. J. Baum
Tai-wo-shing
QUINNONES & Co., S. F., Merchants and
Commission Agents
興立 Lih-shin
RACINE, ACKERMANN & CIE., Merchants-
French Bund; Telephone 37
J. Gautier,
J. Carrère
J. Chenard
G. Cossantelis
J. Jasson
A. Picca
E. Roumagoux
Agencies
Societe des Ciments Portland
Artificiels de l'Indo-Chine
(Haiphong)
Compagnie Asiatique de Navigation
Messageries Maritimes Cie. Chargeurs Reunis
"L'Urbaine" of Paris (Fire Insur.)
"La Confiance" of Paris Fire Insur.
International Sleeping Car Co.
泰履 Lee-tai
REID, EVANS & Co., Merchants
J. Samson
J. H. Craven
T. W. Ping
REUTER'S TELEGRAM CO., LD.
Evans, Pugh & Co., agents
HO-fa-way
RODEWALD & HEATH, Merchants
A. H. Heath
Douglas Fleming
*
Lo-soey-E-sing
ROESE, DR. Geo., Physician-Private Hospital: Rue de La Mission, French
Concession; Telephone No. 57 Nurse-Sister Johanne Preussner
HANKOW
969
行賣怕昌怡
HAK E Chong-pau-mei-hong
ROSE & Co., Land and Commission Agents,
Auctioneers
Alex. Rose
M. Dietrich
Agency
Ostasiatischer Lloyd Cable Service
E Chong-yang-hong
ROSE, ALEX., Architect, Civil Engineer and
Surveyor
Ngo-koch-tsung-hu
RUSSIAN CLUB-Telephone 56
Committee-M. P. Kourenkoff (chair- man), Ch. M. Benzeman (vice-chair-
man), O. L. Staeger, T. N. Lepekhin,
M. M. Golovin (sec.), A.F. Ghertovich (librarian)
行銀勝道俄華
Wah-ngo-tao-shing-yin-hong
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK---Tel. Ad: Sinorusse,
Teleph. No. 9; Res: No. 12
T. de Krzywoszewski, manager
O. Staeger, signs per pro.
V. V. Ilmar, assistant
Sha-sun
SASSOON & Co., Ld., DAVID, Merchants
Geddes & Co., agents
Shun-chang
SCHIELE AND BYRNE, Merchants
E. G. Byrne
Agencies
Brunner, Mond & Co., Ld.
元怡 Ee-yuen
SCHLICHTING, H., Merchant, Commission
Agent, Bill, Ship and Land Broker and
Estate Agent
H. Schlichting
Ed. Finger, signs per pro.
E. Benck
Agency
Alliance Assurance Co., Ld.
SCHRÖDER, JOH. AUG., Export and Import
Y. Max, compradore
利嘉 Cha-lee
SCHWARZ, GAUMER & Co., Importers and
Exporters, Merchants, Albumen Factory;
Tel. Ad: Maxemilian; Teleph. 65
0. Gaumer
J. Arnold
M. von Arend N. Sainderichin R. Volkert N. Loverdo
Agencies
British Dominions Marine Ins. Co., Ld. Sino-German Ore Co., Ld.
Yi-shing-long
SCHWEIGER, & Co., Ld., Import and Export;
Head Office: Milan; Branches: Singa-
pore and Manila
A. Peregrini, genl. inspector-mgr..
C. Carugo, accountant
C. Giannotti, hide inspector
驎威 Wai-lin
SHANGHAI ELECTRIC & ASBESTOS Co., LD.,
Electrical Engrs., Asbestos, Oil and Paint Merchants-Tel. Ad: Ohm
S. A. Spenceley, agent
SHANGHAI LIFE INSURANCE CO., LTD.
R. A. Frost, in charge
所烈陳器機行洋生瑞
Zay-soong yang hong tyi tyi chan lie dso
SHANGHAI MACHINECO.--Offices and Show
room: Tung King Rd.; Tel. Ad: Probaran
Buchheister & Co., proprietors
A. McGregor, engineer Alfred Brand
SIEMENS SCHUCKERT WERKE, Electrical Manufacturers and Contractors--32, E Woo Road; Tel. Ad: Motor
G. Wielandt, chief engineer
F. Metzger, assistant
F. Herden, engineer
A. Bernhardt, do.
臣襌 Zai.zing
SIEMSSEN & Co., Merchants
F. Hübbe, signs per pro.
E. A. H. Siebs
H. von Appen
Th. Kleinschmidt
Agencies
Martin's Bank, Ld., London Verein Hamburger Assecuradeure Northern Assurance Co., London Mannheim Insurance Company, Ld. Providentia Allgem. Vers. Ges., Wien Insce. "Salamandro," St. Petersburg Schweizerische Natnl. Vers. Ges., Basel North German Marine Insurance Co.
SINGER SEWING MACHINE Co.-Show Room:
Taiping Road
SMITH & Co., Yuen Fah (China)-Teleph.
77; North British and Mercantile Ins. Co..
970
*
Soy-hsing-dan-chan
HANKOW
SOCIÉTÉ ANONYME BELGE POUR L'INDUSTRIE
DES OEUFS
G. Roosen, Brussels (administrateur)
H. Hübbe, signs per pro.
和義
SOLINA & Co., R. V., General Storekeepers
and Wine Merchants-5, Wha Chong Rd.
A. Dorabji
K. C. Sarkari
司公利泰公 Kung tai nee kung sze
SPENCELEY, S.A. Merchant and Commission
Agent
S. A. Spenceley
李美 Meifoo
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK
G. F. Lanning, attorney
C. B. Clark
E. J. Harrs, in charge of oil
installation
平公 Kung Ping
STEPHENS, THEO., Commission Agent
## Si-mun-ta-lihmsze
SYMONDS, W. N., B.A. CANTAB, Barrister-
at-law-British Bund
德杜 Tao-tuck
THEODOR & RAWLINS, Merchants-Peking
Road
F. E. Theodor (London)
J. A. Rawlins
W. Theodor
do.
do.
THOMSON & AIRD, Medical Practitioners
Dr. J. Alex. Thomson, B.S.C., M.B., CH.B.
Dr. Robert Aird, M.B., CH.B.
Dr. O. H. Skinner, M.D.
佑天 Tien-yu
THURIER & KOHR., Provision, Wine and
Spirit Merchants, General Importers and
Commission Agents
J. Thurier
F. Thurier
L. Thurier
P. L. Farn J. King
Hsin-tai
TRADING COMPANY, THE, Tea Merchants (Successor to Alex. Goobkin, A. Koosntzoff & Co.)-Tel. Ad: Gubkinkusnezoff; Head Office: Moscow
G. J. Tooritzin, signs per pro.
W. J. Grigorieff,
do.
J. N. Lepekhin, do.
J. J. Antoofieff
N. J. Falk
T. A. Kovalsky
N. W. Markin, signs per pro.
N. J. Petroff
S. D. Tihomiroff
V. W. Tokmakoff
W. E. Ulanoff
安保 Pau-an
UNION INSURANCE SOCIETY OF CANTON,
LD.-Tel. Ad: Union; Teleph. 159
W. E. Schmidt, agent
Agency
China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld.
行油器機裕光
Kwang-hue-che-ch'e-yu-hong
VACUUM OIL COMPANY
A. R. Burtenshaw, manager
C. Pulun, accountant
Tah-ming
WAGONS LITS TERMINUS HOTEL-Wagons
Street; Tel. Ad: Terminus
R. Saint-Pol, proprietor
Ignacio M. Marques
司公司
WEEKS & Co., Ld., Drapers, Milliners and
General Furnishers
J. F. Dodman, manager
Mrs. Laidrich
J. C. da Silva
A Koong-sin
WELCH, LEWIS & Co., Merchants
平太 Tai-ping
WESTPHAL, KING & RAMSAY, LD.
W. S. King, managing director
H. E. Ramsay, director
W. G. Pratt, sub-manager
J. Austin
R. H. Rowlatt B. W. Gale
C. J. F. Jess
Agencies
Nippon Yusen Kaisha Great Northern S. S. Co.
South Manchuria Railway Co.
Pacific Mail Steamship Company
Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Portland and Asiatic Steamship Co. The East Asiatic Co., Ld. Russian East Asiatic Co., Ld. Swedish East Asiatic S. S. Co., Ld. Royal Insurance Company Ltd. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Atlas Assurance Co., Ld. Central Insurance Co., Ld. The Marine Insurance Company, Ld.
HANKOW-YOCHOW
South British Insurance Co., Ld. Hankow Wharf and Godown Co., Ld. Shanghai Tug and Lighter Co., Ld.
WISSOTZKY & Co., Ld. (Society for Tea
Trade, Moscow)
P. Kracke, representative
Dodwell & Co., Ld., agents
司公限有造製器機子揚
YANGTZE ENGINEERING WORKS, LD., The- Head Office: Augusta Strasse (German Concession); Works: Seven Miles Creek Tel. Ad: Yangworks, Hankow; Codes: A. B. C. 5th edition, Western Union and Engineering Teleph. second edition Directors-V. K. Lee, Sung Wei Chan,
Lo Hung Chang General Manager
Wong Kwong,
M.I.N.A., M.I. MACH. E., M.I.S. INST. General Office
K. C. Lee
Tsang Fuk
Yeung Pak Un
Hsu Chung Ching Whang Chun Fong
971
Technical Dept.-G. W. Cockburn, S.
H. Ho, Y. M. Lin, K. C. Ho
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, Ld.
W. Kobayashi, manager
Y. Shimidzu, sub-manager
Y. Yatsuda K. Yamaoka
S. Yoshiwara
T. Yamanishi
R. Toyama
田吉
Chih-din
YOSHIDA YOKO, General Merchant T. Takatsuji signs per pro.
H. Yoshida
M. Kono
Y. Miyao R. Ohnishi T. Kono
K. Takaya
YOCHOW
Yochow, with a population of 15,000 to 20,000, is situated in latitude 29°23′ N., and longitude 113° 8' E. (Greenwich), at the outlet of the Tungting Lake. Past it ebbs and flows practically the whole of the trade of Hunan, which, however, adds nothing to the prosperity of the place, as it simply passes by after having paid its inward and outward taxes. The city is the gateway of the province and nothing more. Efforts are being made, by Japanese, to find adequate communication with Changteh, the trade centre, whose opening to foreign trade was talked of in 1906. The opening of Changsha took away much of Yochow's transit trade, but as the Hankow-Canton Railway will pass through Yochow it may hope to experience better times. While in 1908 the value of the foreign imports fell from Tls. 507,371 in 1907 to Tls. 387,392, the total net value of the trade of the port, through exceptional causes, increased from Tls. 1,354,155 to Tls.
2,943,917.
The province of Hunan used to be to foreign commerce what Tibet has been to the explorera Forbidden Land-and it is only a few years ago that foreigners were stoned out of Yochow. In 1904, the people were described as showing a "friendly attitude" to all foreigners. The anti-foot-binding crusade has done well in Hunan, which was once the most anti-foreign province in all China. They are intensely patriotic, but their patriotism is rather for Hunan than for the Empire at large.
The province is rich in many forms of wealth, though the inhabitants say it consists of "three parts mountain, six water, and one arable soil." One of the main staples is rice, of which nearly a million piculs are sent out of the province to Hupeh and Kueichow in an average year.
about six hundred thousand half-chests a year.
The Hunan tea sent to Hankow amounts to Changtch is valued officially at six million taels a year, and is probably worth more. The timber passing down past There is also a large production on contact a audis contain large- fields of coal, both anthracite und bituminous; iron also is known to exist. Sulphur, antimony, nickel, and other ninerals are even now exported, and great possibilities of development
are undoubtedly to be found.
and passengers, under River passes; and from Yochow to Inland places under Inland Steam launches and steamers run through from Hankow to Changsha with cargo
Steam Navigation Rules.
I
972
YOCHOW
The city of Yochow is perched on a bluff in a very picturesque way. Its site is however, not adapted for a transit trade, and it offers no shelter for small craft. The port has, therefore, been opened at Chenglin, five miles to the north and only a mile from the Yanetsze, where a small creek provides the needed shelter for cargo-boats, and a good anchorage is found for steamers. Here the Chinese Government has set aside a place for a cosmopolitan settlement, for which they themselves will provide roads, police, etc.; the site contains level ground for business purposes, well raised, but not too high, above flood limits, while higher ground gives good and healthy sites for foreign houses. Work on the formation of the settlement and bunding operations were commenced in 1900, and a new Custom-house and quarters have been built. Yochow is described by the Customs Commissioner as doubtless the healthiest town in the Yangtse Valley, considering the insanitary conditions." In 1900, really the first open year of the port, the net value of the trade was Tls. 143,827. In 1903 it amounted to Tls. 3,473,241, but in 1905 the value was Tls. 490,058 only, and in 1907 the returns show a net value of Tls. 1,354,155. The decline since 1904 is the result of the opening of Changsha as a Treaty Port.
The noteworthy feature of 1907 was the connection of Changteh by steamer during the high water season-June to October-the resulting trade being valued at Tls. 617,000 Buoys and lights were established to mark the channel across the lake. The difficulties and risks of this route are considerable, and it is probable that it will be found advisable to adopt the somewhat longer route via Lolintan, though, on account of the sharp bends of the River Yuan in its lower reaches, specially adapted steamers will probably have to be used.
DIRECTORY
AUGUSTINIAN MISSION OF NORTHERN HUNAN Rt. Rev. Bishop Luis Perezy Perez,
vicaire apost., Lichow
Rev. Fr. A. Martinez (Lichow)
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
E. Fernandez (Yung Kiang) A. Arroyo (Sesueitien) V. Andrés (Niehkiashih) N. Puras (Hwajung)
A. Gonzalez (Changteh) L. Ramirez (Louki)
B. Gonzalez (Tselision)
Rev. Fr. B. Yheas (Nauchowting)
J. Hospital (Yochow City) V. Ferrero (Niehkiaslih) V. Martinez (Shenchowfu) A. Diego (Gan-siang)
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
S. de la Torre, Vic. Prov.
(Yochow)
A. de Paz (Yochow City) A. Fernandez (Yalan) F. Bernardo (Tsinse)
Rev. Fr. J. Pons, Procurador
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
(Hankow)
S. Palomino (Lungyang) S. P Longyang (Lungyang) B. Fernandez (Kaiki Kino) P. Pelaz (Sesucit'ien) H. Martinez (Semensien)
關州岳 CUSTOMS-IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner R. Kurosawa
Assistants M. P. Hyde, G. Müller Acting Tidesurveyor-T. H. Gwyone Asst. Examiner O. R. J. Konig Tidewaiters-W. Keeler, J. B. Gjern
POLICE
T. H. Gwynne
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE (Yochwo
District)
District Postmaster-R. Kurosawa Acting District Inspector (Chang-
teh) E. Caretti
District Inspector (Kweiyang)-E. T
S. Newman
REFORMED CHURCH OF THE UNITED STATES
Dr. Wm. E. Hoy and wife Mr. Frank Buches and wife Mr. Horace Lequear Rev. W. Reimart and wife Dr. W. Adams and wife Miss A. Traub
Miss Hannah Kanne
SHASI
市沙
Sha-si
L
Shasi (the "market on the sands") is one of the ports opened to foreign trade under the Japanese Treaty of 1895, the official declaration of the opening being dated the 1st October, 1896. The port is about 85 miles below Icbang and is situated at the crossing point of two most important routes of commerce in Central China, namely, from east to west and from north to south and vice versa. It is reclaimed from the river and the sea by a magnificent system of dykes and canals, and is " monument of ancient commerce, and 2 witness to native perseverance and engineering skill." The district suffers periodically from the flooding of the Yangtze. In July, 1908, the river rose to 30 ft. 9 inches, and caused the destruction of all the earlier summer crops. The population is estimated at about 80,000, and the floating population, of which no account is kept, may be estimated at 10,000 more.
A con- siderable amount of washing for gold is done between Shasi and Hosueh, chiefly on the Tukkechow. Formerly Shasi was an important distributing centre, but the opening of Ichang to foreign trade diverted much of the traffic to the last-named port. It was hoped that when Shusi itself was opened it would regain its importance as a point of distribution, but the experience now gained shows that the development is likely to be slow. On the 9th and 10th May, 1898, a serious anti-foreign riot occurred at Shasi. The Customs Office and the residence of the Commissioner, the Customs boats, the premises of the China Merchants' Company and their hulk, the office of the Foreign Board, the Japanese Consulate, the premises occupied by the native agents of Messrs. Butterfield & Swire and Messrs. Jardine, Matheson Co., and a number of newly-erected Chinese houses were burnt by the mobs, kerosene oil being used to feed the conflagration, and the foreign residents were driven out of the port, narrowly escaping with their lives. The Custom-house was re-opened on the 1st July of the same year. In August, 1898, an area of 3,800 Chinese feet in length, by 800 to 1,200 in breadth, lying along the river side below the town, was assigned to Japan as a Japanese concession. The foreign commerce is mostly in Japanese hands. The British Consulate was withdrawn in January, 1899, British interests being placed under the care of the Consul at Ichang. Calling steamers have to anchor in the river, the current of which is very swift, but some bunding work, commenced in December, 1904, and finished in April, 1905 provided berths for three bulks, with jetties, but in 1908, this bund for over two-thirds of its length went bodily into the river owing to the action of the water coming from inland carrying away sand from beneath the stone work. The net value of the trade of the port coming under the cognizance of the Foreign Customs was in 1908 returned at Tls. 1,699,624 against Tls. 1,880,422 in 1907, and Tls. 1,497,134 in 1906. The bulk of the carrying trade is, however, carried on by junks, which do not come under the control of the Foreign Customs.
DIRECTORY
Sue Che Sing, agent
BETTERFIELD & SWIRE
Steamer "Tung-ting"
CONSULATES
GERMANY
Acting Consul-Baron von Muffling
(residing at Hankow)
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-H. A. Little (residing at
Jchang)
JAPAN
Chancellor-in-charge- I. Katayama Police inspector-K. Koreyeda
Chao Shang Sha Chi
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVGTN, Co.
Hsieh Chen, manager
Hsu Kin Sung, clerk
Steamers "Kwei Lec" and "Kuling"
市沙關 Shasi Kuan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissioner A. Sharp Deane
Assistant-H, F. W. von Kries
Acting Tidesurveyor and Harbour
Master.-L. E. N. Szigetvary Tidewaiters-G. High, J. Contes,
F. A. Armstrong
Clerks Chien Tsze Shang, Lin E.-hai
974
和怡 E-Wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co.
Wu Hung Yuen, agent
Steamer "Kiangwo
SHASI-CHANGSHA
METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATORY OF JAPAN
Y, Oki
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rev. Marcel Sterkendries (Kingchow) Rev. Angelus Timers (Kin-men) Rev. Gratianus Laurent (Kong-ng an)
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE Postinaster-A. S. Deane Postal clerk-in-charge-Sun Kuo-sui
POST OFFICE, Japanese
Postmaster R. Suzuki Asst. Clerk-F. Itow
CHANGSHA
Chang-sha
Changsha ("Long Sands"), the capital city of Hunan, which stands on the bank of the River Hsiang, 120 miles above Yochow (at the confluence of the Hsiang and Yangtze) became an open port under the China-Japan Commercial Treaty of 1903. A Custom house was inaugurated on July 1st, 1904, and a British Consulate in 1905. The surrounding country is hilly; though to the North there is a long plain varying in width from half a mile to a mile; possibly an ancient watercourse. The river Hsiang is not navigable for steaners in winter time, although its gradual fall and absence of rocks seem to promise a useful waterway. The city itself contains many fine streets, well paved and kept, according to Chinese ideas. There are many handsome buildings, both public and private. A local print describes the Changsha people as being earnest in temple worship and incense burning, which accounts for the careful preservation of all the innumerable temples and shrines. The first Customs Commissioner, writing in February, 1905, reported that the reception accorded to the new status of the port by the people had been quiet but satisfactory, and their behaviour since has been excellent. "Officials and gentry alike have been courteous and civil, and, the right conditions being premised, the future is full of promise." A Mr. H. Bennertz assumed that the walled city itself was open; bat the Chinese insisted that open port" was extra-mural. The upshot was a decision against the Chinese, who finally paid Mr. Bennertz to go away. By imposing lekin, by boycotting, and in other ways, however, this open port is kept practically closed. In 1905, the Commissioner stated that the idea of a foreign settlement is "practically dropped," and suggested that foreign merchants may establish themselves on a low-lying sandbank 400 yards out, which they must first raise to a safe level! "Even now it is difficult to get foothold," he adds, but for those who do get in, and can wait, golden possibilities are promised. Floods in April and May of 1906 covered the Bund to a depth of ten feet. All business was suspended for several weeks. Steamers having no place into which to discharge, for junks and lighters dared not move in the river which ran in a torrent, carried their cargoes back to Hankow one vessel making three round trips with the same freight before being able to land it. What with the flool and famine and rebellion in the province the year was not a success fiscally. The net value of the trade for 1908 was Tis. 9,240,292; for 1907 Tls, 7,292,133; for 1906 T counting, but there is a steady increase chief Direct foreign trade is as yet not worth articles of export are rice, of which 911,124 piculs were exported in 1908 as against 353, 208 piculs in 1907, and crude antimony (the product of antimony ore roughly smelted once), the export of which increased from 29,411 piculs in 1907 to 100,00 piculs in 1908. A new refining plant has recently been erected in the antimony works in the southern suburb of the city, and there have been already some pure antimony--Antimony Regulus.
shipments of
A British Consular Report states that
1
"
CHANGSHA-ICHANG
975
provincial exclusiveness renders it difficult for foreign firms to open branches in the city, where a powerful and wealthy clique of gentry are in a position to outbid them in the purchase of premises and in other ways to use their powers to keep them out.
A considerable amount of building has been carried out in the foreign quarter, including two massive stone bunds about 30ft in height constructed along the frontage of adjoining lots belonging respectively to the Imperial Maritime Customs and Messrs. Butterfield & Swire, giving a total length of over 600 feet. An extensive scheme for bunding the whole foreshore outside was sanctioned last year, and a long stretch of band has already been completed outside the north gate.
BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO Co.
M. Jungbluth
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
DIRECTORY
Acting Consul-W. M. Hewlett
JAPAN
Vice Consul-M. Murayama Chancellor Y. Hayashi
Inspector of Police-M. Hiyoshi
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Acting Commsr.-C. E. S. Wakefield Assistant-R. F. Wrench
Do. -W. G. Fitz Gibbon Do. -Y. Akatani Tidesurveyor-J. H. Nightingale Examiners W. Duncan, R. A. Thomp-
S011
Tidewaiters--H. Wyatt, W. Olsen, S. O. A. Torp, P. Pezzini, B. Shainin
會人本日南湖
| KONAN NIHONJIN KAI (Japanese Club)
M. Munayama (chairman)
Committee M. Higoshi, K. Matsu-
yama, K. Horü, Š. H. Hinako, K. Hoiaoka
#E Sam-chin
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA
K. Matsuyama, agent
司公船輪清日
NISSIN KISEN KAISHA
K. Hiraoka, agent
H. Mukae
Agency
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
Osaka Shosen Kaisha
POST OFFICE, Imperial Chinese
District Postmaster-C.E.S. Wakefield Postal Officer-M. E. Summers
ICHANG
昌宜 I-Chang
Ichang is one of the four ports opened to foreign trade on the 1st April, 1877, in accordance with Clause 1, Section 3, of the Chefoo Convention. It is situated in lat. 30° 44′ 25′′ N., long. 111° 18' 34" E., on the north bank of the river Yangtze, about 393 miles above Hankow, and some ten miles below the entrance to the great Ichang Gorge,
or just about a thousand miles from the coast. The navigation of the river to this port is comparatively easy for vessels of light draught, but great care is necessary for all vessels when in the neighbourhood of Sunday Island, owing to the shiftings and banks. Ichang is practically the present limit of steam navigation on the Yangtze. The anchorage is off the left bank, opposite the foreign residences, and is good, except in freshets, when the anchors should be sighted every two or three days. The port is the centre of a hilly country, the productions of which are rice in the valleys, cotton on the higher grounds, winter wheat, barley, and also the tungtzu trees, from which the ordi- bary wood oil is obtained by pressing the nuts gathered from the trees. In the sheltered valleys, amongst the mountain ranges west of the city, oranges, lemons, pomeloes, pears, plums, and a very superior quality of persimmons are grown, and find a ready
976
1CHANG
market in the city and at Shasi. Jchang has increased in importance since the opening of Chungking. All cargo for the latter port is landed here and transferred to chartere junks. In the same way cargo brought down in chartered junks from Chungking and intended for the lower river and coast ports, is shipped here on river steamers, which make regular voyages to and from Hankow,
Native opium is largely grown from here westwards, and is increasing in quantity and improving in quality. The export in 1906 was nearly 50,000 cwts. The climate of Ichang is drier than that of the lower river ports-summers very warm, winters dry and pleasant. The native population is estimated at some 40,000. The foreign residents are few in number, educated native agents representing the four or five foreign houses (three British) doing business here. Fine new Consular and Customs buildings and shipping offices have recently been erected and have improved the appearance of the settlement very much. A German Post Office was opened in 1903.
The net value of the tradle of the port in 1908 was Tls. 7,613,218 as compared with Tls. 6,557,173 in 1907.
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
Wm. Alston Turnbull, agent
Agencies
DIRECTORY
China Navigation Company, Limited North Borneo Trading Co., Ld.
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld.
London and Lancashire Fire Ins. Co. Guardian Assurance Co., Ltd.
BIR Chau-song-nee-ch'euk
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION Co.
Chu Moy-son, manager
Woo Yueh-chiao Wong Kwo Hsin
Ne-cheong.
COMPAGNIE FRANCAISE DES INDES ET DE L'EXTREME ORIENT, INDIA & EASTERN FRENCH TRADING CO.-Head Office: Paris, 19-19 bis Rue Richer; London Office: 19-20, Water Lane, E. C.
CONSULATES
FRANCE
* Ta fa-ling-shih-fu
Acting Consul-G. Morisse (residing
at Hankow)
Acting Vice-Consul-Minard
GERMANY
Acting Consul-Baron von Muffling
(residing at Hankow) Secretary-W. Frederking
*** Ta Ying ling-shih-fu GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Consul--H, A. Little
JAPAN
門衙事本]大
Acting Consul-I. Katayama, for Shasi and Ichang (residing at Shasi)
"6@*A Ta-me-kwoh ya-men
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Vice-Consul General in Charge-
Hubert G. Baugh (Hankow)
SI-chang-kwan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner--J. C. Johnston Assts--F. L. Bessell, E. A. MacDonald
and A. S. Campbell Medical Officer A. Graham Harbour Master and Tidesurveyor-
D. M. Leunar
Examiners-J. McMahon, J. V. Jensen Asst. do.-R. Olsen, R. Tismar Tidewaiters-W. H. Barley, J. Larkin,
D. Verner, R. Balldeath, P. H. M. McCarthy, J. Rasmussen
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Ltd., Merchants,
Andrew Ross
Agencies
Indo-China S. N. Company, Limited Canton Insurance Office, Limitel Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co. Canadian Pacific Railway Co.
"Glen Line" of Steamers
"Shire" Line of Steamers
隆茂
MACKENZIE & Co., Lv.
H. McAdam, resident agent
Agencies
Kiang Pei Ting, Coal & Tin Mining Co-
North China Insurance Co. Ld.
West China Transport Co.
China Mutual Life Assurance Co.
時最美
MELCHERS & Co., Merchants
E. D. Chang
Agencies
ICHANG-CHUNGKING
Nordd. Lloyd Imp. German Mail Line Nork. Lloyd. Imp. Melchers & Co.'s,
Yangtsze Line Hamburg-Amerika Linie
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ltd.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
Tien-choo-tang
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Right Rev. Modestus Everaerts
Bishop tit. of Tadama and Vicar Apostolic of Southern Hupeh
Revi Angelus Timmers, pro vicar
Do. Gratianus Laurent Do. Marcellus Sterkendries Do. Polydorus Vercruysse Do. Hubertus Adons Do. Seraphinus Melissen Do. Damianus de Walleff Do. Thaddeus Jacobs Do. Mathias Vlaminck Do. Natalis Gubbels Do. Deodatus Janssen
Do. Robertus van Voorden
Do. Julianus Adons
Do. Thomas Kempenaers Do. Franc. Xav. Corbisier
Do. Clementianus De Vuyst Do. Trudo Jans
Do. Achilloeus Van Den Bosch
Do. Theodoricus Hesseling Do. Carolus Goethals
Do. Columbanus Clement Do. Marinus Adons
Do. Solano de Cock
Do. Libertus Callebaut Do. Victor Stolle Do. Julianus Verhaeghe Do. Donatus Sammels
Chen-mou-tang
977
REV. SEURS FRANCISCAINES MISSION-
AIRES DE MARIE
Rev. Mère Marie Béatrix and 8 Sisters
司公船輪清日
Tai-pan tseung-lun kung-tze
NISSHIN KISEN KAISHA, THE Tel. Ad:
Nisshinkisen
Y. Obbe, agent
F. C. Lu
P. Y. Chow
Agency
The Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
局政郵清大昌宜
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
District Postmaster-J. C. Johnston
District Inspector-A. Ortolani (Wanh-
sien)
Postal Officer-E. Rose
SALT LEKIN COLLECTORATE
Commis'ner-in-charge-W. T. Lay
富美 Mci. foo
STANDARD OIL Co. of New York
W. H. Lovatt
德立
Li-teh
THE WEST CHINA TRANSPort Co.
Mackenzie & Co., Lrl.
Agencies
North China Insurance Co., Ld. China Mutual Life Assce Co. Upper Yangtsze Syndicate, Ld.
CHUNGKING
I Chung-king
The city of Chungking, situated in lat. 29 deg. 33 min. 56 sec. N., long. 106 deg. 30 min. E, may well be described as not only the commercial capital of Szechuen, but of the whole of Western China. The foreign import trade centres here, and is then distributed by a smaller class of trading junks up the various rivers of the province, opium, url the large assortment of Chinese medicines are received, assorted, repacked, and shipped to Ichang, Hankow, and Shasi, consignments to the latter port being transhipped there into smaller junks, and forwarded to the southern provinces, vid the Tung Ting lake.
+
The city occupies the end of a high and rocky bluff forming a peninsula, at the Janetion of the river Kia-ling with the Yangtze, 1,400 miles from the mouth of the latter. The principal streets of the city, in which are many fine shops, are on the side
31
978
CHUNGKING
of the Yangtze. It is surrounded by a crenelated stone wall in good repair, which is some five miles in circumference, pierced with nine gates. This wall was built in 1761, replacing an older oue. The climate of Chungking is depressing, the summer being hot and damp, the winters raw and chilly, with thick fogs from November to March. Spring and Autumn can indeed hardly be said to exist. The ordinary rise of the river is about 75 feet; in 1892 it rose 96 feet, and on 6th August, 1898, to 101 feet, on 2nd August, 1903, it rose to 933 feet, the water not being able to force its way fast enough through the gorges. On the 11th August, 1905, the river rose to 108 feet. In 1908 it only attained a height of 52 feet 4 inches. According to a Chinese report the river rose 120 feet in 1878. On the left bank of the Kialing and facing Chungking, extending below the junction of the two rivers, is the walled city of Kiang-Peh-ting, formerly within the district of Li Min Fu, but now incorporated in Chungking Fu. These two cities and the large villages in their immediate neighbour hood are estimated to contain a population of about 300,000.
The port was declared open to foreign trade in March, 1891, but business did not actually commence until the 18th June, since which date a large trade has been done both in imports and exports, carried in foreign chartered junks. The net value of the trade was larger in 1908 than it has ever been. It amounted to Tls. 31,173,410. In 1907 it was 27,045,904; and in 1906 Tls. 28,996,206. Rebellious disturbances in years past adversely affected trade, but recently the province has enjoyed comparative im- munity in this respect. A rising, started in 1904 by a man who said be was connis- sioned by Heaven to wipe out the missionaries, was ruthlessly suppressed. One church was burned, and a few converts killed, and then "the Chinese officials caused shell to be fired into the mob until all (several hundred) were killed!" A local police force has been created.
The Yangtze is navigable for steamers from Ichang, not only to Chungking, but as far as Sui-fu, where the Min river joins the Yangtze, but before the Japanese war, steamers were not allowed to ascend above Ichang. By the Japanese Treaty of 1894, however, the right of steam navigation to Chungking was secured, and in the spring of 1898 the voyage was successfully accomplished by Mr. A. Little, with the small steamer Leechuen, which, however, being of limited power, had to be tracked up the rapids in the same way as junks. On 6th May, 1900, the two light-draught British gunboats Woodcock and Woodlark arrived from Ichang, having left that port on 5th April. The return journey occupied 25 steaming hours. On 12th June, the Yangtze Trading Company's steamer, the Pioneer, commenced her maiden voyage and arrived at Chungking on 20th June. This steamer was afterwards purchased by the British Government. Several steamers have since been built for the Upper Yangtsze. The German steamer Suihsiang was wrecked on her first voyage sixty miles above Ichang. In 1909 the Szechuen Steam Navigation Co. put on a steamer of special design constructed by Messrs. J. L. Thornycroft & Co. in England, so far with very satisfactory results.
DIRECTORY
房藥美大
AMERICAN DISPENSARY
C. W. Freeman, M.B., manager
記瑞
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co.
L A. Anderson, agent
古太
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE
Ching Yü-tsai, agent
♬ Chau Shang-yu-chi
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION Co.
Yek Kwei Chang, manager
Yu Hao Chuan, asst. do.
Chin Hsiao Shan, chief clerk
司公壽保年永
Yung Nien pao sou kung shih
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Leslie H. Gabb, district manager
Szechuen
Central Office: Chungking
I-chang-yang-hang
for
COMPAGNIE FRANÇAISE DES INDES ET DE
L'EXTREME ORIENT
Head Office (India & Eastern French Trading Co.) Paris-19-19, bis Rue Richer; London Office Water Lane, E.C.
―
19-20,
G.C.C.Changeux, manager for Szechen
branche
P.Bié
CONSULATES
FRANCE
CHUNGHIG
Consul-Général- -(Chentu) P. Bons d'
Anty
Eleve Interpréte-J. Leurquin
Médecins
Esserteau
Dr. J. Mouillac, Dr. J.
Vice Consulat de France (Chungking)
A. Bodard, net. Vice-Consul
Poste Française (Chungking)-- Chen
Yen-tchang, chargé du bureau
GERMANY
Acting Consul-F. Weiss (Chengtu) Acting Vice-Consul
Dr.
Belirke
Assistant--. Fischer (Chengtu) Secretary T. Sperlein do.
Dr. Assmy, Surgeon of the German
Army Stabsarzt (attached)
****** Tu Yingling-shih ya-men
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-General
W. H. Wilkinson
Acting Consul J. L. Smith, also in charge of Austro Hungarian and American interests
Constable E. Richmond
府事頜本 大
JAPAN
Tu-yat-pin-ling-sz Fu
In charge of H. I. J. Consulate--N.
Kasai
Interpreter M. Miura
Chief of Police-K. Sakaguchi
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul in charge-J. L. Smith Interpreter-Chou-yun-pa
Chung-ch'ing Kuan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Act. Commissioner-G. F. H. Acheson Assts.-C. T. Brandt, L. V. Chute Medical Officer-C. W. Freeman Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-
J. G. Becke Examiner J. Landen
Assistant Examiners- M. W. Fraser,
D. Silver, W. E. McKenny
Tidewaiters-S. B. Starling, C. Tes-
chendorf, D. McDermott
HOSPITAL. CATHOLIC
Physician-C. Roullet
院醫仁寬
HOSPITAL CHUNGKING GENERAL
Supt.-C. W. Freeman, B.A., M.B.
院醫女慶重
HOSPITAL, GAMBLE MEMORIAL
Miss Jennie Borg, superintendent
Dr. Agnes Edmunds, phys. in charge
HOSPITAL, GERMAN GOVERNMENT
979
Dr. Assmy, staff surgeon (German Army)
院醫濟仁
HOSPITAL, LONDON MISSION
Physician-R. Wolfendale, L.R.C.P., S.E.
Là từ Shih-chung
ISHISUKA, T., Manager of Szechuen Leather
Factory, Chentu
和怡 E-wo
JARDING MATHESON & Co., Merchants
茂隆
MACKENZIE & Co., Ltd.
J. W. Nicolson, manager
MELCHERS & Co.
Agencies
Nordd. Lloyd, Imperial German Mail
Line
Do., Melchers & Co.'s Yangtsze Line
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions
China Directory
see end of
Tien-chu-t'ang
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
(Missions Etrangères de Paris)
堂原眞
Chen-iuen-t'ang
VICARIAT APOSTOLIQUE DU SU'TCHUEN
ORIENTAL (CHUNGKING)
Evêché-Chonvellon, évêque
Lorain, provicaire Caron, procureur Cathédrale Pons, curé
Hopital Farges (aumônier); Guille- met (médecin); Emérentienue (supérieure); Felix, Françoise, Concorde, Camille), Taddéc, sœurs hospitalières
Ecole Française-Gabriel, directeur
Amateur, Anicet, professeurs Séminaires Dangy, Pitiot, Poitout,
Bourgeois, Palafre
Imprimerie-Gourdon, Lamonnerei
堂修聖
Shen-sieou-t'any
VICARIAT APOSTOLIQUE DU SU'TCHUEN
OCCIDENTAL (CHENTU)
Evêché-Dunand, évêque
Pontvianne, pro vicaire Couderc, procureur
Cathédrale Rouchouse, curé
Hôpital Chrysostome, Zaccharie,
Transfiguration, Blaise, Celine, Misericordia, sœurs hospitalières
31*
980
CHUNGKING HANGCHOW
Ecole Française --Louis-Eraste, dir.
Paul Xavier, Joseph Claudius, profs. Séminaires-Perrodin, Caluraud
4 Yun-sen-kong-kouan
VICARIAT APOSTOLIQUE DU SU'TCHUEN MERIDIONAL(SUIFU) Tel.Ad: Adexteros
Evêché-Chatagnon, évêque
F. Fayolle, coadjuteur Moutot, provicaire de Guébriant, id. Puech, P. procureur Cathédrale-Renault, curé Ecole Française Piard
Hópital--Bénézet, aumônier; mère
Felicie, supérieure; Samuel, Lon-
gin, Anizia, Visition, Thècle
Séminaire Scherrier, supérieur;
Brotte, Boissière, professeurs
Probatorium-Tarrisse, supérieure
司公船輪清日
NISSHIN KISEN KAISHA
Y. Nakagawa
PLANT, CAPT. S. C., Upper Yangtze
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Deputy Postmaster-H. G. C. Perry-
Ayscough
Postal assistant-A. L. Kauffmaun
Postal Officers-M. E. Summers, W.
Ortolani
District Inspector-O. Mellows
POSTE FRANÇAISE
Postmaster--E. Colin
Kung-t'a-mee
SPENCELEY, S. A. (residence in Hankow)
Tsai Tzu Chuen, agent
Wang Shing Pai, clerk
SUN LIFE INSURANCE Co.
Mackenzie & Co., Ld., agents
TELEGRAPH, CHINESE IMPERIAL ADMINI-
STRATION
Ling Füh He, manager
L. C. Sun, controller of Szechuen
Twanmo Pang-Fan, clerk-in-charge
Chentu
局報電都成
Chow Pao-Chên, manager
Chên Tzu Sho, clerk-in-charge
Chungking
局報電慶重
S. P. Cheng, manager
Shu Yen Chih, clerk-in-charge
處報電署督川
Department in Viceroy's Yamen
K. Y. Whang, clerk-in-charge
4 operators
CHENGTU
DISTRICT POST MASTER-W. W. Ritchie POSTAL ASSISTANT-J. A. Greenfield POSTAL OFFICER-J. Kenting
"
1
HANGCHOW J thì Hàng-chau
Hangchow, the capital of the province of Chekiang, is situated 120 miles south west of Shanghai, and 110 miles south of Soochow, on the Chien-tang River, at the apex of a bay which is too shallow for the navigation of steamers. The mouth of the river is, moreover, periodically visited by a bore, or tidal wave, which further endangers navigation. Haining is the best place for observing this famous bort, which is formed by the north-east trade wind heaping up the water of the Pacific on the China coast and causing enormous tides. Hangchow Bay is shaped like a funnel, and the mass of water rushing up, more and more concentrated as it advances, is sud- denly confronted by the current of the river. The momentary check causes the water to assume a wall-like formation; then, growing to a height of 15ft. at spring tides and gathering momentum with the immense pressure behind, forcing its volume into the comparatively narrow waterway, it tears past the sea-wall with a roar like thunder ata rate sometimes reaching 12 miles an hour. Before the Taiping rebellion Hangehow shared with Soochow the reputation of being one of the finest cities in the Empire on account of its wealth and splendour, but it was almost destroyed by the rebels It has since rapidly recovered and is once more populous and flourishing, though it has not yet regained its former pitch of prosperity. The population is estimated at
HANGCHOW
981
750.000, including suburbs. Asamanufacturing centre Hangchow takes place even before Soochow. Its three great trades are silk weaving, including several kinds of crape and ganze, the production of fans of all kinds, the manufacture of scissors, and the making of thin tinfoil, from which are formed the imitation ingots of silver, burnt in such immense quantities by the Chinese. In addition, it sends out thread, string, colours, drugs, lacquer, and many other articles in small quantities. Coarse paper is also manu- factured. The communication by water with Shanghai is particularly good, and might be much improved with very little trouble by a small amount of dredging at a spot in the Grand Canal twenty miles from Hangchow. Ningpo, about 120 miles distant, can also be reached by boat from Hangchow with several tran- shipments only: it is quicker to go via Shanghai. Hangchow was declared open to foreign trade on the 26th September, 1896, in accordance with the terms of the Japanese Treaty Steam launches ply regularly to and from Shanghai and to and from Soochow with passenger boats in tow, making the trip in from 18 to 24 hours. An express launch towing only one passenger barge, in which cabins can be hired, now leaves Hangchow and Shanghai at 2 p.m. daily and reaches its destination at 6 a.in. next morning. There are also two launches daily to Huchow and other places en route; also on Chien Tang river daily launches to Fuyang, Tunglu, Linpu, etc., started this year. There is hardly any cargo carried by the latter between Hangchow and Soochow. One of these launches goes ria Kaching and the other via Huchow and Nanzing. The Hangchow-Shanghai companies are Tai Sun Chong (practically Japan- ese), the China Merchants Inland Steam Navigation Co. (Chinese), and the Nisshin Kisen Kaisha (Japanese). The Hangchow-Soochow companies are Tai Sun Chong and China Merchants Inland Steam Navigation Co., on alternate days via Kashing, and Taito Steam Navigation Co., daily, via Huchow; these three companies formed a combination some years ago and have a monopoly of the trade. Several attempts of outsiders to come in have always failed after a few trips.
રી
One of the sights of Hangchow is the famous western lake, dotted with islets crowned with shrines and memorial temples, and spanned by causeways joining island to island. The general picturesque effect is heightened by temples, pagodas, and similar monuments judiciously placed in effective spots, while the slopes of the hills bordering the lake on the west are bright with azaleas, honey-suckle, and peach-bloom, and clusters of bamboos, several kinds of conifers, the stillignia, caniphor tree, and maple in rich profusion, all help to make the scene very pretty.
The site selected for the Foreign Settlement extends for half a mile along the east bank of the Grand Canal; it covers over half a square mile and is about four miles from the city wall. The Japanese concession adjoins it on the North and is about the same size. The Custom-house and Commissioner's and assistants' residences are built on the Customs Lot, and an imposing Police Station has also been put up. A British Consulate has been built on the opposite side of the Japanese Concession, not in the settlement, but the Consul at present resides at Ningpo. On the west side, opposite the settlement, a cotton mill, owned by Chinese and built and worked on western fines, is in operation. The company has also a large factory for pressing oil out of cotton seed. The commodities chiefly dealt in are opium, tin, Japanese copper, kerosene oil, soap, sugar, prepared tobacco, varnish, paper fans, silk piece goods, raw silk and tea. The principal article of export is tea, 116,063 piculs (including re-export) in 1908. The tea comes from Anhwei and Pingsuey near Shaohsing and from the neighbourhood of Hangehow, where the valuable Lungching tea is grown. Silk, paper fans, raw cotton, medicines and tinfoil are also exported. The import of foreign goods from Chinese ports amounted to Tls. 4.875,183 in 1908 against Tls 4,789,00 in 1907, and the exports to Tls. 11.833,917. The net value of the trade of the port was Tis. 22,017,060. In 1900 it was Tls. 0,433,771. Trade is improving generally.
Halfway between Hangchow and Shanghai is Kashing, where the Grand Canal joins the Whaugpoo River on which Shanghai is situated. Kashing is a Customs Sta- tion under Hangchow and was first opened in 1898 for collecting duties on Foreign opium owing to fiscal arrangements being against the collection at Hangchow. It now collects duties both on imports and exports and has become quite an important factor.
Cholera in 1902 killed 10,000 people.
A railway from the Settlement to the fur- ther end of Hangchow City near the Chien Tang river was completed in Sept., 1907. It was built solely by Chinese and with Chinese capital. There is now railway connection with Shanghai via Kashing. 28 miles North of Hangchow is situated the now well- known summer resort. Mokanshan. It can be reached from Shanghai by way of the railway and a motorboat in ten hours. There are now over a hundred houses on
982
HANGCHOW
the slope of a hill about 3,000 feet high. The scenery is magnificent and the view unequalled. Bamboo forests cover the mountain and afford shade to all the roads. Clear mountain springs abound, chairs and coolies for baggage are always available, and are under contract with the Mokanshan Association.
Houses more or less completely furnished can be rented at Tls. 100 to 350 per season (four months). The Shanghai municipality has lately purchased two houses as a Sanatarium for their employes, and a competent nurse is in charge. The difference in temperature from the plain amounts to 10° in the day and 15' at night.
DIRECTORY
BURIN YOKO, Commission Merchants and
Storekeepers
司公壽保年永海上
Shanghai-yung-nien-puo-show-kung-sze
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LD., District Manager-Capt. G. V. Watson-
Paul
Medical Examiner-Dr. A. Kember Chief Native Agt.-P. Lin Young Ling Secretary and Interpreter--TongTsu-ba
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul Officiating--L. H. K. Barr
(Acting Consul at Ningpo)
JAPAN
門衙事領本日大
Ta-ji-pen-lin-sz Ya-men
Acting Consul-M. Ikebe
Inspector of Police-H. Ishihara
關新州杭
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME Commissioner-W. T. Lay
Deputy do.-T. E. Cocker (Kashing) Assistants-C. Pape, J. Klubien, J. C.
G. Beatty, T. Koizumi, C. J. Gutt (Kashing)
Medical Officer-R. Shields (Kashing) Chief Tidesurveyor--T. Moorelead Assistant Examiners--A. Millar (Kas-
hing), J. L. Wilson, N. Carlson Tidewaiters-C.W. Landers (Kashing), W. Filipovich, J. Mackenzie, O. M. Strömdahl (Kashing), H. E. Halvor sen, C. M. J. Müller, A. H. Liddicock (Kashing)
LIKINÅDMINISTRATION, EASTERN CHEKIANG
Commissioner-in-charge--W. T. Lay
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rev. C. Wittib (Hangchow) Rev. N. Boucherie do.
Rev. A. J. Asinelli (Kashing) Rev. A. Boucher
Rev. C. Basso
do.
do.
I
Rev. P. Legrand (Huchow)
SISTERS OF CHARITY
Sisters Archenault (superioress), M Parada, A. Wagensperg, G. Borie M. L. Hacard
MOKANSHAN SUMMER RESORT ASSOCIATION President--Rev. W. H. Hudson Vice-President-Rev. D. H. Davis, D.D. Treasurer-Rev. R. F. Fitch
Secretary-Rev. J. M. Blain
BoardCrofoot, Estes, Gaunt, G.
Hudson, Keen, Langman, Dr. Lee,
Little, Dr. McKenzie, Pape, br.
Shields, J. Leighton Stuart
房捕巡塲關通州
POLICE (CHINESE) Hangchow Settlement
Chief-Chinese
1 interpreter, 2 sergts., 15 constables
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL (Hangchow City)
Postal Officer-G. Tudhope
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL JAPANESE Postmaster-Miyashita Postal Clerk-S. Tsuji
PA**** Ta-tang-kung-n TAITO STEAM NAVIGATION COMPANY
H. Tobi, manager
YAMATO CLUB, West Lake
Secretary-K. Okada
NINGPO
波篝 Ning-po
Ningpo s situated on the river Yung, in the province of Chekiang, in lat. 29 deg. 55 min. N., and long. 121 deg, 22 min. E. It was one of the five ports thrown open to foreigners in 1842. Foreigners had, however, visited Ningpo at an early date. Portuguese traded there in 1522; a number of them settled in the place in that and succeeding years, and there was every prospect of a rising and successful settlement soon being established. But the lawless acts of the Portuguese soon attracted the attention of the Government, and in 1542 the Governor of Chekiang ordered the settlement to be destroyed and the population to be exterminated. A large force of Chinese troops soon besieged the place, destroying it entirely, and out of a population of 1,200 Portuguese, 800 were massacred. No further attempt at trade with this port was made till towards the close of the 17th century, when the East India Company established a factory at the island of Chusan, some forty miles from Ningpo. The attempt to found a trade mart there, however, proved unsatisfactory, and the factory was abandoned after a few years' trial. The port was deserted by foreigners for many years after that. When hostilities broke out between Great Britain and China in 1839, the fleet moved north from Canton, and on the 13th October, 1841, occupied Ningpo, and an English garrison was stationed there for some time. In March, 1842, an attempt was made by the Chinese to retake the city, but the British artillery repulsed them with great slaughter. Ningpo was evacuated on May 7th, and, on the proclamation of peace in the following August, the port was thrown open to foreign trade,
Ningpo is built on a plain which stretches away to a considerable distance on either side. It is a walled city, the walls enclosing a space of some five miles in cir- cumference. The walls are built of brick, and are about twenty-five feet high. They are fifteen feet wide at the summit, and twenty-two at the base. Access is obtained to the town by six gates. A large moat commences at the north gate and runs along the foot of the wall for about three miles on the landward side, until it stops at what is called the Bridge Gate. The main street runs from east to west. Several of the streets are spanned by arches erected in memory of distinguished natives. Ningpo has been celebrated as possessing the fourth library of Chinese works, in point of numbers, which existed in the empire. It was owned by a family who resided near the soutli gate. The site occupied by the foreign residences is on the north bank of the river. The population of Ningpo is estimated at 255,000. The French opened a post office in
1905.
Two cotton mills are established in Ningpo, one of which started in 1896 and the other in 1907. Cotton yarn spun by these mills now ranks third in value among the articles of export of the port. The tea trade has fallen off owing to a deviation of the Fychow teas which formerly passed through Ningpo but are now forwarded to Shanghai via Hangchow. In 1908 the export amounted to over 14,000,000 lbs., showing hittle difference over the figures for 1907, but comparing favourably with the three previous years. The net value of the trade of the port was Tls. 26,995,000 in 1908, Tls. 34,860,000 in 1907, and Tls. 18,900,000 in 1906.
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE
Tuikoo
L. H. Howell, acting agent
Agencies
DIRECTORY
China Navigation Company, Ld.
Ocean Steamship Company, Ld., China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co. of
Hongkong, Ld.
Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co.
Palatine Insurance Company, Ld. Guardian Assurance Co., Ld. Union Insurance Society of Canton,
Limited
North Borneo Trading Co., Ld.
A Chau Shang Yung-chu
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION Co.
Koo Yuen Seng, manager
Li Ching-ling
Agency
China Merchants' Marine Insurance Co.
981
CHRIST CHURCH, Ningpo
NING PO
Bishop-Rt. Rev. H. J. Molony, D.D. Archdeacon-Ven. A. E. Moule, B.D.
Chaplain-C. M. S. Missionary in
Ningpo
CONSULATES
門衙事領國英大
Da Ing-kok Ling-ze-ngo-meng
GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul-L. H. R. Barr
Constable J. Cater
WM
Che Hai-kwan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
J. W. Innocent, acting commissioner A. Duncan, assistant
B. D. Tisdall,
do.
Y. Kurematsu, do.
A. Fongner,
do.
C. F. Mills, medical officer
J. Dalton, tidesurveyor
E. Shelton, boat officer
G. T. Murray, chief examiner
J. Berthet, examiner
W. A. Maca, do.
F. W. Rowland,
J. Willis, assistant examiner
L. J. Borgeest, tidewaiter
D. A. Campbell, do.
B. W. Bulbrook, do.
H. W. Butte,
do.
H. Biermann,
do.
A. F. Gabb,
do.
O. Clark,
do.
C. Fisher,
do.
W. N. Polglase, do.
S. W, Rowland, do.
Me-ih
EHLERS A., & Co.
A. R. Donnelly
Agencies
"Norddeutscher Lloyd Java-China-Japan Lijn
Austrian Lloyd Steam Navigation Co. Canadian Pacific S. S. and Railway Co. Indo-China Steam Navigation Co.,Ld. Shell Transport and Trading Co. Canton Insurance Office, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Ld. The State Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Standard Life Assurance Company New Zealand Insurance Company Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld." Mannheimer Insurance Co. Hanseatische Feuer-Vers.-Ges. Salamander Fire Insurance Co. The Federal Life Assce. Co. of Canada Green Island Cement Co., Ld.
Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Ld. New York Lubricating Oil Co.
昌遜
HUDSON & COMPANY, Merchants, Commis.
sion Agents, Importers and Exporters
A. J. Hudson
Agencies
Manufacturers' Life Ins. Co., Toronto Gould's Manufacturing Co.
Bielfeld & Son (A. Hudson, agent)
MARINE SURVEYOR
Capt. A. J. Philbey
MISSIONS
For
Protestant Missions see end of China Directory
COLLEGE ST. JOSEPH (Frères Maristes)
Frère Paschal, directeur
Tsi-ping-yuen
HOSPITAL SAINT JOSEPH
Sr. Gilbert, Sup.
Lien-ying-t'ang
MAISON DE LA PRESENTATION
Sr. Marie Raisin, Sup.
Jen-tsz-t'ang
MAISON ST. VINCENT, Hangchow
Sr. Marie Archenault, Sup.
MAISON DU SACRÉ COEUR, Tsofootang
Sr. Adéle Faure, Sup.
***** Ning-po Tieng-tsu-tang 堂主天波篝
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION OF CHEKIANG Mgr. P.M. Reynaud, Bhp. of Fessulan
堂慈仁府波篝
Ning-po-fu Jen-tse-t'ang
SOEURS DELA CHARITÉ DE ST. VINCENT DE
PAUL
Maison de Jesus-Enfant
Sr. Isida Calcagni, Sup.
理使密 Mi Li Shin
MILLS, DR. CHARLES F., M.D., L.M.
Physician to H. B. M. Consulate, and
Medical Officer, I. M. Customs
Sun-dah
PEARSON & CO., T. Y., Importers, Exporters and Commission Agents-Tel. Ad: Pens-
son
T. Y. Pearson
Agencies
Lloyd's, London,
Vacuum Oil Co.
British America Fire Assce. Co., LAo Central Fire Assce. Co., Ld.
NINGPO-WENCHOW
Excess Fire Assce. Co., Ld., Northern Fire Assce. Co., Lil.
China Mutual Life Insurance Co., L‹l.
PEARSON'S PRIVATE HOTEL--The Bund; Tel.
Ad: Pearson
T. Y. Pearson, proprietor
PILOTS-A. J. Philbey, H. Edgran
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Distr. Postmaster-J. W. Innocent
Distr. Postal Officer-F. L. Smith
POST OFFICE, FRENCH
E. Sauvage, postmaster
司公船輪紹甯記慎签美
Me-ih-shun-kee Ning-shao-lun-zan-kung-2
STEAM LAUNCH COMPANY
A. Ehlers & Co., agents
Sun Jang Ching, manager
Launches "Chinhsing
JJ
房捕巡 Shun Pou Fong
POLICE STATION
985
A. Bookless, magistrate and controller
of Police
S. P. Chang, interpreter
Yue Sih Yuen, writer
8 native corporals
50 do. constables
局報電國中
Chung-Kuo-tien-pao-chu
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Liu Shao-kah, manager
Boun Pah-yung, clerk-in-charge
TRINITY COLLEGE (C. M. S.)
Principal-Rev. W. S. Moule, M.a.
Rev. W. Robbins
C
WENCHOW
州温 Wan-chau
Wenchow, one of the five ports opened to foreign trade by the Chefoo Convention is the chief town in the department of Wenchow, occupying the south-east corner of Chekiang province.
The city is situated on the south bank of the river On, about twenty miles from its mouth, in lat. 27 deg. 18 min. 4 sec. N., long, 120 deg. 38 min. 28 sec. E. The site is a well cultivated plain, bounded on all sides, but at a distance of some five miles, by lofty hills. The walls are said to have been first erected during the fourth century, and enlarged and re-built by the Emperor Hung Wu in 1385. They are formed of stone, diagonally laid at the foundation, and partly also of brick, and measure about four miles in circumference. The streets are wider, straighter, and cleaner than those of most Chinese cities. They are mostly well paved with brick and kept in careful repair by the householders. They slope down on either side to waterways, which in their tum communicate with canals intersecting the whole city. There are numerous large nunneries and temples in Wenchow. known as the Sharany Mến or
The Custom-house, outside the chief gate, Double Gate," the Taotai's Yamen, the Prefect's and other public offices in a cluster, and the Foundling Hospital, all near the centre, are the other chief buildings. The latter institution, built in 1748, contains one hundred apartments. Among the objects of greatest interest and curiosity to the stranger are two pagodas situated on "Conquest Island, abreast of the city. They are both of great antiquity and, with the temples between, were for some time the retreat of Ti Ping, the last Emperor of the Sung dynasty, when seeking to escape from the Mongols under Kublai Khan. His Majesty Ti Ping has left behind him autographs preserved to this day in the adjoining temple.
The British Consul and the Customs outdoor staff Occupy foreign built houses on the island. The estimated population of the city is 80.000. There were Boxer troubles in the Ping-yang district, several native Christians being murdered in 1900, and all the missionaries left Wenchow, where, however, the officials were able to maintain order. The Roman Catholic Missionaries have a spacious and imposing Cathedral in the Western part of the city. The English Methodist
hundred students, and teaching accommodation for more than two hundred. Early erected a fine college at a cost of $20,000, containing sleeping accommodation for over a
Mission at an outlay of fully $20,000. The building consists of a central block and two hundred patients. pings, after the style of Hunt's Block, Guy's Hospital, and can accommodate about two
986
WENCHOW-SANTUAO
There is no foreign settlement at Wênchow, and the foreign residents are a mere handful, consisting almost entirely of officials and missionaries. A large quantity of native opium is produced in the vicinity of Wenchow. There is a considerable native export trade in tea, tobacco, wood, charcoal, and bamboos, brought down the river on rafts from Ch'u-chow. Manufactures do not flourish. The annual value of the trade is estimated to be about Tls. 3,000,000. The shops and yards engaged in it are situated in the west suburb, where immense quantities of bamboo and poles are kept on hand. Wenchow is also celebrated for its oranges, which rank second in importance in the export trade. The total export of Tea in 1908 was 28,062 piculs against 15,027 piculs in 1907, 18,071 in 1906, 16,498 piculs in 1905, 25,590 piculs in 1904, 38,935 piculs in 1903, and 26,411 piculs in 1902. The value of the net trade of the port coming under the cognizance of the foreign Customs for 1908 was Hk. Tls. 2,525,575 against Hk. Tik 2,071,485 in 1907, and Tis. 2,346,728 in 1906.
DIRECTORY
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION CO.
Hsieh Chung-son, agent
Loo Hsin Yuen, clerk
CHINESE TELEGRAPH Co.
Cheng Sung-hwa, manager
Yaw Ven Kan, clerk in charge
Kia Hong-ziang, Chen Tseh-ling,
clerks
Yang Yuch-nien, accountant
CONSULATES
門衙事領國英
Da Yung buailing-82-ngo-miệng
GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY, Consulate
Acting Consul-L. H. R. Barr (re-
siding at Ningpo)
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul in Shanghai
!
關海甌
Ou.Hoi-Kwan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissioner-C. T. Bowring Assistant--F. G. E. Rudolphy
Harbour Master and Tidesurveyor-||
A. Walker
Examiner-W. Johnsford
Asst. Examiner H. J. Christophersen
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of China
Directory
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rev. C. Aroud
Rev. Boisard
局政郵大州温
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postmaster--C. Talbot Bowring
Clerk in Charge-Yea Hong Yue
SANTUAO
Santuao was voluntarily opened to foreign trade by the Chinese Government on the 8th May, 1899. The port includes the whole of the magnificent Samsalı Inlet, which is situated some 70 miles North of Foochow. The foreign settlement is ou the island of Santu in the centre of the Inlet. The harbour is certainly one of the finest on the China cost: the approaches to it are well-defined, and vessels of the largest size may enter at any time, regardless of the state of tile. H.M.S. Waterwitch surveyed the whole of the Inlet in 1899, and an Admiralty chart has been published. A telegraph cable was successfully laid from the mainland to the Settlement in July, 1905, and communication established with all China ports.
The port of Santuao serves important Tea districts. Much of the Tea exported from Foochow to Europe is first shipped from Santuao; and there is a growing demand in North China for certain varieties grown in the neighbourhood. The chief towns of the district are Funing, Fu-an, Ningte, and Shouning. There is a prosperous and increasing junk-trade, and regular steamship communication with the provincial capital. The net value of the trade of the port for 1908 was Tls. 2,659,287, as compared
with Tls. 2,275,874 for 1907.
SANTUAO-FOOCHOW
官事領總利大義大
DIRECTORY
Tai I-tai-li Chun-ling-s-hún
CONSULATE
ITALY
Consul-General-Comu. Z. Volpicelli
(residing in Hongkong) Chinese Writer--Ching Yao
Fun-hai-Kwa
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Assistant-in-charge-P. R. Walsham Assistant--R. L. Warren
Examiner A. D. Copeland
Tidewaiters - E. E. Bulbrook, O.
Sörensen
Tien-cheang
DODWELL & Co., LD., Merchants
Agencies
The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld.
987
The Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ld.
J
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., LD., Merchants
Agencies
Indo-China Steam Nav. Co., Ltd.
Canton Insurance Office, Ltd.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of China
Directory
局政郵
三清大
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postmaster P. R. Walsham
Clerk-in-charge-Lau Kaik-jong
(N.B. Letters should be addressed:
Santuao via Foochow)
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Clerk-Y. Y. Wei
FOOCHOW
州福 Fuhuchau
Foochow (or Fuli-chau-fu) is the capital of the Fokien province. It is situated in lat. 26 deg. 20 min 24 sec. N., and long. 119 deg. 20 min. E. The city is built on a plain on the northern side of the river Min, and is distant about thirty-four miles from the sea, and nine miles from Pagoda Island, where foreign vessels anchor.
The attention of foreigners was early attracted to Foochow as a likely place where commercial intercourse could be profitably carried on in the shipment of Bohea Tea, which is grown largely in the locality. Before the port was opened, this article used to be carried overland to Canton for shipment, a journey which was both long and difficult. The East India Company, as early as 1830, made representations in favour of the opening of the port, but nothing definite was done till the conclusion of the Treaty of Nanking in 1842. The early years of intercourse with the natives were anything but what was anticipated. The navigation of the river was difficult, there was no market for imports, and several attacks by the populace rendered the port an undesirable place of residence for some time. It was not until some ten years after the port had been upened that there was much done in the export of tea from the interior, but after that the quantity shipped increased largely, and Foochow became one of the principal tea ports in China. Since 1880, when the tea trade of the port reached its highest figure, the prosperity of the place has been on the wane. Local teas are only wanted now if they can he bought cheaply enough to bring down the prices of Indian and Ceylon blends, al that demand for them for their own sake will soon cease. Within 20 years a valuable trade has dwindled to the most meagre dimensions, and thousands of eres must have gone out of cultivation. Apart from the tea business the trade of
purt has shown some improvement in the last decade.
the
A few years ago extensive mining concessions were granted in the north and west of the province of Fukien to a Chinese and French syndicate, with a view to mining for gold. A French mining engineer of high repute made a careful survey of all the gold fields at Shao-wu Fu, and reported them very valuable and all worth working. A Company with a capital of one and a quarter million dollars was reported to have been formed to work the mines, but operations were delayed until the privilege expired and nothing has been done.
988
FOOCHOW
The city is built around three hills, and the circuit of the walled portion is between six and seven miles in length. The walls are about thirty feet high and twelve feet wide at the top. The streets are narrow and filthy, but the number of trees about the official quarter of the city, and the wooded hills enclosed by the walls, give a picturesque appearance to the general view. Two well-preserved pagodas stand within the city walls. Near the east gate of the city are several hot springs, which are used by the natives for the cure of skin diseases and are believed to be efficacious. The Foochow people excel in the manufacture of lacquer ware of all kinds. What is known as "No. I, Lacquer" is regardled as the best made in the world. These goods received gold medals at the St. Louis World's Fair. There are several grades of lacquer, but all are having large sales, also the manufacture of miniature monuments, pagodas, dishes, etc., from what is called "soap stone," and in the construction of artificial flowers, curious figures of Birds, etc. A few miles above the city the river divides into two branches, which, after pursuing separate courses for fifteen miles, unite a little above Pagoda Anchorage. The foreign settlement stands on the northern side of the island thus formed and which is called Nantai. A bridge across the river, known as the Long Bridge, or Bridge of the Ten Thousand Ages, affords access to the city.
The climate of Foochow is mild and delightful for about nine months of the year, but in the summer it is rather trying, the range of the thermometer then being from 74 deg. Fahr, to 98 deg.
The scenery surrounding Foochow is very beautiful. In sailing up the Min river from the sea vessels have to leave the wide stream and enter what is called the Kimpai Pass, which is barely half-a-mile across, and enclosed as it is by bold, rocky walls, it presents a very striking appearance, The Pass of Min-ngan is narrower, and with its towering cliffs, surmounted by fortifications and cultivated terraces, is extremely pictur- esque, and has been compared to some of the scenes on the Rhine. The Yung Fu, a tributary of the Min, also affords some charming scenery, the hills rising very abruptly from the river bank. The Min Monastery, the Moon Temple, and the Kushan Monastery, all occupying most romantic and beautiful sites, are fine specimens of Chinese religious edifices, and are much resorted to by visitors. Game abounds in all the ravines and mountains in the vicinity of Foochow while tigers and panthers are common in the more remote hills, and some of these beasts have been killed within ten miles of the city,
Foreign vessels, with the exception of those of very light draught, are compelled to anchor at Pagoda Island, owing to the shallowness of the river, which has been increasing of late years the difficulties of navigation; even at the anchorage the river is silting up in several places. The limits of the port of Foochow extend from the City Bridge to the Kimpai Pass. The Mamoi Arsenal, near Pagoda Anchorage, is an extensive Government establishment, where several good-sized gun- boats have been built. The Arsenal was bombarded by the French on the 23rd-24th August, 1884, and reduced to partial ruin, but has since been restored. The establish- ment has now been reorganised, and is administered by French experts. There is a dock in connection with the Arsenal on Losing Island. The dock is over 300 ft. long and has very powerful pumps and a good steel caisson. A small daily paper called the Foochow Echo is published here. Until 1905 one mint, known as the City or Viceroy's Mint served to supply the coinage requirements of the local province, but in that year the government set up two additional mints, for which there was no need, but only an alluring prospect of profit on the export and sale of copper 10-cash coins. It was calculated that two million pieces per day were being turned out by the three mints. The market value of the coins quickly fell below par, and orders from Peking reducing the output to 300,000 coins per day, and forbidding the export of coins to other provinces, necessitated the closing of the two mints before they had been in operation twelve months. In June, 1900, the port was visited by the most disastrous floods known there in living memory, the river rising through heavy rains, which overflowed and deluged the country, sweeping away villages and causing immense havoc and loss of life. The population of Foochow
is estimated at 650,000.
The net value of the trade of the port coming under the cognisance of the Forrig Customs in 1908 was Tls. 17,150,000 as compared witli Tls. 18,952,000 in 1907, which was higher than it had been for many years. Less than two decades ago the Customs revenue was fully two million taels annually; in 1908 it was Tls. 852,147 only.
FOOCHOW
KULIANG
989
A refuge from the heat of summer at Foochow can be gained by a three hours' chair ride to the top of Kuliang, e., "Drum Pass," which is a mountain resort situated about nine miles east of Foochow. The thermometer indicates an average of 10 degrees cooler on the mountain than it is in Foochow; the nights are always cool and blankets a necessity for comfort. Dr. Rennie was the first to build a house of foreign design at Kuliang in 1880. Now there are upwards of one hundred such houses, and every summer between two and three hundred persons, chiefly missionaries, are in residence on the mountain. According to the Admiralty Chart, Kuliang reaches a height of 2,900 feet. Nearly five miles of stone paved roads, about three feet in width have been made under the supervision of a Public Improvement Committee, appointed by the residents, the necessary funds being provided by voluntary contribution. greatest charin of Kuliang is the mountain walks, and there are many interesting places within easy walking distance, An Imperial Chinese Post Office is opened at Kuliang every year from the middle of June to the middle of September, and daily mail connection with Foochow is maintained. There are many private tennis courts and two public courts on the mountain, also a swimming pool, as well as mountain streams, where swimming can be enjoyed. Sharp Peak also affords a seaside and bathing resort which is much appreciated by Foochow residents. The American missions and the Anglican Mission each have sanitarium there. It is also the place of landing of the E. È. A. & C Telegraph Co's cables.
The
Fu
Hip-wo
DIRECTORY
ANDERSON & Co., ROBERT, Merchants
Henry Schlee
ANGLO-SAXON PETROLEUM CO., LD. Agents-Dodwell & Co., Ld.
ARSENAL, IMPERIAL
High Commissioner-- Sung Show,
Governal-General Mandarins-Ma, Yang
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD, THE
Agents-Dodwell & Co., Ld. Installation Managers:
At Foochow A. A. Rozario
At Pagoda G. Nissen
Tai-wan-gin-ko
# #
BANK OF TAIWAN, LTD.
1. Yoshiwara, agent
J. Sogawa
1. Nemoto
興太 Taihing
BATH-ATE & Co., Merchants, Commission
Agents and Public Tea Inspectors
John R. B. Begley
John B. Taylor
C. Oswald
Agencies
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Portland and Asiatic Steamship Co. South British Insee. Co. Ltd. Imperial Marine Insurance Co., Ed. -National Union Society (Fire) Maatschappij tot Mijn-Boschen Lanel
bowexploitatie in Langkat, Ld. The China Commercial S.S. Co. Northern Assurance Company American Asiatic S. S. Co. Java-China-Japan Lijn
Hing.eu
BRAND & Co., H. S., Commission Agents,
Auctioneers, &c.
H. S. Brand
Agency
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
The Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Ld.
Dack-mau
BROCKETT & Co., Forwarding, Shipping & Comsn.Agts.,Storekeepers and Aucnrs. Mrs. G.T. Brockett, directress (London) A. A. Brown, managing director
D. Johnson, compradore
Agency
'Hongkong Daily Press"
+
990
Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
H. Baker, signs per pro.
Agencies
FOOCHOW
"China Navigation Company, Limited Ocean Steamship Company, Limited China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Retining Company, Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Orient Insurance Company Guardian Assurance Company, Ld.
British and Foreign Marine Insce. Co
司公船駁车經 King Foey
Cargo Boat Co., THE
F. D'Almeida, manager
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, FOOCHOW GENL,
Committee--Ronald Greig (chairman)
H. S. Moss, H. Baker, J. Helbling,
A. E. Reynell
H. S. Brand, secretary
打揸 Cha-ta
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, ÁUSTHALIA
AND CHINA
G. S. Sandford, sub-agent
司公木鋸興建
Chieng-hing-ku-mok-kun-sze
CHIENG HING SAW MILL COMPANY
Fung Che Sew, manager
Fung Dainien, assistant manager
Vong Do Song,
do.
Diong Guang-lung, engineer
Uong Cu-king, overseer incharge Oong Eu-ling, asst.
MM
do,
Chu-sheung-min-kok
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION CO.
Wong Naun-chan
Tao Kok Hee
Wong U. Kong
Agency
China Merchants' Marine Insce. Co.
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LD.
C. F. Smith, manager
CONSULATES
門衙事簿 國 奧大
Ta-ao-kuo-ling-shih-ya-mun
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting-Consul-G. M. H. Playfair
MB Ta-fah-kwo ling-shin
事領國法大
FRANCE
PORTUGAL
SPAIN
Consulates
Consul-Leduc
Vice Consul-L. Reynaud
官事領國德大
Ta-Te-kwo-ling-shih-kwan
GERMANY
Consul-G. Siemssen
Interpreter-Lu Bing Chien
門衙事領國英大
Ta-ying-kwo ling-shih ya-mun
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-G. M. H. Playfair
Assist.and Pro-Consul--Hubert Higgs
British Vice Consul at Pagoda-W.
W. Myers
Constable at Pagoda-J. McGregor
官事預總利大義大
Tai I-tai-li Chung-ling-sz-kun
ITALY
Consul-Comin. Volpicelli (residing
in Hongkong)
門衙事領本日大
Ta-yut-pun Ling-sz Ya-mun
JAPAN
Vice Consul-T. Takasu
Secretary-S. Iwamura
do. --S. Miyata
Inspector of Police-Y. Yoshizawa
NETHERLANDS
Consul J. C. Oswald
NORWAY
Vice-Consul--J. C. Oswald
*** Ta-ngo-kwo ling-skih
RUSSIA
Acting Consul-A. V. Toujiline
SWEDEN
Vice-Consul--G. Siemssen
* Ta-me-ling-shih-ya-mun
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul-Samuel L. Gracey Vice and Deputy Consul-Heury
Oscar Nightingale Interpreter-Ding Neng Guong Chief Clerk-Ngu Deung Su Chinese Writer-Chen Tsung I
Min Hai-kwan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-Smollett Compbell Deputy Commsnr.-K. J. Andes Assistants H.D. Tyndall, E. E. Moran,
K. Myamoto, C. Bos
Medical Officers T. Rennie, M.D., (Nantai), W. W. Meyers, MD. (Pa goda Anchorage)
Asst. Tidesurveyor-E. Hubbard
Examiner-F. J. Rowsell
FOOCHOW
Asst. Examiners-J. S. Damazio, E. S.
C. Davies, R. J. Stephens Tidewaiters-S. P. Fabian, J. M. Nisbet, E. J. Lichtenstein, G. St. M. Stocker, T. Knox, T. J. Broderick
Pagoda Anchorage.
Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-C
H. Palmer
Boat Officer-F. S. Jobst
Tidewaiters H. J. Harper, T. J. Broderick, W.J. Turner, A. E. J.Wood, A. Williams, E. Pezzini Sergeant J. F. J. Seier
Tien-cheang
DODWELL & Co., LD., Merchants
H. S. Moss, manager
H. H. Dulling, sub-manager H. J. Scents
H. H. Bond
A. A. Rozario
C. Parkson
G. Nissen (Pagoda)
General Managers
Fohkien Match Factory, Ld. Pakling Tea Factory
Agencies
"Northern Pacific Steamship Company
East Asiatic Co., Ld.
Est Asiatique Français (Marseilles) Cie des Messageries Maritimes Navigazione General Italiana Barber Line of Steamers Milburn Line of Steamers Apear Line of Steamers
Austrian Lloyd Steam Nav. Co.
Warrack's Line of Steamers Mogul Line of Steamers Natal Line of Steamers North China Insurance Co. Ocean Marine Insurance Co. Thames and Mersey Marine Ins. Standard Life Assurance Co. Sun Life Issurance Co. of Canada Royal Insurance Company Yorkshire Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Commercial Union Assce. Co. Ld.
Man-hing
ENGLAND & Co., FRANK H., Merchants
F. H. England
C. Skerrett-Rogers, tea inspector Agencies
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Co.
Marine Insurance Company, Limited
女隆
Loong-man
FAIRHURST & Co., Merchants, Commission
Agents and Public Tea Inspectors
John C. Oswald
F. A. Follen (Bremen)
991
FOHKIEN MATCH FACTORY, LIMITED
Dodwell & Co., Ld., general managers
FOOCHOW CLUB
Committee John C. Oswald (chair- man), C. H. Balfour, H. S. Moss, G. S. Sandford (lón. treasurer), Ronald Greig, H. Baker, Jas. Helbling, H. S. Brand (secretary) Library Committee-Geo. L. Greig, (chairman) Hubert Higgs. A. W. Allen
"FOOCHOW DAILY ECHO"
Mrs. E. Rozario, proprietrix.
**E* Yiug Kok Huk-yu
FOOCHOW FAMILY BOARDING-HOUSE
Mrs. G. T. Brockett (London) A. A. Brown, managing director D. Johnson, compradore
Ping-chong
FoоCHOW ICE AND AERATED WATER Co.
River Steamers "Grip" and "Nantai"
Mrs. A. H. Begley
院醫亭塔省福 E-kreen
FOOCHOW NATIVE HOSPITAL & DISPENSARY
Miss Barr
Miss L. M. S. Dunn
Hon. Medical Officer-T. Rennie, M.D"
Hon. Sec, and Treas.-James Helbling
泰天
Tien-tai
FOOCHOW PRINTING PRESS
G. Rozario
德寶 Pao-tek
FOOCHOW TRADING CO., LTD., Importers,
Exporters, Storekeepers, Commission Agents
Burjorjee Mehta
P. Pettick, manager, signs per pro.
S. A. Pettick
W. C. Pettick T. H. Pettick H. G. Pettick
Agency
Federal Marine Insurance Co. Stuttgart Life Assurance Co.
FUHKIEN WINE AGENCY, Wine and Spirit Merchants, General Importers and Com- mission Agents
P. White
S. A. White
GERMANIA SAW MILLS
Siemssen & Krohn-general managers
992
記乾
Kien-kee
GIBB, LIVINGSTON & Co., Merchants
Alex. W. V. Gibb
Agencies
Ben Line of Steamers
FOOCHOW
Eastern & Australian Steamship Co. Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Union Insce. Society of Canton, Ld. North British & Mercantile Insur. Co
** Tai-ping
GILMAN & Co., Merchants, Lloyd's Agents
G. Balloch (absent).
H. W. Slade (Hongkong)
J. Helbling
Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Ld. Lloyd's
Association of Underwriters, Glasgow Underwriters' Association, Liverpool Merchant Shipping and Underwriters,
Association of Melbourne
Hing-loong
GITTINS & Co., JOHN, Merchants
John Gittins (London)
Thos. Gittins
Agencies
Sun Insurance Office
China Traders' Insurance Company Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co.
Tuck-hing
GREIG & Co., M. W., Merchants
Ronald Greig
Geo. L. Greig
A. Mendes
A. M. Oliveria
Agencies
Pacific Mail Steamship Company
Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Strath Line of Steamers
Royal Insurance Company
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld.
樵玉賀
Ho You CHEW, Merchant and Commission
Agent
Ho Yoc Chew
H. Shun Son
Ho Pochun
Agency
Wah Hing & Co.
Hway-foong
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN.
C. H. Balfour, agent
A. W. Allen
茂泰 Tai-mao
JAPAN COAL TRADING CO., Coal Merchants
Import, Export and Commission Agents
Fung Dainien, agent
Oong Eu ling
Lam Wang-heng
Fu E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., LD., Merchants
A. E. Reynell, agent
F. P. Lachlan, tea inspector E. F. d'Almeida
F. A. Gomes
Agencies
Indo-China S. N. Company, Limited Douglas Steamship Company, Limited Glen Line of Steamers
Shire Line of Steamers, Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Company United States & China-Japan S.S. Line West Australian Steamship Co. Canton Insurance Office, Limited Triton Insurance Company, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Alliance Assurance Company Eastern Insurance Company, Ld. Green Island Cement Company, Ld. China Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Hongkong Cotton Spinning, W. & D. Co.
Ewo Cotton Spinning & Weaving Co.
International Banking Corporation
Ewo Timber Depôt
興怡 Yee-hein
KAW HONG TAKE & Co., Merchants, Com-
mission Agents, and Shipbrokers
Kaw Hong Take (Hoihow)
Kaw Siew Hoe, manager
MASONIC
CORINTHIAN LODGE No. 1,806, E.C.
I. P. M.-J. Moorhead
W. M. -H. F. Rankin S. W.-H. J. P. Anderson J. W.-F. W. Kruse Treasurer-J. H. Berruger Secretary-C. B. Mitchell S. D.-H. C. Köhler J. D.-P. Cowper D. C.-E. Stevens Organist-B. G. Tours Steward-M. B. Nilsen I. G.-J. H. Roberts Tyler-L. A. Sellwold
FOOCHOW LODGE, No. 1912 W. M. Hubert Higgs, I. P. M.-N. A. A. Nielsen S. W.-H. S. Moss J. W.-A. W. Allen
S. D.-H. J. Sceats J. D.-H. H. Dulling
FOOCHOW
993
Chaplain-Dr. S. L. Gracey
Treasurer C. Skerrett Rogers
Secretary--J. Helbing
I. G.-C. H. Pahner D. C.-T. Rennie
Organist H. S. Brand
Steward-F. W. Shaw
Tyler-F. Rowsell
打美
Me-ta
MEHTA & Co., Mchts. and Comsn. Agents
P. B. Jokhee
B. P. Mehta
局書華美州福
Foo-chow-mei-hua-shu-cknh
METHODIST PUBLISHING HOUSE
Wm. H. Lacy, manager
MICHAELSEN & Co.,W.B.-Tel. Ad:Scheibler
J. Fr. Scheibler, manager
Fritz Mecke, signs per pro.
"MIN PAO KWAN," Newspaper Shin Mayeshima, editor
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of China
Directory
堂主天巷尾澳外門南
Nan-moon-wai o-muy-hong tsen-chu-tang
DOMINICAN SPANISH MISSION
Moreno Rev. P. Fr. Manuel vicar
general
Garcia, Rev. P. Fr.Santiago (Vicario)
堂慈仁巷尾澳外門南
Nan-moon-war, o-muy hen jen-tsu-tang
FOUNDLING HOSPITAL, under the control
of the Dominican Sisters
Santa Infancia de Foochow
Rev. M. Rosa de la Corona de
Espinas, superioress
堂主天尾
船番台南
Naw-bay huen-sun-gru-muy tsen-chio-tim
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
Right Rev. Bishop Salvador Masot
Rev. P. Aguirre Francisco, secretary
Rev. Valencia, Francisco
ST. COLOMBE'S ORPHANAGE, Pagoda An.
Superioress-Louise Amelie
and Sisters
堂主天安福
VICARIA DE FOGAN
Peña, Rev. P. Fr. Nicolas (Vicario
Provincial) 10 Misioneros
堂主天府平延
VICARIA DE YEN-PIN-FU
Masip, Rev. P. Fr. Jaime (Vicario) Lisundia, do. do.
Juan
Masip,
do. do.
José
Valencia, do. do.
Gregorio
Alonso, do, do,
Severiano
Alonso, do do.
Furio, do. do.
Quinones, do. do. Rodriguez, do do.
San-tsuang
Maximino Manuel Pedro J. Maria
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, Ln., General Mer-
chants-Tel. Ad: Mitsui
S. Tsukui
K. Kondo
Agency
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
A
Yung-tai-ng
MYERS, W. WYKEHAM, M.B., C.M., M.A.0. Medical Officer, II. B. M. Consulate,
and Health Officer, Customs-Pagoda Anchorage
司公船商贩大
Ta-pan-sheung-shun-kung-sze
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA-Head Office:
Osaka, Japan; Tel. Ad: Shosen
K. Matsubara agent
T. Miyaji
M. Otsuka
PAKLING TEA FACTORY
Dodwell & Co., Ld., genl. managers
Hock-kee
PETIGURA, P. J., Merchant and Commission
Agents
Phirozshaw J. Petigura
Dinshaw J. Petigura
Dadabhoi J. Petigura
PETTICK & CO., PAUL, Importers, Exporters,
Storekeepers, Engineers, &c.
P. Pettick
Samuel A. White
Wm. Cullen White
PILOTS (at Pagoda Anchorage),
R. H. Wetherell, A. Arp, W. Thom
POST OFFICE, BRITISH
Postal Agent-Hubert Higgs
POST OFFICE, FRENCH
Postmaster-M. Flock
POST OFFICE, GERMAN
Postmaster --W. Pfeng
1
994
FOOCHOW
KX Ta-ching-you-ching-jooh
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Acting Deputy Postmaster in Charge--
J. Stirling
Asst. Postal Officers-H. Kliene, J. C.
Palmer
4
生醫你厘
Lin-ne E-sung
RENNIE, T., M.D., C.M., Medical Practitioner
Hon. Medical Officer Foochow Native Hospital
REUTER'S TELEGRAM COMPANY
H. S. Brand, agent
Seem-sun
SIEMSSEN & KROHN, Merchants--Tel. Ad:
Yardarm
G. Siemssen
H. Wintzer, tea inspector
P. Ungewitter
W. Pfeng
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd
Hamburg-America Line
司公記大新
SIN TAI KEE & Co., Importers, Exporters,
Storekeepers and Commission Agents
S. Long
W. S. Young
N. L. Ding
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK.
L. I. Thomas, manager
H. Tiensinfoo, compradore
SUN LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF CANADA Agents-Dodwell & Co Ltd.
司公報電北大東大
Ta-tong ta-pak teen-po kong-sze
TELEGRAPH COMPANY, Eastern Extension,
Australasia and China Telegraph Co.,
Limited
Superintendent-M. C. Ruddock
Counter clerk-W. W. Byu
Sharp Peak
J. Kennedy Gibson, superintendent
W. H. McHugh
C. Langley Johnson
局總報電國中
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE ADMINI-
STRATION
Li Chung Lee, manager
K. B. Woo, controller and clerk-in-
charge
T. Y. Wei, assistant in-charge S. F. Chang assistant in-charge D. Y. Ling, in charge, Sharp Peak Fung Yew, in charge, Pagoda An-
chorage
Y. D. Wei, clerk-in-charge (Santuao)
臣禪 Seem Sum
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE, FOOCHOW
Siemssen & Krohn, proprietors
Wha-kee
TURNER & Co., Merchants
R. Greig
A. N. Mendes
昌裕 Yu-cheong
WESTPHAL KING & RAMSAY, Ld., Merchants
W. A. Westphal, chairman
W. S. King, managing director
H. E. Ramsay (Hankow)
A. P. Simpson (London) W. H. Bell (Shanghai)
H. A. Westphal (Hamburg)
J. W. Odell, manager A. E. Collins
Agencies
Russian Volunteer Fleet
American & Oriental Steamship Line Atlas Assurance Company Commercial Union Assur. Co. (Marine) South British Insurance Co. (Marine) Stockton Milling Co., San Francisco The Robert Dollar S. S. Co.
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION-Tel
Ad: Flamingo
L. E. McLachlin, B.A., Secretary W. L. Adamson, B.A., secretary
AMOY
門厦
Hid-mun
Amoy was one of the five ports open to foreign trade before the ratification of the Treaty of Tientsin. It is situated upon the island of Haimun, at the mouth of the Pei Chi or Dragon River, in lat. 24 deg. 40 min. N. and long. 118 deg. É. It was the scene of trade with Western nations at a very early date. The Portuguese went there in 1544, but in consequence of their cruelty towards the natives, the Chinese authorities forcibly expelled them and burned thirteen of their vessels. The English had commercial dealings there up to 1730, when the Chinese Government issued an edict prohibiting trade with foreigners at all ports except Canton. They made an exception as regards Spanish ships, which were allowed to trade at Amoy.
In describing Amoy Dr. Williams says: "The island upon which Amoy is built is about forty miles in circumference, and contains scores of large villages besides the city. The scenery within the bay is picturesque, caused partly by the numerous islands which define it, surmounted by pagodas or temples, and partly by the high barren bills behind the city. There is an outer and an inner city, as oue approaches it seaward, divided by a high ridge of rocky hills having a fortified wall running along the top. A paved road connects the two. The entire circuit of the City and suburbs is about eight miles, containing a population of 300,000, while that of the island is estimated at 100,000 more. The harbour is one of the best on the coast; there is good holding ground in the outer harbour, and vessels can anchor in the inner, within a short distance of the beach, and be perfectly secure; the tide rises and falls from fourteen to sixteen feet. The western side of the harbour, here from six hundred and seventy-five to eight hundred and forty yards wide, is formed by the island of Kulangsu. It is a picturesque little spot and maintains a rural population of 3,500 people. Eastward of Amoy is the island of Quemoy or Kinmun (Golden Harbour), presenting a striking contrast in the low foreground on its south shore to the high land on Amoy." The population of the city is, however, now estimated at 96,000.
Amoy ranks as a third-class city. It is considered, even for China, to be very dirty, and its inhabitants are unusually squalid in their habits. There are several places of interest to foreigners in the vicinity, and excursions can be made to Chang- chow-fu, the chief city of the department of that name, and situated about 35 miles from Amoy. The island of Kulangsu ["Drum Wave Island," from a hollow rock in which the in-coming tide causes a booming sound] is about a third of a mile from Amoy, and the residences of nearly all the foreigners are to be found there, although most of the foreign business is transacted on the Amoy side. It is a remarkably pretty island, and will become exceedingly popular with tourists and holiday-makers as its attractions become better known. The island of Kulangsu was handed over by China as an International settlement on the 1st May, 1903. In the opinion of the Commissioner of Customs, Kulangsu bids fair to become one of the most charming little republics on the coast of China. The value of land on the island of Kulangsu has enhanced 100 per cent, compared with the prices ruling a decade ago. Hotel accommodation is satisfactory. There is a good club in the settlement, adjoining which is the cricket ground. A neat little Anglican Church has also been erected. A Japanese Settlement was marked out in 1899 and a fair number of Japanese, officials and others, reside Oil Co. of N. Y. have erected oil tanks at "Sing Su
There is a slipway at Amoy, owned and managed by foreigners. The Standard on the mainland, and close on the site of the new station of the Amoy-Changchow railway now in active construction Kerosene oil tanks, capable of turning out 4,000 tons a day, the property of the Asiatic Petroleum Company, have also been erected. The foreign residents number about 280. battleship flost at Amoy, the officers and men being entertained on a lavish scale.
Swatow, Foochow and Formosa, and steamers occasionally run directly to the Straits Frequent and regular steamer communication is maintained with Hongkong, Settlements and Manila. There has always been a comparatively good trade done practically lisappeared, it is significant that the shipping tonnage employed by the port has quintupled since the decade 1864-73, and almost trebled since the decade 1874- 3. Yet the recent reports of the Commissioners of Customs have pointed out that if allowance is made for the fall of silver, in studying the average annual values of the
1
996
ΑΜΟΥ
import trade, we shall have to assume that imports, like exports, have been stationary for many years past. The explanation of the growth in shipping tonnage would there fore appear to be exclusively indicative of the development of the coolie traffic to the Malay Archipelago, "humanity being now the staple export of Amoy."
The returns of the native passenger traffic for 1908 show that 79,243 left Amoy, more than half of them for the Straits, and 53,534 landed at Amoy, mostly from Hongkong and the Straits. With the exception of 1905, when only 76,000 left, this is the lowest total since 1899. The numbers have been steadily declining of late and a Commissioner of Customs a few years ago suggested that many years of emigration are beginning to tell, and that with lesser competition at home those who remain are able to get better wages than formerly in the service, directly on indirectly, of their "returned emigrant" countrymen.
In former times, ere the glory of Amoy had departed, the staple export was Tea-the local product as well as the superior blends brought over from Formosa- but, largely owing to the deterioration of the local product, and the indifference of the grower to the changing conditions of the foreign market, locally-grown tea has long since ceased to be exported, and the Customs Commissioner made a fairly safe prophecy that it only required the development of Keelung harbour to cause the total disappearance of the foreign tea merchant from Amoy. Before the Japanese obtained possession of Formosa the Formosan teas were settled and warehoused in Amor, whence they were shipped to the foreign markets. Now no Formosan tea is "settled" in Amoy, and with Keelung still unimproved to any considerable extent, quite 50 per cent. of the Formosan product is being shipped direct to America from Keelung The foreign tea merchant at Amoy has practically lost his occupation, and we are witnessing the fulfilment of the prediction that the row of quaint, rambling, old hongs on the Amoy side, and many picturesque residences on Kulangsu will be offering for the occupation of the wealthy returned emigrant or the missionary school." The total export of tea in 1908 was 5,617 against 5,190 piculs in 1907. The net value of the trade of the port coming under the cognisance of the Foreign Customs in 1908 was Tls. 18,897,452, which compares with 17,667,161 for 1907, and 17,353,330 in 1906.
局總報電國法大
DIRECTORY
Fa Fa-kono-tien-pao-tsong-kin
ADMINISTRATION FRANCAISE DES POSTES
ET TELEGRAPHES
Receveur Principal-A. J. M. Fauque Adjoint-J. Aubert
HT Heng-hoat
Ан Kow, P. & SONS, General Storekeepers Wine and Spirit Mchts. and Commission Agents-79, Longtow Street, Kulangsu
P. Ah Kow
P. Engho
P. Yin Hun
(See Advt.)
AINSLIE, D. H., M.B., CH.B., D.PH., D.T.M.
AMOY CHINESE HOSPITAL
H. McDougall, surgeon in charge
do.
J. Moorhead,
D. H. Ainslie, dlo.
AMOY CLUB
Committee-W. H. Wallace(chairman)
AMOY GAZETTE AND SHIPPING REPORT
Daily Newspaper
J. F. Marçal, manager
BALTRA Ke-keh-yau-han-kung-st AMOY SLIPWAY AND ENGINEERING CO, Engineers, Launch Builders, Commission Agents and Repair Work to Steamers, etc., call flag E
J. D. Edwards, manager G. W. Barton, secretary
Ng Lim Quee, accountant N. Joryuk, foreman engineer K. Kohsan and others
DAY 11 Hock-heng-long-kungsi AMOY STORE, THE, General Storekeepers, Drapers, Compradores, Navy Con tractors, Stevedores, Auctioneers, Cum mission Agents, Butchers, and Baker,
&c.
P. M. See Jung, manager Ah Yiayiau, accountant
Tan Chu Un and others
(See Advt.)
ΑΜΟΥ
司公話電門厦
Ha-mun-tin-wa-kung-sze
AMOY TELEPHONE COMPANY -Kulangsu
T. Ogino, proprietor
院 書 華英
ANGLO-CHINESE COLLEGE
H. F. Rankin, F.E.L.S., principal
H. J. P. Anderson, M.A.
A. Joseland, and 12 Chinese Assist.
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD.
Pasedag Co., agents
A. B. Craggs
Tai-wan-gin-ko
BANK OF TAIWAN, LD. -Taigin, Amoy
K. Tsudzurabara, manager
T. Yamanari
S. Konuma
T. Misumi
記和
Ho-kee
BATHURST, CAPT. H., Harbour Pilot and
Surveyor; Agent: Imperial Merchant Service Guild
Boyd & Co., Merchants and Com. Agents
W. Snell Orr (absent)
E. Thomas
G. A. Sword
F. G. Kell
J. S. Fenwick
Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Limited
Eastern and Australian Steamship Co.
Northern Pacific Steamship Co.
Oregon Railroad and Navigation Co. "Bank" Line of Steamers Dodwell & Co., L., "Suez" Steamers Lloyd's
China Traders' Insurance Co., Limited Royal Fire and Life Insurance Co., Ld. Bremen Marine Insurance Companies Underwriters' Union at Amsterdam Netherlands India Sea and Fire Insce. Underwriting and Agency Assocn. Le Cercle Transports d'Assurances
Maritimes de Marseilles
Liverpool Underwriters' Association Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co.
Mat-long
BROWN & Co., F. C., Drapers, Silk Mercers,
Milliners, and Dressmakers-Kulangsu
Mrs. T. C. Nicholls
古太 Tai Koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
F. W. Fowler, signs per pro.
R. K. Rodger
Agencies
997
China Navigation Company, Limited Ocean Steamship Company, Ld.
China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld.
Norddeutscher Lloyd Orient Line Java-China-Japan Line
Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Taikoo Dockyard & Eng. Co. Ld. H'kong. Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. Guardian Assurance Co., Ld. London& Lancashire Fire InsuranceCo. British & Foreign Marine Insurance Co. Union Insce. Society of Canton, Ld. North Borneo Trading Co., Ld.
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, AMOY GENERAL
G. W. Barton, secretary
Chin Cheong
CHEW BOON TIAN & Co., Chop "Chin Cheong," Merchants and Commission Agents-Tel. Ad: Chincheong
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION CO.
Malcampo & Co., agents
Eng-lian
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LTD.
S. J. Deeks, district manager
P. Whitfield, secretary
Dr. Francis A. McOstrich
Niu Chin Seng, medical examiner
房藥外中
CHINESE AND FOREIGN DISPENSARY Co.,
Merchants and Commission Agents-Tel.
Ad: Tongway; A. B. C. Code
CONSULATES
門衙事領國美大
Tai-me-kok ling-su ge-mong
AMERICAN CONSULATE
Consul-Julian H. Arnold
Vice-and-Deputy Consul-Dr. A. D.
Foster
Clerk-Miss Eva Macgowan
U. S. Public Health and Marine
Hospital Service-Dr. A. D. Foster
Interpreter--Hu Siu Gi
門衙事領與大
Ta-ao ling-shih ya-mên
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul--B. G. Tours
BELGIUM
Consul-W. Wilson
Acting Consul-Charles Lee
DENMARK
998
AMOY
FRANCE
署事頜國法大
Vice-Consul- G. Lecomte
門衙事領國德大
Tai-tek-kok ling-su ge-mong
GERMANY For the Fuhkien Province;
Tel: Ad. Germania
Consul- Dr. C. Merz
Interpreter-B. Krause (absent) Secretary--H. Gottwaldt do. Actg. Sec.-P. Bohmer
HBWAX Ta Ying ling-shih-ya-mén
GREAT BRITAIN -Tel. Ad: Britain
Consul-B. G. Tours
Assistant--
Marine Surveyor-A. Coghill
Constable J. Sullivan
官事頜總利大義火
Tai I-lai-li Chung-ling-sz-kun
ITALY
Consul-Comm. Z. Volpicelli (residing
in Hongkong)
Chinese Writer-Ch'ing-Yao
門衙事領本日大
Ta-jeh-pen Ling-shi ya-meng
JAPAN
Acting Consul-Y. Mori
Chancellor--S. Tokoi
Do. -S. Toimitta
Inspector of Police--T. Kono
16 Ho-lan ling-su ge-mong
NETHERLANDS
Consul-B. Hempel (absent)
Actg. do.-W. Kruse
NORWAY
Vice-Consul-F. W. Kruse
門衙事領洋西大
Ta Hsi-yang Ling-shih Yamén PORTUGAL
Acting Consul-B. G. Tours
署事領國俄大
Ta Ngo-kouo ling-che-chou
RUSSIA
Consul-G. Lecomte
門衙事領總國亞呢巴斯日大
TaJih-ssi-pa-in-a-kuo Chun-ling-su ge-mon
SPAIN
Vice-Consul -G. Lecomte
1 Isia-men-hai-kuan
關海門廈
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissioner--J. Mencarini
Do. Deputy Comy.-J.W. Richarson
Assistants-V. C. Henderson, G. F. Graham, J. H. Berruyer, M. Kitadai, J. F. Kuapel, M. Miyoshi, Medical Officer-11. McDougall, M.E Chief Tidesurveyor and Harb. Mastr.-
E. Stevens
Acting Boat Officer-T. H. Blowey Chief Examiner--W. F. Kahler Examiners A. Sutherland, J. L. Lutz Asst. Examiner W. Frederick Tidewaiters-J. C. Veir, M. B. Nilsen, L. R. Roberts, II. K. Kohler, W. M. Komaroff, P. Cowper, L. C. Escot, H. Davies, G. Uprichard, H. E. Brown, H. P. Leaver, M. MI. Pedersen Lights Department, Southern Section Inspector of Lights-A. Nielsen
Tung Yung--F. Möhring, J. Macdonald Middle Dog-P. Olausen, R. Holman,
W. F. Prew,
Turnabout-J. Wulf, G. D. Fuller Ocksen-J. Shields, R. W. Broadley
Dodd Island-S. P. Swensson, F. S.
Hill, J. O. R. Olsson Tsing-seu--D. Botelho
Chapel Island-J. A. Tellesen, H.
Thomas, J. R. W. Monaghan
Lammocks- J. C. Bruhn, O. Romahu
Sugar Loaf J. Chapman
Cape of Good Hope-B. R. Bohn
Breaker Point-C. May, H. W. Thøger-
sen, H. Grundt
Double Island---J. H. Buntzen
Headquarters-J. Noble
Unattached-A. M. dos Santos
記裕 Yu-Joee
DAUVER & Co., Merchants and Comn. Agts
P. M. Saugar
Agency
Steamers "Vizcaya," "España," "Vi-
caya,'
}
and Compañia Maritimas
Steamers of Manila
Tai-suen-o
DOCK COMPANY, LIMITED, NEW AMOY-
Tel. Ad: Dock
General Managers-Tait & Co.
Consulting Committee F. B.Marshall,
J. Fenwick, W. Kruse, W. Wilson
R. W. Black, manager
C. C. Carvalho, accountant
C. C. Carvalho, Jr.
士利忌得 Douglous
DOUGLAS LAPRATK & Co., Merchants
J. H. Lewis (Hongkong)
H. P. White, do.
G. W. Barton, signs per pro.
Agencies
Douglas Steamship Co. Ld. American and Asiatic S.S. Co. Yangtsze Insurance Association Ld. China Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
AMOY
Commercial Union Insurance Co., Ld.
(Fire, Marine and Life) Ben Line of Steamers Shire Line of Steamers Standard Life Assce. Co.
EDWARDS & Co., Commission Agents, Ex-
porters of Narcissus Bulbs, and Stamp
Dealers-Lab Kee Tali Street, Kulang- su; Tel. Ad: Olympia
C. C. Edwards
司公限有房藥大建 福 FUKIEN DRUG Co., LTD., THE-Kulangsu and Amoy;Chemists, Druggists, Wine and Spirit Merchants, Stationers, Drapers, and Commission Agents, etc.; Kulangsu Dispensary; Tel. Ad: Fukieudrug
Lim Ui Sian, general manager
Dr. Chiong Eng Soon, secretary and
asst. manager
Liau Yat Hoat, treasurer
Dr. Ng Ghee Hu
Dr. Sih Kun Eng
Lian Chiau Hi and others
(See Advertisement)
興鴻
Hung-Hin
GONG SUA LIO & Co., JUAN, Spanish Mer-
chants and Commission Agents-Tel. Ad; Hong Hin
Agencies
Yan On Marine and Fire Insce. Co.,Ld Bangkok Liong Hing Co.
V HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN.
W. H. Wallace, acting agent
Hway-Hong Goon-hang
A. G. L. Renny
HOPE HOSPITAL
Ku-sai-e-kuan
J. A. Ötte, M.A., M.D., in charge
和怡 E-200
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Merchants
Chas. Lee agent
Agencies
Canadian Pacific Steamship Co.
Shire Line of Steamers
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Glen Line of Steamers Indra Line of Steamers
Canton Insurance Office, Limited
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Limited Alliance Assurance Company Eastern Insurance Company, Ld.
China Sugar Refining Co., Ld.
Green Island Cement Co., Ld.
999
The Hongkong Cotton Spinning
Weaving & Dyeing Co, Ld.
Vacuum Oil Co.
堂壽仁
JIN SIN TONG DISPENSARY-Middle Street
Man-kee
KнOO EWE CHYE & Co., Merchants and
Commission Agents
Agencies
Po On Marine Insurance Co., Lel. Fook On Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Wah Tong Fire & Marine Ins. Co., L. Wah On Life Insurance Co., Ld.
The Home Life Insurance Co., Ld.
Seang Taik Line of Steamers
Wee Bin & Co's., Steamers Moh" and "Glenfalloch
}}
44
Hong
房藥大方英大 Tai Yiny Hong Ko BROS., Lamson Dispensary, Chemists, Druggists, Drapers, Stationers, Sundries,
and Commission Agents, &c.--Chang-
Chow City; Tel. Ad: Lamson
KULANGSU LAWN TENNIS & CRICKET CLUB
Hon. Sec.-F. Knäpel
Hon. Treas.-W. H. Wallace
Committee-J. H. Berruyer, J. F. [Ias-
lam, F. E. Joseland
KULANGSU MILK AND DAIRY PRODUCE Co.
Amoy Tinning Co., proprietors Yeo Chiu Si, manager
I Kong-pau-kek
KULANGSU MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
W. H. Wallace (chairman), J. S. Fenwick, W. Kruse, J. Mencarini, K. Tsudzurabara, Lim Nee Kar, W. Wilson, C. Berkeley Mitchell (sec.) E. A. Hartley (assistant secretary) Dr. H. McDougall (health officer) E. A. Hartley (assistant officer)
Hong-kee
KUNG PHOE CHUN & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents-Tel. Ad: Hongkee
Kung Tsung Jung
Kung Tsung Tin
Kung Phoe Wooi Khoo Heng Toe
Agencies
Hock Guan Seng S.S. Co. Koe Guan Steamship Co.
Penang Khean Guan Insurance Co.
Po On Marine Insce. & Godown Co., Ld. Guen On Marine & Fire Insnce. Co. Eastern Shipping Co., Ld.
1000
瑞
AMOY
Soy-bee
MALCAMPO & Co., Merchants
J. Maleampo, Quioga
J. Malcampo
L. Malcampo R. Malcampo
Agencies
Man On Insurance Company
MASONIC
AMOY CHAPTER, No. 1806, E.Ç.
M. E. Comp.-C. J. Weed, z. H. Bathurst--P.P.Z., Scribe E.
CORINTHIAN LODGEOFAMOY, No. 1806 E.C. Worshipful Master--H. F. Parkin,
F.E.IS.
Im. Past Master-J. Moorhead
Senior Warden--H. J.P. Anderson, M.A. Junior Warden-C. Berheley Mitchell Secretary-F. W. Kruse, P.M. Senior Deacon- H. C. Koller Junior Deacon-P. Cowper Organist B. G. Tours
Dir. of Ceremonies E. Stevens, P.M. Steward M. B. Nilsen
Inner Guard-J. f. Roberts
PRECEPTOR, CORINTHIAN LODGE OF IN-
STRUCTION
生醫 E-sang
MCDOUGALL, H., M.B.
MERCHANT SERVICE GUILD
H. Bathurst, marine su veyor, hou. sec.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
CONVENT AND FOUNDLING HOSPITALS
under Spanish Dominican Sisters
Amoy Sisters Maria, Magdalena del Rosario, Inocencia de Angeles Kang-boe --Rev. Maria del Pilar superioress, Sister Consuelo Alvarez
Au-poa-Rev. M. Maria Nieva, Sis- ters Milagros de la Paz Nieves de St. Domingo, Dominica del C. do Maria
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rt. Rev. Isidoro Clemente, vicar
apostolic, Amoy
Very Rev. J. V. Blasco, Chiang-chiu Rev. C. Arranz, Amoy
Rev. John Giralt, Tangoa
Rev. I. Barba, Niatare
Rev. J. M. Duque, Chian-an
Rev. D. de Miguel, vicar provincial,
Hui-oa
Rev. C. Hernandez, Kang-bué Rev. D. Palau, Lampilao Rev. S. Moya, Choran-chiu Rev. J. Arnaiz, An Hai Rev. J. Piñol, Au-poa Rev. E. Martinez, Chiauan
Rev. I. Gonzalez, Chioh-be Rev. S. Moltó, Manila
Rev. E. Garció, An-ké
Rev. A. Vigil, Chiu-pó
Rev. John Ormaechen, Soa-siå
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LD., Merchants-
The Bund; Tel. Ad: Mitsui
S. Okazaki, agent
S. Yoshida
H. Unotoro
Agency
The Meiji Fire Insurance Co., Ld. The Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
記灣臺新 Sin-tai-wan-kee
Moall & Co., N., Coal Merchants, Stevedores, Lightermen, Compradores, Sail Makers, Commission Agents, Steam
Towage; Call Flag "J."; Fresh Water for Shipping Yap Kai Tong Ng Lim Quee Ng Kung
MOORHEAD, J., L.K.C.P., M.R.C.S.
MUNICIPAL POLICE FORCE (Amoy)
F. H. Edwards, chief constable
MUNICIPAL POLICE FORCE (Kulangsu)
Superintendent-C. Berkeley-Mitchell Assistant Super.-E. A. Hartley Chief Clerk and Interpreter-Woo
Hsiang Yün
1 Sergt. Major
3 Sikh Sergeants, 16 Indian, and
Mahomedan constables
NATIVE HOSPITAL
Chai-sai E-koon
H. McDougal, M.B.
NEW AMOY HOTEL
F. H. Lucassen, proprietor
順g Woo.shun
ONG MAH CHAO & Co., Merchants and
Commission Agents-34 and 35, Hai Thong Street
Ong Mah Chao
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA--Head Office: Osaka, Japan (The Osaka Mercantile S.S. Co.)
Y. Akaishi (agent)
S. Kajita
記實 Poa-kee
PASEDAG & Co., Merchants
A. Piehl (absent)
B. Hempel
W. Kruse, signs per pro.
C. Martens
Agencies
National Bank of China, Limited
Nederl. Handel Maatschappij Norddeutscher Lloyd Hamburg-America Line Nippon Yusen Kaisha
D. I. "Union" of Hamburg Navigazione Generale Italiana
AMOY
Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij Stoomvaart Maatschappij Phoenix British India Steamship Company Bureau Veritas
Stand. Oil Co. Oriental, Freight Dept. Germanischer Lloyd's
Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Russian Company for Sea, River and
Land Insurances, St. Petersburg Imperial Marine Insurance, Tokyo Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co. Prussian National Insurance Co. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co. Union of Hamburg Underwriters Deutscher Lloyd Marine Insurance Co. Donau Marine Insurance Co. Agrippina Insurance Co., Cologne Germania Transport Vers. A. G., Berlin Badische Assec. Ges. A. G., Mannheim Insurance Co. "Hansa," Stockholm
Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., London
Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ld., L'don
打美 Bi.tiim
PETIGURA, P. J., Merchant and Commn. Agt.
PILOT (Harbour)
H.Bathurst, Harbour Pilot and Surveyor; Agent Imperial Merchant Service
Guill
POST OFFICES
BRITISH
Postal Agent- B. G. Tours Clerk-Pang Sin Tso
CHINESE
District Postal Officer-W. Martins
d'Oliveira
Assistant Postal Officer-J. Ross
GERMAN
P. Bohm-postmaster
JAPANESE
Postmaster-R. Kumano
Postal Officers-M. Yanagida, K. Saito SEA VIEW HOTEL
C.C. Edwards, manager and proprietor |
1001
SHANGHAI LIFE INSURANCE Co., L.---Head
Office: Shanghai
Fred. Leyte, district manager
Dr. Adlf Razlag, medical examiner
Mec-foo
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK
L. I. Thomas, attorney
J. P. Morley,
assistant
H. W. Livingston,
do.
J. M. Goodeno,
do.
P. H. McIntyre,
do.
J. C. Frowin,
do.
H. R. Dyson, superint, godowns
SUI JIN TONG DISPENSARY, Jessee Keer-
Kau Street
Chew Ah Lye, manager
司公險保壽人年永
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE Co., OF CANADA-15
and 16, Hin Thong Street
Ong Mah Chow, agent
Tick-kee
TAIT & Co., Merchants-and at Yokohama,.
Kobe & Formosa
F. B. Marshall
W. Wilson
R. N. Ohly (Yokohama)
G. F. Haslam
F. E. Joseland
Agencies
Chartered Bank of India A., and China International Banking Corporation Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Company China & Manila Steamship Company Austrian Lloyd Steam Navigation Co. Shan Line of Steamers Marine Insurance Company
Atlas Assurance Co.
North British and Mercantile Ins. Co. North China Insurance Company, Lil. Northern Assurance Company
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld. South British Fire and Marine Ins. Scottish Imperial Insurance Company La Foncière Cie, d'Assurances Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Portland and Asiatic S. S. Co. Palatine Insurance Co.
American & Oriental Transport Line Pacific Mail Steamship Company Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Nederlands Indische Handelsbank
TAN SIONG CHEE & Co. (Amoy and Chiang Chiu), Watch and Clock Merchants. and Importers of Fancy Goods, etc.- Tel. Ad: Siongehee
Tan Siong Chee
1002
AMOY
TELEGRAPII ADMINISTRATION, IMP. CHINESE
C. T. Chu, manager
fi
TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Tin sin hong
GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPH Co., Ld.-
Offices: Kulangsu and Amoy
G. Carlsen, superintendent
M. Johansen electrician
A. Carstensen supervisor
Ch. P. Kraal, counter clerk
Eight Chinese operators
利 Lee-Kee
THOMSEN & Co., Shipchandlers, Store-
keepers, Navy Contractors, Auctioneers,
Coal Merchants, Stevedores and Com-
mission Agents
J. A. Kupsech
院書文同
TUNG WEN INSTITUTE
Trustees Julian H. Arnold (ch'man), J. Mencarini (vice-chairman), Chas. J. Weed (superintendent), Yap Ching Tee (treasurer), A. B. John- son, Poh Luk Kwan, Lim Nee Kah Yap Chong Hua, Ong Ca Pin, Kung Tsung Jung, Lo Coc Leong, Chee Chin Kiang
Instructors-Chas. J. Weed, A.B. (su- perintendent), Charles F. Brissel Chang Al Say, Cheng Pui Mun Tan Ching Tee, Daing Sie Hee, Ng Tien Chong
FER Wat-sun-see-tai-yuck-fong WATSON & CO., LIMITED, A. S., "Amoy Dispensary, Kulangsu Ice Factory, Chemistsand Druggists, Aerated Water Mfrs., Wine and Spirit Merchants, Ice Manufacturers-Lin Tow Jetty,Kulangsu
W. Davies, manager
***
Choo-lee-tai-yuck-fong
WHITFIELD & Co., C., Druggists, Commission Agents, &c., Central Dispensary-Tel. Ad: Choolee
C. Whitheld, manager Thos. Whitfield
K. E. Cheang
K. C. Too
舘醫世救
Ku-sai-e-kuan
WILHELMINA HOSPITAL
J. A. Otte, M.A., M.D., in charge
Anderson, Mrs. H. G. P. Akuzawa, Mrs. Barton, Mrs. G. W.
Bathurst, Mrs. (absent) Beattie, Mrs. Benham, Miss Bonthuis, Mrs. Bowra, Mrs. C. A. V. Brown, Mrs. C. C. Bryson, Miss E. M. D. Buntzen, Mrs. Cappon, Miss E. M. Carvalho, Mrs. C. C.
Craggs, Mrs. A. B. Davies, Mrs. W.
Day, Mrs. D. T. S.
De Pree, Mrs. H.
Duncan, Miss A.
Duryee, Mis A.
Duryee, Miss L. N.
Edwards, Mrs. St. J. H.
Ewing, Miss J.
Ewing, Mrs. M.
Fahmy, Miss
Fauque, Mdm.
Forge, Miss
Fowler, Mrs. F. W.
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Götz, Mrs.
Green, Miss K. R.
Hanken, Mrs.
Herschell, Miss
Inoke, Mrs. J. H. Jensen, Mrs.
Kip, Mrs.
Kranenberg, Miss Marie
Locky, Miss Lecomte, Mme Lee, Mrs. Chas.
Leyte, Mrs.
MacGowan, Miss
Macgregor, Miss Maclagan, Miss
McArthur, Miss
Malcampo, Mrs.
McKay, Miss
Meengs, Miss A. H.
Medland, Miss
l'itcher, Mrs.
Ramsay, Miss L.
Randell, Miss Rankin, Mrs. Reynolds, Miss
Ross, Miss Saunders, Mrs.
Saunders, Miss K. I.
Shepard, Miss M. W.
Snoke, Mrs. J.
Stevens, Miss
Symington, Miss
Talmage, Mrs. J. V. N. Talmage, Miss K. M.
Talmage, Miss M. E.
Thacker, Miss L. M. D.
Thomas, Mrs. Tours, Mrs.
Usher, Miss
Van der Linden, Miss J.
M, C.
Wallace, Mrs. W. H.
Morrison, Miss Nicholls, Mrs. Nelfenius, Miss Okuyama, Mrs. Ollia, Mrs. N. D. Ovenden, Miss
Wales, Mrs.
Wilson, Mrs.
Wonnink, Miss G.
Yamonari, Mrs
Zwemer, Miss N.
SWATOW
Shan-tau
Swatow, which was first thrown open to foreigners by the Treaty of Tientsin, is situated at the mouth of the river Han, near the eastern border of the Kwangtung province, in lat. 23 deg. 20 min. 43 sec. N., and long. 116 deg. 39 min. 3. sec. E. It is the shipping port for the city of Chao-chow-fu, the seat of the local government, 35 miles inland, and San-Ho-Pa, forty miles farther up the river.
Swatow is built on the northern bank of the Han, which forms part of an alluvial plain through which the branches of the river flow. The shore on the opposite side is bold and striking, the hills stretching away to the coast and forming what is known to sea-going people as the "Cape of Good Hope." Pagoda Hill rises at the opposite side; and in a direct line from this lies the large island of Namioa.
The first foreign trading depot in this locality was inaugurated at Namon, where the opium vessels used to anchor, but it was subsequently removed to Double Island, which is situated just inside the river and is four miles from Swatow. Foreigners here made themselves notorious in the early years of the settlement by the kidnapping of coolies, and so strong was the feeling shown against them by the natives that no foreigner was safe far from Double Island, while they were strictly forbidden to enter Swatow, and it was not until 1861 that they could do so. In the country round Swatow the antipathy to foreigners was of much longer duration. The British Consul was held technically to reside at Cha'o-chow-fu, and subsequent to 1861 several ineffectual attempts were made to pass through its gates. In 1866 a visit was made under more favourable circumstances, but it is only within very recent years that the population has refrained from annoyance and insult to foreigners within its walls. In 1862 the lease of a piece of land was applied for and granted to the British Government on the north bank of the river about a mile from Swatow, but so strong were the demonstra- tions of the populace against it that the matter fell through. Foreign residences, however, commenced to spring up here and there, and many of them are consequently somewhat scattered, though the majority are in or near the town of Swatow. The yearly increasing traffic of the port led to much over-crowding on the narrow strip of land on which it is built, and since February, 1877, no less than 214 acres have been reclaimed from the sea, the greater part of which is now covered with shops and houses. The climate of Swatow is reputed to be very salubrious. The town occupies, however, an unenviable position as regards typhoons, on account of being opposite the lower mouth of the Formosa Channel, and it has on many occasions been subjected to all the violence of these terrible storms, which almost every year sweep across the lower coast of China. The population of Swatow is estimated at 35,000.
A Chinese syndicate with a capital of two million dollars obtained the necessary sanction for the construction of a railway from Swatow to Ch'ao-chou-fu, and work was commenced on the line in 1904. The line which is 24 miles in length was opened to traffic on November 25th, 1906. The contractors were Japanese, who supplied all material, the rails and engines coming from America and the carriages from Japan. The construction of the line has brought about a great inflation of land values, as well as a notable influx of Japanese traders.
The foreign trade of Swatow has never been large, but of late years it has shown a slight increase. Tea and sugar were formerly the principal exports but the tea trade here, as in other China ports, has to a very large extent passed away, and the sugar trade seems to be rapidly following it, the chief reason being that the superior sugar exported from Hongkong is finding increasing favour with consumers in the north, who formerly drew their supplies from Swatow. The China Sugar Refining Company of Hongkong have a large sugar refinery here, but work has for some time been suspended. The import into this sugar-producing district of sugar from the Hongkong refineries has shown big fluctuations during the past five years. In 1906 the import was 87,426 piculs of white and 53,410 piculs of brown. In 1908 the figures were 18,204 and 12,245 respectively. The export in 1908 was 481,214 piculs of brown and 444,233 piculs of white. Refined sugar from Hongkong; and Java and Malay sugars have taken the place of Swatow sugar in the Northern markets. In place of sugar increased attention is being given to the cultivation of vegetables, fruit, poppy and indigo. The net value of the trade of the port, coming under the cognisance of the Foreign Customs for 1908 was Tis. 46,873,268 as compared with Tls. 45,342,001 in 1907 and fis. 43,159,013 in 1906.
1004
Astor House Hotel
F. H. Hyde, proprietor
行銀灣台
SWATOW
DIRECTORY
BANK OF TAIWAN, LTD.-Tel. Ad: Taigin
Y. Kikuchi, manager
H. Yamase
S. Hojio
泰悦
Yuat-buy
Ben & Co., Shipchandlers, Storekeepers, Provision Merchants, Navy Contractors, Auctioneers and General Commission Agents
C. U. S. Ben C. P, W. Ben
Tey-kee
BRADLEY & Co., Merchants
Thomas Wui. Richardson Robt. H. Hill
A. Macgowan
A. Forbes (Hongkong)
G. A. Richardson (Shanghai)
F. C. Butcher, sigus per pro.
1. Graham
S. Barker
A. R. Pollock
J. M. da Cruz Agencies
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corpn. National Bank of China, Limited Mercantile Bank of India, Limited British North Borneo Company Shan Steamship Company Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. Shire Line of Steamers Ben Line of Steamers Nippon Yusen Kaisha Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Kian Guan Line of Steamers Lloyd's
Royal Insurance Company China Fire Insurance Co., Limited Standard Life Insurance Company Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
J. H. R. Hance, signs per pro. L. S. Greenhill
Agencies
Chartered Bank of India, A., and China China Navigation Company, Limited Ocean Steamship Company, Limited China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld, Norddeutscher Lloyd Orient Line Java-China-Japan Line
Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Lol.
Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co.
of Hongkong, Ld.
Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Orient Insurance Co.
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
British and Foreign Marine Insce. Co. Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld. Sea Insurance Company, Limited Standard Marine Insurance Co., Lâ.
司公總路鐵汕潮
Chin-sau-tak-lo-chong-kung-sze
CHAOCHOW & SWATOW RAILWAY CO., LTD.-- Head Office: Chee On Street; Tel. Ad; Railway
Cheong Yuk Nam, managing director
general (Deli)
Lim La Sang, managing director Cheong Chong Hong, director (B'kok) Chia Mong Chee, director (Penang) Ng Li Hing, director (Hongkong)
E TẢI 3 Chiêu-sheung-chuck
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION CO.
Siu Wei-nam, agent
Liang Bi-tien, chief clerk
Agency
China Merchants' Insurance Company
Bong-nee CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LD.
S. J. Deeks, district manager, Amoy,
Swatow and Formosa
Tan Chiang Yong, sec. agency staff
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul-P. F Hausser
官事領國比大
Tai-peh-kurok Ling-si-kun
BELGIUM
Consul for Hongkong, Macao and South China Residing at Hong-
kong
FRANCE
Vice-Consul-H. Feer
府事領國德大
GERMANY
Ta-te-kwo ling-shi-ju
Acting Consul-Dr. von Borch
Secretary-F. Grimm
Asst. Interpreter-Fang Topin
*** Ta-Ying Liny-shik-kwan
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-P. F. Hausser
Assistant-A. G. Major
Constable-W. J. Cross
BRITISH POSTAL AGENCY
A. G. Major
ITALY
官事領總利大義大
Tai-i-tai-li Chung Ling-sz Kùn
SWATOW
Consul-Comm.Z.Volpicelli(H'kong)
Chinese Writer-Ching-Yao
府事領國帝本日火
JAPAN
Consul-S. Tokumaru
Chancellor-Y. Makino
Inspector of Police-S. Uchida
Constable-H. Suzuki
官事領國和大
Ta-ho-buo Ling-shih-kwan
NETHERLANDS
Acting Consul-P. I. Hausser
NORWAY
Acting-Vice-Consul-J. Focke
UNITED STATES
Consul-Albert W. Pontius
Chao Hai-Kuan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-Edward Gilchrist Deputy Commir.-P. B. von Rantenfeld Assistants A. P. A. Boninais, J. de W. Jansen, H. D. Hilliard, R. Inokuma, T. E. Cocker, jun.
Medical Officer-C, H., D. Morland Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-J.
C. A. Holz
Acting Boat Officer-R. Walpole Examiners-F.A. Cartman, J. Holliday Assistant Examiners-F. R. G. da Cruz, W. Aird, G. A. Anderson, E. N. Kretzchmar
Tidewaiters-J. Hamilton, M. Bryan, 0. Granzow, T. Buckley, E. Kemp, H. Ruchwaldy, A. M. da Motta, FL. Donaldson, C. Watson, F. E. Lane, A. F. Vidal
FREWIN, H., Marine Surveyor
遠
FRIEDRICH WANDRES
Chinese Harbour Office
F. Waudres (absent)
Hongkong Agency: Rombach & Co.
Mec-lung
GALLON & Co., General Commission Agents
W. Gallon E. C. Newby
Agencies
Rangoon Refinery Co., Ld.
1005
The Rangoon Steam Rope Manfg.
Con La
The Pioneer Roller Flour and Oil Mill
Co., L.
Godfrey Phillips & Sons
Sing-chang
GERRUDER ROESE (ROESE BROTHERS), Mer-
chants-Tel. Ad: Rossi
A. Rombach (Hongkong)
J. Thun, signs per pro.
Agencies
Yangtze Insurance.Assn., Ld. Royal Insurance Company
Sun Fire Assurance Co. of Canada
Maatschappij tot Mijn Bosch en
Landbouw Exploit., Landkat
Nordstern, Unfall Alters. Vers. Act.Ges. Damps. Rhed. "Union" A. G. Hambg.
昌福
Hock-cheang
HOOK CHEANG & Co., Merchants and
Commission Agents
Teo Yee Swee, managing partner
Kee Ban Soon
Agency
The Eastern Shipping Line of Steamers
和怡 E.wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., LD., Merchants
J. McG. Forbes, agent
W. B. Riglen
Agencies
Douglas Steamship Company, Limited Indo-China Steain Navigation Co., Ld. Indra Line of Steamers
Glen Line of Steamers
Occidental and Oriental Steamship Co. British India S. N. Co.
Canadian Pacific Railway Company Chino-Siam Steam Navigation Co., Ld. "Shire" Line of Steamers
Canton Insurance Office, Limited Alliance Assurance Company Eastern Insurance Company, Ld. Hongkong Fire Insurance Cá, L Green Island Cement Company, Ld. China Sugar Refining Company Ld. The H'kong Cotton Spinning, Weaving
& Dyeing Co., Ld.
KIALAT CLUB
Hon. Secretary-J. Focke
Yan-cheong-yvn-mo-kul
KWAI FUNG, Stationers, Printers, Book-
binders, etc.-Wai On Street
LAUTS & HAESLOOP, Mers.--Tel.Ad: Haesloop
F. H. L. Haesloop (Bremen)
J. Focke
1006
R. Tiefermann, signs per pro. H. Krueck
SWATOW
A. E. Yates, installation manager
(Asiatic Petroleum Co.)
Agencies
Netherlands Trading Society Deutsch Asiatische Bank Association of Deli Planters
Asiatic Petroleum Company, Limited Royal Dutch Petroleumi Company Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ld. Norddeutscher Lloyd Hamburg-Amerika Linie Rhederei M. Jebsen, Apenrade Navigazione Generale Italiana Austrian Lloyd's Steam Nav. Co. Royal Packet Navign. Co. of N. India East Asiatic Steamship Co.
Deutsche Dampfschiff. Ges. "Hansa" Rotterdam Lloyd
International Sleeping Car & Express
Trains Company
Central Agency, Ld., Glasgow Germanisher Lloyd Hanseatischer Lloyd
North British and Mercantile Insce. Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. South British Insurance Co., Ltd. Commercial Union Assurance Co. Albingia Assee. Co., Ld., Hamburg China Traders' Insurance Co., Jd. Mannheim Insurance Company Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co. Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges., Berlin Oberrhein. Versicherungs Ges. Heilbronner Versicherungs Ges. "Germania" Transport Vers. Ges. Deutscher Lloyd, Transport Vers. Ges. Committee of the Mar. Ins. Co. of Genoa Union of Bremen Underwriters
LIM & Co., E.V.S., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents
E.V.S. Lim
John Than
Proprietors-The Swatow
Grass
Cloth, Silk and Drawn Work Depot
MANSEL, DR. E. L., M.D. C.M., Med. Practr.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
MISSION CATHOLIQUE
Rev. F. Douspis
Missionnaires dans l'intérieur
Rev. F. Boussac
Rev. F. Guillaume Rev. F. Vacquerel Rev. F. Canãe Rev. F. Roudiére
Rev. F. Becmeur Rev. F. Rey Rev. F. Rayssac Rev. F. Veaux Rev. F. Lasportes Rev. F. Le Corre Rev. F. Pencolé Rev. F. Verdeille Rev. F. Delorme Rev. F. Thiolliére Rev. F Vogel
Rev. F. Constancis
Rev. F Werner
Rev. F. Favre
Kev. F. Sicard
Rev. F. Lao
Rov. T. Kho Rev. F. Tsoa
MORLAND, C. H. D., F.R.C.S. (ENG.), M.B., B.S
PILOTS-J. A. Pearne, C. Mutton
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL GERMAN; Tel, Ad
Kronos
Postmaster F. Grinım Assistant P. Kroll
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
District Postmaster The Commis
sioner of Customs
―
Dist. Postal Officer-W. M. d'Olivein Asst. Postal Officer--H. D. Henry
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL JAPANESE
Postmaster-K. Suganuma Clerks S. Hashimoto, H. Tonoi
SEAMEN'S HOSPITAL
Med. Officers-Dr. Morland and Dr.
Mansel
SHANGHAI LIFE INSURANCE Co., LP.
Head Office, Shanghai W. S. Niebuhr, agent
STANDARD On Co. of NEW YORK
L. I. Thomas, manager
Chan Ip Son, compradore
A. Fathergill, supt. installation
SWATOW CLUB
Hon. Sec.-F. C. Butcher
房藥安惠
Swatow Dispensary
Yang Khe Phou
Swatow Hotel & Astor House Hotel
F. H. Hyde, proprietor
SWATOW-CANTON
司公限有燈電明開頭汕辦商
SWATOW KAIMING ELECTRIC LIGHT CO.,
LTD., THE
Ko Seng Chi, director
Tan Fan Po, manager
Wang Fee Poh, secretary
S. Lightfoot, chief electrical engineer
Black, Miss
Butcher, Mrs. Capen, Mrs.
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE T. Y. Whang, manager
K. S. Chu, superintendent
WENDT & Co.
W. Melchiers
G. E. Hüygen
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Harkness, Miss (absent)
Ásverus, Mrs.
Gilchrist, Mrs.
Beath, Dr.
Groesbeck, Mrs.
Haesloop, Mrs. L.
Borch, Mrs. E. von
Haesloop, Miss
Hausser, Mrs. P. F.
Holz, Mrs. A.
Hyde, Mrs. M.
Jansen, Mrs.
Cruz, Mrs. F. da
Cruz, The Misses da
Feer, Madame H. Focke, Mrs. J. Focken, Mrs. F. W. Forbes, Mrs. J. McG.
Gibson, Mrs.
Henri, Madame
Lightfoot, Mrs.
Lyall, Mrs.
MacGowan, Mrs.
CANTON ) Da Kwang-chau
Mackenzie, Mrs. M. Maclagan, Mrs. Major, Mrs.
McIver, Mrs. (absent) Mutton, Mrs.
Page, Mrs.
Pearne, Mrs. Riddel, Mrs.
Scott, A. K. Dr. (Mrs.) Spiecher, Mrs. (absent) Steele, Mrs.
1007
Canton is situated on the Chu-kiang or Pearl River, in latitude 23 deg. 7 min. 10 sec. N., and longitude 113 deg. 14 min. 30 sec. E., and is the capital of the province of Kwangtung. It is sometimes called the City of Rams and the City of Genii, both of which names are derived from ancient legends. Canton is a foreign perversion of Kwangtung, its real name.
One of the first cities in the Chinese Empire, it is also the seat of government for the province, and is the residence of the Viceroy of "The Two Awang (Kwangtung and Kwangsi). The Tartar General is likewise resident here, besides a number of other government officials of more or less distinction, including the Haikwan, or Superintendent of Customs, a post always held by a Manchu.
Owing to its favoured situation, Canton became at an early date the Chinese port to which the traffic of European countries was first attracted. The Portuguese found their way thither in 1516, and Arab navigators had been making regular voyages between Can- ton and the ports of Western Asia as early as the tenth century. The Dutch appeared on the scene about a hundred years later than the Portuguese, and these in their turn were supplanted by the English. The latter, towards the close of the seventeently century, founded the very profitable trade which was conducted for nearly one hundred and fifty years by the Agents of the East India Company, who established a Factory there in 1684, which was afterwards celebrated throughout the world. From 1684 the export of ten to England increased rapidly. The Company's monopoly terminated in 1834. In 1830 Great Britain was led to a declaration of war with China in consequence of the oppression to which foreigners were subjected by the native authorities, and Canton was menaced with capture in 1841. A pecuniary ransom was, however, received in lieu of the occupation of the city, and hostilities were for the time being suspended. The lesson, unfortunately, was without effect, and the arrogance of the Chinese authorities continued unabated. The British campaign in Central China ensued, and the result was the signature of the Treaty of Nanking (August 29th, 1842), by which what was called the Co-Hong monopoly at Canton was abolished and four additional ports thrown Open to be ignored in the City of Rams, and foreigners were still denied admittance within to foreign trade. Nevertheless, the provisions of the Treaty continued His walls. The result of protracted unnoyances and insults was that in October, 1856, Sir Michael Seymour, with the fleet, again opened hostilities, and some two months later a mob in retaliation pillaged and burned all the foreign residences. In December, 1857,
1008
CANTON
Sir Charles Straubenzee, in command of an expedition which had been specially despatched from England, attacked the city, and it was taken on the 29th of that month. The French also sent out an expedition, and the city was occupied by the Allied Forces until October, 1861, a period of nearly four years.
The city proper extends to a breadth of about two miles, is about six miles in circumference, and is enclosed by walls about twenty feet thick and from twenty-five to forty feet high. The suburbs spread along the river for nearly five miles. The entire circuit, including the suburbs, is nearly ten miles, the walls enclosing about six miles. What is now called the New City was formerly known as the Southern Suburb. The Western Suburb stretches for miles along the river. There are sixteen gates giving admission into the city besides two water gates. Canton contains great attractions for foreign visitors in its numerous temples, pagodas, &c., and in the many curio shops to be found there. As a specimen of Chinese architecture, the Chin Chew Club is well worthy of inspection, and the Examination Hall, the City of the Dead, the Execution Ground, the Gaols, the Arsenal, an ancient Water Clock, the Mahomedan Mosque and the fine ancestral femple of the Chan family are among other show places. The French Mission have a large and handsome Gothic cathedral, with two lofty towers surmounted by spires, in the city. The structure is entirely built of dressed granite. A Mint, constructed by the late Viceroy Chang Chih-tung, and furnished with a very complete plant, has been erected near the East Gate, commenced work in 1889, and now issues silver dollars and subsidiary coins, as well as copper cents. The buildings cover a large area. On the opposite side of the river the Honam Temple and Monastery form the principal attraction, and in the same neighbourhood the firing, sorting and sit- ting of tea, the preserving of ginger, and the packing of rattans, cassia, &c., may be seen. The founding of bells, and the dyeing of paper and cotton fabrics are two of the chief industries of Fatshan, some ten miles from Canton. There are large glass-works at Fatei, and paper-mills-these with up-to-date European machinery--near the village of Impo. At Shekwan, seven miles from Fatshan, are extensive potteries The population of Canton has been estimated at 2,500,000, by the Customs authorities. A native official report in 1895 gave the population as 499,288 only; but this was exclusive of the boat population and is believed to have been inaccurate as regards the land population.
When the foreign merchants returned to Canton to establish trade after the capture of the city by the English at the close of 1857, they found the Factory and the buildings along the river in ruins. Recourse for accommodation was consequently had to warehouses on the Honam side of the river. Considerable discussion subsequently took place as to the selection of a site for a permanent British settlement, and it was eventually determined that an extensive mud flat known as Shameen should be filled in and appropriated. In 1859 an artificial island was created there, a canal constructed between the northern side of the site and the city, and solid and extensive embankments of masonry built. It took about two years to complete this undertaking, and cost no less than $325,000. Of this sum four-fifths were defrayed by the British, and one-fifth by the French Government, to whom a portion of the reclaimed land was given. Up to 1889 most of the French concession remained unutilised, but in that year a number of lots were sold and are now built upon. The French also received a grant of the old site of the Viceroy's Yamen, on which the Catholic Cathedral now stands. Shameen is pleasingly laid out, and the roads are shaded with well grown trees. Christ Church (Church of England) stands at the western end, and there is also a Roman Catholic church on the French Concession, There is good hotel accommodation. During an anti-foreign riot on the 10th September, 1883, sixteen houses and the Concordia Theatre on the settlement were burned by the mob.
In consequence of the decline in the importance of Canton as a place of trade caused principally by the opening of some of the northern ports, many of the merchants by whom lots were purchased there in 1861, at enormous prices, withdrew from Canton altogether. For many years the trade transacted there by foreigners has beeu limited, but since 1900 an appreciable increase has been noticeable. Tea and Silk an the staple exports. The export of Tea for the year 1908 was 10,604 piculs, which shows a decline of 3,509 piculs compared with the previous season's export; in 1901 the export was as low as 6,653 pieuls. The extent to which this trade has fallen of will be seen on a comparison of the above figures with those for 1888, when the export was 131,141 picuis. The quantity of Raw Silk and Cocoons (exclusive of Refuse and Wild Silk) exported in 1908 was 41,035 piculs which compares with 41,500 in 1907:37,346 in 1906; and 38,370 piculs in 1905. These figures, however, which are taken from the Maritime Customs returns, do not give the total export, but only those in foreign sels. Both Tea and Silk are carried in large quantities to Hongkong by junk for
CANTON
1009
transhipment. The export of Sugar in 1908 was 61,938 piculs against 70,366 piculs. in 1907; the import of Sugar in 1908 was 235,241 piculs. The net value of the trade of the port coming under the cognisance of the Foreign Customs during the past six years has been as follows: Tls. 103,696,530 in 1908; 103,782,947 in 1907: 94,108,696 in 1906; Tls. 92,243,650, in 1905; Tls. 96,247,076 in 1904, and Tls. 110,559,826 (the largest on record) in 1903.
The
Ample means of communication exist between Canton and Hongkong, a distance of about ninety-five miles, by foreign steamers plying daily, and a large number of native craft. There is daily steam communication with Macao and regular connection with Wuchow and West River ports, and with Shanghai, Newchwang, and Kwangchauwan. The total tonnage for 1908 entered and cleared was 4,691,141. The steam-launch traffic under the Inland Steam Navigation Regulations has proved a great success, though since rules were enforced in December, 1901, compelling all Chinese launches to undergo inspection at the hands of an engineer appointed by the Customs before obtaining licenses to ply, the number of launches is not so large as previously. There is a safe and commodious anchorage within 150 yards of the river wall at Shameen. Canton was connected by telegraph (an overland line) with Kowloon in 1883, and another overland line was completed from Canton to Lungchau-fu, on the Kwangsi and Tonkin frontier, in June, 1884. The electric light and the telephone system have been intro- duced into a portion of the city. A railway between Canton and Kowloon is in course of construction. The British section of the line will extend from Kowloon Point to Samchun, a distance of 22 miles, and will be completed this year. Chinese section, which will have its terminus at Taishatow (East Gate), will be 80 miles in length. A thirty miles section from Canton outwards is expected to be opened to traffic in March, 1910, and a through connection with Kowloon in or about July, 1911. A connection with the Canton-Hankow Railway will be made to the northward of Kowloon city. The survey by an American syndicate of a railway route to connect Canton with Hankow was made in 1899. Work upon the branch line from Canton to Samshui (about 30 miles) commenced in December, 1902, and a length of ten miles, as far as Fatshan, was opened on November 15, 1903. The line was extended to Samshui the following year. The completion of the railway to Samshui brought the West River ports within easy distance of Canton, it being now possible to reach Wuchow in Kwangsi in less than twenty-four hours. That the advantages of rapid communication are appreciated may be gathered from the fact that about three millions of passengers a year are carried on this short line. Very little freight is carried. The railway has prac- tically killed the passenger traffic by steam launches to Fatshan, but an increase in the railway fares in 1908 revived it to some slight extent. Work on the grand trunk line has been started at both ends, and a section, about 12 miles long, from Canton, northward to Ko Tong Hü was rapidly approaching completion, when in October, 1904, on account of friction between the Chinese authorities and the constructor of the railway, work was entirely stopped. Then it became known that Belgian capitalists had acquired extensive holdings in the American-China Development Company, and, in consequence, a strong agitation was aroused among the Chinese aiming at the cancellation of the concession, and the construction of the line with Chinese capital only. The agitation proved entirely successful. The concession was cancelled by the Chinese Government, who paid to the American-China Development Company a sum of Gold $6,750,000 as compensation, including the cost of the works already completed. As soon as the concession was cancelled a movement was organised by the commercial men of the three provinces which the line will traverse to raise the necessary funds for its construction.
A large sum of money was subscribed or promised by Chinese at home and abroad on condition that there would be no official control of the railway. This attitude on the part of the merchants naturally brought them into serious con- fiet with the provincial authorities, but they successfully urged their claims to freedom from official interference, and construction work is now in progress under the direction of a Chinese engineer. Kongtsun,
The first section of the line-from Wongsha to a distance of 17 miles, with three intermediate stations-was opened on July 17th, 1907, and in December 1908 a further section to Yuntam 44 miles from Can- opened. Good progress with the work continues to be made. Owing to the difficulties experienced in getting the Chinese shareholders to pay up the calls on their shares as they fell due, the government resolved at the end of 1908 to raise a foreign loan. A Chinese-owned line from Canton to Whampoa and thence to Amoy has been projected and surveys have been made. The capital of the company is 40 million dollars, hat only about one-fifth has been paid up or promised. A concession for a line from blacao to Canton was granted in November, 1901, to a Sino-Portuguese syndicate after
ton, was
32
1010
CANTON
prolonged negotiations, but this has now been cancelled. In accordance with stipulations in the Supplementary Commercial Treaty between Creat Britain and China, concluded in 1902, the various barriers or artificial obstructions to navigation in the Canton River were in 1905 partially removed, thus rendering the approaches to Canton safer and easier for shipping, and simplifying work in connection with the proposal to improve the accommodation for shipping in the harbour. Extensive wharves and godowns have been erected at Pak Hin Hok on Honam Island, about two miles below Shameen, which enable ocean-going vessels of considerable draught to proceed up to Canton, During the last year or two large bunding operations have been in progress, along the Front and Back Reaches, and a considerable amount of building has been done on the Shameen, where there are now very few vacant lots.
DIRECTORY
ABDOOLALLY, EBRAHIM & Co., Merchants
and Commission Agents-Honam
記瑞 Sui-kee
ARNHOLD, KARBERG & Co., Importers, Exporters, Shipping Agents, Engineers
and Contractors Tel. 1012; Cable Ad: Karberg, Shameen
Philipp Arnhold (London) E. Goetz (London)
M. Niclassen (Berlin)
H. Arnhold (Shanghai)
A. E. Dowler (New York) W. Helms (Hongkong) Fr. Lieb (Hongkong)
A. Metzler, signs per pro., manager
E. Goyet,
H. Spillmann,
C. Lips,
F. Wegmann
R. Johnson
A. Meyer
silk inspector
A. J. Hackman
E. Wolf
E. T. H. Bunje A. R. Moosdeen H. D. Noronha F. de Barros F. X. Franco J. Matthies G. H. Silva
Agencies
Bunks
do. do.
Deutsche Bank, Berlin
Banco Aleman Transatlantico, Berlin J. P. Morgan & Co., New York
Shipping
American & Oriental Transport Line The Robert Dollar Co.
Rickmers Reismuehlen, Rhederei and
Schiffbau A.G.
Andrew Weir & Co., London
The Prince Line Ltd., Newcastle-
on-Tyne
Insurance
Lancashire Insurance Co. (Fire and
Life)
South British Fire and Marine
Insurance Co.
China Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Ltd.
"Fatum" Accident Insurance Co. (For Machinery and Other Agencies See
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong)
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD, THE-23,
Shameen
Manager-H. Oldenburg
Assistant R. C. Burgess Clerk-P. da Silva
do. A. M. dos Santos Fati Installation
Manager-T. V. Xavier
BANQUE DE L'INDO CHINE
G. Poullet-Osier, manager
H. Mazot, chief accountant D. M. da Luz, assistant
Sam-lee
BARRETTO & Co., Merchants-Shameen
General Cable Ad: Barretto
F. D. Barretto (Hongkong)
BAUDET, Commission Merchant-French
Concession, Shameen
架璧
BECKER, OTTO, Merchant-Tel.Ad: Ottbeck
Agencies
Transatlantic Marine Insee, Co. International Lloyd, Berlin
BHESANIA & Co., J. B., Merchants and Commission Agents--149, Shameen
BOMANJEE & Co., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-Shameen
Patell & Co., agents
泰綸 Lun-tai
CANTON
BOYER, MAZET, GUILLIEF & Co., successors
to R. Chauvin & Co., Raw Silk Merchants
J. Eymar, signs per pro.
J. Band, silk inspector
司公烟美英
BRITISH-AMERICAN TOBACCO Co., LD.-Tel.
Ad: Pawnee
A. B. Giles
J. W. Jay
C. F. Stockwell
C. G. Fry
1011
Assistant Manager-Tow Lui Kung Clerk in charge-Chang King Lai
Asst. Clerk in charge-Liang Sit Kau Operators---8
CANTON HOSPITAL
Medical Supt.-J. M. Swan, M.D., Business Supt.-A. G. Wilson Head Nurse (foreign)-Mrs. Jugs
CANTON HOTEL-Ngo Chau Ngoi Kai St.
Honam, Canton
CANTON KOWLOON RAILWAY, Imperial
Chinese Section
H. E. Wei Han, Taotai, managing
director
Frank Grove, M.I.C.E, engineer-in-chief
W. T. Nelke
H. H. Waller
F. A. Page Patrick P. Drummond J. V. Dodd
F. W. Quark
W. L. Thompson
B. Campbell J. Whyte
BRITISH EPISCOPAL CHURCH ESTABLISH-
MENT-CHRIST CHURCH
Trustees The Bishop of Victoria, H. B. M. Consul-General, H.B.M. Vice-Consul General
Committee Rev. P. Jenkins, H. F. Baker (hon. sec. and treas.), E. A. Stanton, A. V. Hogg
Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants J. R. Greaves, signs per pro.
E. E. Hill
A. K. Davies, wharfinger Agencies
China Navigation Company, Limited Ocean Steamship Company, Limited China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ltd. Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering
Co. of Hongkong, Ld.
Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn., Ld. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Palatine Insurance Co., Ld. Orient Insurance Co., Ld, Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld.
CANTON CLUB
Committee J. R. Greaves (chairman),
D. H. Cameron. C. Robton, C. Ah-
rendt, W. W. G. Ross
R. T. Matheson (secretary)
局官報電東廣
Kwany-tung-din-po-kun-kuk
CANTON GOVERNMENT TELEGRAPHS
Director and General Manager-Fung
Ying Kai
W. G. Moore,
district engineer
B. T. B. Boothby,
do.
D. M. Fraser,
do.
J. J. Thompson, assistant engineer
C. M. Keay
do.
A. G. Roberts,
do.
E. S. Warmington, B.A.
do.
K. Roberts
do.
W. M. Stratton,
do.
M. Garibaldi,
do.
J. O. Power, acting chief accountant T. Makins, chief draughtsman F. Fischer, chief storekeeper W. G. Comley, sub,
do.
S. Bailie, bridge machinery foreman B. Christiansen, inspector of works
A. E. Slaney,
R. C. G. Ogilby,
W. A. Cole,
L. Toncker,
do.
do.
do.
do.
C. E. Watson, workshop foreman
CANTON ROWING CLUB
Chairman-T. E. Griffith
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-E. Lund General Committee-Lund, Griffith
Herb, Purnell, Johnson
Balloting Committee-Sutton, Scho- enherr, Cameron, Saunders and the General Committee
CANTON TELEPHONE Co., Head Office Yü
Mo Street, Old City
Se-Kwan Branch Exchange-Sup
Sam Po, Western Sub.
Honam Branch
Tong Tse
Exchange-Hoi
和禮 Lai-wo
CARLOWITZ & Co., Merts.-111, Shameen;
Telph. 1122
Chas. von Bose (Hamburg)
Chas, E. Rayner (Shanghai)
M. E. F. March (Hamburg)
B. Rosenbaum (Shanghai)
Townsend Rushmore (New York)
32*
1
:
1012
!
C. R. Lenzmann (Hongkong) A. V. Bohuszewicz, signs the firm
F. W. Pfaff signs per pro. W. Schüchner, H. Schönherr
H. Schramon
O. Kibat
Ed. Schröder
G. Farr
do.
C. Fritzsche, silk inspector
A. Hoffmeister, do.
F. X. M. P. Tavares L. Alonço
Agencies
CANTON
Line (homeward
Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai Navigazione Generale Italiana (Bom-
bay Line) Hamburg-America freight service.) Dampfschiffs Rhederei "Union', A. G.
(New York Line)
German Lloyd Marine Insce. Co. of
Berlin
Upper Rhine Insurance. Co., Ld., of
Mannheim
La Foncière (La Lyonnaise Réunie) Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co. Baloise Fire Insurance Co., Basle
Albingia "Fire Insce. Co., Hamburg Globus Insce. Co. of Hamburg Scottish Union, & National Insurance
Co., Ltd.
Imperial Marine & Transport Insur-
ance Co., Ld., Tokyo, Japan
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, CANTON Chairman-E. A. Stanton Secretary R. T. Matheson
CHINA BAPTIST PUBLICATION SOCIETY, Book Publishers and General Printers; Tel. Ad Bapto--144, Shameen
Rev. William Ashmore, JR.,D.D.,president Rev. R. E. Chambers, general sec. and
treasurer
R. T. Cowles, supt. of works
ARM
Lun-shun-chiu-sheung-kuk
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION CO.
Chan Lai-to, agent
Chan Kwok-man, acting agent
Chan Yuk-tong, shipping clerk
Agency
China Merchants' Insurance Company
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE Co., Ld.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., general agents
關海粤 Yuch Hai-Kwan
CHINESE IMPERIAL MARITIME CUSTOMS,
CANTON
Commissioner-J. F. Oiesen
Acting Depy. Com'r.-J. J. M. Drum-
mond (Indoor)
Do.-C. A. McAllum (Outdoor) Assistants-G. D. Poli, C. F. Johnston, H. Otaki, M. H. Picard-Destelan, A G. Wallas, G. F. March, P. L. O. Hill, G. Boezi, Hu Ping-fai, Tai Tin Pui Medical Officers-H. P. M. Dupuy, P
L. Craig
Tidesurveyor-C. Clarkson
Asst. Tidesurveyor--M. Hellestrand
(at Whampoa);
Acting Asst. Tidesurveyor-A.E. Pfan-
kuchen
Boat Officer J. S. Enright
-
Acting Boat Officer - W. E. Clark Chief Examiners-W. H. Williams, P.
E. Milhe
Examiners-E. A. Roberts, E. C. A.
Deichen
Asst. Examiners-W. P. M. Whaite, G. E. Bell, M. Neubrunn, J. I. da Cur- ha, J. Mottram, A. Nichol, V. Gaeta Tidewaiters-P. A. Kalleberg, W. R. Hayes, A. Gregory, J. Ward, G. R. H. Dittmann, A. G. Bowman, W. J. Hood, J. S. Cunha, F. A. do Ro- zario, M. O. Neill, G. Kremser, H. L. Amiel, D. A. G. Alison, J. M. L Martin, H. C. Scrimshaw, T. W. Lee, C. Watson, E. Hubert, C. M. Hoff- man, J. Taylor
9 Probationary Tidewaiters and 16
Watchers
Acting Deputy Coast Inspector and
Harbour Master-F. Harris Assistant Surveyor--E. M. Almberg Acting Berthing Officers-C. R. Jons-
son, J. Mitchell
Revenue Steamer "Feihoo":
Acting Commander-G. T. Giertsen Acting 1st Officer-J. H. Barton 3rd Officers (temporary)-H. F. Carey,
J. E. F. A. Laursen 1st Engineer - H. G. Mackenzie 2nd Engineer--J. C. Saunders 3rd Engineer-T F. Gilkison Unattached (on leave from South Ports) Commissioners -F. W. Maze, A. H.
Wilzer, W. R. M'D. Parr Deputy Commissioners-S. J. Hanisch, E. A. W. von Strauch, C. E. Hol- worthy Assistants R. A. Currie, W. C. G. Howard, J. W. H. Ferguson, F. Ros pigliosi, H. G. Fletcher, A. CE Braud, F. W. H. C. G. Biester, O. Rettberg
Chief Titlesurveyor-J. H. May Boat Officer-J.J. C. Lorentzen Examiners-F. J. Brumfield, N. AA
Nielsen, W. H. Campkin Assistant Examiner A. L. Demée
CANTON
1st Class Tidewaiter-W. B. Lipson
2nd
1
CONSULATES
-J. S. Brandao
署事領國美大
Tai-mee-kowk-ling-sz-şhu
AMERICA
Consul General-Leo, Allen Berg-
holz
Marshal-Horace J. Dickinson
Interpreter-Lam Ying Chee
Clerk-Ha Wing Kwong
Chinese Writers-Chao Hae Men,
Wang Yen Choy
署官事領國與大
Tai Ao-kwok Ling-sz'-kun-shi
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Consul in charge-J. W. Jamieson
BELGIUM
官事領國比大
Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
Consul-Residing in Hongkong
署事領國法大
Tai Fat-kwok Ling-sz-shi
FRANCE
Consul-M. J. Beauvais (absent)
Acting Consul--R. Réau
Vice-Consul-Lépissier
Médecin-Dr. H. Dupuy
Commis de Chancellerie-Thiong
Interprètes Chinois--Li et Ma
署官事領國德大
Tai-tuk-kwok Ling-sz-kun-shu
GERMANY-Tel. Ad; Germania
Consul-Dr. Rössler
Acting Interpreter-Al. Tigges
Secretary- Albers
Assistant Secretary-P. Zumpe
署事領總國英大
Tai Ying-kwok Tsong-Ling-sz shi
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-General-J. W. Jamieson
Vice-Consul-L. Giles
Assistants--R. S. Pratt, W. P. W.
Turner
Constable-W. F. Browne
ITALY
官事頜利大義大
Tai I-tai-li Ling-sz-kun
Consul-General-Comin. Z. Volpi-
celli (residing in H'kong)
Chinese Writer-Ch'ing Yao
1013
館事領總本日大
JAPAN
Acting Consul-General-A. Segawa
Elève Consul--Y. Hori
Chancellor K. Aibara
Secretary K. Kumazawa
Constable S. Kukita
官事領國和大
Tai-wo-kwok Ling-se'-kun
NETHERLANDS
Consul-in-charge The Netherlands
Consulate-General at Hongkong
事領總國洋西大
Ta Si-yung Kwo Chung Ling-sz
PORTUGAL
Consul-General (for South China)-
J. D. da Costa de Moraes
Interpreter-V. A. de Rozario Clerk S, M, do Rozario
Chinese writer-Lu Ine Pô
RUSSIA
Consul A. v. Bohuszewicz
官事頜宋呂
★*1*2
SPAIN
Lui-suny Ling-sz`-kun
Consul-The Consul for France at ·
Hongkong
官事頠國喴哪晪喘大
Tai-sui-tin-no-wai Kwok-ling-sz-ya-num
SWEDEN
Vice-Consul-M. Steger
Tung Hing
CRUZ, BASTO & Co., Merchants--Tel, Ad:
Paloma
A. D. Barretto
J. C. Barretto, signs per pro.
Agencies
North China Insurance Co., Ld. The State Fire Insurance Co., La.
EM Ti-kin-kung-se
DEACON & Co., Merchants, Shipping and
Insurance Agents-Tel. Ad: Deacon
E. A. Stanton
H. Staples Smith
E. H. Smyth II. F. Baker J. P. Pereira
Agencies
Hongkong, C. & M. Steamboat Co., Ld.
Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co.
Dodwell's Line of New York Steamers The Bank Line of Steamers Northern Pacific Line
Ben Line of Steamers
Eastern & Australian SteamshipCo.,Ld Apcar Line of Steamers
1014
CANTON
Alliance Assurance Co., Ld. China Fire Insurance Co., Limited China Traders' Insurance Co., Limited Union Assurance Society Ld. The Marine Insurance Co., Ld. The Standard Life Assce. Co., The Atlas Assce. Co., Ld., Lloyd's
# Ha-pat-tin-tee
DENT & CO., HERBERT, Public Silk and Tea Inspector and Commission Agents, Can- ton, Macao, Yokohama, London and Lyons
Herbert F. Dent (London)
P. R. F. Carter, signs per pro. C. Robton,
J. M. Graça
H. H. Xavier
C. Gomes
do.
D. da Roza (Macao)
Agencies
Chartered Bank of I., A. & China Shiu On Steamship Company
South British Fire & Marine Insce. Co. General Accident Assurance Corptn. North British and Mercantile Insc. Co. Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
DHABHAR, H.K., Mcht. and Com. Agt.
DHUNAMALL, CHELARAM & Co., Silk Mer-
chants French Concession
K. Shevaram, manager
* Yuh Ts'vi Shu Sz
ELLIS KADOORIE COLLEGE, Honam
Managers The Ellis Kadoorie Chinese
Schools Society (Hongkong)
James Moore, M.A., headmaster
A. G. Beaumont, (Lon. Univ.)
G. E. Hocking
舘字印滔利美 Mei-lee-ton
FERNANDES, NORONHA & Co., Printers and
Publishers-Shameen
FISH AND SUBMARINE TORPEDO DEPOT
IMPERIAL
Director H. E. Wei Han
Associate do.-H. E. Li Sen Tien
In charge of Torpedoes-Y. K. Sean,
P. K. Wong, M. S. Kaon
Secretary H. Wong
Paymaster-S. P. Hao
沙非
FISHER & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents French Concession, Shameen;
Godown: Hing Loong Street
C. T. Fisher
H. Hunter Lou Ping Ho Fook
Agencies
Po On Steam Launch Co. Chi Wo Steamship Co. Shanghai Life Insurance Co. U On Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
FULTON, MARY H., M. SC. M.D.
Physician and Surgeon in charge of the David Gregg Hospital for Women and Children; Dean of The E. A.K. Hackett Medical College for Women, Superin tendent of the Julia M. Turner Train- ing School for Nurses
GOBHAI, & Co., M. N., Merchants and
Commission Agents Shameen
Patell & Co., agents
枝高
GOEKE, A., Merchant
J. Helms, signs per pro.
J. Montalto de Jesus
Fritz Rantoft
W. A. Cheong
S. P. Leung
利太
GRAÇA & Co., I. M. R., Merchants and
Commission Agents-Tel. Ad: Gogra
昌時
Sze-cheong
GRIFFITH, T. E., Silk Merchant and Agent
and Public Silk Inspector
T. E. Griffith
H. Bent, signs the firm
H. Sutton, signs per pro. W. Imhoof, silk inspector K. B. Wilson
Agencies
Yuen On Steamship Co., Ld.
Norwich Union Fire, Insce. Society
行銀海上港香
Heung-kong-sheong-hoi-ngan-hong
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING
CORPORATION
K. R. Hynd, agent
F. H. Thomas, assistant
J. V. dos Remedios, clerk
蘭葛 Kot-lan
HONGKONG & SOUTH CHINA TRADING CO,
LD.-Sun Life Building; Tel. Ad: Kotlan
R. A. Parry, secretary
HOWARTH, ERSKINE, LIMITED, Civil En gineers and Contractors-Head Office: Singapore
W. H. Hill, manager
L. J. de Figueiredo K. H. Lo
局商報電國中
Chung-kwok Tin-po-sheng-kuk
CANTON
IMPERIAL CHINESE TELEGRAPH ADMINIS-
TRATION
Manager--F. M. Sah
Sub Manager--T. T. Wong
Clerk-in-charge and Controller-Sen
Foh-Hui
Controller-L. K. Tow
Supervisor-Q. Y. Woo
Do. -H. Y. Tsai
行銀通寶國萬
Mu-henol to fruong nhong
INTERNATIONAL BANKIN CORPORATIONG-
Tel. Ad: Statebank
H. W. Kenny, acting manager
R. B. Williams, sub-accountant
和怡
E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., L., Merchants
W. W. G. Ross, agent
G. Richarme, silk inspector
G. Des Garcts D'Ars
F. P. de Senna
J. de Senna
Agencies
Indo-Chinn Steam Navigation Co. Indra Line of Steamers Glen Line of Steamers
Canadian Pacific Railway Company Canton Insurance Office, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Alliance Assurance Co. Eastern Insurance Co., Ld.
KAPADIA & Co., M. M., Merchs.-Shameen
J. M. Kapáliá
KARANJIA, C. C., Merchant and Commis-
sion Agent Shameen Patell & Co., agents
KATRAK, M. H., Merchant and Commission
Agent Shameen
K Hing Loong
KAVARANA & Co., B. F., Merchants and
Commission Agents-Shameen
D. B. Kavarania
F. B. Kavarana
KAVARANA, S. F., Merchant and Commis-
sion Agent-Shameen
II. S. Kavarana
LANDOLT, & Co., J.
J. Landolt Wong Yar Fong
LAWN TENNIS CLUB SHAMEEN
Committee--H. Bent (Hon. Secretary) R. C. Comrie, J. I. M. Drummond
MASONIC LODGE
1015
"STAR
OF SOUTHERN
CHINA," No. 2013, E.C.
Wor. Master W. G. Saunders
Secretary E. Almberg
Chong-lee
MEHTA, M. N., Merchant and Commission
Agent-Shameen; Tel. Ad: Mehta
M. N. Mehta (Calcutta) D. N. Mehta (do.)
D. D. Mehta, manager
MELCHERS & Co., Merchants
C. Ahrendt, signs per pro.
E. Schwager 0. Querfurt J. F. d'Azevedo
Agencies
Imperial German Mail Line Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremen Ostasiatiske Kompagni, Copenhagen Swedish East Asiatic Co., Gothenburg Russian East Asiatic Co., Ld. Est Asiatique Français
Maatschappij tot Mijn-Bosch and Landbouwexploitatie in Langkat
MESSAGERIES CANTONAISES, Proprietors of the French Line of Steamers between Hongkong, Canton and Wuchow; Head Office: Canton
P. A. Lapicque, agent in Hongkong
福 巨 Ku-fuk
MEURER FILS & Co., Export Merchants
André Meurer
Charles Meurer
C. Zencovich,' signs per pro. H. Dangu
Agencies
"Comité des Assur. Maritimes de Paris Comité des Assur. Maritimes de Havre
A
Sun-chuen-loong
MEYERINK & Co., WM-Sai Hing Street G. Engel, signs the firm (Hongkong) Agencies
The Liverpool, London & Globe Ins. Co. Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance Co.
MINT, CHINESE IMPERIAL
Manager-The Provincial Treasurer Directors--Cheang Che Leang, Ching
Sin Gang
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of China
Directory
1016
CANTON
FRENCH MISSION
Right Rev. Mgr. Mérel Evêque, Rev. M. M. Sorin Fleureau (pro- préfets), Fourquet (Curé), Lévêque (procureur), Clauzet (Supérieur du College), Bourdin (Shameen), Ger- | vaix (Sai Chan), Pradel (Val d'Or.), Robert, Favreau (Fat-Chan), Gau- thier (Tai-Leuong), Thomas (San cian), Fouque (San - Tcheung), Léauté (Tsang Shing), Nicouleau, Jarreau (Tong Koun), Grisel
- (Shek-Loung), Conrardy (Shek- Loung), Barnier Lemaire (Chao- Qwan), Collas (Nam - Hiong), Peric (Chek Sing), Frayssinet Deswazières (Pok - Lo), (Woui-Non), Druais (Vounay), Vogel (Lao-Long)
Merle
SŒURS DE MARIE IMMACULÉE
Angelina du Sacre Coeur, Helene de la Croix, Madalene de Sales, Claudia de Jesus
#E Sam-ching
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LTD., Merchs.-
Tel. Ad: Mitsui; Head Office; Tokyo
C. Tanaka, manager
M. Doi S. Sugimura S. Koyanagi
Agency
Meiji Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co.
The Dai Nippon Brewery Co.
記協 Hip-kee
MOGRA & Co., E. R.-Shameen
E. R. Mogra
Mathuradass Kalidass & Co. (Bombay)
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL, FRENCH CONCESSION
President R.Réau (Consul for France) Secretary and Treasurer-L. Albert Members-H. S. Kavarana & L. Albert Chief of Police-Syed Mahomed
I Sha-min Kung-po MUNICIPAL COUNCIL-SHAMEEN
Chairman T. E. Griffith Councillors--E. A. Stanton, W. G. Saunders, M. Steger, P. R. F. Carter Medical Officer--Dr. Davenport Secretary-R. T. Matheson Super. Fire Brigade-F. C. Herb Police Superintendent A. G. Brimble
Cheung-kee
NAOROJEE, BURJORJEE, Merchant and Com-
mission Agent-150, Shameen
B. Naorojee
Sorabjee Dossabloy (Bombay)
M. B. Futtakia, signs per pro. N. B. Naorojee
NAVAL COLLEGE, IMPERIAL
Director-H. E. Wei Han Associate Director-H. E. Li Sen Tien Superintendent B. W. Woo Professors-J. Moyes, K. M. Wong,
T. F. Woo, Y. K, Wong Secretary-H. K. Lin Paymaster-C. P. Hao
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA
T. Matsudaira, resident representative Agenties
Great Northern Steamship Co. Great Northern Railway Co. Nisshin Kisen Kaisha
NORDISK FJERFABRIK, LD., Feather Expor- ters-Shameen; Tél. Ad: Chinaimport; Head Office and Factories: Copenhagen
V. R. E. Harth-Olsen, agent
Hung-hing
PARSEE TRADING Co., THE, Wine and Spirit Merchants, Provision Dealers, Auctioneers and General Commission Agen's; Tel. Ad: Parsee, Canton
T. J. Vasania
E. R. Mogra
C. B. Bathena (Shanghai)
R. P. Vasania
N. B. Naoroji Yik Shin Chong
Pao-loun
PASQUET & Co., E. (Successors), Silk Mer-
chants and Commission Agents
G. Schultz
J. Wullschleger, silk inspector
J. J. Braga d'Azevedo
L. A. de J. Luz
PATELL & Co., Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents
M. J. Patell, proprietor (Hongkong) E. Cowasji, manager
Byramjee Dadabhoy
PLACE DA SILVA & Co., Commission Agents
-Shameen
A. da Silva
POHOMULL BROS., Merchs. and Com. Agents
-Verhamull, manager
K. W. Mahtani, clerk
POST OFFICE, BRITISH
Postmaster-R. S. Pratt
POST OFFICE, FRENCH
Postmaster-F. Bloy
CANTON
POST OFFICE IMPERIAL GERMAN--Tel. Ad:
Kronos
Postmaster-Hugo Wiemer Assistant S. Ling
POST OFFICE CHINESE IMPERIAL
Postal Commissioner-H. E. Wolf Acting Deputy Postmaster-B. Arndt Accountant J. C. Parkin
Postal Officer-G. P. Perier
Assistant Postal Officers-A. Bottu, T.
McDermott, W. B. Browne
步進 Chun.po
PURNELL & PAGET, Architects, Engineers
and Surveyors--Shameen; Tel. Ad: Panel
A. W. Purnell
C. S. Paget
J. S. Gawler
H. R. Legge Ricardo Frys Lam Choy
Cheung Shiu Tung
Cheng Tsze Sau
Chan Wai Yuen Tam Wai
REBER, DR. MED. HANS, Physician and Surgeon British Concession, 103, Shameen; Telephone 1014
Tai-wo
A. V. Hogg, silk inspector
REISS & Co., Merchants
W. G. Saunders,
do.
F. C. Herb,
do.
H. Rossiter,
do.
F. Danenberg
Loo-ling
W. Sage
REUTER, BROCKELMANN & Co., Merchants
Tel. Ad: Heyn
Heinr. Heyn (Hamburg)
R. Fuhrmann (Hongkong)
M. Steger, signs per pro. G. Tiedt
A. Schubert
E. Dauter G. Azedo
Agencies
Osaka Shosen Kaisha S. S. Co. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Fire Insurance Co. of 1877, Hamburg Manhattan Life Insurance Company Continental Insurance Company National General Insurance Co., Ld. German Marine & Ins. Co.. Ld., Berlin Ocean Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
SACRED HEART COLLEGE (Collège du Sacré
Coeur)-Tai San Street, New City
Head Master and General Supt.-
R. F. A. Clauzet, M.A.
French Standards:
1017
Rev. F. D. Gourdiat, M.A. (appointed
teacher tö" Fong-In" Chinese Offi- cial College)
Rev. Bro. Paschal
Do.
Angelin
Do.
John
Do.
Marcel
Raphael
Do.
德裕 Yii Talk
SALES & Co., Merchants, General Com-
mission Agents and Coal Merchants-
Shameen, French Concession
J. F. Sales
刺威打山
SANDER, WIELER & Co., Merchants
C. Piper
Agency
International Lloyd Insurance Co.,
Berlin
SCHULDT & Co.
She-la-se
Ad. Ernst Schuldt (Hamburg)
G. Harling
S. Swart (Hongkong)
W. Brockstedt
F. Bruhn
Fung Lai Chune
Fung Kam Chune
Fung San Fan
Agencies
do.
National Assurance of Ireland
Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co.
Providentia Insurance Co., Frankfurt
Khenania Vers. Action Ges., Coeln
Yorkshire Insurance Co.
Wurtemberg, Transport Vers. Ges. Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin Bayerischer Lloyd, Munchen
SHANGHAI LIFE INSURANCE Co., LD.-
French Concession, Shameon
J. F. Eça da Silva, general agent for
Cantón and West River
Kee-cheong
SHEWAN, TOMES & Co., Merchants
R. Shewan (Hongkong)
C. A. Tomes, do.
L. H. Gilman
G. C. Hoppeler, silk inspector O. Eager
C. G. Rozario
E. G. dos Remedios
Agencies
National Bank of China, Limited China Provident Loan and Mrtg.Co.,Ld. Union Line of Steamers
1018
CANTON
China and Manila Steamship Co. Messageries Maritimes,correspondents Portland and Asiatic Steamship Co. China Commercial S. S. Co. Yorkshire Fire and Life Insurance Co. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Id. Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Manchester Assurance Company Green Island Cement Company, Ld. Carton Land Company, Limited Hongkong Rope ManufacturingCo.,Ld. La Société Nouvelle de Kebao American Asiatic S. S. Co. Manufacturers' Life Insce. Co. Pacific Mail S. S. Co. Toyo Kisen Kaisha
E Sim-sun
SIEMSSEN & Co., Merchants A. Gultzow (Hamburg) N. A. Siebs do. A. Fuchs ( do.
O. Struckmeyer (Shanghai) H. A. Siebs (Hongkong) E. Siebert (Tientsin)
J. Helmers, signs per pro.
L. Albert, silk inspector K. Kastmann
E. Lund
E. A. Koester
W. Hildebrandt
Agencies
Hamburg Amerika Linie, Europe-
Canton
Hamburg Amerika Linie, Coast Service Hamburg Amerika Line, Europe-C'ton North German Fire Insurance Co. Dusseldorf Universal Marine Insce. German Lloyds Marine Insce. Co. Globe Marine Insurance Company Samarang Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Sun Insurance Office, London Compania Anonima de Segurosy
Banca, "El Dia," Cartagena Union of Hamburg Underwriters Janus Life Insurance Co., Hamburg Allianz Insurance Co. of Berlin
3
Him-tai
SILVA & Co., J. M., Eça da
J. M. Eça da Silva
J. F. Eça da Silva
SOCIETÀ ANONIMA DI
NAVIGAZIONE
COMMERCIO (The Italian Navigation & Commerce Co., Ld.)
V. P. Musso di Peralta, director L. Borello, manager
SOUTH-CHINA MEDICAL COLLEGE, Asso-
ciated with Canton Hospital
Committee-Dr. J. Webb Anderson, Dr. E. C. Davenport, A. G. Wilson, (sec. and treas.), Dr. J. M. Swan
Teachers-Dr. J. M. Swan, Dr. F Oldt, Dr. Webb Anderson, Dr. Nye, Dr. So To Ming, Dr. Chi Lu Teng, Dr. Hung, Dr. Sung
Fu
Tung-wo
SPALINGER, U., Silk and Commission Agent
C. Geiger, silk inspector
A. B. T. Senna
富美 Mei-Foo
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK-Tel. Ad:
Socony
D. H. Cameron, attorney
J. A. Rule, Jr. W. E. Goolsby R. C. Cunrie D. A. Alonco
J. C. H. Smith J. M. Victor
TA CHING KWANG TUNG (ELECTRIC SUPPLY
Co., LD.) Ng Sin-mun; Tel. Ad: Light-
House, Canton
G. S: Thorne, engineer-in-chief
E. E. Garrard
C. Beid
館洽夜面沙界英
THE AUCTION SALESROOM-British Con-
cession, Shameen
Place da Silva, A. M., general auc-
tioneer and auctioneer to the I. M.
Customs and Consulates
THOMAS, C. B., A.R.I.B.A., Architect and Civil
Engineer Shameen
W. Oertel, assistant
VANIA, A. D., Merchant and Commission
Agent
嗹嘩
VARENNE & Co., Raw Silk Merchants
J. F. Varenne (Lyons)
T. Varenne, do.
G. Reiffinger (Yokohama)
J. Proton, signs per pro.
VASUNIA, J. P., Merchant-Shameen
P. J. Vasunia
L. E. Kavarana
E. F. Kavarana (Bombay)
VICTORIA HOTEL--Shameen, British Con-
cession
W. Farmer, proprietor
Harry Haynes, manager
Wat-sai-mau WASSIAMULL ASSOMULL, & Co., Silk Mer- chant. Commission Agent-Sai Hing St
A. Hemandass, manager
F
CANTON
* WATSON & CO., LIMITED, A. S., "The Can- ton Dispensary," Chemists and Drug- gists, Aerated Water Manufacturers, Wine, Spirit, and Cigar Merchants
Wat-sun-sz tai-yeuk-fong
G. C. Kitching, manager
A. W. Smith
J. S. Chisholm
盛興
Hing-sing
WENDT&Co., Merchants and Comn. Agents
F. A. Wendt (Hongkong)
W. Melchers, do.
G. E. Huijgen, signs per pro.
J. D. O. da Silva
Agencies
1019
Austrian Lloyd Steam Navigation Co. Equitable Life AssuranceSocietyofU.S. Java-China-Japan Lijn
Cheong On S.S. Co., (s.s. "San Cheong') Netherlands Lloyd, Batavia
Chee-sang
WILHELM LAVY & Co., Merchants
Fu #
WIRTH, HERMANN, Import and Export
Merchant Shameen
Agency
The Beneficial Fire Insurance Co.
Albert, Mrs. L., Shameen
Alf, Mrs. A.
Alongo, Mrs. L.
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Anderson, Mrs. J. N., Tung Shek Kok Anderson, Mrs. W. J. W., Fatshan
do.
Andersson, Mrs. E. C., Medical College Andersson, Miss E. C. Andonard, Mrs.
Azedo, Mrs., Shameen
Azevedo, Mrs. Braga, Shameen Azevedo, Mrs. J..F., Shameen Baudet, Mrs., Shameen Baudet, Miss, Shameen Beattie, Mrs., Fatei Bent, Mrs. H., Shameer Bergholz, Mrs., U. S. Consulate Bigler, Mrs. R., M.D., Honam Bloy, Mrs., Shameen Boggs, Mrs. J. J., Fatei Brimble, Mrs. A. G. Britton, Miss F., Tsang Sha Burkwall, Mrs., Fatei Butler, Miss
Cameron, Mrs. D. H., Shameen
Chellaram, Mrs. D.
Clarkson, Mrs. J.,
Shameen
Clayson, Mrs., Shameen
Comrie, Mrs. R. C. Cruz, Mrs. C.
Davenport, Mrs. E. C., Shameen Danenberg, Mrs. F., Shameen Demée, Mrs. A., Whampoa Dewstoe, Mrs., Shaochou
Dobson, Mrs.
Dolty, Miss E. L.
Dunham, Miss L. Dupuy, Mrs., Shameen. Eça Silva, Mrs. J. F. Edwards, Mrs. E., Shameen Ericsson, Miss, Honam Evans, Mrs., Shameen
Eversleigh, Mrs., Shameen. Fisher, Mrs. A. J.
Fulton, Mrs. A. A., Fatei, Saikwan Fulton, Miss M. D., Saikwan (absent) Gaff, Mrs. A., Fatshan
Giles, Mrs. A., Shameen
Giles, Mrs. L., British Consulate Gillespie, Mrs., Pak Hin Hok Graça, Mrs. J,
Graves, Mrs., Ng Sin Mun Greaves, Mrs. J Shameen Greene, Mrs., Shameen Griffith, Mrs. T. E., Shameen Grupe, Mrs. Magdalene Hayes, Mrs. W. R., Shameen Haynes, Mrs. H., Shameen Hellstrand, Mrs., Shameen Hogg, Mrs. A. V., Shameen Horrocks, Mrs., Shameen Huygen, Mrs. G., Shameen Jesus, Mrs. F. M., Shameen Johnston, Mrs. J. C., Shameen Jones, Miss, Fatei Kerr, Mrs., Fatei Kitching, Mrs. G. C. Kaoth, Madame B. Kollecker, Mrs., Fatei Lewis, Miss H.
Luz, Mrs. D. M., Shameen Marshall, Mrs. G. W. Martel, Mrs., Shameen McMinn, Miss, Ng Sin Mun Mills, Mrs. S. V., Shameen Myers, Miss K.
Naorojee, Mrs. B., Shameen Nelson, Mrs. C. A., Saikwan Niles, Miss M. W., Kuk Fau Noyes, Mrs., Fatei Noyes, Miss, Kuk-fau Noyes, Mrs. R. V.
Noyes, Mrs. H. V.
1020
Paget, Mrs. C. S.
Pfankuchen, Mrs., Whampoa Patell, Mrs. J. B., Shameen Proton, Mrs, J" Shameen Ratean, Mrs. O., Kumchuk Reau, Mrs., French Consulate Reber, Mrs. H., Shameen Reid, Mrs. C. H., Shameen Reid, Miss N. L. Remedios, Mrs. E. Remedios, Mrs. O. C. dos. Ribeiro, Mrs. S.
Richarme, Mrs. G., Shameen Roberts, Mrs. C.
CANTON-WHAMPOA
Rössler, Mrs. S., German Consulate Rule, Mrs. G. A. Sage, Mrs., Shameen Saito, Mrs., Shameen
Schmidt, Mrs. A. H. T., Shameen Schultz, Mrs. G., Shameen Segawa, Mrs. A.
Senna, Mrs. V. F., Shameen Shumaker, Mrs., Honam (absent) Simmons, Mrs. É. Z., Ng Sin Mun
Smith, Mrs. H. S.
Smith, Mrs. J. C. H. L. Spalinger, Mrs. Martha, Shameen Spore, Mrs. E. C., Honam Stanton, Mrs. E. A., Shameen Steger, Mrs. M.
Swan, Mrs., Canton Hospital Tavares, Mrs., Shameen Tope, Mrs. S. G., Tsangsha Tubbler, Mrs.
Walter, Mrs., Shameen
Ward, Miss É. B.
Wells, Miss
Whilden, Mrs. Lula F.
White, Miss C. J., Ng Sin Mun Wilcox, Miss Vela M.
Williams, Mrs. W. H., Shameen Wisner, Mrs., Fa-tei (absent) Wolf, Mrs. H. E., Shameen Wood, Mrs. F. S. Xavier, Mrs. E.
Zundel, Mrs. J., Shameen Zunmerlairg, Mrs., Fatei
WHAMPOA
埔黃 Whang-po
This village was formerly the seat of a large portion of the foreign trade with Canton, as foreign sailing vessels were not allowed to go farther up the Pearl River. The trade in sailing vessels has, however, dwindled to very small proportions, and Whampoa is now almost deserted. Occasionally steamers lighten their cargoes here to enable them to proceed up river to Canton. A branch of the Maritime Customs is stationed here, but no separate return is published. The large granite docks formerly belonging to the Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Company were sold to the Chinese Government and have since been used for the gunboat squadron. A Government Torpedo School has been established here. There was some talk a few years ago of a railway enterprise likely to revive this place, to the detriment of Hongkong transport trade. It was a Chinese project, but owing chiefly to lack of funds the work of construction seems unlikely to be commenced for the present.
The village, known as Pamboo Town, is a dirty and unattractive place without any feature of interest, but the scenery around is picturesque and pleasing. Two lofty pagodas on neighbouring eminences are conspicuous objects from the river. The first of these, called the Whampoa Pagoda, is built on an island rising abruptly from the river to a height of 100 feet. It was erected about the year 1598, and is very much out of repair. A good-sized tree grows from the brickwork at the summit. The other pagoda, called the First Bar Pagoda, is nearer to Canton, and occupies a hill which is considered the guardian hill of the province. It was built between the years 1821 and 1628 as a palladium to the waterway of the provincial capital.
The importance of Whampoa is now a thing of the past. The place will always, however, possess some interest for foreigners, since the earliest recollections of foreign commercial intercourse with China are associated with it, all foreign ships being in olden times compelled to anchor at Whampoa.
WHAMPOA CHINESE KOWLOON CUSTOMS
DIRECTORY
1021
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Asst. Tidesurveyor in charge-M.
Hellstrand
Tidewaiters-M. O'Neill, V. Allen, G.
Copley
DOCK YARD, IMPERIAL
Director H. E. Wei Han Sub-Director-Chan Chang Ling
FISH AND SUBMARINE TORPEDO DEPOT,
IMPERIAL
Director H, E. Wei IIan Sub-Director-W. E. Li
In charge of Torpedoes-Lieut. Sen Engineering Secretary-Chan Chang
Ling
MILITARY SCHOOL, IMPERIAL
Director Hwang Shih Lung
Proctor Suh Chuang
Secretary Shen Tsang
Accountant-Lüh Yung Sin
Librarian Hwang Ying Fei
Instructors in Ethics-Ho Ch'ib, Wu Shu
Nan, Hung Ching Chaou
Instructors in Literature-Leaou K'ung Heun, Hung Ching Nan, Leang Sze Kan
Instructor in German-Hwang Tao Min Instructor in French-Wang Shih Instructor in English-Yuen Che Seun Instructors in Science-Wang Li K'ang,
Fang Ch'ing Show, Tsai Seun
Instructors in History-Chaou I Nin Instructors in Geography--Fang Sin,
Leang Ch'eng Chang
NAVAL COLLEGE, IMPERIAL
Director H. E. Wei Han Sub-Director-H. E. Li
Professors Lai, Chan-pong, Y. K.
Wong, T. F. Woo, K. M. Wong Secretary-Lin Hsian-hai Superintendent--B. W. Woo
KOWLOON FRONTIER DISTRICT OF
THE CHINESE I. M. CUSTOMS
This is the inclusive name given to the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs stations adjacent to Hongkong and established in 1887 in accordance with the Additional Article to the Chefoo Agreement of 1896 for the purpose of recording the movement of opium and of collecting duty on the trade carried on by Chinese junks between Hongkong and Chinese ports. In 1899, when the New Territory was taken over by Hongkong, the Customs stations had to be removed from their former locations which had been brought within the British boundary, and the present stations are situated at Taishan, Lintin, Shamchün, Shatowkok, Shayuchung, and Samun (Tooniang), besides which there are a number of frontier patrol posts on the north shores of Deep and Mirs Bays and between the two bays. The net value of the trade of 1908 was Tls. 53,477,376 compared with Tls. 54,381,058 in 1907; Tls. 41,971,859 in 1906; Tls. 42,946,800 in 1950; Tls. 43,771,566 in 1904; Tls. 42,507,795 in 1903; Tls. 40,784,280 in 1902. The largest on record was in 1899, víz.: Tls. 56,532,226.
|
1022
CHINESE KOWLOON CUSTOMS
關新龍九
Kow-loon Sin-kwan
DIRECTORY
IMPERIAL MARITIME CUSTOMS, Hongkong
Address: York Buildings, Chater Road
Commissioner --A. H. Harris
Acting Deputy Commissioner-R. F.
C. Hedgeland
Assistants-J. Nolasco da Silva, C. A.
R. Cabral, A. R. de Broc Acting Assistant-Chiu Ho-ping Medical Officers-F. O. Stedman, G. D.
R. Black, O. Marriott Tidesurveyor-W. J. Hewett Acting Boat Officer-E. T. Young Assistant Examiners-H. A. Adamsen O. E. N. Samuelson, E. M. Lundberg Tidewaiters W. Murray, J. W. Adnams, F. Huber, C. de Bedoire, J. A. Karkatzky, W. Anderson, L. L. Lopes, C. H. J. Ross, G. E. Cross, T. Rees, J. Gires, É. M. E. Gallo, P. Ermiloff, W. G. States, J. E. Greenhalgh, J. P. B. Negaard, J. J. Egan, L. G. J. W. Schiitto, J. R. Tomlinson, H. Larsen, T. S. Egerton, W. J. Martin, J. T. Standen, A. Russell, J. A. Murphy, L. W. Luckins, S. G. Flinders, E. Runge, F. C. Hayes, R. A. Tayler, H. F. O. Dettmar, C. F. Burdett, F. J. Bloxsidge
Watchers-E. C. Jost, U. Burke-Close, S. Hancock, C. W. Norman, J. S. Watson, H. Cowburn, G. M. Taylor Revenue Cruiser Kaipan
Commander-H. S. Sweeting First Officer-W. D. Fraser Third do. -F. W. Charles Third do. -H. E. Carter
First Engineer-G. J. Harman
Do. Second do.
--J. Grant
F. B. E. Land Third do. -P. O. l'ickburn Revenue Cruiser Likin
Commander-R. O. Rutherfurd First Officer-W. G. Pitcairn Third do. -A. N. Biermann Third do. P. J. Tadd First Engineer-H. J. May Second do. -D. D. Thomson
-G. C. Furniss
Third do. Gunner-M. Long
Revenue Launches Kwantin
Officer-in-charge-T. Rees Launch Officer-W. J. Martin Kwanlui
Officer-in-charge-G. E. Cross Launch Officer-J. T. Standen Kwanfung
Officer-in-charge--W. Anderson Launch Officer-J. A. Murphy Kapsuitsai
Officer-in-charge--H. Larsen Chinese Clerks-Huang Tsew, Wong Iu-on, Leung Shi-nam, Chiu Shiu- ping, Chan Sui-ki, Fêng Chao-tang, Fan U Kai, Ip Chan Sui-ki, Sung Yik-sam, Lo Pak-ling, Wong Pak- hoi, Chan Tat Ting, Ên Fu, Foug Chi-po, Lau Ip-cheung, Feng Kuo- hsün, Tsoi Yam Shu, So Kai-hong, Lau Yuk Cheung, Fung Cheung, Leung Shi Wai, Lo Man-chung, Lam Kwok To. Kwok Yun-tong, Leung Im, Siu Kuk, Ho Chi-tang. Writers Ts'ao Chia-chi, Yu Shou, Wang Chien-lün, Ts'ao Pang-Shik Shupon-Ho Jung-hising, Lu l'ên- sheng, Ma Ch'ing, Ch'en Kuang-tao, Pan Hua-kno, Tseng Liem-, Wu Kuo-hsien, Lou Lien-hsien, Huang Yi-hui, Ch'en Jui-vao, Ch'en Jung- tuan, Tan Jih-tang, Chou Yung-fu, Chou Chung-t'ao, Chou Hsiao-shen, Shroffs-Tan Tou-yuan, Chou Yueh- chih, Li Ts'ai-ven, Chang Li-Kuang, Hu Lien-po, P'ao Yao-ch'ien.
LAPPA
Lappa, also called by the Chinese "Kung Pak," is an island directly opposite the Inner Harbour of Macao, the distance across being from 1 to 1 miles. One of the stations of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs is located here, and another on an islet called Malowchow. Lappa is under the jurisdiction of the Heungshan Magistrate. It possesses no features of interest beyond the fact that it is the principal Customs station in the neighbourhood of Macao. The net value of the trade passing through the Lappa Custom Houses in 1906 was Tls. 15,383,943, in 1907 Tls. 17,108,785, and in 1908 Tls. 18,167,073. The diversion of the course of trade in a variety of goods to and from the Luichow Prefecture operates against Lappa.. Much of the cargo which formerly came thence in junks to Macao and reported at Malowchow now avails itself of the more convenient and doubtless safer direct steamer carriage between the French port of Kwangchow-wan and Macao. There is also a tendency for a portion of the west coast produce to go via Kongmoon, whether destined for Hongkong or Canton, and the old junk trade of this region with the foreign colonies is gradually disappearing.
SAMSHUI 7KE Sâm-shui
The Treaty port of Samshui, opened in 1897 under the Burmah Convention-nearly forty years after Consul Harry Parkes East River Expedition-is situated near the junction of the West and North Rivers, in lat. 23 deg. 6 min. 30 sec. N., and long. 112 deg. 53 min. and 48 sec. E. The anchorage known as Hokow, at which foreigners reside, was formerly an ordinary Chinese fishing village, with boat building as its leading industry, and a flooded state in summer as its characteristic peculiarity, but it is fast becoming a busy town. According to the Convention, the town of Samshui and Kongkén (a dirty little village situated among the hills opposite Hokow) together constitute the port area. The formal opening took place on 4th June, 1897, since which date the net value of the trade of the port coming under the cognizance of the Foreign Customs has grown to nearly 4 million taels in 1907. junk traffic is simply enormous and the lekin station is the first in the province. The district city of Samshui itself is surrounded by an imposing wall built in the 6th year of Chia Ching of the Ming's (about A.D. 1560), the year after the place attained to the dignity of a magistrate's cure. Within the wall the houses are poor and the place is wanting in life- a condition in which it has remained throughout the present dynasty and in contrast (say the records) to its affluent state under the Mings. Outside the North Gate stands an imposing temple, temp Chia Ching (circa 1800). Between the town and the river is a fine nine-storied pagoda-probably of the Ming dynasty.
The
The business focus of the district is Sainam, a large well-built town of no great antiquity, three miles distant, on the creek leading to Fatshan. The inhabitants are not lacking in enterprise and there is a steam silk filature and a steam flour mill. Here an interesting occupation is the tinning of rice-birds, soles and game. The rice birds are caught in reed patches at night in a bag net, into which they are swept by a rope drawn over the reeds. The season is short, lasting only for six weeks in the Autumn.
Two sets of steamship lines converge here, from Canton and Hongkong respec- tively, and tourists in China can do many worse things than visit the West River, and should not fail to explore this port and its environs. The number of steamiers entered and cleared at the Custom House during 1908 totalled 3,264. Since 1st May, 1905, Samshui has been made a port of entry for foreign steamers going up the West River,
Numerous steam launches carrying passengers or towing passenger boats ply between Samshui and neighbouring cities on the West and North Rivers and on the creek leading to Fatshan and Canton. A railway line from Canton to Samahui via Fatshan was inaugurated on the 26th September, 1904, and five trains run daily each way between Canton and Samshui. The total number of pas- sengers carried during the 34th year of Kuang Hsu (1908-09) was 3,052,920, of which 890
1024
SAMSHUI
were foreigners. Goods traffic does not exist so far. In the Summer malignant diseases-fever, dengue, cholera, plague, etc.-may occasionally appear, as in every other place in China; but in the Winter the air is keen, bracing, and clear. The waterways and surrounding country are picturesque and the adjacent heights (from 200 to 400 ft.) worthy of ascent. Game, especially snipe, duck and geese, is to be found in fair quantities. The temperature varies from 38° F. to 100° F.-dry in winter, damp in summer-but generally very supportable.
The Chinese Imperial Post Office with a branch office at Samshui is connected by rail with Canton and with all important cities in the neighbourhood by steam launches or couriers, Mails for and from Hongkong are sent via Canton
There is no telegraph station at Samshui, but telegrams are forwarded via Sainam by messengers.
There are no consulates at Samshui. The consuls within whose jurisdiction Sam- shui is situated reside either in Hongkong on in Canton.
DIRECTORY
CONSULATE
★¶¶BŁA Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
BELGIUM
Consul--Residing in Hongkong
官事頜國英大
GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRO-HUNGARY
Consul-General-J. W. Jamieson
(residing in Canton)
ÉONA★ Tai I-tai-li Ling-sz-kun
ITALY
Consul-General-Comm. Z. Volpicelli
(residing in Hongkong)
Chinese Writer-Ch'ing Yao
關水三
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Assist.-in-charge-H. Picard Destelan Assistant-F. H. Maas
Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master--
L. Liedeke
Examiner G. Houlston
Tidewaiters-H. W. Beckell, N. Tra-
vers, H. H. d'A. Carneiro
司公和怡
E. Wo & Co., Merchs. and Commsn. Agents
匋渣
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Merchants
Man Fuk Lung, agent
Agencies
H'kong, Canton & Macao S.B. Co., Ld. Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. China Navigation Company Canton Insurance Office
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld
和公
KUNG-WO, Broker and Commission Agent
14
KWAN YIK, Broker and Commission Agent
局政郵湳大
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postal Commissioner-M. E. Wolf
(Canton)
Postal Clerk-Liu Kam Wo
Assistant-Chan Hing
局報電國中
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE-Sainam
Clerk-Yu Tsze Hing
昌與永
WING HING CHEONG, Broker and Com-
mission Agent
KONGMOON
PT Kong-moon
Kongmoon was added to the list of treaty ports on 7th March, 1904, in accordance with the stipulations of Article X. of the Mackay Treaty. A British Consulate was established, but withdrawn in 1905. Kongmoon is located some three miles up a creek on the West River, in the Kwangchow Prefecture of the Kwangtung Province in Lat. 22° 34′ 49′′ N. and Long. 113° 8′ 53′′ E. and is about 45 miles distant from Macao, 70 from Canton and 87 from Hongkong. The creek on which it is built connects the West River with the sea at Gaemoon and is a narrow and tortuous stream, the lower reaches of which, near the main river, are lined with rafts, while further up in the vicinity of the town it is crowded with native craft of every description, thus rendering navigation for steamers difficult at all times, but especially so when the current runs fast during the summer months. The steamer anchorage is in the West River at the mouth of the Creek, opposite the Imperial Maritime Customs, but the town is included in the port limits. The population of Kongmoon is about 55,000, and it has the appearance of being a more populous centre, as it extends for a considerable distance on both banks of the stream. Formerly it was a business centre of considerable importance, but various causes have arisen which appear to have lessened its commercial standing, and which have interfered adversely with the general prosperity of the port.
In this connection the Commissioner of Customs in his trade report for 1904 remarked: "The opinion generally prevails that the proximity of Kongmoon to Hongkong and Macao and its favourable situation as an outlet and distributing centre for the southern prefectures of the province augur well for its future prosperity and development. While this is, to some extent, true, it should be remembered that facts have arisen which have tended to diminish rather than increase its commercial importance. Formerly it enjoyed direct communication with Shanghai and Foochow and was the real outlet and distributing centre for the south-western district of the Delta and the Southern prefectures of the province. The development of Hongkong and the opening of Kiungehow and Pakhoi as treaty ports, however, have seriously interfered with the junk trade and general welfare of the port, and have, besides, opened up other trade routes to districts hitherto dependent upon Kongmoon for their supplies. At present there are no indications that the sanguine expectations, based upon imperfect knowledge, entertained concerning the overestimated commercial possibilities of the place will be speedily, if ever, realized." The large increase of trade in 1905 failed to alter his opinion, but the improvement in the trade of the port seems to be steady. The trade returns of 1908 show an increase of Tls 888,877 on the net value in 1907. There is daily steam communication with Hongkong, regular connection with Macao, and considerable numbers of vessels trading under the Inland Waters Regulations arrive and depart daily. There are also several large junks trading regularly to Hongkong, Macao, and the island of Hainan. A railway from Kungyik, running southwards to Sunning, a distance of just over 17 miles, has been con- structed under the supervision of native engineers, trained in America, and the line is being continued southward to Samgaphoi, on the coast. The line, however, stops short three miles from the sea, as to take the line right down would involve laying out a new town on the water front and dredging operations which they cannot at pre- sent afford; they intend devoting their available capital to constructing a line from the shore opposite at Kungyik to Kongmoon via Sunwei. The railways tap rich districts, and will undoutedly prove beneficial to the trade of Kongmoon. The Sun- ning Railway Company has obtained the concession to extend the line to Kouginoon, and intends to commence the construction soon, but matters have been delayed consider- ably owing to the objections raised by the Yueh-Han Railway Company to the Sun- ning Railway Company coming to the West River at Kongmoon, which they allege is within their concession, and work on the new line has not commenced yet. A Telegraph Office was opened on the 8th December, 1907, and telegraphic communication is now
possible with the Fatshan office.
The principal articles of export consist of prepared tobacco, joss-sticks, strawmats, palm-leaf fans, and fresh vegetables; and imports are largely represented by dried fruits, foreign piece goods and foreign sundries, including a variety of Japanese com- modities of a cheap nature. Large quantities of softwood poles are floated down in the form of rafts, which are dismantled here. These mostly come from beyond Wuchow and also from the North River. The yearly value of this branch of the trade is estimated
1026
KONGMOON-WUCHOW
*
at about $750,000. There are two silk filatures in the town which afford employment to about 300 women each: the total out-turn of silk amounts to about 100 catties per day. An interesting local industry is the dredging of large shells from which good quality of lime is made. The annual production of these shells is estimated at 200,000 piculs, worth about $40,000. Quite an important industry has sprung up in Kongmoon, namely, the preserving and canning of Chinese fruit for export abroad, where it is consumed by the numerous Chinese in America, Australia and the Straits Settlements.
The unique opportunities presented for transport by the unrivalled waterways of the Delta have been well availed of by native enterprise, and there is a large and lucrative passenger trade with Canton, Fatshan, Sancheong, Hongkong and Macao, etc. Large roomy native passenger boats towed by powerful launches are engaged in this trade.
The surrounding country is picturesque, fertile and highly cultivated, and the inhabit- ants are prosperous and industrious. Rice is, of course, the principal crop, but mulberry shoots are very extensively cultivated for sale in the silk producing centres, and large quantities of fresh vegetables are exported to supply the Hongkong market,
The net value of the port's trade in 1908 was Hk. Tls. 4,652,827 as compared with Tls. 3,763,950 in 1907.
CONSULATES,
GREAT BRITAIN
DIRECTORY
Consul J. W. Jamieson, residing at
Canton
ITALY
Consul General-Comm. Z. Volpicelli
(residing in Hongkong)
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Asst.-in-charge-J. W. Loureiro Assistants-F. Marti, J. E. Hartshorn Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-F.
J. Allshorn
Assistant Examiner J. H. Thatcher Tidewaiters--J. S. Chubb, F. Am- broise, H. Tjomsland, A. Channings, H. H. Scheithauer, A. H. Craig, A. Z. de Souza, M. J. Barreira, T. P. Stubbs, W. S. Turnbull
H. E. Wolf
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postal Commissioner
(Canton)
Postal clerk-Ho Chu Shek
WUCHOW
州梧 Wi-chau
Wuchow, opened to foreign trade on June 4th, 1897, by the Special Article of the Burmah Convention, is situated on the Sikiang or West River at its junction with the Fu or Kuei (Cassia) River. By the steamer routes at present authorised it is distant about 220 miles from Hongkong and Canton. Wuchow is the limit of navigation for ocean-going steamers; but, during eight months in the year, vessels drawing not more than 3 feet can reach Kueihsien (150 miles beyond Wuchow), and Nanning (360 miles from here) can be reached by boats drawing 2 ft., almost all the year round. The population of the city and suburbs is estimated at 50,000; it is slowly increa sing, more especially in the riverine suburbs which comprise the business quarter. The annual inundations caused by the rise in the river-there is an average difference of 60 feet between the winter and summer levels are a source of great inconveniebes to the inhabitants and at times bring about a total cessation of business. To shvate this, the principal steamship offices, the foreign Custom House and the native Customs and Lekin stations, together with numerous shops and hotels, are located ou pontoon (locally known as Pais) moored alongside the river bank. The situation of Wudor makes it the natural distributing centre for the trade between Kweichow, Eastern Yunnan, Kwangsi, and Hongkong and Canton. The hopes that were entertained its opening have not, it is true, been realised, but with the agricultural and in development of the province, Wuchow bids fair to become one of the principal trading marts in South China. The gross value of the trade coming under the cognisance of the Maritime Customs has steadily grown from four to nearly thirteen million Tacks, and the Revenue is about half a million Taels, while the Native Customs coutr junk trade worth fifteen million taels and collects nearly 170,000 taels duty. The
I
j
I
WUCHOW
1027
principal articles of export are timber, oils (aniseed, cassia, wood and tea), indigo, bides, and live stock. The coal, which should form one of Wuchow's largest exports, still lies buried in the surrounding hills. There is daily steam communication with Canton, the two steamers of the British West River Steamship Co. affording excellent passenger accommodation.
The round trip from Canton takes four days: the boat leaving Canton on Friday mornings remains over Sunday in Wuchow. The direct trade with Hongkong is now carried on by eight cargo steamers. During the last three years a large native passenger trade has sprung up between Wuchow and up-river towns: launches leave daily during the summer months for Konghau, Kuaiping and Kueihsien, and weekly four motor boats make regular, and five launches make irregular, trips to Nanning, averaging three trips a week. The floods in 1902 were the highest on record, the water in the river rising to 68. 3.′′ The lowest winter reading was 1.10 feet below zero in December 1906. In winter the only local industry worthy of mention is boat building; when the river falls the foreshore is lined with matsheds where native craft of all descriptions, from a huge salt junk to a diminutive sampan, are constructed. Wuchow itself offers few attractions to the tourist, but the river scenery on the way up, especially between the Shuiling and Takhing Gorges, where the stream winds in and out among the green hills to form a succession of apparent lakes, is extremely picturesque, and has not altogether unjustly been compared to the Rhine. Wuchow is connected by telegraph with Hongkong, Shanghai, etc. and the Imperial Chinese Post has established postal communication with the principal towns in Kwangsi.
和天
Teen-Woo
DIRECTORY
BANKER & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents-Kiu Fong Street; Shipping
Office: Banker's Pontoon
Geo. Banker
Pang Shui-ming, signs per pro.
Agency
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld.
CONSULATES
THA Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
BELGIUML
Consul-Residing in Hongkong
GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting-Consul-C. D. Smith
Constable-J. H. Inwood
官事領總利大義大
Tai I-tai-li Chung-ling-sz-kun
ITALY
Consul, Comm, Z. Volpicelli (resid-
ing in Hongkong)
Chinese Writer-Ch'ing Yao
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-J. A. van Aalst
Assistants-A. E. Kindblad, W. O.
Law, S. V. dos Remedios Medical Othcer-P. Rees
Act. T.-S. and Harbourmaster-H.Clive Examiner-E. V. H. Viez
Asst.
Examiners E. Watson, E. O'Hare, F. Heilman
Tidewaiters-C. B. Berglof, G. J. C. Kindt, A. Schmidt, G. Gosling, A Mitchell, J. D. F. Barbé
viên Y Cha-tin
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Merchants
Agencies
Butterfield & Swire
Deacon & Co., Canton
Hongkong, Canton and Macao S.B. Co. Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. China Navigation Company Canton Insurance Office
Hongkong Fire Insurance Company China Sugar Refinery Co., Limited West River British Steamship Co.
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Acting Postal Commissioner--H. E.
Wolf (Canton)
Postal Clerk-Kwok Shin-chun
Wat-kin
WATKINS, LIMITED, Druggists
Kwong Cheung-hing, agent
FARE Wat-sun-she Tai-yuek-fong WATSON&Co. Ld., A.S., Chemists and Drugs.
Ma Keng Tong, agent Sit Siu Chün, agent
NANNING
Nan-ning
The port of Nanning, declared open to foreign trade on the 1st January, 1907, is situated on the left bank of the Tso-Kiang, one of the branches of the West River, 363 miles above Wuchow and about 250 miles below Lungehow, the frontier port on the Tonkinese border. It lies in the centre of a wide fertile plain in a sharp bend of the river, which there describes nearly two-thirds of the arc of a circle. It is a fu city and is the seat of the Tso-Kiang Taotai and of the Provincial Commander-in-Chief. Below the walled city and adjacent to the lower suburbs is the site which has been set apart for a Settlement; it occupies the only spot near the city which is above high-water mark. The regulations do not allow the purchase of land on the Settlement site, but merely its lease for 30 years, which period may be extended on expiry for another 30 years. Foreigners desiring to lease land must apply through their Consul to the Customs Taotai.
The net value of the trade of the port has advanced from Hk. Tls. 1,544,000 in 1907 to Hk. Tis. 3,399,000 in 1908. The bulk of the carrying trade is now done by motor boats, of which there is already a small fleet plying regularly throughout the year between Wuchow and Nanning. The round trip can be made by motor boat from Wu- chow in five to six days, as againt the journey by junk which takes about twenty days on the upward trip only. The only Europeans residing there at present are missionaries and the Customs staff.
Nanning is, next to Wuchow, the most important port on the West River. It was opened to foreign trade in January, 1907, when a Customs-house was established there. The site selected for the foreign settlement covers a very extensive area and is situated where the old city formerly stood, about a mile distant from the present walled city. Whether the area set apart for international residence and trade is ever likely to be fully occupied it is perhaps early yet to say, but the fact that steam craft are quable for seven months in the year to ascend the river beyond Wuchow militates against any rapid development of a foreign settlement. The journey by boat from Wuchow to Nanning occupies about twenty days. Five good motor boats now ply regularly between Wuchow and Nanning, each making the round trip in six days. The only Europeans residing there at present are missionaries and the Customs staff.
The net value of the trade of the port for the year of 1908 was Tls. 3,399,000.
DIRECTORY
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commr.-T. D. Moorhead Assistant--E. H. Borowski
Medical Officer-H. Lechmere Clift Tidewaiter A. Johnson
FRENCH MISSION
ECOLE BERTHLET
Fr. Fauslies, superieur
Fr. Archangelus Fr. Onsime
MISSIONS ETRANGERES
Rev. Père Labully
Rev. Père Barrière
Rev. Père Albouy
Rev. Père Besnier
官事領總利大義大
Tai-I-tai-li Cheung-ling-sz-kún
ITALIAN CONSULATE
Consul-General-Comm. Z. Volpicelli
(residing in Hongkong)
Chinese Writer-Ching-yao
MISSION DU KOUANG-SI
Right Rev. J. M. Lavest, Nanning
Rev. I. Renault, Kweilin Rev. F Poulat, Kweishen Rev. C. L. Héraud, Kouipin Rev. V. F. Thomas, Si-tcheng-fou Rev. C. Pélamourgues, Yun-fou Rev. J. M. Epalle, Kiuchow Rev. H. J. Coste, Tai-ping
Rev. A. Dalle, Lung-nü
Rev. V. Sifferlen, Sy-lin
Rev. H. Costenoble, Lungchow
Rev. L. Crocq, Pin-nam
Rev. Auguin, Yow-lin
Rev. Ducœur Siao-jen
Rev. Barrés, Louk-moui
Rev. Tessier, Wuchow
Rev. Maurice, Chang-se (Hoiwan)
Rev. Humbert, Lo-yung
Rev. Bibollet, Posé
Rev. Séosse, Kweishien Rev. Courant, Liukia-tow Rev. Berthand do.
3 Sisters at Nanning and 5at Lungchow
SOEURS DE ST. PAUL DE CHARTRES
Rev. Sœur Agnès Rev. Soeur Renéé Rev. Soeur Ambroise
KOUANG-TCHEOU-WAN
Kwang-chau-wan
The bay of Kwangchau (or according to the French official spelling, Kouang-tcheou- wan) situated in the province of Kwang tung, was ceded on lease with the surrounding territories by a Convention between France and China, and occupied by the French on the 22nd of April, 1898. It is comprised between the 20 deg. 45 min. and the 21 deg. 17 min. north latitude, and the 107 deg. 55 min. and 108 deg. 16 min. east longitude to a distance more or less of 230 miles of Hongkong, W.S.W. The two islands of Nao-tcheou and Tang-hai placed at the entrance of the bay make an excellent closed port into which entrance is by two narrow passages. The port measures about 15 miles long, and for about half of its length it is three or four miles in breadth. The depth of anchorage of 20 mètres extends over a length of more than 10 miles and borders on the extremity of the junk port of Tchekam, an important commercial centre in constant communication with Macao, Hongkong, Hainan and Pakhoi. The neighbouring districts are well cultivated and it is believed mineral beds will be found. The new French territory is only separated from the valley of the West River by chains of hills. Following the Convention of delimitation signed on the 16th of November, 1899, between Marshal Sou and Admiral Courrejolles, the territory of Kouang-tcheou-wan was placed under the authority of the Governor-General of Indo-China. It was divided into three circumscriptions. The superior administration of the territory is directed by a first class administrator in the civil service of Indo-China, assisted by three deputy administrators, each taking charge of one circumscription, residing at Tehe-kam, Po-teou and Nao Tcheou. Each circumscription is divided into districts administered by the native authorities (Kong-hü). The chief place of the territory is the new town of Ma Tché, which is at the entrance of the interior port. The village of Fort Bayard, on the right bank of the river Ma Tché, contains important military installations, and on the left bank is the commercial port, with the establishments of the civil administration and the special offices.
Kouang-tcheou-wan is a free port in which all commercial operations can be carried on without paying any duty. A regular bi-monthly line of steamers joins Kouang-tcheou- wan to Haiphong and Hongkong, calling at Pakhoi and Hoihow. Eight steamers of French-Chinese and German companies connect Kouang-tcheou-wan with Hongkong, and another steamer makes the service between Kouang-tcheou-wan, Macao and Canton. Commerce has already largely extended since the steamers entered this port in com- munication with the exterior ports, and it is expected to develop considerably. The Chinese population of the territory is about 189,000, and the superficial area is 84,244 hectares, containing 1.233 villages.
DIRECTORY
ADMINISTRATION SUPÉRIEURE Aministrateur en Chef-Paul Dufrénil Impocteur des services clvils (Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur) Administrateur Adjoint-Henri Lachand Administrateur, Chef de la 1ère Circon
soription, Tchékam
Garde Principal, Commissaire de Police,
Matché Campi
BUREAUX
Commis du Territoire-Tandil
Do.
-Candil
lere, Circonscription (Tché Kam)
Administrateur--Caire
Commis-Normand
2e. Circonscription (Po-Tao) Admiteur.-Duchassaing de Fontbressin
3e. Circonscription (Ile de Nao-Tcheou) Administrateur-Belin
JUSTICE
Juge de Paix à Compétence étendue-
Lachand
Greffier Notaire Receveur de l'Euregistre-
ment-G. Tandil Huissier-Brard
Préposé-Payeur--Marotte
TRÉSOR
GARDE INDIGÈNE
Inspecteurs-Lambert, Malberti
1030
KOUANG-TCHEOU-WAN-PAK-HOI
Gardes Principaux-Vinay, Leonardou- Brossard, Duffort, Meslier, Hospital, Lebourdonnec, Leonardon, Brossard
SERVICE DE SANTÉ
HOPITAL-Dr. Mathés, Médecin Major de lere. classe des Troupes Coloniales à Fort-Bayard
POSTES ET TÉLÉGRAPHES
Receveur-Lestang
MISSION CATHOLIQUE
Aumonier des Troupes M.F. Laurent, Fort
Bayard
GENDARMERIE
Brigadier, de Commissarie de Police-
Brard, Fort-Bayard Gendarme-Réviere, Fort Bayard
Missionnaires
Le Talliandier, Ko-chow Baldit,
do.
Zimmermann, Loui-chow
do.
Cellard,
A. Genty, Shek-shing
AGRICULTURE
Chef du Service-Decker
TRAVAUX PUBLICS
Chef du Service-Lepagney
MARINE CHALOUPE GOURLAONEN
Flotille-Balisoni
COMMISSARIAT DE POLICE Commissaire de Police-Meslier
COMMERÇANTS
Chaix
Marty
Charles et Cie
Union Commerciale Indo-Chinoise
Champéstéve
Piry
Rougeau
Baudet
COLONS
ΡΑΚΗΟΙ
Pak-hoi
Pakhoi is one of the ports opened to foreign trade by the Chefoo Convention in 1876. It is situated on the Gulf of Tonkin in long. E. Greenwich 109 deg. 7 min. (106° 47′ of Paris), and lat. N, 21 deg. 29 min. The British Consul hoisted his flag on the 1st May, 1877, a French Consulate was established in December, 1887, and the foreigners were well received by the natives and continue to be respected even to the present day. Pakhoi is the port for the important cities of Limehow and Chinchow, from whence considerable quantities of foreign piece goods, etc., were formerly distributed over the country lying between the West River and the seaboard, but now that the West River has been opened to steam navigation a part of the trade has been diverted to that route. The trade of Pakhoi is a declining one. Its net value in 1908 was Tls. 3,037,001. Since 1888 the prosperity of the port has been steadily declining owing to the diversion of trade to Haiphong which has been rendered possible by the pacies tion of the surrounding territory, while the trade of Kwangsi has been diverted to the recently opened ports on the West River. The Chinese town is situated on a small peninsula, and faces nearly due north.
It stands at the foot of bluff nearly forty feet high, which deprives it of the south-west breeze, in summer, while in winter it is exposed to the full force of the north-east monson which very often blows so hard for several days that it materially interferes with the loading and discharging of steamers in the harbour. The bluff, or the plain above the town, is level for miles, which makes riding both on bicycle and on horse-back a decided pleasure. The foreigners almost exclusively live on the bluff, which in former year was only dotted by a few European buildings, but has recently been ornamented with several new structures. From the bluff an extensive partly-cultivated plain develo over which some sport is obtainable-snipe, plover, quail, and pigeons being found in large numbers, but duck and other water-fowl are not numerous. considered to be very salubrious. The estimated population of the port is 20,0 No port in China is more easily approached and entered than that of Pakhoi. The landmarks are conspicuous and unmistakeable. The channel is wide and deep and has no hidden danger to be avoided. The anchorage is a mile and a half from the
2
The climate
I
PAKHOI
1031
Custom House. There is good landing at high water, but at ebb tide only for small boats. The construction of a railway by a French Company from Pakhoi to Nanning was authorised a few years ago, but the work on the project has not yet been commenced. More recently the leading Chinese residents of Limchowfu, the chief city in the Pakhoi district, have formulated an ambitious scheme of railway construction spreading out to Western Kwangtung and Kwangsi, with lines to Kweichow and Yunnan, but the realisation of this project is probably as distant as the other. A free school is now firmly established by the French Government to teach the French language to the Chinese and others. A French Post Office and the German Consulate are the latest additions to the foreign institutions at Pakhoi. 1906 a police force was established by order of the provincial government of Canton and the local merchants established a branch office of the Canton Chamber of Commerce.
ln
DIRECTORY
CONSULATES
**AD Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
BELGIUM
Consul-Residing in Hongkong
*** Tai-fat-kwok Ling-sz Fn
FRANCE
also
PORTUGAL, Consular Agency
Vice-Consul for Pakhoi and Tunghing
J. E. Saussine
Medical Officer-Dr. P. J. L. Pouthiou-
Lavielle
Interpreter-Dong
ÉB
GERMANY
Tallat-kwok-Ling-sz-kuan
Consul-Dr. Merklinghaus(Residing-
at Hoihow)
Acting Consul- Th. Metzelthin
Secretary-A. B. Jarzembowski
Chinese Sec.-Chütao
宮事領國英大
Tai-ying-ku ok-Lingsz-kuau
GREAT BRITAIN
and
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
also
UNITED STATES, Consular Agency
Act. Consul-G. W. Pearson (Hoihow) Asst. in charge W. R. Brown
ITALY
Consul--Comm. Z. Volpicelli (residing
in Hongkong) Chinese Writer-Ching Yao
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissioner-J. Acheson Assistants-E. G. Lebas, P. G. S.
Barentzen
Medl.Offir--P. J. L. Pouthiou-Lavielle
Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master--
G. A. Forsaith
Examiner-F. McLavy
Tidewaiters R. Whitmore, H. M.
Andersson, D. Willis
JEESEN & Co.
成捷
Agents-Ching Tye & Co.
MARTY, A. R., Merchant and General
Commission Agent
W. H. Chiong, agent
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
堂主天
MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES DE PARIS
Rev. Père Kammerer, Pakhoi
Rev. Père Mirambeau, Weichao Is.
Rev. Pere Marqué, Weichao Island
Rev. Pere Penicand, Kiungchow
Rev. Père Baldit,
Rev. Père Le Taillandier, do.
do.
Rev. Père Cellard, Lei-tchéou
Rev. Père C. Zimmermann, do.
Rev. Père Laurent, Kouang-tchéou-wan.
Rev. Père Grandpierre, Toung-hing
Rev. Père Richard, Tchuck-san Rev. Pére Rossillon, Tsap Ly Rev. Pére Genty, Shek Cheng
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postal Commissr.-H. E. Wolf (Canton) Asst. Postal Offir.-J. M. E. S. de Senna Inland Offices-Lim Chow, Yamchow, Watlam, Onpo, Shiutung, Popak, Shekshing, Fachow, Suiki, Lingshan, Wuli, Peiliu, Tung Hing, Fongshing, Shunfau, Lukuk, Shekkong, Wookah, Nalai, Fak Mong, Siokong, Choung Mong, Wongping, Sheung lok, Lokchun, Sheungwai, Wenshui Saicheong, Namhong, Shunhan, Kinkong
1032
POST OFFICE, FRENCH
Postmaster-Laostau
Sum-bo
PAKHOI HOIHOW
SCHOMBURG& Co., A., Mhts. and Comn. Agts.
Aug. Schomburg (Bremen) L. Jüdell (absent)
W. Krone
A. Otto
H. Wintruff Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd
Norddeutscher Lloyd Orient Line Douglas Steamship Co., Limited North China Insce. Co., Limited Canton Insurance Co., Limited Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges.,in Berlin
Badische Schiffahrts Assecuranz Ges Badische Rück und Mitvers. Ges. Prussian National Vers. Ges. South British Insce. Co., New Zealand Deutscher Lloyd Transp. Vers. Act. Ges London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Asiatic Petroleum Co. Limited China Navigation Co. Limited
SCHOOL OF FRENCH LANGUAGE
A. Gérand, director
L. Gérand, professor
士機刺
SEQUEIRA & Co., Merchants and General
Commission Agents
Chun Cho Fun, agent
HOIHOW (IN HAINAN)
Kiung-chau
Hoi-hau
Hoihow is the seaport of the city of Kiung-chow (the seat of government in the island of Hainan, and distant from its port about three and a-half miles) which was opened to foreign trade on the 1st April, 1876, but 18 years passed before there were any signs of foreign commerce. The position of the port, though geographically favourable, is topographically unsuitable for the development of any extensive com- mercial transactions, vessels being compelled to anchor some two miles from the entrance of the creek or branch of the main river upon which Hoihow is situated. The tides are extremely irregular, and the anchorage is liable to the visitation of very severe typhoons, being moreover entirely unprotected from the north. The width of the Hainan Straits, between Hoihow and the mainland-the Lien-chau peninsula is about twelve miles. As regards health Hoihow compares favourably with other parts of Hainan. The port is badly supplied with water.
The approaches to the shore are extremely shallow, so that loading and unloading can only be carried on at certain states of the tide. Despite this disadvantage however, the advent of foreign steamers has given a considerable impulse to trade. The town itself contains about 30,000 souls, and is governed by a Tsan-fu, or Lieutenant-Colonel; the population of Kiungchow being 50,000. The native mercan- tile population, though respectable, is by no means rich. No foreign settlement has as yet been formed, and with the exception of the Roman Catholic Orphanage, erected in 1895, the American Presbyterian Mission Hospital and doctor's residence, and the Customs Indoor Staff, the French Post Office and the French School for Chinese, the houses occupied by the foreign residents are Chinese converted into European habitations by alterations and improvements.
H.B.M. Consulate obtained a site after fourteen years' negotations, and a consulate building was in 1899 erected to the south-west of the Hospital; towards the end of 1897 afpiece of land was granted, and a French Consulate has been built on the Northern side of the river and facing Hoihow town. Since the beginning of 1899 a free school has been opened by the French Government for teaching the French language to the Chinese, and an officer from the Tonkin Medical Staff was detailed to this port for the purpose of giving the natives and others free attendance and medicine. In 1903 a German Consulate was created. The foreign residents at present number about sixty-five. The net value of the trade of the port in 1908 was Tls. 7,129,298, against Tls. 6,319,276, in 1907. A large export trade in pigs, poultry, eggs, bullocks and provisions is carried on with Hong- kong. There has been some talk among the natives of opening mines, constructing railways, and bringing out timber from the virgin forests of the interior. While all this may not be realised on any scale for some years to come, it has been noticed that foreigners are beginning to explore the island, and the Assistant Commissioner of Customs opines that the searchlight of modern civilisation will reveal much that is
HOIHOW
1033
of value to science as well as to commerce. "Perhaps," he adds, "when this is accomplished it will be seen that this 'Island of Palms' is not the least rich nor the least fertile of China's possessions." The island of Hainan is described as a terra incognita to the world.
The postal service was at first conducted at the British Consulate only; when the Chinese Imperial Post was created a branch of that service was also established at this port. In the beginning of 1900 a French Post Office was added; the public is therefore well provided for in that respect. Telegraphic communication with the other ports of the world is established through the line under Chinese administration, but the service is most wretchedly conducted, the line being more often interrupted than not. Wireless telegraphy was inaugurated in April 1908, to operate across the Hainan Strait at Hoihow and Suwen, immediately opposite on the mainland. A harbour light, as well as one at Lamko (western entrance of the Hainan Straits), were opened in 1894; also one at Cape Cami in 1895. The approach to the harbour badly needs dredging.
CONSULATES-
DIRECTORY
1BX Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
BELGIUM
Consul-Residing at Hongkong
FRANCE
Vice-Consul-A. Hauchecorne
Medical Officer-Dr. Ch. Maguna Postmaster-Mougeot
Director, French School-Laborie
GERMANY
Consul-Dr. Merklinghaus (residing
in Pakhoi)
Actg, for the Consul-Th. Metzelthin
GREAT BRITAIN (Kiungchow)
also in charge of
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY, and UNITED STATES
INTERESTS
Acting Consul-G. W. Pearson
Constable and Postal Agent-W.
F. Canning
官事領總利大義大
Tai I-tai-li Chung-ling-sz-kun
ITALY
Consul-Comm.Z.Volpicelli(residing
in Hongkong)
Chinese Writer-Ching-yao
NORWAY
Vice-Consul-Albert Otto
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Indoor
Acting Commissioner-A. W. Cross Assistants-H. M. W. Grundmann, L.
R. Rocher
Medical Officer-Dr. Ch. Magunna
Outdoor
Tidesurveyor and Harbour Master-
F. Benson
Acting Boat Officer-T. H. Smith Examiners-J. G. Jensen, J. Wacker Tidewaiters-C. Reinhardt, E. Cam- miade, W. Moore, J. E. Morgan, A. M. C. Koch, A. J. Cox, R. R. Cuth- bert, G. Copley
Lights
Hoihow Harbour Light-J. A. D.
Stelting
Lamko Light R. Stephen
Cape Cami Light-W. Neil
Relieving Lightkeeper R. A. Schmel-
ing
成捷 Jit-Sing
JEBSEN & Co., Merchants
J. Jebsen (Hamburg)
H. Jessen (Hamburg)
H. J. Kihn
Agencies
Jebsen Line of Steamers
London and Lancashire Fire Ince. Co.
地孖 Ma.ti
MARTY, A. R., Mercht., Com. and Ship. Agt.
A. R. Marty (Hongkong)
C. Berthelot, signs per pro.
Agencies
Chino-Siam Steam Navigation Co.,Ld.
Compagnie de Navigation Tonkinoise Indo China Steam Navigation Coy. Nippon Yusen Kaisha
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions see end of
China Directory
Tien-tsu-tong
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rev. P. Pénicaud (Kiung Chow)
1034
POST OFFICE, FRENCHI
Receveur-M. Subira
Planton-Li-coeng-Ten
HOIHOW-LUNGCHOW
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postmaster A. W. Cross
寶森 Sum-bo
SCHOMBURG & Co., A., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents
Aug. Schomburg (Bremen) L. Judell (Biebrich)
Albert Otto
W. Krone
H. Wintruff
Agencies
Nanshan Steamship Company Norddeutscher Lloyd Orient Line China Navigation Co., Ld. North China Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Limited Deutsche Transport Versicherungstes, Badische Schifffahrts Assec. Ges. Prussian National Insurance Co. South British Insce. Co., N. Zealand Royal Exchange Assce. Corporation
LUNGCHOW
Lung-chow
This city is situated at the junction of the Sung-chi and Kao-ping rivers in lat. 22 deg. 21 min. N., and long. 106 deg. 45 min. E., near the south-western border of the province of Kwangsi, and was selected as the seat of the frontier trade of that province with Tonkin. The continuation of the two above-named rivers is known as Tso-chiang, or left branch of the West River, and it enters the main stream some 30 miles above Nan- ning. The town is prettily placed in a circular valley surrounded by hills, and has a new wall completed in1887. The population is estimated to number about 22,000. Lung chow, from a military point of view, is considered by the Chinese to be a place of importance. Considerable bodies of troops are stationed here, and the head-quarters of the Provincial Coromander-in-Chief are established between it and the Tonkin frontier. It was opened to the Franco-Annamese trade on the 1st June, 1889, but so far the little trade existing has been of a very petty description, and will continue so until the Haiphong-Hanoi-Langson railway, which after twelve years' assiduous work was completed early in 1902, is extended to Lungehow; for the present, this extension is abandoned. Telegraphic communication exists with Canton and other places down the West River, with Mêngtza in Yunnan, vid Po-sé, and with places in Toukin. The Imperial Post Office sends daily couriers to Langson in Tonkin and couriers every second day to Nanning with connections to Canton and Pakhoi. An establishment of the Imperial Maritime Customs is maintained here. The net value of the trade coming under the cognisance of the Foreign Customs for 1908 was Tls. 232,452.
DIRECTORY
ASILE DE LA ST. ENFANCE
Lungchow-Sisters Martha, Suzanne,
Louise
Nanning-Strs. Agues, Réné, Ambroise
CONSULATES-AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
H. B. M's Consular Officer in charge |
of Austro-Hungarian interests
官事領國比大
Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
BELGIUM
Consul-Residing at Hongkong
FRANCE
署事領國法大
Consular Agent-Dr. F. Péloži.
官事領總利大義大
Tai-I-tai-li Chung-ling-ze-kun
ITALY
Consul-Comm. Z. Volpicelli (residing
in Hongkong)
Chinese Writer-Ching-yao
## Lung-chow-hein-kaan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Actg. Commsnr.-K.H. von Lindholm Third Assistant-H. A. Gary
LUNGCHOW-MENGTSZ
1035-
Tidewaiter-F. Fontaine
Clerk-Lo Tsak-kwan
Medical Officer-Dr. F. Pélofi
IMPERIAL COMMISSIONER OF THE FRONTIER
OF
KWAN-SI-
I-Taotai
and
General
Teehuang Van Koan
Secretaries-Yang, Chêng
MISSION DU KOUANG-SI
Rev. H. Costenoble, Lungchow
Rev. P. H. Coste, Kweiping
Rev. Crocq, Taiping
Rev. Berthand, Pingnan
局總政郵州龍淸大
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
District Postmaster-K. H. von Lind-
holm (ex officio)
Postal Clerks-Sung Sik, Hsieh Chiaén,
Lin Han
Postal Agenices: Shnikow, Siatung, Pingsiang, Ningming, Taiping, Hai- yuan, Shangszè, Kuan tsien-yai
MENGTSZ
自蒙 Mung-tsz
The
This is a district city in south-east Yunnan, and together with Man-hao, a village on the left bank of the Red River, was opened to trade by the Additional Convention to the French Treaty of Tientsin of the 25th April, 1886, signed at Peking on the 26th June, 1887. The town is two days' journey from Man-hao and about six days' from the frontier of Tonkin at Laokay, and beautifully situated, being built on a cultivated plateau twenty miles long by about twelve miles in breadth, encircled by picturesque mountains, and is 4,280 feet above the level of the sea. It has a population of about 3,500 persons, but was a place of much more importance before the Mahommedan rebellion, as the numerous well-built temples, many of them now in ruins, still testify. It is, however, a considerable commercial emporium even now, and is becoming an important centre for the distribution of foreign goods imported via Tonkin. French Consul hoisted his flag at Mengtsz on the 30th April, 1889, and the Customs station was opened in the following August. The value of the trade coming under the cognisance of the Foreign Customs for 1907 was Tls. 12,860,893; in 1906 it was Tis. 10,825,000; TIs. 9,593,000 in 1905, and Tls. 10,747,000 in 1904. The Chinese merchants avail themselves largely of the advantages offered by the transit pass system. The value of goods sent into the interior under transit passes during the year 1907 was Ts. 3,324,449; in 1906 it amounted to Tls.3,761,000. The climate of Mêngtsz is temperate and salubrious. Plague has been absent from Mèngtsz since 1899. During the winter good sport is obtained, snipe and wild fowl being abundant in the plains, and some pheasants and partridges in the hilly districts, but the presence of a large number of sportsmen of all kinds is making all game scarce. A new French Consulate was finished in 1893, new dwelling-houses for members of the Customs service in 1894, and a new Custom-house in the spring of 1895. All these buildings are outside the East gate of the city. On the 22nd June, 1899, a riot occurred, in the course of which the Custom-house and French Consulate
were looted. The Compagnie Lyonnaise Indo-Chinoise in 1899 opened a branch to Mengtsz. Others have followed in their footsteps and four large commercial houses in Indo-China are now represented. A railway from Laokay to Yunnanfu via Mengtsz is under construction. by a French Company, which had a capital of 4,000,000 francs for this purpose, but the ultimate cost of the line, which will have a length of 470 kilometres, will probably be at least a hundred millions. The section Laokay-Mongtsz was opened to traffic on the 17th April, 1900. At the end of 1909 more than 400 kilometres of rails had been laid down, and it is expected that the whole line will be completed and opened to traffic in March, 1910. Mengtsz is now only 12 hours by rail from the Tonkin border and 22 hours from the coast. The British Consul has pointed out that not least of the benefits which the line should confer would be the provision of sanatoria for Indo-China, even, maybe, for Singapore, Bangkok and Hongkong. If for twenty years, he says, the Chinese peasant could be checked in his ravages-there has been ruthless dextraction of timber-the lake region of Yunnan would become a terrestrial paradise. Several houses for the accommodation of the Railway Mission have been built at Méngtsz since 1900, and as a sequel to the immigration, rents, wages, and the cost of living for natives and foreigners alike have risen greatly. During the last four years the Chinese Post Office has pushed its way into the interior till now the south- Past of Yunnan is covered with a network of lines and nearly every town has its establishment.
1036
BLETON, A.
Baldauff
Agency
Standard Oil Co. of New York
CONSULAT DE FRANCE
Consul-L. Flayelle Chancelier-Anziani Interpreter E. Bradier
MENGTSZ
DIRECTORY
Médecin du Consulat Dr. Talbot Receveur des Postes-J. Rambaud Directeur de l'Ecole Franco-Chinoise-
Georges Détrie
Commandant de la Brigade de Gen-
darmerie-S. J. Robert
CERCLE DE MENGTSZ
President-Denain
Vice President-Danais
Secretary-Cheun
COMPAGNIE FRANCAISE DES CHEMINS DE
FER DE L'INDO-CHINE ET DU YUNNAN
Agent Principal-Langrone
Adjoint à l'agent Principal--Danais Interpréte-Jonnery
B
Meng-tsz-kuan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Commissioner-P. J. Grevedon Assistants-A. E. Blanco, S. F. Denby, R. D. Mansfield, R. M. Myers, C. M. R. A. de Jaurias Medical Officer-Dr. Talbot Examiners-T. Loureiro, G. E. Don Assistant Examiner-D. Duchamp. Tidewaiters R. Raiteri, H. M. H. Moreau, A. K. Tellefsen, F. V. Murphy
HOTEL SELCE
Dalban, manager
HOSPITAL
Dr. Talbot
ITALIAN CONSULATE
Consul de Rossi
Chinese Secretary--Cha Lung A
MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES DE PARIS, Yunnan
Mission
Vicaire Apostolique
Gorotzarzu
Charles de
Provicaires-E. E. Maire, F. Duclour Missionnaires-M. Oster, H. Maire, F. Vial, H. Tapponnier, H. Badie, C. Leparoux, D. Piton C. Bailly, A. Kircher, P. Duffau, F. Ringenbach, J. M. Le Garrec, J. Rossillon, A Salvat, A. Liétard, J. Souvris, A. Fortin, Mérigot, Mongelaz, Durieu, J. Guyomard, J. Guilband, J. I Savin, F. Degenève, F. Bonyault, A. Deschamps
PASQUIER & Co., J., Transport Agency, Import and Export, Mengtsz (Yunnanfu)
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postmaster P. J. Grevedon Postal Officers- N. B. Doocha (Meng- tsz), P. Filippini (Yannanfu), Ting Ywan-Sun
SERVICE DU CONTRÔLE DU CHEMIN DE FER
Ingénieur en chef --A. Denain Jaouenne, conducteur
Porçet,
do.
Raynae,
do.
SOCIETE DE CONSTRUCTION DE CHEMINS DE FER INDO CHINOIs (Ligne de Lao Kay à Yunnansen) Siège Social à Paris, 6 Boulevard de la Madeleine; Adresse télégraphique: Chemindo, Paris, Haiphong, Hanoi, Lao-kay, Mengtze
Dir, des Travaux-Bodin Ingénieur-Vatin Comptabilité Dumas
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE; Adminis
tration Yun-kwei Provinces
Director-Lin Hsiao Tso (Yunnanfu) Engineer Superintendent-E. Mengel
(Yunnanfu)
Clerk in Charge-Bang Yok You
(Yunnanfu) Manager-Chi Kai Sien
An-Heing
UNION COMMERCIALE INDO-CHINOISE
Mengtsz Agency
Felix Faure, agent
HOKOW
Hokow was opened to foreign trade by the Supplementary Convention between China and France of 20th June, 1895. A French vice-consulate was established in August, 1896, which is subordinate to the Mengtsz Consulate, and an office of the Customs under the control of the Mengtsz Customs was opened at Hokow on 1st July, 1897. Hokow is picturesquely situated on the left bank of the Red River, at its junction with the Nanhsi River, and is immediately opposite Laokay, an important garrison town in Tonkin. An iron railway bridge across the Nanhsi River, completed in 1902, connects Laokay and Hokow. The village has some 4,000 inhabitants who live in bamboo houses and huts with thatched roofs. Hokow is about 420 li from Mengtsz by land. The value of the trade is not separately stated in the Mengtsz Customs reports.
Hokow is the terminal station of the Yunnan Railway, now under construction
CHARRIERE COMPANY
C. Pelissier, signs per pro.
E. Racine
DIRECTORY
Hokow-fên-kwan
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Branch Office of Mengtsz Customs
Assistant-W. R. Myers Examiner T. Louriero Tidew'tr R. Raiteri Postal Clerk-Chan Sik Yan
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
(Branch Office of Mengtsz Post Office)
Postal Clerk-Chan Sik Tan
SOCIETE DE CONSTRUCTION DES CHEMINS
DE FER INDO-CHINOIS (1st Division) Ingenieur en Chef A. Dufour Ingr. Chef 1 ière Section-A. Bodin
TELEGRAPHS, IMPERIAL CHINESE Manager-Li Yu-ch'in
VICE-CONSULAT DE FRANCE
Gérant du Vice Consulat-Gérant Ch.
Dupont
VICE-CONSULAT D'ITALIE
Agent Consulaire-Ch. Dupont
F
TENGYUEH (MOMEIN)
Teng-yueh
It is a
The trade mart Tengyuel-situated near the south-western frontier of Yunnan, in lat. 34 deg. 45 min. N., and long. 93 deg. 30 min. E. was opened to Foreign trade under the Burmah Agreement of 1897 modifying the Convention of 1894 relative to Burmalı and Thibet, and the Imperial Custom-house was opened on the 8th May, 1902. sub-prefectural walled town built in a rice valley and watered by the Tieh Shui river, A small tributary of the Tai Ping which flows into the Irrawaddy a few miles above Bhame, which latter place has been the principal emporium of Chinese trade in Upper Burmah for many years past. The distance from Tengyueh to Bhamo by road is some 140 miles, and little more than half that distance as the crow flies. There are two recognised trade routes known as the "old" and "new" roads--the former via Nam- young and Manwyne (where Margary was murdered), and the latter via Kulikha and Man-hsien. The new road ends at Man-hsien, from whence the journey to Tengyueh is made over the old tracks. Pack animals and porters constitute the only form of transport, and the time occupied on the trip is usually about eight days. Pack animals
"
1038
C4
TENGYUEH-SZEMAO
at a standstill, which means that, contrary to expectations, the construction of the new" road, which is passable all the year round, has not resulted in any increase of summer trade, the cessation of business during this period being due more to un- favourable climatic conditions than the inferior communications. From Tengyueh to Yunnanfu the road is divided into 24 stages for caravans and 12 for Imperial Postal couriers. It crosses a succession of mountain ranges varying from 4,000 to 10,000 feet in height, besides being intersected by numerous rivers, including the Sweili and the Mekong, which would appear to render any railway project too speculative and too costly to be commercially practicable. Referring to the question of railway construe tion the Commissioner of Customs in the course of an interesting report for 1906 remarks: "Should the visionary project of connecting Yunnan and Burma with a trunk railway be ever seriously considered, an initial difficulty will be the selection of a suitable route. Two have been suggested-the so-called Bhano route via Tengyueh and the valley of the Salween route via Kunlun Ferry. Opinions are divided as to which is the better, but the latter perhaps allows of easier gradients and is, for various reasons, the more preferable. Both, however, are difficult, and it must be admitted that neither is really suitable for railway construction. Considering the almost insur- mountable physical difficulties presented and the colossal expenditure which would be involved, the practicability, viewed commercially, of such a scheme may well be questioned."
Owing to its elevation (5,400 feet) the climate of Tengyueh is temperate and health- ier than any of the valleys in the vicinity which are rendered excessively unhealthy by malignant forms of malarial fever. Malaria is, however, very prevalent in the town itself during the rains when mosquitoes are plentiful, and when the general health of the place is bad. The average yearly rainfall is about 65 inches, most of which falls from June to September, when the incessant dampness is trying to the most robust. The value of the trade during 1908 as taken cognizance of by the Imperial Maritime Customs, was Hk. Tls. 1,765,868, an increase of Tls. 33,656 on the figures for 1907. The chief imports were cotton goods, which were imported to the extent of Tls. 861,862; the export trade remains unimportant. The principal local industry is the manufacture of jadestone ornaments.
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
also
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Consul -Archibald Rose
DIRECTORY
#K Teng-yueh Hsinkuon
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Commissoner-F. W. Carey
Assistant-A. L. Pichon Examiner--A. W. L. Oliver Tidewaiter-E. T. Craig Medical Officer-Nichal Chand
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Postmaster-F. W. Carey Clerk in charge -Cheung Iii-shang
SZEMA O 3 8 màu
Szemao, opened to the Tonkin frontier trade by the Gérard Convention of and to British trade by the Burmah Convention of 1896, is situated in the south western part of the Province of Yunnan in latitude 22 deg. 47 min. 29 sec. N. and long tude 100 deg. 46 min, E. It is a sub-prefectural walled town built on a gently rising ground overlooking a well-cultivated plain. The elevation is 4,700 feet above the sea level, and the population is estimated to be about 15,000. Tlie climate is delightful, the temperature rarely exceeding 80 degrees (Fahr.) during the summer and sem falling below 50 degrees in the winter months. The plague, such a common visitor
SZEMAO
1039
throughout Yunnan, is almost unknown in Szemao. The place is distant from both Yunnan-fu (the capital of the province) and Mengtsz 18 days, and from the French Loas frontier 6 days, and from British territory about 12 days. It was opened in the early part of 1897, and so far has not fulfilled the expectation of its potential im- portance as a trarling centre. The value of the trade of Szemao in 1908 was Tls. 181,787 as against Tls. 265,467 in 1907. The smallness of the trade statistics has been attri- buted partly to the fact that, owing to the various routes in the neighbourhood of the port, effective supervision is difficult of attainment. No foreign traders reside at Szemao, the trade being entirely in the hands of local merchants, who have no agencies in either Tonkin or Burmah. The principal article, imported is raw cotton, which comes from the British Shan States, particularly from Keng Tung and also from the Haut-Laos. A telegraph line from Túng Hai, via Yuan Chiang and Pu Erh-fu, connects Szemao with the existing Chinese overland telegraphs. Considerable ethnological interest centres in the neighbourhood of Szemao. Writing on this subject in the course of his Trade Report for 1905 the Commissioner of Customs remarked: "It is of much interest to notice the various aboriginal races in this part of Yunnan, living side by side with, and yet differentiated from, the Chinese, and possessing distinct customs, characteris- ties, and traditions of their own. In the surrounding mountains we find the Lolo and Lohe, and in the low-lying plains the Shans, known to the Chinese as Pa-i; interspersed with these is the vassal tribe of the Akas. In the vicinity of the Chinese towns little settlements of the Mahe and Putu, who are offshoots of the Woni, are to be met with. From Talang north to Yuan-chiang and eastwards south of the Red River as far as Man- hao, is the home of the Woni race, who are a swarthy people sub-divided into several tribes. Near Talang a few Min-chia live-people who have migrated from Ta-li and Yuan-chiang, the headquarters of this large branch of the Shan race. At Shih-ping and Yuan-chiang there are several tribes of Pa-i, or Shans proper, and some Yao also are to be found in the mountains to the east of Szemao--a remarkable race which is to be met with in scattered hamlets in mountainous districts as far eastwards as Kwangsi. The Kawas inhabit the prefecture of Chen-pien-t'ing, to the westward of Szeйao, and concerning their mode of life but little yet is known. The relentless march of civilisa tion, however beneficial to the world at large, is bearing hardly on the aboriginal races of mankind; and the south-western portion of this ancient province of Yunnan provides one of the few remaining territories where they are still permitted a local habitation and a name.
>>
DIRECTORY
CONSULATES
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-General--P. E. O'Brien-Butler
(residing at Yunnanfu)
ITALY
+
官事頜利大義大
Tai I-tai-li-liny-82-kun
Consul de Rossi (residing in Mengtsz)
Chinese Secretary-Cha Lung
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME
Acting Comr.-J. H. W. Houstoun Assistant R. C. L. d'Anjou
Asst. Examiner J. Bartolini
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
District Postmaster-J.H.W.Houstoun
Acting Postal Officer-Wong Wai Chiu
TELEGRAPH OFFICE, IMPERIAL CHINESE
Manager-Yang-wen-kuang
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
ALLGEMEINER EVANGELISCH
PROTESTANTISCHER
MISSIONSVEREIN
(GENERAL PROTESTANT MISSION
OF GERMANY)
會善同
TSINGTAU
Rev. R. Wilhelm and wife
Rev. W. Schüler and wife
B. Blumhardt
R. Wu sch, M.D.
Miss Hannah Blumhardt
AMERICAN ADVENT CHRISTIAN
MISSION
會復來
NANKING
Rev. G. Howard Malone and wife
Miss Nellie E. Dow
Miss F. M. Quimby
Miss Alice Hazard Miss Hannah Stocks
WUHU
Rev. Z. Charles Beals and wife (absent) Miss B. Cassidy
CIAOHSIEN
Miss M. E. Burke
C. A. Burch and wife
AMERICAN BAPTIST MISSIONARY UNION
堂神眞會禮浸國美大 SHANGHAI
Rev. F. J. White and wife (absent)
Rev. J. T. Procter and wife
Mr. Saffard and wife
HANYANG VIA HANKOW
Rev. J.S.Adams, chairman of com.and wife
Rev. G. A. Huntley, M.D.. and wife Rev. Sidney G. Adams and wife
Miss Annie L. Crowl
Miss Emilie Bretthauer, M.D.
Rev. John Howard Deming and wife
Rev. Wayland D.Gates, M.A., B.D., and wife
Miss Winifred Roeder
Miss Cody
Miss L. J. Crawford
HANGCHOW
Rev. W, S. Sweet and wife
Rev. Percival R. Bakeman
Miss Mary A. Nourse
Miss Ida E. Wickenden
HUCHOWFU
Rev. M.D. Eubank, M.D., and wife (absent) Rev. J. V. Latimer and wife
C. Herman Barlow, M.D., and wife Miss H. M. Rawlings
Miss Mary I. Jones
KINHWAFU
Rev. T. D. Holmes and wife (absent) Rev. C. S. Keen and wife
CF McKenzie, MD, and wife Miss C., E. Righter
Miss Laverne Minniss
Miss S. Relyea
Miss E. L. Adams
NINGPO
Rev. J. R. Goddard, D.D., and wife J. S. Grant, M.D., and wife Rev. E. E. Jones and wife (absent) Rev. B. E. Robison and wife Miss H. Elgie
Miss M. C. Covert
Miss D. I. Zimmerman
SHAOHINGFU
F. W. Goddard, M.D., and wife Rev. A. L. Fruser and wife Rev. A. F. Uffard and wife Miss C. M. Huntoon (absent) Miss M. A. Dowling
UNDESIGNATED
Rev. John Cherney and wife
CHENGTU
Rev. J. Taylor and wife
Rev. Daniel Dye
KITINGFU VIA CHUNGKING
Rev. W. F. Beaman and wife (absent)
Rev. F. J. Bradshaw and wife
Rev. John P. Davies and wife
Miss Pansy Mason
NINGYUANFU VIA CHUNGKING
Rev. Robert Wellwood and wife (absent)
Rev. H. F. Rudd, .D., and wife
SUIFU VIA CHUNGKING
C. E. Tompkins, M.D., and wife (absent) W. R. Morse, M.D., and wife Rev. C G. Lewis and wife Rev. I. B. Clark and wife Rev. Daniel Dye Miss Pearl Page Miss B. Bassett
YACHOWFU VIA CHUNGKING W. R. Morse, M.D., and wife Rev. H. J. Openshaw and wife Miss Anna Evans Conlies, MA Rev. C. A. Salquist and wife. Edgar T. Shields, M.D., and wife Miss Helen Fielden
I
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
SWATOW
Ker. Wm. Ashmore, jun.,D.D., and wife (abt.)
Rev. J. M. Foster, D.D.
Rev. G. H. Waters and wife
Rev. R. T. Capen and wife
Mrs. A. K. Scott, M.D. Rev. A. H. Page and wife Rev. L. E. Worley and wife Mrs. R. E. Worley
Miss M. Sollman (absent) Miss M. F. Weld
Miss E. G. Traver
KAYING, VIA SWATOW
Rev. G. E. Whitman and wife Rev. J. H. Giffin and wife Rev. Geo. Campbell and wife
CHAOCHOWFU, VIA SWATOW Rev. H. A. Kemp and wife (absent) Rev. B. L. Baker and wife
UNGKUNG, VIA SWATOW Rev. G. W. Lewis and wife
KITYANG, VIA SWATOW Rev. Jacob Speicher and wife R. E. Adkins, M.D. Miss B. A. Ross
Miss Lucille Withers
CHAOYANGḤSIEN, VIA SWATOW
Rev. A. F. Groesbeck and wife HOPO, VIA SWATOW
Rev. A. S. Adams and wife
AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY
會經聖國美大
SHANGHAI
Rev. John R. Hykes, D.D., agent, and wife
Charles F. Gammon and wife (absent)
PEKING
Rev. W. S. Strong and wife
TIENTSIN
Rev. 4. H. Smith, D.D.
PANGCHUN
Rer. A. H. Smith, D.D.
TUNGCHOW, CHI.
Rev. Walter S. Elliott and wife (absent)
CHUNGKING
W. C. Hooker and wife
CHENGTU
H. C. Ramsay and wife
CANTON
Rev. Alfred Alf and wife (absent)
Rev. B. F. Bean (acting)
KIUKIANG
Rev. F. C. Crouse and wife
AMERICAN BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN
MISSIONS
會理公國美
North China Mission
PEKING
Rev. Chauncey Goodrich, D.D., and wife
Ms W. S. Ament (nsent)
Rev. W. B. Stelle and wife
C. W. Young, M.D., and wife Miss M. H. Porter Miss N. N. Russell Miss Luella Miner Miss B. P. Reid Miss J. E. Payne Miss M. N. Corbett Miss Vanderslice
TIENTSIN (FRENCH CONCESSION) K. M. Gordon, business agent TIENTSIN (HSi Ku)
Rev. C. A. Stanley, D.D. Rev. C. E. Ewing and wife Miss M. G. MacGown
TSUNGCHOW, CHI.
1041
Rey, D. Z. Sheffield, D.D., and wife (absent)
J. H. Ingram, M.D., and wife
Rev. G. D. Wilder and wife
Mrs. F. D. Wilder, mission treasurer
Rev. H. S. Galt and wife (absent)
Rev. L. C. Porter and wife W. H. C. Ebeling and wife Miss A. G. Chapin
Miss M. E. Andrews (absent) Miss A. S. Browne
Miss Delia D. Leavens
PAOTINGFU, VIA TIENTSIN Rev. H. P. Perkins and wife (absent) Rev. E. E. Aiken and wife
Miss L. Jones
KALGAN, VIA TIENTSIN
Rev. W. P. Sprague and wife (absent)
PANGCHUN, VIA TIENTSIN
Rev. Arthur H. Smith, D.D. (wife absent)
F. F. Tucker, M.D., and wife
Rev. C. A. Stanley, jun., and wife
Mr. Arie B. De Haan and wife
Miss Gertrude Wyckoff
Miss Grace Wyckoff (absent)
Miss Lucia E. Lyons
LINCHING, VIA TSINGTAO AND TEHCHOW James H. McCann and wife
Rev. E. W. Ellis and wife Rev. V. P. Eastman and wife Miss Susan B. Tallmon, M.D. Miss Mabel Ellis
Shansi Mission
TAIKUHSIEN
Rev. Mark Williams
W. A. Hemmingway, M.D., and wife Miss F. K. Heebner (absent)
Miss Daisy P. Gehman
FENCHOW
Rev. Watts O. Pye
Rev. I. J. Atwood, M.D., and wife (absent)
P. T. Watson, M.D., and wife
Rev. P. L. Corbin and wife
Foochow Mission
FOOCHOW
Rev. Lyman P. Peet and wife
Rev. G. Milton Gardner and wife (absent) Rev. L. Hodous and wife
H. N. Kinnear, M.D., and wife
33
1042
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
G. M. Newell and wife Miss Hannah C. Woodhull Miss Kate C. Woodhull, M.D. Miss Elsie M. Garretson Miss Martha Wiley Miss Emily S. Hartwell Miss Alice U. Hall
Miss Ruth P. Ward
PAGODA ANCHORAGE
Rev. G. H. Hubbard and wife
DIONGLOH, VIA FOOCHOW
Miss Harriet L. Osborne Miss Elizabeth S. Perkins
SHAOWU, VIA FOOCHOW
Rev. J. E. Walker, D.D. E. L. Bliss, M.D., and wife Rev. C. L. Storrs, jr. Miss Frances K. Bement Miss Lucy P. Bement, M.D. Miss Grace A. Funk
Miss Josephine C. Walker
INGHOK, VIA FOOCHOW
H. T. Whitney, M.D., and wife (absent) Rev. E. H. Smith and wife Miss E. D. Smith, M.D. Miss C. E. Chittenden
Miss Agnes J Meebold
South China Mission CANTON
Rev. C. A. Nelson and wife (absent)
Rev. O. S. Johnson
Miss Edna Lowrey
Miss Vida Lowrey
HONGKONG
Rev. C. R. Hager, M.D., D.D., and wife, 5,
Ladder St.
AMERICAN FREE METHODIST
MISSION IN CHINA
會理循
Kaifengrų, ÏÏONAN
Rev. C. F. Appleton, supt., and wife
Miss Edith Francis Jones
Miss Lucy H. Fittemore
CHENGCHOW, HONAN
Rev. N. S. Honn and wife
CHINSIEN, HONAN
Rev. F. R. Millican and wife
YUNGTSIHSIEN, HONAN
Rev. G. H. Scofield and wife
TSINGKIANGPU VIA CHINKIANG
Rev. F. J. Fletcher and wife
Rev. G. D. Schlosser
AMERICAN FRIENDS' MISSION
會格貴
NANKING
Miss Esther H. Butler
Miss Lena M. Stanley (absent)
Mrs. Harriette M. Shimer (absent)
Miss Lucy A. Gaynor, M.D.
Miss Emma Oliver
Miss Mary A. Hill
LUHO
George F. Devol, M.D., and wife Miss Margaret H. Holme Miss Mary Wood
AMERICAN LUTHERAN AUGUSTANA SYNOD MISSION
HSUCHEO, HONAN, VIA HANKOW Rev. A. W. Edwins and wife
Re. A. E. Trued and wife
Miss Jongeborg Nystul
HONANFU, HONAN, VIA HANKOW
C. P. Friberg and wife
AMERICAN LUTHERAN MISSION
會德路美
HANKOW
J. M. O. Gudal and wife
SINYANGCHOW, HONAN
Rev. D. Nelson and wife (absent)
Rev. Erik Sovik and wife
Rev. Prof. Ingvald Dachlen and wife Miss Marie Anderson Miss Aase Hagestande
LOSHAN, HONAN
Rev. L. Christensen and wife
KIOSHAN, HONAN
Rev. A. Martinson and wife (absent)
Rev. O. Hellestad
O. S. Behrents, M.D., and wife Sister Christine Johnson
Sister Ingeborg Pederson
Mrs. Olive Netland
JUNING, HONAN
Rev. K. S. Stokke and wife (absent)
Rev. T. L. Ekeland and wife
Sister Marie Fredricks en
Miss Agnes Thonstad
AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN MISSION
美國長老會
PEKING
Rev. W. A. P. Martin D.D., LL.D.
Rev. J. Wherry, D.D.
Rev. A. M. Cunningham and wife
Rev. C. H. Fenn, D.D., and wife Rev. W. W. Hicks and wife Rev. W. H. Gleysteen and wife Rev. E. L. Johnson and wife Francis J. Hall, M.D., and wife Frederick E. Dilley, M.D., and wife Miss E. Ward
Miss J. C. McKillican Miss Eliza E. Leonard, M.D. Miss Bessie C. McCoy
PAOTINGFU
Rev. J. W. Lowrie, D.D. Rev. C. A. Killie and wife Charles Lewis, M.D., and wife Rev. W. A. Mather and wife Rev. D. C. Chapin Miss Grace Newton Miss A. H. Gowans
1.
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Miss M. A. Mackey, M.D. Miss Elizabeth F. Lewis, M.D. Miss Maggi
SHUNTERFU, CHIHLI Rev. J. A. Miller and wife G. W. Hamilton, M.D., and wife Rev. E. C. Hawley and wife
TUNGCHOW, CHI.
Rev. Charles H. Corbett and wife
CHEFOO
Rev. Hunter Corbett, D.D., and wife Rev. W. O. Elterich and wife
W. C. Booth and wife.
O. F. Hills, M.D., and wife Mrs. J. L. Nevius
TSINGTAU
Rev. T. H. Montgomery and wife Miss M. L. B. Vaughan Rev. Charles Scott and wife Mason Wells and wife
YIHSIEN, VIA CHINKIANG Rev. C. H. Yerkes and wife Wm. R. Cunningham, M.D. Miss Margaret Faris
ICHOWFU, VIA TSINAN
Rev. Geo, A. Armstrong Rev. W. P. Chalfant and wife Rev. Paul P. Faris and wife Miss Emma E. Fleming, M.D. Frederick Fouts, M.D., and wife
WEIHSIEN, VIA KIAOCHOW
Mrs. C. W. Mateer
Rev. R. M. Mateer and wife Rev. Frank H. Chalfant and wife Rev. J. A. Fitch and wife Rev. Paul D. Bergen and wife Rev. H. W. Luce and wife Miss M. H. Bynon, M.D., Ralph C. Wells and wife Chas K. Hoys, M.D, and wife Mrs. M. M. Crossette Miss A. K. M. Franz Miss Charlotte E. Hawes Rev. H. E. Chandler and wife
TSINING, VIA CHINKIANG
Rev. H. G. Romig and wife (absent) Rev. T. N. Thompson and wife Charles Lyon, M.D., and wife Rev. Frank E. Field
Rev. Charles M. Eames
TSINAN
Rev. John Murray
Rev. W. B. Hamilton D.D., and wife
J. B. Neal, M., and wife
Rev. A. B. Dodd and wife
Miss E. S. Boehne
Rev. W. W. Johnston and wife Chas, F. Johnson, M.D. W. M. Schultz, M.D.
TENGCHOWPU, VIA CHEFOO Rev. J. P. Irwin and wife W. F. Seymour, M.D., and wife Robert W. Dunlap, M.D. Miss M. A. Snodgrass
Mrs. Calvin Wight (absent) Miss Effie Cooper, M.D.
TSINGCHOWFU, VIA KIAOCHOW Rev. W. M. Hayes, D.D., and wife Miss S. F. Eames
SHANGHAI
1043
Rev. J. M. W. Farnham, D.D., and wife, 61,
Range Road
South Gate
Rev. J. A. Silsby and wife Rev. J. M. Espey and wife Miss M. E. Cogdal
Miss E. Silver
Miss A. Morton
Miss Manuella Morton
Miss M. A. Posey, 97, Elgin Road
Mission Press
(Book-room and Offices, 18, Peking Road) Rev. G. F. Fitch, D.D., supt., and wife Gilbert McIntosh and wife (absent) James Williamson, accountant J. C. Pollock, assistant
Mrs. J. Whitfield (absent)
Rev. C. M. Myers, M.A., and wife (absent) Miss M. L. Fish
Printing Works, North Szechuen Road C. W. Douglass and wife. W. C. Chapman
R. P. Montgomery
NANKING
Rev. Charles Le aman and rife Rev. W. J. Drummond and wife Rev. J. E. Williams and wife Rev. J. C. Garritt, D.D., and wife Rev. Alfred V. Gray and wife Mrs. J. R. Jones Miss E. E. Dresser Miss Mary A. Leaman Miss Lucy Leaman Miss Jane A. Hyde Miss Grace M. Lucas
A. A. Bullock and wife
HWAIYUAN, AN., VIA NANKING
Rev. E. C. Lobenstine
Rev. D. B. S. Morris (absent) Rev. J. B. Cochran and wife S. Cochran, M.D., and wife Miss Mary Lattimore Miss Agnes Murdock, M.D. Miss Mary Murdock Miss Margaret Murdock
SOOCHOW
Rev. J. N. Hayes, D.D., and wife Rev. O. C. Crawford and wife (absent) Miss E. E. Anderson, M.D.
Miss Agnes M. Carothers, M.D. Rev. H. T. Throop and wife
HANGCHOW
Rev. J. H. Judson and wife Rev. E. L. Mattox and wife Rev. Robert F. Fitch and wife Rev. C. D. Herriott and wife Rev. F. W. Bible and wife (absent) A W. March
33*
1044
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Mrs. M. E. Lyon
Miss Lois D. Lyon
Miss L. Newman
Miss Juniata Ricketts (absent)
NINGPO
Rev. J. E. Shoemaker and wife Rev. H. K. Wright and wife (absent) Rev. E. F. Knickerbocker and wife Miss L. M. Rollestone
Miss M. B. Duncan Miss Edith Dickey Miss E. A. Lindholm
CANTON
Rev. H. V. Noyes, D.D., and wife Rev. A. A. Fulton. D.D., and wife Rev. J. J. Boggs and wife (absent) Rev. A. J. Fisher and wife Rev. Wm. D. Noyes and wife E. C. Machle, M.D.
Rev. G. W. Marshall and wife
Rev. James M. Henry and wife H. W. Boyd, M.D., and wife Mrs. J. G. Kerr
Miss Mary W. Niles, M.D. Miss H. Lewis
Miss M. H. Fulton, M.D. Miss H. Noyes (absent) Miss E. M. Butler (absent) Miss L. Durham (absent) Miss E, A. Churchill
Miss L. R. Patton
LIMCHOWFU
Rev. John S. Kunkle
Rev. Rees F. Edwards and wife Robert L. Ross, M.D., and wife Dr. Elizabeth R. Carper
Miss Elda G. Patterson
YEUNGKONG
W. H. Dobson, M.D., and wife Rev. C. E. Patton and wife Rev. John W. Creighton
Rev. George D. Thomson and wife Miss V. M. Wilcox
Hainan Mission KIUNGCHOW
Rev. C. H. Newton
Rev. Wilbur M. Campbell and wife Rev. D. S. Tappan, jr.
Miss Henrietta Montgomery Miss Alice Skinner (absent)
HOTнOW
H. M. McCandliss, M.D., and wife Rev. George D. Byers
NODOA
Rev. P. W. McClintock and wife Rev. William J. Leverett (absent) Rev. J. F. Kelly, M.D., and wife (absent) Herman C. Bryan, M.D.
Mrs. M. R. Melrose
KACHEK
Rev. Frank P. Gilman and wife (absent) S. L. Lasell, M.D.
Miss Kate L. Schaeffer
Hunan Mission
SIANGTAN, HUNAN
Rev. W. H. Lingle and wife Rev. A. R. Kepler and wife E. D. Vanderburgh, M.D., and wife F. J. Tooker, M.D., and wife Miss Emma Kolfrat Miss Ettie M. Murray
CHANGTEH, HUNAN
O, T. Logan, M.D., and wife Rev. T. J. Preston and wife Rev. Gilbert Lovell and wife
TAOYUAN, HUNAN
Rev. G. F. Jenkins and wife
CHENCHOW
Rev. T. W. Mitchell and wife Stephen C. Lewis, M.D. Rev. C. H. Derr and wife Wm. L. Berst, M.D.
Rev. W. T. Locke and wife
HENGCHOWFU
Rev. Geo. L. Gelwicks and wife Rev. Ernest Crabb and wife
W. E. Robertson, M.D., and wife
AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN
MISSION (SOUTH)
會老長南國美 SOOCHOW
Rev. H. C. Du Bose, D.D., and wife
J. R. Wilkinson, M.D., and wife
R. T. Shields M.D., and wife Rev. P. C. Du Bose and wife Rev. R. A. Haden and wife Miss S. E. Fleming Miss Gertrude Sloan Miss Addie Sloan Mrs. M. P. McCormick Miss Carrie Moffett David T. Stuart, M.D.
SHANGHAI
Rev. S. I. Woodbridge, D.D., and wife
KIANGYIN
Rev. Lacy L. Little and wife Rev. L. I. Moffett and wife G. C. Worth, M.D., and wife Mrs. Anna Sykes
Miss Rida Jourolmon Miss Pearl Rodman
Miss Ida M. Albaugh
CHINKIANG
Rev. A. Sydenstricker, D.D., and wife Rev. J. W. Paxton and wife Rev. O. V. Armstrong and wife Rev. C. Fred Hancock and wife
NANKING
Rev. J. W. Davis, D.D., LL.D. Rev. J. Leighton Stuart and wife
TAICHOW, PU., VIA CHINKIANG Rev. C. N. Caldwell Rev. J. T. McCutchan and wife
TSINGKIANGP'U VIA CHINKIANG Rev. J. R. Graham and wife
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Rev. A. A. Talbot and wife
J. B. Woods, M.D., and wife (absent) Miss E. H. Morton Miss J. D. Hall
HWAIANFU, VIA CHINKIANG Rev. H. M. Woods, D.D., and wife Miss Josie Woods Rev. O. F. Yates
SUCHIEN, VIA CHINKIANG
Rev. B. C. Patterson and wife
Rev. W. F. Junkin and wife
J. W. Bradley, M.D., and wife (absent)
Rev. J. W. Vinson and wife
Miss Mary Johnston
Rev. George B. Stevens
Miss Bella McRoberts
Rev. H. W. McCutchan
Rev. M. B. Grier and wife
HstCHOWFU, VIA CHINKIANG
Rev. H. W. White and wife
Rev. T. B. Grafton and wife
A. A. MacFadyen, M.D., and wife Rev. A. D. Rice and wife Miss Mary P. Thompson Miss Charlotte Thompson HAICHOW
ller. J. W. Vinson and wife Rev. A. D. Rice and wife L. $. Morgan, M.D.
Mrs. L. S. Morgan, M.D.
HANGCHOW
Rev. Geo. Hudson and wife
Rev. J. L. Stuart, D.D., and wife Rev. G. W. Painter, D.D. (absent) Rev. W. H. Stuart and wife Miss Emma B. Boardman Miss Mary S. Mathews
Miss E B. French Miss V. J. Lee, M.D. Miss Annie R. V. Wilson
KASHING
Rev. W. H. Hudson and wife ler. J. M. Blain and wife W. H. Venable, M.D., and wife Aliss Bessie Talbot
Miss Elizabeth Corriher
H. B. Van Valkenburgh and wife 4. C. Hutcheson, M.D., and wife Miss Rowe
Miss Irene Hawkins
TUNGILIANGHSIEN, VIA KIASHING
Rer. P. F. Price and wite
Rev. J. Y. McGinnis and wife
Miss R. E. Wilson
Rev. H. Maxey Smith and wife
AMERICAN PROTESTANT EPISCO-
PAL CHURCH MISSION
會公聖
Missionary District of Shanghai
SHANGHAI
St. John's College, Jessfield
Rt. Rev. F. R. Graves, D.D., and wife
Rev. F. L. Hawks Pott, D.D., and wife Rev. R. E. Browning
Rev. J. L. Meade Rev. R. A. Griesser F. C. Cooper and wife
C. S. F. Lincoln, M.D., and wife M. P. Walker G. N. Steiger M. H. Throop J, N. Major H. Gray
J. T. Thayer R. A. Sawyer J. Post
Miss S. L. Dodson
Miss Lillie Crummer (absent) Mrs. L. P. Fredericks (absent) Miss R. Elwin
Miss E. W. Graves
Miss M. S. Mitchell
Miss C. M. Palmer (absent) Miss L. J. Graves
Miss A. R. Torrence
Miss A. Cheshire Miss Edith Piper
SINZA
Rev. J. W. Nichols and wife (absent) Rev. C. F. McRae and wife
Miss A. B. Richmond
Miss Angie M. Myers, M.D. (absent)
Miss M. A. Hill
Miss Ellen C. Fullerton, M.D.
HONGKEW
1045
Ven. Archdeacon E, H. Thomson, D.D., and
wife, 4, Minghong Road
H.W.Boone,M D., and wife,4A,Minghong Rd. W Hamilton Jefferys, M.D., and wife,
4B, Minghong Road
A. W. Tucker, M.D.
S. E. Smalley, treasurer, and wife, 6 E,
Seward Roari
Miss M. E. Bender (absent)
SOOCHOW
Rev. R. C. Wilson and wife (absent)
Rev. W. H. Standring
Rev. Henry A. McNulty
Miss T. L. Paine
TSINGPU
Miss Ida Porter
WUSIH
Rev. G. F. Mosher and wife
C. M. Lee, M.D.
Miss M. T. Henderson
YANGCHOW
Rev. B. L. Ancell
Rev. T. L. Sinclair
Rev. J. M. B. Gill
Missionary District of Hankow HANKOW
Rt. Rev. L. H. Roots, D.D. (Bishop), and wife Rev. S. H. Littell, B.A., and wife
Rev. A. M. Sherman, B.A., and wife
Rev. T. P. Maslin, B.A,, and wife
T. J. Hollander
1046
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Miss Alice M. Clark
Miss Edith Hart, deaconess
Miss Gertrude Stewart, deaconess Miss L. L. Phelps
ICHANG
Rev. D. T. Huntington, B.A.
Rev. P. R. Stockman, B.A., and wife
WUCHANG
Rev. R. E. Wood, B.A.
Rev. James Jackson and wife Rev. L. B. Ridgely, B.A., and wife Rev. A. S. Cooper, B.A. Rev. D. Tyng, B.A.
John Macwillie, M.D., and wife E. M. Merrins, M.D., and wife Howard Richards, jr., PH.B., John R. Wilson, jr.
R. A. Kemp J. W. Fell
E. P. Miller, jr., B.A.
Miss Mary V. Glenton, M.D. Miss S. H. Higgins
Miss A. E. Byerly
E.E.
Miss Katharine E. Phelps, deaconess
Miss M. E. Wood Miss R. R. Halsey Miss E. L. Wheeler Miss E. T. Cheshire Miss A. F. Gates
WUHU
Rev. F. E. Lund and wife Rev. J. C. Dean and wife
ANKING
Rev. Edmund J. Lee, M.A.
E. L. Woodward, M.D. (absent) H. B. Taylor, M.D.
W. McCarthy and wife Miss Mary R. Ogden Miss E. P. Barber Miss S. C. Tomlinson
SHAST
Rev. Amos Goddard, B.A., and wife J. H. Sowerby, M.D.
CHANGSHA
Rev. A. A. Gilman, B.A., and wife
KIUKIANG
Rev. C. F. Lindstrom and wife
AMERICAN REFORMED PRESBY
TERIAN MISSION
會老約國美
TAKHING, VIA CANTON
Rev. A. I. Robb and wife
Rev. J. K. Robb and wife (absent)
Rev. W. M. Robb and wife
Rev. J. Kempf
Rev. E. C. Mitchell and wife
J. M. Wright, M.D., and wife
Miss K. W. McBurney, M.D. (absent)
Miss Jean G. McBurney, M.D. (absent) Miss Ida Scott, M.D.
Miss Jennie Dean
AMERICAN SOUTHERN BAPTIST
MISSION
部道德信國美南
SHANGHAI
Rev. R. T. Bryan, D.D.
Rev. E. F. Tatum and wife
Rev. Frank Rawlinson and wife
Rev. H. W. Provence, T.H.D., and wife
Rev. J. E. Wills
Miss Willie H. Kelly
Miss Lottie W. Price Miss Sallie Priest Miss Mamie Sallee Miss F. Catharine Bryan
SOOCHOW
Rev. T. C. Britton and wife
Rev. Chas. G. McDaniel and wife (absent) Rev. P. W. Hamlett
Miss Sophie S. Lanneau
Miss Spainhour
CHINKIANG
Rev. W. E. Crocker and wife Rev. James B. Webster
YANGCHOW
Rev. L. W. Pierce and wife P. S. Evans, jr., M.D., and wife Rev. A. Y. Napier and wife Adrian S. Taylor, M.D., and wife Miss Julia K. Mackenzie Miss Alice Parker Miss Mary E. Moorman
CHENGCHOW, HONAN Rev. W. W. Lawton and wife Rev. D. W. Herring and wife Rev. A. D. Louthan, M.D. Miss Lila McIntyre
KAIFENGFU, HONAN
Rev. W. Eugene Sallee and wife
CHEFOO
Rev. Peyton Stephens and wife (absent) Rev. E. L. Morgan and wife Miss Gertrude Abernethy Miss Eula Hensley
TÉNGCHOWFU, VIA CHEFOO
Rev. W. W. Adams Miss Lottie Moon Miss Ida Taylor Miss Mary Floy White Miss Jane W. Lide
HWANGHIEN, VIA CHEFOO
Rev. J. B. Hartwell, D.D.
Rev. C. W. Pruitt, D.D., and wife Rev. S. E. Stephens and wife Rev. W. C. Newton and wife (absent) T. W. Ayers, M.D., and wife Miss Anna B. Hartwell Miss E. B. Thompson Miss Florence Jones Miss Jessie L. Pettigrew Rev. W. B. Glass and wife
PINGTU, VIA KIAOCHOW Rev. W. H. Sears and wife Mrs. Cora H. Oxner
r
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Rev. J. C. Owen and wife (absent) Miss Ella Jeter (absent) T. O. Hearn, M.D., and wife
LAICHOW, VIA CHEFOO
Rev. J. W. Lowe and wife Miss Mary D. Williford Miss C. A. Miller
Miss Alice Huey
J. M. Gaston, M.D., and wife
CANTON
Rev. R. H. Graves, M.D., D.D., and wife Rev. E. Z. Simmons, D.D., and wife Rev. G. W. Greene, D.D., and wife Rev. R. E. Chambers and wife Rev. E. T. Snuggs and wife Rev. J. Lake and wife Rev. P. H. Anderson Miss Lula F. Whilden
Miss Pansy Greene
YINGTAK, VIA CANTON
Rev. J. R. Saunders and wife (absent) Rev. B. P. Roach and wife Miss Perle Harrison
WUCHOW, KWANG-SI PROVINCE
Rev. W. H. Tipton and wife J. G. Meadows M.D., and wife C. A. Hayes, M.D. and wife Miss Julia Meadows
Rev. H. F. Buckner and wife
SHIUHING, VIA SAM SHUI
Miss H. F. North
APOSTOLIC FAITH MISSION 會心信徒使
HONGKONG
Moh Lai Chi and wife
Miss E. M. Law
Miss R. J. Pitman
Miss B. Milligan
Miss C. Fritsch
Mrs. Helland
Kom Chah Tsun
Leung King Tsing
B. Bernsten and wife
CHENGTINGFU, CHI.
G. Lundgren and wife
Miss Mary S. Bjorkman Miss Hannah Holmsten Miss Grace Krout Miss Esther Lenander Miss Emma B. Hansen William Burns
SHANGHAI
George Hansen and wife Martin K. Kvamme and wife Miss Berthine H. Dahl Miss Antainethe Moomau Miss Levla Phillips Arthur Atter and wife
SHIHCHIA CHUANG
A. Johnson and wife
AUGUSTANA SYNOD MISSION
FANCHENG, VIA HANKOW
Rev. W. Edwards and wife
BAPTIST MISSION
PEKING
Rev. Isaac J. Mann
CHIKUNG-SHAN
Rev. S. H. Townshend and wife
BASEL MISSIONARY SOCIETY
會色巴
HONGKONG
1047
Max E. Pfleiderer, treas. and business
agent, and wife
Rev. J. H. Vomel and wife
Mrs. P. Schaub, women's work
Miss A. Elsenhaus, school work
LILONG
(c/o Basel Mission, Hongkong)
Rev. G. Ziegler, ch'man of mission, and wife Rev. A. Nagel and wife
Rev. G. Bornand
CHONGHANGKANG
(c/o Basel Mission, Hongkong)
Rev. Dr. W. Oehler
Rev. H. Maurer
LONGHEU
(c/o Basel Mission, Hongkong)
Rev. Chr. Muller and wife
KICHUNG
(c/o Basel Mission, Hongkong)
Rev. G. Krüger and wife
KUCHUK
(c/o Chinese Post Office, Kuchuk,
via Canton and Weichow)
Rev. Fr. Schmoll and wife
Rev. F. Schneider
Rev. R. Krayl and wife
HOYUN
(c/o Chinese Post Office, Hoyün,
via Canton and Weichow)
Rev. C. Zwissler and wife
Rev. O Ederlein
H. Vortiseli, M.D., and wife
LENPHIN
(c/o Chinese Post Office, via Canton) Rev. A. Sautter and wife
HOSHOOWAN
(c/o Chinese Post Office, Yung-an-hsien via Canton and Weichow)
Rev. W. Maisch and wife
Rev. O. Lohss
NYENHANGLI
(c/o Chinese Post Office, Chongpu, via Swatow, Wanglyuthu)
Rev. S. Maute and wife
Rev. W. Sikemeier and wife
CHONGTSUN
(c/o Chinese Post Office, Kilang, via Swatow and Hsingning)
Rev. M. Neubacher and wife Rev. H. Maier
1048
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
CHONGLOK
(via Swatow and Hsingning)
Rev. E. Goll and wife
HOKSHOOHA
(c/o Chinese Post Office, Kilang
via Swatow and Hsingning)
Rev. H. Ziegler and wife
Rev. P. Schmid and wife
FOPHIN
(via Swatow, Hsingning and Laulung) Rev. S. Mayer
MOILIM
(c/o Chinese Post Office, Onlyu, via Swatow and Hsingning) Rev. T. Leonhardt and wife Rev. E. Lipp and wife
PHYANGTONG
(via Swatow and Hsingning) Rev. M. Maier and wife Rev. G. Dietrich
LOKONG
(via Swatow and Hsingning) Rev. K. Ramminger and wife Rev. K. Schoch and wife
KAVINCHOW
(via Swatow)
H. Wittenberg, M.D., and wife (absent) V. Schoch, M.D.
Rev. O. Schultze and wife
Rev. W. Zimmer and wife
Rev. F. Lindenmeyer and wife (absent) Rev. G. Reusch, jun.
Rev. H. Giess and wife
Miss Lydia Borbein
FUITSCHU, VIA CANTON
Rev. Reinh. Giesel and wife
TSCHU THONGAU, VIA CANTON Rev. G. Scholz and wife
FAYEN LUK HANG, VIA CANTON Rev. Max. Bahr and wife Rev. G. Vogt
Rev. A. Heidingsfeld and wife
FAYEN SHAK KOK, VIA CANTON Rev. G. Endemann and wife
SHIU CHOW FU, VIA CANTON Rev. W. Leuschner and wife Rev. F. Huhn Rev. K. Eckart Miss K. Steuer Miss E. Neumann
TSCHI CHIN, VIA CANTON Rev. K. Zehnel and wife
YINFA, VIA CANTON Rev. B. Greiser and wife (absent) NAM HUNG, VIA CANTON Rev. W. Homeyer and wife
SYU YIN, VIA CANTON Rev. K. Trowitzschi and wife
NAM-ON, VIA CANTON Rev. A. Wohlgemuth and wife
HONGKONG
Rev. H. Müller and wife
Rev. E. Gramatte
Rev. G. Greschat
BIBLE MISSION SOCIETY
Rev. K. Kiehlnecker
Miss E. Herwig
BERLIN FOUNDLING HOUSE
堂嬰國德
HONGKONG
Rev. J. Müller and wife
Miss Mathilde Grotefend
Miss Luise Holzmann
BERLIN MISSIONARY SOCIETY
堂義信
TSINGTA U
Berliner Missionsagesellschaft
Rev. C. J. Voskamp, supt., and wife
Rev. A. Zieger and wife
Miss Freida Strecker, girls' school
Miss Käthe Voget, girls' school
KIAOCHOW
Rev. A. Kunze and wife
TSIMO, VIA TSINGTAU
Rev. W. Lutschewitz and wife (absent)
Rev. Th. Scholz and wife
CHUCHENG, VIA TSINGTAU
Rev. O. Toepper and wife
CANTON
Rev. A. Kollecker and wife
Rev. W. Rhein and wife (absent)
Rev. R. Zimmerling and wife (absent) Rev. F. Weiss
會道傳經聖
Mrs. S. C. Todd
MACAO
Rev. Jno. L. Galloway and wife
Rev. C. J. Lowe and wife
TS'IN SHAAN
Miss C. E. Brown
KONGMOON
Rev. D. H. Owings
John Sundstrom and wife
BRITISH & FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY
會公書聖英大
SHANGHAI
Rev. G. H. Bondfield, agent, and wife
T. D. Begg and wife
L. J. Day and wife
HANKOW
R. J. Gould (wife absent)
CHENGTU W. N. Fergusson and wife. F. S. Deane (acting)
CHEFOO Alfred Copp and wife
TJENTSIN
Rev. I. F. Drysdale and wife
MOUKDEN
R.T.Turley,asst.ngt.for Manchuria, and wife
T
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
CANTON
Rev. H. O. T. Burkwall and wife Hans Doring and wife (absent)
HONGKONG
Rev. J. Bosshard
KALGAN
F. A. Larson and wife
YUNNANFU
E. Amundsen and wife (absent)
"BROADCAST" TRACT PRESS
CHANGSHA, HUNAN
A. N. Cameron and wife
CANADIAN METHODIST MISSION
會美英
CHENGTU
Rev. O. L. Kilborn, M.A., M.D., and wife (ab.) Rev. J. Endicott, B.A., and wife (absent) Rev. James Neave and wife
Rev. J. L. Stewart, B.A., B.D. (absent) Rev. R. B. Ewan, M.D., and wife Rev. C. R. Carscallen, B.A., and wife Rev. H. D. Robertson, B.A., and wife Rev. E. W. Wallace, B.A., B.D. Rev. E. J. Carson, B.A S. P. Westaway and wife A. W. Lindsay, D.D.S., and wife Rev. Geo. E. Hartwell and wife Rev. W. Small
T. E. Plewman
Rev. D. M. Perley
ני
B.D.,
and wife
Rev. C. J. P. Jolliffe and wife Rev. H. H. Irish and wife Rev. A. Hockin and wife A. T. Crutcher and wife
Rev. W. B. Albertson and wife A. J. Barter, M.D., and wife P.M. Bayne, and wife Rev. E. R. Brecken and wife M. A. Brillinger and wife Miss S. C. Brackbill Miss M. E. Brimstin
Miss L. A. Ker
Miss M. E. Switzer
EL. Wilford, M.B., L.R.C.P. and S., Ediu. George G. Harris, B.A.
A. G. Curphey, M.B., L.R.C.P. and S., Edin. Miss Muriel Wood
R. E. 5. Taylor
D. S. Kern, B.A. J. E. Thompson, D.D.S. Rev. F. H. Langford, B.A. J.H. Oldham, B, A. Miss A. J. Henry, M.D. Misa C. A. Brooks (absent) Miss C. Wellwood
KIATINGFU
C. W. Service, B.A., M.D., and wife (absent) Rev, W. J. Mortimer, B.A., and wife (ab.)
1049
Rev. E. W. Morgan, B.A., B.D., and wife (ab.) Rev. N. E. Bowles, B.A.
W. Crawford, M.D., and wife
Rev. A. P. Quirmbach and wife Miss M. R. Swann (absent)
Miss U. F. Steele
Miss Lottie Lawson
Miss Ethel Virgo
JENSHOW
James R. Cox, M.D., and wife (absent) Rev. A. C. Hoffman, S.T.L., and wife Rev. J. R. Earle, B.A., and wife F. F. Allan, M.D., and wife Miss L. H. Hambley
Miss Edus Spiers
JUNGHSIEN
Rev. W. E. Smith, M.D., and wife Rev. R. B. McAmmond and wife Rev. R. S. Longley and wife
PENGHSIEN Rev. W. S. Sibley, B.A., and wife
TSELIUTSING
Rev. R. O. Joliffe, B.A., and wife W. J. Sheridan, M.D., and wife Rev. G. W. Sparling and wife
LUCHOW
W. D. Ferguson, M.D., and wife
CANADIAN PRESBYTERIAN MISSION 會老長大阿坎
SHANGHAI
Rev. D. MacGillivray, M.A., B.D., and wife
CHANGTE, HO.
Rev. J. Goforth and wife
Rev. M. Mackenzie, D.D., and wife Rev. J. Griffith, B.A., and wife Rev. J. H. Bruce, B.A.
Rev. G. Eadie, B.A., and wife
W. G. Scott, B A., M.J).,
and wife
Percy C. Leslie, M.D., M.R.C.S., and wife (ab.) Miss M. I. McIntosh
Miss Jeanie L. Dow, M.B.
Miss M. A. Pyke
Miss E. McLennan, B.A.
WEIHWEI, HO.
Rev. W. Harvey Grant, B.A., and wife Rev. R. A. Mitchell, B.A., and wife Rev. Harold M. Clark, B.A.
Rev. A. W. Lochead, B.A., B.D., and wife Rev. A. Thomson, B.A., and wife W. McClure, B.A., M.D., and wife Shirley O. McMurtry, B.A., M.D. Miss Isabel McIntosh
HWAIKINGFU, Ho.
Rev. J. A. Slimmon and wife
Rev. Jas. Menzies, M.D., and wife (absent)
Rev. G. M. Ross, B.A., and wife
Rev. J. A. Mowatt, B.A., and wife
Miss M. Thomson
Miss Edith McGill
KONGMOON, VIA HONGKONG Rev. W. R. McKay, M.A., B.D., and wife John A. McDonald, M.D., C.M., and wife
1050
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Rev. T. A. Broadfoot, B.A., B.D., and wife Miss Jessie A. MacBean, M.D., C.M. Miss Agnes I. Dickson, B.A. Miss Rachel McLean
Rev. Robert Duncanson, B.A., and wife Miss Harriet M. Latter, B.A.
TAMSUI, FORMOSA
Rev. Wm. Gauld, B.A., and wife
Rev. J. Y. Ferguson, B.A., M.D.C.M., and wife
Rev. Milton Jack, M.A., B.D., and wife
Rev. Duncan McLeod, B.A., and wife
Miss Janie M. Kinney, B.A.
Miss Hannah Connell
CANTON CHRISTIAN COLLEGE
堂學巔
CANTON
C. K. Edmunds, P.H.D., pres., and wife (ab.)
H. B. Graybill, M.A., acting pres,, and wife Chester C. Fuson, B.A., and wife
Clinton N. Laird, M.A., treas, and registrar J. C. McCracken, M.D., and wife. G. W. Groff, B.A.
Henry C. Brownell, B.A.
F. Wilbur, Mottley, B.A. E. J. Weekes, BA,
C. H. Wicks, B.A.
CENTRAL CHINA RELIGIOUS
TRACT SOCIETY
局書教聖
HANKOW
Depot: Poyang Road. Board of Directors:
Rev. Griffith John, D.D., president
Rev. A. Bonsey, vice-president
Rev. R. G. Glover, M.D., vice-president Rev. R. T. Booth, M.B., B.CH., hon-treasurer Rev. G. A. Clayton, hon-secretary
Rev. C. G. Sparham, colportage secretary Rev. Ch. W. Kastler, agent
Rev. S. J. Adams
Rev. C. W. Allen
J. Archibald
Rev. J. H. Deming
T. Gillison, M.B., C.M.
R. J. Gould
Rev. J. Jackson
Rev. S. H. Pittell, B.A.
Rev. G. L. Pullan
Rev. H. B. Rattenburg, B.A.,
Rt. Rev. L. H. Roots, D.D.
W. C. Sen
Rev. J. Sköld
Rev. J. J. Tsang
CHEFOO INDUSTRIAL MISSION
CHEFOO
James McMullan and wife
H. B. Niblock
Miss E. M. Mosson (absent)
CHEFOO MISSIONARY HOME
樱歇安
CHEFOO
J. A. Stooke and wife
Miss C. R. Downing
H. B. Niblock
Wallace Squire
CHINA BAPTIST PUBLICATION
SOCIETY
局書印會信侵華美
CANTON
Rev. Wm. Ashmore, jr., D.D., president
Rev. R. E. Chambers, cor. secty, and treas.
R. T. Cowles, superintendent of works
CHINA INLAND MISSION 會地內
MISSIONARIES ON HOME STAFF
ENGLAND
M. Broomhall, B.A., and wife G. Graham Brown and wife T. W. Goodall and wife H. J. Hewitt
C. H. Judd and wife J. B. Martin and wife Walter B. Sloan and wife Miss K. I. Williamson F. Marcus Wood and wife
AMERICA
F. H. Neale and wife Rev. F. A. Steven and wife Mrs. G. Stott
AUSTRALIA
J. Southey and wife J. H. Todd and wife
DETAINED AT HOME
J. F. Broumton Mrs. W. Cooper Mrs. C. Horobin Mrs. G. Hunter Mrs. J. McCarthy Miss C. K. Murray E. Pearse and wife
W. L. Prusen, L.R.C.P. and's., and wite
Miss G. Rudland
Mrs. H. Schofield
Miss E. M. Smith Mrs. J. W. Stevenson
F. H. Taylor, M.D., F.R.C.S., and wife Mrs. E. Ö. Williams
Kiangsu Province
SHANGHAI (Headquarters)
D. E. Hoste, general director, and wife J.W.Stevenson, dy, dir. (and wife, abt) James Stark and wife (absent) Miss E. S. Birch
A. T. Lavington Miss M. S. Currie PRO-TEM
O. Burgess and wife
י
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
FINANCIAL DEPARTMENT
J. N. Hayward and wife G. T. Howell and wife Miss E. M. Simpson BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
J. W. Wilcox and wife
M. Hardman and wife (absent) Miss A. R. Darling
POSTAL DEPARTMENT
Miss R. L. Smalley (absent) Miss T. Ahlström
MISSION HOME
Mrs. H. N. Lachlan
Miss G. M. Muir (absent)
Miss M. E. Cox
Miss M. Darroch (absent) HOSPITAL
Miss L. A. Batty
CHINKIANG
G. A. Cox, L.R.C.P. & S., and wife
Mrs. J. E. Williams
Miss Mary Allen
Miss E. F. Burn
YANGCHOW
A. R. Saunders and wife
Frank Tull and wife
J. S. Orr and wife
Miss A. Henry (absent) Miss E. S. Clough
Miss M. King
Miss I. A. Robson (absent)
Mrs. A. L. Shapleigh (absent)
Training Home
Miss M. Murray Miss F. Cole (absent) Miss E. E. Hall
Miss G. Rees
Students
Miss G. C. Davey
Miss F. Herbert
Miss M. M. Reid
Miss H. E. K. Reikie
Miss E. Rowan
Miss A. Schür
KAOYUCHOW, VIA CHINKIANG
(Vacant)
TSINGKIANGPU, VIA CHINKIANG
Miss M. E. Waterman Miss L. I. Weber Miss A. I. Saltanarsh
Astung, Ku., via CHINKIANG
Miss G. Trüdinger Miss L. M. A. Ellmers Miss F. A. R. Baker
Chekiang Province
SHAORINGFU
J. J. Meadows
W. H. Warren and wife Miss L. Meadows Miss Lily Meadows SINCHANGHSIEN, VIA NINGPO W. J. Doherty and wife Miss S. E. Jones
HANGCHOW
Pastor Ren MOKANSHAN
A. Langman and wife NINGPO
J. Palmer and wife FENGHWA, VIA NINGPO
A. Miller
W. A. McRoberts and wife A. K. Macpherson
NINGHAIHSIEN, VIA NINGPO
K. Macleod and wife Miss E. L. Bennett Miss M. Biggam TIENTAI, VIA NINGPO
A. O. Loosley and wife TAICHOWFU, VIA NINGPO
W. D. Rudland
J. A. Anderson, M.D., and wife W. W. Robertson and wife HWANGYEN, VIA NINGPO
C. Thomson and wife T. Hamilton LUKIAO, VIA NINGPO
Miss K. Ralston (absent) TAIPING CHE, VIA NINGPO
W. Richardson and wife SIENKU, VIA NINGPO
A. B. Wilson and wife (absent) WENCHOW
E. Hunt and wife
Mrs. A. Menzies (absent)
G. H. Seville, B.A., and wife J. M. Munro
Miss F. A. M. Young Miss J. Scott
PINGYANGHSIEN, VIA WENCHOW
E. C. Searle and wife
Miss M. Moler
R. Grierson wife and (absent) JUIAN (WENCHOW)
W. Grundy
YUNGKANG, VIA NINGPO
A. Gracie and wife
KINHWAPU, VIA NINGPO
F. Dickie
LANCHI, VIA NINGPO
Miss E. Palmer Miss A. Tranter Miss R. M. Ford
YENCHOW, VIA HANGCHOW
A. Hammond
C. Fairclough
TUNGLU, VIA HANGCHOW J. B. Miller and wife CHUCHOWFU, VIA NINGPO
W. Emslie and wife Miss A. C. Ware
Miss E. S. Twizell
CHANGSHAN CHE, VIA NINGFO
Miss Guex
Mrs. L. Just
1051
1052
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Hunan Province
CHANGTEH, VIA YOCHOW
J. W. Owen
Mrs. T. A. P. Clinton (absent) H. G. MacEwan
E. J. Bannan NANCHOWTING, VIA YOCHOW
G. F. Drattin
J. Gardiner
CHANGSHA, VIA YOCHOW
F. A. Keller, B.A., M.D., and wife W. E. Hampson (absent) R. K. Veryard Miss L. Tilley
An-huei Province
ANKING
W. Westwood and wife A. Mair
E. A. Brownlee and wife Training Home
A. Bland and wife CHIHCHOWFU, VIA TATUNG
Miss H. L. Reid
Miss Lilias Reid
Miss B. J. L. Reynolds
WOHU
C. T. Fishe and wife A. Duffy and wife NINGEWOFU, VIA WUHU
F. E. Shindler and wife (absent) G. Miller and wife
H. E. Foucar and wife
D. Miller
Miss B. Webster
Miss C. Readshaw Miss G. Banks
KWANGTEHCHOW, VIA HUCHOW
H. H. Taylor and wife (absent) KIENPING, VIA WUHU
W. G. Bobby and wife Miss R. E. Oakeshott Miss F. Sauzé HWEICHOW, VIA TATUNG
G. W. Gibb, M.A., and wife A. W. Mead LAIAN, VIA NANKING
Charles Best and wife LIUANCHOW, VIA WUHU
W. E. Entwistle and wife Miss I. Smith
Miss J. E. McN. Macdonald SHUCHENG, VIA WUḤU
Robert Young and wife CHINGYANGKWAN, VIA WUHU
Facant
YINGCHOWFU, VIA WUHU
H. S. Ferguson and wife J. H. Mellow TAIHO, AN,, VIA WUHU
W. R. Malcolm and wife
Kiang-si Province
KIUKIANG
C. Howard Judd and wife
A. Orr-Ewing and wife (absent) D. J. Mills and wife (absent) KULING, VIA KIUKIANG
H. G. Barrie, M.D., and wife W. W. Lindsay, B.L., and wife TAKUTANG, VIA KIUKIANG
J. T. Reid and wife Miss E. P. Reid NANKANGPU, VIA KIUKIANG
Mrs. Fred. Traub Miss H. Lemann JAOCHOW, VIA KIUKIANG
F. H. Jud‹l, B..A., M.B., C.M., and wife R. A. McCulloch and wife A. L. Cannon ANJEN, VIA KIUKIANG
Miss F. Young (absent) Miss H. B. Fleming Miss E. Burton (absent) Miss I. Cormack Miss J. B. James Miss L. Moody
Miss H. J. A. de Greeuw TUNGSIANG, KI., VIA KIUKIANG
Miss G. M. Blakely
Miss L. Carlyle (absent) KWEIKI, VIA KIUKIANG Miss N. Marchbank Miss L. Seymour Miss A. G. Leith Miss J. R. Anderson Miss M. Baxter Miss A. Sharp KINKI, VIA KIUKIANG Miss F. L. Collins Miss A. C. Lay
IYANG, KL, VIA KIUKIANG
Miss R. McKenzie (absent) Miss M. E. Standeri Miss C. C. Macdonald Miss Grace Dring (absent) Miss K. E. Cooke Miss G. Rugg
HOкow, KI, VIA KIUKIANG
Miss F. E. McCulloch Miss Marian H. Fishe Miss A. C. Skow Miss G. Pearse KWANGSINFU, VIA NINGPO
Miss C. McFarlane
Miss M. C. Brown (absent) Miss L. F. M. Jackson IANG-K'EO, VIA NINGPO
Miss G. Irvin
Miss A. A. Davis Miss E. G. Taylor YUSHAN, VIA NINGPO
Miss Á. M. Johannsen (absent).
Miss L. M. Cane
Miss M. Suter
Miss Agneta Rehnberg
Miss B. H. Lajus
SINFENGHSIEN, VIA KIUKIANG
J. Meikle and wife
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
KANCHOW, KJ., VIA KIUKIANG
W. S. Horne and wife (absent) J. C. Hall and wife (absent) G. J. Marshall and wife
W. E. Tyler and wife (absent) J. L. Rowe
J. Carver and wife WANAN, KI., VIA KIUKIANG C. A. Bunting and wife KIANFU, VIA KIUKIANG Wm. Taylor and wife Miss E. A. Ogden
YUNGFENGHSIEN, VIA KIUKIANG
Miss H. M. Duncan YOANCHOW, KI, VIA KIUKIANG
J. Lawson and wife
R. W. Porteous and wife LINKIANG, VIA KIUKIANG
G. Donay and wife C. Miederer
H. Sames
CHANGSHU, KI., VIA KIUKIANG
F. Blasier and wife NANCHANG, VIA KIUKIANG J. G. Kauderer and wife
Hupeh Province
HANKOW
Lewis Jones and wife Owen Warren
ICHANG
H. J. Squire and wife
LAOHOKOW, VIA HANKOW
A. W. Lagerquist and wife Miss Black
Mias J. Black
Miss E. Black
KUCHENG, Hur. (LAO-JIO-KEO)
H. A. Sibley and wife
Szechuan Province
CHUNGKING
H. L. Parry, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife
A. H. Broomhall and wife
R. B. Whittlesey and wife
F. Bird
Miss I. W. Ramsay
KLANGTSING
H. H. Curtis and wife LUCHOW
T. James (wife absent) A. H. Barham and wife J. K. Sinton Robert Cunningham SUIFE
R. L. McIntyre and wife FUSRUN, SEZ.
J. W. Webster and wife $. Glanville
H. Westmidge A. J. Clements KIATINGFU
B. Birie and wife
E. G. Toyne
W. H. Hockman and wife Miss N. Burbridge
TATSIENLU
T. Sorsenon and wife W. T. Herbert and wife BATANG
J. H. Edgar
J. R. Muir and wife KIUNGCHOW, SZE.
F. Olsen and wife Miss H. M. Overland Miss E. C. Bailey CHENGTU
Jos. Vale and wife
A. Grainger and wife Thos. Torrance
G. M. Franck and wife
KWANHSIEN, SZE.
J. Hutson and wife Miss A. E. Sharpe Miss F. Bailey PAONING
Bishop Cassels, B.A., and wife
C. H. Parsons, B.A.
W. H. Aldis and wife
C. B. Hannah (absent)
A. W. Large
C. C. Elliott, M.D., and wife J. R. Hayman
Miss M. E. Booth (absent)
Miss K. M. Allis
Miss R. J. Pemberton
Miss J. MacLaren
Miss A. Hewett
Miss E. J. Harvey Miss M. E. Haslam
SIN-TIEN-TSI (PAONING)
Miss F. M. Williams Miss H. Davies
Miss L. Richardson (absent)
Miss A. M. Gregory
Miss C. M. Biggs
NANPU
Miss E. H. Allibone
Miss E. M. Tucker
Miss C. M. Harlow
Miss F. H. Culverwell (absent)
Miss F. Lloyd (absent)
YINGSHAN, SZE. (SHUENKING)
Miss E. Culverwell
Miss H. M. Kölkenbeck
CHUHSIEN, SZE.
C. F. E. Davis and wife Miss H. Anniss (absent) Miss E. Drake
Miss E. Turner
Miss M. E. Waters Miss H. M. Scorer Miss O. C. Lucas
SHUNKING
A. E. Evans and wife H. G. White
H. E. V. Andrews and wife R. B. Porter
1053
1054
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
KWANGYUAN (PAONING) Miss E. J. Churcher
Miss E. M. Yard
PACHOW, SZE.
Miss M. J. Williams (absent)
Miss F. J. Page
Miss H. A. Gough
SUITINGFU
W. Wilson, M.B., C.M., and wife (absent) A. T. Polhill, M.A., and wife
J. W. Hewett, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife H. G. Thompson
H. W. Thomasson Miss F. J. Fowle KAIHSIEN (WANHSIEN)
H. Wupperfield and wife LIANGSHAN
Geo. A. Rogers and wife WANHSIEN
W. C. Taylor and wife T. Darlington and wife Miss L. M. Wilson Miss A. R. Allen
Miss M. E. Fearon (absent) KWEICHOWFU
M. Beauchamp, B.A., and wife J. C. Platt and wife Miss Lena Clarke
W. Jennings (absent) Miss P. A. Barclay (absent) WUSHAN (KWEICHOWFU)
(Vacant)
Kweichow Province
KWEIYANG, VIA CHUNKING
S. R. Clarke and wife
G. Cecil-Smith and wife (absent) C. Freeman Davies and wife Miss L. E. Kohler
Miss J. L. Turner
CHENYUAN, VIA Yоcпow
D. W. Crofts, R.A., B.D., B.SC., and wife ANSHUNFU, VIA YOCHOW AND KWEIYANG B. Curtis Waters and wife (absent) J. R. Adam and wife
I. Page and wife
P. O. Olesen
Miss L. Guest
TUSHAN, VIA CANTON AND WUCHOW
D. F. Pike and wife
Miss E. M. Parr
PANG-HAI (CHEN-YUAN), VIA YOCHOW
R. Powell and wife Miss A. Campbell
(Vacant)
TSENYI, VIA CHUNGKIANG
T. Windsor and wife A. C. Portway
Yunnan Province
YUNNANFU, VIA HOKOW AND MENGTZE
J. McCarthy and wife (absent) O. Stevenson and wife
J. Graham
C. A. Fleischmann Miss C. E. Varcoe A. H. Sanders (absent) SHA-P'U-SHAN (YUNNANFU)
Gladstone Parteous and wife A. G. Nicholls
K'ÜTSINGFU, VIA MENGTZE H. A. C. Allen and wife D. J. Harding and wife PINGI, VIA MENGTZE
W. J. Hanna and wife TALIFU
Hector McLean and wife (absent) W. T. Clark, M.D., and wife G. E. Metcalf
Miss A. M. Simpson Miss C. Morgan TENGYUEH
W. J. Embery and wife J. O. Fraser, B.S.C. BHAMO (BURMAH)
T. Selkirk and wife
Shensi Province
HANCHUNGFU, VIA HANKOW AND SIANFU
G. F. Easton and wife (absent) A. B. Lewis
H. E. Stubbs
F. A. Williams
MIENIISIEN, VIA HANKOW
A. Goold and wife
CHENGKU, VIA HANKOW
C. Carwardine and wife (absent) SISIANG, VIA HANKOW
Miss A. Harrison Miss M. A. Edwards R. W. Kennett and wife Miss E. J. Crystall YANGHSIEN, VIA HANKOW
Miss I. M. Coleman Miss M. Batterham SIANFU
O. Burgess and wife FENGSIANGFU
C. H. Stevens and wife CHOWCHIH, VIA HANKOW
T. A. S. Robinson and wife MEIRSIEN, VIA HANKOW
R. W. Middleton and wife
Kansuh Province
(P. O. Ad: Via Hankow and Sianfu) LANCHOWFU
G. Andrew and wife Miss E. Andrew
A. Moore and wife G. F. Andrew
SININGFU
H. F. Ridley and wife LIANGCHOWFU
W. M. Belcher and wife (absent) A. Preedy and wife Miss A. É. Mellor Miss G. Eltham
NINGSTAFU
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
J. S. Fiddler and wife
C. F. Nystrom and wife (absent) TSINCHOW KAN
D. A. G. Harding and wife Miss A. Garland
Miss S. Garland
Miss E. L. Giles
FUKIANG KAN
E. J. Mann and wife
Shansi Province
TATUNGFU
Miss M. Beschnidt
PINGYAOHSIEN
J. Falls and wife
W. B. Milsum aud wife
H. J. Mungeam KIEHSIU
Miss C. A. Pike Miss R. Hjort Miss S. Romcke Miss F. L. Morris SIAOTI
D. Urquhart and wife HWOCHOW
Miss Edith Higgs Miss E. Frenchi Miss A. M. Cable
Miss E. M. Mandeville
Miss E. L. French
TAXING SHA
Miss H. E. Carr
Miss E. R. Bolton KICHOW SHA
(Vacant)
HOTSIN
R. Gilles and wife
CHAO CHENG SHA
F. C. H. Dreyer and wife
P. V. Ambler (absent)
HUNGTUNG
A. Lutley and wife
E. J. Cooper and wife (absent)
Ernest H. Taylor and wife (absent) W. F. H. Briscoe
TOYANG
R. K. Gonder and wife
W. T. Gilmer and wife (absent) PINGYANGFU
W. P. Knight and wife (absent) N. E. King and wife II. Lyons and wife (absent) J. C. Carr, M.D., and wife Miss C. F. Tippet
Ktwo
Miss E. C. Johnson
Miss F. Stellmaun (absent) Miss G. Linom
Miss A. M. Munson
KIANGCHOW
(Facant) YICHENG
A. Trüdinger and wife
E. O. Barber (absent) A. Langhorne LUANFU
G. McKie and wife Miss A. Hunt
Miss F. M. McDonald LUCHENGHSIEN
A. Jennings and wife Miss Barraclough U-U (CHIEN) (LU-AN FU) D. Lawson and wife S. G. Wiltshire
Chilli Province
TIENTSIN
G. W. Clarke and wife HWAILU
C. H. S. Green and wife A. Hermann
Miss J. G. Gregg Miss M. Mower
SHUENTERFU, VIA PEKING
M. L. Griffith and wife
Shantung Province
CHEFOO
E. Tomalin and wife (absent) Miss A. H. Faers and wife A. Hogg, M.A., M.D., and wife Mrs. Cameron
Miss E. R. White
Literary Work
F. W. Baller and wife
G. F. Row
R. Willians
Sanatorium
Pro Tem.
F. H. Rhodes and wife
Boys' School
F. McCarthy, L.C.P., and wife
E. Murray and wife
H. J. Alty and wife
H. A. H. Lea, M.A., and wife Miss A. Sanderson
Miss R. Angwin Miss E. A. Powell Miss E. C. Pearce Arthur Taylor
Girls' School Miss H. G. Aplin (absent) Miss I. A. Craig Miss Lucy Smith
Miss A. Slater (absent) Miss Ethel A. Fishe Miss E. A. Shepperd Miss L. C. Button, B.A. Miss J. B. Pearse Miss M. Gray Miss D. M. Wilson
Preparatory School
Miss L. Blackmore Miss A. lí. Rohothan Miss D. Trüdinger Miss A. E. Eldridge Miss B. Wa
'arren
Miss G. M. Unwin
1055
1056
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Secretary of Schools
J. J. Coulthard and wife NINGHAICHOW
Mrs. T. E. Botham
Mrs. E. Tomkinson (absent) Miss A. M. Hancock
Honan Province
CHOWKIAKOW, VIA HANKOW
J. Brock and wife
W. E. Shearer and wife Mrs. U. Söderström
Miss M. Macdonald (absent) R. G. Walker YENCHENG, Ho.
C. N. Lack and wife
Miss S. A. Cream
SIHWA
R. H. Mathews and wife
FUKOW
Miss E. Wallace
Miss E. I. Pilson
Miss S. C. Peet
CHENCHOWFU
E. G. Bevis and wife Miss C. D. Cook
Miss B. Leggat (absent) Mrs. F. E. Talbot (absent) TAIKANG
H. T. Ford and wife Miss C. M. Hacking Miss K. M. Barter KAIFENG
C. Howard Bird, B.A., and wife G.W.Guinness,B.A., M.B.,B.CH., and wife A. P. Laycock, M.A., M.B., B.C.
S. H. Carr, M.D., and wife (absent) HIANGCHENG
F. S. Joyce and wife Miss M. E, Soltau
Miss J. P. Brook
Miss E. Wallis
SHEKICHEN
H. S. Conway and wife
Miss W. Hingston
Miss M. A. Lloyde
German China Alliance Mission, Seifen-
strasse 5 Barmen
Finnish Free Church Mission, Seutula
Dickursby, Finland
Liebenzell Mission, Liebenzell, Wurtem
. berg
NORTH AMERICA
Scandinavian China Alliance Mission 89,
Point Street, Chicago, Ill.
CHINA MEDICAL MISSIONARY
ASSOCIATION
會醫博
SHANGHAI.
(Address: 2 Shantung Road)
Dr. G. A Stuart, president
Dr. C J. Davenport, vice-president Dr. W. H. Jefferys, editor Dr. R. T. Booth, do. Dr. P. B. Cousland, sec, and treasurer
Publication Committee: Dr. G. A. Stuart (chairman), Drs. J. Butchart, D. Christie, T. Cochrane, C. J. Davenport, T. Gillison, E. H. Hart, W. H. Jefferys, J. B. Neal, M. Niles, W. H. Park, J. M. Swan, W. H. Venable, J. R. Wilkinson, H. Wittenberg, Dr. P. B. Cousland, (general and editorial secretary) Terminology Committee: Dr. P. B. Cousland (chairman), Drs. J. G. Cormack, T. Gillison, J. H. Ingram, P. L. McAll, J. B. Neal, W. H. Venable. Research Committee: Dr. J. L. Maxwell,
Chairman
Organ: "The China Medical Journal"
CHINA MISSIONARY ALLIANCE
會聯
Executive Committee, Shanghai
Rev. J. W. Stevenson, chairman
Rev. A. P. Parker, D.D., vice-chairman
Rev. G. F. Fitch, D.D., treasurer
Rev. H. V. S. Myers, D.D., secretary Rev. G. H. Bondfield
Rev. T. Richard, D.D.
Miss M. M. E. Liddell
G. A. Anderson and wife (absent)
Miss T. E. Andersen (absent)
Rev. R. T. Bryan, D.D.
Miss C. Argento (absent)
KINGTZEKWAN
G. Parker and wife
H. J. Mason and wife
KWANGCHOW
A. Argento and wife (absent)
Sinkiang Province
TIHWAFU, VIA LANCHOWFU,
G. W. Hunter
Associate Missions EUROPE
ΚΑΝ
Swedish Mission in China, Stockholm Swedish Holiness Union Torp, Kumla Scandinavian China Alliance, Jönköping Norwegian Mission in China, Randsfjord
Rev. C: J. F. Symons Rev. W: Nelson Bitton
CHINA NEW TESTAMENT MISSION
ΡΑΚΗΟΙ
Rev. A. H. Bach, superintendent and wife
Mr. Haskell and wife
CHINESE TRACT SOCIETY
會書聖
SHANGHAI
Rt. Rev. G. E. Moule, D.D., president Rev. R. T. Bryan, D.D., vice-president Rev. A. P. Parker, D.D.,
do.
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Rev. J. M. W. Farnham, D.D., corres, secty. Ven. Archdeacon Thomson, D.D., do. Rev. W. N. Bitton, A.T.S.,
do.
Rev. C. J. F. Symons, B.A., recording secty. Rev. J. E. Cardwell, treasurer
Periodicals
"The Chinese Illustrated News" and
"Sunday School Child's Paper
Rev. J. M. W. Farnham, D.D., editor
CHRISTIAN AND MISSIONARY
SHANGHAI
ALLIANCE
會道宣
Rey. John Woodberry and wife
CENTRAL CHINA CONFERENCE
Hu-pel Province
WUCHANG (Headquarters)
Rev. R. H. Glover, M.D. (chairman),
and wife
Rev. M. B. Birrel and wife Rev. Wm. G. Davis
Rev. I. Kuykendall (Pastor)
HANKOW (Business Department)
Rev. F. A. Baer
Frank B. Baer Au-huei Province
WUHU (Recewing Home)
Miss M. A. Funk Miss Jessie Rhind
Miss E. Von Gunten (absent) Howard Van Dyck and wife WANCHI
Miss A. Young Miss E. Hilty Miss L. Jones NANLINGHSIEN
H. Nichols and wife
Miss M. Parmenter Miss L. Drane
Miss Ida Morgan
Miss Ida Haldeman
FATONG
James Smith and wife
F. Carter
TSINGYANG HSIEN
Miss M. Quinn
Miss L. Shore
Miss K. Fradd Bunan Province
CH'ANG-SHA
Rev. B. H. Alexander and wife SIANG-TAN
Rev. Wm. A, Shantz and wife Miss B. D. Henshaw
CHANGTEH
Rev. E. F. Stewart and wife Miss E. von Gunten WESTERN CHINA CONFERENCE Kunsu Province
TAOCHOW, old city
Wm. Christie (supt.) and wife Rev. W W. Simpson and wife
Ivan S. Kauffman Miss Grace C. Agar MINCHOW
Rev. M. E. Ekvall and wife TITAOCHOW
Rev. D. P. Ekvall and wife Miss A. E. Galbraith
Amdo Province
CHONE
Rev. C. F. Snyder and wife M. F. Plymire
Wm. A. Stemmerich
Rev. W. N. Ruhl and wife
SOUTH CHINA CONFERENCE
Kuangsi Province
WUCHOW
Rev. R. A. Jaffray and wife Rev. T. P. Worship and wife Rev. I, L. Hess and wife PING LOн, via WUCHOW
Rev. G. B. Carpenter and wife KUEI LIN, via WUCHOW
Rev. J. R. Cunningham and wife Miss M. Edith Dyer
Miss Annie Charles Miss E. Lewis
PING NAM, via WUCHOW
Mrs. M. C. Allward Miss Laura E. Oehme KWAI PING, via WUCHOW
Rev. W. G. Smith and wife NAM NING, via WUCHOW
Rev. M. L. Landis and wife Miss Laura Landis LUNG CHOW, via HAI FONG
Rev. F. W. Davis and wife Miss Ella Rudy Rev. T. L. Hughes
WAT LAM, via Wucnow
Rev. P. Hinkey and wife LAU CHOW, via WUCHOW
Rev. W. A. Farmer and wife Rev. W. H. Oldfield Mrs. M. D. Sherman Miss Minnie Landis
Kwong Tong Province
LOI TING, via TAK HING
Rev. Frank Porter Hamil
Rev. P. M. Hosler
1057
CHRISTIAN CATHOLIC APOSTOLIC
CHURCH IN ZION
教同公督基
SHANGHAI
Rev. F. M. Royall and wife, elder
Rev. C. F. Viking and wife, do.
Miss Edith Hosken
CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SOCIETY FOR CHINA
會學廣
Rev. Timothy Richard, D.D., LITT.D., gen-
eral secretary
1058
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Rev. Evan Morgan and wife
Rev. Donald MacGillivray and wife
Rev. W. Arthur Cornaby and wife, editor
"Chinese Weekly "
Miss Hilda C. Bowser
CHRISTIANS' MISSION
會公徒督基
NINGPO
Miss E. A. Hopwood, director and overseer
Miss L. M. Hopwood, do.
Miss A. H. Bettinson
Miss G. E. Metcalfe
Miss M. J. Shewring Miss E. E. Watts, LL.A. Miss E. R. Groves
Miss M. R. Ferguson Miss G. Smith
Miss E. E. Metcalfe
Miss E. Geary
Miss I. M. Smith
do.
CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY
會英火
MID-CHINA MISSION
SHANGHAI
Rev. C.J.F. Symons, B.A., Sec., andwi fe A. J. H. Moule, B. A., and wife (absent) W. A. H. Moule and wife, Anglo-Chinese
School
G.F.C. Dobson, M.A. (absent)
HANGCHOW
do.
Rt. Rev. G. E. Moule, D.D., and wife Rev. Geo. W. Coultas and wife Rev. H. W. Moule, B.A., and wife (absent) Duncan Main, L.R.C.P., F.R.C.S., and wife A. T. Kember, F.R.C.S., and wife Rev. H. Castle and wife
H. B. Morgan
Rev. J. E. Denham and wife
J. C. P. Beatty, M.D., T.O.D. H. N. Bishop
Miss Louise H. Barnes Miss D. C. Joynt (absent) Miss J. F. Moule Miss Elsie Goudge Miss A. Graham Miss G. Lewin (absent) Miss E. Parker (absent) Miss S. Morris
Miss E. Batchelor
Miss Jean Morris
NINGPO
Rt. Rev. H. J. Molony, D.D., Bishop, and wife
Ven. Archdeacon A. E. Moule, B.D., and wife Rev. W. S. Moule, M.A., and wife Rev. T. Goodchild, M.A., and wife A. F. Cole, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife H. C. Woolridge (absent)
Rev. W. Robbins and wife
Miss Green
Miss Hughes
Miss A. Maddison
Miss M. E. Turnbull Miss Wells
Mrs. E. A. Walker Miss M. M. Clark
Miss E. J. Clark Miss Furness
SHAOHINGFU
Rev. H. Barton and wife
P. J. King and wife
Rev. H. Clements
Miss I. Clarke
Miss E. F. Turner
Miss M. E. Gillard (absent)
CHUKI
Rev. J. B. Ost and wife (absent)
Rev. W. Browne and wife
Miss B. L. Frewer
Miss E. M. Read
TAICHOWFU
Rev. E. H. Thompson, B.A., and wife Rev. W. J. Wallace and wife (absent) S. N. Babington, M.D., and wife Rev. T. Gaunt, B.A., and wife
T. Thomas
B. Scare Brown, M.D. Miss A. O. Stott Miss M. A. Wray
Miss M. Leathers
YUNGCпOWFU, HUNAN Rev. A. Byrde (and wife, absent) J. Parker and wife (absent) Rev. P. Stevens Miss L. S. Digby Miss E. Couche Miss E. M. Roxby
KWEILINFU, KWANGSI Rev. F. Child and wife (absent) Rev. T. C. Ibbotson and wife Rev. J. Holden
Rev. J. L. Bacon
MIEN-CHOW, SZE.
Rev. A. A. Phillips, secretary, and wife
Rev. W. Munn
Rev. F. J. Watt, B.SC.
R. C. Taylor, B.A.
E. R. Willians and wife Miss F. Kempson (absent) Miss G. E. Wells
Miss E. Casswell
Miss E. M. Gallop
Miss J. M. Leete
Miss M. E. Stewart
MIENCHUHSIEN, SZE.
Rev. O. M. Jackson and wife Rev. J. R. Stewart, B.A.
Rev. W. Squibbs, L.R.C.P., Ed., and wife (abt.) J. H. Lechler, M.B. (Edin.) Miss L. Mellodey
Miss M. A. Walmesly
Miss M. Armfield
CHUNGPA, SZE
W. R. Spreckley
Rev. D. A. Callum and wife (absent)
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Miss E. D. Mertons Miss A. Edwards (absent)
ANHSIEN, SZE.
Rev. H. J. Howden, M.A., and wife Rev, A. E. Seward and wife
R. A. Whiteside
Miss S. E. Bryers
SHIHCHUAN, SZE.
Rev. J. Hickman and wife (absent) T. Caldwell and wife
W. R. Cannell
MOWCHOW, SZE.
Rev. W. Kitley and wife
A. Lawrence
TEHIYANG, SZE.
W. L. L. Knipe
E. A. J. Thomas and wife (absent) Rev. H. H. Taylor, B.A.
SINTU, SZE.
Rev. W. Andrews and wife (absent) E. A. Hamilton and wife
CHUNGKIANGHSIEN, SZE.
Rev. J. G. Beach and wife (absent)
P. J. Turner and wife
Miss C. Carleton
FOOCHOW, NANTAI
Rt. Rev. Bishop Price, M.A.
Rev. Llewellyn Lloyd, secretary, and wife Rev. F. E. Bland and wife (absent)
Rev. John Martin
Wm. Müller, and wife
Rev. W. S. Walsh, B.A., and wife
Ven. Archdeacon John R. Wolfe and wife
Rev. Marcus MacKenzie, M.B., and wife Rer. J. B. Carpenter and wife
Miss J. Bushell
Miss E. S. Goldie
Miss Lambert
Miss A. K. Wolfe
Miss E. L. Little (absent)
Miss Moore
FoocHow CITY
G. Wilkinson, M.B., and wife (absent)
Miss Baldwin
Miss Bennett
Miss Massey (absent)
Miss A. M. Wolfe
Miss Merchant
Mrs. Saunders
Miss Burton
TO-SUNG
FUNINGFU, VIA FOOCHOW
Rev. T. de C. Studdert, B.A., and wife Rev. S. Synge, M.B., and wife Miss M. E. Clarke (absent) Miss A, M. Heard (absent) Miss Thomas
Miss R. A. M. Thomas Rev. W. P. Williams
Rev. J. Curtis
Rev. E. J. Stanley
Miss Hind
Miss Craig
HINGHWAFU
F. Sanger, M.B. (absent) Rev. C. Shaw and wife
1059
B. Van Someron Taylor, M.B., and wife R. R. Walker, M.B., and wife Miss Forge
Miss F. A. Forge
Miss C. M. Taylor
Miss Leybourn
HOKCHIANG
Miss Mabel Poulter, M.D. Miss J. Poulter
Dr. A. W. Scatliff and wife Rev. H. B. Ridler and wife Miss Postance
GO-SANG-CHE
Miss Andrews (absent) Miss McClelland
Miss M. E. Wolfe
Miss Mort
GENGTAU
Miss F. E. Oatway (absent) Miss I. Suttor
Miss Harrison
Miss Tatchell
HAITAN
KIENNINGFU
J. Blundy and wife
A. W. Churchill, M.B., and wife H. R. Pakehnam, B.A., M.B., and wife Rev. H. S. Phillips, B.A., and wife C. W. Reeves and wife Rev. A. Sills
Miss Coleman
Miss Ramsay
Miss Nettleton
KIENIANG
KUTIEN
Rev. J. R. Shields Boyd, B.A., and wife (ab't.)
T. Woods and wife
LIENKONG
Miss Marshall Miss Newton (absent)
Miss M. Searle
Miss M. Onyon
Miss Boileau
Miss J. C. Clarke
NINGTEH
Miss Mabel Hannington, M.B.
Miss Nicholson
Miss E. M. Scott
HONGKONG
Ven. Archdeacon W. Banister, sec.,
of South Hunan, and wife
Bishop
Rev. G.A. Bunbury, M.A., and wife, St Paul's
College
Rev. E. J. Barnett, principal, C.M.S. English
College
Rev. A. D. Stewart
Rev. W. H. Hewitt and wife
Miss Fletcher, Fairlea, Bonham Road
Miss S. Fletcher
Miss Carden
Miss Griffin
1060
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Miss C. E. W. Hunt Miss Cree
Miss Eyre, St Stephen's House, Bonham Rd.
Miss Pitts,
Miss Banderlock
Miss K. Stewart
do.
KOWLOON CITY
do.
Victoria Home and Orphanage
Miss Storr
Miss Hollis
CANTON
Rev. P. Jenkins and wife
Miss A. M. Jones
SHIUHING, VIA CANTON
Miss Dunk
Rev. Norman McKenzie
Miss Baker
PAKHOI
Rev. W. E. Hipwell
Rev. C. I. Blanchett and wife (absent)
S. Wicks and wife (absent)
Dr. Neville Bradley and wife Miss Bradley
Dr. Gordon Thompson
Miss A. Bolton
Miss R. Bachlor
Miss E. L. Havers (absent)
Miss E. C. George (absent)
Miss L. Rogers
CHURCH OF ENGLAND MISSION
會計立安
DIOCESE OF NORTH CHINA
PEKING
Rt. Rev. Chas. P. Scott, D.D., Bishop in
North China
Miss Mary Scott
Rev. H. J. Benham Brown and wife
Rev. F. L. Norris, M.A.
DIOCESE OF SHANTUNG
Rt. Rev. G. D. Iliff, D.D., Bishop in Shan
tung, and wife, Chefoo and Tai-an
CHEFOO
ST. PETER'S COLLEGE
Rev. F. Jones
WEIHAIWEI
Rev. A. E. Burne and wife
TAIANFU
Rt. Rev. G.D. Iliff, Bishop, and wife Rev. H. Mathews and wife Rev. J. W. Hunter
Rev, B. M. McOwan and wife
WEIHSIEN
H. S. Cousens, B.A.
PINGYIN
Rev, W. G. Mawson and wife
Rev. I. T. Stocker
Dr. Margaret Phillips, M.B. Dr. Frances Cunningham, M.B. Miss F. Gay
CHURCH OF ENGLAND ZENANA
MISSION
FOOCHOW, NANTAI
Rev. Llewellyn Lloyd, C.M.S., correspond.
ing secretary
Miss Barr
Miss Lee (absent)
Miss Seabrook (absent)
Miss Stevens
Miss Wedderspoon
Miss Fearon
Miss Stinson
Miss Dunne
FOOCHOW CITY
Miss Faithfull-Davies (absent)
Miss Hook
Miss Kingsmill
Miss Mead
Miss Dinneen
Miss M. J. Shire, L.R.C.P. & S., Ireland (ab't.)
HINGHWAFU CITY
Rev. F. S. Huglies, M.A.
Rev. P. M. Scott, M.A.
Rev. Crichton McDowall, M.A.
W. H. Graham Aspland, M.D., F.R.C.S.E.,
Miss Witherby
and wife
SIENG-IU CITY
Deaconess Edith Ransome, St. Faitli's Home
Miss Montfort
Miss Marian Lambert,
do.
Miss Thomas
Miss Ursula Shebbeare
do.
KIEN-NING
Miss M. Sworder
do.
Miss Rodd
Miss A. M. Bearder
do.
Miss Bryer
Miss Ruth Phillimore
do.
Miss Gardner
TIENTSIN
All Saints' Church
Rev. J. H. Sedgwick and wife
NEWCHWANG
St. Nicholas' Church
Rev. F. H. Sprent and wife (absent)
Rev. T. A. Scott, M.A.
Rev. C. W. Scott, B.A.
YUNGCHING HSIEN
Rev. J. A. Partridge (absent)
Rev. W. Canner
Rev. F. Day
Miss Johnson
Miss Darly
Miss Coleston
NANG-WA
Miss Fleming (absent)
Miss Boaz
CIONG-BAU
Miss Weekes
Miss Lane
KUTIEN
Miss Church
Miss Codrington
Miss Jones
Miss Nisbet Miss Wade
Miss Garnett
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
PINGNAN
Miss Mabel Pantin, L.S.A.
Miss Townsend Miss Graham
Miss Burroughs
SANG-TONG
Miss M. Newcombe
Miss B. Newcombe
SA-IONG
Miss Locke-King
Miss Loader
Miss Giles
LO-NGLONG
Miss A. B. Cooper (absent)
Miss Florence Cooper, L.S.A.
Miss Jackson
Miss Lydia Jackson (absent)
Miss Watney
Miss Griffiths
CHURCH OF SCOTLAND MISSION 堂音福蘭格蘇
ICHANG
Rev. Thos. R. Kearney and wife
Rev. Wm. Deans and wife (absent)
A. Graham, L.R.C.P., and wife
Rev. Forbes Tocher
Miss C. G. Fraser
Miss M. E. Moore, B.A.
Miss M. Bere, D.C.S.
Mrs. Rankine
Miss C. B. MacGill (absent)
Miss A. McQuillan
Miss M. Hadden
DANISH LUTHERAN MISSION
會德路國丹
PORT ARTHUR
Rev. C. Waidtlow and wife
Rev. N. Kristiansen and wife (absent)
Rev. C. Christensen and wife
Miss Q. Kristensen
HSIUYEN, MANCHURIA
Rev. 0. Olesen and wife
Rev. 1'. Norgaard
N. Nielsen, M.D., and wife
TAKUSHAN, MANCHURIA
Rev. C. Bolwig and wife Miss E. Nielsen
Miss Broström
Miss Pallesen
FENGAWANGCHENG, MANCHURIA
Rev. J. Lykkegaard and wife
Rev. L. Hagelskaer and wife
Miss K. Andersen
Miss K. Folmer
Rev. E. Jensen and wife
KWANTIEN, MANCHURIA
HWAIJEN, MANCHURIA
Rev. Hertz and wife
1081
ANTUNG (SHAHOATSË), MANCHURIA Rev. J. Vyff and wife
A. Ellerbek, M.D.
L. K. Larsen, M.D., and wife
Miss Gormsen
EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION
OF CHINA
會育教國中
SHANGHAI
(120A, Szechuen Road)
Officers
F. L. Hawks Pott, D.D., president Rev. H. H. Lowry, D.D., vice-president Rev. Timothy Richard, D.D., vice-president Rev. John Darrock, general editor Rev. J. Alfred Silsby, general secretary Prof. F. C. Cooper, treasurer
Rev. F. L. Hawks Pott, D.D., publication
Rev. G. A. Stuart, M.D.,
Rev. John Darrock,
committee
do.
do.
Executive Committee Rev. John Darroch, chairman
G. 5. Foster Kemp, secretary Prof. F. C. Cooper, treasurer
Rev. John A. Silsby, general secretary Zia Hong Lai, Chinese general secretary Dr. Fong, F. secretary
Prof. Lee Tong Hwa
Rev. G. A. Stuart, M.D.
Rev. J. W. Crofoot
Rev. J. W. Cline
Rev. J. T. Proctor
ENGLISH BAPTIST MISSION
會禮浸
SHANGHAI
Rev. T. Richard, D.D., LITT. D.
Rev. Evan Morgan and wife
TAIYUENFU, SHANSI
Rev. A. Sowerby and wife
Rev. S. Hendersun Smith and wife Miss Turner
Rev. J. J. Turner
Dr. E. H. Edwards and wife (absent)
Dr. B. C. Broomhall and wife
Dr. H. Balme
Rev. A. I. Garnier
Dr. Lewis
Zenana Mission
Miss Shekleton
Miss Walter
Miss Maier, M.B.
Miss Lane
Miss M. Green
HSINCHOW, SHANSI
Rev. T. E. Lower and wife Rev. P. J. Smith and wife Rev. H. T. Stonelake and wife
1062
Miss Manger
Miss Wood
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Zenana Mission
SHOU YANG, SHANSI
Rev. J. C. Harlow and wife
Rev. E. R. Fowles
Rev. H. R. Williamson, B.D.
TSINGCHOWFU, SHANTUNG Rev. J. P. Bruce, M.A., and wife J. Russell Watson, M.B., and wife Rev. E. C. Nickalls and wife
Rev. Frank Madeley, M.A., and wife Rev. E. G. Baker
J. Harris
Rev. E. B. Greening
Zenana Mission
Miss A. O Kirkland
Miss H. Sifton, B.A. Miss E. L. Goodchild Miss E. M. Weeks
TSOWPING
(P. O. Address: Via Kiaochow)
T. C. Paterson, M.D., and wife Rev. H. Payne and wife
Rev. Geo. Fisk, B.D., and wife
Zenana Mission
Miss A. Simpson (absent)
Miss A. S. Aldridge
WEIHSTEN
Rev. E. W. Burt, M.A.
Rev. H. C. Whitcher, B.A., and wife
CHOWTSUN
Rev. R. C. Forsyth and wife
Rev. E. C. Smyth and wife
CHINANFU
Rev. J. S. Whitewright and wife (absent) Rev. F. Harmon and wife
B. Von Werthen and wife
PEICHENG PUT'AI CITY
Rev. A. E. Greening and wife
Rev. A. G. Castleton and wife
SIANFU, SHENSI
Rev. A. G. Shorrock, B.A., and wife Rev. J. C. Keyte, M.A. Rev. J. Shields
Rev. E. J. Ellison, B.s.
H. S. Jenkins, M.D., F.R.C.S., and wife A. Young, M.D., and wife
G. A. Charter, L.R.C.P. & S., and wife
Zenana Mission
Miss J. Beckingsale, B.A. (absent) Miss Franklin
Miss H. M. Watt
SUITEICHOW
Rev. J. Bell, A.T.S., and wife
Rev. J. Watson and wife
YENNGANFU
Rev. E. F. Borst-Smith and wife
YCLINFU
Rev. Donald Smith
ENGLISH PRESBYTERIAN MISSION
會老長英大
AMOY
Rev. G. M. Wales and wife
Rev. J. Beattie, M.A., and wife
H. F. Rankin and wife (absent)
H. J. P. Anderson, M.A., and wife Miss M. B. McGregor Miss C. M. Usher Miss A. A. Symington Miss D. Noltenius
CHANGPU, VIA AMOY
Rev. J. Watson, M.A., and wife Rev. H. W. Oldham'
J. H. Montgomery, M.B., CH.B., and wife Miss G. J. Maclagan
Miss H. Lecky (absent)
Miss Edith Herschel
CHANGCHIOWFU, VIA AMOY
Rev. C. C. Brown and wife
Rev. A. S. Moore Anderson, M.A.
B. L. Paton, M.D.
R. A. Rogers, B.A.
Miss Macarthur (absent)
Miss A. N. Duncan
Miss L. Ramsay
Miss M. E. Bryson, M.B., CF.B.
Miss Louisa Thacker, M.B., B.S., LOND.
Miss Jeanie Mackay
ENG-CHUN, VIA AMOY
Rev. Hy. Thompson
J.P. Maxwell, M.B., B.S.,F.K.C.S.,and wife (abt.)
Miss M. Ewing
Miss J. Ewing
Miss M. Ross
SWATOW
Rev. J. C. Gibson, M.A., D.D., and wife Alex. Lyall, M.B., C.M., and wife
Rev. P. J. Maclagan, M.A., D. PHIL, and wife Rev. J. Steele, B.A., and wife (absent) Rev. H. F. Wallace, M.A., B.D.
George Duncan Whyte, M.B., C.M., and wife William Paton and wife Miss Mary Harkness
Miss Eleanor Black
Miss Nina Beath, M.B., C.M. Miss J. Brander (absent) Miss M. Paton
CHAOCHOWFU, VIA SWATOW
Philip B. Cousland, M.B., CM., and wife
(in Shanghai)
A. Wright, M.B., C.M., and wife Miss Gillhespy (absent) Miss Wells
WOKINGFU, VIA Swarow
Rev. D. MacIver, M.A., and wife (absent) Rev. W. Riddel, M.A., M.D., and wife Rev. Stephen Band, B.A., and wife Rev. W. B. Paton, B.A., and wife Miss J. Balmer Miss Alice Laidler Miss M. Duffus
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
SAM-HO-PA, VIA ŚWATOW
Rev. Murdo C. Mackenzie and wife
J. F. McPhun, M.B., C.M. (absent)
SUA-BUE, VIA HONGKONG
Rev. David Sutherland, M.A., and wife
TAINAN, FORMOSA
Rev. Wm. Campbell, F.R.C.S., and wife (abt.)
Rev. Thomas Barclay, M.A.
Rev. Duncan Ferguson, M.A.
Rev. A. B. Nielson, M.A. Rev. A. E. Davies, B.A.
Rev. W. E. Montgomery, B.A.
Peter Anderson, L.R.C.P. & S. (absent)
J. L. Maxwell, M.D., B.S., and wife Miss M. Barnett
Miss J. Lloyd
Miss M. Learner
Miss A. Beuning
CHIANGHOA, FORMOSA
D. Landsborough, M.B., C.M.
Rev. H. Moncrieff, M.A., and wife
Miss A. E. Butler
Miss J. Stuart
EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION OF
NORTH AMERICA
會教
福美大
SHENCHOWFU, HUNAN
Rev. A. H. Butzbach and wife
F. C. Krumling, M.D., and wife
Rev. E. Kelhofer and wife
Rev. C. E. Ranck and wife
FINNISH FREE CHURCH MISSION (Associated with the China Inland Mission) Kiungsi Province
YUNGFENGHSIEN, VIA KIUKIANG Miss J. W. Arpiainen
Miss E. Cajander (absent)
YUNGSIN KI, VIA KIUKIANG
Miss A. E. Elurström
Miss E. E. Ingman
FINNISH MISSIONARY SOCIETY
會義信
TSINGSHIH, VIA SHASHI
Rev. Erland Sihvonen
Dr. Hannes Heikinheimo (absent)
Bev. Wilh. Pylkkänen and wife
Rev. H. Alanko and wife
Miss Sanni Lampén
Miss Amanda Laine
Miss Mandi da Kirveskoski
Miss Tmi Lammenranta
Miss Ida Rönka
YUINGTING
Rer. Martin Meedar and wife
Rev. Sakari Collan and wife
Miss Laura Nyberg
Miss Alma Unrukanti
TSILI
Rev. Oskar Puutula
1063
FOREIGN CHRISTIAN MISSIONARY
SOCIETY
會督基
SHANGHAI
Rev. James Ware and wife
Rev. H. P. Shaw and wife (absent)
Miss Rose L. Tonkin
NANKING
Rev. W. E. Macklin, M.D., and wife Rev. F. E. Meigs and wife (absent) Rev. F. Garrett and wife
Rev. Abram E. Cory and wife
Rev. E. A. Layton, M.D., and wife (abt.) Rev. C. S. Settlemeyer
Mrs. Lily Molland Miss Emma Lyon Miss Mary Kelly
Miss Edna Kurz
Miss Eva Raw
LUCHOWFU, VIA WUHU
Rev. Justin E. Brown and wife
Rev. James Butchart M.D., and wife Miss Alma Favors
Rev. George B. Baird
Rev. Frank C. Buck
CHUCHOW, AN, VIA NANKING Rev. E. J. Osgood, M.D., and wife Rev. D. E. Dannenberg and wife Miss Nellie J. Clark
WUHU
Rev. Alexander Paul and wife Miss Edna P. Dale
Miss Kate Miller
CHAOHSIEN, VIA WUHU
Rev. C. B. Titus and wife
NANTUNGCHOW
Rev. John Johnson and wife
BATANG FOR THIBET
Rev. J. C. Ogden and wife
A. L. Shelton, M.D., and wife
Z. C. Loftus, M.D.
FRIENDS' FOREIGN MISSION
會誼公
CHUNGKING
A. W. Davidson and wife
W. H. Davidson, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife
E. W. Sawdon B.SC.
Miss Margaret Fox, B.Sc.
Miss Myra L. Cumber
Alfred Davidson and wife (absent)
Wilfred A. Maw and wife
Bernard Wigham
TUNGOHWAN, SZE.
Leonard Wigham, B.A., and wife
Mrs. A. M. Deane
Miss Amy S. Marrs
Miss Lucy E. Harris, M.B.
J. P. Rodwell
E. B. Vardon and wife (absent)
TUNGLIANG
Benjamin H. Jackson and wife (absent)
1064
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
CHENGTU
Robert J. Davidson and wife (absent) Henry T. Hodgkin, M.A., M.D., and wife Henry D. Silcock, B.A., and wife
SUINING, SZE.
I. Mason and wife
NAN-FENG, VIA KIUKIANG
H. Pfannemüller and wife (absent) NINGTUCHOW, VIA KINKIANG
Adam Seipel and wife TSUNGJEN, VIA KIURIANG
F. Monch and wife Chekiang Province
CHUCHOW, VIA WENCHOW
O. Schmidt and wife E. Maag and wife Miss K. L. Böhnker Miss E. Forrler TSINYON, VIA WENCHOW
F. Rohm and wife YUNHO, VIA WENCHOW J. A. Beutel and wife Miss M. Steinmann Miss E. Baünier (absent)
LUNGCHUAN, CHE., VIA WENCHOW
J. Bender and wife George Müller and wife SUNGYANG VIA WENCHOW
H. Klein and wife H. L. Georg
Kiangsu Province ANTUNG, KU.
Miss L. Schwarz
GOSPEL MISSION TAIAN, SHANTUNG
Rev. T. L. Blalock and wife Mrs. J. V. Dawes
. Miss B. R. Walker
PоCHOW, ANHWEI
Rev. G. P. Bostick and wife Rev. W. D. Bostick and wife
Miss A. T. Bostick
GRACE MISSION 會與恩
TANGSI, VIA SHANGHAI
Alexander Kennedy and wife
Miss Eliza Etchells
HAUGE'S SYNODES MISSION
會恩鴻
FANCHENG, VIA HANKOW
Rev. H. N. Rönning (absent)
Rev. G. M. Trygstad and wife
Dr. I. M. J. Hotvedt and wife (absent)
Dr. Robert Anderson
Christian Stokstad, B.S.
Miss Olive Hodnefield (absent)
Miss A, Lee
Miss A. Nilsen
Miss Therese Peterson
Miss Ida Groseth
Miss Elsie Olson
TAIPINGTIEN, VIA HANKOW Rev. C. W. Landahl and wife
Tsz-HO TAIPINGTIEN, VIA HANKOW
Rev. O. R. Wold and wife
HILDESHEIM MISSION FOR
THE BLIND
館書光心
KOWLOON, BLIND HOME
Miss Johanna Reinecke
Miss Agathe von Seelhorst
Miss Sophie Moritz Miss Berta Bernhardt
INDEPENDENT CANTON
Miss Evelyn M. Burlingame
Mrs. Olivě A. Allen
SHANGHAI
Rev. Paul Kranz and wife Edward Evans and wife Mrs. Louise Dyer Miss M. W. Jewell Miss Adda L. Signor Miss Margaret L. Boyer
Miss E. N. Finn
C. E. Cornford
HANGCHOW
HSINHWA, VIA CHINKIANG
T. Hutton and wife
Miss A. M. Hutton
Miss C. Helena von Poseck
Miss G. Oviatt
Miss M. Oviatt
WUHU
KIENTEH, VIA ÅNKING
Miss Sarah Volk
KIUKIANG
Miss Hettie Johnston Miss Margaret Johnston Miss Isa B. Johnston
KULING, VIA Kiukiang Spencer Jones and wife
CHIKUNGSHAN, HONAN
J. U. Stotts and wife Miss Louise F. Stotts James M. Stotts
PIYANGHSIEN,
W. N. Nowack and wife
Miss D. R. Malot
Miss Crumpe
FoоCHOW
Ho
TSAOISIEN, SHANTUNG
Henry C. Bartel and wife Thomas Junk
Miss Anna Nyffenegger
Miss Bertha Maier
Miss Louise Bena
Miss Maud Allen
TSAOCHWFU
Peter Kiehn and wife
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
SHANHSIEN
John J. Schmidt and wife
Miss Maria Dyck
TSININGCHOW
1065
LIMCHOW
L. Jensen and wife
Miss Wendt
Ernst Ruelmann
Miss Louise Beme
Miss Maud Allen
TAIANFU
A. B. P. Giesler and wife
A. Wieneke and wife
TSEHCHOW, VIA PEKING
Stanley P. Smith and wife
Miss F. M. Reid
Miss M. Seagrave
INDEPENDENT LUTHERAN
MISSION SIHSIEN, HONAN
Rev. E. O. Böen
IRISH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
MISSION
會老長
NEWCHWANG
Rev. J. Carson, B.A., and wife
Walter Phillips, M.D.
MUKDEN
Rev. T. C. Fulton, M.A., and wife Rev. A. Weir, M.A. Miss E. McMordle
KIRIN
J. A. Greig, F.R.C.S., ED., and wife Miss Emma Crooks, M.B., C.M.
KUYUSHU
(P. O. Address: Kirin)
Rev. W. Miskelly, M.A.
KWANGNING
Rev. J. McWhirter, M.A., and wife
Dr. Elizabeth Beatty
CHINCHOW
Rev. A. R. Crawford and wife
Dr. Eva Simms
KWANGCHENGTZE
Rev. R. J. Gordon, M.A., M.B., C.M., and wife
Rev. W. H. Gillespie, M.A.
Miss Margaret McNeill, L.R.C.P. & S. Miss B. A. Grills
FAKUMEN
Rev. F. S. W. O'Neill, M.A., and wife
Miss Me Williams
Dr. Ida Mitchell
SINMIN FU
Rev. J. Omelvena, M. A,
B. L. Livingstone Learmonth, M.B., O.M.,
and wife
KIELER CHINA MISSION
會敎老長國德
PAKHOI
I Grohmann and wife
IL Clausen
Miss G. Nagel
LIEBENZELL MISSION
(Associated with the China Inland Mission)
HUNAN PROVINCE
CHANGSHA
C. Wohlleber and wife
O. Hollenweger
Miss E. L. P. Kumm
Miss I. Kunst
Miss M. Vasel
Miss A. F. K. Groth
SIANGTAN, VIA YOCHOW
Carl Czerwinski and wife
YUANCHOW, HUN., VIA YOCHOW
Heinrich Witt and wife H. H. F. Witte
Miss E. E. V. Trojahn Miss B. U. A. Leppin
PAOTSING, VIA YOCHOW
F. K. Schoppe and wife E. O. Schild
Miss L. Schmidt
U-KANG, VIA YOCHOW
A. H. Franke and wife
Miss A. Czach
HENGCHOW, VIA YOCHOW
F. Kampmann and wife
A. Stanislaw
Emil Breton
LONDON MISSIONARY SOCIETY
會敦倫
SHANGHAI
C. J. Davenport, F.R.C.S., and wife
Rev. Ernest Box and wife
Rev. W. N. Bitton
Rev. H. L. W. Bevan, M.A., and wife
Rev. E. J. Malpas, B.A., and wife
Mr H. B. Stewart and wife
Miss E. Halley
Miss A. Ford
Miss E. Foggitt, B.A.
Miss Ethel, Trihe, M.D.
PEKING
Rev. S. Evans Meech
Rev. W. Hopkyn Rees and wife Rev. T. Howard Smith and wife T. Cochrane, M.B., C.M., and wife
Ernest J. Peill, M.B., C.M., F.R.C.s., and wife Miss Livens (absent)
Rev. W. F. Dawson and wife
J. G. Gibb, c.M., M.D., M.S., and wife
Miss Myfanwy Rowlands, B.A.
Miss E. Lloyd
Dr. Hill and wife
TUNGCHOW, VIA PEKING
Rev. T. Biggin, M.A., and wife
TIENTSIN
Rev. Thomas Bryson and wife
Rev. Alex. King and wife
1066
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
S. Lavington Hart, M.A., D.Sc., and wife T. Kirkwood, M.A., M.B., C.M., and wife (abt.) J. B. Tayler, M.80.
J. G. Anderson, M.A.
J. Murray, M.A.
CHICHOW
(P. O. Address: Siaochang, Kichownan, via Peking)
J. B. Grant and wife
Rev. J. D. Liddell and wife E. J. Stuckey, M.B.,C.M., and wife Miss S. Peel, B.SC. Miss Myfanwy Wood
WEICHEN
(P. O. Address: Weikiachuang, Shuntefux, Peking) Rev. A. H. Bridge and wife T. Bragg, L.R.C.P. & S., and wife Rev. E. E. Bryant, B.A., B.D.
TSANGCHOW
(P. O. Address: Via Tientsin) Rev. D. S. Murray and wife Rev. Arnold G. Bryson and wife Miss Berry
S. G. Peill, M.B., C.M., and wife
HANKOW Rev. Griffith Jolin, D.D.
Rev. Arthur Bonsey and wife Rev. C. G. Sparham and wife Rev. A. J. Macfarlane, M.A, Rev. Bernard Upward and wife Cyril W. Knott, M.Sc.
Thomas Gillison, M.B., C.M., and wife
P. L. McAll, B.A., M.B., CH.B., and wife (alt.) Miss Byles, M.B., CH,M.
Miss Organe
WUCHANG
Rev. Arnold Foster, B.A.,
and wife
C. W. Somerville, CH. B., and wife Rev. W. Rowlands, M.A., B.D. Miss R. Massey, M.B., CH.B. Miss Edith E. Calvert (absent)
SIAOKAN
H. Fowler, L.R.C.P. & S., and wife Rev. Wilson H. Geller and wife
IWANGPI
James G. Cormack, L.R.C.S. & P.,ED., and wife Rev. L. C. F. Tomkins, B.A., and wife
TSAO-SHIH
Rev. H. Robertson and wife
E. F. Wills, M.B., C.M., and wife
CHANGSHA, HUNAN
Rev. J. W. Wilson and wife
HENGCHOWFU, HUNAN
A. L. Greig and wife
Ernest C. Peake, M.B., CH.B., and wife
Miss Clark
Miss Coxon
SIANGTAN, HUNAN
Rev. Ernest Burnip (absent)
CHUNGKING
Rev. A. E. Claxton and wife
Rev. J. Parker and wife
R. Wolfendale, L.R.C.P. & S., ED., and wife
AMOY
Rev. John Macgowan
Rev. James Sadler and wife (absent) Rev. Frank P. Joseland Miss Gertrude Ovenden Miss Lily Medland
CHIANGCHIU, VIA AMOY Rev. A. J. Hutchinson and wife Rev. T. C. Brown, B.A., B.D. A. Fahmy, M.D., C., and wife Miss A. L. Bell
G. R. Turner, M.B., CH.B. (absent) Miss Alice M. Horne (absent)
TINGCHOWFU, VIA ÁMOY
Rev. J. S. Wasson and wife C. E. Blair, M.B., CH.B., and wife Miss Edith Benham
CANTON Rev. W. W. Clayson, B.A., and wife I. E. Mitchell, M.D., C.M., and wife Rev. T. H. Caren
Rev. A. Baxter Miss M. Watkin
HONGKONG
Rev. T. W. Pearce Rev. H. R, Wells and wife
R. MacLean Gibson, M.D., C.M., and wife Miss H. Davies
Miss Alice D. Sibree, L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S. (abt.) Miss Stewart
Miss Briggs
POKLO
Rev. C. D. Cousins and wife
LUTHERAN BRETHREN MISSION
會道進
TSAOYANG, VIA HANKOW
Rev. Reinholt Kilen and wife (absent) Rev. Didreck Kilen and wife
Rev. Harman Fauske und wife Rev. George Holm
Miss Ida Walen
Miss Caroline Rasmuseu
Miss Mary Harstad
MEDICAL MISSIONARY ASSOCIA-
TION OF LONDON PEKING
J. M. Stenhouse, B.A., M.B., B.C.
H. V. Wenham, M.B., B.S., F.R.C.S. (Eng)
E. R. Wheeler, M.B., B.S.
MEDICAL MISSIONARY SOCIETY
局醫濟博
CANTON
Rev. R. H. Graves, D.D., M.D., president
Jolm Kirk, M.D., secretary
J.M.Swan, M.D.,surg.in charge, C'ton H'pital
A. G. Wilson, business manager Mrs. J. Ings, head of nursing department
NATIVE HOUSE PHYSICIANS
Dr. Nye
Dr. Li Sz Ku
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
SOUTH, U.S.A.
會公理監
SHANGHAI
Rev. A. P. Parker, D.D., and wife
Rev. J. W. Cline and wife
Rer, J. Whiteside and wife
Mrs. M. H. Allen
Rev. J. B. Fearn, M.D., and wife
MeTyeire Home, 4, Thibet Road
Miss Helen L. Richardson Miss Margaret Mitchell Miss Elizabeth Claiborne Miss Sophia Manns Miss Bessie Houser Miss Clara Park Miss Tuttle
SOOCHOW
Rev. D. L. Anderson, D.D., and wife W. H. Park, M.D., and wife Rev. W. B. Burke and wife Rev. W. B. Nance and wife Prof. N. Gist Gee and wife Rev. B. D. Lucas and wife Prof. R. D. Smart and wife Rev. C. K. Campbell and wife Rev. A. C. Bowen and wife J. A. Snell, M.D., and wife Prof. R. L. Anderson Miss Virginia M. Atkinson Miss Margaret H. Polk, M.D. Miss Martha E. Pyle Miss Mary C. White Miss Mary M. Tarrant Miss Maggie J. Rogers Miss Janie H. Watkins Miss Emma S. Lester Miss Nell Drake Miss Hood
Miss T. Foster
CHANGCHOW
Rer. R. A. Parker and wife Rev. J. C. Hawk and wife Miss Ella D. Leveritt Mise Ida M. Anderson
SUNGKIANGFU
Rev. J. A. 4. Shipley and wife le. H. T. Reed and wife Rev. G. R. Loehr and wife Mrs. Julia A. Gaither
Mrs. S. S. Harris
Miss Alice G. Waters
Miss Irene King
Miss Nettie Peacock
НuспOWFU
Rev. T. A. Hearn and wife Hes. J. L. Hendry and wife Rev. E. Pilley and wife Rev. W. A. Estes and wife Miss L. Rankin Miss M. B. Bomar Miss C. E. Steger
Miss Mary L. White
Miss Emma Steger
1067
METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION 會美以美
SHANGHAI
Rev. William H. Lacy, D.D., and wife
Rev. G. A. Stuart, M.D., and wife
Central China Mission
CHINKIANG
Rev. W. C. Longden and wife Rev. Spencer Lewis, D.D., and wife Lilburn Merrill, M.D...
Miss Lucy H. Hoag, M.D. Miss Gertrude Taft, M.D. Miss Grace Crooks
Miss Flora Carncross
NANKING
Robert C. Beebe, M.D., and wife Prof. A. J. Bowen, M.A., and wife Prof. Wilbur F. Wilson M.A., and wife Prof. A. W. Martin, M.A., and wife Prof. W. F. Hununel
Prof. William Millward Miss Laura M. White, B.A. Miss Sarah Peters (absent) Miss Ella C. Shaw
Miss Alice Peters (absent) Miss Luella Huelster
WUHU
E. H. Hart, M.D. superintendent, and wife Henry S. Houghton, M.D., and wife
Dr. Chung, house physician and surgeon Rev. George Miller and wife
Miss Edith M. Crane (absent)
Miss A. Mae Peregrine
Miss Kate L. Ogbom
Miss Alice E. Maddock
KIUKIANG
Rev. C. F. Kupfer, PII.D., and wife
Rev. H. F. Rowe and wife
Rev. F. G. Henke and wife
Miss Clara E. Merrill Mrs. Louise M. Walley Miss Mary Stone, M.D. Miss Jennie V. Hughes Miss A. W. Tracey
NANCHANG VIA KIUKIANG M. R. Charles, M.D., and wife Rev. J. R. Trindle and wife Rev. J. H. Blackstone and wife Rev. Wm. R. Johnson and wife Rev. F. C. Gale and wife Miss Gertrude Howe
Miss Ida Kalin, M.D. (absent) Miss Welthy B. Honsinger Miss Winifred Muir
West China Mission CHUNGKING
Rev. Q. A. Myers and wife (absent) Rev. J. F. Peat and wife
W. M. Crawford and wife J. H. McCartney, M.D., and wife
1068
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Claude W. Freeman and wife Rev. Johan A. Johanson (absent) Miss Helen R. Galloway (absent) Miss Agues Edmonds, M.D.
Miss Mary E. Ketring, M.D. (absent) Miss Annie M. Wells
Miss Jennie Borg
Miss A. Lulu Golisch
Miss Anna C. Lindblad
CHENGTU
Rev. Joseph Beech and wife
Rev. W. E. Manly and wife (absent) Rev. John W. Yost and wife H. L. Canright, M.D., and wife Rev. Elrick Williams and wife Rev. J. H. Neumann and wife J. G. Vaughan, M.D., and wife Miss Clara Collier Miss Mary Simister
Miss Dorothy Jones (absent) Miss Winifred Stout
TZECHOW
Rev. R. C. Ricker and wife Rev. C. B. Rape and wife Miss Ella Manning Miss Alice B. Brethorst
SUINIG, SZE.
Rev. J. O. Curnow and wife
Rev. B. F. Lawrence and wife
HOCHOW, SZE.
Rev. Ray L. Torrey and wife
North China Conference PEKING
Rev. James W. Bashford, IL.D., D.D., LL.D.,
Bishop, and wife
Prof. H. II. Lowry, D.D., and wife
Bev. James H. Pyke, D.D.
Rev. W. T. Hobart, D.D., and wife
Rev. F. D. Gamewell, PH.D., and wife N. S. Hopkins, M.D., and wife
Prof. I. T. Headland, PH.D., and wife Prof. H. E. King and wife
G. D. N. Lowry, M.D., and wife
Prof. John MacGregor Gibb, jr., and wife J. J. Mullowney, M.D., and wife Prof. W. W. Davis
Rev. C. A. Felt and wife
Mrs. C. M. Jewell
Miss A D. Gloss, M.D.
Miss Alice Terrell
Miss Gertrude Gilman
Miss L. Maud Wheeler
Miss Alice Powell Miss Evelyn Baugh
I
Miss Melissa Manderson, M.D, Miss Myra Jaquit
TIENTSIN
Rev. G. R. Davis and wife Rev. F. Brown, F.R.G.S., and wife Rev. Burton St. John and wife O. J. Krause and wife
Miss Ida Stevenson, M.D. Miss Frances O. Wilson
Miss Emma Knox
Miss Stryker M.D.
Miss Clara M. Cushman
CHANGLI
Rev. Marcus L. Taft, D.D., and wife (abt.) Rev. G. L. Davis and wife
J. L. Keeler, M.D., and wife Miss E. E. Glover
Miss Carrie P. Dyer
TAIANFU, SHANTUNG Rev. Geo. W. Verity and wife Prof. Perry O. Hanson and wife Charles F. Ensign, M.D., and wife Jessie H. Baldwin, M.D. Miss Edna G. Terry, M.D. Miss Emma Martin, M.D.
Miss Sue L. Koons, M.D. (absent) Miss Ethic C. Young
Miss Estie Boddy
Foochow Conference
FOOCHOW
Rev. Wilson S. Lewis, D.D., LL.D., Bishop,
and wife
W. S. Bissonnette and wife (absent) Prof. E. C. Jones (absent) Rev. W. A. Main and wife Rev. J. Gowdy and wife Rev. G. S. Miner and wife
Rev. Ernest B. Caldwell D.D., and wife Rev. E. L. Ford and wife
Rev. A. W. Billing and wife Prof. Walter N. Lacy and wife E. F. Black
Rev. E. L. Page Rev. W. Paddock Miss Mary Thomas Miss Julia Bonafield
Miss Sarah M. Bosworth
Miss Iu King Eng, M.D. Miss Carrie T. Jewell Miss E. M. Lyon, M.D.
Miss Florence J. Plump (absent) Miss Lena Halfield, M.D. Miss Grace B. Travis Miss Lydia A. Trimble Miss Ethel Wallace
Miss Jean Adams (absent) Miss P. C. Wells
Miss May Hu
Miss Cora Simpson
Miss Lulu Baker
Miss Louise Collier
HOKCHANG, NGUCHENG, VIA FOOCHOW
Rev. H. R. Caldwell and wife
Miss Mabel Allen
Miss Carrie Bartlett (absent) Miss Mamie Glassburner Miss Li Bi Cu, M.D. Miss Jessie Ankeny
YENPINGFU, VIA FOOCHOW J. E. Skinner, M.D., and wife (absent) Rev. G. S. Brown and wife (absent) Rev. F. W. Bankhardt and wife C. M. Lacey Sites, PH.D., and wife (absent) J. E. Gossard, M.D., and wife
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Miss Mabel C. Hartford
Miss Alice Linam
MINTSINGHSIEN, VIA FOOCHOW
Rev. J. B. Eyestone
KUCHENG
Rev. J. H. Worley, PH.D., and wife (absent)
Rev. T. H. Coole, M.D., and wife
Rev. Ralph Ward and wife
Miss Friedla V. Lorenz (absent)
Mrs. A. Shepard
Miss Mary Peters
Miss Laura Frazey
Miss Edna Jones
LEKDU, VIA FOOCHOW
Miss M. E. Carleton, M.D. Miss I. D. Longstreet (absent)
Hinghwa Conference
HINCHWAFU, VIA FOOCHOW
Rev. W. N. Brewster, D.D., and wife Rev. U. R. Jones and wife (absent) Fred. H. Trimble and wife
Rev. F. Stanley Carson and wife Miss L. E. Varney (absent) Miss Pauline E. Westcott Miss M. E. Wilson
Miss E. Campbell Miss Edith L. Fonda
YUNGCHUN, VIA FOOCHOW Rev. H. G. Dildine and wife Rev. J. W. Hawley and wife
YUNGAN, VIA FOOCHOW Rev. W. W. Williams, M.D. Rev. W. W. B. Cole
SIENYU, VIA FOOCHOW
Miss M. Lebeus (absent)
Miss M. Nicolaisen
Miss Emma Betow, M.D.
Miss Fannie L. Draper, M.D. Miss Paula Seidlemann
TEHWA, VIA FOOCHOW
Miss A. M. Todd
Miss J. A. Marriott
Miss Gertrude Strawick
METHODIST PUBLISHING HOUSE
IN CHINA
館書印美華
10, Woosung Road, Shanghai
Rey, W. H. Lacy, D.D., manager, and wife
Cowen, ass't, manager, and wife
A. Rosenberg, superintendent, and wife James Thompson, book-keeper Misa Ida Louise Brooks, secretary
FOOCHOW
W.R. Bissonnette, supt., and wife T.M. Hsu, accountant
METROPOLITAN PRESBYTERIAN
MISSION
SHANGHAI
Bev. H. G. C. Hallock, PH.D.
18, Peking Road
1069
MISSION FOR THE CHINESE BLIND 會目瞽
PEKING
Rev. W. H. Murray and wife
Miss Hill Murray
MISSION TO CHINESE DEAF
堂學啟瘖
Mrs. A. T. Mills
Снегоо
Miss Anita E. Carter
MISSIONARY HOME AND AGENCY
所公士教
38, Quinsan Road, Shanghai
Edward Evans and wife
Miss E. Spurling
Miss Florence M. Buck
Miss M. E. Asken
Y. C. Ng, compradore
T. Hong, chief clerk
BOOK ROOM AND EDUCATIONAL
DEPOSITORY
Edward Evans, 30, N. Szechuen Road Hugh McKay, jun,
Miss Beulah O. Mason
Miss Lily Porter
William K. Lee
H. Y. Chen
NATIONAL BIBLE SOCIETY OF
SCOTLAND
會經聖蘭格穌
PEKING AND TIENTSIN
A.S.Annand,agent for NorthChina,and wife
CHINKIANG
M. J. Walker, agt. E. Cent. China, and wife
HANKOW
John Archibald, agent, and wife T. F. Buchanan, missionary printer (abt.)
CHUNGKING
W. E. Souter, agent
ΑΜΟΥ
Walter Milward, agent, South China
NORTH CHINA TRACT SOCIETY 會書北華
PEKING
Rev. W. H. Rees, chairman
Rev. G. D. Wilder, vice-chairman
Rev. W. F. Dawson, cor. secretary
Rev. C. E. Ewing, cor. secretary
Jno. McG. Gibb, jr., treasurer
Rev. C. H. Fenn, D.D., recording secretary A. C. Grimes, general agent
NORTH-WEST KIANGSI MISSION WUCHENGRI, VIA KIUKIANG
Edward J. Blandford and wife Charles Wilson
Mrs. E. J. Lennox
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
1070
Miss C. Lennox
Miss C. Featherstone
Miss M. Scott
Miss Bertha Taylor
NORWEGIAN LUTHERAN MISSION 會德路 國瑙
LAOHOKOW, HUPEH
O. M. Sama and wife
O. J. A. Helland and wife
E. Osnes and wife
Olay Roed, treasurer, and wife Mrs. G. Johnsen Miss Inga Ohrset Miss A. Engesland Miss Anna Rorvik
L. Lande Ostergaard
SHIHWAKAI, HUPEH
KENCHOW, HUPEH
L. Tveit and wife Miss Kojrsvik
YUNYANG, HUPEH K. Bergfjord and wife
Miss Sofie Istad
TENGCHOW,
HONAN
I. B. Oistesö and wife
T. Froiland, M.D.
CHENPINGHO, HONAN
Thy. Skraastad and wife
L. Fleisje
NANYANGFU, HONAN
Olav. Espeegren, actg. sup't., and wife
Hj. Mjelve and wife
LUSHAN, HONAN
Johs. Karstad and wife
NORWEGIAN MISSION IN CHINA
(Associated with the China Inland Mission)
Shansi Province
HOTSIN, KIANGCHOW, VIA PEKING
Miss R. Hattrem (absent)
P. Hole
SIH-CHEO (TANING)
R. T. W. Gornitzka
S. Bjertnres
Shensi Province
NINSIANG, VIA CHANGSHA
Rev. K. L. Reichelt and wife
Miss Hanna Halthe
Rev. P. O. Halthe
IYANG, VIA CHANGSHA
Rev. N. Arnetvedt
Rev. A. Fleischer, B.SC., M.A., B.D., and wife Rev. Olav. Dalland
TAOHUALUEN, IYANG, VIA CHANGSHA J. E. Nilssen, M.A., M.D., and wife (absent) Volrath Vogt, B.SC., M.A., M.D. Volrath Vogt, M.A., M.D. Sister Dorthea Gulbrandsen Sister Danielle Johannessen Rev. A. Hertzberg, M.A., M.SC. Mrs. A. Hertzberg, M.A. Miss Birgit Gleditsch
SINHWA VIA CHANGSHA Rev. S. Brun, M. A., B.D., and wife Miss Brynhild Jakobsen, B.A.
ORIENTAL MISSIONARY SOCIETY YAU MA TEI, VIA HONGKONG
Rev. E. R. Munroe and wife Miss Phoebe Pierce
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF NEW
ZEALAND, THE CANTON
VILLAGES MISSION
會公老長俞絲烏
CANTON
Rev. G. H. McNeur and wife
Rev. Wm. Mawson, M.A., and wife
Rev. H. Davies, M.A.
Miss J. Mawson
Miss M. T. Anderson
John Kirk, M.B., CH.B., and wife
Miss McEwen
REFORMED CHURCH IN AMERICA
教正歸國美大
AMOY
Rev. P. W. Pitcher, M.A., and wife
Rev, J. A. Otte, M.D. (wife absent)
Andrew Bonthius, M.D., and wife
Herman Renkers
Rev. D. Jackson Steward Day and wife
Mrs. M. E. Talmage
HAN-CH'ENG (YUNCHENG)
Miss C. Angvik (absent)
NORWEGIAN MISSIONARY SOCIETY
會義信
Hunan Province
CHANGSHA
Rev. J. A. O. Gotteberg
J. A. O. Gotteberg, M.D. Sister Emilie Caspersen Miss Hansine Heimbeck Rev. Johan Torset
Rev. Fredrik Klavenes, M.A., B.D. Rev. Steen Bugge, B.Sc., M.A., B D.
Miss M. E. Talmage
Miss K. M. Talmage
Miss M. Kranenberg
Miss Anna H. Meengs
Miss Mary W. Shepard
Miss Leona Vander Linden
TONG-AN
Rev. Frank Eckerson, M.A.
Miss L. N. Duryee
Miss Alice Duryee
CHIANG-CHIU
Rev. H. P. Boot, M.A.
Rev. H. P. De Pree, B.D., and wife
Miss Katharine R. Green
Miss M. C. Morrison
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
SIO-KNE
Rev. A. L. Warnshuis, M.A., and wife Rev. H. J. Voskuil
Miss N. Zwemer
Mrs. H. C. Kip (absent)
Miss Elizabeth H. Blauvett, M.D. (absent)
REFORMED CHURCH IN THE
UNITED STATES
會初復美德大
YOUHOW, VIA HANKOW
Rev. W. E. Hoy, president, and wife
Rov. W. A. Reimert, sec., and wife
Rev. Paul E. Keller and wife
Rev. Wm: F. Adams, M.D., and wife Miss S. E. Ziemer
Miss Anna C. Kanne
Miss Alice E. Traub (trained nurse) Rev. J. Frank Bucher and wife Prof. Horace R. Lequear
CHENCHOW, HUNAN
W. Kelly, M.D., and wife (absent)
Rev. Edwin A. Beck
Miss Rose A. Spangler
Mr. F. K. Heinrichsohn and wife
Miss Edyth N. Brightbill (trained nurse)
MIENISH MISSIONARY SOCIETY
會賢禮
TUNGKUN, VIA CANTON
Rev. G. Hötzel and wife
Rev. H. Rieke and wife
1. Baumann and wife
G. Eich, M.D., and wife
Dr. H. Hermann
Rev. E. Zahn and wife
SANTONG, VIA CANTON
Rev. F. Wichner and wife
KANGPUI, VIA CANTON, SHEKLUNG
Rev. W. Giesewetter and wife
THONGTAUHA
(en Rhenish Mission, Hongkong) Rev. I. Bahr and wife
Rev. H. Linden and wife
FUKWING
(c/o Rhenish Mission, Hongkong) Rev. F. Diehl and wife
TAIPING TUNG, VIA CANTON Rev. Chr. Rüter and wife Miss Helene Schmitz
Miss Agnes Smithson
HONGKONG
Rev. I. Genähr and wife
Otto Meyer, business agent, and wife
SCANDINAVIAN ALLIANCE MIS-
SION-MONGOLIA
會同協
PAOTEO, VIA PEKING
Rev. A. F. Almbland and wife
Rev. N. J. Freidström and wife Rev. A. Magnusson and wife
SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN
CHRISTIAN FREE MISSION 會丹遂美
CANTON
Rev. H. J. von Qualen (absent)
Rev. A. E. Thor and wife
Miss M. Ericsson (absent)
Miss F. L. Larson (absent)
Miss Ingeborg Wendell
Miss Hannah Hedström
1071
SCANDINAVIAN CHINA ALLIANCE
MISSION
會同協
(Most missionaries of
Scandinavian
Alliance Mission, China proper, are
associated with the China Inland Mission)
Kiangsu Province
SHANGHAI
Scandinavian Work
Rev. A. E. Rydberg and wife
Shensi Province
SIANFU, VIA Hankow
Rev. C. J. Anderson and wife Rev. V. L. Nordlund and wife
V. Renius
Mrs. Ch. Henriksen (absent) Rev. O. Bengtsson and wife C. J. Jensen
Miss D. Lindvall
LANTIEN, VIA HANKOW
Rev. W. Englund and wife
YING-KIA-WEI, SIANFU, VIA HANKOW
Miss M. Anderson
CHEN-KIA-KEO, SIANFU, VIA HANKOW
(Vacant)
HINGPING, STANFU, VIA HANKOW
S. Bergström and wife
SANG-KIA-CHUANG, WUKUNG, VIA HANKOW
Miss A. Olson
WUKUNG, SIANFU, VIA HANKOW
Miss A. Swanson Miss C. Anderson CHIENCHOW, SIANFU, VIA HANKOW W. Hagqvist and wife (absent) Rev. G. Allstrand and wife (absent) LICHICANHSIEN, SIANFU, VIA HANKOW
Rev. R. Beckman and wife
Rev. E. Palmberg and wife Rev. G. Palmberg
PINCHOW SIE
Rev. Ph. Nilson and wife Alfred B. Gjelseth
KIENYANG, VIA HANKOW
Miss L. Norden
Miss A. Jensen
LUNGCHOW, SHE., VIA HANKOW
J. G. Nilson and wife
1072
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Miss E. E. Petterson
Miss H. A. Hagsten
Shansi Province
FENGCHEN, VIA TAIYUANFU
Rev. K. R. J. Hill and wife Miss A. M. Anderson KWEIHWATING, VIA TAIYUANFU
Rev. P. E. Ebn and wife (absent) PAO-TEO (KWEIJIWATING)
Rev. Emil Johnson (absent) Rev. N. Göthberg (absent) SARATSI, VIA PEKING
Rev. O. E. Oberg and wife Miss H. A. Dahlberg
Miss I. A. Göthberg (absent)
Kansuh Province
TSINGNINGCHOW, VIA][ANKOW ANDSIANFU
Rev. J. O. Ryd
PING LIANG, VIA HANKOW AND SIANFU
Rev. D. Törnvall and wife
Rev. E. M. Paulson
Miss T. Johnson
Miss O. Olsen
Miss G. S. Andersen (absent)
CHEN YUAN (CHINGCHIOW), VIA HANKOW
Miss E. Peterson
Miss A. Strand (absent)
Miss J. Wedicson
Miss A. Skollenberg
TSINCHOW, KAN., SIANFU, VIA HANKOW
Miss H. Lundvall
Miss C. Wallenberg CHONG-SIN (CHINGCHOW)
Rev. F. A. Gustafson and wife TUNGCHOWFU, SIANFU, VIA HANKOW
Rev. A. T. Johanson (absent)
Chilli Province
SUANHWAFU, VIA PERING
Rev. C. G. Söderbom and wife
SEVENTHI DAY ADVENTIST MISSION
會日息安臨復督基
CANTON, C/O BRITISH P. Q.
Pastor E. H. Wilbur and wife
Miss Amanda Vanscoy
Miss Ida E. Thomson
FATSHAN, VIA CANTON
Law Keen, M.D., and wife
WAICHOWFU, VIA CANTON
J. P. Anderson
CHOWKIAKOW, HONAN Pastor F. A. Allum and wife E. D. Miller
Pastor R. F. Cottrell and wife A. C. Selinon, M.D., and wife Pastor J. J. Westrup and wife CHANGSHA, HUNAN
P. J. Laird and wife
KULANGSU, AMOY Pastor W. C. Hankins and wife Pastor B. L. Anderson and wife
SHANGHAI
(Address: P. O. Box 993, U, S. Postal Agency)
O. J. Gibson
Mrs. Bothilde Miller
H. W. Miller, M.D., and wife
Miss Pauline Schilberg
H. H. Winslow, secy, and treas., and wife
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
MISSION PRESS
館書印報宣音福
P. O. Box 993, U. S. POSTAL AGENCY,
SHANGHAI
Paper, "Fuh Yin Hsuen Pao" (Wenli
Monthly)
H. W. Miller, M.D., manager and editor
B. A. Roberts, superintendent
H. H. Winslow, treasurer
O. J. Gibson
SEVENTH DAY BAPTIST MISSION 會禮浸日息安敎穌耶傳
SHANGHAI
Rev. D. H. Davis, D.D., and wife
Rev. J. W. Crofoot, M.A., and wife
Miss Susie M. Burdick, ru.B.
Miss Rosa W. Palmborg, M.D. Rev. H. E. Davis and wife
SHANGHAI SEAMEN'S CHURCH
AND MISSION SOCIETY Honorary Chaplain-Rev. A. J. Walker, M.A.; Chaplain iu Charge of St. Andrew's Church-Rev, F. Perry, B. A.; Chaplain in Charge of Institute and Work Afloat-Rev. R. G. Winning, B.A.
Honorary Treasurer-Rev. E. C. Richards SOUTH CHINA MEDICAL COLLEGE
EXECUTIVE COMMITTE
J. M. Swan, M.D.
J. Webb Anderson, M.D.
E. C. Davenport, MD.
A. G. Wilson, secy, and treas.
SOUTH CHIHLI MISSION
福
會
TAMINGFU, CHIILI
H. W. Houlding, general director, and wife
Miss Bertha Z. Schrack, secy, and treas.
Jacob G. Cole
August H. Reinhard I. Deutsch
Miss Inez M. Barker Miss Pearl Robinette Mrs. E. L. Karr Mrs. L. D. Marston Miss Amy E. Brown Miss Sophia Taylor Miss May H. Taggart Miss Ilarriet Lang Miss Hattie R. Wilcox
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
1073
Miss Lydia E. Connaughty
Miss Katharine Ewald
Miss Selma O. Moberg
Miss Paula Ritter
Miss Catharine Flagler
SWEDISH AMERICAN MISSIONARY
COVENANT
會道行
SIANGYANG, VIA HANKOW
Rev. P. Matson and wife
Rev. J. Sjöquist, M.D., and wife (absent)
Rev. C. J. Nelson, B.A., and wife
Miss H. N. Rodborg
Miss Ellen Ackerson
Miss Amelia Ackerson
FANCHENG, VIA HANKOW
Rev. J. Peterson and wife
Miss H. M. Johnson
Miss Justine Nelson
Nanchang, via Siangyang, Hope!!
Rev. I. W. Jacobson and wife
KONGMEN, VIA SIangyang, Hupe
Rev. J. S. Johnson
Rev. O. S. Johnson
SWEDISH BAPTIST MISSION
會信浸國瑞
CHUCHENG
Rev. J. E. Lindberg and wife
Rev. John Wertergren
Miss Matilda Persson
KIAOCHOW
Rev. J. A. Rinell and wife
Rev. A. Leander and wife
Miss Ester Wahlin
SWEDISH HOLINESS UNION
(Associated with the China Inland Mission)
Shansi Province
TATUNGFU, VIA TAIYUANFU
A. Karlsson (absent)
G. E. Larsson
C. A. Olsen
A. Albin Karlsson J. A. Lifbom
Miss A. Gustafson
Mrs. N. Carleson (absent) TSOYUN, VIA TAIYUANFU
C. A. Anderzén and wife Miss E. K. Anderson Miss K. Anderson Miss A. Setterberg
SOPING, VIA TAIYUANFU
A. A. Myrborg
A. G. Worn
E. Hallin
HONYUAN, VIA PEKING
Oscar Carlén and wife (absent)
J. D. Höglander (absent) G. S. Fredberg
J. L. Classon
G. Walentin
Szechuan Province
Pachow, Sze (Paoning)
Miss H. S. Johanson
SWEDISH MISSION IN CHINA 會華瑞
(Associated with the China Inland Mission)
Shensi Province
TUNGCHOWFU, SHE, VIA TAIYUANFU
N. Högman and wife
Miss A. Eriksson
L. H. E. Linder and wife (absent) HANGCHENGUSIEN, VIA HANKOW
A. R. Bergling and wife
Miss O. G. W. Ahlman HOYANG, VIA PEKING
Mrs. Bolling (absent) Miss A. Rosenius Miss Ida E. Anderson Shansi Province
Isum, VIA TAIYUANFU
A. Hahne and wife A. A. Ericsson
Miss A. O. Forssberg Miss M. Bjorklund
YÜNCHENG, VIA TAIYUANFU
E. Folke and wife (absent)
A. Berg and wife
C. Blomand and wife J. Th. Sandberg and wife Miss F. Ilallin
CHIEHCHOW, VIA TAIYUANFU
C. H. Tjäder and wife G. W. Wester and wife Miss E. Anderson Miss S. E. E. Hesse
PUCHOWFU, VIA PEKING
Miss F. Prytz Miss L. M. Nylin
Honan Province
HONANFU
E. O. Beinhoff and wife
K. R. Anderson
Miss M. Ringberg
Miss A. Janzon
Miss E. A. E. Burén SINANHSIEN
Miss B. M. P. Pettersson Miss A. M. L. Hultkrantz MIENCIOU
G. A. Stalhammar and wife
Miss H. W. S. Engstrom
SWEDISH MISSIONARY SOCIETY
食道行
WUCHANG, VIA HANKOW
Rev. Joh, Sköld and wife
Rev. A. L. Fagerholm and wife
Rev. A. E. Wandel
Miss A. Jönsson
Miss E. Lindgren
1
34
1071
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
SHASI
Rev. A. P. Tjellstrún and wife Rev. B. E. Rydén and wife
ICHANG
Rev. K. W. Engdahl and wife
Rev. K. A. Fernström and wife Miss E. Isaksson
Miss Ida Pettersson
HWANGCHOW
Rev. G. Tonnér (absent)
Rev. S. Tannkvist and wife
Rev. K. Nilsson and wife
Mrs. A. Berg
Miss H. Borjeson
Miss M. Axling
MACHENGHSIEN,
VIA HANKOW
Rev. F. A. Wennborg and wife.
Rev. D. R. Wahlquist and wife
Miss Ellen Sundquist
KIENLI, VIA HANKOW
Rev. N. Kullgren and wife
Rev. E. Franzén
KINGCHOW, HUPER
Rev. S. M. Fredén (and wife, absent) Rev. O. Terning
SWEDISH MONGOL MISSION HALLONG, Osso, KALGAN
Rev. Edvin Karlen
THE JOHN G. KERR REFUGE
FOR INSANE
院醫愛惠
CANTON
C. C. Selden, PH.D., M.D., supdt, and wife
J. Allen Hofmann, M.D., assistant
Board of Trustees
Rev. H. V. Noyes, D.D.
Mrs. J. G. Kerr
Rev. J. J. Boggs
Lei Yuk Tin
UNCONNECTED
Shantung Province
CHEEFOO
J. A. Stooke and wife
WEIHAIWEI
Dr. J. N. Case and wife (absent)
J. W. Wilson and wife
E. N. Hill and wife
E. C. Ockenden and wife
Miss A. Gresham
Miss A. Rout
YÜNCHENGHSIEN, VIA WEIHAIWEI
H. S. Smith and wife
WENTENG, VIA CHEFOO
J. E. E. Bridge
SHIRTAO, VIA CHEFOO
Miss T. Briseid
Miss Akers Miss Leach
Inner Mongolia
PAKOW, VIA TANGSHAN
E. Eagger and wife (absent) E. J. Tharp and wife Mrs. Merrington
J. Duthie
TU-CHIA-WO-PU, VIA TANGSHAN
C. A. L. B. Christensen and wife Miss Gates (absent)
Miss Blackmore
Miss Butcher (absent)
JEHO (CHỦNG-TE-FU) VIA PEKING
R. Stephen
H. J. Barnett and wife R. M. McAlpine
R. W. Sturt
Hupeh Province
LAOHOKOW, VIA HANKOW
A. Robertson and wife A. Whitelaw and wife
Kiangsi Province
NANCILANG
Harry Price and wife. F. J. Hopkins and wife Miss N. Warr (absent) Miss A. Lambert Miss F. L. Bergin Miss A. B. Dawson
Mrs. H. E. Pownall (absent)
Miss H. Dunphy
Miss F. L. Thomas
FUNGSINHSIEN
T. Melville and wife JUICHOWFU
A. Cuff and wife (absent) J. W. Alderson and wife SHANGKAOHSIEN
Miss R. Norman SINCHANGHSIEN
Miss S. A. Holt Miss M. Ridley TUKIAPU
James A. Gordon and wife NGANIHSIEN
H. Lamb and wife TEHNGANHSIEN
R. Ernest Jones and wife Miss L. Crawford
KIUKIANG
W. H. Lester and wife
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
會寅同
CANTON
Regina M. Bigler, M.D.
Rev. C. E. Spore and wife
Rev. E. B. Ward and wife
Rev, B. F. Bean and wife Frank Oldt, M.D., and wife Miss Belle Myers
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
UNITED EVANGELICAL CHURCH
MISSION
會道巡
CHANGSHA, VIA YOCHOW, HUNAN
Rev. C. Newton Dubs and wife
Rev. M. E. Ritzman (absent)
Miss Marie T. Hasenplug (absent) Miss Irene E. Poling
Rev. T. L. C. Suhr and wife
SIANGTAN, VIA YOCHOW, HUNAN
Rev. C. C. Talbott and wife
Rev. W. I. Shainbaugh and wife
LILING, VIA YOCHOW, HUNAN
Rev. H. E. Voss and wife D. C. Mumford, M.D., and wife Rev. Irving Dunlap and wife
UNITED FREE CHURCH OF
SCOTLAND
MANCHURIAN MISSION (P. O. Address: Via Newchwang) LIAOYANG AND HAICHENG CIRCUIT Mrs. Macintyre
LIAOYANG
A. M. Westwater, L.R.C.P. & S., ED. Rev. George Douglas, M.A., and wife Rev. Alex. R. Mackenzie, M.A., B.D. Miss Mary Fleming Graham Miss Isa Aitken, L.R.C.P. & S., ED. Miss Sarah Mundle
Miss Ellie G. Miller, M.B., C.H.M.
MURDEN CIRCUIT MUKDEN, EAST SUBURB Rev. John Ross, D.D., and wife
Dugald Christie, F.R.C.P., L.R.C.S., E., and wife Rev. James Webster and wife
Alex. Russell Young, L.R.C.P. & S., and wife Miss Mary Stuart Davidson
Miss Mary C. Horner, L.R.C.P. & S., ED. Miss Ethel L. Starmer, M.B., C.M. Miss R. T. Garriock
Miss Emily McNeill, B.A,
MUKDEN, UNION COLLEGE, SOUTH SUBURB
Rey, Dan, T. Robertson, M.A., and wife John Primrose Hay, M.A.
HSING CHING Circuit
YUNGLING
Rev. Henry W. Pullar, M.A., and wife TIEHLING AND KAIYUEN CIRCUIT
TIEHLING
David D. Muir, L.R.C.P. & S., ED.
KAIYUEN
Rev, Jus. W. Inglis, M.A., and wife
Miss Louise Howie
Miss Bessie Macintyre
Miss Jean M. Andrew, M.B., CH.B.
HAILUNG CHENG CIRCUIT
CHAOYANGCHEN
Rev, W. MacNaughtan, M.A., and wife W. A. Young, M.B., C.M., and wife (absent)
Arch. R. Leggate, M.B., CH.B,
SUNGARI CIRCUIT ASHIO
Rev. James Stobie and wife
1075
E. McKillop Young, M.B., C.M., and wife (abt.)
Rev. L. D. M. Wedderburn, M.A.
Miss Mary Paton
Miss Agnes M. Cowan, M.B., CH.8.
HULAN
Rev. David C. Davidson, M.A.
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
MISSION
會公我皆
NINGPO
Rev. J. W. Heywood and wife
Rev. G. W. Sheppard and wife Rev. W. Lyttle and wife
H. S. Redfern, M.Sc., and wife Dr. J. Jones and wife Miss J. E. Murfitt
WENCHOW
Rev. W. E. Soothill, gen. sup't., and wife
(Shansi University)
Rev. W. R. Stobie, act'g supt., and wife Rev. A. H. Sharmah and wife
Rev. F. D. Jones
Dr. W, E. Plummer and wife (absent) Dr. E. W. Smerdon
T. W. Chapman, M.Sc., and wife (absent) Miss Lily Boardley
TIENTSIN
Rev. John Hedly, F.R.G.S., and wife
TANGSHAN
Rev. Geo. T. Candlin and wife
WUTING, SHANTUNG
Rev. W. Eddon and wife
J. K. Robson, M.D.
A. K. Baxter, L.R.C.P. & S., ED., and wife
YUNGPINGFU, Sci.
Rev. G. P. Littlewood
A. F. Jones, L.R.C.F. & S., and wife Miss M. Roebuck
CHUCHAI, VIA NINGCHING
Rev. John Hinds and wife Dr. F. W. Marshall and wife Miss E. K. Cook
Miss A. Turner
CHAOTUNG, YUNNAN
Rev. C. A. Hicks and wife
Lewis Savin, M.R.C.B. & S., L.R.C.P., and wife Miss Squire, B.A.
Miss E. M. Squire, B.A.
Miss L. Grandin, L.R.C.P. & S.
Aboriginal Work
Rev. S. Pollard and wife (absent) Rev. H. Parsons and wife
Rev. C. Mylne
TUNGCHWAN, YUN
Rev. F. J. Dymond and wife (absent)
Rev. A. Evans
34*
1076
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
UNITED SOCIETY OF CHRISTIAN
ENDEAVOUR FOR CHINA
會合酈勉督基國中
Rev. G. F. Fitch, D.D., president
L. T. Yoen, vice-president
D. Y. Tsang, hon. secretary
E. S. Little, hon, treasurer
Rev. J. Darroch, editorial treasurer
Miss E. S. Hartwell, sec'y. for Junior C. E.
in Fukien
E. E. Strother, gen. sec. for Christian
Endeavour and Junior C. E.
PROVINCIAL SECRETARIES
E. E. Strother, chairman, Shanghai
Anhwei
Dr. E. J. Osgood, Chuchow
Chekiang
J. E. Shoemaker, Yü-yao
Chilli
Miss N. N. Russell, Peking
Pukien
G. H. Hubbard, Pagoda Ane.
Ionan
H. T. Ford, Taikang
Пunan
Tupeh
A. R. Kepler, Siangtan
A. W. Lagerquist, Laohokow
Kansu
G. Andrew, Lanchowfu
Kiangsi
R. A. McCulloch, Jaochow
Frank Garrett, Nanking
Kiangsu
Kwangsi
Kwangtung
F. J. Child, Kweiling
Mrs. C. A. Nelson, Canton
Kwei how
D. W. Crofts, Chenyuan
Manchuria
James Stobie, Kaiyuen.
A. Sowerby, Taiyuanfu
Geo. Cornwell, Chefoo
Shansi
Shantung
Shansi
Szechuan
A. Goold, Mienhsin
Miss E. Harris, Tungehuan
Yunnan
J. McCarthy, Yunnanfu
UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCHOOL
CANTON
Josiah C. McCracken, M.A., M.D., and wife
William W. Cadbury, M.A., M.D.
Mary C. Soles
WESLEYAN MISSIONARY SOCIETY
Hupeh Province
HANKOW
會道循
Rev. G. A. Clayton and wife
Rev. J. S. Helps and wife (absent) Rev. C. S. Minty
Miss Gooch
Rev. R. T. Booth, M.B., B.CH., and wife Rev. W. A. Tatchell, M.R.C.9., L.R.C.P,
and wife
Miss B. Mountford
Miss N. Booth
HANYANG
Rev. T. E. North, R. A., and wife
Mrs. Mitchil
Miss Russell
WUCHANG
Rev. C. W. Allan and wife
Rev. E. F. Gedye, M.A., and wife Rev. H. B. Rattenbury, B.A., and wife Miss Crawford, M.B.
Miss Reed
HANCH'UAN, VIA HANKOW
Rev. J. S. Helps and wife Teianfu, via Hankow
George Miles and wife (absent) Rev. N. Page and wife Miss Longstaff
A. Morley, L.R.C.S. & P., ED., SUICHOW, VIA HANKOW
Rev. J. K. Hill and wife Miss E. T. Taylor Rev. G. M. Thomas ANLUII, VIA HANKOW
Rev. W. Rowley and wife E. Cundall, L.R.C.S. & P. TAYEH, VIA HANKOW
and wife
Rev. P. T. Dempsey and wife J. W. Pell, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wite WUSUEH, VIA KIUKIANG
Rev. H. B. Sutton and wife Rev. S. Lee and wife
Hunan Province
CH'ANGSHA
Rev. W. H. Watson
Rev. G. G. Warren and wife Rev. H. Jowett
Rev. C. Little
YIYANG
Rev. C. S. Champness and wife PINGKIANG
Rev. V. Johnson and wife LIUYANG
Rev. J. Alexander
PAOKING
Rev. W. W. Gibson
Rev. J. Webster and wife
Dr. Heyward YUNGCHOWFU
Rev. E. C. Cooper and wife (absent)
Rev. W. H. Pillow
I
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
J. Hadden, M.B., B.CII. Miss Pillow
Miss Denham
CRENCHOW, VIA CHANGSHA
Rev. E. F. P. Scholes and wife SHANGHAI-44, Boone Road
Rev. W. A. Cornaby and wife CANTON
Rev. E. Dewstoe and wife Miss F. M. Britton
Miss A. L. Perkins
FATSHAN, VIA CANTON
Rev. W. J. W. Anderson, M.D., and wife
Rev. C. A. Gaff and wife
Rev. A. W. Hooker, M.D.
Rev. S. G. Tope
HONGKONG
Rev. C. Bone (chairman) and wife Rev. J. A. A. Baker
Rev. T. W. Scholes, M.A.
WUCHOW, VIA CANTON
Rev. H. E. Anderson and wife (absent) Rev. P. Rees, M.D., and wife SHIUCHOW, VIA CANTON
Rev. T. Robinson, and wife Rev. R. Hutchinson
Rev. R. Ellison
Rev. Dansey Smith, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.,
and wife
WEST CHINA RELIGIOUS TRACT
SOCIETY
局書聖
CHUNGKING
Head Office-Mi Hwa Kiai
J. Hudson Broomhall, depôt secy.
Chang, clerk
WOMAN'S FOREIGN MISSIONARY
SOCIETY METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Miss Kate L. Ogbom
Miss Edith M. Crane
WOMEN'S UNION MISSION
會公女
SHANGHAI
Miss Mary J. Irvine, "Bridgman Home"
Miss Elizabeth Irvine,
Miss Charlotte Johnson,
do.
"Stevenside," West Gate
Miss Elizabeth Reifsnyder, M.D.
Miss Emily Garner, M.D.
Miss Mary Newell, M.D.
Miss Bertha Miller
YALE FOREIGN MISSIONARY
SOCIETY
CHANGSHA, HUNAN Brownell Gage, B.A., and wife Edward H. Hume, B.A., M.D., and wife
Rev. William J. Hail, M.A.
Mrs. J. Lawrence Thurston, B.Sc. Dickson H. Leavens, B.A.
Edwin D. Harvey, M.A., and wife
Kenneth S. Latourette, PH.P.
F. C. Yen, M.D., and wife
1077
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIA-
TION OF CHINA AND KOREA
辦委總會合年青督基韓中
Office: 120, Szechuen Road, Shanghai; Executive Cable Address: Committee Shanghai
T. T. Wong, chairman
Fong, F. Sec. vice-chairman T. H. Lee, vice-chairman Tong Tsing, recording sec. S. K. Tsao, treasurer
F. S. Brockman, B.A., general secretary,
and wife
D. W. Lyon, B.A., associate general sec'y.,
and wife
H. L. Zia, editorial secretary
C. T. Wang, sec'y. Chinese students in
America
C. W. Harvey, associate sec'y., Tientsin Arthur Rugh, B.A., student secretary, and
wife (absent)
W. B. Pettus, B.A., student sec'y., and wife Charles L. Boynton, B.A., and wife, office
secretary
P. S. Vie, associate editorial sec'y.
Y. K. Woo, associate editorial sec'y.
Miss Mabel Steele Jones
Miss A. Lilias Parrott
Y. M. C. A. (INTERNATIONAL
COMMITTEE)
辦委總會年青敎督基州美北 F. S. Brockman, D.A., and wife, Shanghai D. Willard Lyon, M.A., and wife, Shanghai W. W. Lockwood, PH.D., and wife, Shanghai George Fitch, B.A., B.D., Shangai Arthur Rugh, B.A., and wife, Shanghai (ab't) W. B. Pettus, B.A., and wife, Shanghai Charles L. Boynton, B.A., and wife, Shanghai Miss M. S. Jones, Shanghai
W. E. Taylor, PH.D., and wife, Shanghai J. H. Wallace, B.A., Shanghai
P. L. Gillett, B.A., and wife, Seoul F. M. Brockman, B.A., Seoul George A. Gregg, Seoul Lloyd H. Snyder, Seoul
R. R. Gailey, M.A., and wife, Peking D. W. Edwards, B.A., Peking
L. D. Froelick, B.A., Peking
C. H. Robertson, M.A., and wife, Tientsin C. W. Harvey, B.A., and wife, Tientsin R. M. Hersey, B.A., and wife, Tientsin G. H. Cole, M.E., and wife, Tientsin (ab't.) H. Ziegler, Tientsin
1078
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
H. T. Hodgkin, B.A., M.D., and wife, Chengtu R. R. Service, B.A., and wife, Chengtu J. M. Clinton, M.A., LL.B., and wife (Hankow)
Tokyo
H. A. Moran, B.▲., Hankow
F. B. Whitmore, B.A., M.D., and wife, Nanking W. L. Beard, B.A., and wife, Foochow L. E. McLachlin, B.A., and wife, Foochow J. L. McPherson, M.A., Hongkong F. M. Mohler, B.A., and wife, Hongkong George E. Lerrigo and wife, Hongkong F. O. Leiser, B.A., and wife, Canton M. A. Kees and wife, Canton
T. M. Elliott, B.A., and wife, Hongkong
Peter Norgaard, Fenghwangcheng, Man-
churia
Y. M. C. A. OF HONGKONG
會年靑教督基港香
European Y.M.C.A.-Alexandra Buildings
Chinese Central Y.M.C.A.-34, Queen's Rd.
Central
EXECUTIVE
J.L. McPherson, M. A., sec. EuropeanY.M.C.A. T. M. Elliott, B.Sc., secretary, Chinese
Central Y.M.C.A.
George E. Lerrigo and wife
BOARD OF DIRECTORS EUROPEAN Y.M.C.A. Sir F. H. May, K.C.M.G., president P. H. Holyoak, vice-president
A. S. D. Cousland, rec. secretary G. Piercy, hon. treasurer Hon. H. W. Slade Hon. II. E. Pollock, K.C. Hon. Dr. J. M. Atkinson
Rev. F. T. Johnson
Rev. C. H. Hickling A. Bryer
H. R. II. Hancock
J. R. Wood
A. Turner
A. H. Harris
BOARD OF DIRECTORS CHINESE
CENTRAL Y.M.C.A.
B. Wong Tape, president
Dr. Ho Nai Hop
Lee Chuk Sang
Ng Tin Po, recording secretary Lam Woo, treasurer
H. A. Allen, assistant treasurer
Ho Yu Ming
H. Gittins
Mark Purs
Dr. Lau Kai
Dr. T. M. Leung
Dr. K. S. Wong W. C. Wong
T. M. Elliott, sceretary Cheung Sau Pang, Chinese sec. Wei Kan, office
F. M. Mohler, secretary
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN AS- SOCIATION OF SHANGHAI General Advisory Committee: Dr. F. L. H. Pott H. Middleton
T. T. Wong
S. Kurokawa
W. W. Lockwood
Locations:
Chinese Association New Building, 120
Szechuen Road
Foreign Association, 21, Kiukiang Road Japanese Association, 33, Chapoo Road Student Associations (8) in the Colleges
Boards of Directors:
Foreign Association, H. Middleton, pres. Central Chinese Association, T. T. Wong,
president
Student Association, C. V. Le, chairman Japanese Association, S. Kurokawa, pre-
sident
Secretaries:
W. W. Lockwood, PH.B., general secretary Rev. W. E. Taylor, PH.D., Association
general secretary
J. H. Wallace, B.A., general secretary Rev. R. G. Winning, B.A., secretary for-
eign Association
S. K. Tsao, senior Chinese secretary P. Y. Kong, financial secretary, Chinese
Association
M. J. Exner, M.D., physical director
Y. M. C. A. OF PEKING R. R. Gailey, general secretary, and wife D. W. Edwards, secretary L. D. Froelick, R.A., secretary P. C. Chang, Chinese secretary
LEGATION SOLDIERS' BRANCH W. F. Yuan, office secretary Kwei Yung, office secretary
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN AS- SOCIATION OF TIENTSIN
EAST MALU
OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATION
Wang Ilo Chai, president
Chang Chan Ao, vice-president
Meng Kwang Jen, recording secretary
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
A. P. Pek, M.D.. chairman Rer. W. P. Ch'an
R. M. Hersey E. T. Williams H. C. Wang E. K. Lowry Chang Po Ling R. R. Gailey
O. J. Krause, hon. treasurer
EXECUTIVE Staff R. R. Gailey, general secretary H. M. Hersey, general secretary
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA
Chung Wei Yi, Chinese secretary John Sung, Chinese secretary C. H. Robertson, literati secretary R. S. Hall, student secretary
C. W. Harvey, national secretary
TEACHING STAFF
L. N. Hayes, principal Chung Wen Ao
Chang Chung En
Liu Tze Ch'eng
H. W. Hubbard, athletic instructor
YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
會年青女婦
SHANGHAI
1079
Miss Grace L. Coppock, gen. sec. for S'hai,
Miss A. Estella Paddock, national secy.
Miss Alice Fitch, associate sec'y., S'hai
Miss Harriet Smith, national office sec'y
HONGKONG
港香 Heung-kong
The Island of Hongkong (which gives its name to the British Colony in South China) is situate off the coast of the Kwangtung province, near the mouth of the Canton river. It is distant about 40 miles from Macao and 90 from Canton, and lies between 22 deg. 9 min, and 22 deg, 17 min. N. lat. and 114 deg. 5 min. and 114 deg. 18 min. E. long, The Chinese characters representing the name of the island (Heung Kong) may be read as signifying either Good Harbour or Fragrant Streams. By Conventions dated, respectively, 1860 and 1898, further territory was ceded by China, con- sisting of upwards of 280 square miles on the opposite mainland together with the islands of Lantao, Lamma, Chungchow and others. The last concession is by way of a lease for ninety-nine years.
HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT
Before the British ensign was hoisted on Possession Point in the City of Victoria in the year 1840 the island can hardly be said to have had any history, and what little attaches to it is very obscure. Scantily peopled by fishermen and agriculturists, it was never the scene of stirring events, and was little affected by dynastic or political changes. It is alleged, however, that after the fall of the Ming dynasty in 1628, some of the Emperor's followers found shelter in the forests of Hongkong from the fury of the Manchus. The peninsula of British Kowloon has more claim to association with Chinese history. In the year A.D. 1287 it is recorded that the last Emperor of the Sung dynasty, when flying from Kublai Khan, the Mongol conqueror, took refuge in a cave in Kowloon, and an inscription on the rock above is said to record the fact. The inscription consists of the characters Sung Wong Toi, meaning the Sung Emperor's Pavilion. On the cession of the territory to Great Britain the natives petitioned the Hongkong Government that the rock might not be blasted or otherwise injured, on account of the tradition connecting it with the Imperial personage above mentioned. In 1898, during the administration of Major-General Wilsone Black, a resolution was passed by the Legislative Council preserving the land on which the rock stands for the benefit of the public in perpetuity.
Hongkong is a Crown Colony and was ceded to Great Britain by the Chinese Government in 1841. In the troubles which preceded the first war with China the necessity of having some place on the coast whence British trade might be protected and controlled, and where officials and merchants might be free from the insulting and humiliating requirements of the Chinese Authorities, became painfully evident. As early as 1834 Lord Napier, smarting under his insolent treatment by the Viceroy at Canton, urged the Home Government to send a force from India to support the dignity of his commission. "A little armament," he wrote, "should enter the China seas with the first of the south-west monsoon, and on arriving should take possession of the island of Hongkong, in the eastern entrance of the Canton river, which is admirably adapted for every purpose." Two years later Sir George Robinson, endorsing the opinion Lord Napier that nothing but force could better the British position in China, advised "the occupation of one of the islands in this neighbourhood, so singularly adapted by nature in every respect for commercial purposes." In the carly part of 1839 affairs approache a crisis, and on the 22nd March, Captain Elliot, the Chief Superintendent of Trade, required that all the ships of Her Majesty's subjects at the outer anchorages of Canton should pro ceed forthwith to Hongkong, and, hoisting their national colours, be prepared to resist every act of aggression on the part of the Chinese Government. When the British com munity left Canton, Macho afforded them a temporary asylum, but their presence there wa made the occasion by the Chinese Government of threatening demonstrations against that settlement. In a despatch dated 6th May, 1839, Captain Elliot wrote to Lord Palmers ton:-"The safety of Macao is, in point of fact, an object of secondary moment to the Portuguese Government, but to that of Her Majesty it may be said to be of indispensable necessity, and most particularly at this moment"; and he urged upon his Lordship "the strong necessity of concluding some immediate arrangement with the Government of
HONGKONG
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His Most Faithful Majesty, either for the cession of the Portuguese rights at Macao, or for the effectual defence of the place, and its appropriation to British uses by means of a subsidiary Convention." Happily for the permanent interests of British trade in China this suggestion came to nothing, and Great Britain found a much superior lodgment at Hongkong.
The unfortunate homicide of a Chinaman during a riot at Hongkong between British and American seamen and natives precipitated events, and in view of the measures taken by the Chinese in reference to Macao, Captain Elliot felt that he ought no longer to compromise the safety of that settlement by remaining there. He accordingly left for Hongkong on the 24th August, 1839, Mrs. Elliot and her child having previously embarked. It was hoped that his own departure, with the officers of his establishment, might satisfy the Chinese, but it soon became evident that they intended to expel all the English from Macao. It was accordingly determined that they should leave, and on the 25th August the exodus took place. The whole of the British community (with the exception of a few sick left behind in hospital) embarked, and under the convoy of H.M.S. Volage arrived safely at Hongkong. At that time there was, of course, no town, and the community had to reside on board ship. The next measure of the Chinese was to stop supplies of food; the water also was reported to be poisoned, a placard being put up on shore warning Chinese against drinking it. This led to a miniature naval battle in Kowloon Bay. On the 4th September Captain Elliot, in the cutter Louise, accompanied by the Pearl, a small armed vessel, and the pinnace of the Volage, went to Kowloon, where there were three large men-of-war junks whose presence prevented the regular supplies of food. A written remonstrance was sent off to the junk of the commanding mandarin. After six hours of delay and irritating evasion a boat was sent on shore to a distant part of the bay with money to purchase supplies, which the party succeeded in doing, and they were on the point of bringing their purchases away when some mandarin runners approached and obliged the natives to take back their provisions. The English returned with this intelligence, and Captain Elliot, greatly provoked, opened fire on the three junks. It was answered with spirit by the junks and a battery on shore. After a fire of almost half-an-hour the English force hauled off, from the failure of ammunition, for anticipating no serious results they had not come prepared for them. It was evident, however, Captain Elliot says in his account of the engagement, that the junks had suffered considerably, and after a delay of about three-quarters of an hour, they weighed and made sail from under the protection of the battery, with the obvious purpose of making their escape. By this time the English had made cartridges, and they drove the junks back to their former position. Evening was now closing in, and in the morning it was decided, for reasons of policy, not to renew the attack. A complete relaxation of the interdict against the supply of provisions followed. Some little time after this event an arrangement for the resumption of the trade was arrived at, and there was a partial return to residence at Macao. The arrangement was of but a few weeks' duration, however, and on the 3rd November a naval engagement took place off Chuenpee, when the Chinese retired in great distress. The British ships returned to Macao, arriving on the evening of the same day, and arrangements were immediately made for the embarkation of those of Her Majesty's subjects there, who thought it safest to retire, and on the evening of the 4th November they arrived at Hongkong.
Captain Elliot considered the anchorage of Hongkong unsafe, as being "exposed to attack from several quarters," and already, on the 26th October, His Excellency had required the removal of the British merchant shipping to Tong-Koo, which he deemed safer. The shipping community did not share this opinion, and on the same day that the notice appeared an address signed by the masters of thirty-six vessels was presented to Captam Elliot requesting that they might be allowed to remain at Hongkong. On the 9th November H. M. Plenipotentiary replied, adhering to his former decisior. Thereupon another remonstrance was addressed to him, signed by "twenty firms, the agents for Lloyd's, and for eleven insurance offices." Captain Elliot, however, still adhered to his decision, and a few days afterwards the removal to Tong-Koo took place. In 1840 the expedition arrived, and Hongkong became the headquarters of Her
Majesty's forces.
-
On the 20th January, 1841, H. M.'s Plenipotentiary issued a circular to British subjects Announcing the conclusion of preliminary arrangements between the Imperial Com- missioner, Ke-shen, and himself. One of the terms was stated in the circular as follows:
1.-The cession of the island and harbour of Hongkong to the British Crown. All just charges and duties to the Empire upon the commerce carried on there to be paid as if the trade were conducted at Whampoa." On the 26th January, the island was
•
L
1082
HONGKONG
accordingly taken formal possession of in the name of Her Majesty Queen Victoria. The treaty was subsequently repudiated by both parties, and it was not until the conclusion of the Nanking Treaty in 1842, that the Chinese Government formally recognised the cession of the island. In the meantime it was held by the British--who had come to stay and on the 1st May, 1841, the Public Notice and Declaration regarding the occupation of Hongkong was promulgated. On the 7th May of the same year, 1841, the first number of the Hongkong Gazette was published, printed at the American Mission Press, Macao. This first number contained the notification of the appointment (dated 30th April, of Captain William Caine, of the 26th (Cameronian) Regiment of Infantry, as Chief Magistrate, the warrant being under the hand of Charles Elliot, Esquire, Her Majesty's Plenipotentiary, etc., etc., "charged with the Government of the Island of Hongkong." Captain Elliot's idea was that the island should be held on similar terms to those on which Macao was at that time held by the Portuguese, and the Chief Magistrate, instead of being charged to administer British law, was authorised and required "to exercise authority, according to the laws, customs, and usages of China, as near as may be (every description of torture excepted), for the preservation of the peace and the protection of life and property, over all the native inhabitants in the said island and the harbours thereof"; and over other persons according to British police law. The first land sale took place on the 14th June, and building thereafter proceeded rapidly, the population of the new town at the end of the year being estimated at 15,000. On the 6th February, 1842, Hongkong was formally declared a free port by Sir Henry Pottinger, who had succeeded Captain Elliot as Plenipotentiary. Until the signing of the treaty, however, the ultimate fate of the new settlement remained in doubt. Sir Robert Peel, when asked in the House of Commons whether it was the intention of Her Majesty's Government to properly colonise the place or give it up, declined to answer what he deemed an unparliamentary question during a period of open war with the country by whom the cession of the island was both made and repudiated. The Treaty of Nanking, however, settled all doubts. On the 23rd June, 1843, Ke-ying, the Chinese Imperial Commissioner, arrived in Hongkong, for the exchange of the ratifications of the treaty, and the ceremony took place in the Council Room on the 26th of that mouth, and immediately afterwards the Royal Charter, dated 5th April, 1843, erecting the island into a separate colony, was read, and Sir Henry Pottinger took the oaths of office as Governor. At first progress was rapid. The Queen's Road was laid out for a length of between three and four miles, and buildings rose rapidly. But a check was received owing to the unhealthy conditions which were developed by the breaking of the malarious soil, and in 1844, soon after the arrival of Sir John Davis, who assumed the Government in June, the advisability of abandoning the island altogether as a colony was seriously discussed. Mr. Montgomery Martin, H.M.'s Treasurer, drew up a long report, in which he earnestly recommended the abandonment of a place which, he believed, would never be habitable for Europeans, instancing the case of the 98th Regiment, which lost 257 men by death in twenty-one months, and of the Royal Artillery, which in two years lost 51 out of a strength of 135, and gave it as his opinion that it was a delusion to hope that Hongkong could ever become a commercial emporium like Singapore. Sir John Davis, in a despatch dated April, 1845, strongly combated Mr. Martin's pessimistic conclusions and expressed a firm belief that time alone was required for the develop ment of the colony and for the correction of some of the evils which hindered its early progress. Sir John (who died in November, 1890, in his ninety-sixth year) lived to see his predictions most amply verified, and in after years must have reflected with satisfaction on the fact that his views had prevailed in Downing Street. On the 26th May, 1846, the Hongkong Club house, situated in Queen's Road Central, at its junction with Wyndham Street, was opened with a ball, and was occupied by the Club for over fifty years, being vacated in July, 1897, when the Club moved inte new and more commodious premises on the New Praya. Sir John Davis resigned in January, 1848, and left the colony on the 30th March of that year, Major-General Stavely administering the government until the arrival, a few weeks later, of Sir George (then Mr.) Bonham. During Sir George Bonham's administration, which lasted, with two intervals, until April, 1854, the colony continued to progress, the garrison and residents still suffered severely from malaria. On the 13th Ap 1854, Sir John Bowring took the oaths as Governor, and held the reins unt May, 1859. Sir John Bowring was the last Governor who united that office with that of Minister Plenipotentiary and Superintendent of British Trade in Chin During his administration various public works were carried out, and the Bowrington Canal constructed. In September, 1859, Sir Hercules Robinson arrived and assumed th
but
administration.
HONGKONG
1083
The
In 1860 the peninsula of Kowloon was placed under British control, and soon afterwards became a great camp, the English and French troops of the Allied Expeditionary Force being for some time quartered there. The principal work effected during the government of Sir Hercules Robinson was the construction of the original Praya wall, in connection with which an extensive reclamation of land from the sea was made. Prior to that time the marine lot-holders had the entire control of the sea frontage of their lots and no public road properly speaking existed along the water frontage. In 1862 the Clock Tower was completed, and the Hongkong Mint was erected, but owing to the loss attending the working of this institution it was closed early in 1864, the plant being sold to Japan and re-erected at Osaka. In March, 1865, Sir Hercules Robinson left the Colony, and Mr. Mercer, Colonial Secretary, became Acting Governor until the arrival, in March, 1866, of Sir Richard Graves MacDonnell. In November, 1867, a great fire occurred, which swept the whole district between the Queen's Road and the Praya, from the Cross Roads to the Harbour Master's Office. During Sir Richard MacDonnell's vigorous administration the revenue of the Colony, which had fallen much below the expenditure, was augmented by the imposition of the stamp duties and other measures. One of His Excellency's last official acts was to preside at the opening, in February, 1872, of the Tung Wa (Chinese) Hospital. In April, 1872, Sir Arthur Kennedy arrived and assumed the reins of Government, which he held with such tact and dexterity that he acquired the title of "Good Sir Arthur," and a bronze statue of him was erected in the Public Gardens. Under his administration the Colony prospered, but the year 1874 was made memorable in Colonial annals by one of the most destructive typhoons which had down to that time visited it, causing enormous damage and great loss of life. peaceful reign of Sir Arthur Kennedy was followed by the stormy administration of Sir John Pope Hennessy, who arrived in April, 1877, and left in March, 1882. In this interval the trade of the Colony increased greatly and Governor Hennessy accumu- lated a large surplus, but public works made little progress, the Breakwater at Cause- way Bay being the principal work completed during his administration, while the Observatory was projected. On Christmas Day, 1878, a fire broke out in the Central District of Victoria which destroyed 368 houses and entailed enormous loss on the community. On Sir John's departure Sir William (then Mr.) Marsh, the Colonial Secretary, assumed the government, and affairs proceeded placidly until the arrival, in March, 1883, of Sir George Bowen. His advent was the sigual for great activity in the prosecution of public works, amongst others being the Tytam Waterworks, the Victoria College, the Lunatic Asylum, the Observatory, and the enlargement of the Government Civil Hospital. He was also the means of securing to the residents the privilege of nominating two of the unofficial members of the Legislative Council. Sir George Bowen left Hongkong on the 19th December, 1885, and another interregnum followed. Mr. Marsh administered the government until April, 1887, when he retired from the service, and Major-General Cameron assumed the reins until the arrival of Governor Sir William G. Des Voeux in October of the same year. The Colony steadily progressed, though naturally with some fluctuations in its prosperity, until in 1889, when, writing to the Secretary of State on its condition and prospects, Sir William Des Vreux was able to remark, with obvious satisfaction:-"It may be doubted whether the evidences of material and moral achievement, presented as it were in a focus, make anywhere a more forcible appeal to eye and imagination, and whether any other spot on the earth is thus more likely to excite, or much more fully justifies pride in the name of Englishman." After that date a period of deep depression, arising partly from the fluctuations of exchange, partly from over-speculation, and partly from other causes, was experienced, and continued for five years. Sir William Des Vænx resigned the government on the 7th May, 1891, and in the absence of the Colonial Secretary Major-General Digby Barker was sworn in as Acting Governor. Sir William Robinson was appointed Governor and arrived in the Colony on the 10th December, 1891. The year 1894 will be memorable in the annals of the Colony as the most disastrous year of the plague. This disease, which is endemic in Yunnan, and some
years previously had appeared at Pakhoi, made its Colony was declared infected on the 10th May, and the mortality rapidly increased that year at Canton, and from there was introduced to Hongkong. The until at one time it reached more than a hundred a day. Energetic measures were taken to cope with the discase, a system of house to house visitation being established by means of which all cases were promptly discovered and at once removed to hospital or, where death had already taken place, buried, and every house in the Chinese
appearance
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HONGKONG
quarters was whitewashed and fumigated. Special hospitals were erected and the medical staff was augmented by additions from the Army and Navy and the Coast Ports. The Colony was especially indebted to the Shropshire Light Infantry for the services of about three hundred volunteers from the Regiment, who were engaged in the house to house visitation and cleansing. Captain Vesey, S.L.I., while engaged in this work contracted the disease and died from it, and one sergeant and four privates also suffered from it. The other corps of the Garrison as well as the Navy likewise lent valu- able assistance. Amongst other measures taken to combat the disease, a portion of the Taipingshan listrict, where the cases were most numerous, was cleared of its inhabit- ants, for whom accommodation was provided elsewhere, and the property in the con- demned area was subsequently resumed by the Crown, the intention being that it should be reconstructed in accordance with sanitary requirements. The disease reached its climax on the 7th June, when 107 deaths and 69 new cases were reported. After that date its virulence decreased, and on the 3rd September the proclamation declaring the Colony infected was withdrawn. The total number of deaths recorded was 2,547. In the meantime the trade of the Colony had suffered severely. Large numbers of the natives fled, it being estimated that the population was reduced at one time by no less than 80,000, and the usually busy Queen's Road appeared almost deserted. As the disease waned the population returned, business was gradually resumed, and with the withdrawal of the quarantine imposed at the other ports vessels resumed their regular calls at Hongkong. In 1896 the disease again made its appear- ance, but was much less virulent than in 1894, and in 1898 there was another visita tion, in connection with which two of the sisters of the Government Civil Hospital lost their lives, having contracted the disease while in the discharge of their duties. In every succeeding year there has been a recurrence of the epidemic notwithstanding the expenditure of millions of dollars and the prosecution of a vigorous policy of sanitation carried out on the advice of special commissioners (Mr. Osbert Chadwick and Dr. Simpson) sent out from England to advise on the best means of improving the health of the city of Victoria. The annual returns for the last ten years have been as follows:-1899, 1,486 cases; 1900, 1,087; 1901, 1,651; 1902, 572; 1903, 1,415; 1904, 472; 1903, 304; 1906, 892; 1907, 240; 1908 1,037; 1909, 124. The percentage of deaths has never been lower than 88.4, though it is considered probable that the true mortality is not so high, because it is likely that many mild cases at the beginning and end of the epidemic recover without treatment, and are never notified. A feature of these epidemics is that they die out completely in the autumn. Seldom has a case been reported in the last three months of the year. Research has established the fact that plague infection comes from the rat flea, and in the year 1909 extensive use was made in the colony of special breeds of cats for the extermination of rats. This new method of fighting the scourge appears to have given very satisfactory results, but perhaps it will be as well to wait a year or two before any dogmatic opinion is given on the subject.
Sir William Robinson left Hongkong on the 1st February, 1898, and until the arrival of Sir Henry Blake on 25th November, 1898, the government was administered by Major-General Wilsone Black. In 1900, on the despatch of the China Expeditionary Force from India, Hongkong became the base from which troops and supplies were sent forward. Prior to the arrival of these troops, a force drawn from the Garrison was despatched to the front, and the Hongkong Regiment were retained for service in North China during the whole of the campaign, only returning to the colony in December, 1901. In October, 1902, the Hongkong Regiment were paraded for the last time in the colony, handed over their colours to be placed in St. John's Cathedral, and embarked a few days later for India, where they were disbanded. Sir Henry Blake departed on leave for England at the close of 1901, and during his absence (until September, 1902) Major-General Sir William Gascoigne administered the govern ment. Owing to a very short rainfall in 1901, and a prolonged drought lasting until May, 1902, a serious water famine occurred, reducing the inhabitants to great straits, and forcibly bringing home to the Administration the urgent need for incressed water storage, which has since been met. The total estimated cost of these works slightly exceeded two million dollars, but the actual cost largely exceeded that sum In November, 1903, Sir Henry Blake left the Colony on appointment to the governorship of Ceylon, and the Hon. Mr. F. H. May, C.M.G. (now Sir Henry May, R.C.M..) who appointed Administrator pending the arrival of Sir Matthew Nathan, K.C.M., who reached the Colony on the 29th July, 1904, and at once assumed charge of the administration. In his inaugural address His Excellency declared that the construction
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and in the following year the Colony had the satisfaction of learning that the work of construction had commenced on the British section of the line, which, starting from Kowloon Point, will have a straight run to Shatin and Taipu, and then turn inland to Shakuhu and Samchun on the frontier. This section of the line, constructed at the Colony's cost, will be opened to traffic in June or July this year, and the progress which is being made with the Chinese section justifies the expectation that through trains will be running to Canton in July, 1911. The year 1906 will be remembered in the history of the Colony by two calamitous events. On September 18th, a typhoon struck the Colony with terrific force and with such disastrous results as to give it rank as the worst typhoon that the Colony has ever experienced. The Observatory was able to give but very short notice of its approach. The typhoon lasted only two hours, but it was roughly estimated that in that
short space of time 10,000 persons lost their lives in the vicinity of the Colony, while the damage done to shipping and property ashore ran into many millions of dollars. A list, admittedly incomplete, compiled by the Harbour Authorities, showed sunk or damaged 67 large vessels, 652 junks, 54 lighters, and 70 launches.
No account is taken in this list of the hundreds of sampans which were sunk or battered to pieces against the sea walls. The Rt. Rev. J. C. Hoare, D.D., the Bishop of Victoria, was among those who lost their lives by this calamity. The second of the disasters referred to above occurred early on Sunday morning, October 14th, when the river steamer Hankow, while lying at her wharf, was completely gutted by a fire which developed with such extraordinary rapidity that over 100 Chinese passengers lost their lives in trying to escape. The majority of them were drowned; but many, who were probably first suffocated or trampled to death in the rush for the gangway, were victims of the flames. The Colony was visited by another typhoon of greater force on the night of July 27-28, 1908, but the Observatory gave timely warning of the approach, and shipping consequently did not suffer so badly as in the 1906 typhoon, but much more extensive damage was done to property ashore. The most serious shipping casualty was the foundering of the Yingking with a loss of some 424 lives.
Sir Matthew Nathan left the Colony in April, 1907, on promotion to the Governor- ship of Natal. Few Governors of the Colony have succeeded in making themselves so popular, and at the same time won so much confidence and respect as an administrator. His successor, Brigadier-General Sir Frederick Lugard. K.C.M.G, arrived on July 28th, 1907, the Hon. Mr. (now Sir) F. H. May having again administered the Government in the interval. Falling revenue, while costly public works were in progress, obliged the govern- ment in 1909 to break away from the free-trade traditions of the port to the extent of imposing import duties on intoxicating liquors. The name of Sir Frederick Lugard will remain noteworthy in the annals of the Colony on account of his successful labours to secure the establishment of a University. Mr. H. N. Mody has gonerously offered to provide buildings at an estimated cost of $250,000, and an endowment fund amounting to nearly a million and a quarter dollars having been raised in 1909, it has been decided to commence building forthwith. A site in Bonham Road has been selected. The following is a list of those who have administered the Government from the date on which the Island was erected into a Colony-
1848 Sir Henry Pottinger, Bart., &.c.B. 1844 Sir John Francis Davis, Bart., K.C.B. 1848 Samuel George Bonham, c.E. 187 Major-General W. Jervois (Lt.-Governor) 1851 Bir S. George Bonham, Bart., K.C.B. 1852 John Bowring, LL.D. (Acting) 1953 Sir S. George Bonham, Bart., K.C.D. 181 Sir John Bowring, Knt., LL.D. 1854 Lient.-Colonel Wm. Caine (Lt.-Governor) 1855 Sir John Bowring, Knight, LL.D. 1850 Colonel Caine (Lieut.-Governor) 180 Sir Hercules G. R. Robinson, Knight 1862 William Thomas Mercer (Acting) 1964 Sir Hercules G. R. Robinson, Knight 1965 William Thomas Mercer (Acting) 2966 bir Richard Graves MacDonnell, Knt., c.B. 1870 M.-H. H. W. Whitfield (Lt.-Governor) 1871 Sir Richard G. MacDonnell, K.C.M.G., C.B. 1872 Sir Arthur E. Kennedy, K.C.M.G.,C.B. 1875 Joha Gardiner Austin (Administrator) 1876 Sir Arthur E. Kennedy, K.C.M.G., O.B.
1877 Sir John Pope Hennessy, K.C.M.G. 1882 Wm. Hy. Marsh, c.M.G. (Administrator) 1883 Sir George Ferguson Bowen, G.C.M.G. 1885 Wm. Hy, Marsli, c,m.o. (Administrator) 1887 Mjr.-Gen. W. G. Cameron, c.B. (Adminis.) 1887 Sir George William Des Voeux, K.C.M.G. 1890 Francis Fleming, c.M.G. (Administrator) 1890 Sir George William Des Voeux, K.C.M.G. 1891 Mjr.-Gen. G. Digby Barker, c.B. (Adm.) 1891 Sir William Robinson, G.C M.G. 1898 Mj.-G. Wilsone Black, C.B. (Adminr.) 1898 Sir Henry Arthur Blake, e c... 1902 Mj.-Gen. Sir W. Gascoigne, K.C.M.G. (Adr.) 1902 Sir Henry Arthur Blake, &.c... 1903 Francis 1. May, c.m.o. (Administrator) 1904 Sir Matthew Nathan, K.C.M.G. 1906-7 Hon. F.H.May,c.M.G., Ad'tor. (forimonth) 1907 Sir Matthew Nathan, K,C M.G. 1907 Hon. F. H. May c.M.G. (Administrator) 1907 Brigadier Gen. Sir F. D. Lugard, R.C.M.G.
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HONGKONG
The Government is administered by a Governor, aided by an Executive Council of five officials and two unofficials. The Legislative Council is presided over by the Governor, and is composed of the Officer Commanding the Troops, the Colonial Secretary, the Attorney-General, the Treasurer, the Registrar-General, the Director of Public Works, the Harbour Master, the Captain Superintendent of Police, and six unofficial members, one of whom is elected by the Chamber of Commerce and another by the Justices of the Peace. The other four, two of whom are Chinese, but British subjects, are appointed by the Government,
FINANCES
The revenue for 1908 including land sales ($69,385), was $6,034,849, and the expenditure was $6,573,341, exclusive of expenditure on railway construction (Loan Account). The Colony has a small public debt. A loan of £200,000 was contracted in 1886. Another loan of £200,000 was contracted in 1893, and in 1894 the unredeemed balance of the first loan was converted from 4 per cent. debentures into 3% inscribed stock, thus bringing it into uniformity with the loan raised in 1893. In 1906 the Government raised a loan of £1,100,000 in London at an average price of £99 15. per cent., bearing interest at the rate of 35 per cent. This money was lent oy the Government to the Viceroy of Wuchang for the purpose of redeeming the Canton Hankow railway concession from the various persons who had acquired interests in it from the original American concessionaires. The total cost of the loan including expenses of issue, was £1,143,933. The loan is repayable in ten annual instalments. Interest at the rate of 4 per cent. is payable on it, and the opium revenue of Hupeh, Hunan and Kwangtung is pledged as security.
The rateable value of the city of Victoria for 1908-9 was $8,987,125 (showing an increase of 1.06 per cent. on the rateable value of the previous year), while for the whole Colony the assessment is $10,816,753 as compared with $10,716,173 in the previous year, showing an increase of 0.93 per cent.
DESCRIPTION
The island of Hongkong is about 11 miles long and from 2 to 5 miles broad; its circum- ference is about 27 miles. It consists of a broken ridge of lofty hills, with few valleys of any extent and scarcely any ground available for cultivation. The only valleys worthy of the name are those of Wong-nai Chung and Little Hongkong, both of which are remark- ably beautiful and well wooded, being in fact the only parts where any considerable arborescent vegetation was formerly to be found. The island is well watered by numerous streams, many of which are perennial. The city of Victoria and suburbs are supplied with water from the Pokfolum, Tytam, and Wong-nai Chung reservoirs. The first- named, constructed in 1866-69, has a storage capacity of sixty-eight million gallons, while the Tytam reservoir, constructed in 1883-88," and extended in 1896 has an area of about 29 acres and a storage capacity of about three hundred and ninety million gallons. From the Tytam reservoir the water is conveyed into town by means of a tunnel a mile and one-third in length and a conduit along the hillside some 400 feet above the sea level and nearly four miles in length, on which a fine road--called the Bowen Road has been formed, which commands the most charming views of the city and the eastern district, and is a favourite resort of pedestrians. In many parts the conduit is carried over the ravines and rocks by ornamental stone bridges, one of which, above Wanchai, has twenty-three arches. The Wong-nai Chung reservoir, completed in 1899, has a capacity of twenty-seven million gallons. A bye wash reservoir of about thirty million gallons capacity, situated immediately below the overflow of the Tytam reservoir, was completed in 1903, and a dam at Tytam Tak to impound 194 million gallons was completed in 1909.
The natural productions of the Colony are few and unimportant. There is little land suitable for tillage, and nothing is grown but a little rice and some vegetables near the outlying villages. There are large granite quarries, both on the island and it Kowloon, and there is a small export of this stone. A bed of fire clay exists at Deep Water Bay, and bricks and earthenware pipes are manufactured from it. The forests now growing up and in course of being planted may one day become a source of revenue, when sufficiently extensive, from the periodical thinnings.
In the "Directory and Chronicle" for 1894 the following notice concerning mineral
HONGKONG
1087
above the Tytam Service Reservoir in Victoria, but after a trial did not promise sufficiently to justify further working. Recent examination showed this to be most likely a "pocket
'pocket" of secondary deposit from disintegration of the original rocks." A fresh complexion has, however, been placed on it, by the discovery of numerous traces of old workings, near which are found large quantities of old slags These carry 2%, copper, besides 3 dwt. gold and 6 dwt, of silver to the ton of slag. The rocks in the vicinity afford, besides copper, gold, silver and platinum metals.
The approaches to the port are fairly well lighted. A lighthouse on Green Island lights the western entrance of the harbour. The eastern approach is indicated by a group flashing dioptric light of the first order, visible at a distance of twenty-two miles, erected on Waglan Island, while a smaller light on Cape Collinson assists navigators to make the Ly-ee-mùn Pass. A lighthouse on Gap Rock, about thirty miles to the south, was completed and first displayed its beacon on the 1st April, 1892; it is connected with the port by cable, and the approach of vessels is signalled from it to the Post Office.
The harbour of Hongkong is one of the finest and most beautiful in the world, having an area of ten square miles, and, with its diversified scenery and varied shipping, presents an animated and imposing spectacle. It consists of the sheet of water between the island and the mainland, and is enclosed on all sides by lofty hills, formerly destitute of foliage, but the island slopes are gradually becoining clothed with young forests, the result of the afforestation scheme of the Government The city of Victoria is magnificently situated, the houses, many of them large and handsome, rising, tier upon tier, from the water's edge to a height of over five hundred feet on the face of the Peak while many buildings are visible on the very summit of the hills. Seen from the water at night, when lights twinkle among the trees and houses, the city, spreading along the shore for upwards of four miles, affords a sight not readily to be forgotten.
Nor on landing are the favourable impressions of the stranger dissipated or lessened. The city is fairly well built, the roads and streets are for the most part admirably made and kept, and many of the thoroughfares delightfully shaded with well grown trees. The European business quarter occupies the middle of the city, from Pottinger Street to the Naval Yard, but with the exception of this limited area almost all the lower levels, especially the Western District, are covered by a dense mass of Chinese shops and teneinents. The Botanic Gardens are situated just above Government House, and are tastefully laid out in terraces, slopes, and walks, with parterres of flowers. A handsome fountain adorns the second terrace, around which many European children and their amahs resort claily. There is a bandstand, presented by the Parsee community (but never now occupied by a band), some aviaries, orchid houses, and ferneries, and seats are provided in every spot where a view is obtainable or shade afforded by the varied foliage. A fine bronze statue of Sir Arthur Kennedy, Governor of the Colony, 1872-6, erected by public subscription, stands above the second terrace looking down on the fountain. It was unveiled in November, 1887, by Governor Sir William Des Voeux. The chief public building is the City Hall, erected in 1866-9 by subscription; it contains an elegant theatre, numerous large rooms used for balls and public meetings (in one of which known as St. George's Hall, is a fine portrait of the late Queen Victoria, presented by Sir Thomas Jackson, Bart., in 1900), an excellent and valuable Library, and a Museum gradually increasing in importance. In front of the main entrance is a large fountain presented in August, 1864, by Mr. John Dent, a former merchant of the Colony. Eastward of the City Hall is a fine open space or lung, in the shape of the Parade Ground south of the road, and the Cricket Ground on the north. The latter is furnished with a neat Pavilion, and the turf is kept in perfect order.
The Government Offices, Supreme Court House, and Post Office are very plain and lost inadequate edifices, but a new Post Office on a site with frontages on the Praya, Pedder Street and Des Voeux Road will probably be opened towards the end of the present year ground. Occupying a site on the west of the New Law Courts stands the Jubilee this site became available; it was unveiled on the 28th May, 1896. The statue re- statue of Her Majesty Queen Victoria, the erection of which was postponed until presents Queen Victoria in a sitting posture and is of bronze under a stone canopy, Close by, formerly stood a fine bronze statue of the Duke of Connaught, presented by Sir C. P. Chater to the Colony. It was unveiled by Sir William Gascoigne on the 5th July, 1902. This statue was removed in February, 1907, to a site on the waterfront near Blake Pier, and H. R. H. the Duke of Connaught, who paid a second visit to the Colony, this time as Inspector General of the Forces, on
as also will the new Law Courts near the cricket
=
1088
HONGKONG
February 6th, 1907, unveiled, in what may in future be designated the Royal Square, a fine bronze statue of H. M. the King, presented by Sir Paul Chater, c.M.G., and one of H. R. H. the Prince of Wales, presented by Mr. James Jardine Bell-Irving. A statue of H. M. Queen Alexandra, subscribed for by the Community as a memorial of the Coronation of their Majesties in 1903, and one of H. R. H. the Princess of Wales presented by Mr. H. N. Mody, were placed in the same Square in 1909, and the unveiling ceremony, by H. E. Sir Frederick Lugard, formed a prominent feature of the King's birthday celebrations. These statues surround the jubilee statue of her late Majesty Queen Victoria. Government House occupies a commanding situation, in picturesque grounds pleasingly laid out, in the centre of the city. Victoria Gaol is a large and massive structure, with its main entrance from Arbuthnot Road. The Police Barracks and Central Station adjoin the Gaol, as does the Magistracy, a small and inconvenient structure. The strength of the Police Force is 1,048, of whom 135 are Europeans 410 Indians, and 503 Chinese. A Reformatory was built and opened in 1900 at Causeway Bay, the cost of erection being borne by the late Mr. E. R. Belilios, C.M.G. but the building has not been used for the purpose, the idea having proved impracticable. The Lunatic Asylum consists of two small buildings, one for Europeans and the other for Chinese, below the Bonham Road. The Government Civil Hospital is a large and well designed building affording extensive accommodation, situated in the western part of the town. The Alice Memorial Hospital, situated at the corner of Hollywood Road and Aberdeen Street, is a useful and philanthropic institution, which is also the headquarters of the Hongkong College of Medicine for Chinese; affiliated with it is the Nethersole Hospital on Bonham Road. A little to the west is a hospital designated the Ho Miu Ling Hospital, the gift of Madame Wu Ting Fang to the Medical Mission of the London Missionary Society. The Royal Naval Hospital occupies a small eminence near Bowrington. The Military Hospital, a fine range of buildings, occupies a commanding position on an eminence above Bowen Road; it was completed in 1907. Queen's College, a handsome and commodious structure, which stands on a site having its chief frontage on Staunton Street, is the home of the chief Government educational institution in the Colony. It was opened in 1889. The Belilios Public School for Girls, in Gough street, is the chief centre of female education. The Tung Wa Hospital, a Chinese institution, which has been of great utility in the Colony, was considerably enlarged in 1903, and new plague wards were added in 1909. A well-designed Plague Hospital for Chinese, situated at Kennedy Town, was also built at the expense of the Chinese community, The Barracks for the garrison are extensive, and constructed with great regard to the health and comfort of the troops, and the buildings belonging to the Naval Establishment are spacious if not substantial. The chief cantonments lie on both sides of the Queen's Road, between the Cricket Ground and Arsenal Street, Wanchai. There are also extensive Barracks at Kowloon, in which the Indian regiments are quar tered; and a magnificent sanatorium (formerly the Mount Austin Hotel) at the Peak for the European troops. A smaller one is situated near Magazine Gap. Head-quarter House, the residence of the General in Command of the Troops, occupies a pleasant elevation overlooking the cantonments in Victoria. A commodious Central Market situated between Queen's Road Central and Des Voeux Road, was opened in 1895, and in 1906 another fine market was opened further west, and is known as the Western Market. The building of the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank is large, hand- some, and massive, and would do credit to any large city. It occupies a fine site next to the City Hall, and has frontages on Queen's Road and Des Voeux Road. The exterior walls and elegant fluted pillars are of dressed granite, and the offices on the Queen's Road frontage are crowned with a large dome. Opposite the Des Vœux Road entrance to the Bank stands a bronze statue of Sir Thomas Jackson, Bart, who from 1876 to 1902 was chief manager of the Bank.
The statue was unveiled by Governor Sir Matthew Nathan on February 24th, 1906. An extensive reclamation along the city water frontage from West Point to Murray Road initiate! by Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G., was completed in 1903, the total area reclaimed from the se being approximately 65 acres. Of this area 33'73 acres constitute building land, the remainder being occupied by roads and open spaces.
The total cost, including reconstruction of Government piers, was $3,362,325.
The various sections as they were ready were rapidly built upon and some of the finest buildings in the Colony have been erected on the reclaimed land.
On the eastern section handsome building for the Hongkong Club was finished in 1897, and was occupied in July of that year. The Clock Tower, near Pedder's Wharf, was erected by public subscription in 1862, and the illuminated clock was presented to the Colony by the
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HONGKONG
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firm of Messrs. Douglas, Lapraik & Co. The Pier at the foot of Pedder Street was opened on the 29th December, 1900, and named Blake Pier in honour of Governor Further west is the Harbour Master's Office, a commodious and Sir Henry Blake, attractively-designed building completed in 1906.
The chief religious buildings are: St. John's Cathedral (Anglican), which was erected in the year 1842, occupies a commanding site above the Parade Ground, and is a Gothic church of considerable size but with few pretensions to architecture. It has a square tower, with pinnacles, over the western porch, and possesses a peal of bells.
A new chancel was built in 1869-70, the foundation stone of which was laid by the late Duke of Edinburgh on the 16th November, 1869. A handsome stained glass window in the east end, over the altar, to the memory of the late Mr. Douglas Lapraik, another in the north transept erected in 1892 to the memory of the late Dr. F. Stewart, formerly Colonial Secretary, one in the south transept to the memory of those who perished in the wreck of the P. & O. str. Bokhara, another to the memory of the Hospital Sisters who died in 1898 while in execution of their duty during an outbreak of plague, and the stained clerestory windows of the chancel, presented by Lady Jackson in 1900, and one to the memory of Bishop Houre, who lost his life in the typhoon of 1906, are the chief adornments of the interior. The choir stalls, pulpit, and Bishop's throne are fine samples of Chinese carving in teakwood. It also possesses a fine three-manual organ containing 47 stops erected in 1887. St. Peter's (Seamen's) Church, at West Point, close to the Sailors' Home, is a small brick Gothic erection with a spire. It also has a stained glass window, presented in 1878. St. Stephen's Church, for Chinese, was built in 1892. It is a neat building in red brick with white facings, with a tower and spire about 80 feet high, standing on the Pokfo- lum Road side of the Church Mission compound. Union Church, a rather pleasing edifice in the Italian style of architecture, with a spire, and containing accommodation for about 500 persons, formerly stood in Staunton Street, but was rebuilt, in 1890, on the plan of the old building, on a new site above the Kennedy Road, together with a parsonage adjoining. This church possesses an organ, and the three rose windows are filled with stained glass. A Wesleyan chapel stands at the junction of Queen's Road and Kennedy Road; this was enlarged in 1904. The Roman Catholic Cathedral situated in Glenealy Ravine, near the Botanic Gardens, is a large structure in the Gothic style and is a rather imposing building. It was opened for worship in 1888. A campanile tower with a small spire surmounting it was completed in 1904 to receive a new peal of five bells. St. Joseph's Church, in Garden Road, is a neat edifice erected. in 1876 on the site of one destroyed by the great typhoon of 1874; St. Anthony's Church on the Bonham Road, near West Point, is an ugly structure, erected in 1892 by the munificence of a late Portuguese resident; St. Francis' Church, at Wanchai, and the Church of the Sacred Heart, at West Point, are small and unattractive structures. The Jewish Synagogue was erected in 1901, and is situated on the northern side of the Robinson Road. It is a plain but roomy edifice with two squat towers surmounted by spirets. The entire cost of the Church was borne by Mr. (now Sir) Jacob Sassoon. There are two Mahomedan Mosques, one in Shelley Street and the other at Kowloon, the latter being for the accommodation of the men of the Indian Mahomedan regiments quartered on the peninsula. A Sikh temple was, in 1902, erected near the Wanchai Road approach to the Happy Valley. There are also several Protestant mission chapels. St. Joseph's College, a school for boys managed by the Christian Brothers (Roman Catholic), occu- pies a large and handsome building on a prominent site below Robinson Road. The Italian Convent, in Caine Road, educates a large number of girls, and brings up many orphans gratuitously. The Asile de la Sainte Enfance, in Queen's Road East, is in the hands of French Sisters, who receive and train up numbers of Chinese foundlings. Other denominations likewise support charitable establishments, conspicuous among which are the Diocesan Home and Orphanage, the Berlin Foundling Hospital on Bonham Road, which has a plain little chapel attached (in which services according to the Lutheran creed are held), the Baxter Vernacular School, the Victoria Female Home and Orphanage, &c. St. Paul's College, situated between Peddler's Hill and Glenealy Ravine, was erected in 1850, and was originally founded for the purpose of giving a theological training to young Chinese and others intended for the ministry of the Anglican Church, but is now an ordinary school. A small chapel is attached. The college is the town residence of the Bishop of Victoria, who is its warden.
The Protestant, Roman Catholic, Parsee, Jewish, and Mahomedan Cemeteries cupy sites in Wong-nai Chung Valley, and are kept in good order. The Protestant Cemetery is almost a rival to the Public Gardens, being charmingly situated and mirably laid out with fountain, fower beds, and ornamental shrubs. The principal
I
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1090
HONGKONG
Chinese cemetery is on the slopes of Mount Davis, near the Pokfolum Road, and is injudiciously crowded, and dismally bare, but it is a Confucian maxim that "placesef burial should not be made to resemble pleasure-gardens."
An electric tramway runs through the City of Victoria from Belcher's Bay to East Point and Happy Valley, and thence on to the village of Shaukiwan, a total length of 9 miles. A cable tramway has since 1888 given access to the Peak, and is worked with great success, both financially and otherwise. The City terminus of this interesting little line is at St. John's Place. Powers were obtained in 1908 for the making of another tramway to the Peak, starting from Battery Path and proceeding up the Glenealy Ravine to a point close to the terminus of the existing line, but owing to public opposition to two of the suggested routes the scheme was abandoned. the alternative routes, on which some tunnelling was necessary, proving too expensive.
INSTITUTIONS
There are several Clubs in the Colony. The principal are the Hongkong Club on the New Praya, the Club Germania in Kennedy Road, the Club Lusitano in Shelley Street and the Nippon Club in Ice House Road. The Hongkong Club is a handsome building replete with every modern comfort; a large annexe was completed in 1902. The Peak Club is domiciled in a pretty building completed in 1903, nt Plunkett Gap, and possesses tennis and croquet lawns on land adjoining. There are also the United Services Recreation Club, Cricket Clubs, Football Clubs, a Chess Club, a Polo Club, a Golf Club, a Hockey Club, and two Yacht Clubs. The Ladies' Recreation Club have several prettily laid out tennis courts and a pavilion in their grounds on the Peak Road.
The Hongkong General Chamber of Commerce have rooms in St. George's Build- ings and meet annually. The Committee form its executive, and the Chamber is frequently asked by the Government for its opinion on questions affecting commerce. There is a branch here of the China Association, with its separate Committee. The Freemasons' Hall, erected in 1865, is situated in Zetland Street, and belongs to the parent lodge, the Zetland. The Sailors' Home occupies a site at West Point, and there is a Mission to Seamen. The Institution of Marine Engineers watches over the interests of that profession. The Hongkong Benevolent Society does good work among the indigent waifs occasionally cast destitute on the Colony. Among other institutions is the St. Andrew's Society, primarily established to ensure the fitting celebration of the anniversary of Scotland's patron saint, whose memory is annually honoured by a Ball.
The annual races are held in the month of February, under the auspices of the Hongkong Jockey Club, on the Race Course in Wong-nai Chung Valley at the east end of the town, a beautiful spot enclosed by fir-clad hills. On this occasion the whole Colony makes holiday, and the stands and course are crowded with one of the most motley collections of humanity to be seen in any part of the world. Gymkhanas also take place monthly during the summer. Regattas are held in December in the harbour, but they do not evoke the same enthusiasm as the races. Athletic Sports are also got up every year by the residents and the garrison, and occasionally swimming matches and boat races take place. There is a Philharmonic Society and also an Amateur Dramatic Club, the members of which give several performances in the Theatre Royal during the season. There are two large Chinese Theatres, where the Chinese drama is almost constantly on view. The Tung Hing Theatre, which was completed and opened in 1892, is a fine building constructed on modern principles, and with special regard to the safety of the auditors.
There are four daily papers published in English: the Hongkong Daily Press and the South China Morning Post, which appear in the morning, the China Mail and the Hongkong Telegraph, issued in the evening. There are three weekly papers, the Hongkong Weekly Press and China Overland Trade Report, the Overland China Mail, the South Chine Weekly Post. The Directory & Chronicle for China, Japan, Straits Settlements, &c., appears annually, published at the Daily Press Office. The native Press is represented by eight daily papers-the Chung Ngoi San Po, which is the oldest and most influential, published at the Daily Press Office; the Wa Tsz Yat Po, or Chinese Mail; the Tsun Wan Yat Po, the War San Yat Po, the Chung Kwok Po the Sai Kai Kung Yik P', the Sheung Po, and the Kwangtung Po. A small Japanese paper called the Hongkong Nippo started publication last year. The Government Gazette is published once a week.
There are several good hotels in Victoria, the leading ones in the city being the Hongkong Hotel, close to the Clock Tower, and extending from Queen's Road to Des Vœux Road, and the King Edward Hotel situated in Des Voeux Roudl. The Fesk Hotel is situated at Victoria Gap, about 1,400 feet above the sea, and provides
HONGKONG
1091
considerable accommodation.
A palatial building on Kennedy road, erected as a residence for the late Mr. E. 1. Belilios, C.M.G., but never occupied by him, has been converted into a private hotel, and named Kingsclere. Kowloon Hotel is on the other side of the harbour.
town,
INDUSTRIES
Manufactures are yearly increasing in importance. There are three large sugar refineries: the China Sugar Refining Co's establishments at East Point and at Bowring- ton, and the Taikoo Sugar Refinery at Quarry Bay. In connection with the first-named Company there is also a large Distillery, where a considerable quantity of rum is manu- factured. There is an Ice Factory at Bowrington, a large Rope Factory in Belcher's Bay, Steam Saw Mills at Bowrington, a Glass Manufactory at Causeway Bay, and a Match Manufactory at Kowloon, a Feather Cleaning and Packing Establishment at Kennedy-
or a Soap Factory at Shaukiwan, and two
three Engineering Works. The Green Island Cement Company has works at Deep Water Bay, on the south side of the island, and at Hunghom, in Kowloon. The Hongkong Cotton Spin- ning, Weaving, and Dyeing Company, Limited, has a mill of 55,000 spindles at Soo-Kunpo, which commenced running with 12,000 spindles in June, 1899. A Paper Mill on a considerable scale, fitted with the best English machinery, was erected at Aberdeen in 1891. The Flour Mills at Junk Bay, capable of turning out 8,000 sacks of flour per day, commenced operation on January 1st, 1907, but disaster overtook the concern in 1908, and the mills are at present closed. A Brewery, designated the Oriental Brewery, was opened at Laichikok in 1909. It is equipped with the most modern plant having a capacity of about 100.000 barrels of beer per annum, An ice-plant is worked in connection with the Brewery. One of the latest industrial enterprises in the Colony is boot manufacturing.
The works of the Hongkong and China Gas Company are situated at West Point and at Yaumati, and those of the Hongkong Electric Company at Wanchai. The city is illu- minated partly by gas and partly by electric light, the latter having been introduced at the end of 1890. Among the industries pursued by the Chinese are glass blowing, opiam boiling, soap making, vermilion and soy manufacture, tanning, dyeing, beancurd, toothpowder, and boat building, &c., &c.
There is excellent Dock accommodation in the Colony. The Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Company, Limited, have three extensive establishments, one at Hungham, Kowloon, one at Tai Kok Tsui, and the third at Aberdeen on the south side of Hongkong Island. The establishments of this Company are fitted with all the best and latest appliances for engineering and carpenter's work, and the largest vessel in H.M.'s Navy has been received into the No. 1 Dock at Hungham. The docks and slips are of the following dimensions:-Hunghom :-No. 1 (Admiralty) Dock-576 feet in length, 86 feet in breadth at entrance at top and 70 feet at bottom, and 30 feet depth of water over sill at ordinary spring tides. No. 2 dock -Length on keel blocks, 371 feet; breadth atentrance, 74 feet; depth of water over sill at ordinary spring tides, 18 feet 6 inches. No. 3 dock-Length on keel blocks, 264 feet; breadth at entrance, 49 feet 3 ins.; depth of water over sill at ordinary spring tides, 14 feet. Patent Slips: No. 1--Length on keel blocks, 240 feet; breadth at entrance,60 feet; depth on the blocks, 14 feet. No. 2-Length on keel blocks, 230 feet; breadth at entrance, 60 feet; depth of water on the blocks at ordinary spring tides, 12 feet. Tai Kok Tsui Cosmopolitan dock-Length on keel blocks, 466 feet; breadth at entrance, 85 feet 6 inches; depth of water over sill at ordinary spring tides, 20 feet. Aberdeen: Hope dock-Length on keel blocks, 430 feet; breadth at entrance, 84 feet; depth of water over all at ordinary spring tides, 23 feet. Lamont dock-Length on keel blocks, 333 feet; breadth at entrance, 64 feet; depth of water over sill at ordinary spring tides, 16 feet, The Hungham and Cosmopolitan Docks are in close proximity to the shipping in port and are well sheltered on all sides. The approaches to the Docks are perfectly safe and the immediate vicinity affords capital anchorage. The Docks are substantially built throughout with granite. Powerful lifting shears with steam purchase at Hunghom and Cosmopolitan Docks stand on a solid granite sea wall alongside which vessels can lie and take in or out boilers, guns and other heavy weights. The shears at Hunghom are capable of lifting 70 tons and the depth of water alongside is 24 feet at low tides. There are other establishments at which shipbuilding and foundry work is carried on, and some good-sized steamers have been launched in the Colony. In 1908 the
docks constructed by Messrs. Butterfield & Swire at Quarry Bay, just inside the yeemoon Pass, were completed. The Dock has been built to British Admiralty requirements, is the largest out of England, and, while it is capable of accommodating the biggest vessels afloat, it has been designed to permit
1092
HONGKONG
of further increasing its length if it should become necessary at some future time to do so.
The dimensions of the dock are:-787 feet extreme length; 700 feet on the blocks; 120 feet wide at coping; 77 feet 6 inches wide at bottom; 88 feet width of entrance at top; 82 feet width of entrance at bottom; 34 feet 6 inches depth over centre of sill at high water Spring tides; 31 feet depth over side of sill at low water Spring tides. It can be filled in 45 minutes and pumped out in 2 hours 40 minutes. Founded on a solid rock bottom, it has been built of cement concrete and lined with granite throughout. A feature of the Dock is the caisson, of the new box-sliding type, weighing 400 tons and electrically controlled. There are three slipways. No 1 slipway is 1,030 feet long and 60 feet wide, capable of taking up two steamers each 300 feet long, drawing 18 feet, and having a displacement of 2,700 tons.
The other slipways are each 993 feet long by 60 feet wide, capable of taking two steamers 200 feet long, drawing 17 feet, of 2,000 tons displacement. The building yard is 500 feet long, and 300 feet wide, and has been equipped with a view to the construction of passenger and cargo vessels, turbinesteamers, steam yachts, torpedo destroyers, steam launches, tugs and ligh- ters. The establishment throughout has been fitted with the latest time-saving appliances procurable. The chief motive power is electricity, generated by gas engines, the gas producing plant being the largest installed in the Far East. The electric shears situated on the sea wall, lift 100 tons at a radius of 70 feet, and wagon and crane roads run the full length from end to end. This sea wall which forms the boundary of the yard is 3,200 feet long and built of concrete blocks of an average weight of 15 tons. There is a depth of 39 feet at high water Spring tides for the greater length of the wall, which will enable ships of any size to berth alongside for the removal or fitting of heavy boilers, machinery, etc. The establishment is known as that of the Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Ld., of Hongkong. His Majesty's Naval Yard likewise contains machine sheds and fitting shops on a large scale, and repairs can be effected to the machinery of the British men-of-war with great expedition. A large extension of the Naval Yard, including an important reclamation on the foreshore, the construction of a dock (capable of accom- modating the largest ship afloat), and erection of various workshops was completed in 1909
THE PEAK DISTRICT
A well-made but rather badly graded mountain road leads up to the summit of Victoria Peak, with numerous other paths branching off from it at Victoria Gap along the adjoining hills. A tramway, on the wire rope system, runs to the Victoria Gap, where the stationary engine is fixed, the lower terminus being close to St. John's Cathedral. It was opened to traffic on the 30th May, 1888. Passengers can alight at the Kennedy, Bowen, and Plantation Roads, where stations are provided for their accommo- dation. Within the past few years the number of bungalows and houses on and about the Peak has increased so much that they now form quite a considerable alpine village. The Military erected a sanatorium on the heights near Magazine Gap in 1883, and in 1897 acquired the handsome and commodious Mount Austin Hotel for the same purpose. The Peak Club is domiciled in a neat building just below Craigieburn. It was erected in 1902. The Peak Church, an unpretending structure after the similitude of a jelly mould, was opened for worship in June, 1883. Comfortable accommodation for visitors is afforded at the Peak Hotel. A finely-situated private Hospital has been erected at Victoria Gap, just above the Peak Hotel. The Victoria (Jubilee) Hospital for Women and Children, occupying a breezy site on Barker Road, was opened by Sir Henry Blake on November 7th, 1903. Yet another hospital, named "The Matilda Hospital" is situated at the southern corner of Mount Kellett. It was built at a cost of about $350,000 and opened in 1906. The expense of erection and maintenance are borne by the estate of the late Mr. Granville Sharp, who devoted the bulk of his fortune to provide such an institution for the benefit of persons needing it who are of European or American birth. A small public garden, or children's playground situated at the junction of Chamberlain and Mount Kellett Roads was opened in 1906.
The road from Victoria Gap westward leads to Victoria Peak, which is 1,823 feet above the sea and rises almost abruptly, behind the centre of the city of Victoria. On the summit is placed the flagstaff, from which the approach of the mails and other vessels is signalled. Not far from the summit of the Peak, on a most command- ing site, stands Mountain Lodge, the summer residence of H.E. the Governor, which was erected in 1901. An excellent and well graded road, commencing on the Bowen Road, leads to Magazine Gap, near which a second hill village of foreign residences has been formed on the southern side of the hills at an elevation of about 900 feet above the sea. Another road leads from Victoria Gap to Pokfulum and Aber- deen, and at the side of this, about half a mile from the Gap, a small granite cross has
HONGKONG
1093
been erected. This bears the inscription:-"W. W. H. 1869" and marks the scene of a brutal murder there by a Chinese footpad, the victim being Mr. Holworthy, an officer of the Ordnance Department, whom he felled with a bamboo and robbed, inflicting fatal injuries. The Peak roads are now lighted by gas.
THE RURAL DISTRICTS
There are several villages on the island, the largest of which is Shau-ki Wan, situate in a bay in the Ly-ee-mùn Pass, a great resort of Chinese fishing craft. Aberdeen, known to the Chinese as Shek-pai-wan, on the south of the island, possesses a well sheltered little harbour, also much frequented by fishing craft. Two large docks of the Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Company are situated there, and add to the importance of the place. Pokfolum, on the road to Aberdeen, about four miles from Victoria, was formerly a place of resort for European residents in the hot weather, and some elegant bungalows were erected in pleasant and picturesque situations, commanding fine sea views and cool breezes, but since the development of the Peak district Pokfolum has been comparatively neglected. The sanitarium of the French Missions is located at Pokfolum, and is a fine building with an elegant chapel attached. The Dairy Farma is also situated there. Wong-nai Chung is snugly located at the head of the valley of that name and is the most accessible of all the villages from Victoria. Stanley, situated in a small bay on the south-east of the island, was once the site of a military station, but the barrack buildings have been pulled down, and the village is now stationary. A cemetery on the point contains numerous graves of British officers and soldiers. One of the places most in favour with pedestrians who are not afraid of a good long tramp is the little village of Tytam Tuk, nestling among trees at the mouth of the stream of the same name, which here enters Tytam Bay, the most extensive inlet on the southern coast. There are good carriage roads from Victoria both to Aberdeen and Shau-ki Wan and bridle roads to Stanley and Tytam, and as a memorial of the Jubilee of Queen Victoria a new road round the body of the island was constructed. Saiwan is a small village picturesquely situated in Saiwan Bay, just outside the Ly-ee-min Pass, and is also much frequented by picnic parties. In the belief that it was a healthy locality, small barracks were erected there early in the 'forties, but the experiment proved most disastrous, for in five weeks out of a detachment of 20 English soldiers five died and three more were removed in a dangerous condition. The buildings were therefore soon abandoned. Shek O is a small but prettily located village occupying a small valley shut in from the water on the eastern coast, not far from Cape D'Aguilar.
KOWLOON AND OTHER DEPENDENCIES
Across the harbour is the dependency of British Kowloon. Some four square miles of the peninsula was first granted in perpetual lease by the Kwangtung Government to Sir Harry (then Mr.) Parkes, but was definitely ceded to Great Britain in 1860 by Article VI. of the Peking Convention. Yau-ma-ti, the principal. village, has increased in population, and bids fair soon to become an important town. There is a considerable Chinese junk trade at this place, and amongst other industries is a preserved ginger factory. Gas Works were erected here in 1892, and the settled portion of the peninsula is lighted with gas; electricity is also now largely used, the generating station being at Hunghom. Waterworks were established. in 1895, but with the rapid growth in the population, further provision was necessary, and the new waterworks now almost completed provides for the supply of a million gallons daily. Three regiments of Indian infantry are stationed at Tsim-tsa Tsui, where barracks and officers' quarters are located and a Mahommedan mosque has been erected. At Tsim-tsa Tsui, too, a number of European houses have been erected and numerous gardens laid out, and this portion of the peninsula, which faces Victoria, is gradually developing into a European residential settlement. A fine bund, with a massive granite wall, has been constructed there, and an extensive range of godowns built and several fine wharves made for discharging cargo and cowling. During 1905 and 1906 extensive reclamation works were carried out extending eastward from the godown company's property to Hunghom. Messrs. Butterfield & Swire have erected extensive godown accommodation on the reclamation. The same period will also be remembered by the building of two churches at Kowloon --St. Andrew's in Robinson Road being the gift of the Hon. Sir C. P. Chater, C. M. G.
1094
HONGKONG
and the Roman Catholic Church in Des Voeux Road, the gift of Dr. S. A. Gomes. There are two hotels, one possessing large accommodation.
The Kowloon British School was erected in 1901 on Robinson Road at the expense of Mr. Ho Tung. The Navy maintains a small naval yard, subsidiary to the principal establishment on the Hongkong side. A well equipped Observatory is situated on Mount Elgin; and a large and handsome Police Station for the Water Police occupies an eminence just above the Praya. A steam ferry plies regularly between Tsim-tsa Tsui and Victoria, ferry boats also run between Victoria and Yau-ma-Ti and Hung-hom, where the principal docks of the Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co. are situate. The Cosmo politan Dock and works, also belonging to the same Company, are situated at Fuk Tsun Heung, formerly known as Sain Shui Po. At Hok-ün are also situated the extensive works of the Green Island Cement Co., Ld., and the patent slip and ship- building yard of Messrs. Bailey & Murphy. The Oriental Brewery is at Laichikok
In 1898 an agreement was entered into whereby China ceded to Great Britain for ninety-nine years the territory behind Kowloon Peninsula up to a line drawn from Mirs Bay to Deep Bay and the adjacent islands, including Lantao, the extent of the New Territory being about 376 square miles, namely, 286 square miles on the mainland and 90 square miles on the islands. The ceremony of formally taking over the terri tory was fixed for the 17th April, 1899, when the British flag was to have been hoisted at Taipohu, and the day was declared a general holiday. Attacks, however, having been made on the parties engaged on the preliminary arrangements, the mat-sheds erected for the accommodation of the police having been burnt, and other evidences of an organised opposition having been given, it was deemed advisable to assume full jurisdiction on the 16th April, on which date the flag was hoisted by the Hon. J. H. Stewart Lockhart, c.M.G., Colonial Secretary. Military operations were found necessary to overcome the opposition, and on the 18th April the rebels were completely routed in an action fought at Sheung Tsun, their force numbering some 2.600 men. On the British side there were no fatalities and only one or two slight casualties; on the Chinese side a number were killed and wounded, but the exact figures were not ascertained, those who fell being carried away by their friends. In the Convention it was provided that Kowloon City was to remain Chinese, but it having been established beyond a doubt that the hands of the Chinese officials were by no means clean in respect of the disturbances which occurred on the taking over of the leased area, the Home Government determined to mark their sense of the duplicity of the Chinese in a suitable manner and orders were accordingly issued to the inilitary authorities to seize Kowloon walled city and Shamchun. This was done on the 16th May, 1899, no opposition being encountered at either place. The Hongkong Volunteer Corps took part in the expedition to Kowloon City. Shamchun, the other place seized, is an important town on the river of the same name just beyond the boundary originally agreed upon. Unfortunately it has not been retained, having been restored to the Chinese authorities in November, 1899, and has become a resort for desperate characters. The New Territory under British jurisdiction is being developed by the construction of roads; police stations have been established, and a system of administration by means of village communities organised. The headquarters of the administration are at Taipohu. The railway from Kowloon to Canton, which will pass through the New Territory to Shamchun, will no doubt do much to develop it. The principal islands and their populations are as follows:-Lantao, 7,940; Cheung Chau, 2,734; Lamma, 1,134. The islands to the west of Hongkong contained 1,925; those to the east, 1,169, The Chinese population of the New Territories is estimated at 85,000.
Of the islands and islets in the waters of the Colony (exclusive of the above acquisitions) the most important is Stonecutter's Island, formerly known as Wong Chune-chow, opposite to and about three-quarters of a mile from the north-western extremity of the Kowloon peninsula. The island is an irregular ridge about a mile in length, and a little over a quarter of a mile broad; the principal eminences are occupied by batteries and no one is allowed to land without a permit. The Quarantine Station is also located here. After the great typhoon of September, 1874, two or three thousand bodies of the victims found afloat were interred on Stonecutter's Island. Kellot's Island is a small rock near East Point, on which a fort formerly stood, but which has been replaced by a small magazine. Green Island, at the western entrance of the harbour, has been planted with trees and now justifies its name all the year round. A lighthouse has been placed on its south-western extremity. One Tree Island is a tiny rock near the entrance to Aberdeen. Aplichau, a considerable island opposite Aberdeen, of which harbour it forms part, has a populous fishing village on its northern shore
HONGKONG
1095
facing Aberdeen. Lantao and Lamma Islands were brought under British jurisdiction by the Kowloon Convention of 1898. The former has a considerably larger area than Hongkong, but both this island and Lamma are sparsely populated by agriculturists and fishermen.
POPULATION, GARRISON, AND DEFENCES
The total population of the Colony, according to the census taken in January, 1901 numbered 281,782, compared with 221,441 in May, 1891, and 160,402 in 1881. A census was taken on November 20th, 1906, and the report gave the total civil popu- lation (exclusive of the New Territories) as 319,803, which included a non-Chinese civil population of 12,415. In addition the army returns showed a strength of 4,537 and the Navy 4,698, making the total population of the Colony 329,038. The returns showed an increase in the civil population of 17,992 (exclusive of New Kowloon and the rest of the New Territories) on the census return of 1901.
The Garrison consists of three companies Royal Garrison Artillery, one company Koyal Engineers, one battalion of Infantry, Army Service Corps, Royal Army Medical Corps, four Indian infantry battalions-two in North China and two at Hongkong; four companies native artillery and one local company native engineers. There is also a Volunteer Corps consisting of one troop of Mounted Infantry, two companies of Garrison Artillery, and one Company of Engineers. On the initiative of II. E. Sir Matthew Nathan, a Volunteer Reserve Association was formed in 1904 composed of British residents over the age of 35.
The approaches to the harbour are strongly fortified, the batteries consisting of well-constructed earthworks. The western entrance is protected by three batteries on Stonecutters' Island and two forts on Belcher and Fly Points, from which a tremendous converging fire could be maintained, completely commanding the Sulphur Channel. Pine Wood battery, on the hill above and west of Richmond Terrace, has a wide range of fire. The Ly-ee-min Pass is defended by two forts on the Hongkong side and another on Devil's Peak on the mainland, and if vessels survived that tire they would then have to face the batteries at North Point and Hunghom which completely command the eastern entrance. Another battery on the bluff at Tsim-tsa Tsui, Kowloon, commands the whole of the centre of the harbour. The batteries are armed with the latest breech-loading ordnance. The Colony of Hongkong pays a military contribution fixed at 20 per cent. of the revenue.
In addition to the fortifications the Colony possesses a small squadron for harbour defence. This consists of the obsolete turret ironclad Wivern, 2,750 tons, now dismantled and being used as a distilling ship, and six torpedo boats. The crews of these vessels are borne in the receiving ship Tamar, which is also the headquarters of the Commodore and his staff. The Naval Yard consists of a large dock, an extensive range of workshops and offices east of the Artillery Barracks, and the Naval Authorities have another large establishment on the Kowloon side near to Yau-ma-Ti.
CLIMATE
As intimated in earlier paragraphs, Hongkong formerly enjoyed a most unenviable notoriety for unhealthiness, and in years past the troops garrisoned here suffered grievously from malarial fevers. A great deal of the sickness in the early days of the Colony was believed to have been caused by excavating and otherwise disturbing the disintegrated granite of which the soil of the island mainly consists, and which appears to throw off malarious exhalations when upturned. At the present time, however, the Colony is one of the healthiest spots in the world in the same latitude. The influence of the young pine forests created by the Afforestation Department and the training of nullahs on the slopes have no doubt been beneficial in checking malaria, and the attention latterly bestowed on sanitation has not been without its due effect. The annual death rate per 1,000 for the whole population in 1908 was 27.55 per 1,000 against 22.12 in 1907. For the non-Chinese community only (including the Army and Navy) the death-rate was 14.78 per 1,000, as compared with 15.46 per 1,000 in 1907.
The following table shows fifteen years' means of the annual and monthly values of the principal meteorological elements:-
1096
Bar. Mean pressuro Maximum
Minimum
Mean temperature Mean maximum
HONGKONG
Jan. Feb. March April May Junc July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. In .80.159 30.132 30.055 29.958 29.868 29,764 29.738 29.755 29.624 20.982 30.103 30.181
30.367 30.390 30.308 30.158 30.045 29.880 29-882 29.851 92.984 30.157 30.311 30.414 3141 29.686 29.421 29.552 29.576 20.447 29-284 28.702 29.888 28.870 20.089 29.575 20.757 2878
62.2 09.9 76.6 80.7 81.6 81.0 80.4 76.2 09.2 42.4 7.5 64.1 61.7 06.4 74.5 81.2 85.2 36.2 86.0 85.3 90.7 74.3 67.5 761
50.7
67.7
Mean minimum
Maximum
56.0 79.2 79.0
64.5
58.9 66.7
73.5
77.4 78.0 77.3
82.1
88.6
01.5
93.6
94,0
92,9
94.0
76.6 72.5 05.3 58.3 67.9
Minimum
32.0
40.3
45.0
55.6
44.1
09.2
721
71.0
65.6
93.8 85.0 81.9 90
Mean daily range
8.1
7.2
7.4
7.7
7.7
7.8
8.2
8.7
8,7
60.8 50.6 40.7 32.0
8.3 9.0 0.2 8.1
Mean humidity
74
79
84
85
83
83
83
83
77
71
Mean rain
1.645
2.091
2.991
5.980 13.159 16.496
14.210
13.482
$.833
5.794
05
64 1.302 0985 86.807
Bri
Maximum in 24 hours
3,920
2.185
3.580
5.210 20.495 12.630 13.480
6.555
6.855 10.190
6.876 01.70 20.456
Mean max. in 24 hours
0.688
0.710
1.160
2.256
4.844 4,438
3.973
3.267
2.951
2 743
Maximum in 1 hour
0.510
0.525
1.570
2 420
9.400
2.650 3,480 2.140
0.843 0.522 BUI
1.720
1.850
1,620 0.500 3.400
Heun max. in 1 hour
0.188
0.249
0.484
1.018
65
94
87
as
1.400 94
1.309
06
1.333
1.187
1.004
79
73
57
0.702 44
Zet 34
8:30
Hours of rain
Wind direction
Wind velocity mean Maximum
Hours of sunshine
E15 N E14 N ES N E2 N E11'S 830°E S43°E 533 E E15 N
14.4 15.0
14.9 13.5 12.5 11.2 40 53
40
43
108 130.7 77.7
110.7
16 5
49 79.5
0.285 0.165 2.11
21°N E29°N E27°N E 9.6 12.2 E 14.7 13.8 12.7 13.1
66
49 69 100 152.1 155.4 197.0 107.2 200,1 214.5 190.2 189.7 11
42
85
It has been remarked that the meteorological returns indicate a progressive change in the climatic conditions generally of the Colony. The average yearly rainfall for the ten years ended 1904 was 20 inches less than the average for the immediately preceding decade.
TRADE
Hongkong is a free port, and there is no complete official return of the imports and exports compiled, but the value of its trade is estimated at about £50,000,000 per annum. During the year 1907 the following tonnage entered and cleared :--
ENTERED
CLEARED Vessels. Tons.
784 1,198,346
NATIONALITY
ENTERED
CLEARED
NATIONALITT
Vessels. Tons. Vessels.
Tons.
American
30 248,089
39
232,768
Gennan
Vessels. Tons.
750 1,197,970
Austrian
25
97,789
25
97,789
Italian
12 31,100
12
31,400
Belgian
1
2,008
Japanese
434
1,049,540
434
1,052,665
British
5,053
5,895,480 5,062
5,870,940
Norwegian
181
192,278
184
197,00
Chinese
416
333,578 419
394,787
Portuguese
221
45,195 220
45,01
Chinese Junks.. 12,056
1,100,680
12,877
1,091,562
Russian
13
34,826
18
34,396
Danish
16
84,211
15
34,211
Swedish
11
18,099
11
18,099
Dutch..
197
French
201,014 183 583,516
98
203,458
Small Craft
2,023
90,312
2,042
92,190
462
581,880
A total of 16,747 vessels of 10,151,970 tons entered, and 17,981 vessels of 9,905,877 tons cleared with cargoes. There also entered in ballast 5,993 vessels, of 1,012,416 tons, and 4,716 vessels of 1,236,854 tons cleared in ballast. A Parliamentary paper issued in August, 1905, showed Hongkong to be, in respect of tonnage, the largest shipping port in the world. The trade chiefly consists in opium, cotton, sugar, salt, flour, oil, cotton and woollen goods, cotton yarn, matches, metals, earthenware, amber, ivory, sandalwood, betel, vegetables, granite, &c., &c. There is an extensive Chinese passenger trade, chiefly restricted, however, to the Straits Settlements, Netherlands India, Borneo, the Philippines, Siam, and Indo-China.
Hongkong possesses unrivalled steam communication. The P. & O. S. N. Co. and the M. M. Co. convey the European mail weekly, the Norddeutscher Lloyd Co. maintain a regular fortnightly mail service between Bremen and Hongkong, the P. M. S. S. Co., O.&O. S. S. Co, and the Toyo Kisen Kaisha maintain a mail service with San Francisco, the Canadian Pacific Railway Co. a regular mail service with Vancouver, B. C.; a regular line has been established by the Northern Pacific S. S. Co. to Tacoma, and Portland, Oregon, and the Portland and Asiatic S, N. Co. also run
a line of steamers to Portland; the Eastern and Australian S. S. Co., the China Naviga- tion Co. and the Norddeutscher Lloyd keep up a regular monthly service with the Australian Colonies, and the Nippon Yusen Kaisha maintain services to Europe, Australia, and the United States (Seattle) In addition to all these, several great lines of merchant steamers run between ports in Great Britain and Hongkong, of which the China Mutual S. S. Co., Ocean S. S. Co. and the Glen, Warrnck, Mogul, Ben, Union, Shire, and Shell lines are the most conspicuous. The Austrian Lloyd's steamers also ply from Trieste to Hongkong, those of the Hamburg-Amerika line from Hamburg, and the Navigazione Generale Italiana Company's stearners run monthly from Genoa. Regular steam communication between Java and Hongkong has been established by the Java-China-Japan Liue Between the ports on the east coast of China, Formosa and Hongkong the steamers of the Douglas S. S. Co. ply regularly twice a week, and tho of the Osaka Shosen Kaisha weekly, and there is constant steam communication
HONGKONG
1097
with Hoihow, Manila, Saigon, Haiphong, Tourane, Bangkok, Borneo, &c. With Shanghai, Tientsin, and the ports of Japan there is frequent communication by steamers of the Indo-China S. N. Co., China Navigation, and other lines, in addition to the English and French and German mail steamers, which leave weekly. Between Hongkong, Macao, and Canton there is a daily steam service, and steamers run as far as Wuchow on the West River.
DIRECTORY
COLONIAL GOVERNMENT
Governor, Commander-in-Chief, and Vice-Admiral--SIR FREDERICK J. D. LUGARD
K.C.M.G., C.B., D.8.0.
Private Secretary-Captain W. C. S. Simson. Singapore Battalion Royal Artillery
Aide de Camp-Captain P. H. M. Taylor, 32nd Lancers, Indian Army
Hon. Extra Aide-de-Camp-Subadar Major Ahmed Din, H.K.S.B., R.G.A.
His Excellency The Governor
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
局政議 IChing Kuk
The General Officer Commanding
Hon. Colonial Secretary
Hon. Attorney-General
Hon. Colonial Treasurer
President:
His Excellency The Governor
Official Members:
Hon. Director of Public Works
Hon. The Principal Civil Medical Officer
Hon. Sir C. P. Chater, Kt., C.M.G.
Hon. Mr. E. A. Hewett
LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
局例定 Ting Lai Kuk
The General Officer Commanding
Hon. Colonial Secretary
Hon. Captain Superintendent of Police
Unofficial Members:
Hon. Dr. Ho Kai, M.B., C.M., C.M.G,
Hon. Mr. Wei A Yuk, c.M.G.
Hon. Mr. H. E. Pollock, K.C.
Hon. Mr. M. Stewart
Hon. Attorney-General
Hou. Colonial Treasurer
Hon, Director of Public Works
Hon. Registrar-General
Hon. Mr. E. A. Hewett
Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson
Hon. Mr. E. Osborne
Clerk of Councils: Mr. C. Clementi
For Government Dejurtments see under G
AAGAARD, THORESEN & Co., Steamship Agents--9, Ice House St. Christiania Office: Det Oversoisk Cie; Shanghai Office: Thoresen & Co.; Tel. Ad: Over; Telph. 450
Bjarne Aagaard
Olaf Thoresen (Shanghai)
A. S. Sörensen
C. W. Olson
Einar Evensen
Agencies
Norwegian Steamship Owners' Co- operative Association Incorporated Tonnage
Nordisk Skibsrederforening Associa- tion of Scandinavian Shipowners Incorporated Tonnage
#
Si-ap-too-la
ABDOOLA & Co., C., Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents-13, Gage Street
C. Abdoola (Bombay)
Ahmed Hadjee Joosab, manager A. L. Assur
* E-pa-la-him
do.
ABDOOLALLY EBRAHIM & Co., Merchants and Comm. Agents-12, Wyndham Street Adoolkayoom Ebrahim Noordin(B'bay) Noordin Ebrahim Noordin, (B'bay) Abdooleader A. Ebrahim, Cumroodin Essabhoy Ebrahim, do. Nagindas Valahhdas (Bombay)
Ebrahim A. Tyabkhan, manager K. A. Busrai
1098
HONGKONG
WP Ho-to-la-him
ABDOOLRAHIM, A., Civil Engineer, Architect and Surveyor-34, Queen's Road Cen-
tral
Mirza Abdoola
C. M. Alarakia
1 Hik Tat-po hong ABDOOLRAHIMAN, O., Milliner, Hosier, Silk Mercer and Commission Agent, The Drapery Emporium-7, Lyndhurst Terrace; Tel. Ad: Roome
Wa-fong
A FONG'S PHOTO STUDIO-31, Queen's Road
Central, above Watkins' Dispensary
A Fong, photographer
H. A. Rosario, managing clerk
Hing-cheong
AH MEN & HING CHEONG & Co., Tailors, Drapers and Outfitters-8, Queen's Road Central
(See Advertisement)
King-kee
A KING, Slipway, Yacht, Motor-boat, and Boat Builder, Regger, Sail and Flag Maker Praya East, Wanchai
A. King, proprietor
L. Kon Tai, signs per pro.
ALABASTER, CHALONER GRANVILLE, Bar-
rister-at-Law 18,
Bank
Hongkong.
院醫濟利氏麗雅
Nga-lai-se Li-tsai-i-yun
Buildings,
ALICE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Hollywood
Road and AberdeenStreet
ALICE MEMORIAL MATERNITY HOSPITAL-
6, Bonham Road
NETHERSOLE HOSPITAL-10, Bonham Road HO MUI LING-HOSPITAL, Bonham Road
Chairman of Finance Committee Hon.
A. W. Brewin
Hon. Treasurer-F. M. Crawford Medical Superintendent and Secretary
-R. MacLean Gibson, M.D., C.M. Medical and Surgical Staff Drs. R. MacLean Gibson, G. P. Jordan. Dental Surgeon-J. W. Noble, D.D.S.
Resident Surgeon, A. M. H.-Dr. To
Ying Fan
Resident, N. H.-Dr. Li Ying Yau
Matron-Miss Stewart
榮耀萬 Man-iu-wing
A LING
LING & Co., Furniture, Foochow
Lacquered Ware and Photo Goods
Dealers-19 Queen's Road Central
Tsang A Ling Chang Tu Woon
(See Advertisement)
ALLY, M., Merchant and Commission
Agent--14, Des Voeux Road Central
利和 Wo-lec
ALVARES & Co., L. M. (in liquidation
H. Percy Smith, C. A., receiver
Sun Hing
ALVES & Co., J. M., General Merchants.
Importers and Exporters-6, Des Voeux
Road Central, First floor; Tel. Ad:
Agaratuin; P. O. Box 324
Jose M. Alves
物馬座亞 Alli-momch
ALLYMAHOMED, A. T., Freight and General
Broker-c/o A. M. Essabhoy, 4, Zetland Street
G. T. Poona Walla
AMATEUR DRAMATIC CLUB
Committee R. Sutherland, H. V Bird, G. A. Caldwell, A. Chapman J. Robertson, M. Stafford Northcote (hon. secy.), E. Ormiston (hon. treas.)
AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS See Missions in China
Man-kee
APCAR & Co., ARRATOON V., Merchants and Commission Agents-14, Des Vœux Central
A. V. Apcar
T. M. Gregory, signs per pro.
Agents
Banco Nacional Ultramarino,
FuE Ching-kwong-wo 和廣正
"AQUARIUS" COMPANY, Manufacturers of
Aerated Waters--15, Queen's Road
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., agents
ARCULLI, A. F., Army and Navy Contractor
A. F. Arculli
O. el. Arculli
F. Mahomed Abbass Khan
#
A Hop-tock-young-hong
ARCULLI BROTHERS, Merchants and Con- mission Agents -Queen's Road Central; Tel. Ad: Curly; Telph, 409
O. el Arculli
A. K. el Arculli
V. Curreem
C. V. Curreem T. K. Fung P. S. Pang
On-kee
HONGKONG
Arndt & Co., Machinery Importers, General Merchants and Commission Agents: Tel. No. 622; Cable Address: Arudtcomp; P. O. Box 268-38, Queen's Road Central
Ernst Arndt, partner W. Goetz, signs per pro.
Wong Mung Wai, assistant
G Sui-bee
Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Importers, Exporters. Shipping Agents, Engineers and Contractors, New Praya; P. O. Box 1; Tel. 8; Tel. Ad: Karberg
Philipp Arnhold (London) E. Goetz (London) Harry Arnhold (Shanghai) M. Nielassen (Berlin)
A. E. Dowler (New York) W. Helms (Hongkong)
F. Lieb (Hongkong)
C. A. H. Westerburger, signs per pro. E. Friedrichs
C. Lauritzen
G. S. Cruickshank, A.M.I.MECH.E.
L. V. Langstein
E. Hausemann
H. Popper
B. Webb
W. Arnhold-Zedelius
D. P. J. Lopes
M. V. Leon
A. A. Alves
F. M. Xavier
F. V. Vandenberg F. A. Barradas J. F. Tavares
Agencies
Shipping
American & Oriental Line
Rickmers Reismuellem, Rhederei and
Schiffbau A. G.
The Robert Dollar Co. San Francisco Andrew Weir & Co., London Prince Line Ltd., Newcastle-on-Tyne
Insurance
South British Fire & Marine Insce. Co. New York Board of Underwriters National Board of Underwriters, New
York
Record of American & Foreign Shipping London Assurance Corporation (Fire
and Marine)
Lancashire Insce, Co., (Fire and Life) "Fatum" Accident Insurance Co.
Atlantic Mutual Insce. Co. New York
Electrical Machinery, Telephones and Telegraphy
1099
Allgemeine Electricitaets Ges-
ellschaft, Berlin
The British Radio Telegraph and
Telephone Co., Ltd., London Western Electric Co., Chicago, U. S.
A., Telegraph and Telephones
Arms and Ammunition
Schwartzkoff's Torpedoes and Mines. Skodawerks, A. G. Pilsen (Guns) Vereinigte Koeln - Rottweiler Pulver
fabriken A. G., Berlin (Gunpowder) Rendrock Powder Co, New York ("Rackarock"PatentBlasting Powder) Deutsche Waffen und MunitionsFabri-
ken, Berlin-Karlsruhe
Waffenfabrik Mauser, A. G. Oberndorf,
Neckar
Shipbuilding and Motorboots Stettiner Maschinenbau A.G. "Vulcan,"
Bredow-Stettin
Carl Meissner. Hamburg (Motorboats) Union Iron Works, San Francisco
Aeronautics
Luftfahrzeug Gesellschaft m. b. H.,
"l'arseval" dirigible Balloons Flugmaschine Wright G. m. b. H.,
"Wright" Aeroplanes
Railway, Material, etc.
Arthur Koppel,
(Portable Railways)
A. G., Berlin
Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadel
phia, U. S. A.
General Machinery
A.Borsig, Berlin-Tegel (Steam Engines,
Boilers, etc.)
Diesel Engine Co. Ltd., London (Diesel
Engines)
Gebrueder Sulzer, Winterthur (General
Machinery)
Deutsche Niles-Werkzeug-Maschinen- fabrik, Berlin (Heavy Machine Tools) Niles-Bement-Pond Co. New York
(Machine Tools)
Ludwig Loewe & Co. A. G., Berlin, (Machine Tools and Arsenal Machi- nery)
A. S. Cameroon Steam Pump Works
New York
Ingersoll Rand Co. New York (Air
Compressors and Rock Drills) Pneumatic Engineering Co. New York
(Pneumatic Tools)
Davis Calyx Drill Co. New York (Core
Drilling Plant)
Seager Engine Works (Oil Engines) Star Drilling Machine Co. (Well Bro-
ing Plants)
Asa, Lees & Co. Oldham, England,
(Cotton Mill Machinery) Nordyke & Mormon Co. Indianapolis
(Flour Mill Machinery)
1100
HONGKONG
Klein, Shanzlin and Becker, Frank-
enthal (Pumps and Fittings) Meinecke & Co. Breslau (Water Meters) Kirchner & Co., Ltd., Leipzig (Wood
Working Machinery).
Mannesmann Tube Works (Seamless
Steel and Copper Tubes)
Sundries
Paraffine Paint Co., San Fran- cisco (Malthoid Roofing Material) Patent File and Tool Co. (Dreadnaught
Milling File)
Trussed Concrete Steel Co., Detroit, Mich. (Reinforced Concrete Construction)
Ideal Concrete Machinery Co. (Con-
crete Block Making Machinery) "Panzer" A. G., Berlin (Safes, etc.) Jonas & Colver, Ltd., Sheffield (Steel) The Gandy Belting Co., Baltimore
("Oxylo" Cotton Belting)
David Corsar and Sons, Arbroath,
(Canvas)
Port Costa Milling Co., San Francisco
(Flour)
The Central Agency, Ltd., Glasgow,
(Cotton thread)
The Ansonia Clock Co., New York
(Clocks and Watches)
Deutsche Gasgluehlicht A. G. (Auer. gesellschaft) (Incandescent Gas
Mantles)
The Royal Standard Typewriter Co.
New York
Registered Offices
Tientsin Native City Waterworks Co. New Engineering and Shipbuilding
Works, Ltd., Shanghai
A. Butler Cemont Tile Works, Ltd.
Shanghai
Peking Electric Light Syndicate
義公 Kung-i
ARTHUR & Co. (EXPORT) LD., Manufacturers and Merchants (Glasgow and London)
-Queen's Road Central
Alex. Mackenzie, representative
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD, THE-
King's Buildings, Connaught Road
N.G. M. Luykz, general manager (abt.) H. Brodersen, manager W. Pringle, Jr. F. K. Brownrigg W. Manning
A. Whitmarsh
H. F. Bunje A. M. Barradas E. M. Rozario
T. F. Castro S. Paul H. A. Bursley
Miss E. Best
North Point Installation
(Shaukiwan Road)
P. H. Murray, manager H. J. Hunt, engineer
Tai-Kok-Tsui Installation
(Kowloon)
R. Thuss, manager
ASILE DE LA SAINTE ENFANCE-See under
Educational
Fa-lan-ci Chao Tim
ASTOR HOUSE, Hotel -13 Queen's Road
L. Gameau, proprietor
N. Blumenthal, manager
森筆
Yat-sham
Ataka Co., Importers, Exporters, and Coal Merchants-3, Queen's Road Cent; Teleph. No. 468; Head Office: Osaka: Branch: Tokyo
Y. Ataka (Osaka)
do.
S. Minami, signs per pro, S. Okumura, T. Yamada
T. Matsushima Y. Nishikawa Y. Komaki
Agencies
Nippon Marine Transport & Fire
Insce. Co., Ld.
Iwasaki Coal Mines Furukawa Coal Mine
Sumitomo Coal Mine
Koyanose Coal Mine Omi Cotton Duck Co., Ld.
ATIEUZA, VICENTE, Agent for the Ger
minal Tobacco Factory-32, Caine Road
司公船輪國澳
O-kwok lan shun kung-sze
AUSTRIAN LLOYD'S STEAM NAVIGATION Co.
Prince's Building
Sander, Wieler & Co., agents
利庇
Bay-li
Bailey Co., Ltd., W. S., Engineers and Shipbuilders -Works: Kowloon Bay; Tel. Ad: Seybourne; Telephone K. 21
W. S. Bailey, M.I.MECH.E., managing
director
E. O. Murphy WH.SC., asst. managing
director
H. J. Gedge (Hongkong), director F. C. Macdonald (Glasgow) do. C. H. Lee, secretary
J. Maxwell
L. Chinfen S. S. Ko
I
1
T
L
HONGKONG
1101
-
At Works:
T. Ramsay J. Ross H. C. Lim
J. Tye
W. C. Chung
T. Leung
W. Chan
Fung Chun Ling
D. S. Wong
BAILEY & MURPHY, Consulting Engineers
and Surveyors-Hotel Mansions
W. S. Bailey, M.I.MECH.E.
E. O. Murphy, wH. SC., M.I.M.E.
Tai-wan-ngan.hong
BANK OF TAIWAN, LD.--Prince's Building,
Des Voeux Road; Tel. Ad: Taiwan
D. Tohdow, manager
E. Hashimoto
S. Ishida
S. Matsumoto
和天
Teen-wo
BANKER & Co., Merchants--1, Cross Street
Geo. Banker (Wuchow)
S. E. Green
RE
Fat-lan-sai ngan-hong
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE-Chater Road
L. Berindoague, manager
E. Le Carduner accountant
G. Escande, sub
R. J. Audap, cashier
J. M. Noronha
E. M. Xavier
L. G. Xavier
H. J. Alves
G. F. Alves
do.
BARKER, & Co. Wm., Electrical and Mechani- cal Engineers and Machinery Agents- Beaconsfield Arcade; Tel. Ad: Arcade: Teleph. No. 261
Sam-lee
BARRETTO & Co., Merchants and Shipping Agents-3 Queen's Building: P. O. Box 27 Tel. 457; General Cable; Address
'Barretto"
H
F. D. Barretto
Q. D. Barretto B. J. H. Botelho J. A. H. Botelho ('. M. Soares
A. M. Xavier
A. Azevedo
Miss. M. J. H. Botelho
Miss. C. C. dos Remedios
Agents
Compañia Trasatlantica Royal Spanish Mail Line (Passenger Department)
Compañia General de Tabacos de
Filipinas
Gresham Life Assurance Society, Ld. La Nacional Fire and Marine Insurance
Co., Lad.
Swiss National Insurance Co. of Basel Lipton, Ld. (Ceylon Teas and Coffeos) G. W. Sheldon & Co., Forwardling Agts. Lloyd Platino, Ld.
Australia Flour Mill and Grain Stores Jerilderie and Narandera Flour Mills Forquil Flour Mills
Anglo-French Textile Co., Ld.
BASA, R., Merchant and Commission
Agent--7, Arbuthnot Road
BASEL MISSIONARY SOCIETY-See under
Protestant Missions in China
BASTO, H, M., Property and General Broker
-6, Des Voeux Road
BEJONJEE & Co., Milliners, Drapers and General Merchants-128, Wellington St.
P. Bejonjee Shroff N. Bejonjee Shroff J. H. Bejonjee Shroff M. Bejonjee Shroff
BELILIOS PUBLIC SCHOOL for Girls-See
under Educational
BELILIOS, R.A., Dr.,M.D., F. R.C.S.EDIN., Medical Practitioner-Office: Alexandra Build- ings; Tel. 615; Residence: 3 Century Cres., Kennedy Road; Telph. No. 698
Be-lo-se
BELL'S ASBESTOS EASTERN AGENCY, LD. -4, Queen's Buildings; Tel. Ad: Asbestos; Teleph. No. 501
Bradley & Co., agents
J. F. Miller, superintendent
S. Musso, assistant
A. Joanilho, bookkeeper A. G. Coppin, local secretary
BENEVOLENT SOCIETY, HONGKONG
President Lady May
Hon. Secretary-Mrs. Edkins
BERKELEY, K.C., SIR HENRY-Chambers :
Bank Buildings
BERLIN FOUNDLING HOSPITAL-See under
Churches and Missions
BIBLE, BOOK & TRACT DEPÒT-See under
Protestant Missions in China
BIBLIOTHECA PORTUGUEZA DE HONGKONG
-17, Shelley Street
President J. C. da Cunha
1102
Secretary J. M. de C. Basto
Treasurer- -F. X. V. Ribeiro
HONGKONG
Librarians--E. H. d'Aquino, J. M. P.
da Silva
BILBROUGH, C. F. S., Proprietor of Chosen- holme Estate, Wonsan, Korea, and Sole Lessee of Victoria Island, Burma
BILIMORIA, R. D.,Wholesale and Retail Sta- tioner, Paper Merchant and Commission Agent-16, Elgin Street
和萬新 Sun-Man-wo-Hong
BISMARCK & Co., Shipchandlers, Navy Con- tractors, Provision and Coal Merchants, Sailmakers and Commission Agents--18
and 19, Connaught Rd. Central;Telph.309
C. Yuetpo, manager
Au Ut Foo
Tam Shun Ting
Kwong King In, clerk Chan Pak Hing, do. Lee Mow, clerk
(See Advertisement)
BISNEY, S., Estate and General Broker- "Stillingflete" Peak Road; Tel. Ad: Bisney; Teleph. No. 331
BAWLA, O. M., Merchant and Commission
Agent-21, Cochrane Street
M. J. Bawla (Bombay)
E. M. Bawla(Singapore and Sourabaya) A.M.Bawla(Penang and KwalaLumpur) R. Sharafali, manager
Pek-lik-het
BLACKHEAD & Co., F., Shipchandlers, Sail- makers, Coal Merchants, Soap, Soda and Disinfectant Manufacturers-St. George's Building (ground floor); Factory: Shaukiwan
F. H. Hoeluke
F. Schwarzkopf
C. Stockhausen
E. Thiel, signs per pro.
J. Danielsen
A. Schoenemann
T. Hansen
W. Direng
H. Paulsen
H. Wedehase, chemist
H. G. White representative for Suter Hartmann and Rahtjens Composi- tion Co. Ld., London
(See Advertisement)
Po-ne-man
BORNEMANN & Co., FERD., Merchant and Commission Agent-16, Des Voeux Road
F. Bornemann (Germany) H. Schumacher (Shanghai)
G. Binder, signs the firm
H. Schierenberg F. Bierling
L. L. da Silva
Agency
Gerinan Lloyd Mar. Ins. Co., Ld., Berlin
L1 Tuk-Kee
BRADLEY & Co., Merchants-4, Queen's Buildings, and Swatow and Shanghai; Teleph. No. 96
T. W. Richardson (Swatow) R. H, Hill (London)
A. Macgowan (Swatow) G. A. Richardson (Shanghai) A. Forbes
J. A. Plummer, signs the firm A. G. Coppin, signs per pro. F. Bevington
K. S. Morrison
J. M. S. Rozario
I. Rocha
J. A. P. da Rocha
J. F. Miller, supt. enginr. Shan stre
S. Musso
A. Joanilho
H. A. Castro
Agencres
Akaiki Coal Mines
Bell's Asbestos Eastern Agency, Ld. Borneo Co., Ld.
Labuan Coalfield's Co., Ld.
La Cie. de Commerce et de Navigation
D'Extreme Orient
Manufacturers' Life Assce. Co., Toronto Northern Assurance Co. (Fire and Life) Northern S. S. Co., St. Petersburg Shan Steamship Company
The Nestle & Anglo-Swiss Condensed
Milk Co.
Indo-China Portland Cement Co., Ld. Haiphong (Société des Ciments Portland Artificial de l'Indo-Chine)
理信 Sun-li
BRANDES, KARL, Mcht. and Commission Agt.
Hung-fat
BREWER & Co., Ld., Booksellers, Stationers, Printers, Newsagents, Fancy Goods Dealers, Tobacconists, &c.-Pedder St. (adjoining main entrance Hongkong Hotel); Head Office: Shanghai
E. Page, managing director (Shanghai) W. F. Brewer, manager and director
(Hongkong)
E. H. Pond
JA** Ying-mee-yin-kungsz BRITISH-AMERICAN TOBACCO Co., L.D.-18 Bank Buildings; P. O. Box 131; Tel. 355, Cable Ad Powhattan
R. D. Harvey
A. Harrison 0. C. Kench A. J. Carter
R. Abraham H. B. Davidson
Miss Lue Cheong
J. W. Jay (West River)
C. F. Stockwell (Wuchow)
F. A. Perry (Swatow)
G. Worby (Amoy) W. L. Jenkins (Amoy) O. Jennewein (Foochow)
W. T. Nelke (S.S. "Bramtoco") G. Campbell,
do.
HONGKONG
BRITISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION--HONG-
KONG AND CHINA BRANCH
President O. Marriot, Esq., M.D. Vice-President
Deputy Inspector-
General Tait, R.N, Council-Hon. J. M. Atkinson, M.B.,
Fleet Surgeon Shaw, R.N., C. Forsyth.
M.D., J. Herbert Sanders, M.D., Major Macdonald, R.A.M.C.
Hon. Sec. and Treas-G. W. R. Black,
M.D.
家皇烏般托英大
Tai-ying-pak-pun-niu Wong-ka
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO GOVERNMENT
Gibb, Livingston & Co., agents
Pong-long Chun-se
BROWN, JONES & Co., Undertakers, Monu- mental Masons, Marble and Granite Dealers, and Collectors Government
Cemetery Fees Office: Warerooms and
Marble Yard: 41, Morrison Hill Road
師狀嚇及踹律布
Po-lut-tun-kap-hick-chong-sze
BRUTTON & HETT, Solicitors, Notaries
Public, Proctors, Patent and Trade Mark
Agents, &c.-39, 41 and 43, Des Vœux Road
G. K. Hall Brutton F. P. Hett
W. B. Hind
P. D. Fernandez
Wong Tsuk Lam, Chow Tack Mee,
Kwok Ying Kuen and other clerks
and interpreters
保 Po Pi
Bumann & Berblinger, Electrical and Machinery Showrooms, Consulting Engineers, Shipchandlers and General Merchants, Machinery and Electric Merchants, Wine and Spirit Merchants. Tel. Ad: Bumann; Telephone No. 427- 15, 16, 17, Connaught Road
J. Bumanu
A. Berblinger
W. Otto, signs per pro.
Aage. Bredvad
P. Schmidt, M.I.E.E. C. W. Alexander, M.E. Miss M. Pedersen
Miss M. A. Carvalho
1103
Sole Eastern Representatives for:-
The British Antifouling Com- position and Paint Co., Ltd. London
John Dewar & Sons, Limited, Perth,
Scotland
Glyco Metal Co. Ld., Manchester Manganesit Works, Hildburghausen J. D. Fluegger, Hamburg
Vereinigte Cummiwarenfabrik Har-
burg-Wien
BUMC & REIF
F. Hesse, signs per pro.
彌播 Poon-nee
Bune, A., Ship, Freight, Coal and Insur- ance Broker and Commission Ågent-
No. 4, Des Voeux Road; Teleph. 418
Th. A. Bune
A. W. Snowman, signs per pro,
Agency
The Canton S. S. Co., Ld.
Salvage Str. "Protector"
BURJORJEE NAOROJEE, Merchant-care of
F. P. Talati, 6, Ice House Street
M. B. Futtakia, signs per pro.
N. B. Naoroji
古太 Tail:oo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants--Praya
J. H. Scott (London)
John Swire
do.
G. Warren Swire do. D. R. Law
G. T. Edkins, signs per pro. T. H. R. Shaw,
W. Armstrong Frank Austin C. F. Bird C. H. Blason C. W. Bone W. B. Boyce
B. F. Chapman
A. S. Cobden J. D. Danby
A. L. Dawson P. J. Falconer S. G. Fenton B. E. Fielder Hope Greig E. C. Hagen J. Hall
C. E. V. Harrop
do.
1104
C. C. Hickling W. Ironside H. S. Kennett H. W. Kent
C. C. Knight
A. Laing H. R. Makin W. B. Marshall R. McGregor
J. M. McHutchon
A. V. Monk
W. Nicholson
E. Burns Pye
A. W. L. Robertson
C. Rogers
E. L. Shaw
J. W. Taylor
R. Innes, marine supt.
J. Sutherland, asst. supt.
F. W. James, supt. engineer J. Lennox, asst. supt. engineer A. R. Austin, architect
HONGKONG
(See also under Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld., and Taikoo Dockyard and Engi- neering Co., of Hongkong, Ld., and Holt's Wharf)
Agencies
China Navigation Company, Ld. Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co..Ld. Ocean Steamship Company, Ld, China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld. Norddeutscher Lloyd Orient Line Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Palatine Insurance Company, Ld. Orient Insurance Company British and Foreign Marine Insce. Co. Sea Insurance Company, Limited Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld. North Borneo Trading Company, Ld.
BYHAMJEE & Co., J. (late P. C. Patel)
Storekeepers and Stationers-40, Lynd hurst Terrace
J. B. Patel
D. B. Munshi, manager
CAFÉ WEISMANN, LTD.-14, Des Voeux Rd. Reinhold Eckhardt, mgr. and licencee
Fu
Ching-Kwong-Wo
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Wine, Spirit and Beer Merchants-15, Queen's Road
E. J. Caldbeck (London)
J. Macgregor
do.
C. J. Lafrentz (Hongkong) E. F. Bateman (Shanghai) K. A. Stevens (Singapore)
E. Gumpert (Tientsin)
I. Lammert
A. G. da Rocha
C. J. M. Pereira
J. Souza
Agency
The Aquarius Company, Shanghai
(See Advertisement)
司公麽布今
CAMPBELL, MOORE & CO., LIMITED, Hairdres
sers, Perfumers, and Wigmakers, Tobac
conists and Variety Store-14, Des
Voeux Road, Central
Ellis Bros., general managers
A. Capozzi, manager
C. Agostinelli
Miss I. Bishop
A. Rollo
P. Rollo
4 Japanese and 1 Filipino
司公船輪火興昌
Cheong-hing Fo-lun-shun Kung-sze
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Co.'s ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIP LINE-Corner Pedder's
Street and Praya; Tel. Ad: Nautilus
D. W. Craddock, general traffic agent
H. P. Thomas
P. D. Sutherland T. G. Turnbull A. G. Ravenhill Chas. Pryce A. A. de Jesus C. B. da Rocha F. J. Brown
H. T. Richardson, supt. engineer F. C. S. Rose, storekeeper
DARER Can-ton Po-him Kun-sze CANTON INSURANCE OFFICE, LIMITED
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld.,gen. agts. Consulting Committee-Hon. Mr. W.J Gresson (chairman), Hon. Sir Paul Chater, C.M.G., F. Maitland, E. Shellim, H. P. White, D. W. Craddock
CAPTAIN & Co., D. R., (Successors to Jes jeebboy & Co.), Provision Dealer, Store keepers and Commission Agents-25, Hollywood Road
E. R. Mogra, proprietor
D. R. Captain, manager
P. H. Nekoo
和禮 Lai-w0
CARLOWITZ & Co, Merchants-2,Connaught
Road (opposite Murray Pier), New Praya
Chas. von Bose (Hamburg)
Chas. Rayner (Shanghai) M. E. F. March (Hamburg) Ad. C. Schomburg (Tsingtau) W. Wiederhold (Shanghai) Townsend Rushinore (New York) B. Rosenbaum (Shanghai)
HONGKONG
110
C. R. Lenzmann (Hongkong) R. Laurenz, signs per pro.
H. Desebroock
J. Moeller
F. Eggert
C. Mueller
H. J. M. de Figueiredo
V. C. da Rocha
A. V. da Silva
J. J. Gutierrez
Agencies
Navigazione Generale Italiana (Bom-
bay Line)
Dampfschiffs-Rhederei "Union" A. G.
(New York Line)
German Lloyd Marine Ins. Co. of Berlin Upper Rhine Insce. Co., Ld., Mannheimn Imperial Marine & Transport Insce.
Co., Ld., Tokyo
La Foncière (La Lyonnaise Réunie) Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co. Baloise Fire Insurance Co., Basle Albingia Fire Insce. Co., Hamburg Globus Insurance Co., of Hamburg Scottish Union & National Ince. Co.
The Yangtze Wharf & Godown Co.,
Ld, Shanghai
The Central & North China Godowns Presspacking Co., Ld., Shanghai
師器機船聡咕咪架
CARMICHAEL & CLARKE, Consulting En- gineers, Marine Surveyors and Contrac- tors-3, Queen's Building, Hongkong,
and 8-4. Change Alley, Singapore; Tel. Ad: Carmichael Hongkong and Singa- pore; Telph. :32
H.F. Carmichael, M.I.N.A., M.I.M.E. (abt.) H. L. Fletcher, R.N.R.M.I.N.A.
T. H. G. Brayfield, A.M.I.N.A.
J. C. Baird (Singapore)
CASSUM AHMED, Draper-32 and 34Welling-
ton Street
Cassum Ahmed
A L. Ahmed
M. Cassum
J. Cassum
M. A. Latief Hamed
Abdoolrahim
Allarakia J. W. Kum
CASTLE BROTHERS, WOLF & SONS, Shipping and Commission Merchants-San Fran- cisco, Sydney and Manila
A. B. Moulder & Co, Hongkong,
Agents, Hotel Mansions
Palun chee
CAWASJEE PALLANJEE & Co., Merchants-
22, Stanley Street; Telph. 879
Rustomjee Cooverjee (Bombay)
Hormusjee Cooverjee,
Eduljee Cawasjee,
Pestonjee Cooverjee,
C. B. Mowravala
D. K. Sethna, manager
B. P. Dahivala
do.
do.
do.
CENTRAL HOTEL-242 and 244, Queen's Rd.
Central
館會商英
Ying-seung-wai-kün
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, HONGKONG
GENERAL Secretary's Office: St. George's Building, Chater Road
Chairman--Hon. Mr. E. A. Hewett Vice-Chairman-J. R. M. Smith Committee Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson, A. Babington, D. R. Law, J. W. C.
Bonnar, John W. Bandow, E. Shellim,
H. A. Siebs, H. E. Tomkins
E. A. M. Williams, secretary
E. D. da Roza
司公煤京東
Tung-king-mui-tan Kung-sze
CHARBONNAGES DU TONKIN-SOCIÉTÉ FRAN-
ÇAISE DES Mines at Hongay, Tonkin H'kong Agency, Alexandra Building
昌鴻 Hung-cheng
CHARLES & Co., L., Shipchandlers and Navy Contractors-23, Lee Yuen Street West
L. Charles
### Cha-ta Ngan-hong
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA-Queen's Road
Wm. Dickson, manager
G. E. Allen, accountant
P. S. Sandford, sub-agent (Foochow) J. W. Taylor, sub-accountant
R. H. Beazley,
do.
W. McCulloch,
do.
A. B. Pollock,
do.
J. P. Xavier
A. L. Alves C. B. da Roza S. A. Ahmed
E. Abraham
E. A. da Silva E. M. Ozorio A. F. Rozario H. M. Silva H. Campos J. F. Remedios A. L. Silva
R. C. da Silva F. F. X. Antonio A. M. Suffiad
A. G. Suffiad
35
1106
G. F. da Roza
V. A. Rozario
F. M. A. da Costu
(See Advertisement)
打這 Chéh.ta
HONGKONG
CHATER, SIRC. P., C.M.G.-5,Queen's Rd. Cen.
CHATER & MODY-5, Queen Road Central
Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G.
H. N. Mody
F. X. Graça Ozorio
CHAUN, DR. M. H., Dental Surgeon-33, Queen's Road Central, Lock Hing's
Building
CHINA ASSOCIATION, HONGKONG BRANCH
Committee Hon. Mr. M. Stewart. (chairman), E. G. Barrett, Hon. Mr.
W. J. Gresson. N. G. Stabb, H. W. Slade, D. R. Law, H. E. Tomkins, W. G. Humphreys, J. W., C. Bonnar and A. S. D. Cousland (hon. secty. and treasurer)
CHINA-BORNEO
COMPANY, LIMITED-4,
St. George's Building: Tel. Ad: Billian
W. G. Darby, general manager W. D. Jupp, manager, Hongkong H. W. Kennett, mgr. Saw Mills W. H. Cope
R. S. Bevan
(Sandakan)
do
S. Murray
do.
J. Thomas
do.
H. D. Holland
do.
B. Suyder
do.
Wm. Hutchison, manager, Fort Pryer
Engineering Works
H. Larard, mgr., Sandakan Saw Mills
司公限有船輸華中
Chung-wah-lun-shun-you-han-kung-sze
CHINA COMMERCIAL STEAMSHIP COMPANY LTD.-Office: 34, Queen's Road Central; Tel. Ad Chinando
President Wong Kwong Chung Vice President--Leung Kam Ming Secretary-Choy Sek Chuen
Him-shun
CHINA EXPORT-IMPORT-AND-BANK COM- PAGNIE 2, Connaught Road; Tel. Ad: Lemjus;Head Office: Hamburg; Branches: Hongkong, Shanghai, Kobe, Yokohama
Paul Ehlers, manager (Hamburg)
R. Seydler, signs per pro. O. Wiesinger H. Hildebrandt O. F. Ribeiro
A. V. Barros
司公己克
CHINA EXPRESS Co.--3, Duddell Street;
Tel. Ad: Expedition: Teleph. No. 668
S. D. Hickie
Alex. Shaw
行險保燭火華中
Chang-wa Fo-chuk Po-him Hong
China Fire Insurance Co., Ltd.-3, Queen's Road Central; Tel. Ad:
Chincough; Teleph. No. 247 Lirectors-R.Shewan (chairman), J.W. C. Bonnar, H. A. Siebs, E. Shellim, J. W. Bandow, G. Balloch, F. Liebs C. Pemberton, secretary
H. F. Hickman
E. Gaster G. S. Archbutt F. H. Fame
Chan Pat
Agency
The Atlas Assur. Co., Lt., of London
JART 司公風律德
Tak-lut-fung Kung Sze
CHINA AND JAPAN TELEPHONE & ELECTRIC
Co., LIMITED-2, Duddell Street; Tel. Ad:
Oakenpin; Teleph. No. 606
W. L. Carter, manager
A. M. Marshall, assistant manager
D. Tollan, inspector
司公燈電華中
Chung-wa Dan-ding-kung-sze
CHINA LIGHT AND POWER Co., Ld.
Shewan, Tomes & Co., gen. mangrs.
Kowloon Works, Hunghom
G. L. Hales, resident engineer N. Hamilton, asst. do.
E Tuk-sun Yan-tsz-koon China-Mail Ld, Proprietors "China
Mail," Evening Newspaper: "Overland China Mail," weekly; "Chinese Mail," (Wah-ts-Yat-Po,) daily-5, Wyndham Street, 2, 4 and 6 Wellington Street
Mrs. Geo. Murray Bain, chairman of
directors
H. Bellamy Brown, editor and director Horace Bain, director and printing
manager
F. Hicks sub-editor J. Taylor, reporter T. Rutherford, overseer Alex. Bryson, secretary
F. G. Rozario, bookkeeper
CHINA AND MANILA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Shewan, Tomes & Co., general managers Consulting Committee-Hon. Mr. R Shewan (chairman), Dr. J. W. Noble,
H. P. White
(For Officers of Strs. See end of Directory)
·
I
I
局商招船輪
Lun-shun Chiu-sheung-kuk
HONGKONG
CHINA MERCHANTS' STEAM NAVIGATION
COMPANY-15 and 16, Connaught Road
Lo Po Wan, manager
Tong Tit Sai, assistant
Pang Lum Cho, chief clerk
Lo Shiu Leung, shipping clerk Ching Sik Lun,
Agency
ao.
China Merchants' Insurance Co.
(For Officers of Strs. see end of Directory)
司公壽保年永
Wang-nên-gio-suu-kung-sa
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE Co., Ld.--
Alexandra Buildings
Lefferts Knox, manager
B. W. Tape, resident secretary
C. Lowder
W. E. Rose
H. Leison
Miss Ivy Laucheong
Robert Chan
CHINA NAVIGATION COMPANY, LIMITED
Butterfield & Swire, agents
(For Officers of Strs. See end of Directory)
CHINA PROVIDENT LOAN & Mortgage Co
LD.-Head Office: St. George's Buildings; Godowns, &c.: West Point
Shewan, Tomes & Co., gen. managers Consulting Committee-R. Shewan, (chairman), J. S. Van Buren, Dr. J. W. Noble, II. P. White, U. Poi On
H. H. Tayler, manager A. Mackenzie
P. R. Murray
V. H. Xavier
Fung Fei Tong
U Yu Kwok
辰糖車火華中
Chung-wa Fo-cheh Tong-kuk
CHINA SUGAR REFINING COMPANY, LIMITED Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld.. genl.agts
Consulting Committee-Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson (chairman), Sir Paul Chater, C.M.G., E. Shellim, H. P. White, J. W. C. Bonnar F. M. P. de Graça E. E. da Silva C. S. Remedios
J. D. Osmund
C. M. Barradas W. Taylor J. H. Underwood East Point Retinery
A. Rodger, manager A. Bain J. Rodger J. Gloyn
J. McCorquadale J.D. Kinnaird
J. Forbes K. Miller A. Forbes J. W. Stewart
S. Pepper
T. Brawn
Bowrington Refinery
J. Dickie, manager
T. Blair
P. Plage
司公瞼保國衆外中
1107
Chung-ngoi-tsung-kook Po-him Kung-ste
CHINA TRADERS' INSURANCE Co., LD.-2,
Queen's Building
C. Montague Ede, secretary
Directors E. Ormiston (chairman) E. G. Barrett, J. W. C. Bonnar, C. S. Gubbay, C. R. Lenzmann, A. Forbes, H. A. Siebs, J. W. Bandow, G. Balloch, Fr. Lieb
CHINESE CHURCH BODY
The Bishop of Victoria, chairman Rev. E. J. Barnett, vice-chairman Rev. Fok Tsing Shan Rev. Fong Yat Sau
Li Wai Ching, hon. treasurer Ng Tin Po, hon. secretary
J. M. Wong Lam Woo So Lai Chun Geo. Lam
Yam Chok Kwan Wong Tsui Po
Dr. B. C. Wong
St. Stephen's Church, Pokfulam Rd.
The Rev. Fok Tsing Shan
Holy Trinity Church, Kowloon
The Rev. Fong Yat Sau
CHINESE IMPERIAL MARITIME CUSTOMS (Kowloon Frontier District)-Offices:
York Buildings, Chater Road
(For staff see Page 1020)
報II字華
CHINESE MAIL (WAH TSZ YAT PO),
Chinese Morning Paper-5, Wellington
Street; Tel. Ad: Wahtsapo; Telep. 227
Sum Ku Pun, publisher
Luk Hing Nam
Ngan Hang Poomanaging editors LeeSum Ling(abt.))
Lum Tsz Kau, editor in chief
Wong Yuk Un, editor
Wong Chuk Kong, translator
Lau Yuk Wan
do.
35*
L
1108
HONGKONG
A 2 & # # Aa-ti-sa chi-nai CHINOY & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents-38, Queen's Road Central
J. A. Chinoy
J. K. do.
CHRISTIANI, TH, Exchange Broker-
Hongkong Club
司公限有險火保安全
Chun-on Po fo-him Yau-hun Kung-sze
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCTY.-Zetland St.,
Queen's Road
(Address communications to the Clerk)
*** Tai-lui-sung chun-kau-tong DOMINICAN PROCURATION FOR MISSIONS -2, Seymour Road, "Glenseskin"
Procurator-Rev. Fr. F. R. Noval Vice Procurator-Rev. Fr. P. Prat Socius-Rev. Fr. A. Cubeñas
CHUN ON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, LD. *** Tak-kwok Lai-pai-tong
8, Queen's Road West
Directors-Chiu Yu Tin (chairman), Lo Cho Shan, Chan Chun Tsun Chau Siu Ki, secretary
if là Chung-ngoi San-p0 Chung Ngai San Po, Chinese "Daily Press"-101, Des Voeux Road Central; London office: 131, Fleet Street, E.C.
D. Warres Smith, lessee (London) Fung Sing-in, sub-lessee and publisher
Hung Hung Gang, editor
Luk Man Chung,
Chan Pun Sam
do.
do.
Fung Shing-im, interpreter
CHURCHES AND MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions in China see end
of China Directory
院書女陵巴盤營西
Sai-ying-pun Ba-leng-noe-shue-yuen
BERLIN FOUNDLING HOUSE
Supdt-Pastor Johannes Müller
Mrs. Gertrud Müller
Miss M. Grotefend missionary
Miss L. Holzmann
do.
堂拜禮國德盤營西
Sai-ying-pung Tak-Kwok Lai-pai-tong
BETHESDA CHAPEL, Deutsche Kapelle,
Berlin Foundling House-West Point,
1, High Street
Pastor Johannes Müller German Service Sundays at 11 am.
CATHOLIC UNION--Glenealy
Presdt. Rt. Rev. Bishop D. Pozzoni Vice-President-José M. Alves Hon. Secretary-J. D. Osmund Hon. Treasurer-A, A. Alves Spiritual Director-Rev. P. Gabardi Committee J. A. C. V. Ribeiro, J. M. S. Rosario, A. M. Souza, J.
Graca Ozorio
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOUR, THE Y. P. S. OF President-Rev. C. H. Hickling Secretary T. Hamilton Treasurer C. Elliott
GERMAN CHURCH AND SCHOOL SOCIETY
OF HONGKONG
Pastor Rev. J. Müller Committee
Consul Dr. E. A.
Voretzsch (president), C. G. Gok (hon. treasurer), R. Laurenz (hon. secretary)
IlFat-lan-an Chin hoa trong PROCURE GÉNÉRALE DES MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES DE PARIS-34, Caine Road
Procureur General-Rev. L. Robert
Rev. J. Ouillon, Rev. H. Souvey assistants Sanatorium, Pokfulum
Rev. L. Marie, superior
Bro. J. Gendron, assistant
House of Nazareth, Pokfulum
Rev. D. A. Lecomte, superior
Rev. J. Gaztelu
Rev. F. C. Monnier
Rev. P. G. Guéneau
Rev. F. P. Aguesse
堂教傳總教主天
Tien chu kau Chung Chun kau tong
ROMAN CATHOLIC CATHEDRAL-Glenealy
Right Rev. D. Pozzoni, Bishop of Tavia and Vicar Apostolic of H'kong. Very Rev. Fr. P. de Maria, Prov. Apost.
and Proc. General
Rev. Fr. P. Gabardi, Apost. Miss., rector Do. D. Arvat, Apost. Miss., assistant Do. A. Leong Do. M. Fu
Do. F. Cheung Organist--O. Baptista
do.
do.
do.
ROSARY CHURCH--Des Voeux Rd., Kloon Rev. Fr. G. M. Spadu, Ap. Miss., rector Rev. P. Lu, assistant
ST. ANTHONY CHURCH--West Point
Rev. Fr. J. Carabelli
Branch Institutions
St. Lewis Orphanage, West Point
Rev. Fr. J. Carabelli
Rev. Fr. M. Fu, vice-director Glenealy Seminary
Rev. Fr. F. P. Gabardi, director
Sai Kung (New Territory)
Kev. Fr. A. Ferrario, Ap. Miss. Rev. Fr. Chang, assistant Namtau (Sunon district)
Rev. Fr. H. Valtorta, Ap. Miss. Rev. P. Lam, assistant. To-yeung (Sha-u-chung)
Rev. Fr. A. Poletti, Ap. Miss. Rev. J. Situ, assistant Kwai Shin district
Rev. Fr. A. Banchi, Ap. Miss. Rev. J. Chang, assistant San-bue (Hoi-fung district)
Rev. Fr. Zamponi, Ap. Miss. Rev. A. Liu, assistant
ST. FRANCIS CHURCH-Wan-chai Very Rev. Fr. de Maria, rector Rev. J. Leong, assistant
HONGKONG
ST. JOSEPH'S CHURCH--Garden Road
Rev. Fr. Augustin Placzek, Ap. Miss. rector, military chaplain, and chap- lain of prisons
SOLDIERS' & SAILORS' HOME-Arsenal St. Chaplain and President-Rev. J. A. A. Baker (Rev. C. Bone on fur- lough)
Hon.Secretary-J.C.Toughin, R.C.N.C. Manager--Pepperell Matron Mrs. Pepperell Committee of Management
Capt. Baker, A. 0.0. Q.M. S. North, Rt. E. C. Makeham
E. Richards, R. N. E. Hear!
*#*X Tai Lai-pai-tong ST. JOHN'S CATHEDRAL--Garden Road
Bishop of Victoria The Rt. Revd.
Gerard Heath Lander, D.D. Chaplain-Rev. F. T. Johnson, M.A. Asst. Chap. Rev.A.B. Thornhill, M.A. Church Body-Bishop of Victoria, the Senior Chaplain, Hon. Dr. J. M. Atkinson, A. Bryer (honorary secretary), W. Armstrong, J. M. Beck, Dr. Francis Clark (Hon. Treasurer), Hon. W. J. Gresson Auditor-J. C. Pete
Organist Denman Fuller, F.R.C.V.,
L.K.A.M.
Supts. of the Sunday Schools-W.
L. Pattenden, E. T."Williams
Verger-J. Vanstone
堂拜禮入手水得彼聖盤營西
Sai-ying-poon Sing-pi-tak Shui-san-yan
Lai-pai-ton
MISSION TO SEAMEN, HONGKONG
ST. PETER'S (SEAMEN'S) CHURCH-Des
Voeux Road, West Point
1109
Chaplains-Rev. C. E. Thompson, B.A. 3, Babington Path, West Point, Rev. A. P. Crofton, B.A. Occidental Hotel, Kowloon Organist G. Grimble
Hon. Lay Helpers--Alfred Mackie,
R. Wilks, Robt. Drude
Manager Seamen's Institute Kow-
loon-C. Wilcockson
Manageress Seamen's Institute Wan-
chai-Mrs. Molson
SEAMEN'S INSTITUTES-Praya East and
Haiphong Road, Kowloon
"OHELLEAH,"SYNAGOGUE-Robinson Rd. Trustees C. S. Gubbay (president), A. J. David (vice-president), E. Shellim, E. S. Kadoorie, C. H. Silas, Albert Raymond
O. I. Ellis (hon. treasurer)
E. I. Ellis (hon. secretary)
堂拜禮柱石大
Tai-shek-ch'u Lai-pai-tong
UNION CHURCH-Kennedy Road
Minister-Rev. C. H. Hickling
Trustees W, G. Humphreys, W. Drew Braidwood, J. W. C. Bonnar, D. Clark, A. S. D. Cbusland, D. Macdonald, D. Wood
Hon. Secretary to Committee of
Mangt.-W. Drew Braidwood Hon. Secretary for Sittings-Duncan
Clark
Hon. Treasurer- A. S. D. Cousland Organist E. J. Chapman
WESLEYAN GARRISON & NAVAL CHURCH
-Wanchai
Chaplain-Rev. J. A. A. Baker, 2,
Morrison Hill, Hongkong
Church Stewards-R. S. Piercy and
J. C. Joughin
Organist and Choirmaster---J. W.
White
↑
Tai Vi-tong
CITY HALL (Assembly Rooms, Theatre
Museum and Library)
Committee-Hon, Mr. W. J. Gresson (chairman), B. Layton (hon. treas). H. N. Mody, Hon. Mr. H. E. Pollock, K.C., J. W. C. Bonnar, Hon. Sir Paul Chater
Secretary, Librarian, and Curator-
Denman Fuller
Free Lending Library and Reading
Room, open daily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Museum, open daily 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. (Women and children only on Saturday morn- ings), Admission Free
1110
HONGKONG
DAX Tai-po-kwok Kung-sze
CLUB GERMANIA-Kennedy Road
Committee-
G. Binder, chairman
Emil Meyer, hon. secretary C. M.Meyer, hon. treasurer
H. Wasserfall, hon. librarian O. Meyer
F. Ortlepp
hon. stewards
O. Wagner
H. Warnsloh
E. E. Drescher, verwalter
CLUB, HONGKONG-(See under H)
A#1 Sai-yeung Kung-sze
CLUB LUSITANO-Shelley Street
Committee - Leo. d'Almada e Castro (president), A. D. Barretto, M. E. da Silva, F. E. Carvalho, E. V. M. R. | Souza, A. E. da Silva, J. D. Azedo, J. J. Coelho (sec.)
COLLEGE OF MEDICINE FOR CHINESE-See
under Educational
COLONIAL HOTEL-1, Jubilee Street
梳燕仁於素孖今
Com-ma-su Fü-yan In-sor
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. (Life, Fire, marine, Typhoon, Accident, and Sickness and Fidelity Guarantee, and Plate Glass) - Hotel Mansions; Tel. Ad: Cuaco; Telph. 153
W. II. Trenchard Davis, manager for
China, Shanghai
P. Tester, local manager E. L. Arnold
Chan Sui Hing
Agencies
Merchants' Marine Ins. Co., London Union Marine Ins. Co., Liverpool Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Kung-lee
CONNELL BROS. COMPANY- Hotel Mansions;
Tel. Ad: Connell
M. J. Connell (Seattle)
J. J. Connell (Shanghai)
A. R. Hassan, manager
C. S. Virgil
J. L. M. do Rozario
CONSULATES
官事領國奧大
Tai-o-kwok Ling-sz-kün
Consul-Konrad Ritter von Wiser
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY-Prince's Buildings,
Ice House Street
Secretary F. Winkler
★¶IBEX Tai-peh-kwok Ling-ss-kuu
BELGIUM-31, Wyndham St.
Consul --Francis Janssens
官事領國西巴大
Tar-pa-sai-kwok Ling-sz-kin
BRAZIL 47, Wyndham Street
Consul J. J. Leiria
CHILI-3, Lower Mosque Terrace
Consul J. Gascon Gonzalez de
Bernedo
官事預壁顛
*1*@ Tin-mak Ling-sz-kin
DENMARK-Queen's Building
Consul G. Friesland (absent)
Actg. Consul-John W. Bandow
Chancelier-H. Warnsloh
KOOLH
Fat-lan-sai Ling-sz-kùn
FRANCE Consulate: Peak Road
Chancery of the Consulate-Prince's
Building, Des Voeux Road Consul (for Hongkong and Macao)-
Gaston Liébert
Vice Consul-A. Guibert (absent) Acting Vice-Consul--P. Kremer Annamite Socretary-Nguyen-ho-
ang-tha
Chinese Assistant-Ah Wong
***AX
GERMANY
―
Tai-tak-kwok Ling-sz-kun
1 and 2 College Gardens Upper Albert Road; Tel, Ad: Germania
Consul-Dr. Jur. E. A. Voretzsch Secretary A. Lohman
Do. a. i.-K. Polstorff Clerks F. Perkunder, P. Sass Asst. Clerk and Interpreter-- F.
Scbüling
GUATEMALA
13, Queen's Road (Astor
House, Room 23)
COSTA RICA
EQUADOR-In charge of Consulate-L. C.
Herrera
官事領總利大義大
Tai I-tai-li-chung Ling-sz-kun
ITALY--Zetland Street
Consul-General Comm.Z.Volpicelli
Chinese Writer-Ch'ing Yao
官事頜本日
Yat-pun Ling-sz-kùn
JAPAN-Queen's Building
Consul and Acting Consul-General
-T. Funatsu
Secretary-M. Yagi
Do. -M. Kusa
Clerk S. Misawa
HONGKONG
1111
官事頻國哥西墨
Mak-sai-ko Kwok Ling-sz-kun
MEXICO- Queen's Building, No. 3
Consul-F. D. Barretto
(Consul for Hongkong, Canton
and the provinces of Kwangtung,
Kwangsi, Kweichou and Yunnan)
Chancelier-0. D. Barretto
Chinese Secretary-Chu Wun Man
署事領總國和大
Thi vào trình Trung-lang-sa-shi
NETHERLANDS Prin e's Building, 2nd
floor, Chater Road
Acting Consul-General for South
China-J. H. de Réus
Secretary-Interpreter-Li Tsan Fan
官事頜華那家李
NICARAGUA Queen's Building, No. 3
Acting Consul-B. J. Botelho
Chancelier-J. H. Botello
NORWAY Queen's Building
Vice-Consul-Jorgen Eitzen
PANAMA 13, Queen's Road Central
Consul General-L. C. Herrera, As-
tor House, Room 23
官事頒國洋西大
Tui-sai-fering-Duol Ling sẽ h
PORTUGAL 47, Wyndham Street
Consul-J. J. Leiria
官事毹斯羅俄
RUSSIA
Ngo-lo-sz Ling-sz-kun
Consul-P. H. Tiedemann
* Chim-lo Ling-sz-kun
SIAM-5, Queen's Road Central
Consul-Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G.
官事領國牙尼巴斯日大
Tai-yi-si-pa-m-a Ling-s-kun
SPAIX-24, Des Voeux Road Central
Consul for Hongkong, Macao and Canton--The French Consul at Hongkong
官事頏國瑞
g đi B Khoa Sui-kuvole Ling-8-
SWEDEN-Top Floor, York Building
Acting Vice-Consul-S. Swart
*
Tai-mei-kwok Ling-az-kun
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA-2, Pedder
Street
Consul-General-Wm. A. Rublee Vice and Deputy Consul-General--
Stuart J. Fuller Interpreter-James Chue
Clerks William D. Bush, E. D.
Bush, Li Sik-ling
Surgeon Spencer Hough, M.D., U.S.,
P.H. & M.H.S.
隆濟通
Tung Tsai Lung
Cook & SON, THOS., Tourist Agents, &c.;
Tel. Ad Coupon; Telph. 524,
N. F. Blanch, general agent
for The Far East
E. G. B. Lover F. J. de R. Rowley W. E. Tibbs C. Piquet A. Melbye W. W. Edwards F. Hobbs G. Rudow Miss Leshirel
Miss A. Lesbirel
Tong Tsung Po
Cheung Sing-lai
Wong Shiu-pun
記實 Po-kee
COOKE, L. F., Coal Merchant and General
Contractor-53,Connaught Road Central,
New Praya
L. F. Cooke
吧高 Ko-pa
COOPER & Co., H. N., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-77, Wyndham Street
H. N. Cooper, (Bombay)
N. J. Moroji manager
COOPER & Co., Milliners, Drapers and
Wholesale Stationers-132, Wellington Street; Tel. Ad: Draper
P. N. Cooper
A. Nizamoodlin
D. P. Cooper
COSMOPOLITAN HOTEL-65, Des Voeux Road
Lewis Comar, licencee
CRAIGIEBURN HOTEL-Plunkett's Gap, The
Peak
Mrs. Duncan, manageress
CRITERION HOTEL-98-100, Queen's Road,
Central
Tung-hing
CRUZ, BASTO & Co., Merchants
- 15,
Prince's Building; Tel. Ad: Avante: P.O.
Box 160B; Telep. 18
A. M. da Cruz
J. M. F. Basto
A. D. Barretto
J. C. Barretto, signs per pro.
S. Pinna (Canton)
J. M. da Cruz
1112
J. E. N. Guterres F. M. da Cruz
Miss C. M. de Cruz Miss H. Cabral
Agencies
HONGKONG
Globe Commercial Co., Tacoma, Wash
Edwin Davey & Sons, Millers, Sydney
and Adelaide
Adelaide Milling Co., Ld., Adelaide
記裕廣 Kwong Yi Kee
Dady Burjor & Co., General Mer-
chants, Manufacturers' Representatives and Commission Agents-28, Des Voeux Road; Tel. Ad: Turret; Teleph. 665 Agency
Federal Marine Insurance Co., Zurich Property (Fire) Insurance Co., Ltd.,
London,
D'AGOSTINI, PROSPER GERAUD, Professor of French at Queen's College, and Private Teacher-11, Beaconsfield Arcade
Ngau-nai-Kung-sze
DAIRY FARM COMPANY, LD.-Pokfulum; Office and Town Depot: Corner of Wynd- ham St. and Lower Albert Road; Kow- loon Branch: 38, Nathan Road; Quarry Bay Branch: 20, Bridge Row Telph. 85, Town Office; 67, Pokfoolum; Tel. Ad: Milkmaid
Directors-Hon. Mr. E. Osborne, Dr. J. W. Noble, F. Maitland, E. H. Hinds S. A. Seth, secretary (absent)
M. Manuk, acting
Jas. Walker, manager
do.
A. Stevenson, asst. manager
J. Jack, accountact
H. W. Page
C. Makeham
A. S. Ellis
J. Tatum, butcher
師狀蔑士及打馬利亞
A-le-ma-ta Kap Sz Mit Chong-sz
D'ALMADA & SMITH, Solicitors 33,Queen's
Road Central; Tel. Ad: Dahlia; Teleph. 897
F. X. D' Almada e Castro
Crowther Smith
Lam Tan Chiu, Mak Nam Woon, in-
terpreters
Tso Kwai Pang, Lo Wa Kan, Wong
Lin Hop, Tam Pak Pui, clerks
DANENBERG, FRANCIS, Professor of Music, and Teacher of Piano, Singing, &c., 2A, High Street, West Point; Tel. 367
Tai-Cheong-Loong
DANG CHEE SON & Co. (late Banker & Co.
General Mer.-14, Des Vœux Rd, Centr.;
Tel. Ad: Cheetah
T. Chee
親經都士打
DASTUR, R. A., Bill, Bullion and General,
Broker-38, Queen's Road Central
核爹 Dicrat
DAVID & Co., S. J., Merchants--Prince's
Building; Tel. Ad: Psalmist
Sir Sassoon David (Bombay)
A. J. David
Evelyn David (Shanghai)
M. J. Moses (Kobe)
A. Raymond, signs per pro E. S. Abraham
do.
Archibald David
do.
F. P. Shroff
I. S. Levy
H. S. Jephson K. D. Mistry
H. A. Hyndman
D. M. Langrana
E. S. Joseph, broker
Agency
South British Fire and Marine Insce,
S. G. Newall, local manager
H. J. Totton
師狀近狄及買陸近狄
Ti-kan Luka kap Ti-kan Chong-ss
DEACON, LOOKER & DEACON, Solicitors,
Conveyancers, Proctors, Notaries and
Patent and Trade Marks Agents-1,Des
Voeux Road Central; Tel. Ad: Ottery;
A. B. C. Code 4th and 5th Edns, and Western Union Code
Herbert Wm. Looker, Commissioner to
administer oaths for the Supreme
Court of New South Wales
Frank Barrington Deacon
Dudley Vaughan Steavenson, solr.
Arthur Conrad Holborow,
Ernest P. H. Lang,
Wm. E. L. Shenton,
H. K. Hung,
do.
do.
do.
do.
U. Rumjalin, chief cashier and
book-keeper
Wm. Pittendrigh, Jr., clerk
F. Geddes, stenographer
J. A. Chue,
S. R. Curreem,
do.
do.
Lo Tat, chief translator and inter-
preter
Chand Yam Ting, assistant do. Lo Kwan Yung,
do.
Ho Wan Shang, assistant cashier George Ho, do. book-keeper Miss K. Euanson, typist
HONGKONG
A. R. Rahman,
do.
Mak Ip Fan,
do.
Wong To Shuen, do.
Fung Ping U,
do.
Pun Min,
clerk
Yung Pak Chi, do.
Sung Cheong, shroff
EE
Din-ni-sun
DENISON, RAM & GIBBS, Civil Engineers,
Architects and Surveyors-6, 7, 8,
Beaconsfield Arcade
A. Denison, M.INST.C.E.
E. A. Ram, F.R.I.B.A.
L. Gibbs, A.M.I.C, E.
W. Thom, jun,
師律理保及士尼甸
Tin-ni-sz Kap-Po-li Lut-sz
DENNYS & BOWLEY, Solicitors, Convey- ancers, Proctors, Notaries Public, and Patent and Trade Mark Agents-Su- preme Court House; Tel. Ad: Synned; Codes A. B. C. 4th and 5th and Western Union; Telph. $59
H. L. Dennys, solicitor and notary,
F.M.C.INST.P.A.
F. B. L. Bowley, Crown Solicitor and King's Proctor, Notary Public
C. Bulmer Johnson, solicitor H. L. Dennys, Jr., solicitor
Yam Kwan Un, chief interpreter
Tsok En Kau
Chan Kwan
London Agents: Church, Adams &
Prior, Bedford Row
行銀華德 Tak-wa-Ngan-hong
DEUTSCH-ASIATISCHE BANK-7, Queen's
Road Central; Tel. Ad: Teutonia
A. Koehn, manager
J. Kullmann, sub-manager
M. Schindewolf,
H. Wasserfall
B. Schwandes
C. M. Meyer A. Koehler M. E. da Silva A. A. Alves C. M. S. Alves
O. F. Rozario
G. V. Osmund F. X. Britto
J. A. Barradas
accountant
DHUNAMAL CHELLARAM, Silk and Fancy Goods Dealer-56, Queen's Road Central
G. Naroomal T. Lekhraj H.,Veshindass
1113
DINSHAH & Co., D., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-75, Wyndham Street Dadabhai D. Talati, sole proprietor
Hormajshah D. Talate
DIOCESAN HOME AND ORPHANAGE - See
under Educational
士靈機 Ki-ling-se
DISS BROS., Tailors-1, Wyndham Street
George A. Diss
Arthur C. Diss
Harry G. Diss (London)
Teen-cheung
DODWELL & Co., LIMITED, Merchants-
Queen's Buildings, Praya Central, and at Shanghai, Hankow, Foochow, Yoko- hama, Kobe, Vancouver, Victoria (B.C.), Tacoma, Seattle (Wash.), Portland (Oregon), San Francisco (California), Colombo and London
G. H. Medhurst, (absent)
E. G. Barrett, F.S.A..A., manager
J. D. Auld
S. R. Carlill
G. R. Edwards Albert Ellis J. G. S. Gansden H. R. Hertslet H. W. Lester
E. A. G. May C. A. Peel J. W. Rowan G. Morton Smith Eric Grant Smith T. W. Scarborough W. Waterhouse T. G. Weall D. J: Barradas
J. M. Britto
A. H. Carroll
C. A. Remedios
D. E. de Souza
H. J. Xavier
Agencies
Northern Pacific Railway Co. general
agents
Bank Line, Ltd.
Mogul Line of Steamers
Warrack's Line of Steamers
Dodwell Line of Strs. (for New York)
Barber's Line of Steamers
Natal Line of Steamers
Standard Life Assurance Company Thames and Mersey Marine Insce. Co. Imperial Insurance Company, Ld. Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
St. Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co., Ld. Providence Washington Ins. Co.
-
DOMINICAN PROCURATION FOR MISSIONS -
See under Churches and Missions
1114
舖飽麵治笠打
HONGKONG
CHURCH
SCHOOLS
MISSIONARY SOCIETY'S DAY
Ta-lap-chee Min-pau-po
DORABJEE, & SON, Merchants, Bakers-2,
Observation Place
D. Dorabjee
司公 船輪士利忌得
Tak-ki-lee-si Lun-shin Kung-sze
DOUGLAS STEAMSHIP COMPANY, LIMITED
Douglas, Lapraik & Co., genl. managers Consulting Committee Hon. Mr.W. J. Gresson, R. Shewan, J. W. C. Bonnar
(For Officers of Strs See end of Directory)
DRAGON CYCLE DEPOT, Cycle Motor-car,
and Boats Dealers-33 & 35, Des VœuxRd.
S. A. Marican, proprietor
M. Raman, engineer
廠器機
製
和
Wo-Lan cha cho hee hee chong
DUTCH ENGINEERING WORKS, Amsterdam
(Nederlandsche Fabriek van Werktuigen
en Spoorweg Materieel)
Holland-China Trading Co., agents
館字印興東
Tong-hing Yan-tsz-koon
EASTERN PRINTING OFFICE--3A, Wyndham
Street
J. M. S. Xavier
Miss M. G. Xavier
V. O. Rosario
F. F. Pinna
Lucas Kwang
Joaquim Young
EDUCATIONAL
堂嬰環下 Ha-wan Ying-tong
ASILE DE LA SAINTE ENFANCE Queen's
Road East and Praya East
Supérieure Rev. Mère Felicie
Sœurs Macarie, Louise, Onésime,
Vincent, Anna Joseph, Gonzague, Gertrude, Alice, Alfred, Aimée, Marie, Marguerite, Estelle, Héléne, Sophie, Eusèbe, St. Michel Marie, Odile, Eusico, Angéline, Cécile, Eulalie, Blandine, and 6 Chinese Sisters
"Fairlea,"
BAXTER GIRLS' SCHOOL
Bonhain Road
Miss Fletcher
Miss Cree
堂學女士羅理庛
Pi-li-lau-sz Nui-hok-tong
BELILIOS PUBLIC SCHOOL FOR GIRLS-
Hollywood Road (See under Govern-
ment)
Vernacular Sidle Head Master-Sung
Hok Pang
Asst. Master-Ngan Kwan ü
Manager-Rev. A. D. Stewart, M.A.
CONVENT, ITALIAN-28, Caine Road
Superioress Rev. Mother Teresa
Martinoia Vice-Superioress
Lucian
Mother Teodora
Directress of the Chinese Depart-
ment--Mother Natalina
English School
Teaching Staff-
Headmistress Sr. Mary Teresa Teachers-Sr. Frances, Sr. Teresa, Sr. Emilia, Sr. Louise, Sr. Virginia, Sr. Mary Louise, Sr. Rosa, Sr. Eliza, Sr. Gina, Sr. Clelia and three Assistant-Teachers
Chinese School
Teaching Staff--
Headmistress-Sr. Clara Teachers Sr. Francesca, Sr. Lucia
Sr. Maria and Sr. Catherine
Special Subjects
Music Sr. Wilielmina, Sr. Natalie, Sr. Louise, Sr. Presentacion and Sr. Rosa
Mandoline-Sr. Gina and Sr. Mary
Louise
Drawing and Painting-Sr. Gina
Sr. Eliza and Sr. Rosa
French and German-Sr. Mary Teresa, Sr. Frances and Sr. Willel mina
Typing-Sr. Louise and Sr. Rosa Stenography--Sr. Teresa Needlework-Sr. Adele and Sr.
Rosario
Needlework Order department-Sr. Annita, Sr. Carolina and Sr. Teresa St. Agnes College (Boarding School)
Directress-Sr. Teresina Assistants-Sr. Virginia, Sr. Marie, Sr. Clelia, Sr. Eva, and Sr. Louise,
Orphanage for Europeans and Eurasians
Directress--Sr. Regina Assistants-Sr. Carolina, Sr. Librada
and Sr. Blanco
Orphanage for Chinese Directress Sr. Angela Assistants Sr. Cleafe, Sr. Esther, Sr. Anna, Sr. Annetta and Sr. Antonietta
Sister in charge of the Destituig
and Aged Sr. Teresa Tam Assistant-Sr. Clara Yi
HONGKONG
ITALIAN CONVENT BRANCHES Home for the Poor-18, St. Francis' Street,
Wanchai
Sister in Charge Sr. Clementina Assistants-Sr. Mari, Sr. Laura, Sr.
Anna, Sr. Maria Mah
English School
Teachers Sr. Frances, Sr. Mary
and Sr. Justa
Chinese School
Teachers-Sr. Anna Wong and Sr.
Catherina
St. Mary's School Chatham Road, Kowloon
Sister in Charge-Sr. Galli
Teachers Sr. Clelia, Sr. Mary, Sr. Cipriana, Sr. Annie and Sr. Félicie Music Sr. Felicie
French and Typing-Sr. Clelia Needlework-Sr. Cipriana and Sr.
Mary
Foundling House, West Point-44, High St.,
Sister in Charge-Sr. Agatha Assts. Sr. Cirilla, Sr. Mariquinhas,
Sr. Anna Song and Sr. Isabel Foundling House (Nam-Tao) Sister in Charge-Sr. Florentina Assistants-Sr. Eudocia and Sr.
Anna Leong
Foundling House (Sunbue) Sister in Charge--Sr. Erminia Assistants Sr. Giuseppina and Sr.
Maria Bith
Chinese Schools
Ladder Street - Sr. Francesca, Sr.
Lucia and Sr. Catherine
Aberdeen-- Sr. Louisa and Sr. Filo-
mena
Shaukiwan--Sr. Martha and Sr.
Louise Lok
Yumati-Sr. Speranza and Sr. Rosa Hunghom--Sr. Gioavanna and Sr.
Louisa Wong
DIOCESAN GIRLS' SCHOOL, and Orphan-
age Rose Villas, Bonham Road
Rt. Rev. the Bishop of Victoria,
Chairman of Committee
Rev. F. T. Johnson, hon. secretary
H. B. Dowbiggin, hon, treasurer
Miss E. D. Skipton, B.A., Supt.
Miss M. T. Hawker, assistant supt.
室書萃投
* Pat-sui Shu-shat
DIOCESAN SCHOOL AND ORPHANAGE-
Bonham Road; Teleph. 747
Visitor-Rt. Rev. Bishop of Victoria
Committee Rt. Rev. Bishop of Vic-
toria (chairman), Hon. Sir C. P.
Chater, C.M.G., J. Barton, F. B. L. Bowley, Hon. Mr. E. A. Hewett, Hon. Mr. E. Oshorne, A. Turner, H. W. Slade, H. Humphreys, Rev. C.E. Thompson, Rev. F. T. Johnson (hon. secretary and treasurer)
Head Master-Geo. Piercy Second Master--H. Sykes Assistant Master-S. Hore
1115
Do. ---W. H. Viveasli Assistant Mistress-Mrs. Elliott
Do. Do.
Mrs. A. Arnold -Mrs. Johnstone
Music Teacher--Miss C. H. Pearce Matron-Mrs. Tuxford
Anglo-Chinese Teachers-Lu Cho
Lang, Sin Ping Kwan
GERMAN CHURCH AND SCHOOL SOCIETY-
See under Churches and Missions
HILDESHEIM MISSION BLIND ASYLUM-
Kowloon
Miss J. Reinecke
Miss A. von Seelhorst Miss S. Moritz
Miss B. Reinhardt
HONGKONGCOLLEGE OF MEDICINE-Holly-
wood Road
Rector-Hon. Sir Henry May, K. C.M.G. Dean-Francis Clark, M.D., D.T.M. &
H., D.P.H.
Sec.-R. MacLean Gibson, M.D., C.M.
KOWLOON BRITISH SCHOOL Chater
Avenue-See under Government
OXFORD LOCAL EXAMINATIONS (Entries
close early in March)
Hon. Sec.-T. K. Dealy, Queen's
College
QUEEN'S COLLEGE-See under Govm'nt.
R. C. CATHEDRAL SCHOOL-Glenealy Rd.
English School for Chinese Boys,
conducted by the Brothers of the Christian Schools
院書女英瑟若聖
Sing-yeuk-sut Ying-mun Shu-yun
ST. JOSEPH'S ENGLISII COLLEGE-Robinson
Road; Tel. Ad: Brothers
Provincial Visitor-Rev. Bro. Gabriel Director-Rev. Bro. Christian
院書羅保聖
HR Shing-po-lo Shu-yun ST. PAUL'S COLLEGE-Lower Albert Road
Visitor-Archbishop of Canterbury
Warden Rt. Rev. Bishop of Victoria
Principal-Rev. G. A. Bunbury, M.A.
Vice-do. Rev. A. D. Stewart, M.a.
堂學反据
Sing-sze-tai-fan-hok-tong
ST. STEPHEN'S COLLEGE--Bonham Road
and Western Street
Warden-Rev. E. J. Barnett, M.A
1116
HONGKONG
Chaplain-Rev. W. H. Hewitt, B.D. Senior Resident Master G. A.
Hancock, B.A.
-
Maths, and Science A. L. Nairn, B.A. Resident Master A. H. Mackenzie
do.
-H. L. Manderson
校學荥童業堂學女反据士聖
ST. STEPHEN'S GIRLS' COLLEGE AND PRE-
PARATORY SCHOOL-27, Caine Road
Principal Miss Carden
Asst. Teachers-Miss Hunt
do. do.
-Miss Stewart
do.
Miss Beudelack -Miss Cooper
#
Num-wa-kung-hok
THE SOUTH CHINA ACADEMY-7, Bonham
Road
President-Fang Kwang Asst. Master---Fu Ka Chi
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
-Wan Tze Leung
-Ho Chiu
-Lu Shiu Wa
-Fong Lai Chuen -Sham Wai Fan
Mak Kwok Wing.
VICTORIA BRITISH SCHOOL (See under
H. M. Government)
女亞利多域龍九
VICTORIA HOME AND ORPHANAGE- Kow-
loon City; Teleph. Kowloon, 40
Miss Storr, acting principal
Miss Hollis
WESLEYAN MISSION SCHOOLS
Superintendent Rev. C. Bone; res:
2, Morrison Hill
A
Tin-tang-kung-sze
ELECTRIC COMPANY, LIMITED, HONGKONG
Works: Wanchai
Directors J.W.C. Bonnar (chairman), Hon. Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G., Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson, E. G. Barrott Gibb, Livingston & Co., agents
W. H. Wickham, manager
F. Graham, electrical engineer
H. B. Bridger,
do.
J. J. Stubbings,
do.
V. Sorby,
do.
H. W. Petley,
do.
G. B. Colson,
do.
R. F. Long,
do.
W. J. J. Souza, assistant
A Tien-chea Kung-sze ELECTRIC TRACTION CO. OF HONGKONG LTD., THE-P. Q. Box 201; Telephone 430 Cable Ad: Snakefish, Hongkong; Head Office and Power Station: Bowrington;
Agents' Office: Shewan, Tomes & Co.
J. J. Stodart Kennedy, gel. mgr. and
chief engr.
Alan F. Earle, engineer
G. G. Sathe, assistant engineer
A. Course, traffic superintendent
W. Glendinning, chief inspector and
line overseer
E-sile
ELLIAS, MAHOMED HAJEE ESSACK, Merchant
-15, Gage Street
S. Curimmahomed
A. H. Mahomed
E-lee-kin-kec
ELLIS, FREDERICK, Stock, Property and
General Broker and Estate Agent-4,
Queen's Road Central
司公船輪利茂
Mau-lee-lan-chun-kung-sze
ENG HOK FONG STEAMSHIP COMPANY-37,
Des Voeux Road Central; Telph. 627;
Cable Ad: Enghokfong
S. C. MacNider, superintendent Eng Hok Fong, general manager
### Ki-hi-si Wui-kun ENGINEERS AND SHIPBUILDERS, INSTITU-
TION OF King's Buildings
President T. Skinner
Vice-President J. F. Miller
Chairman, Committee-P. H. Nye
Vice do.-J. McDougall
Hon. Treasurer J. McCubbin
Secretary-C. E. Libeaud
司公險人保安永國美
Ta-mi-kowk Wing-on Po-yan-him Kung-s
EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF U.S.A.-St. George's Building; Tel. Ad: Deva
Shewan, Tomes & Co., gen. managers
Ye-sha-pui ESSABHOY, A. M., Merchant and Commis sion Agent--7 and 9, Zetland Street; also at Singapore, Penang, Calcutta, Bombey Rangoon, Madras, Shanghai, Kobe and Yokohama
Abdoolcader Moolla Essabhoy (Surat) Motabhoy Moolla Essabhoy (Bombay) Abdulkyum Moolla Essabloy (S'pore) Abdulkyun Shaikh Abdooleader, mgr. E. Faizullabhoy, assistant manager C. T. Molloabhoy
HONGKONG
1117
A. Shunsudin M. B. Busrai
N. Fukhrudin
E. Essabhoy
A. D. Chinoy
師律頓士夏及氏 尹 伊
E-wan-se, kup Ha-se-ton Lut-sze
EWENS & HARSTON, Solicitors and Notaries Public-Alexandra Buildings, Des Vœux Road Central
C. Ewens, solicitor and notary public J. Scott Harston (Commissioner to Administer Oaths, &c., for the High Court of Australia and the Supreme Court of New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia and
Western Australia) Solicitor and Notary Public
Paul M. Hodgson, solicitor
Sin Tak-fan
C. A. P. Xavier
V. M. F. Xavier
T. Fuller
Wong Ming, Ko Po Shan, Lok Man
Piu and other
Chinese assistants
FAIRALL & Co., Dressmakers, Milliners and
General Drapers-7 & 9, Pedder Street, Hotel Buildings
Miss Fairall
Miss Parker
Miss Reay
Miss Placé
Miss Rozario
Miss Chapman
Miss Gunnel
Miss Logan
Fok-kun-na
FALCONER & CO., GEO., Watch and Chrono-
meter Makers, Jewellers, &c.-Hotel Mansions
I. B. Falconer (Scotland)
T. Meek
J. Meek
J. Cruickshank
C. A. dos Remedios
Fun-lik Tit-chong
FENWICK & CO., LIMITED, GEORGE, Engi- neers, Ship, Bridge and Iron Wharf Builders, Government and General Con- tractors, Wanchai and North Point
Directors A. Rodger, G. K. Haxton,
P. Tester
J. 1. Andrew, M.IN..A., general mgr. R. Smiles, harbour engineer F. A. T. Joanilho, bookkeeper E. A. Manzo clerk
Kat-cheong
Fernandez & Co., Merchants-4, Ar-
senal Street; Tel. Ad: Fernandina
M. Fernandez
Peter Chantong
Jos. Chanatong
C. S. Man
Sole agents
Ship-on-Globe" Brand "Seal" Brand
FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION OF HONG- KONG; Secretary's Oflice-St. George's Buildings
P. Tester, chairman
C. Pemberton, vice-chairman
A. R. Lowe, C.A., secretary
房藥大西中 ***T+ Chung-saiTai-yuek-fong FLETCHER & Co., LD., The Pharmacy, Chemists, Druggists, Patent Medicine Vendors and Commission Agents-22, Queen's Road Central
Tam Wai Chi, secretary
FOOTBALL CLUBS (See Recreation Clubs)
FUMIGATING & DISINFECTING BUREAU, LD.-
2, Pedder Street
C. L. Gorham, general manager
A. C. Botelho, Jr.
M. Read Leitao
FUNG TANG-53, Des Voeux Road
Fung Kong Yuen, principal
Fung York
J. A. S. Alves, manager
Chun Chuck Chee
How Yew Kee
GAINS, M., Court Milliner-18, Nathan
Road, Kowloon; Tel. Ad: Gains; Telph. K. 6
埃全 Chun di
GAMEAU, L. (French Store), Wine and Spirit Merchants, General Storekeepers
and Bakers, Commission and Forwarding
Agents, Importers and Exporters-6, Queen's Road, Central
J. M. Silva, assistant M. A. Vas, bookkeeper
# Ka-tin-na Chong-sze GARDINER, JOHN HENRY, Solicitor, Proc- tor, Patent and Trade Marks Agent, &c. -50, Queen's Road Central
Pun Yun Fong, interp. and translator Chan Kun Yui, Wang Po Keung, and
S. J. Kadoorie, clerks
1118
HONGKONG
吔咪 Me-ya
GARRELS, BORNER & Co. (late Meyer & Co.)
Merchants-King's Buildings, Connaught
Road
J. H. Garrels (Hamburg)
H. Börner (Hongkong)
P. Westendorff (Shanghai) C. Schroter, signs the firm
J. Emil Meyer, signs per pro.
O. Vorster
J. Schultz
K, Helm
F. X. Rozario
V. C. Rozario
P. A. Rosario, Jr.
C. B. Remedios
Agencies
Pulu Laut Coal Co.
Prussian National Insurance Co. (Fire) Scottish Imperial Insurance (Life) American Waltham Watch Co., Wal-
tham, Mass., U.S.A.
Chemische Fabriken vorm. Weiler-ter
meer, Uerdingen
C. F. Böhringer & Söhne, Mannheim
Po-wai Piu-teem
Gaupp & Co., Ohs. J., Watch and Chronometer Makers, Jewellers, and Opticians Alexandra Build- ing, Chater Road
C Heermann (Europe)
O. Wagner
P. E. Heermann, merchant
C. Bunje
E. Frohlich, watchmaker
E. Lange,
M. A. Collaço
do.
#IMAVM In-sa-ji Kas-da
GAZDAR, D. D., Share, Exchange and Freight Broker and Commission Agent -3A, Wyndham Street
Dinshaw Dadabhoy Gazdar Kawasjee Dinshaw Gazdar
GERMAN TAVERN--266 and 268, Queen's Rd.
Central
Carl Seeger
Kip-hong
GIBB, LIVINGSTON & Co., Merchants-
St. George's Buildings
A. McLeod (Shanghai) H. R. Kinnear (Shanghai)
J. W. C. Bonnar
C. Gordon Mackie, signs per pro. A. O. Lang G. M. Lakin
L. E. Ozorio
R. R. Robarts
O. Baptista D. A. Cordeiro
J. de Pinna H. Goldenberg F. A. Machado F. Hesse
Agencies
British North Borneo Government Hongkong Electric Company, Limited Ben Line of Steamers
Eastern & Australian SteamshipCo.,Id South African Line of Steamers Australian Alliance Assur. Co. (Marine) Northern Assurance Co. (Fire & Life) Queensland Insce. Co., Ld. Shanghai Land Investment Co., Ld. Shanghai Gas Company, Ld. Shanghai Tug and Lighter Co., Ld. Wei-hai-wei Land and Building Co., Id. Alleanza Societá de Assecurazione in
Genova
4
Yip-shun I-shang
GIBSON, R. MACLEAN, M.D.C.M., Medical
Practitioner-Alice Memorial Hospital
Tai-ping
Queen's Road
GILMAN & Co., Mehts.
Central
G. Balloch H. W. Slade
W. L. Pattenden
I. B. C. Neilson
Agencies
Lloyd's
National Provincial Bank of England London and Westminster Bank
Stockholms Enskilder Bank
Bank of New Zealand
Ulster Bank, Limited
Western National Bank of New York Liverpool Underwriters' Association Salvage Association, London Underwriting and Agency Association Merchants Shipping and Underwriters'
Association of Melbourne
Committee of Underwriters of Glasgow Underwriters' Union of Amsterdam "Italiana" Societa d'Assicurazoni Schweiz Allegemeine Vers. Action Ges. Lloyd Generali Italiano, in Genoa Royal Exchange Assurance Comité des Assureurs, Paris Union Malonine et Servannaise Compagnia d'Assicurazione Generali
in Trieste
Maritime Insurance Company, Ld. Northern Assurance Co. of Moscow Preuss. Nat. VersicherungsGesellschaft "La Estrella "Soc. A. D'Assurs. Génis, Liguria Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Rhenish Westphalian Lloyd Mar.
Insurance Company. Limited
HONGKONG
1119
士
忌德及打哥 Ko tat Kap Iuck-ki-la-sze
GODDARD & DOUGLAS, Surveyors to Local Insurance Offices, Germanischer Lloyd, Norwegian Veritas and American
Bureau of Shipping-Prince's Building
F. D. Goddard, A.I.N.A. (absent)
Capt. J. T. Douglas, A.I.N.A.
Capt. Thomas Arthur
A. F. de Carmo Xavier
師狀勞利麼勞巴及陵露高 Ko-lo-ling kap Ba-lo chong-sze
GOLDRING, BARLOW & MORRELL, Solicitors,
Proctors and Notaries, and Patent and
Trade Marks Agents--10, Queen's Road
Central; Tel. Ad: Goldring
P. W. Goldring, solicitor
F. C. Barlow,
G. E. Morrell,
do.
do.
Leo. D'Almada e Castro, solicitor J. M. Xavier, accountant
Li Hong Mi,
Cheang Yau,
Leung Chan,
Lee Shiu Shek,
Lee Keang Chee,
interpreter
do.
do.
do.
do.
S. A. B. Bux, clerk
Wong Chak Nam and others
GOLF CLUE, THE ROYAL HONGKONG (See
Recreation Clubs)
41
Kma-me-sze Yee-sang
GOMES, A. S., M.D., M.R.C.S., Medical Prac- titioner 9, Lena Cottage, Seymour Road
GONZALEZ, DE BERNEDO, Commission Agent and General Broker; Consul for Chili--. 3 Lower Mosque Terrace; Tel. Ad: Bernedo
GONZALEZ, FRANCISCO, Filipino Professor
of Music-7, Remedios Terrace
GORDON & Co.--St. George's Building A. G. Gordon, M.INST.N.A., M.I.MECH.E,,
M.I.K.S.
J. V. P. de Jesus, assistant M. W. Mark, clerk
GOTLA & Co., P. D., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-22, Peel Street Hormusjee Cawasjee Gotla
E. J. Degaria D. S. Siganporia B. P. Tavaria P. C. Mowawalla A. N. Mowawalla N. D. Gotla
GOVERNMENT OFFICES
Hau Shò Shù
AUDIT OFFICE, Local-Albert Road
Local Auditor-H. R. Phelips (abt.)
Acting do. R. F. Brayn
Clerk-P. Neathcote
腐林監督署
Yuen-lam-kam-tak-shu
BOTANICAL AND FORESTRY DEPARTMENT
-Albany Road
Supt.-S. T. Dunn, B.A., F.L.S., F.R.C.S. Assistant do.-W. J. Tutcher, F.L.S.
署使政布港香命欽英大
Tai Ying Yam Ming Heung Kong Po Ching Sze Shú
COLONIAL SECRETARIAT Albert Road
Colonial Secy.-Sir F.H. May, K.C.M.G. Assistant Colonial Secretary and
Clerk of Councils-C. Clémenti Chief Clerk-R. H. Crofton (absent) Clerks--J. A. E. Bullock, R. H. Kote-
wall, F. X. H. do Rozario, M. B. Suffiad, H. G, Leong, Leung Kwok Tung, Cheng Sui Ki, Sun King Kwong, Shun She Chun, S. K. Moosa, Leung Kwok-tai
**4# Ta-hok-fu-shu EDUCATION DEPT.-College Chambers Director of Education-E. A. Irving Sub-inspectress for Girls Schools-
Miss C. M. Noronha
Sub-inspector of Vernacular Schools
--Sin Yan Wai
Clerks U Tai-hang, Un Chan-fai GOVERNMENT SCHOOLS
KOWLOON BRITISH SCHOOL (for Girls and Infants of European British
Parentage)
Head Master-B. James, B.A. Head Mistress-Mrs. M. E. Main Asst. Mistress-Miss Main
Do.-Miss R. Robson
VICTORIA BRITISH SCHOOL (for Boys and Infants of European British
Parentage)
H. Mas.-W. H. Williams,r.c.S.,F.R.G.S. Mrs. Taylor
Miss McNail
Asst. Mistress-Miss A. C. Rutter BELILIOS SCHOOL, Hollywood Road
Head Mistress-Mrs, E. Tutcher Asst. Mistress-Miss A. M. Bateman YAUMATI SCHOOL
Head Master
W. Curwen
Assist, Master-S. R. Moore
SATYINGPUN SCHOOL
Head Master A, Morris
Asst. Master-R. C. Barlow
Head Mistress-- Mrs. L. Morris
1120
WANCHAI SCHOOL
Head Master-Young Hee
ANGLO-INDIAN SCHOOLS
Head Master-Bishen Singh
局火滅 Mit Fo Mus
FIRE BRIGADE, Victoria
Superintendent-F. J. Badeley
Dep. do. Capt. F.W. Lyons
Assistant Supt.-H. G. Baker
HONGKONG
Do. --Lieut. C. W. Beckwith, R.N. Engineer D. Mcdonald Station Officer and Asst. Eng.-A.Lane
Clerk--Geo. Ng Fuk-shang
Overseer, Water Works-J. Ross
Inspr.Dangerous Goods-D. Gourlay
司政船
Shun-ching-sze
HARBOUR DEPARTMENTS--Connaught Rd.
Central
Harbour Master, Marine Magistrate, Emigration and Customs Officer, and Registrar of Shipping-Com- mander Basil R. H. Taylor, R.N. Asst. Harbour Master-Lieut. C. W.
Beckwith, R.N.
Chief Clerk-M. McIver Second Clerk-Chan Pui
Island
Bing. Officer-Ed. Jones, A.E. Davey Inspectors of Cargo Boats and Junks
-R. L. Rocha, S. Nunes GUNPOWDER DEPOT, Green
Supt. Comdr. Basil R.H.Taylor, R.N. Officer in charge-F. M. Franco LIGHTHOUSES
Collector of Light Dues-Comman-
der Basil R. H. Taylor, R.N,
Light Keepers, Green Island-F. A.
Coleman, J. M. Franco
Light Cape Collinson-G. F. Taylor Light Gap Rock-E. A. Johnson, A.
E. Harvey, W. McGram
Light Waglan Island-C. E. Nicholas,
W. F. Hast, W. McKay MERCANTILE MARINE OFFICE- Sailors
Home, West Point
Supt. Comdr. Basil R. H. Taylor, R.N. Deputy Supt.-R. H. A. Craig, Clerk, Indian Intpr.-S. Soonderam Out-stations
Yaumati-Inspector D. McDonald Shaukiwan-Inspector A. Collett Stanley Sergeant P. Brazie Aberdeen-Inspector A. G. Dymond Hunghan Sergeant G. Watt Cheung Chau-Sergeant A. Gorden. Tai O Sergeant W. Davitt Tai Po Sergeant P. F. Boulger Sai Kung-Sergeant A. Counsell Long Kat-Supt. G. Boole Deep Bay and Signal Stations Blacklead's Hill-R. Gomes Green Island-Thomas Agan
HARBOUR OFFICE TELEGRAPH BRANCH,
A. M. Costa, chief telegraphist
A. A. Abbas, first assistant
J. A. Agabeg, second do.
署務事貨各口入出港本辦總
Tsung-pan Pun-kong Chut-yup-huu Kok-fo Sze-mo-shu
IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OFFICE- -Harbour
Office, Connaught Road Central
Supt.-Lieut. C. W. Beckwith R.. First Clerk-F. Placé da Silva Clerks Ip Kam Kwong, Hon Kam Shing, Chan Fo Poi, Wong Wong and Tsang Kun Fa Shroff--Wong Hang Tong Revenue Officers-L. E. Brett, D. J. McKenzie, J. C. Wilden, T. Suther- land, E. W. Dawson
Tin-to-tang
LAND OFFICE Queen's Road Central
Land Officer and Official Receiver in
Bankruptcy G.H. Wakeman Assistant Land Officer-Philip Jacks Deputy Official Receiver-A. G. M.
Fletcher
Asst. Land Officers for New Terri- tories-G. N. Orme, Southern District, Office: Beaconsfield;
S. B. C. Ross, Northern District
Office, Taipo
Asst. D. W. Tratman (acting)
Land Bailiffs-F. J. W. Last, W. J.
Unwin
Clerk-Li Tak Yung
Interpreter and Translator-Chau
Kwing Un
廳理巡 T's'un-li Ting
MAGISTRATES' COURT-Arbuthnot Road First Magistrate and Coroner-F.A.
Hazeland
Acting Second Magistrate-E. R.
Hallifax
Acting do. -J. R. Wood First Clerk--G. A. Woodcock Second do.-S. A. Bux
Third do. Chan Yuk Shan Fourth do. Ho Ying Kwan Fifth do. -Meh'r Din Khan First Interpreter M. Hoosen Second Interpreter-Sung Tsui Lu Third Interpreter-
Chinese Clerk and Shroff- Lai
Wing Sheung
MARINE SURVEYOR'S DEPARTMENT -
Harbour Office, Praya West
Govt. Marine Surveyor of Ships and Examiner of Engineers-James Macdonald
Assistant do.-William A. Crake
HONGKONG
1121
Second Asst. do.-William Russell Clerk-Chan Pun
MEDICAL BOARD
Principal Civil Medical Officer (president), Senior Naval Medical Officer, Principal Army Medical Officer, F. O. Stedman, M.D. (hon. secy.), Hon. Ho Kai, C.M.G., M.B., B.L., Hon. Mr. Murray Stewart, G. Ballakan
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Principal Civil Medical Officer J. Mitford Atkinson, M.B., D.PH., etc. Health Officer of Port
Jordan, M.B., etc.
G. P.
Second do. F. T. Keyt, M.D., etc., Superintendent of Civil Hospital
J. Bell, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., D PH. etc., Visiting Surgeon to Tung Wa, etc.
L
J. C. Thomson M.A., M.D., D.PH., Assistant Superintendent of Civil Hospital and Medical Officer in charge of Lunatic Asylum--W. B. A. Moore, L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S., etc. Medical Officer in charge of Infec- tious Diseases' Hospitals, Victoria Gaol J. C. Thomson
Medical Officer to Kowloon-Canton Railway, etc. (British Section)-J. W.Hartley, M.B., etc.
Bacteriologist Dr. H. Macfarlane Analyst . Frowne, F.c.s.
Asst. do. -A. C. Franklin, F.C.8.
院醫家國
CIVIL HOSPITAL
Analyst F. Browne
Apothecary and Assistant Analyst
A. C. Franklin
Accountant and Storekeeper-R,
Chapman (absent)
Act. Accountant-Sung Teng Man Act. Storekeeper-J. O'Regan Matron-Miss S. E. Barker Clerks Sung Teng Man, Yeung Man Yuk, Wong King Chi, Tang Yan Ming
Sisters-Misses A. M. T. Millington (absent), E. Maker, A. E. Gorham, L. M. Jacobs, C. H. Barrow, A. L. H. Richards, M. Sloan, M. E. A. Johnstone
Do. Private-J. Park Nurse-R. M. Watling
Probationer Nurses--M. Gourdin,
C. M. Kennedy
Wardmasters-J. O'Regan and J. W.
Armstrong
LUNATIC ASYLUMS
Wardmaster J. W. Armstrong
INFECTIOUS DISEASES' HOSPITALS
(KENNEDY TOWN HOSPITAL & HOSPITAL
HULK HYGEIA")
**
Medical Officer-E. S. Etherington Sisters-H. M. Gourley
Wardmasters-C. D. De Haney and J.
Grant
VICTORIA HOSPITAL
Medical Officer J. Mitford Atkin-
son (P.C.M.0.)
Sister in charge- Miss Jacobs
* Tung-wah I-yun
TUNG WAR HOSPITAL
Visiting Medical Officer-J. C. Thomson, M.D., D.T.M. & H., D.P.H. Resident Surgeons-Jeu.Hawk, M.D. Leung Chik Fan, L.M.S.H.
7 Tinner toi
OBSERVATORY, HONGKONG--Kowloon
Director F. G. Figg
Chief Assistant-J. I. Plummer, M.A. First Assistant-C. W. Jeffries Assist. Meteorologist-A. Doberck Computers-Wan Suit Ngam, Lam Kai Tsung, Tsau Tak Chiu, Leung Sui Sang
Ts'un-pò Ting
POLICE, CENTRAL STATION Hollywood
Road
Captain Supdt.-F. J. Badeley Deputy do. Capt. F. W. Lyons Assistant Dep. Supt.-P. P. J.
Wodehouse
District Officer-E. R. Hallifax Probationer Actg. District Officer-
S. B. C. Ross
Chief Inspector--H. G. Baker Chief Detective Inspr.--J.W.Hanson First Clerk, Act.-G. Ng Fuk Shang Secondl Clerk--Chan Kwan Chun Third do. -Ho Ping Pui Fourth do. Tang Chi Kau Clerk & Hindu Interptr.-S. G. Kadir Inspectors-W. Robertson, D. Me- Donald, A. C. Langley, A. Collett, W. Withers, D. Gourlay, J. Smith, J. Kerr, A. G. Dymond, W. Cameron, D. McHardy R. Fenton E. O. Sullivan, W. Murison Europeans-26 sergeants, 24 lance
sergeants, 62 constables Indians-2 jemadars, 2 sergt.-majors, 15 sergeants, 30 lance sergeants, 311 constables Chinese-31 sergeant interpreters, 6 Telephone clerks, 1 sergt-major,21, sergeants, 290 constables
1122
HONGKONG
Water Police, Chinese-13 coxswains, 2 boatswains, 51 seamen, 2 car- penters, 13 engineers, 14 stokers, 2 station sergeants, 6 station orderlies, 2 painters, 2 barrack sergeants, 1 sailmaker, 4 signal- men, 4 detectives, 17 boatmen Seconded to other departments-
3 Europ'ns., 12 Indians, 12 Chinese
館信書
Shu-sun Kún
POST OFFICE, GENERAL-Queen's Road
P. M. G.--C. McI. Messer
Assistant do. E. Cornewall Lewis
Accountant--A. J. Reed
Asst. do. A. F. Castilho Correspondence Clerk-Ng Yuk General Office
Senior Clerk-G. G. Burnett (on
leave)
Acting Senior Clark-B. Gutierrez Supt. of Mails-R. A. J. Savage Clerks J. S. dos Remedios, J. M. Passos, U. Shui Kwai, Lau Hin, D. Fernandez, Fung Yan Kwong, J. Maxwell, J. Santos, Ng Kuok Leung, Wong Kam Lai, J. A. d'Almeida, Lam Tso Tai, Fung Kwong Yap, E. L. Stainfield, T. Nakahara, Barkat Ali Khan, Ip. Tsan Lam, J. Castilho, Lo Kain Chuen, Surang Singh, Hung Cheuk Man.
Marine Officers-Sirdar Khan, T. M. Perpetuo, M. A. de. N. Mendes, Has- han Khan, S. C. Halleem, C. J. Poole
Boardling Officers-A. Delgado, D. J.
Santos
Registration and Parcel Branch
Superintendent T. H. Martin Clerks P. A. V. Remedios, P.Roza
D. A. Remedios, S. V. Re- medios, J. M. Britto, J.C. Barros, E. J. F. Gomes, Sallem Maho- med, Bishan Dass, J. Osborne, N. Baldovino, R. Nazarin. C. Peerbhoy, A. Lobaton, Wm. Nuttall, M. J. D. Alves, F. X. Alves, J. C. Santos, D. Fernandes, J. C. Castilho, A. D. Soares, G. Stoker, Ip Kun King, A. H. Hossein, So Kwan Chi, Ip Kun Lam, Tso Dep Ling Money Order Office
Superintendent H. Dixon Clerks P. J. M. Rodrigues, M. L. Rocha, Muhamed Akbar, J. J. Osborne
Kowloon Branch
Clerk in Charge-J. S. Gil Western Branchi
Clerk in Charge-Cheung Lai Kam Clerk-U. Shiu Tsun
I Kong Mò Shu PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT-Albert Rd. Director of Public Works -Hon. Mr.
W. Chatham, C.M.G.
1st Asst.
2nd do.
do. -P. N. H. Jones
Executive Engineer-H. P. Tooker
do. -J. F. Boulton
Do. -C. H. Gale
Do.
-A. H. Hollingsworth
Do.
-H. G. C. Fisher
Do.
--H. T. Jackman
Do.
-T. L. Perkins
J
Do. -D. Jaffe
Asst. Engineer-I. M. Xavier
Do.
A. E. Wright -W. T. Walker
--
-F. A. Biden -E. W. Carpenter
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
-H. E. Goldsmith
Do.
-J. W. White
Do.
-R. J. Everest
Do. -F. J. Ling
Do. A. W. Taylor Principal Land Svyor.-L. C. Rees Land Surveyors-B. W. Grey, A. J. Darby, E. B. Reed, Fred Sutton G. C. McIntosh, H. C. Sayer, John Grant
Land Bailiffs-F. H. Dillon, John
McKay
Supt. of Accounts, Correspondence
and Stores-David Wood Clerks P. Julyan, A. M. de Souza, F. M. Garcia, Y. Abbas and others Drainage Surveyor-J. J. Bryan Surveyor-J. E. Piercy Foreman -- A. Small
Clerk of Works-G. E. Thomas Overseers J. Ross, J. G. McEwen, G. W. Kynoch, U. A. Farrell, W. Dobbs, J. Hutchings, W. T. Ed- wards, R. J. Howard, J. C. Clark, I. A. Wheal, S. R. Boyd, J. A. Hirst, J. H. Barrington, J. T. Lougstaff, H. W. Wolfe, H. A. Morris, A. W. J. Simmons, J. H. Kenich, J. C. Pendlebury, Jas. Dickson, Jr., P. Keyser, R. J. Everest, F. J. Ling, A. W. Taylor, H. W. Bolton Custodian Recreation Ground-R.
J. Wilkinson
Foremen-A. M. Souza, C. N.
Solomon and others
Meter Readers-G. M. Gibbs, S. F.
Santos
Watchman, Tytain-J. A. Bowen Dredger Master-T. Olsen
***** Hong Kong Tai-hols-tong QUEEN'S COLLEGE--Aberdeen Street
Head Master-T. K. Dealy, FELA
F.C.S.
7
HONGKONG
Second Master-E. Ralphs, F.C.S.
Normal do. Senior Asst.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Junior Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
J
-E. B. Tanner, F.R.G.S. A. W. Grant, B.A.
R. E. O. Bird, M.A. -A. H. Crook, M.A. -R. J. Birbeck, B.A. G. P. de Martin, B.A.
-H. L. Garrett, B.A.
-A. R. Sutherland,M.A.
A. O. Brawn
華道攜 Fu Wu To
REGISTRAR-GENERAL'S OFFICE
field"
Beacons-
Registrar-General-A. W. Brewin
First Asst.
do.-R. O. Hutchison
Second Asst. do. --D. W. Tratman
First Clerk--Leung Ping Fai
Inspector E. Browne
Sergeant (Emigration) A. K. Taylor
官務事姻婚掌
Cheung Fan-yan Sz Mo Kun
REGISTRATION OF MARRIAGES
Registrar The Registrar-General
Deputy The Asst. Registrar-General
Teing-ching-kuk
SANITARY DEPARTMENT Beaconsfield
Head of Sanitary Dept.-E. D. C.
Wolfe
Medical Officer of Health-Dr. F.
W. Clark
Asst. Medical Officer of Health-W.
W. Pearse, M.B., D.PH. Secretary W. Bowen-Rowlands Sanitary Surveyor-A. Carter (on
leave)
Colonial Veterinary Surgeon - A.
Gibson
First Clerk and Accountant-Tsoi
Hin Ting
Sanitary Inspectors-F. Allen, C. W. Brett, A. Brown, J. A. Bullin, H. Coombs, J. T. Cotton, G. W. Coysh, R. Duncan (on leave), W. Fincher, F. Fisher, C. E. Firth, R. Hudson, T. Hynes, H. J. Knight, P. T. Lamble, J. A. Lyons, R. G. McEwen, D. J. O'Halloran, H. Pearson, J. Reidie,
C. W. Ward, A. Watson (on leave) R. C. Witchell, W. H. Woolley
署臬 Nip Suiè
SUPREME COURT-Queen's Road Central
Chief Justice His Honour Sir
Francis Taylor Piggott, Kt.
Fuisne Judge-His Honour Henry
Hessey Johnston Gompertz Attorney-General-The Hon. W.
Rees-Davies, K.C.
1123
Registrar, Official Administrator, Official Trustee, and Registrar of Comp. Joseph Horsford Kemp Deputy Registrar and Appraiser-C,
A. D. Melbourne
Deputy Registrar and Accountant-
J. W. Lee-Jones
Crown Solicitor-F. B. L. Bowley First Grade Clerk of Court and Clerk to the Chief Justice-A. B. Suffiad Second Grade Clerk of Courts & Clerk
to the Puisne Judge-I. U. Mirza Chief Interpreter-N. G. Nolan Second Interp.-Wong Kwong Tin Third do. -A. J. Mackie Third Grade Clerk-Alim Khan Clerk and Translator-Wong Kwok-ü Fourth Grade Clerk and Shroff-
Wong Kin Wo
Temporary Fourth Grade Clerk-
Wong Pok-fuk
Clerk and Usher A. W. Hill First Bailiff-F. Howell
Second Bailiff-J. Leonard
Fifth Grade Assit, do.-F. J. Rozario
Librarian-Wong Yui Shum
署務庫 FuMo Shi
TREASURY-Pedder Street
Treasurer-Hon. Mr. A. M. Thomson
Cashier-E. A. de Carvalho
J. Pestonjee --M. Azim
Second Clerk-J. C. da Cunha Assistant Clerk--L. J. Lopes Third do. Fourth do. Fifth do. Sixth do. Seventh do.
Lo Fuk Lam
Cheung Yuk Fai J. F. E. Rozario Eighth do. -Wong Shiu Ki Ninth clerk-M. Abvoolrahman Tenth do. J. M. Dyer Sub-Department-Assessor of Rates
Assessor-A. Chapman Clerk-Chan Kwok On Interpreter-Tai Tin Shang
Sub-Dept. Stamp Revenue Office
First Clerk-E. H. d'Aquino
Second do.-J. M. P. da Silva
房監 監 Kim Fong
PRISON DEPARTMENT
Superintendent-Capt.
Police ex officio
Supt. of
Assistant dö. -R. H. A. Craig
Medical Officer-Dr. J. C. Thomson
Victoria Gaol
Chaplains--Rev F. T. Johnson, M.A. Rev. Augustin Placzek, Rev. F. Pearce
Clerk & Storekeeper-Ngan King Hoi Clerk & Interp.-Yeung Kam Shing Clerk To King Shun Chief Warder-J. McLeod
1124
HONGKONG
Principal Warders-W. Wilkinson,
G. Passmore, A. Ratcliffe
24 European Warders, 2 Indian Warders, 32 Indian Asst. Warders 23 Indian Guards
Female Prison
Matron Mary Bredenberg War'ses-Mrs. Tamar Oi, Mrs. Roza
Kock
GRAÇA & Co., Importers and Exporters of Foreign and Colonial Postage Stamps, and Pictorial Post Carl Dealers, etc.- 27, Des Voeux Road
F. Graça
F. Soares
Miss A. Soares
Miss M. Graça
Miss D. Leão
GRAHAM, DOUGLAS, Commission Agent-
Alexandra Buildings
GRAND CARLTON HOTEL, Branch Estab-
lishment Kowloon Hotel
Q. E. Owen, proprietor
G. E. Owen, manager
Mrs. M. A. Lafferty, matron
司公報電北大
Tai-pak-teen-po-kung-tze
GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPH Co., LD.
J
Chief Office 26, Kongens Nytorv,
Copenhagen.
Olaf Nielsen, superintendent
C. Nicolaisen, electrician
A. W. Brandtmar, supervisor
J. E. Jorgensen, supervisor
F. E. Carvalho
E. L. Barros
J. L. Marques
F. de Sá
司公坭英洲青
Ching-chow Ying-nai Kung-sze
GREEN ISLAND CEMENT COMPANY LIMITED-
Head Office: St. George's Building;Works:
Green Island, Macao, Deep Water Bay, Hongkong, and Hok-ün, Kowloon
Shewan, Tomes & Co., genl. managers Consulting Committee-R. Shewan, (chairman), Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G., Hon. W. Gresson, Dr. J. W. Noble S. V. A. Uldall, works
Hok-ün Works
manager,
A. H. Hewitt, chief engineer
P. Simcock, supt. Macão Works
T. Arnott, engineer
O. Wegwood, do.
J. P. Douglas, do.
J. S. Murray, do.
A. Finbow,
do.
H. Doughty,
do.
J. Witchell
J. P. Christensen, burner
T. H. Jensen,
do.
M. C. Rasmussen,
do.
C. Christensen,
dlo.
N. Christensen,
do.
P. F. C. Prata, clerk F. J. Barros
O. M. S. Oliveira
A. F. M. Luz
F. A. Luz J. Souza A. M. Eça A. J. Eça
H. O. Gomes
Geo. Thomas, clerk
Charles H. Kini, storekeeper
A. Keating, supt.. DeepWater Bay Wks.
T. J. Richards,
G. Truer
do.
(See Advertisement)
部廉斤 Kai-lem-pu
GRIMBLE, GEORGE, Ship, Freight, Coal and
General Broker-1 Prince's Buildings;
Tel. Ad: Elbming; Telph. 342
George, Grimble
N. W. Chew
俾呷 Kup-pi
GUBBAY, R. Á., Bill and Bullion Broker -4, Ice House Street; Tel. Ad:
Gubbay; Teleph. 86, Residence
#SPINK Kee-tee-szo Yan-tsz-koon GUEDES & Co., Commission Agents, General
Printers and Publishers. Publishers of
The Yellow Dragon-9A, Duddell Street
P. M. Nolasco da Silva
勞何 Ho-lo
HALL, THOMAS PHILLIP, Marine Surveyor and Surveyor to Marine Insurance Cos-
Top Floor, York Building: Teleph. 994;
Representative for Holzapfel's Interna
tional Ships Composition
司公船輪亨實 Hang Po
HAMBURG-AMERIKA
LINIE 3, Queen's
Building, Chater Rd.; Tel. Ad: Packetline
C. G. Gok, manager
H. Schmidt
Chr. R. Hause
F. L. Marques
R. Martens, superintendent
(See Advertisement)
HANCOCK, ALFRED, Bill and Bullion Broker
-10, Queen's Gardens (absent)
HANCOCK, SIDNEY, Bill and Bullion Broker
-10, Queen's Gardens
HONGKONG
1125
# #Д Ha-ting luk-tse
HARDING, R. A., Solicitor-24, Queen's
Road Central
R. A. Harding
P. Sydenham Dixon
F. H. Wyvill
Ha-ku
HARKER, B. BROTHERTON, A.M.I.C.E., Archi- tect, Civil Engineer and Surveyor, -2, Pedder Street, 3rd floor
*** Ha-tse-tun esang
HARSTON, G. M., M.B. (London Univ.) M.R.C.S. (England), L.R.C.P. (London) -Alexandra Building
HASKELL, D., Merchant and Commission Agent, Share and General Broker-4, Ice House Street
#E±* Day-si-ting-chong-sze HASTINGS & HASTINGS, Solicitors, Convey- ancers, Proctors, Notaries Public, Patent and Trade Marks Agents-36 and 38, Queen's; Road Central; A. B. C. Code. 5th Edition; Tel. Ad: Slemish; Teleph. No. 592
Geo. A. Hastings, solicitor and notary
public
Edgar Davidson, B.A., solicitor Chrystopher Wilson, solicitor Tam Wing Kwong, Chiu Kan, clerks Chan Chiu Ngok, interpreters Charles Kent, cashier George Lee, stenographer
F. F. Remedios, Chan Kam-in and
other clerks
Agents
Law Guarantee & Trust Society Ltd.
Ha-tse-lan
HAZELAND, E. M., Civil Engineer, Architect and Surveyor-33, Queen's Road Central
Hin-li-E-sang
HEANLEY, DR. C. M., M.B., B.S., (LOND.), D.PH., D.T.M.H., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. 4, Camer- on Terrace, Cameron Road, Kowloon, Vaccine Manufacturer and Bacteriolo- gist; Teleph. 87 K; Tel. Ad: Vaccine, Hongkong
HEUSER, EBERIUS & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents-3, Duddell St., First Floor: Tel. Ad: Eberius; Telephone 713
C. W. Heuser
G. F. Eberius
O. Kirmse T. Cordeiro
Agency
Messrs. Coqui & Reimers, Hamburg
Hill, Bergdahl & Co.-4, Cross Lane, Wanchai; Teleph. 718; Manufacturers of Aerated Waters
Carl Seeger
F. A. B. Marçal
HIMLY & Co.-62, Connaught Road
Chang Fee Shun
Chan Chew and others
A
Hip-on Kung-sze
HIP ON INSURANCE, EXCHANGE AND LOAN
Co., L.--42, Bonham Strand West
Directors-Cheng Man Po (managing), Lo Cheuk Wan, Chan Kan Tong, Chan Chung Wo, Wong Tak Chuen, Lai Siu Tong, Cheuk Kook Sze, Lum Tung Ting
Ng Li Hing, Tam Tsz Kong, gl.managers
HIPTOOLA & Co., H., Milliners and Drapers
-13 and 15, D'Aguilar Street
T. Motabhoy (Bombay) T. A. Tyebkhan (Surat) H. S. Abdeally
E. M. Karimbhoy G. A. Rahim
G. S. Jafferbhoy
#AKO Ho-Kai Tai-but-szc Ho KAI, M.B., C.M., M.R.C.S. (ENG.) C.M.G.
Barrister-at-Law-28A, Des Voeux Road
Ho-si
HOLLAND-CHINA HANDELSCOMPAGNIE
(Holland-China Trading Co.), Merchants Tel. Ad: Holchihand-16, Des Voeux Road Central
FB. s'Jacob (Shanghai)
W. Kien, signs per pro.
B. D. Kapteyn, signs per pro. P. H. Klimanek A. W. van Andel A, van Ginkel P. Stuijfbergen C. P. Pintos S. E. Ismail
A. A. Baptista B. S. Vieira
Agencies
Salamander Fire Insurance Co.
Consolidated Mar. Ins. Co., of Berlin Dutch Engineering Works
## Hom-se luk-se
HOLMES, H. K., Solicitor-54, Queen's Road
Central
H. K. Holmes
1126
J. C. da Roza Mak Yan Ip Pak Shan
Lo Man Kai
HONGKONG
HOLMES, II. S., General Merchant, Export
and Import Commission Agent--54, Queen's Road
H. S. Holmes, manager
Sole Agents
All kinds of Marine Motor Engines
倉貨船輪通烟藍
Lam-yin-tung-lun-shuen-fo-chong
Hour's WHARF, KOWLOON, Butterfield &
Swire, Agents
A. W. Dixon, wharf manager
S. R. Aitken, assistant manager
R. L. Brown, whartinger
Robert Hall, engineer
司公船輪澳港省
Shang Kong O Lun-shun Kung-s
-sze
HONGKONG, CANTON AND MACAO STEAM-
BOAT COMPANY, LIMITED-Hotel Man- sions; Tel. Ad: Steamboat
Directors--F. A. Gomes, R. Shewan, E. R. Fuhrmann, H. E. Tomkins, C. R. Lenzmann, H. A. Siebs, C. E. Anton, J. W. Bandow, F. Sieb
W. E. Clarke. secretary
John Arnold, accountant R. A. da Costa
Lo Kai Hong
Deacon & Co., agents at Canton A. A. de Mello, agent at Macao
J. d'Almeida, wharfinger, Hongkong V. Nogueira, do., Macao
(For Officers of Strs. See end of Directory)
A
Mui-hi Kung-sze
HONGKONG AND CHINA GAS CO., LIMITED
-Offices and Works: West Point
Gas Office
George P. Curry, local secretary A. E. Dunrich, book-keeper
A. Abraham,
J. H. Simmons,
Shi Kum Kwai,
Wong Kai Kee,
clerk
Leung Kam Kong,
77
"
>
12
A. E. Moyhing, meter inspector
W. Wong,
"
**
G. M. Xavier,
35
13
Chan Chi,
Gas Works Department
53
John McCubbin, resident engineer J. H. Barr, assistant
Chung U Ching, tracer
J. J. Blackburn, manager, Kowloon E. W. Terrey, supt. fitting dept.
J. Hunter,
>>
Au Wing, store-keeper
ウウ
1
kk Wing-Sin
Hongkong and China Shoe Fac tory, Limited--Office: 38, Queen's Road Central; Factory: Wanchal, Praya East, 98, 98, 99 and 991; Tel. 622; Cable Ad Shoemakers
:
Lo Po Shan, president
Erust Arndt, manager Wong Kung Wai, acting secretary Chan Yew Kai, assistant Fred. W. Walker, supt., factory Geo. E. Lace, assistant do.
A San Kung-sze
HONGKONG CLUB, New Praya
General Committee-H. P. White (chairman), Hon. Six C. P. Chater,
C.M.G., J. W. C. Bonnar, C. M. Ede,
T. F. Hough, E. H. Hinds, E. Ormis-
ton, W. N. Fleming, N. J. Staff
James Craik, secretary
司公成志 Chee sing kung sze
HONGKONG COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
(See under Education)
HONGKONG CO-OPERATIVE
Caine Road
SOCIETY -94,
Committee H. J. M. Figueiredo, J. M. P Tavares, J. Baptista, A. J. C. da Rocha
Clerk-L. L. Lopes
A
Fong-chik-kung-sze
HONGKONG COTTON SPINNING, WEAVING & DYEING CO., L.-Works: Su-kun-poo; Telephone 599
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., geal.
managers
Consulting Committee- Hou. Mr. W. J. Gresson (chairman), Hon. Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G. and J. W. C. Bonnar A. Shaw, manager (absent)
P. S. Jameson, acting manager E. Shaw, assistant manager
J. Deveney, spinning master
H. Palmer, head overseer
H. Gittins, accountant
HONGKONG DISPENSARY-See A. S. Watsun
* Co., Ld.
司公險保燭火港香
Hong-kong Fo-chuk Po-him Kung-sze
HONGKONG FIRE INSURANCE Co., LIMITED
Jardline, Matheson & Co., Ltd., general
managers
Consulting Committee-Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson (chairman), Hon. Sir Paul Chater, C.M.G., C. S. Gubbay, H. P. White, F. Maitland
+
•
HONGKONG
1127
館詆聞新刺孖
Ma-la San-mun-chi-koon
Hongkong Daily Press, Morning
Newspaper
"HONGKONG WEEKLY PRESS AND CHINA
OVERLAND TRADE REPORT"
"CHUNG NGOI SAN Po," Chinese (Morning)
Daily Newspaper
Directory and Chronicle for China, Japan, Straits, etc.----10a, Des Vœux Road Central: Tel. Ad: Press; Telphe. 12; P. O. Box 33; London Office: 131, Fleet Street, EC.; Tel. Ad: Socotrine
Estate late Y. J. Murrow, proprietor D. Warres Smith, lessee (London) Editorial Department
B. A. Hale, managing editor
A. Ramsay, sub-editor and reporter H. Victor, reporter
Business and Printing Departments
A. N. Kemp, business manager
Wm. Jackson, assistant
F. Elphinstone, accountant Kavasji Edulji, bookkeeper
Wong Lang Fook, head Chinese clerk Cung Nghi săn l
Fung Shing Im, publisherand manager
HONGKONG HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY-6,
Beaconsfield Arcade
President--J. Barton
Hon. Secretary-L. Gibbs
Hon. Treasurer-W. L. Pattenden
司公店客港香
Hong-kong Hal-tim Kung-sze.
HONGKONG HOTEL COMPANY, LIMITED-
Hotel: Pedder Street and Des Voeux
Road; Tel. Ad: Kremlin; Telephone 32
Directors W. Hutton Potts, Hon Mr.
E. Osborne, Dr. J. W. Noble
C. Mooney, secretary
A. F. Davies, manager
J. H. Taggart, sub-manager
麻雪港香 Hong-kong Suet-chong
HONGKONG ICE COMPANY, LIMITED; Works:
East Point; Depot: Ice House Street; Tel. Ad: Glacis
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., general
managers
G. K. Haxton, manager
J. M. Irving, engineer
H. Davidson, clerk
廠鐡頓哥
bài thi tại EF
Ko-bun bit-chong
HONGKONG IRON WORKS-21,ShaukiwanRd.
A. G. Gordon, M.INST. N.A., M.L.MECH.E.,
M.I.E.S.,
J. V. F. de Jesus, assistant
S. A. Chun, clerk
司公倉貨及頭嗎龍九港香
Hong-kong Kow-loon Ma-tau kop Fo chong Kung-sz HONGKONG AND KOWLOON WILARF
AND
GODOWN COMPANY, LIMITED Offices: Kloon and Prince's Building, Hongkong; Tel. Ad Godowns; Telph. No. K 7-8 Directors Hon. Mr. W. J. Gressou (chairman), Hon. Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G., C. S. Gubbay, C. R. Lenz- mann, E. Shellim, E. G. Barrett, W. Helms, Hon. Mr. E. A. Hewett, J. W. C. Bonnar, A. S. D. Cousland H. A. Siebs, J. W. Bandow Edward Osborne, secretary
R. J. Macgowan W. S. Brown J. Hooper C. H. W. Kew P. R. Wolf E. S. Ford S. R. Ismail S. A. Sepher S. Juman K. Drude
Jumar Khan
T. W. Robertson, supt. engineer
J. Elliott, asst. engineer
R. Unsworth, berthing master
R. Packham, cargo superintendent
E. H. Neave, wharfinger
A. H. Heron, wharfinger
H, Summers
W. Hyde
F. G. Allen
司公限有理代及地港香
Hongkong Chi-ti kup Toi-lee Yau-han Kung-sze
HONGKONG LAND INVESTMENT AND AGENCY COMPANY, LIMITED, Queen's Road Centl. Directors-Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson (chrm.) Hon. Sir P. Chater, C.M.G. (vice chairman), C. S. Gubbay, E. Shellim, H. P. White, J. Bandow, H. A. Siebs
A. Shelton Hooper, secretary
M. S. Northcote E. B. Shepherd
A. E. Asgor
F. Elms, overseer
Agencies
West Point Building Company, Ld. Kowloon Land and Building Co., Ld.
HONGKONG LAND RECLAMATION CO., LD.-
5, Queen's Road Central
Directors-Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson (chairman), Hon. Sir P. Chater, C.M.G., E. Shellim, C. S. Gubbay, Ho Tung M. S. Northcote, secretary
HONGKONG LITHOGRAPHIC Co.-3, Wynd
ham Street
L. L. Xavier, manager
1128
Roman Francisco, engraver
Esteban José,
do.
Luis Santos, lithographer
Pertonillo Perez, do.
業營理滙盛源宋呂小港香
梳燕兼司公限有
HONGKONG
HONGKONG AND MANILA YUEN SHENG EXCHANGE AND TRADING CO., Ld.,
Banking and Firc,and Marine Insurance-
66 Bonham Strand West; Tel. Address: Yschange; Telephone 390
Ng Li Hing, general manager
HONGKONG MILLING Co., LIMITED, THE, H. Percy Smith, official liquidator-5, Queen's Road Central
SOCIETY
HONGKONG PHILHARMONIC
Patron-H. E. Sir Frederick Lugard
K.C.M.C., C.B., D.S.O. President-Sir F. II. May, K.U.M.G. Vice-Presidents-C.
E. H. Beavis, Hon. Mr. W. Chatham, C.M.G., E. Goetz, Frank Grove M.I.C.E, Rev. F. T. Johnson, M.A., A. H. Ough A.R.I.B.A., T. L. Perkins, A.M.I.C.E, E. Ralphs, F.C.S., John Robertson, The Hon. Captain Basil Taylor, R.N.
M.I.C.E.,
Committee.--Rev. A. B. Thornhill, F. C. Barlow, W. L. Pattenden J. A. Young
Hon. Treasurer-C. E. H. Beavis
Hon. Secretary--H. L. O. Garrett
Conductor-Denman Fuller, F.R.CO.
L.R.A.M.
館字印港香
Hong-kong Yan-tsz-koon
HONGKONG PRINTING PRESS-3, Wyndham
Street
L. L. Xavier, manager
P. A. Xavier, clerk
M. Marques
E. da Silva
L. Souza
J. Fernandes
DA##& Hong-kong lam Kung-zes
HONGKONG ROPE MANUFACTURING COM- PANY, LIMITED-Factory: Belcher's Bay Shewan, Tomes & Co., genl. managers Consulting Committee-Dr. Noble, J. W. H. P. White, D. W. Craddock C. Klinck, superintendent
W. Gardner, engineer
V. Goulborn
E. Loureiro
A. A. Barros
P. Xavier
HONGKONG SAVINGS BANK, at Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation
(See Advertisement)
行銀海上港香
Hong-kong Shang-hai Ngan-hong
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING Cor-
FORATION-1, Queen's Road
Court of Directors-Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson (chairman), H. E. Tomkins, (deputy chairman), G. Balloch, J. W Bandow, E. G. Barrett, R. Lenzmann, C. S. Gubbay, Fr. Liebs, E. Shellim, R. Shewan, H. A. Siebs J. R. M. Smith, chief manager N. J. Stabb, acting sub-manager J. F. Cox-Edwards, chief accountant C. H. Ford
E. M. Bishop W. C. D. Turner J. R. Boyes H. E. Moon H. D. Sharpin H. A. Macintyre O. J. Barnes H. C. Joass
A. C. E. Ekborough A. W. W. Walkinshaw W. D. McCullach M. A. Murray J. Dunn L. Evans A. C. Putley F. B. Rickett T. M. Knott F. G. Carroll A. C. Leith
C. A. W. Ferrier D. Jackson G. M. Dalgety
C. T. A. Robertson R. Foord-Kelcey F. G. Walker A. A. Gutierrez V. A. P. Collaço C. F. Carvalho J. T. Prestage J. M. E. d'Eça
F. B. da Silva
F. X. Vieira Ribeiro G. M. Gutierrez
J. C. V. dos Remedios, Jr. J. C. Ribeiro A. O. Barradas J. J. dos Remedios J. M. C. Lopes A. A. da Luz J. T. Victor A. M. d'Eça C. A. Rodrigues L. A. V. Ribeiro J. J. P. Gosano F. Soares
D. da Roza, Jr. L. A. Ozorio A. F do Rozario
A. A. dos Remedios A. H.. Hyndman C. F. V. Ribeiro F. B. Rozario
J. M. Fonseca
H. Hyndinan L. Luz
F. J. Ribeiro
HONGKONG.
J. Maclean, acting agent, Calcutta T. C. Anderson, accountant, do. C. H. Wilson, agent,
Bombay
P. A. Barlow, acting accountant, do. A. M. Townsend, managers, London
C. S. Addis
1. Turner, sub-manager, London W. Nicholls, accountant,
F. de Bovis, agent,
C. S. Haden, accountant, W. H. Harries, agent,
do.
Lyons
clo.
S. Feisco. M. M. Tompkins, account't, do. J.P. Wade Gardner, agent, New York J. R. Gillingham, act, accountant, do. F. T. Koelle, manager,
H'burg
R. E. N. Padfield, act. account't, do, W. Reid, agent,
Rangoon
F. A. Rickard, act. accountant, do. A. A. Whelan, agent,
Colombo
J. P. MacKintosli, account't, do.
(See Advertisement)
(For Staff at Local Branches see the
respective Ports)
HONGKONG SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION
OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS
Hon. Secretary--M. S. Northcote.
Working Committee-E. A. Hewett,
E. H. Sharp, K.C., C. H. Ross, M. S. Northcote
館汦聞新蔑士
Sz-mitsun-mun-chi-koon
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, LIMITED, Evening
Newspaper-1, Ice House Street
J. P. Braga, manager
A. W. Brebner, editor
R. Hope
A. R. Ellis
司公澳船埔黃港香
Hong-kong Wong-po Shun-o Kung-sze
HONGKONG AND WHAMPOA DOCK CO., Lv.-
Head Office: Kowloon Docks
Directors-Hon. W. J. Gresson (chair- man), Hon. Sir Paul Chater, K. C.M.G. H. P. White, D. W. Craddock, E. G. Barrett, H. A. Siebs, F. Lieb, J. W. Bandow
R. M. Dyer, B.SC., chief manager Wm. Jolly, secretary
Head Office
W. J. Crawford U. C. Galluzzi F. Gomes
J. Gomes
Jose Gomes
D. Gow
H. Hyndmann, Jr. R. Lapsley F. X. Mendes W. Nicholls J. C. Owen W. J. Rattey J. M. V. Remedios A. C. Squair C. F. Silva W. L. Wong
Hongkong Branch Office
1129
G. A. Caldwell, assistant secretary C. D. Silas
Kowloon Establishment
J. W. Graham, works manager Technical Office
J. Martin, chief draughtsman C. J. Cooke
R. Simmons W. Tulip
Engineers Department
T. Neave, supt. engineer F. Anderson.
A. A. Boulton J. Fisher W. F. Ford J. J. Garraway S. Gray
J. Guy D. Purves J. J. Robson
Boiler Shop
G. Beck
J. M. Henderson
J. D. Logan
Foundry Forge and Smithy
R. V. Rutter
Pattern Shop
W. Taylor
Coppersmith and Plumbing Shop
G. Duncan
Ship-building and Repairing Dept.
D. Cooper
D. Nielson
J. M. Ramsay
Shipwright Department
J. Hand, superintendent C. Adolf
C. Crispin W. Davison D. Keith H. S. Wynne Joiner Shop W. Brown Sawmill
W. Stewar
| 130
Electrical Department
A. J. Ward
Yard
S. Smith, boatswain
I. Turner, head watchman
G. White, foreman mason Time Office
W. M. Johnston
W. Hedley J. W. Lander
Stores
C. Swanson
R. J. Brown R. Stubbs
J. H. Lawrence
Cosmopolitan Establishment
HONGKONG
R. A. Nicholson, superintendent
Office
T. F. Neves
Aberdeen Establishment
C. Fittock, Jr., superintendent
Tug "David Gillies
Capt. N. G. Major, master
Dredger "Canton River"
Capt. J. E. Watson, master
Hoosainali & Co., General Drapers,
Milliners, and Mercers-14,
Queen's Road Central, corner of Zetland Street
Hoosainali Abdeali
Abdeali Nooroodin, assistant
Ebrahim Goolamali, do.
舖奶牛房馬大
Tai-ma-fong nyau-noi-po
HORSE REPOSITORY AND HONGKONG DAIRY-
Causeway Bay
G. W. Gegg, manager
J. W. Peet, assistant L. A. Silva, clerk
HOWARD, E., Share and General Broker-6,
Des Voeux Road
@ı
Hu-se kup Ho-fu
HUGHES & HOUGH, Auctioneers to the Government, General Auctioneers, Share, Coal and General Brokers and Godown Proprietors-8, Des Voeux Road Central, corner of Ice House Street Edward Jones Hughes Thomas Frederick Hough
F. C. Hurley E. J. de Figueiredo J. T. da Silva
Hugo C. A. Fromm, Export and Import Commission Agent-4, Queen's Building, top floor (Head Office in Hamburg: 18, Glockengiesserwall); Tel. Address : Fromelde; Telph: 960.
H. Fromm (Hamburg)
Ad. Duebgen (Hamburg) signs per prò. W.Duebgen (Hongkong) signs per pro. J. A. da Silva
Sole Agencies:
D. Scholte & Co., Exporters, Am-
sterdam
Purshotam Vishram & Co., Exporters,
Manchester
G. F. Beck (Socks) Hohenstein-E. Rodi & Wienenberger A. G. (le-
wellery) Pforzheim
Schlossfabrik Altenbeken (Bell Locks)
Altenbeken i/W.
Siegmund Goldschmiedt (Piece Goods)
Grottau i/B.
Burtscheider Nadelfabrik (Needles)
Aachen-B
C. G. Boden & Sohne (Belts, Suspen-
ders), Grossröhrsdorf i/Sa. Gebrüder Schuster (inusical instrum.)
Markneukirchen
Baer & Rempel (Sewing Machines)
Bielefeld
Primas Bottles
Continental Typewriter "Le Clou" Cigarettes
Condensed Milk "Diamond Brand"
Shiu-cheong
HUMPHREYS& Co., W. G., Mchts. and Comm Agents Queen's Road; also_Avenue Buildings, 2-4, Billiter Avenue, London
W. G. Humphreys
W. M. Humphreys C. Humphreys V. F. V. Ribeiro Y. C. Wong
H. F. BarrOS
Agency
The State Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
The General Accident Fire & Life
Assce. Co. L‹l.
司公限有產資士利富堪
Hum-fu-li-se she-chan-yau-han Kung-sze
HUMPHREYS ESTATE & FINANCE CO., LD- Alexandra Building, Des Voeux Road
John D. Humphreys & Son, general
managers
Directors-J. W. C. Bonnar, J. Scott Harston, J. S. van Buren, Ho Tung and Dr. J. W. Noble
Enos Seth, secretary
IM# Bum-fu-li-se
HUMPHREYS & SON, JOHN D., General Managers and Agents--Alexandra Building, Des Voeux Road
Henry Humphreys John A. Jupp
E. Humphreys (London)
Enos Setli
J. M. Wong G. Rapp General Managers
Peak Tramways Co., Ld.
HONGKONG
Humphrey's Estate & Finance Co., Ld. A. S. Watson & Co., Ld.
Agency
Western Assurance Co., Toronto and
London
alu
Wo-kee
HUTCHISON & Co., JOHN D., Merchants-8,
Queen's Road Central
W. M. Watson
T. E. Pearce
A. A. Claxton
Agency
Patriotic Assurance Company
Muller Maclean & Co., New York
Colgate & Co., Perfumiers
司公險保安宜
I-on Po-him Kun-sze
I ON MARINE AND FIRE INSURANCE Co.
LD.--24 and 26, Bonham Strand West
Ko Faishan, director
Li Pok-kwan, do.
Li Sou-hin,
do.
Chan Shu-ming, secretary
U. Chenkmanı
IMPERIAL BREWING CO., LD., Brewers and Malsters(in liquidation); Tel.665-Works: Wongneichong Road
H. Percy-Smith, official liquidator, 5,
Queen's Road Central
INDO-CHINA STEAM NAVIGATION Co., LD.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., general
managers
A. Sinclair, marine superintendent G. Payne, marine supt. (Shanghai) G. C. Wilson, supt. engineer
do.
(For Officers of Strs. See end of Directory)
行銀通寶國萬
Man-Kwok-Po-tung-Ngan-hong
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION--9,
Queen's Road Central; Tel. Address:
Inbancor
W. M. Anderson, manager
L. R. Macphail, accountant
G. A. Moir, sub-accountant
A. A. Guterres J. A. Yvanovich M. H. Hartean A. C. Rozario
J. M. Roza Pereira Chas. Tetzel
T. M. Pereira L. A. S. P. Leite A. J. Hassan Miss A. Niel Ho Shui Sang
Tu Ku Un, compradore
INTERNATIONAL HOTEL - - 318
Queen's Road Central
To-shun
1131
and 320,
ITALIAN FAR EAST TRADING Co.-10, Des
Vœux Road; Tel. Ad: Labor
G. Barolo
L. A. Musso, signs per pro.
JACK, WM. C., M.L.N.A., Consulting Engr., Naval Architect and Surveyor--14, Des Voeux Road Central
JAMSET, Dr. K., L.M.S., Medical Practitioner -care of Messrs. N. Mody & Co., 54- 56, Queen's Road
JAMSETJEE, P.A., Broker--57-59, Queen's
Road Central
和怡 E-wo
JARDINE, MATHESON & Co., Ld., Merchants-
East Point and Pedder Street
Sir R. W. B. Jardine, Bart., governing
director
William Keswick, M.P. (England), man-
aging director
W.Jardine Gresson, managing director H. Keswick (absent)
D. Landale (Shanghai)
J. McKie, Shanghai
C. H. Ross (absent)
C. E. Anton, signs per pro. (H'kong)
W. F. Inglis,
do. (Shanghai)
T. S. Forrest
do.
H. V. Henson
do.
F. H. Bugbird
do.
(Yokohama) (do.
John Johnstone
do.
(Hongkong)
John Barton
H. W. Kilby,
do.
W. North,
do.
L. N. Leefe
A. C. Shorey,
do.
J. Forrester,
do.
R. Sutherland (absent)
A. J. Pumfrett
W. N. Fleming
F. McD. Courtney, do.
P. S. Jameson
Chas. Stewart,
do.
L. M. Bayley,
do.
J. T. D'Almada e Castro
R. Pestonji
E. F. Aucott
O. V. Lanning
G. H. Bowker
D. J. Donne
A. Morfey C. L. Maxwell
J. J. V. Remedios
K. F. Lay
1132
W. H. L. Warrener
R. S. Piercy
W. H. Tindal King
W. G. Goggin
A. Gregory
G. Hunter
T. Hunter
T. B. G. Tennent
J. McCaig
A. A. dos Remedios
F. X. Vieira Ribeiro
J. M. G. Pereira
G. A. Yvanovich
F. J. V. Ribeiro
S. E, da Luz
J. G. dos Remedios
A. M. da Silva
S. M. da Cruz
J. Baptista
L. E. dos Remedios
M. A. da Silva
A. F. dos Remedios
A. F. Osmund
E. E. Osmund
Agencies
HONGKONG
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Indra Line Ltd.
Shire Line of Steamers British India S. N. Co., Ld.
Western Australian Steam N. Co., Ld. Asiatic Steam Nav, Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Limited Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Triton Insurance Company, Ld. Alliance Assurance Company, Ld. Eastern Insurance Company, Ld. Guardian Assurance Co., Ld. China Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Luzon Sugar Refining Company, Ld. Hongkong Ice Company, Ld. EwoCottonSpinning & WeavingCo.,Ld. Hongkong Cotton S. W, & D. Co, Ld. Shanghai & Honkew Wharf Co., Ld. Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Ld. Shanghai Oil Company, Ld.
Hankow Race Club and Recreation
Ground
Bombay Burmah Trading Corptn. Ld. Nobels Explosives Co., Ld. Merryweather & Sons Ld.
British & Chinese Corporation Ld.
(joint agents
New York Lubricating Oil Co.
Barrett Manufacturing Co.
Spicer Bros. (Colonial and Foreign Ld.)
(See Advertisement)
司公船輪蘭荷本日國中華渣 Ja-wa-chung-kwok-yat-poon-ho-lan Lun-suen-kung-sze
JAVA-CHINA-JAPAN LIJN-York Buildings;
Tel. Ad: Javalijn
P. J. R. Bisschop, head agent
J. Jonckheer, signs per pro. G. Otten
W. L. A. Hissink
T. de Meester
C. Cabos
H. van Zuylen, marine supt.
J. A. Lam
R. G. Borges
Steamers:-
"Tjiliwong", "Tjibodas", "Tjipanas" "Tjilatjap", Tjimahi", "Tjikini", "Tjitaroen
Agencies
Koninklyke Paketvaart Mij
Sabang Bay Coaling Station
Steamship Co., "Nederland"
Steamship Co., Rotterdamsche Lloyd
Official Tourist Office of Batavia
成提 Chit-sing
JEBSEN & Co., Merchants-King's Building,
second floor; Telph. 305
J. Jebsen
H. Jessen
W. Schmidt, signs per. pro.
M. Jebsen,
J. Riecken
A. Jahand H. Finke H. Eggers F. Rummel A. E. da Silva F. M. Silva J. Gutierrez T. A. Barradas J. Bernardo J. P. Gutierrez
Agencies
do.
Jebsen Line of Steamers
Deutscher Rhederei Verein, Hamburg Badische Aniline and Soda Fabrik,
Ludwigshafen
JEFFRIES, H. U.--St. George's Building,
second floor
Agencies
Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Ld. The Kalumpong Rubber Co., Ld. Shanghai Ice, Cold Storage and
Refrigeration Co., Ld.
The Nagasaki Hotel Co. in Liquidation
師狀打士孖及士篤史臣贊
Chun-sun Sze-tuk-sze kap Ma-sze-ta chong-se JOHNSON, STOKES & MASTER, Solicitors, Proctors, and Notaries Public-Offices:
8, Des Voeux Road Central; Agents at Shanghai: Platt, Teesdale & Macleod; Agents in London: Stephenson, Har wood & Co., 31, Lombard Street, E.C
Herbert Johnson Gedge
R. F. C. Master,
solicitor
Androw H. G. Jackson, do.
W. W. Pelling
E. A. Fowler
Miss E. G. Baylis
Miss E. Long
Miss M. Chun Yut
M. A. Baptista
F. M. Xavier
L. Chanson
0. Kitchell
O. Mahomed
Juman Alli
HONGKONG
Un Kam Wa, Cheung Tsoi, Chan Chi,
Cheung Kit-tsoi, interpreters and translators
生醫頓佐 Jo-tan esang
JORDAN, FORSYTH, & GRONE, Medical Practitioners-Alexandra Buildings, 3rd Hoor; Telephone 23
Gregory P.Jordan, M.B.,C.M. (Ed.), M.R.C.S. Eng., Health Officer of the Port and Medical Inspector of Emigrants; residence: 15, Macdonnell Road; Telephone 43
Charles Forsyth,M.D., CH.B., F.R.C.S. (Ed.) Chater Bungalow, Nathan Road, Kowloon; Telep. K. 29
Fritz Gröne,M.B. (Lond.), D.PH. (Camb.), M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. Deputy Health Officer of the Port; 15, Queen's Gardens; Teleph. 671
G. E. Aubrey, M.D., B.S. (Lond.), M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.; res.: Peak Hotel; Teleph. 29
Cho-chee
JORGE & Co., Merchants-5, Zetland St.; P.O. Box 397; Tel. Ad: Alva; Telep. 251
F. J. V. Jorge
A. F. B. Silva-Netto
Frank J. V. Jorge
Miss O'Toole
Agency
Philippine Railway Co. Purchasing
Department
Joseru, J. E., Exchange Broker--Prince's
Buildings,second floor; Tel.Ad: Exchange
JOKEPH, E. S., Share and
General
Broker, Stockbrokers' Association
E. S. Joseph
士紳 Shan Sz
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE
Oficial
Hon. Dr. Atkinson
F. J. Badeley C. W. M. Beckwith Dr. John Bell J. F. Boulton C. F. W. Bowen-
Rowlands Hon. A. W. Brewin Frank Browne A. Chapnian Hon. W. Chatham Dr. F. W. Clark
C. Clementi
R. H. A. Craig
T. K. Dealy
S. T. Dunn
F. G. Figg
A. G. M. Fletcher C. H. Gale A. Gibson
H. H. J. Gompertz E. R. Hallifax F. A. Hazeland A.H.Hollingsworth, R. O. Hutchison E. A. Irving P. Jacks
J. W. Lee Jones
1133
P. N. H. Jones Dr. G. P. Jordan J. H. Kemp W. V. M. Koch E. C. L. Lewis F. W. Lyons J. Macdonald H. Macfarlane F. H. May, C.M.G. C. A. D. Melbourne C. McI. Messer Dr. W. B. A. Moore G. N. Orme Dr. W. W. Pearse H. R. Phelips J. I. Plummer S. B. C. Ross B. R. H. Taylor A. M. Thomson Dr. J. C. Thomson H. P. Tooker D. W. Tratmen G. H. Wakeman P. P. J. Wodehouse E. D. C. Wolfe D. Wood J. R. Wood G. A. Woodcock
Non-official
A. S. Abdulcader
C. E. Anton A. F. Arculli F. H. Arjanee J. Armstrong J.H.W.Armstrong Anthony Babing-
ton G. Balloch H. E. Bamji E. G. Barrett J. Barton J. M. Beck
Dr. R. A. Belilios H. W. Bird
L. G. Bird
J. W. C. Bomar
F. F. Bovet A. Bryer W. L. Carter H. G. Calthrop Ch'an A Fook Hon.SirC.P.Chater Chau Siu Ki
D. Clark W. E. Clarke
A. S. D. Cousland T. P. Cochrane J. F. Cox-Edwards
D. W. Craddock
A. Cumming
A. J. David
W. H. T. Davis A. Denison J. T. Douglas C. M. Ede, A. Forbes C. Forsyth W. N. Fleming W. G. B. Fuller Fung Wa Ch'ün L. Gibbs A. G. Gordon W. D. Graham W. J. Gresson C. S. Gubbay
H. R. B. Hancock H. E. N. Hancock Dr. G. M. Harston F. J. Halton Hon. Mr. E. A.
Hewett
Rev. C. H. Hickling E. H. Hinds Ho Took Ho Kai, C.M.G. Ho Kom Tong Ho Tung P. H. Holyoak A. S. Hooper T. F. Hough E. J. Hughes Henry Humphreys H, E R. Hunter
1134
HONGKONG
W. C. Juck
P. C. H. Potts
|
Rev. F. T. Johnson
E. A. Ram
J. A. Jupp
E. S. Kaloorie
C. J. Lafreutz Lau Chi Pak D. R. Law B. Layton Leung I"ui-chi A. R. Lowe E. F. Mackay C. G. S. MacKie A. Mackenzie F. Maitland
G. H. Medhurst J. R. Michael H. N. Mody G. C. Moxon Ng Hou Tsz Ng Li Hing M. S. Northcote E. Ormiston
Hon. Mr E. Osborne, A. H. Ougli J Paterson G.W. C. Pemberton] J. C. Peter
H. Pinckney Hon. Mr. H. E.
Pollock, K.C. W. Hutton Potts Pun Shu Tsoi
A. J. Raymond A. B. Rouse Almet Rumjahn J. I. Sanders B. B. Tacker
M. S. Sassoon
H. W. D. Shallard
E. Shellim
R. G. Shewal A. H. Skelton H. A. W. Slade M. Warre Slade J. R. M. Smith Frank Smyth Dr. F. O. Stedman M. Stewart H. E. Tomkins Tong Lai Chün Tseung Sz Kai Arthur Turner Un Lai Chuen J. Y. V. Vernon Wei Wah Leen Wei Yuk H. P. White
W. II. Wickham F. C. Wilford W. Wilson Wong Kam Fuk Yung Hin Pong
Gad-doo-li
KADOORIE & Co., E. S., Share and General Brokers-St. George's Buildings; Tel. Ad: Rialto; Telph. 148; P.O. Box 111
E. S. Kadoorie Ellis Kadoorie
G. C. Moxon
P. C. Potts
E. D. Haskell -
E. E. Ellis
E. M. Raymond
I. Gourgey
KAYAMALLY, & Co., M., Milliners, Drapers, and Commission Agents-6 and 8, Peel Street
Abdool Karim Abedin (Bombay)
Hoosenally Jamaludin.
K. Hoosenally
G. A. Abedin
F. Hoosenally
K. Camroodin
F. Camroodin
G. Hoosenally
發別 Pit-fat
KELLY & WALSH, LIMITED, Publishers, Prin-
ters, Bookbinders, Booksellers, Station-
ers, Newsagents, Tobacconists, &c.- York Building, Chater Rond
John West, John Morris, G. Brinkworth,
directors (Shanghai) T. Brown (London) Walter King, manager
W. H. Purcell J. H. Mead F. D. Haigh M. Fernandes
V. Franco
Printing Office, Duddell Street
W. T. Stebbing
N. Mahomet
KENSINGTON HOUSE, Millinery Establish- inent-1, Carnarvon Road, Kowloon Madame Edwards, proprietress
公婚
KEW & Co., J. W., Consulting and Motor
Engineers-14, Hotel Mansions
Sole Agents-Garduer Kerosene En- gines, Stationary aud Marine; Bridge- port Gasolene Motors
48 16 Kiu-nga esang
Kew Brothers, Drs, Dental Sur- geons-6 and 7, Alexandra Buildings
Chadwick T. Kew, D.D.s.
F. Howard Kew, D.D.S., Pennsylvania Irvin W. Kew, D.M.D., Harvard A. A. Carvalho, articled assistant
# NSX Ying-wong Tsau-lim KING EDWARD HOTEL-3, Des Voeux Rd. Cl
Dorabjee & Co.
CL
D. Dorabjee, proprietor
R. David
W. Symonds
Chas. G. Bearwolf
A. K. Ralunan
H. E. Craddock
11
KINGSCLERE, PRIVATE HOTEL-Kennedy
Road.
Mrs. G. Sachse
Miss K. Sachse
J. A, Sanh
✯
Kong-sing-chung-sze
KONG SING, Orro, Solicitor-17, Queen's
Road Central; Tel. Ad: Boomerang
Otto Kong Sing, solicitor
A. J. M. Gomes
Fung Cheung Ling, chief interpreter Chau Sham
Tang Sin Fan
KOTWAL, E. D., Cotton, Yarn and General
Broker-6, Ice House Street
KOWLOON - CANTON
RAILWAY
HONGKONG
(British
Section); Office: Kowloon; Telep. K. 43
E. S. Lindsey, general manager
R. Baker, distr. engineer, Kowloon W. Waite
J. C. Steen, asst. engineer
E. J. Evaus,
Shatin
J. E. Menagh, chief storekeeper
J. Morris, chief accountant J. H. Hartley, medical officer
J. Glaiserrean, chief clerk, corres-
pondence office
L. G. D'Almada e Castro, 1st acct. J. S. Azedo, accountant
KOWLOON DAIRY, THE-Kowloon City Rd.; Hongkong Office: 4, Hollywood Road Tel. Ad: Ah Wee
A. Ah Wee, proprietor and manager
KOWLOON HOTEL Elgin Road, Kowloon
Owen Elias Owen, proprietor
C. Chaytor, manager
N. Nicholas, assistant
司公限有做建及地置龍九 Karen Chi-ta Jep Kin-cho Yau-han Ang-s26 KOWLOON LAND AND BUILDING CO., LD.
Directors T. F. Hough, J. M. E.
Machado, J. Rodger
Hongkong Land Investment and Agency Company, Limited, agents
Ko-lo-sa
Kruse & Co, Storekeepers, Cigar Mer- chants & Comsn. Agts.--Hotel Mansions
John Meier (absent)
C. W. Longuet
P. Hell, signs per. pro.
P. P. Soares
G. Hartig
Agencies
Welsbach Incandescent Gas Light Co.
Cousis Cigarettes
Vafiadis Cigarettes
Kun-kun-æse
KUHN & KOMOR, Japanese and Chinese
Curiosities-Queen's Rond
Arthur Kuhn, proprietor
J. M. R. Xavier
AB Kwong-som-yuen-e-sang KWAN SUM IN, DR. L.M.S.I., Medical Practi-
tioner-18A, Stanley Street
Dr. K. H. Kwan, L.M.S.H., assistant
4Kwang Sang
KWONG SANG & Co., Shipchandlers, Coal Merchants, &c.- 57, 68 and 59, Con- naught Road Central
Yeung Ching Sak, manager Yeung Woon Pun, assistant
Kwok-kung-sze
1135
Kwok & Co., P. K., Merchants, General Importers and Commission Agents- 35, 37, Hing Loong Street; Tel. Ad: Importaron
P. K. Kwok, proprietor and manager C. P. Kwok, clerk and others
(See Advertisement)
LACK & DAVIS, Merchants, Hongkong- Hotel Mansions: Manila, Lack & Davis Building, Calle Exchange; Tel. Ad: Lack; Teleph. 381
G. M. Lack, partner J. L. Davis do.
A. S. Shealy
LAMBERT, JNO., Lloyd's Register of British. and Foreign Shipping Alexandra Buildings; Telep. 179
―
*** Lam-ke-kap-lok-ke
LAMKE & ROGGE, Ship and Freight Brokers -2, Connaught Road, New Praya; Telephone 91
A. W. Snowman
#A&E Lam-mat Ye-lang-kwoon LAMMERT, GEO. P., Auctioneer, Appraiser, Property and Goods Broker and Surveyor Duddell Street; Telep. 224
Geo. P. Lammert
H. A. Lammert, signs per pro. L. E. Lammert
J. M. Campos
LAND OFFICE-See
under Government
Departments
"LAND WE LIVE IN" HOTEL--332 and 334
Queen's Road West
Lin ka-la-fat
Lane, Crawford & Co, Shipchandlers, Grocers, Wine and Spirit Merchants Tailors, Outfitters, Sports Dealers House Furnishers and Musical In- strument Dealers-Chater Road and Ice House Street; Tel. Ad: Capulona; Teleph. 97
A. H. Skelton Duncan Clark F. C. Wilford
W. Anderson H. S. Bevan R. L. Bridger A. E. Crapnell F. M. L. Crawford C. M. Castro B. Eustace
1136
A. Feslier
A. D. Gee
E. M. Haywardl
F. A. Mackintosh H. Reeves R. T. Rowan H. E. Scriven C. A. Warnes Mrs. Elliott
Miss Audrew
Agencies
HONGKONG
Lane, Crawford & Co., Ld., Shanghai Lane, Crawford & Co., Ld., Yokohama John Little & Co., Ld., Singapore Taku Tug and Lighter Company, Ld. Shanghai Horse Bazaar Company, Ld. Tientsin Gas Company Ld.
Tientsin Waterworks Company, Ld. Tientsin Land Investment Co., Ld. Imperial Hotel, Ld., Tientsin Hotung Land Co., L., Tientsin
LAPICQUE & Co., P. A.--Merchants and Shipping Agents; Tel. Ad: Lapicgue; Telephone 950; P. O. Box 382--4, Queen's Buildings
P. A. Lapicque
J. P. Lamarre
A. T. Gomes da Silva, clerk
Agencies
Compagnie Francaise des Indes et de
l'Extreme Orient
Messageries Cantonaises
Comité des Armateurs de France
I Tak-ke-le-se
LAPRAIK & Co., DOUGLAS, Merchts.-Praya;
Telephone 17
J. H. Lewis
B P. White
G. W. Barton (Amoy
J. E. Gomes
M. Mahomed
General Managers
Douglas Steamship Company, Ld.
頓理
Lai tun
LAYTON & Co., Bill and Bullion Brokers--
1, Princes' Buildings, Des Voeux Road; Telph. 89; P O. Box 8
B. Layton
J. Paterson
B
Ming-tsing
LAZARUS, N., Optician-36, Queen's Road, D'Aguilar Street Entrance, Hongkong; also at London, Calcutta and Shanghai
A. S. Tuxford, manager
W. Lee, assistant
J. Lec, assistant
圖給司器機治倫柯及理
Li kap O-lan-che ki-hi-sw-wui-to
LEIGH & ORANGE, Civil Engineers, Archi-
tects and Surveyors-1, Des Voeux Rd.
Central; Telephone 167
A. H Ough, F.R.I.B.A., ASSOC.M. INST.CE A. Bryer
A. E. Griffin. ASSOC. M. INST. C.E.
W. L. Leask
G. G. Wood
G. M. Hay
林津 Jun-lan
LEMM, JOHN, Architect-64, Queen's
Road Central
John Lemm, F.L.A., M.R.S.J.
A. P. Samy, M.K.S.I.
S. Harry Ram
LIBRARY (See City Hall)
造建泰榮
LI PING-Building Contractor
Head Office: 10 High Street
德士連
Lin-se-tuk
LINSTEAD & DAVIS, Real Estate Agents-
Alexandra Buildings
F. Maitland
W. H. Potts
E. J. Chapinan
A. H. da Silva J. H. Carvalho
Gilman & Co., Agents
LLOYD'S
↑
Loi-si-li-shun-wai-she
LLOYD'S REGISTER OF BRITISH AND FOREIGN SHIPPING-Alexandra Buildings; Tel. Ad: Marine
John Lambert, R.N.R., ship and
engineer surveyor
LONDON MISSIONARY SOCIETY-See under
Protestant Missions in China
興
LONG HING & Co., Photographic Goods
Dealers-17, Queen's Road Central
Kom Cheong, signs per pro. Keung Wan Hok, do.
Hut-so-sze
LOWE, BINGHAM & MATTHEWS, Accountants and Auditors--St. George's Buildings, Chater Road; Tel. Ad: (in China) Ex- planate; in England, Celestor; Tel. 506; also Shanghai: 11, Ynen Ming Yuen Rd. London: Ingram Court, 167, Fenchurch Street
HONGKONG
A. R. Lowe, chartered accountant J. E. Bingham, F.LA, (N.Z.) F. N. Matthews, chartered accountant E. A. M. Williams, A.S.A.A. (Eng.) R. A. E. Paterson, chartered acct. E. M. Ross,
C. W. Porter,
J. P. McNaughton
C. A. da Roza
J. Melchior
A. H. Ribeiro
W. J. Heigh
M. Mencarini
T. Tripp
F. A. Remedios
J. J. Martin
利士洛
Lok-se-li
do.
do.
do.
Loxley & Oo, W. R., Merchants and
Commission Agents- York Building;
also Portland House, 73, Basinghall St.,
London, E. C.
J. M. Beattie
A. Beattie (London)
M. P. Beattie, signs per pro.
F. G. Chunnutt
D. Steel
O. R. Chunnutt
F. Drude
J. Chunnutt
H. Anderson
Agencies
British Crown Assurance Corporation,
Limited
Netherlands Fire In.Co., Est. 1845(Fire) Fatum Accident Ins. Co. (Accident) Queensland In. Co., Ld. (Marine) Jas. The Gourepore Co., Ld., Calcutta
(Linseed Oils)
Jenson & Nicholson, London(Paints and
Varnishes)
Gillespie Bros. & Co., Sydney (Flour
Millers)
Crossley Bros., Id. (Gas and Oil En-
gines, &c.)
LUZON SUGAR REFINING CO., LIMITED
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., general agents; Smith, Bell & Co., agents
J. Galbraith
J. Baillie
W. Paterson R. Thomson
W. Smith
* Mak-ton-lo-hong
1137
MACDONALD & Co., Engineers, Contractors and Machinery Agents-York Building, Chater Rd.; Tel. Ad: Kinghorn; Teleph. No. 143; Proprietor Kowloon Engineering Works, Hung-hom; Teleph. No. K19
Donald Macdonald
John Wilkie
Robt. Ilunter
James Ormiston
Kowloon Engineering Works
F. Knell
Agencies
A. R. Brown, Macfarlane & Co., Ld., Iron and Steel Merchants, Clasgow C. A. Parsons & Co.'s Land Turbines. Richardson, Westgarth & Co., Ld.,
Contraflo Condensers, "Nesdrum Water Tube Boilers, Morison's Evaporators
and Feed Water Heaters, etc.
Lobnitz & Co., Dredgers, etc. J. & E. Hall's Refrigerating Plants A. B. C. Coupler, Ld., Patent Automa- tic Buffer Couplers for Railway Carriages, etc.
Vulcan Crucible Co., Crucibles and
Moulders' Blacking
Glacier Anti-friction Metal Co.
Robert Brown & Son, Id., Paisley, Files, Bricks, Drain Pipes, Sanitary Fittings, etc.
The Elaterite Paint & Manufacturing Co., U.S.A., Iron, Steel, Wood, &c. A. & J. Main & Co., Ld., Glasgow, Structural Engineers, Steel and fron Buildings, Bridges, Wharves, &c. Surveyors to:
The British Corporation Bureau Veritas
Germanischer Lloyd (Machinery)
MACDONALD & HUNTER, Consulting Engi-
neers and Surveyors
Donald Macdonald Robert Hunter Surveyors to-
The British Corporation
Bureau Veritas
Germanischer Lloyd (Machinery)
AZ
Ma-kiu-wun Foo-lik-ba
C. Webb
H. C. Carmichael
Man-cheong
LYBAUGHT, WM., Wanchai Machinery Go- downs-10, Cross Lane, and Homeville, 153, Wanchai Road
MACEWEN, FRICKEL & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents-4, Des Vœux Road
Geo. Leo. Duncan
D. K. Blair
G. C. Clark
Agency
"L'Urbaine Fire Insurance Co., of Paris
36
1138
邊麥 Mak-pin
HONGKONG
MCBAIN, G., Mercht., &c.-22, New Praya Cl.
Choy Hui Lam
Wong Iu Agencies
Shanghai-Sumatra Tobacco Co., Ld. Maatschappij tot Mijn Bosch en Land-
bouwexploitatie in Langkat, Ld.
MCKEAN, G. W., D. D. S., Dental Surgeon-
2, Pedder Street
MAHOMED, R. H., General Draper, Ladies'
and Gent.'s Outätter, Milliner, &c., and
General Commission Agent-D'Aguilar Street, No. 16
院醫島馬港香
Heung-kong-ma-ji-ma i-yun
MAJIMA, K., M.D., Ig., Medical Practitioner,
ex-principal of the Formosa Govern
ment Hospital, and Civil Med. Officer
to the Home Dept.-No. 151, Wanchai Road; Telephone 548
司公險保安萬
Man-on Po-him Kung-se
MAN ON INSURANCE CO., LD.--2, Queen's
Road West
Directors-Lum Sin Sang, Kwan Fong Kok, Chiu Chung How, Chan Chu
Tsun
Chau Siu Ki, secretary
Wang-lee
MANUFACTURERS' LIFE INSURANCE Co. OF
TORONTO-3, Queen's Buildings
Bradley & Co., general agents
MARINE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION OF HONG-
KONG
Chairman C. Montague Ede Secretary--A. R. Lowe, c.a.
MARINE INSURANCE Co., LD.--22, Des Voeux
Road Central
Edbert A. Hewett, agent
MARINE & General MUTUAL LIFE ASSCE.
SOCIETY--22, Des Voeux Road Central
Edbert A. Hewett, agent
生醫霍理双
Ma-lee-kok-Esang
MARRIOT, OSWALD, M.D., B.S. (Lon.), L.R.C.P. (Lon.), M.R.c.s. (Eng.) (Stedman, Harston & Marriott)-Alexandra Buildings; resi dence: Hongkong Hotel; Teleph. No. 2
地孖 Ma-ti
MARTY, A. R., Shipowner and Merchant
24, Des Voeux Road Central
A. R. Marty (Haiphong)
G. J. Sequeira, signs per pro.
H. Barbey,
G. A. Yvanovich Jr. A Dreyfuss
A. J. M. Sequeira J. Tam
Ho Wing Shiu
Agencies
do.
Compagnie de Navigation Tonkinoise Service Libre des Fluviales du Tonkin
MASONIC
#✰ Yung-yan Wui-kwoon
Masonic Hall, Zotland Street ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED SCOTTISH RITE; Sovereign Grand Inspector-General for China-Ill. Bro. G. A. Wat- kins, 33°...
ARARAT LODGE OF ROYAL ARK MARI-
NERS, No. 264, E.C.
W. C. N.-H. G. Baker
I. P. C.-W. H. Wickham
Senior Warden J.-W. H. Purcell Junior Warden S.-W. Wolfe Treasurer-J. Young
Scribe W. J. Tutcher
Senior Deacon-Frank Graham Junior Deacon-N. A. Johannsen Steward C. H. Parkinson Guardian--J. C. Pendlebury Warder J. Vanstone
CATHAY CHAPTER, No. 1165
M. E. Z.-M. E. Comp. J.W.C.Bonnar H.-M. E. Comp. W. N. Fleming, P.Z. J.-Ex. Comp. P. H. Holyoak Scribe E-Comp. A. Chapman Scribe N.-Comp. J. A. Young Ppl. Soj.-Comp. Frank Graham First Asst. Soj.-Comp. J. Owen-
Hughes
-
Second Asst. Soj. Comp. J. J.
Stubbings
Treasurer E. Comp. P. Tester Janitor--J. Vanstone
DILIGENTIA LODGE OF INSTRUCTION
Hon. Treasurer-W, H. Purcell Hon. Secretary-Dr. R. A. Belilios
DISTRICT GRAND LODGE OF HONGKONG AND SOUTH CHINA (English Con- stitution)
D. D. G. M.-Sir Paul Chater, C.M.G. D. D. G. M. (designate)-W. Bro. T.
F. Hough
D. S. G. W.-W. Bro, G. A. Caldwell D. J. G. W-W. Bro. J. Rennie
HONGKONG
D. G.Treas.-W. Bro. C. J. Lafrentz D. G. Regtr.-W. Bro. J. J. Bryan D. G. P. B. of G. P.-W. Bro. W. J.
Hewett
D. G. Sec.-W. Bro. A. O'D. Gourdin D. S. G. D.-W. Bro. J. Helbling D. J. G. D.-W. Bro. R. D. Thomas D. G. S. of W.-W. Bro. J. W. Graham D.G.D. of C.-W. Bro. J. O. Hughes D. G. A. D. of C.-W. Bro. P. Tester D. G. Sword Bearer-W. Bro. H. L.
Higgs
D. G. Standard Bearer-W. Bro. W.
Wolfe
D. G. Standard Bearer-W. Bro.
H. F. Rankin
D. G. Organist-Bro. C.F.G. Grimble D. G. P. Bro. W. G. Saunders
D G. Asst. P.-Bro. F. Graham D. G. S.-W. Bro. C. Pittock Jr. D. G. Stewards-Bro. A. Chapman, Bro, C. S. Paget, Bro. T. H. Martin, Bro H. J. P. Anderson, Bro. H. S. Moss
D. G. Tyler-Bro. J. Vanstone Unofficial Members-W. Bros. W.
King, H. G. Baker
DISTRICT GRAND ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER
OF HONGKONG AND SOUTH CHINA
Dist. Grand Supt.-M. E. Comp. Sir
C. Paul Chater, C.M.G.
Dist. Second Gd. Ppl.-M. E. Comp.
T. F. Hough
Dist. Third Gd. Ppl.-M. E. Comp.
H. J. Watson
Dist. Gd. Scribe E.-M.E.C. A. O'D.
Gourdin
Dist. Gd. Scribe N.-M. E. Comp.
C. J. Lafrentz
Dist. Gd. P. C. of G. P.-M. E. Comp.
G. J. B. Sayer
Dist. Gd. Treas.-M. E. Comp. W.
J. Tutcher
Dist. Gd. Regtr.-M. E. Comp. C.
W. Longuet
Dist. Gd. Soj.-M. E. Comp. W.
King
Dist. Gd. First Assistant Sojourner
-M. E. Comp. H. Bathurst Dist. G. Second A. S.--M. E. C.
F. W. Kruse
Dist. Gd. Sword Bearer.-M. E. C.
H. G. Baker
Dist. Gd. Standard Bearer-E. C.
W. C. Drew
Dist. Gd. Standard Bearers-M. E. Comp. J. W. Graham. M. E. Comp. J. Moorhead, M. E. Comp. T. H. Smith
Dist. Gd. D. of Cer.-M. E. Comp.
C. J. Weed
Dist. Gd. D. D. of Cer.-M. E. Comp.
C. Fittock
1139
Dist, Gd. Asst. D), of C.--M. E. Comp.
W. N. Fleming
Dist. Gil. Organist -M. E. Comp.
R. D. Thomas
Dist.Gd.Janitor-Comp. J. Vanstone
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTTISH FREE- MASONRY IN THE DISTRICT OF HONG- KONG AND SOUTH CHINA
Grand Master-R. Wor. Bro. Dr. G.
P. Jordan
G. M. Depute-Wor. Bro. F. Howell G. M. Substitute-Wor. Bro. J. I.
Andrew
G.S. Warden-Wor. Bro.J.A. Tarrant G. J. Warden-Wor. Bro. J. Smith G. Secretary-Wor. Bro. H. Horley G. Treasurer-Wor. Bro. A. W. Hill G. S. Chaplain-Wor. Bro. D. Harvey G. S. Deacon-Wor. Bro. A. Ritchie G. J. Deacon Wor. Bro. E. A. Chap-
man
G. Architect-Wor. Bro. J. C. West G. D. of Ceremonies--Wor. Bro. H.
B. Bridger
G. S. Bearer Wer. Bro. J. Devney G. Standard Bearer-Wor. Bro. G.
W. Coysh
G. Inner Guard Wor. Bro. A.
Lawrence
G. Stewards-Bros. W. Roberston, Bro. W. Glendinning, Bro. C. D. Arnold, Bro. E. W. Dawson, Bro. J. P. Ulderup, Bro. J. Sibbit G. Tyler-Bro. J. Vanstone
LODGE EASTERN SCOTIA, 923 S. C. K'loon
LODGE NAVAL & MILITARY, No. 848, S.C.
R. W. M.-W. G. Coysh I. P. M.-J. C. West W. S. W.-L. D. Arnold W. J. W.-E. W. Dawson Secretary J. J. Blake Treasurer-Jas McLeod Sen. Deacon S. C. Walton Jum. Deacon-A. Pattison Dir. of Cer.-W. Blackman Chaplain--F. W. Will Steward--J. Ellis
Do. --J. Gipson Inner. Guard-F. Carman Tyler J. Vanston
PERSEVERANCE LODGE, No. 1165, E.C.,
1907-1908. Officers for 1909
Wor. Master-Wor. Bro. P. Tester Wor. Im Past Master-Wor. Bro.
P. H. Holyoak
Sen. Warden-Bro. F. Graham Jun. Warden-Bro. A. G. Coppin Chaplain-
Treasurer-Bro. A. Morfey Secretary--Bro. W. G. G. Worcester
36*
1140
HONGKONG
Sen. Deacon-Bro. J. D. Auld Jun. Deacon Bro. A. O. Lang Dir. of Cer.-Bro. W. L. Leask Im. Guard--Bro. R. A. Belilios Stewards Bros. P. P. Jameson and
Bro. H. L. O. Garrett Tyler-Bro. J. Vanstone
PHOENIX CHAPTER, No. 17, A. A. S. R.
ST. ANDREW'S R. A. CHAPTER, No. 218, S.C.
M. E. Z.-M. E. Comp. J. Devney H.-M. E. Comp. W. White J.-M. E. Comp. J. Clelland Scribe E.-E. Comp. T. Chee, P.Z. Scribe N.-E. Comp. S. Silverstone Treasurer-Comp. A. Ritchie P. Soj.-Comp. Ĥ. Tillman First Asst. S.-Comp. F. Hoggard Secd. do.-E. Comp.J.A.Tarrant,P.Z. Janitor--Comp. J. Vanstone
ST. JOHN'S LODGE, No. 618, S.C.
Right Worshipful Master-Wor.
Bro. J. Devney
Im. Past Master-Wor. Bro. G. Sim Wor.Senior Wdn.-Bro.W.Robertson Wor. Junior Warden-Bro. W. S.
Glendinning
Secretary-Bro. W. H. T. Boanas Treasurer--Bro. A. Ritchie Organist--Bro. W. Anderson Chaplain-Bro. H. Tellmann SeniorDeacon-Bro. F. Hoggard JuniorDeacon- Bro. J. G. Mc Ewan Inner Guard--Bro. J. Mackay Steward, 1st-Bro. S. J. R. Kelly Do. 2nd-Bro. W. Stuart Tyler-Bro. J. Vanstone
SUPREME COUNCIL OF SCOTLAND, Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite
G. A. Watkins 33° S.G.I.G.
UNITED CHAPTER, No. 1341, E.C.
M. E. Z.-E. C. Lewis H.-J. N. Jones
J.-J. McGlashan
Treasurer-H. G. Baker
Scribe E-W, Kent
Scribe N.-O F. Frost
Prin. Soj.-W. Wolfe
11
1st Asst. Soj.-W. J. Unwin 2nd
-C. W. Ward Dir. of Cer.-H. J. Knight Organist J. C. Pendlebury Steward H. Baily Janitor J. Vanstone
UNITED MARK LODGE, No. 419, E.C.
W. M.-J. N. Jones I. P. M.-J. Smith S. W.-E. C. L. Lewis
J. W.-W. Wolfe M. O.-C. E. Frith S. O.-W. R. Sutton J. O.-G. S. Hill Chaplain-J. W. Adnams Treasurer-H. G. Baker, P.M. Reg. of Marks-W. A. Edwards Secretary-W. H. Woolley, P.M, S. D.-W. J. Unwin J. D.-H. J. Knight D. C.-W. T. Edwards Steward C. H. Parkinson I. G. E. R. King
Tyler J. Vanstone
UNITED SERVICE LODGE, NO. 1341, EC.
W. M. Bro. W. Wolfe
S. W.-Bro. T. H. Martin J. W. Bro. W. Kent
Treasurer-Wor. Bro.H.G. Baker P.M. Secty. Wor. Bro. W. H. Woolley, P.M. S. D. Bro. J C. Pendlebury J. D.-Bro. J. W. Adnams Chaplain--Bro. H. J. Knight Organist Bro. J. J. H. Snell D. C. Bro, W. R. Sutton Asst. D. C.-Bor. C. A. V. Powell I. Guard--Bro. F. A. Brown Steward-Bro. W. Pincott Asst. Steward--Bro. F. P. Pepperell Tyler-Bro. J. Vanstone.
VICTORIA CHAPTER No. 525, E.C.
M.E.Z.-M. E. Comp. W. King H.-Ex. Comp. A. E. Crapnell J-Ex. Comp. W. Clement Drew Treasurer-Comp.
D. C.-Comp. S. D. Hickie Organist-Comp. J. W. White Scribe E. Comp. A. Morris Scribe N. Comp. A. W. Page Ppl. Sojourner-Comp. C. Pryce First A. S.-Comp. A. W. Ilott Second do. Comp. W. Davidson. Steward-Comp. R. T. Rowan Janitor J. Vanstone
-
VICTORIA LODGE, 1026
Immediate Past Master-Wor. Bro.
T. S. Hough
Wor. Master--Wor. Bro. J. O. Hughes Senior Warden-Bro. A. Chapman Junior Warden-Bro. G. M. Smith Chaplain--Bro. F. J. Halton Treasurer-Bro. T. E. H. W, Hill Secretary-Wor.Bro.A.O'D. Gourdin Senior Deacon-Bro. J. A. Young Junior Deacon-Bro. J. Robertson Dir. of Cer.--Bro, Geo. Grimble Organist-Bro. C. H. Blason Stewards-Bro. A. E. Wright
>>
-Bro. H. I'H. White, Jr. Inner Guard--J. J. Stubbings Tyler-Bro. J. Vanstone
ZETLAND LODGE, No. 525, E.C.
HONGKONG
W. M.-Wor. Bro. J. W. Graham I.P.M.-Wor. Bro. W. Clement Drew Senior Warden-Bro. C. Fittock, Jr. Junior W.-Bro. C. Pryce Chaplain-Bro. F. M. L. Crawford Treasurer-Wor. Bro. H. Sykes Secretary-Wor. Bro. B. B. Harker Senior Deacon-Bro. A. Morris Junior Deacon- Bro. H. W. Sayer Organist-Bro. A. W. White D. C. Bro. R. T. Rowan
Stewards-Bro. E. M. Hayward and
A. A. Bolton
Tyler-Bro. J. Vanstone
館旅原松
Matsubara, Japanese Hotel-18 Con- naught Road; Teleph. No. 405; Tel. Ad: Matsubara
Matsubara, manager
MATILDA HOSPITAL-Nos. 69 and 70, The Peak, Mount Kellet; Telephone No. 567
J.Herbert Sanders, M.D.,superintendent
Lai-yan yeuk-fong
MEDICAL HALL-Corner of Ice House Street
and Des Voeux Road
E. Niedhardt, analytical chemist
F. Sönksen, assistant
MEHTA, B. K., Broker
c/o E. D. Sassoon & Co.
Mat-che-se
MELCHERS & Co., Mchts.-Queen's Building
Hermann Melchers (Bremen)
A. Korff (Bremen)
C. Michelau (Shanghai)
J. W. Bandow
A. Widmann (Shanghai)
G. Friesland
A. Lamperski, signs per pro.
H. Warnsloli
O. Meyer
II Korten
F. Steinhoff
W. Stoermer
H. Claasen A. Winter
J. A. V. Ribeiro
J. A. C. V. Ribeiro L. F. V. Ribeiro M. A. dos Remedios J. M. Graca Wm. Gardner, Jr. F. X. dos Remedios J. G. d'Aquino
A. Ribeiro
Agencies
Imperial German Mail Line
Norddeutscher Lloyd
1141
East AsiaticSteamshipCo., Copenhagen R. E. A. S. S. Co., Ld., St. Petersburg Russian East Asiatic Co., Ld., St. Ptsrg. Swedish East Asiatic Co., Gottenburg N. D. L. East Indian S. S. Co.
Russian Ministry of Finance, St. Ptsrg. Deutsche Suedsee Phosphat A. G.,
Bremen
New Guinea Co., Berlin
Bismarck Archipel Ges. Berlin Russian Volunteer Fleet
Deut. Dampfschifffahrts Ges. Hansa Bremen Underwriters Germanischer Lloyd, Berlin Royal Insurance Co., Fire and Life Neuchateloise Soc. Suisse d'Assur, Transport Vers. Ges., Schwiez Basler Transport Versicherungs Ges Allgemeine Vers. Ges., Helvetia United Swiss Marine Insurance Cos. Internationaler Lloyd Vers. Act. Ges. Assurance Company "Mercur" La Aseguradora Espanola, Madrid Soc.d'Orient d'Entrepôts de Transport, Frankf Transp. Unfall & Glas. Vers.
A. Ges.
Farbenfabriken vorm. Friedr. Bayer
& Co., Elberfeld
Lanmanand Kemp. New York, Florida-
water
R. Avenarins & Co. Stuttgart, (Car-
bolineum) Gandy
Seacombe
Belt Manufacturing Co.,
M. C. Thomson & Co., Ltd., Glasgow
(Canvas)
Paul Lechler, Stuttgart (Inertol) Burt, Boulton & Haywood, Ltd., Lon-
don ([aline Disinfectants) Petrol Raff vorm. August Korff Bremen (Korff's Eng: Oils) Linoleumfabr. "Hunsa" Bremen Matheus Mueller, Eltville (Champagne) A. C. Meukow & Co. Cognac (Brandies)
Yow-le Ngan-hon
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA, LIMITED-
Queen's Road
Evan Ormiston, manager
A. E. Sleap, acting accountant
H. B. L. Dowbiggin, asst. accountant
R. J. dos Remedios, chief clerk
J. O. Remedios
E. Antonio
L. Laurel
(See Advertisement)
壁黎司公船郵梧港省華法
MESSAGERIES CANTONNAISES, Service Flu-
vial Hongkong, Canton et Kouang-si-
Head Office: Canton
P. A. Lapicque & Co., agents, No. 4,
Queen's Building
1142
司公船火西蘭佛
Fat-lan-sai Fo-shun Kung-sze
HONGKONG
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES, COMPAGNIE DES,
Paquebots Poste Français -- Queen's
Building
P. Thomas, agent
A. Gaudet
C. C. Corveth
F. M. X. de Souza
M. R. Beltrão
Ng Tin Yan, compradore
Agency
Chargeurs Réunis Steamship Co.
(See Advertisement)
E
Ku-fuk
MEURER FILS & Cie., Merchants-Ice House
Street; Head Office: Canton
Agencies
Comité des Assurs. Maritimes de Paris Comité des Assureurs Maritimes du
Havre
Messrs. Dayde & Pille, Paris.
Sun-chuen-loong
MEYERINK & Co., WM., Merchants and Commission Agents--Prince's Buildings, Des Voeux Road
Wm. Meyerink (Shanghai) M. Tiefenbacher (Hamburg) Gustav Engel
H. Tiefenbacher (Shanghai)
A. Neidt
F. Martin
J. M. da Rocha
V. B. de Souza
F. L. da Roza J. C. Rodrigues
A. F. da Costa E. Leitao
Agencies
Aachen & Munich Fire Insce. Co. Liverpool & London & Globe Insce. Co.
**** Me-ka king-kee
MICHAEL & Co., J. R., Mehts. and Commis- sion Agents, Share and General Brokers-- 1, Prince's Buildings; Tel. Ad: Myke; Teleph. 163; P.O. Box 391
J. K. Michael (London) S. H. Michael
Sidney Michael
MILITARY
Commanding H.M. Forces in South China and Hongkong-H.E. Major- General R. G. Broadwood. C.B.
STAFF
Aide-de-camp-Capt. J. R. C. Heath-
cote, 2 Cameron Highlanders General Staff Officer-Major A. H. S.
Hart-Synnot, D.S.O., P.S.C.
D. A. A. & Q. M. G.-Capt. W. M.
Stewart
Officer Commanding Royal Artillery Lieut Colonel G. D. Chamier,
C.M.G.
Chief Engineer-Col. C. W. R. St. John Commanding Royal Engineers-Lient.
Col. G. D. Close, R.E.
Officer Commanding Army Service Corps -Major H. F. T. Fisher, A.,8.0. ChicfOrdnanceOfficer-Lieut.-Colonel
C. C. Wrigley District
Paymaster-Lieut.-Colonel
H. D. Stacpole
Principal Medical Officer- Col, W. G.
A. Bedfor', C.M.G,
Inspector of Army Schools - Hon.
Lieut. D. Kimm
Chaplain to the Forces (Church of England)-Rev. A. D. L. Ennis, M.A. Officiating Clergymen
Rev. C. H. Hickling, Presbyterian Rev. A. Bone, Wesleyan
Rev. A. Placzek, Roman Catholic Chief Clerk Hd.-qrs, Office-Staff
Sergt. Major R. Williams Garrison Sergt.-Major-
School Master--E. J. Edwards and J.
Lynch
ROYAL GARRISON ARTILLERY--Victoria Barracks (Officers' Mess: Bowen Road) Comdg. Officer-Lieut-Colonel G. D.
Chamier, C.M.G.
Adjutant-Capt. G. T. C. Dwyer I. G. & R. F. Capt. F. A. Twiss, M.V.0. Arnament Staff Officers-
Captain-G. T. Brierley, D.S.0. Armament Officer-
Captain-P. L. Spicer
Lieut. D. 8. Dodgson
No. 88 Co., R.G.A., Victoria Barracks
Major D. F. H. Logan Capt.-G. E. Garnett Capt.-D. Clapham Lieut. D. Macleay Lieut.-R. H. Fitzroy Lieut.-G. P. Shedden Lieut.-F. B. Hitchcock No. 87 Co., R.G.A., Stonecutters
Major--H. R. Adair Capt.-V. L. Beer Lieut.-L. K. Leeson Lieut.-H. L. F. Dimmock Lieut.-J. de L. Simonds Lieut.-A. W. Chapman
No. 83 Company, R.G.A., Lyemun Major-A. R. Y. Kirkpatrick Capt.-G. B. Mackenzie Capt.-W. Lorign
Lieut.-H. G. Bagnall
Lieut.-C. P. G. Cameron
Lieut. I. Benton
2nd Lieut.-F. W. Thicknesse
HONGKONG
District Staff, R.G.A.
Warrant Officers-Mr. Gr. R. Muir, Mr. Gr. E. H. Brown, Sergt. Major (A.C.) A. W. Goddard, Sergt. Major A. E. W. White
Non-commissioned Officers 3rd Class Mr. Grs. F. Wicks, G. Watton, A.C. Turner, W. Day, G. Tompkins, G. G. Gooch, Co. Sergt. Major (L.G.) Craigie J.
HONGKONG-SINGAPORE BATTALION ROYAL GARRISON ARTILLERY-Gun Club Hill
Barracks, Kowloon
Commanding Officer-Major H. L.
Kirke, R.G.A.
Adjutant-Capt. R. D. Crawford
R.G.A.
Subadar-Major--Subadar-Major Ah-
med Din
No. 2 Company
Captain G. F. C. Finch, R.G.A. Lieut.-T. A. Whyte, R.G.A. Lieut.-A. Creery, R.G.A. No. 3 Company
Captain J. H. M. Beasley, R.G.A. Lieut.-G. F. C. White, R.G.A, Lieut.-L. R. E. W. Taylor, R.G.A. No. 5 Company
Captain-P. H. Climo, R.G.A. Lieut.-H. S. Thompson, R.G.A. Lieut.-C. V. S. Skrimshire, R.G.A. Native Officers, No. 2 Company
Subadar Bulaka Singh Jemadar-Hakam Singh No. 3 Company
Subadar Muhd Ali Jemadar Mohd. Din No. 5 Company
Subadar Mahomed Ali Khan Jemadar Rashan Khan
ROYAL ENGINEERS
Chief Engineer-Col. C. W. R. St. John Staff Officer-Lieut. C. J. Aston Officer Commanding-Lieut. Col. G.D.
Close
Major-W. M. Pine
Commanding 25th Co. R. E.-Capt.
G. H. Aldison
Commanding 40th Co. R. E.-Major,
Caulfield, ST. G.R.S. Captain H. L. Bell
Lieut. and Qr.-Master-G. A. Pickles Lieutenant-B. E. Coke
Do. -E. Woodhouse
-A. P. W. Wedd
Do.
Do.
-G. P. Courtney Do. -C. R. Shannon
Do. -C. N. Rivers-Moore Inspr. of Works-Major A. J. Morris Suptding. Clerk-A. E. Johnson Chief Draughtsman G. B. Fenton
ARMY SERVICE CORPS
1143
Officer Commndg.--Major H.F.T. Fisher Officer in charge Supplies and Trans-
port--Capt. C. H. D. St. Clair Officer in Charge Mule Transport,
Kowloon-Lieut. N. J. Williams Officer in Charge of Barracks-Lieut.
and Q.-M. A. A. C. Thynne Chief Clerks--1st Class Staff Sergt- Major L. C. Bagg, Staff Sergt-Major B. R. Williams
Civil Establishment
Clerk--M. Alarakia
Store Accountants-H. Horley, J. J.
Blake, J. Robinson
ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS
Principal Medical Officer and Com- manding Royal Army Medical Corps, South China Command- Colonel W.G. A. Bedford, o.M.G., M.B.,
R.A.M.C.
Specialist Sanitary Officer, South China Command Major P. J. Probyn, D.S.O., M.B., R.A.M.C. Officer in Charge Military Hospital Victoria and Commanding 27th Com- pany, Royal Army Medical Corps- Lieut.-Colonel Sir J. Fayrer, Bart., M.D., F.R.C.S., EDIN.
Officers doing duty at the Military
Hospital Victoria-
Capt. A. D. Waring, R.A.M.C. Capt. 3. A. Craig, R.A M C.
Lieut. W. J. E. Bell, M.B., R.A.M.C. Lieut. H. M. J. Perry, R.A.M.C. Lieut. & Q. M.-E. V. Saunders Chief Wardmaster--Sergt.-Major E.
Edser, R.A.M.C.
Officer in Charge Military Hospital, Kowloon-Major S. Macdonald, M.B.,
R.A.M.C.
Officer doing duty in Military Hospital, Kowloon-Lieut. F. R. Coppinger, M.B., Capt. W. A. Mearns, M.B., Indian Medical Service
Kwan-hi-chong
ARMY ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT
Chief Ordnance Officer
C. C. Wrigley
Lieut.-Col.
Ordnance Officer in Charge-Capt.
J. A. S. Murray
Inspecting Ordnance Officer--Capt.
W. G. Lyddon
Inspector of Ordnance Machinery-
Capt. O. Brown
Deputy Commissaries of Ordnance- Capt. A. Baker, Lieut. J. Nicholson Chief Clerk to Chief Ordnance Officer
--Sub-Conductor S. N. Smith
Chief Clerk to Ordnance Officer Sub-
Conductor W. A. Allen
1144
HONGKONG
Clerks, Army OrdnanceCorps.-Sergts.
A. Graham, T. Cheshire Civilian Clerk-A. R. Abbas Chief Foreman-H. L. Stringer Foremen--E. Hearle, J. H. Maycock, B. G. Holloway, G. T. Knight, W. H. Goulding and Sergeant E. Passaway Civilian Artificer--À. Hamilton Artificers
Armament Sergt. Major F. N. Hooper, Armament Qr. - Mr. Sergt. R. Moore, G. Edser, Arma- ment Staff Sergts. E. Fortnum, L. Lawley, A. G. Leach, R. Richards, A. Sargeant Armourers
Armourer Staff Sergts. W. Shaw, G. W. Clissold
ROYAL ORDNANCE DEPOT
Naval Ordnance Officer-Major C. L.
Sheppard
Asst. Ordnance Store Officer--R. W.
Wharhirst
First Class Writers-M. W. Bishop,
C. Miller
Writers
O. Madar, E. M. Santos,
M. R. Salleli
Asst. Laboratory Manager - E. Hear! Storehousemen C. Armstrong, W.
Speare, S. Foster, L. Medina
ARMY PAY DEPARTMENT
District Paymaster and Treasury Chest Officer Lt. Col. H.D. Stacpolė, A.P.D.
Staff Paymaster-Lieut. Colonel W. B.
Lander, A.P.C.
Chief Clerk-Staff Sergt.-Major F. T.
Lake, A.P.C.
Clerks Staff Qr. Mr. Sergt. R. W. Anderson, E. G. Baldry, Staff Sergt. G. L. Heath, Sergts. A. C. Clark, W. Williams, R. Mann, H. Perdue
VOLUNTEER CORPS-HONGKONG
Commandant-Lieut. Colonel A. Chap-
man V. D......
15 June, '08
Second in Command-
Major D. Macdonald......15 April '07 Staff Officer, Capt. A. J.
Thompson.
.18 April '07 Surgn. Capt. C. Forsyth...... 8 Sep. 07 Surgeon Lt. J. W. Hartley, 21 Sep. 07 Corps Serg.-Major W.Higby, 16 Oct. '03 Staff Armourer Sergeant
G. W. Avenell Orderly Room Clerk-
Lo Chiu Hoi
4 May '06
1st Sept. '09
No. 1 Company H. K. Volunteer Artillery. Capt. W. Nicholson.....15 April '07 Capt. D. Macdonald 1st Cinque Ports A. V. (attached).
.13 June '03 Lieut. J. A. T. Plummer...15 Oct. '03 Lieut. H. W. Kennett...12 March '06
No. 2 Co. H. K. Volunteer Artillery
Capt. G. P. Lammert......17 July ba Lieut. J. S. Gubbay......12 March '06 Lieut. J. J. Andrew.. .......11 Oct. '09 No. 3 Co. H.K. Volunteer Artillery
Capt. J. H. W.Armstrong 15 Oct. 08 Lieut. M. S. Northcote 12 Sep. 02 Lieut. L. C. Ree......... .11 Oct. 200 No. 4 Co. H.K. Volunteer Artillery
Capt. T. Skinner.. Lieut. W. M. Scott Lieut. E. C. D. Wolfe H. K. Vol. Engineer Company
Captain W. A. Crake ́, Lieut. W. Russell..
H. K. Volunteer Troop
Lieut C. H, Ross
Infantry Co.
Capt. G. G. Wood..... Cadet Co.
.15 Oct. '03
23 Jan. 103
------
3 Feb. '05
16 Feb. 06 .11 Oct. '09
5 Jan. '06
.26 March '04
2nd Lieut. W. H. Williams 8 April '08
HONGKONG VOLUNTEER RESERVE ASSOCIA-
TION, THE,
Chairman Sir Henry S. Berkeley Vice-Chairman-W. H. Wakeman Hon. Secty. Dr. E. Evan-Jones
MISSIONS
For Protestant Missions See end of
China Directory
司公菱三
A
Sam-ling-kung-sze
MITSUBISHI GOSHI-KWAISHA-2, Pedder St.
H. Oishi, manager
K. Miyasaki
S. Hayakawa O. Sasaki H. Yamashita K. Yamada T. Fuwa
#E Sam Ching
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LTD., Merchants- Prince's Buildings, Ice House Street; Tel. Ad: Mitsui; Telep. 155; Head Office:Tokyo
M. Kobayashi, manager K. Shirai, signs per pro. T. Sumü,
M. Aoki
S. Emura R. Hasegawa T. Ide T. Kanada K. Katoli
T. Kawakami H. Kimura S. Koyanagi R. Meiji
K. Minami
S. Mori
T. Narata E. Nishioka
do.
T. Numata
S. Ohta M. Sawada K. Shimada
K. Shinozawa
S Suzuki
Y. Takata H. Tanaka
H. Tsuda
HONGKONG •
Sole Agents-Coal Mines, Miike, Tagawa, Yamano, Ida, Hokoku, Hondo, Kana- da, Kishima, Mameda, Mannoura, Ohmourn, Ohtsuji, Sasahara, Tohmi- yama Tsubakuro, Yoshio, Yunokibara Agencies
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Limited Nippon Fire Insurance Co., Limited Meiji Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Shanghai Cotton Manftg. Co., Ld.
Dai Nippon Brewery Company Ld.
(See Advertisement)
崎宮
Kun Kee
MIVABAKI & Co., Coal Merchants-2,
Connaught Road; Tel. Ad: Yutaka; Telep. 724
N. Miyasaki, principal (Shimonoseki)
DAW
Mo-tee kung-sze
Mopy & Co., N., Merchants, 54 and 56,
Queen's Road Central
Ardaseer N. Mody (Bombay) Framjee H. Arjanee (Bombay) NesserwanjccF.Mowdawalla(Calcutta) Navrojee Jamasjee Arjanee (Bombay) Bomanjee L. Batliwara
Ardeshir C. Antia
Shiavux B. Batliwara
Tung-lee
MOULDER & CO., A. B., Exporters and Im- porters and Commission Merchants- Hotel Mansions; Tel. Ad: Moulder
A. B. Moulder Edward Pond Bayard Moulder
A
Mow-teih-le
Moutrie & Co., Ld., S.-Pianoforte and Organ Manufacturers, Repairers, Tuners
and Importers, Musical Instruments and
Music Dealers-York Buildings, Chater
Road; Tel. Ad: Moutrie; Teleph. 527
Albert E. Paine, manager
J. W. Forbes
L. Wagner
P. J. West
T. Shune
Head Office-Shanghai
Branches-Tientsin, Singapore & London
1145
MÜLLER, JUSTI & Hoch, Medical Practi- tioners Hotel Mansions; Telephone 159 0. Muller. M.D., res. 7, Macdonnel
Road; Telephone 347
K. Justí, M.D., res. Fairview, 3, Robin-
son Road, Telephone 127
K. Hoch, .., res: 2, Bay View Villas,
Kowloon; Teleph. K. 100
館眞寫野佐谷梅
MUMEYA & SANO, M., Japanese Photo-
graphers-SA, Queen's Road Central
F. Sano, manager
T. Oikawa, operator F. Sakata, do.
R. Fujiyama, cashier H. Ogawa, assistant Lo Kun Cho, operator Lo Yun Fun, assistant K. Kinoshita, do. J. Koganemaru, do.
MUSEUM (See City Hall)
素麽
Mo-su
Musso & Co., V.P., Merchants, Ship Owners
and Commission Agents-Duddell Street
V. P. Musso di Peralta
F. P. Musso
L Borello
熊兆 Siu-Leong
Musso & Co., L. A., Merchants-4, Dud-
dell Street; Tel. Ad: Labor
Ah Cheong
助妙 Mu-tso
Mutual Stores, The, General Store- keepers, Wine and Spirit Merchants- 39, Queen's Road Central; Branch 54 Shakee St., Canton; Telephone No. 436, Hongkong; Telephone No. 1437, Can- ton; Tel. Ad: Mutual, Hongkong; Stores: Canton
Tamn Hock Po, general manager Ho Man
N. Wong
Sole Agents King Edward VII. Whisky
生醫爐打來拿
Nalla-daru-E Sang
NALLADAROO & Co., F. P., General Mer- chants and Commission Agents--3A,
Wyndham Street; Head Office: Calcutta
F. P. Nallacaroo (Calcutta)
A. D. Vania, (Canton)
D. D. Gazdar, agent
1146
行銀理滙華中
.HONGKONG
Chung-wa Wui-li-ngan-hong
NATIONAL BANK OF CHINA, LIMITED--5.
Queen's Road Central; Tel. Ad: National
P. Loureiro, acting manager Peter Davidson, accountant
Li Wai Ching and other Chinese
assistants
H. M. NAVAL YARD
Dock-yard
In charge of Naval Establishments and Captain of H. M. S. "TAMAR"- Commodore H. Lyon, R.N. Naval Secretary-E. C. Blanchflower,
R.N.
Secty's Clerk-E. C. Oliver, R.N. Chief Writers-A. R. Martin, C. H.
Foley
Royal Naval Hospital
Naval Officer in Charge-Commodore
H. Lyon, R.N.
Deputy Inspector General--W. Tait,
M.B., R.N.
Staff Surgeon-L. A. Baiss, R.N.
Do. --A. La T. Darley, R.N. Head Sister-Miss Mary Bartlett Nursing Sisters-Miss Ada E. Wood-
ruff, Miss Lily M. Warner Dispenser Eldred Irving Writer-E. A. dos Remedios
CIVIL ESTABLISHMENTS. H. M. Dockyard and Ordnance Depot
Supt.-Commodore H. Lyon, R.N. Secretary and Cashier-J. Hewetson Senior Writer-Creese
Writers T. C. Mundey, B. M. Vieira, Chu Wai Fong, Leung Nai Poom, R. Markar, Lani Wei Cho Commander (N)-Commander M. H.
Penfold, R.N.
King's Harbour Master-Lieutenant
H. Butterworth, R.N.
Lieutenant (T)-Lieutenant L. E. H.
Royle, RN.
Boatswain R.N.-W. Booley Gunner (T) R.N.-H. Gibson Master of Tug "Cherub"--S. West Engineer do. -C. McKinley Chargemen-H. Small, W. Meadows Writers F. E. Budden, W. G. Leong,
Wong Tak Kwong
Inspector of Police A. Lawrence Sergeants A. George, W. Matthews, T. J. Taylor, H. W. Titmas, H. Marriott, S. McKnight, A. Tucker and 25 European Constables. Indian Sergeant Major in Charge- Abdool Latff, 7 Sergeants and 74 Constables
Chief Constructor-W. T. Hockaday Asst. Constructors-J. C. Joughin, Č.
W. Kerridge
Foreman-G. Bedford Inspectors-T. P. Stevens, L. A. Boul- tér, H. Tanner, W. Boyland, F. W, Guddie, H. J. Hooper Chargemen-J. A. Dove, G. Rees, E Morley, C. W. Doughton, E. Harr- ington, G. R. Thomas, W. Pope, A. Adams Draughtsman--J. H. Penfold Senior Writer A. Rogerson Writers A. E. Collins, A. Abbass, Wong Shui Leong, Lan Quai Pui T. M. Pereira
Chief Engineer - Engr. Commander
F. W. Highton, R.N.
First Asst.-Engineer Commander M.
Rundle, R.N.
Assistant-Engineer Lieutenant C.
Main, R.N.
Engr. Lieutenant-W. N. MacDonald,
R.N., for Torpedo Sub Depot. Foremen W. S. Diggins, E. A
Chapman
Inspectors-H. J. Maddicks, G. S. Hill, J. A. Gunnell, W. H. Bennett, J. Taylor
Senior Writer E. Carter
Writers R. Stewart, A. S, Abbass, S. A. Hassan, Ho Ying Pong, Cheung Chu Ngau
Draughtsman-W. F. Taylor Chargemen-J. Hutcheson, W. Drew, H. Lock, A. Harrison, A. Brock, J. H. Coveney, H. Woodward, H. Langdon
Electrical Engr.-E. T. Williamos Inspector A. W. Abraham Writers W. A. Rundell, Hing In Chi Draughtsman-C. McCarthy Fitters-G. Cousins, F. Brown Station Supervisors-H. Jackson, W.
J. Williams, G. Grosset
Naval Store Officer--H. Rissland Asst. Naval Store Officers-J. C. Kell,
R. P, Carter, J. P. Cohen Senior Writer-H. James Writers-E P. Flood, A. E. Wright
S. Ackber, W. Sahmet, P. D'Agostini, S. Ismail, A. Rahman, M. Addries, M. S. Hartcam, U. Kwan Po, Lum Cho Hiug, U. I. Tung, Chan Fuk Iu, Chan Fung Iu, Pun Ping Leung, G. Markar, Ip Shui, Ghak Meito Inspectors-H.E. Fentiman, W. Morris Storehousemen-C.Welch, J. Marshali, J.Payne, W. A. Barnett, G. H. Elliotty W. J. Lewington, J H. Jenkins, 5. C. Lethbridge E. A. Pearson
HONGKONG
Expense Accts. Officer -H.W.Clothier Senior Writer-J. W. S. Taylor Writers--A. E. Combes, L. C. Xavier, Wong Shui Kwong, Hung Iu Kwong, Lui Man Shui
Auditing Officer Staff Paymaster R.
Walker, R.N.
Writers E. J. Treadgold, Lo Yuk
Shan, Kwok Choy
Suptdg, Civil Engineer-H. E. Oakley. Asst. Civil Engineers--H. F. Bowen,
A. Gilpin
Asst. Surveyor-G. D. Callow Draughtsman-A. G. Pile Foreman of Works-H. Shires Acct. Clerks-U. Tsung Hong, Chung Tat Ting, Au Chiu Ming, Ping Kwok Fook, Ip Tsung Ki, Cheung Foo Chee
Victualling Store Officer-J. R. Tapp Assistant Store Officer- E. J. Gill Senior Writer-P. R. Adams Writers N. Marques, Cheung Ting
Shang, S. Jex
Leading Man of Stores-A. Blowey Storehousemen--T. C. Snowden, W.
Woodley
Naval Ordnance Store Officer-Major
C. L. Sheppard
Assistant Ordnance Store Officer-R.
W. Wharhirst
Writers-N. W. Bishop, C. Miller Foremen Messrs. Speare and Arm-
strong
Chaplain-Rev. O. R. Hughes, R.N. Medical Officer Surgeon A. D. Spald-
ing, R.N.
Sick Berth Steward-O. F. Frost
NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL MAATSCHAPPIJ (Netherlands Trading Society)--Queen's Road; Tel. Ad: Gardona; Head Office: Amsterdam; Teleph. No. 578
J. F. van Rees, agent
J. Molleman, accountant
J. D. F. Mulder
M. H. Wontman
C. M. P. Remedios
J. M. Rew
C. Sequeira
行銀達安國荷
Ho Kwok On Tat Ngan Hong
NEDERLANDSCH INDISCHE HANDELSBANK
(Netherlands India Commercial Bank)-
18, Des Voeux Road Central; Tel. Ád: Handelbank
C. Woldringh, manager
C. J. H. van Dellen, accountant R. N. W. Nikkels
E. G. d'Aquino
IF Nim-ma-tse
1147
NEMAZEE, HAJEE MAHOMED HASSAN, Mer- chant and Commission Agent-41, Wyndham Street; Tel. Ad: Amintojar
H. M. H. Nemazee
M. H. A. Shirazee
A. M. F. Pereira
M. A. Kazerani
NEW TRAVELLERS' HOTEL-70, Queen's
Road Central
Mrs. Esther Oliver, licencee
A. Kotas, manager
NEW YORK HERALD
W. H. Donald, Representative; Tel. 800;
5, Babington Path
WHO'S WHO IN THE FAR EAST
Proprietors Donald
F. L. Pratt and W. H.
NIPPON CLUB-Ice House Road; Tel. 301
司公船郵本日
Yat-pun-yau-shuen-kung-sze
NIPPON YUSEN KAISHA (Japan Mail Steam-
ship Company)-Prince's Building, Cha- ter Road Tel. Ad: Morioka
T. Kusumoto, manager
N. Ohtani, assistant manager I. Matsudaira (Conton) U. Yoshikawa K. Mori K. Hanaoka Y. Noro N. Hayashi Y. Kagiyama S. Yoshikawa M. Yamasaki Francis Gomes Miss Gomes T. Tamenari A. Hara
T. Kishimoto
Agencies
Great Northern Steamship Company,
(Tel. Ad Northship)
:
Great Northern Railway Company
Nissin Kisen Kaisha
(See Advertisement
華日 Yat-Wah
NISHIZAWA & Co., Importers, Exporters,
Shipping and Commission Agents; Tel.
Ad Nishizawa; A.B.C. 5th Code used;
Teleph. 841-33, Queen's Rd. Central
M. Fujii, manager
T. R. O'Hashi, assistant
I. Yoshita
B. Nomura
1148
N-po E-sang
HONGKONG
NOBLE, DR. JOSEPH W., Dental Surgeon-
18, Bank Buildings, Wyndham Street
Jos. W. Noble, D.D.S.
J. M. Crago, D.D.S.
E. G. Curry, D.D.S.
E. Evan-Jones, D.D.S.
司公務船國德理總
Tsung-li-ta-kwok-shun mo-kung-sze
NORDEUTSCHER
Technical Superintendent's Office-2,
LLOYD, Nautical and
New Praya; Tel. Ad: Inspection
K. Messner, asst.
do.
Capt. P. Hermeling, marine supt.
Joh. v. Keigen, supt. engineer
Jens Nielsen, asst,
do.
A. Uschmann, godown keeper
P. Ike clerk
F. Ribeiro, clerk
館字印也郎囉
Lo-long-ya Yan-tsz-koon
Noronha & Co., Government and General Printers and Publishers
-6, Des Voeux Road; office of "Govern-
ment Gazette"
J. M. de Castro Basto
E. J. Noronha
B. S. F. Basto
J. A. Basto
L. Santos, foreman
館字印也郎羅新
Sun Lo-long-ya Yan-tsz-koon
NORONHA, L., Printer and Publisher 25,
Connaught Road, Central
ATB No-chin-na kung-sze
NORTH CHINA INSURANCE COMPANY, LD.- Alexandra Buildings; Tel. Ad: Mandarin; Telph. 380
W. F. Gray, acting agent
A. C. da Silva
B. L. de Carvalho
OCCIDENTAL HOTEL-33-44, Haiphong Rd.,
Kowloon
H. Ruttonjee, proprietor
XA Chu-tam-man-she
"ODD VOLUMES," HONGKONG, Literary,
Scientific and Debating Seciety
President-H.E. Sir Frederick Lugard,
K.C.M.G., D.S.O.
Vice President
K.C.M.G.
Sir Henry May,
Hon. Secretary--H. E. Pollock, K.C. Hon. Treasurer-W. H. Purcell
OLLIA & Co., N. D.-4 Queen's Buildings; Head Office: Amoy; Teleph. 28; P. 0. Box 366
F.K. Tata, manager, Hongkong branch E. K. Tata, assistant
Ou-lin-ton-loo-teow-tin
ORIENTAL HOTEL-2, Queen's Road Central
F. Reichmann, manager and proprietor
司公限有酒麥東大
Oriental Brewery Ltd., Brewers and Manufacturers of Ice-Office: Prince's
Building; Brewery: Lai Chi Kok; Teleph.
K79; Depot: 55-57, Des Voeux Road: Tel. 479; Cable Address: Brewing A. Hocking, general manager H. E. Hoffman, chief accountant
P. A. Cruz, clerk
M. Lauritsen, chief engineer
C. Lauritsen, supt. bottling dept.
F. Hauswirth, brewmaster
N. L. Railton
廠煙方東
A Tung-fong-in-chong
ORIENT, THE, Tobacco Manufactory-
Factory and Office: Mongkoktsui (be
tween Dundas and Soy Streets, entrance
from Nathan Road)
C. Ingenohl, proprietor
H. Sieling
W. Schmidt
A. Romero
社會式小船阪大
Ta-pan-sheung-shun-chi-sik-wui-se
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA Head Office:
―
Osaka, Japan (The Osaka Mercantile.
S. S. Co. Limited), Second Floor; 1, Queen's Building
Tadaichi Arima, manager
S. Matsubara (Foochow) S. Hashimoto
K. Shima (Canton)
Y. Nakagawa
Y. Akaishi (Amoy) M. Uchiyama S. Hori
G. Nakamura T. Miyaji (Foochow) M. Ohtsuka do. S. Kajita (Amoy) M. Sugita M. Rahfeek
Chan Kwan Yuen
(See Advertisement)
OSMAN & CASUM, Milliners, Drapers, Haberdashers, etc.-1 and 3, D'Aguilar Street
Ho-si-mun
OSMUND, C., Commission
Belilios Terrace
OWL GRILL ROOM
R. Daly, licencee
ELA Pat-pa-lee
HONGKONG
Agent-16,
PABANEY, EBRAHIMBHOY, Merchant - 1,
Duddell Street
do.
Sir Currimbhoy Ebrahim,Kt.(Bombay) Mahomedbhoy Currimblioy, Fazulbhoy Currimbhoy,
do.
Gulamhusenbhoy Currimbhoy, do.
Esmalbhoy Chandoobhoy, manager,
Janinaliomed Meheralli
Joosabbhoy Hassum
Zohuralibhoy Peerbhoy
Fazulbhoy A. Hassumam A. B. Avasia, broker
Bombay and Calcutta-Currimbhoy
Ebrahim & Co.
Shanghai. Kobe and Singpore-Ebra-
himbhoy Pabaney
PACIFIC COAST LUMBER MILLS LD., THE, and The Hastings Shingle Mfg. Co., Ld., Manufacturers of Dock-yard and Railway Timbers
Office: No. 5, Second Floor Alexander
Buildings
Th. W. Kydd, Oriental representative
司公船輪西東旗花
Fa-ki Tung-sai Lun-shuen kung-sze
PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP Co.
OCCIDENTAL AND ORIENTAL STEAMSHIP Co.
TOYO KISEN KAISHA
I
PORTLAND AND ASIATIC STEAMSHIP CO.
Office: King's Building
Fred. J. Halton, agent
H. ' H. White
Jos. O. Sheppard
W. L. Condon
C. A. Lopes
L. G. d'Aquino
C. E. Lynam F. L. Bates A. L. Batcock
I. J. Lossius
A. A. Lopes
F. M. García
C. H. Lyson
拿丹及馬 怕
Pa-ma-hap Tan-na
PALMER & TURNER, Architects, Surveyors,
and Civil Engineers-Alexandra Build-
ings, 3rd Floor
Arthur Turner
H. W. Bird, A.R.I.B.A.
G. L. Wilson
L. G. Bird
J. Lambert
1149
P. A. Cordeiro, I. L. Goldenberg,
and Chinese draughtsmen
PARIS TOILET Co., LD., THE--13, Queen's Road Central (under the Astor House) Hairdressers, Perfumers, etc.
General Mgrs.-Percy Smith & Seth
J. O. Speiss, manager Mme. Speiss
PARSEE CHURCH & CLUB-49, Elgin Street Trustees H. N. Mody (président), B. L. Batliwara (hon. sec.), M. P. Talati, D.
K. Sethna
PATELL & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents-79, Wyndham Street; P. O. Box 316: Teleph. 354
M. J. Patell, proprietor P. E. Dingy
J. B. Patell
Agency
Bomanjee & Company
Pathe
Phono-Cinema-Chine-16, Des Voeux Road Central, 2nd floor
G. Remy
F. Arnold
PEAK CLUB-Mount Gough Road
Committee-C. D. Wilkinson (chair- man), J. Barton, W. A. Dowley, C. M. Ede, G. T. Edkins, P. N. H. Jones, H. W. D. Shallard, J. R. M. Smith, J. F. Wright, D. B. Murray, (hon. sec.)
PEAK HOSPITAL
Miss Stacey, matron
PEAK HOTEL
Findlay Smith & Moir, proprietors
P. O. Peuster, manager
司公限有車頂山
Shan-ting fo-che-you-han-Kung-sze
PEAK TRAMWAYS Co., LD.-Office: Alex- andra Buildings, Des Voeux Rd. Central
John D. Humphreys & Son, genl. mgrs. Directors-Hon. Sir Paul Chater, C.M.G., Hou, Mr. W. J. Gresson, Dr. J. W. Noble, C.S. Gubbay, J. Scotı Harston C. B. Buyers, superintendent engineer
J. Osborne, engine-driver
E. Watson, do.
C. Pedersen, brakesman
A. Aslett,
do.
J. Watson,
do.
H. Haines,
do.
1150
HONGKONG
司 公船火 行鐵
Tit-hong Fo-shun kung-sze
PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL STEAM NAVI-
GATION COMPANY-22, Des Voeux Road Central
E. A. Hewett, superintendent
H. W. D. Shallard, chief clerk R. C. Graff
W. G. G. Worcester C. A. Carr
F. R. Mann
F. P. de V. Soares
D. K. Klaras
A. M. C. da Silva
P. Buckle
W. Robinson
5 Chinese Clerks
PERCY SMITH & SETH, Accountants and
Auditors--5, Queen's Road Central
H. Percy Smith, chartered accountant J. Hennessey Seth
E. L. Hughes
J. de Graça Ozorio
F. Laurel
Lau Shiu Nun
F. J. Tavares
General Managers
The Paris Toilet Co., Ltd.
PERRY, I. S., General Broker-8, Des
Vœux Road
司公廠烟與聯
PHILIPPINE CO., LIMITED, Manufacturers of
Manila Cigars and Cigarettes
G. C. Moxon, agent, 5, Chater Road,
Queen's Building
司公險保安普
Po-on Po-him kung-sze
Po ON MARINE INSURANCE AND GODOWN
COMPANY, LIMITED- 157, Wing Lok St.; Tel. Ad: Poon; Teleph. 106
Directors Un Oi U, Chu Sek U, Lau Yat Chuen, Chu Keang Wan, Chu Lui Kwai, Lo Man Hing, Chu Su Nam, Lau Siu Cheuck Secretary-Un Lai Chuen
POHOOMULL BROTHERS, Dealers in Indian
Goods-57 and 59, Queen's Rd. Central
Geheemull Ramandas Dalamal Ramandas
POLLOCK, K.C., H. E., Barrister-at-law-18,
Bank Buildings (absent)
Shun-cheong
PORTLAND AND ASIATIC STEAMSHIP Co.-
King's Building; Tel. Ad: Portasia
S. Silverstone, agent
Po-lo
Powell, Limited, Wm., High Class Drapers, Milliners and House Furnishers -- Alexandra Buildings, Des Voeux Road; Gentlemen's Out- fitting Establishment: 28, Queen's Road, Opposite the Clock Tower; Tel. Ad: Polo; Telph. No. 316
Directors-G. C. Moxon (chairman)
E. H. Hinds Harry Eyre, manager
E. W. White F. Chapple H. O. Holt
A. P. Storrie W. T. Elson E. Mauricio J. Gomes
Miss A. Square Mrs. Jack
Miss Williams
Miss Benfield
Miss R. Hopwar
Miss Romero
PRAYA EAST HOTEL, and Restaurant-40,
41 and 42, Praya East
R. H. Whittaker, proprietor
Fu Yuen-wo 和源
PRICE & Co., LD., H., Wines, Spirit and
Cigar Merchants-12, Queen's Rd.; Tel.
Ad: Sphinx; Telephone No. 135
Directors: P. M. Hodgson, P. Loureiro
and A. Rumjahn
A. E. Robinson, manager
A. H. Hamet
D. Rumjahn
H. Hasson
A. Charlton
PRIEN, G. Cigar and Tobacco Merchant-
8, Des Voeux Road
架地利 Le-te.ia
RADECKER & Co., Merchts.-5, Duddell St.
W. Detmers (Hamburg)
R. Marten
K. Detmers
C. Jasse
J. C. Remedios
Agency
Stuttgart Life Insurance Company
RAHIM & Co., Rasid, Merchants and Com Agents-51, Pottinger Street; Tel. Ad: Jollity
C. Rahim
HONGKONG
1151
司公士杬
RAMSEY AND CO., Repairers and Dealers
in Typewriters and Phonographs-12,
Pottinger Street,
C. H. Dodd, managing proprietor
A. F. Ramsay, engineer
Li-king-ki
RAY, E. H., Ship, Freight and Genl. Broker
-6, St. George's Buildings; Teleph. 51
**V 紀經沙模石
Suk-mo-sa-kang-kee
RAZACK, M. A., Land, Estate and Mortgage Broker, and Comm. Agt.-184,StanleySt.
RECREATION CLUBS
AMATEUR ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION, HONG-
KONG
Chairman Dr. C. Forsyth Secretary-H. L. Garrett Treasurer-A. R. Sutherland
BOWLING GREEN CLUB, KOWLOON
President-- T. W. Robertson Hon. Sec.-T. Ramsay Hon. Treas.-J. E. Menagh
CHESS CLUB-18, Bank Buildings
Presidt. Hon. Mr. H.E.Pollock, K.c. Hon. Treasurer-M. J. Danenberg Hon. Secretary-P. A. Rozario
CRICKET AND FOOTBALL CLUB, QUEEN'S
COLLEGE
Presid't T. K. Dealy
Hon. Treasurer-E. Ralphs
CRICKET CLUB, CRAIGENGOWER
President W, Drew Braidwood Hon. Secretary-R. Basa Hon. Treasurer-G. Rapp Committee-W. Allen, A. E. Asger, S. E. Green, G. A. Hancock, Dr. F. H. Kew, L. E. Lammert
BARITE Hong-kong To-po Kung-sze CRICKET CLUB, HONGKONG--Secretary's Office: Cricket Pavilion, or St. George's
Building
President--F. Maitland Committee-R. Hancock, W. C. D. Turner, T. E. Pearce, H. R. Makin, E. C. Oliver, R.N., Captain G. E. Garratt, RA, Captain H. H. C. Baird (Bufts), C. A. Card, A. R. Lowe (sec. and treas.)
CRICKET CLUB, KOWLOON
Captain--J. P. Robinson
Hon. Secretary-T. Chee
Hon, Treasurer-J. H. Mead
CRICKET CLUB, PARSEE
(President's Office: Duddell Street) President A. B Avasia Captain--J. D. Noria
Hon. Secretary-C. B. Mourawalla
CRICKET LEAGUE, HONGKONG
President. Dr. J. M. Atkinson Vice-President-W,Drew Braidwood Hon. Secty, and Treas.-A. E. Asger
GOLF CLUB, THE ROYAL HONGKONG
Patron-His Majesty The King Hon. Members-H. E. Sir Frederick Lugard, K.C.M.G., C.B.,D.S.O., General Broadwood, C.B, D.S 0. Captain--Hon. W. J. Gresson Committee C. E. H. Beavis, R. O. Hutchison, M. A. Murray, D. B. Murray, CE. Anton, R. P. Wal- ker, R.N.
Hon. Sec. Major G. D. Close, R.E. Hon. Treas.-A. R. Lowe
HOCKEY CLUB-HONGKONG
President J. Barton Captain-L. G. Bird
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-T. H. King
HONGKONG CIVIL SERVICE CRICKET CLUB Patrons H. E. Col. Sir F. Lugard, K.C M.C., C.B., D.s.o., Sir Henry May,
K.C.M.G.
President-Hon. W. Chatham, C.M.G. Vice-Presidents-Hon. J. M. Atkin-
son, Dr. F. W. Clark Captain R. O. Hutchison. Vice-Captain--H. T. Jackman Captain" A." Team-P. R. Adams Committee F. A. Biden, L. E. Brett, W. F. Fincher, W. Gast, M. McIver, A. M. Thornhill, J. A. Wheal Hon. Treasurer-E. W. Dawson Hon. Secretary-W. H. Woolley
HONGKONG FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION
President-Frank Browne Secretary-Alex. P. Storrie
WWW
Hong-kong-keuk-pio-wu
HONGKONG FOOTBALL CLUB,
Capt., Rugby-G. D. Mellraith Rugby Match Secretary-E. L. Shaw Capt., Association-J. D. Danby Association Match Secy -H. Hunter Hon. Treasurer F. G. Carroll Hon. Secy.-H. Totton
1152
HONGKONG
JOCKEY CLUB, HONGKONG
Stewards Hon. Sir Paul Chater, KT., C.M.G. Major General Broadwood, C.B., F. B. Deacon, J. Friesland, Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson, J. A. Jupp, Sir Henry May, K.C.M. G., J. C Peter, C. H. Ross, H. P. White, J. F. Cox Edwards (hon, treasurer), T. F. Hough (clerk of the course)
POLO CLUB
Patron-H. E. The Governor Hon. Sec.-Bt. Major Findlay, The
Buffs, Murray Barracks
RECREATION CLUB, LUSITANO
President A. G. da Rocha Hon. Secy.-C. M. C. V. Ribeiro Hon. Treasurer-C. M. S. Alves. Committee-J. M. Britto, J. O. Re- medios, C. F. Franco, A. J. C. V. Ribeiro, P. da Roza, F. X. Britto, F. J. Barretto
UNITED SERVICE RECREATION CLUB-Gun
Club Hill, Kowloon
Patron-H. E. The Governor Hon. Secy. and Treasurer---Lieut.
F. V. Kirwan, A.S.C.
VICTORIA RECREATION CLUB--Murray Pier
President - H. E. Sir
Frederick
Lugard, K.C.M.G., C.B., D.S.O. Chairman--A. Rodger
Act. Hon. Treasurer A. A. Claxton Act. Hon. Secretary-R. L. Bridger Steward C. Lesbirel
YACHT CLUB, THE HONGKONG CORIN-
THIAN-Praya East
Commodore-Francis Clark Vice do. E. M. Hazeland
Hon, Secretary-H. E. Scriven
Hon. Asst. do. P. R. Adams Hon. Treas.-D. Gow
Official Measurer--W. A. Crake Deputy Measurers--C. J. Cooke, G.
G. Wood
Unofficial Members-M. McIver, J. McCorquodale, A. Rodger, A. A. H. Milroy, E. F. Gibson, J. Hand
YACHT CLUB, THE ROYAL HONGKONG--5,
North Point, Shaukiwan Road
ZOROASTRIAN CLUB-57, Queen's Road
Central
F. P. Shroff, president
M. F. Bilimoria-hon. secy.
和泰 Tai-wo
REISS & Co., Mchts.--Chater Rd.;Telph.192
H. E. Tomkins
F. H. Gamburg (Shanghai)
I
F. H Arinstrong P. H. Holyoak H. Beyer
J. H. Brister
G. D. McIlraith C. Danenberg M. J. Danenbere H. Remedios A. S. d'Oliveira
Agencies
New Zealand Insurance Co. British American Assurance Co.
Le-mee-tv-sz
REMEDIOS & Co., J. C. Dos, Merchants and
Commission Agents-19, Queen's Road
Central; Tel. Ad: Doncandido
A. J. V. Ribeiro
A. V. dos Remedios
塘魚 U-tong
REMEDIOS & Co., J. J. Dos, Merchants-47,
Wyndham Street; Tel. Ad: Jayjayare
J. J. Leiria, signs per pro.
Loo-lun
REUTER, BRÖCKELMANN & Co., Merchants- Prince's Building; Tel. Ad: Heyn; Tele. phone 140
H. Heyn (Hamburg) R. Fuhrmann
H. Schlüter, signs per pro. F. Ortlepp
W. Naumann
V. F. Soures
T. F. Souza
J. da Costa
E. T. do Rosario
Agencies
Fire Insurance Co. of 1877, Hamburg Manhattan Life Insce. Co., New York Continental Insurance Co., Mannheim National General Insurance Co., Ld.,
of London
Ocean Marine Ins. Co., Ld., London
REUTER'S TELEGRAM Co., LD.-Victoria
Building, 5, Queen's Road
J. Y. V. Vernon, agent
Bea-
RITCHIE & Co., Shipchandlers, General
Storekeepers and Contractors-11, consfield Arcade.
A. Ritchie
YEAH Lo-pin-sun-kum-hong ROBINSON PIANO Co., LD., Manufacturers, Importers, Tuners and Repairers, Music and Musical Instrument Sellers, &c.- 10, Des Voeux Rd.; Factory: Wanchai, also at Shanghai, Singapore, Tientsin Penang; Cable Ad: Piañomaker
W. Vaughan Robinson
HONGKONG
1153
J. H. Pearson A. Ogilvie C. Reich
A. Bryson
F. Hobbs
利順 Szen Ive
ROBITSEK, H. & REIS (Grossmann & Co.)
Merchants-9, Queen's Road Central:
Teleph. 264
Stefan Robitsek (Vienna)
O. Kramer, signs the firm
E. Angelbeck
E. Pereira
E. M. O. Remedios
P. M. Remedios N. F. Azevedo
Agencies
The Imperial Royal Austrian Com-
mercial Museum
Providentia Mar. Ins. Co. of Vienna Samarang Sea & Fire Insurance Co. Exportverein im Königreich Sachsen Mattoni's Giesshübler Mineral Water E. Sachsse & Co., Liepzig
ROMAN CATHOLIC CATHEDRAL -See under
Churches an Missions
兆欖 Lam-bug
ROMBACH & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents 17A Queen's Road Central
A. Rombach
J. Thun, signs per pro.
ROSE,SHAMROCK&THISTLE HOTEL,THE-304
and 306, Queen's Road Central William Krater, proprietor
ROSE, THOMAS I., Share and General
Broker-Hongkong Club
Tong.song-hong-ming-po ROSENSTOCK PUBLISHING CO., LD., THE, Publishers of Rosenstock's Directory of China & Manila; P. O. Box 218; Cable Address Rosenstock St. George's Building
Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, H'kong.
Agents
C. W. Rosenstock, director and general
manager
E. W. Bauckham, manager for H'kong
and China
ROSE, LOUIS A., Architect and Surveyor-
39, Queen's Road Central (first floor)
Chan Sing Fong, assistant
A
Lo-se-hung-sze
Ross & Co., ALEX., Merchants--4, Des Voeux Road Central; and 26, Chapel Street, Liverpool; Tel. Ad: Rotunda
Alex. Ross (Liverpool)
W. B. Gillespie (Liverpool)
A. S. D. Cousland, signs the firm
D. K. Moss, signs per pro.
A. W. Smith
L. Le Breton
A. J. Vieira
J. M. P. Tavares
Agencies
Sir Elkanah Armitage and Sons, Ld.,
Manchester
The Central Insurance Co., Ld., of
London (Fire)
ROYAL AERATED WATERS MANUFACTORY Co., LD, THE-Works and Office: West Point; Telephone 367; Depot: Ice House
Street; Tel. 374
F. P. Danenberg, manager
ROYAL NAVAL CANTEEN-Praya Eust
President-Commodore H. Lyon R.N.
Hon.Treas--Rev.D.R.Hughes,R.N.,M.A. Hon. Secty.-E. C. Blanchflower, R.N.
G. England
T. Toomey A. Warren
C. Foley, R.N., secretary to sub-com-
mittee
DPP#Lo-shai pi-li-la
ROZA PEREIRA, A. M. Freight and General
Brokers-34, Queen's Road Central (first floor)
澳里沙羅
Lo-cha-li-o
ROZARIO & Co., Merchts.-47, Wyndham St.
Tel. Ad: Rozario
J. J. Leiria
All Ngoc rua Yeu trong
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK
G. B. Adamson, manager
A. F. Kraentler, signs per pro. G. Lion,
E. de Sigalas
do.
C. E. dos Remedios, head clerk H. H. V. dos Remedios
L. G. Rodrigues
Lut-ton-jee
RUTTONJEE & SON, H., Wine and Provi- sion Merchants--5, D'Aguilar Street and 45, Haiphong Road, Kowloon ; Tel. Ad: Ruby; Telephone 190 and K, 3
H. Ruttonjee
J. H. Ruttonjee
1154
Jamshed N. Mehta D. S. Paowalla N. D. Kapadia J. P. Heera H. P. Bathena
H. F. Vapiwalla
P. F. Vapiwalla
Fu Hin Bun
Usuf Ebrahim
館手水盤營西
Sai-ying-poon Shui-shau-kwoon
SAILORS' HOME-West Point
HONGKONG
Trustees Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson, Basil R. Taylor. R.N. (harbour master)
Board of Management-The Trustees, Hon. Mr. E. A. llewett, J. W. C. Bounar, E. Shellim, Hon. Mr. H. W. Slade, D. R. Law
Hon. Secty. Basil R. Taylor, R.N. A. A. H. Milroy, superintendent
C. Gould, assistant
R. HA. Craig, assistant secretary
司公限有理代及揭按業宏三
Sam-wing-chee-yip-on-kit-kep-doy-lee-yau-
han-kung-sze
SAM WANG LAND INVESTMENT, LOAN & AGENCY COMPANY, LIMITED-81, Queen's Road Central: Tel. Ad: Samwang; Code A.R.C. 4th Edition and A1; Telephone 321 Directors--U Kwan Chi (chairman) U Yuk Chi (managing director) Tang Tsz Pun
Pun Wing Secretary-Ho U Ming
San-ta Wei-la
SANDER, WIELER & Co., Merchants and
Commission Agents- Prince's Building
G. Wieler (Hamburg)
R. Becker (Hamburg)
A. Becker
A. Sander (Shanghai)
R. Lenz, signs per pro.
A. Ohme
T. H. Backhouse
E. Luehring
W. Reinhardt
E. M. da Rocha
A. Maher
F. Alvares
Agencies
"Austrian Lloyd Steam Navigation Co. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co.
International Lloyd Insce. Co., Berlin
局務事净清港香理總 Tsung-li Heung-kong Tsing-ching Sie-mo-kit
SANITARY BOARD
Head of Sanitary Dept. (president), Hon. Director of Public Works, lon. Registrar General, Medical Officer of Health, Lau Chu Pak, Hon. Mr. E. A. flewett, A. Shelton Hooper, Col. W. G. A. Bedford, C.M.G., B.A.M.C. Dr. G. A. L. Fitzwilliams, Ho Kom Tong
Secretary W. Bowen Rowlands Acting Secretary-A. Gibson
宜沙
Sa-soon
SASSOON & Co., LD., DAVID, Merchants-
Des Voeux Road
do.
E. Shellim, manager W. Logan, R. M. Joseph do.
D. H. Silas
R. S. Judah E. Ezra
F. F. Eça da Silva J. Joseph
M. Gourgey
R. Galluzzi
V. Gonsalves
J. C. V. Ribeiro
S. S. Perry
Ellis Surgon
Agencies
Apcar & Co.'s Calcutta-H'kong Line
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Soc,
遜沙新
Sun-sa-soon
SASSOON & CO., E.D., Merchants-7, Queen's
Road Central
Sir Jacob Sassoon, Bart (Bombay)
Edward E. Sassoon (London) Meyer E. Sassoon
Ch. S. Gubbay
Ed. Nissim
do.
S. A. Hardoon (Shanghai) Simon A. Levy
D. S. Gubbay E. I. Ellis
Ed. B. Raymond J. Benjamin O. I. Ellis
S. H. Dutton Ellis Raymond
S. S. Levy
J. J. Judah G. G. Catchick
R. J. Judah
J. A. B. Silva
do.
B. K. Mehte, yarn broker
Agency
Queen Insurance Company
י
HONGKONG
SASSOON, M. S., Exchange Broker-4, Ice
House Street
Sz-wai
SAVOY, THE, Drapers, Etc.-13, Queen's
Road, Central,
Quan Hing, proprietor
Miss Johnson Leigh, acct. and cashier Mrs. Barrington
SAYCE & Co., Tobacconists, Booksellers Stationers and Variety Store, Hair- dressing Saloon and Circulating Library -14, Beaconsfield Arcade Kelly Sayce, proprietor
SAYER, G. J. B., Civil Engineer, Architect and Surveyor-19, Queen's Rd. Central
SAYER, & Co., House and Land Valuers, House Agents-19, Queen's Rd. Central
SCHELLHASS, ALBR. W., Exchange Broker
-Hongkong Club; Tel. Ad: Schelly
蔑士
See-mit
SCHMIDT & Co., W., Gun and Rifle Makers- Machinists and Dealers in Arms, Aïu-
munition, &c. 5 and 6, Beaconsfield Arcade
Mrs. Wm. Schmidt
Miss Schmidt
SCHOOLS-See under Educational
士刺些
She-la-se
SCHULDT & Co., Merchants, Hongkong, Canton, Shanghai, Hankow, Tientsin-- Top Floor, York Buildings; Tel. Ad: Ostasia
Ad. E. Schuldt (Hamburg) G. Harling
S. Swart
F. Esrom
F. Heldt
H. Lehmann
F. X. Botelho
A. J. V. Ribeiro
P. A. Yvanovich
Leung Him Capt. Hall
Agencies
do.
Holzapfel Composition Co., Ld. Capt. Hall, representative Chinesische Küstenfahrt Gesellschaft. Hanseatische Dampfer Company Flensburger Dampfer Company Hanseatic Fire Insurance Company Yorkshire Fire Insurance Co. Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co. Rhenania Versicherungs Ges., Cöln
1155
Providentia Insurance Co., Frankfort
Wurtemberg Transport Vers. Ges. Bayerischer Lloyd. Munchen Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin
East India Sea & Fire Ince. Co., Batavia
威利 Lee-wai
SENNET FRÈRES, Jewellers, &c.-Under the Hongkong Hotel; at Paris, Manila, Iloilo,
Shanghai, Kharbin, Tientsin and Peking
Ms. Sennet (Paris)
Mx. Sennet do.
Albert Weill, manager M. Goldstein Agency
Omega Watches
SETH, HAROLD-62, Connaught Road Cl.;
Tel. Ad Cottager, Hongkong
司公梳燕壽人洋華海上
Seung hoi wah yueng yan shun yin shaw kung sze
SHANGHAI LIFE INSURANCE Co., LD., THE -Hotel Mansions, First Floor; Tel. Ad: Shanlico; Telph. 898
Wong Po Chun, general agent, Hong
kong. Canton and West River Wong Hung Park, sub. general agent, Hongkong, Canton and West River Lo Shin Wai, clerk Chan Tak Man, do.
A
Sharp-kung-sze
SHARP & Co.-17, Queen's Road Central (Executors to the late Granville Sharp)
*Sun-fuk-li
Shaw, James T., Tailor and Out- fitter-Hongkong Hotel Buildings, and
14, Des Voeux Road; Tel. Ad: Totton; Telph. Nos. 692, 692Á
昌旗 Kee.chong
SHEWAN, TOMES & Co., Merchants--St.
George's Building; Tel. Ad: Keechong
R. Shewan
C. A. Tomes (New York)
A. Babington
H. R. B. Hancock
C. M. Alport
S. A. Baker F F. Barretto Alfredo A. Botelho Alvaro A. Botelho H. F. Campbell L. F. Campbell W. J. Carroll D. E. Carvalho A. A. Cordeiro J. Coulthart M. A. Figueiredo
1156
M. A. dos Santos Gomes L. E. Guterres
F. Britto Gutierrez F. M. Gutierrez W. G. Hobbs
R. W. Lee-Jones
H. W. Kingston P. Kunze S. A. Lopes F. Loureiro P. J. O'Brien C. H. Osmund N. V. Parker
H. M. M. dos Remedios
John Robertson
O. S. Benbow Rowe
J. C. do Rozario
A. L. Shields
T. H. Smolczyk M. A. Souza Alfred Temperley Jas. Toppin H. J. White R. D. Wilks
D. H. Young, M.I.E.S.
J. A. Young
A. G. Gordon (Marine supt.) J. McMurtrie (New York) Wm. Adamson (London) General Managers
HONGKONG
China Prov. Loan and Mortgage Co., Ld. China and Manila Steamship Co., Ld. Hongkong Rope ManufacturingCo.,Ld. Green Island Cement Co., Ld. Canton Land Company, Limited China Light and Power Company, Ld. Wei San Knitting Co., Ld.
The Equitable Life Assurance Society
of the United States
Agencies
American Asiatic S. S. Company
Glen" Line of Steamers
CA
American & Manchurian Line
J. Marke Wood's Line of Steamers Intenational Sleeping Car & Express
Trans. Co.
Trans-Siberian Route to Europe Electric Traction Co. of Hongkong, Ld. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. World Marine Insurance Company Reliance Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. North British and Mercantile Insce. Co. Law Union & Rock Insurance Co., Ld. Yorkshire Insce. Co., Ld.
Insurance Company of North America Federal Insurance Co. of New York Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corpora-
tion, Ld.
British Westinghouse Electric& Manu-
facturing Co., Ltd.
British Insulated & Helsby Cables,
Limited
Manning, Maxwell & Moore (Machine
Tools)
Fraser & Chalmers, Ltd. (Mining
Machinery)
American Steel & Wire Co. (Concrete
Reinforcement)
(See Advertisement)
Ying-cheong
SHEWAN, & Co. W.--8A, Des Vœux Rd.;
Tel. Ad: Relief
W Shewan
J. Pereira
L. Cordeiro
Seem-sun
SIEMSSEN & Co., Merchants-2, Praya Ctl.
A. Gültzow (Hamburg)
N. A. Siebs
do
A. Fuchs (Hamburg)
O. Struckmeyer (Shanghai)
H. A. Siebs (Hongkong)
E. Siebert (Tientsin)
W. O. C. Spalcklaver, signs per pro.
L. Muhle,
P. Kohlschmidt,
J. Manners
O. Kellinghusen F. Danielsen H. Hüpeden O. Jacubowsky F. McRobie C. Piens
T. F. S. Alonço A. da Cruz Rocha H. T. Jorge A. Rozario
A. A. Lopes
C. F. Franco
H. A. Hyndman
Agencies
do.
do.
Flensburger Dampfschifffahrt Ges.
von 1869
Matthias Struve's Steamers Jaluit-Gesellschaft
Sun Insurance Office
C
Nord-Deutsche Insurance Co. L'Union Fire Insce. Co., Ld., of Paris Allianz Ince. Co. of Berlin, L'don Agey. Nord-Deutsche Marine Insce. Co.
Agrippina" Mar. Insce. of Cologne Allgemeine Seevers. Ges., Hamburg Allianz Vers. Aktien Ges., Berlin Assecuranz Union of 1865 Associated Assurance Cos., Ld., L'aon "Aurora Co. Anonima de Seguros,
Bilbao
"J
י
Baden Marine Insce. Co. of Mannheim Bayerischer Lloyd Transport Vers
Akt. Ges., Muenchen
City of London Underwriting Assoc. Continentale Vers. Ges., Mannheim De Private Assurandeurer, Copenhagen
HONGKONG
Düsseldorf Universal Assurance Co. "El Dia" Companie Anonyme d'Assur-
ances, Carthagena
"Fortuna" Genl. Insce. Co. of Berlin
Fonciere" Gen. Ince. Co. of Budapest Frankfort Marine Ince. Co. Frankona Insurance Co.
Societé Anonymed'Assurance "Franco-
Hongroise," Budapest
"Germania" Transp. V. A. G., Berlin German Mar. Ince. Association, L'don General Insurance Co. (Assicurazioni
Generali) Trieste
Hansa Insurance Co. of Stockholm Heilbronner Vers. Ges.
Hull Underwriters' Association, Ltd. International Ince. Co., Dusseldorf
'International Lloyd," Mar. Insee. Co.
of Berlin
4
"Jakor" Marine Insec, Co. of Moscow Lloyd Meriodionale, Naples Lloyd Sabando Ince. Co. of Turin Koelner Lloyd Insurance Co. Neue 5th Assuranz Company Münchener Rückversicherungs Ges. Niederrheinische Güeter Asscc. Wese. Nord-West Deutsche Insurance Co. Neptunus Assec. Cie. Hamburg Oberrheinische Vers. Ges., Mannheim Ocean Insurance Co., Gottenburg Providentia Marine Insce. Co., Vienna Russischer Lloyd, St. Petersburg Salamandra Insce. Co., St. Petersburg Samarang Sea & Fire Ince Co., Batavia Savoia Ince. Co. of Turin Schweizer National Vers. Ges., Basel Silesia Fire Insurance Co.
Unione Continentale Ince. Co. of Turin Union of Genoa Underwriters Union Internationale,
d'Assurances, Antwerp
Compagnie
United Dutch Mar. Ince. Cos., London United German Mar. Insurance Cos. United Rhenish Ince. Companies Universal Underwriting Association.
London
Vaterlandische Transport Vers. Ges.
Elberfeld
Versicherungs-Gesellschaft von 1873 Verein Hamburg Assecuradeure Wurttembergische Transp. Vers. Gos.,
Heilbronn
SILVA, A, H. M. DA. Property and General
Broker-Office: 6. Des Voeux Road
Sz-li-wa
SILVA & Co., Importers. Exporters and Commission Merchants- 10, Queen's Rd. Central; Tel. Ad: "Orosa"
L. M. Silva
C. Tavares
Mit Sin-ce
1157
SINCERE CO., LTD., THE, Universal Provi- ders-111, Connaught Rd., 215 to 221, Des Voeux Rd., 172, Queen's Rd. Central, and 123, Wellington St.; Tel. Ad: Sincere
ARB Sing-ka-kung-sz
72A,
SINGER SEWING MACHINE Co.
Queen's Road Central; Tel. Ad: Singer
A. C. Logan, manager
A
Sing-on-Kung-sze
Singon & Co., Iron, Steel, Metal and Hardware Merchants, General Store- keepers and Commission Agents --35 and 37, Hing Loong Street; Tel. Ad: Kwok; Telephone No. 515
C. T. Kwok, signs the firm P. K. Kwok signs the firm
C. P. Kwok, and others
(See Advertisement)
Sun-chung-wo
SKOTT & Co., H., Merchts.-10, Des Voeux
Road, Central
H. Skott
Chr. Skott, signs the firm Wallace Hansen
A. McDougall
E. Scott
A. King
W. K. Yerk
Agencies
Columbia River Milling Co., Wilbur Novelty Mills, Seattle Raymond Milling Cɔ. Capitol Milling Co. Seattle Roller Mills Big Canyon Roller Mills The Aetna Mills
Melbourne Roller Flour Mills
Australian Roller Flour Mills, Adelaide Electric Flour Mills Houck Milling Co.
Rickreall Milling Company The Jobes Milling Co. Spokane Flour Mills Golden Rule Flouring Mills Vancouver Milling & Grain Co. Turtle Mountain Milting Co. Columbia Flouring Mill Co. Big Bend Milling Co. Imbler Milling Co.
Hartline Mill and Elevator Co. Calgary Milling Co.
** Si-ley-tai-chong-sze SLADE, MARCUS WARRE; Barrister-at-law -Prince's Buildings, Ice House Street,. 2nd Floor; res.: Lewknor, Mount Gough, Peak, No. 116
1158
HONGKONG
義公 Kung-yee
SMITH & Co., J. G., Commission Merchants
--4, Des Voeux Road
John Grant Smithi
利瑞 Soy-lec
SOARES & CO., Merchants and Commission
Agents-1, Duddell Street
A. F. de J, Soares
A. M. L. Soares
E. V. M. R. de Souza
SOCIEDADE PHILARMONICA
Hon. Sec.-F. X. Vieira Ribeiro, Jr. Hon. Treas.-J. M. S. Rosario Conductors-Prof. F. Gonzalez and
Isidoro Costa
SOUTH BRITISH INSURANCE
LIMITED
S. J. David & Co., agents
S. G. Newall, local manager
H. J. Totton
COMPANY,
HÀ HÍT Nam-ching Cho po
司公報早清南
SOUTH CHINA MORNING Post, LD.
44
Reports"
and
Lithographers and General Printers, Publishers "South China Morning Post,
Law Hongkong Official "Naval Military Directory" "South China Directory"--14, Des Vœux Road Central; Tel. Address: Postscript; London Agents: Messrs. T. B. Brown &Co. Directors Dr. J. W. Noble (chair- man) G. C. Moxon, J Scott Harston. Geo. T. Lloyd, general manager and
editor
T. Petrie, acting assistant editor J. F. Brewer, reporter
W. Smart,
H. B. Collins,
do.
dlo.
F. S. Rayner, works supt.
Geo. Turner, linotype dept.
E. B. Ayris, chief clerk
H. A. Allen, clerk
H. Knuth, outdoor representative
G. Wylie, lithographic supt.
L. Aviles, lithographic department
Sang, printing department
司公 粉麵 利巴士
Se-pe-li Min-fun Kung-sze
SPERRY FLOUR COMPANY (Incorporated),
Mer. Millers- Hotel Mansions and San
Fisco; Tel. Ad: Sperry; Telph. No. 100
W. Ś. Allen, resident manager
do.
G. V. Hayes
(See Advertisement)
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY, HONGKONG
President J. R. M. Smith
Vice-Pres.-Hon. Mr. Murray Stewart
Hon. Secretary--David Wood Hon. Treasurer-A, S. Dalgety Committee W. Armstrong, J. W. C. Bonnar, J. Andrew Forbes, D. Macdonald, E. Ormiston and past presidents
ST. JOHN'S CATHEDRAL--See Churches
ST. JOSEPIT'S ENGLISH COLLEGE-Sec Educa
tional
ST. PAUL'S COLLEGE--See Educational
ST. PETER'S (SEAMEN'S) CHURCH-See Chur-
ches
ST. STEPHEN'S MISSION CHURCH-See under
Churches and Missions
ET
Luk-kok tsau-tim
STAG HOTEL-148 & 150, Queen's Rd. Cl.
I. P. Madar, licencee
M. Tchetchelnitzki, manager
Gokman, clerk
富美 Meefoo
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK-Main
Office: South China Dept., Hotel Mansions
Oriental Freight Department Thompson & Bedford
do.
J. W. Bolles, genl. manager W. B. Walker, asst. do. W. D. Kraft
do.
F. E. McHugh, local auditor
H. J. Morse, chief accountant T. L. Harrison
A. H. Heid
S. G. Bolden
E. Jacobs
F. Hyndman
M. L. Thompson, chief of construc-
tion and manufacturing D. M. Mickle
A. McClay
W. Kailey C. H. Howell
G. L. Dains
G. N. Olsson
Sun Yuk Nam
L. T. Rupracht, chief of shipping dept. (Oriental freight and Orien- tal Pacific lines).
P. N. Sequeira
M. O. Clark, statistician
J. H. Bulmer
Jasper Clark, chief of Thompson & Bedford Dept. (lubricating oil and wax)
C. de M. V. Ribeiro
C. Sequeira
E. A. Long, stenographer
Miss V. H. Gill,
do.
Miss E. H. Gill,
do.
E. J. Marques,
do.
F. X. da Luz,
do.
F. J. Barretto
"STAR" FERRY COMPANY, LD.
HONGKONG
Directors-Hon. Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G. (chairman), Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson, E. Shellim
Hon. Mr. Edward Osborne, secretary
T. W. Kobertson, supt, engineer
C. F. Xavier
C. Sequeira
STEAM LAUNDRY COMPANY, Ld. Tα- Works: Yaumati (near Pumping Station); Depot: 4, Beaconsfield Arcade
Directors Sir C. P. Chater, C.M.G., W.
H. Potts, Hon. Mr. E. Osborne Manager-R. B. Wood
生醫女鐵仕 Steadman Esang
STEDMAN, F. O., M.D., B.S. (LON.), M.R.C.S.
L.S.A.-Alexandra Buildings; residence: Formosa, The Peak
STEDMAN, HARSTON, MARRIOTT, BLACK & HORSON, Medical Practitioners-Alex- andra Buildings, 2nd Floor; Tel. No. 2
Sz-tak-fun-sz-chong-sze STEPHENS, MATTHEW JOHN DENMAN, Solicitor, Conveyancer, Proctor, Notary Public, Patent andTrade Mark Agent-18, Bank Buildings, Queen's Road; Tel. Ad: Stentavi; London Agent: R. C. Trass, solicitor, 25, Coleman Street, E.C.
M. J. D. Stephens, M.L.S. (LONDON)
F.M.C. INST., l'atent Agent Wong Ping
Lee Man Po
Mak Ping
*# * ± Si-tsut-hing-tai
STEWART BROTHERS, Bill and Bullion Brokers, 11, B'nsfield Arcade, Queen's Rd.
Gershom Stewart (absent)
Murray Stewart Herbert Pinckney
STOCKBROKERS'ASSOCIATION OF HONGKONG-
6, Des Voeux Road
Chairman J. Y. V. Vernon Hon. Secretary J. F. Wright
STOCKTON MILLING Co., THE 4 Queen's
Buildings
T. W. Hornby, manager
1159
STOPPA, P., Share and General Broker- Prince's Building, Second Floor; Tel. Ad: Stoppa; Telephone No. 916
STORER & SONS, DAVID, Paint Manufac-
turers--Alexandra Buildings
Wing Ming
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE CO. OF CANADA-6 & 8 Alexandra Buildings; Tel. Ad: Sunbeam
Alex. L. Stein, manager
TAI KWONG COMPANY-33, Queen's Road
Central, Importers of Incandescent Gaso-
line Lamps, Mantles, &c.
Wong Lai Sang, manager
局紙造器機成大
Tai-sing ki-hi tso-chi-kuh
TAI SHING PAPER MANUFACTURING Co.
LIMITED Office:21, Connaught Road;Tel.
Ad Papermill; Telephone 129, 130
:
Lau Yau-pau, manager (Aberdeen) Bailey & Murphy, consulting engrs. Kwok Sui Cho, secretary
TAIKOO DOCKYARD & ENGINEERING CO. OF HONGKONG, LD.-Quarry Bay; Telph. 212 Messrs. Butterfield & Swire, agents P. Forster Nicholson, M.IN.A., dock-
yard general manager
Robert McGregor, local secretary W. J. Lyon, acting engine works
manager
James Reid, assistant dockyard gen-
eral manager
K. E. Greig, assistant engine works
manager
A. Aitchison
G. W. Anderson A. Armstrong G. H. Bannerman M. R. Bell
W. D. Bell
G. Bird
R. Booth G. Brown S. E. Brown W. Burton J. B. Chapman A. Crawford R. H. Cousins E. B. Cubey A. Davidson F. O. Day R. Duncan H. E. Dunipace W. J. Eldridge J. J. Ewing J. C. Ferguson C. Gibbs R. Gray C. F. Grey J. E. Hacking
1160
Alexander Hamilton
J. E. Hansen
J. J. Harrington
T. Hill
N. M. Howie
W. Hoy
J. A. Hunter J. Johnson S. R. Jones
J. W. King D. J. Lennox D. Lyle
K. R. McAskill A. McCallum J. McCormack A. F. McIntosh W. McKay J. McLeod D. McNeillie D. A. Malcolm A. W. Millar
C. H. Murphy C. C. Nelson J. B. Paterson
J. D. Polley W. Reid G. S. Rose T. L. Scott
HONGKONG
O. Hoyem W. Langtry J. Macklin G. Morphew E. E. Rigold H. W. Sayer H. Tillman A. W. Vardigan A. Voller
J. Wells
Tai-koo-tony-fong
TAIKOO SUGAR REFINING COMPANY, LD-
Quarry Bay, Shaukiwan Road
Butterfield & Swire, general agents W. Murray Scott, manager David Templeton, asst, do.
R. Aitken W. Bassford S. Boulton A. Burn
A. Carmichael A. Crane
J. Crosbie B. Croucher A. S. Currie J. Dalziel
J. Simpson
A. Smith
A. McT. Smith
F. H. Smith
F. Soutar
C. Strafford C. Summers
J. G. Swanston
J. K. Taylor
J. Tulley
J. Waldron
D. B. Vincent
J. Weir
G. W. Whiting
J. Wishaw T. G. Worth
W. H. Worth
W. Wotherspoon
F. Wynyard
D. Young
Temporary Civil Engineering and Con-
structional Staff
A. P. Dashwood, A.M.I.C.E.
A. H. Archard
T. Barnett
A. Brown P. P. Chapman
B. Cleveland H. Cruz D. H. Dell E. H. Evans
P. T. Farrell J. Gregson T. Grimshaw A. Henderson F. Hoggard
J. Dickie
R. Dickson H. Dinnen A. Dransfield R. A. Ferguson R. D. Galloway W. Hardwick H. L. Harron W. J. Hill
F. Le Breton J. McCubbin J. McIntyre Wilson McIntyre A. McKirdy D. McNeill J. D. Melvin J. Mitchell J. Muir D. MacCrae
S. A. Neville
A. Nilsson
Dr. M. V. Obrembski
J. Peacock
R. Perrie
J. H. Raptis
E. Roby
G. H. Saunders
C. Schullenbach
T. Shand
C. D. Sullivan
C. N. Young
TALATI, F. P., Merchant and Commission Agent 6, Ice House Street; Tel. Ad: Sherin; Telephone 551
HONGKONG
1161
TATA, F. K., Merchant and Commission TORWAWANCOALSTORAGE-Office:Cornerof
Agent-4, Queen's Buildings; P. O. Box
Ice House St., 8, Des Voeux Rd. Central 366; Teleph. 28
Hughes & Hough, agents
A
E. K. Tata, assistant
Chung-kwok Tin-po-kuk
TELEGRAPH ADMINISTRATION, IMPERIAL
CHINESE Connaught Road
Wan Hao, superintendent
Lin Ting Ching, asst. do. Loo Lai Sang, clerk-in-charge
JACEM Tung-po-chau kup O-s-li-a Tín-po Rungste
TELEGRAPH COMPANY EASTERN EXTEN-
www.
SION, AUSTRALASIA AND CHINA LTD., Electra House, Finsbury Pavement, London, E. C.
Offices, Connaught Road
J. M. Beck, superintendent
H. H. Gilby, asst. do. C. T. Hose, asst, electn. R. B. Beattie, accountant S. Lack, acting accountant C. B. Franklin, supervisor F. Matson,
C. E. Shields,
do.
do.
A. S. Kempthorne do.
do.
B. L. Frost, meclianician
P. Linton,
Operators
F. O. Davies
B. L. Packer
H. E. Colvin
R. A. Gowen
T. C. Buckland A. R. Watson A. R. Luckie W. S. Hone
A. H. Young H. V. Dawson R. E. H. Oliver
J. Wilson
F. Figueiredo
W. Allen
A. Rodrigues
M. P. Remedios
C. P. Marques
A. Crestejo R. M. Silva F. L. Marques F. Schnepel J. Silva
T. A Carvalho
A. F. Rosario
A. Garcia
S. A. Marcal
R. A. V. Ribeiro
U. A. Santos
THEATRE ROYAL (See City Hall)
Tong-yung-lun-sen-kung-sze
Toyo Kisen Kaisha (Oriental Steam- ship Company)--King's Building; Tel. Ad: Toyoasano; Telpli. 291
N. Yamada, acting manager
F. M. Roza Pereira
K. Doi
K. Tsuji
Tso-chong-sze
Tsó, S. W., Solicitor-28A, Des Voeux Rd. C. Ko Wotuck and Pun Yan Chin, clerks
司公限有險保燭火安同
Tung-on-fo-chuk-po-him-yau-han kung-sze
TUNG ON FIRE INSURANCE Co., LD.-2,
Bonham Strand West
Directors Leung Pui Chi (chairman),
Lo Kun Ting, Yung Yik-ting, Ko Yik-kum, Yuen Lai-chuen, Wong Siu-ham, Chan Po-tung, Tam Hok- po, Cheng Siu-tong Lan Lim-yeung Tong Tze-sau, chief secretary
Lau Wan Kai, secretary
Leung Pau Kun, accountant
TURKISH TOBACCO MANUFACTORY
J. H. Solomon & Co., 9 Beaconsfield Arcade
J. H. Solomon, manager
TYEBKHAN, EBRAHIM A., Merchant and Commission Agent-12, Wyndham Street, and Pathanevada Street, Surat, India
Fei lung
ULDERUP & SCHLÜTER, General Merchants and Engineering Agents, Motor Boat
Builders-21 Connaught Road; Tel. Ad:
Feilung; Telep. 577
Johannes P. Ulderup
Carl Schlüter
文利烏 U-li-mun
ULLMANN & Co., J., Watch Manufacturers,
Jewellers, Opticians, Commission Agents,
&c.-34, Queen's Road Central, and at
Shanghai, Tientsin, and Chaux de-fonds
Jacques Ullmann (Europe)
M. Bernheim (Shanghai)
E. Bernheim
A. Kahn, signs per pro. S. Goldschmidt
L. Walch
Agency
The Invar Watch Co.
UNION CHURCH-See under Churches and.
Missions
1162
行安保面洋仁於
Yu-yan-yeung-min Po-on hong
HONGKONG
UNION INSURANCE SOCIETY OF CANTON,
LIMITED 2, Queen's Buildings
C. M. Ede, secretary
A. B. Rouse
E. C. Lane
D. B. Murray H. Hunter E. R. Thomas
H. J. M. de Carvalho
B. C. da Cunha
V. L. dos Remedios A. E. Alves
J. A. Carvalho
J. A. Barros
J. Gardner A. M. Neves
E. L. S. Alves
James Whittall, agent, Shanghai A. J. Easton, agent, Yokohama W. Macbean, agent, Singapore L. T. Easton, acting agent, Manila W. E. Schmidt, agent, Hankow H. W. D. Schmidt, agent, Tientsin Douglas Jones, agent, London
E. W. G. de Gyulay, Sydney (General
manager for Australasia)
W. R. Ray, agent, Melbourne
W. T. Stacy, agent, Adelaide
E. W. Maitland, agent, Calcutta
記提 Jit Kow
UNION TRADING Co., General Importers, Exporters and Commission Merchants
--34, Queen's Road, Central; Tel. Ad:
Hardware; P. O. Box 448; Telph. 587
F. Lau Puy Lo Ip Shing Lo Yuk Kee
Ed. Law
Tsoi Shiu-kin Chan Kwan Pui Chung Wan Kai
UNION WATER BOAT Co., LD. -2, Queen's
Buildings
Dodwell & Co., Ld., general managers
UNITED ASBESTOS ORIENTAL AGENCY, LD.
THE 2, Queen's Building
Dodwell & Co., Ld., general managers
Arch. Ritchie, superintendent D. Harvey, asst.
do.
G. R. Edwards, secretary
F. Jung
DATA Wak-kom-yau kung-sze VACUUM OIL COMPANY-King's Buildings,
second floor West
W. A. Dowley, general manager
C. B. Brooke, asst. general manager
A. Jenkins
G. D. Neubronner Miss L. Gutierrez
Sub Offices and Agencies
Manila, Singapore, Saigon, Haiphong, Swatow, Amoy, Foochow, Soerabaia Samarang, Batavia, Bangkok, Canton, Penang
VASANIA, J. J., Merchant and Stationer-
16 and 18, Peel Street
M. F. Billimoria
VASUNIA, J. P., Merchant-18, Peel Street
P. J. Vasunia (Canton)
E. F. Kavarana (Bombay)
R. P. J. Vasunia (Shanghai)
倫華
VERNON & SMYTH, Share and General
Brokers, Victoria Building-5, Queens'
Road
J. Y. V. Vernon
F. Smyth
F. M. X. de Figueiredo
Agencies
Scottish Metropolitan Assurance Co.
A
Tak-kin yeuk-fong
Victoria Dispensary, Chemists and
Druggists, Aerated Water Manufactur ers, Wine and Spirit Importers-Queen's Road Central
F. W. Stapleton, manager
L. Guy
G. C. Whitelaw
VICTORIA FEMALE HOME AND ORPHANAGE -See under Churches and Missions
VICTORIA RECREATION CLUB (See under
Recreation Clubs)
VICTORIA SCHOOL-See under Educational
興耀 Yew Hing
VIEIRA & Co., General Importers, Expor
ters-50 and 52 Queen's Road Central;
Tel. Ad: Feliciter; P. O. Box 414
J. M. Vieira
Pun Chan
Mannel Baptista Ant. Baptista A. F. Baptista Agencies
Whalley's Sanitary Fluid Co., London Lilley & Skinner, Limited, London
(Boots and Shoes)
Hogg & Mitchell, Manchester ("Prince of Wales Feather" Brand Shirts Collars & Cuffs, etc.) Pachod Freres & Cie., Lyon
HONGKONG
VOLUNTEER CORPS-H'KONG (See Military) WALLEM & Co., Shipowners and Steamship Agents, Coal Contrs. and Genl. Mers. Offices: Hongkong Club Annex; also at Shanghai; Tel. Ad: Wallem; Teleph. 588
H. J. Wallem (Shanghai)
O. Stoltz, signs per pro.
Agency
Norwegian Trading Co., Ld.
論華 War Lan
WARREN, C. E., Architect and Civil Engr.- 30, Des Voeux Road Central; Tele. 370
WARREN & Co., C. E., Building Contractors, Sanitary Engineers, Tile Manufacturers -30, Des Voeux Road Central; Tele. 370
C. E. Warren
J. Olson
WASSIAMULL ASSOMULL, & Co., Silk Mer-
chants-46, Queen's Road A. Hemandas, manager B. Doulatram, cashier S. Dingamal, clerk L. Anoomal, salesman
*** Wat-kin Tai-yeuk fong WATKINS, LIMITED, "Apothecaries" Hall, Chemists, Druggists, Patent Medicine Vendors, Aerated Waters Manufacturers and Commission Agents-31, Queen's Road Central
G. A. Watkins, managing director Chan A Fook,
do.
A. T. Duncan
Chan A Tack
Watkins' Circulating Library
藥大氏臣屈
* Vat-sun-sz tai-yeuk-fong
WATSON & CO., LIMITED, A. S.--Head
Office: Hongkong Dispensary, Alexandra
Buildings; Tel. Ad: Dispensary
John D. Humphreys & Son, gl. mgrs.
J. A. Tarrant, acting secretary J. R. Capell, chemist
A. P. Nobbs,
do.
N. H. K. Davidson
B. J. Spittles
J. B. Scott W. D. Sutton
H. S. Spurge
E. R. Millar
E. W. H. James
J. S. Hay
J. R. Suiter
G. Harper
W. Boanas
J. Millar R. P. Phillips D. Dorward
H. Rapp F. Rapp
W. H. B. Muskett
1163
WAVERLEY, Boarding House- 43, Robinson
Road,
Mrs. W. H. Emberley, proprietress
W. H. Emberley
Miss Emberley
師則盡量大份厘及沙威
Wei-sa-kap-li-fun-cheung-leung-wak-chak-sze
WEASER & RAVEN, Architects and Sur-
veyors, 8A, Des Vœux Road Central:
W. L. Weaser
A. R. F. Raven
Hing-sing
WENDT & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents-6, Ice House Road
F. A. Wendt W. Melchers
G. E. Huygen, signs per pro, Otto Hechtel
J. B. Gutierrez
R. M. O. Gutierrez
Agencies
K.K. Priv. Oesterr. Vers. Ges. "Donau,"
Vienna
L'Universo, Italian Mar. Ince. Co., Ld.,
of Milan
WESLEYAN MISSION SCHOOLS-See under
Educational
司公限有做建盤營西
Sai-ying-poon Kin-choo yau-han Kong-sze
WEST POINT BUILDING CO., LIMITED
Directors-Hon. Sir Paul Chater, C.M.G. (chairman), Hon. Mr. W. J. Gresson,
J. W. C. Bommar, C. S. Gubbay Hongkong Land Investment & Agency
Company, Limited, agents
WEST POINT REFORMATORY- See under
Educational
WESTERN HOTEL-90 and 92, Queen's Road
West
WHITE, HEDLEY G., Messrs Suter, Hartmann & Rahtjen's Composition, Co. Ld. London Agents-Messrs F. Blackhead & Co.
Wic-king
WICKING & Co., HARRY, Merchants and Commission Agents-St. George's Buildg.
W. Clement Drew
J. Owen Hughes
Agencies
Union Assurance Society, Ld. (Fire) New Amoy Dock Company
1164
師律聆厘寄及臣堅威
HONGKONG
Wai-kin-shan kap Ki-li-se Lut-sze
WILKINSON & GRIST, Solicitors, Proctors,
and Notaries Public-9, Queen's Road Central
Charles David Wilkinson
Edward James Grist
Charles Edward Hartnell Beavis
Montgomery Reader Harris, solicitor A. A. Marçal, cashier H. Jacobjee
C. A. Almario
Akbar Khan
J. M. G. Silva, steno-typist
Chan Yau
Lo Fuk Tseung,
Tseung Shiu Lun
C. L. Yip
To Ting Kwok
Li Fuk Tsau,
Leung Wing Cheung, interpreter
Un Hew Fan,
do.
do.
Kut-sing
WILKINSON, HEYWOOD & CLark, Limited, Varnish and Colour Manufacturers- Alexandra Buildings
Walter D. Graham, inanager
H. F. Chard
士忌露威
Wai-lo-ke-se
William G. Jack & Co., Ltd., Elec
trical and Mechanical Engineers, Govt. Contractors, Agents and Importers, &c.- 14, Des, Voeux Road Central; Cable- grams: Marinework;Teleph. 358 and 38K
Wm. C. Jack, M.I.N.A.
Percival H. Nye, asst. manager
F.J. Gellion, engineer
N. S. Moses, harbour engineer F. Montalto de Jesus, acet.
(See Advertisement)
Vi-loo-sun
WILSON, DR. NEWELL, Dental Surgeon-2,
Pedder Street; Telep. 540
WITZKE & Co., CHR., Engineers--Kowloon;
Teleph. K 64
Chr. Witzke, partner
H. Jebsen,
do.
WRIGHT, J. T., Broker
WYNDHAM HOTEL (late Pelham House)-29,
Wyndham Street
M. Stevenson Hoy, proprietress
YACHT CLUB (See Recreation Clubs)
院醫科牙崎山
YAMASAKI, DR, T.,-34, Queen's Road
Central
Dr. T. Yamasaki, dentist
Dr. H. Ishiwara, do.
H. Shimoyama, do.
DAREL Yan On Po-him Kung-sze
YAN ON MARINE AND FIRE INSURANCE
Co., LD.-303, Des Voeux Road, Central: Tel. Ad: "Yutngam'
*
菎惡 Wei-leung
YERA, H., Photographer-14, Beaconsfield
Arcade
K. Tamenari
YIK ON STEAMSHIP Co., LD.-240, Des
Vœux Road
Yü Pun Nam, general manager
行銀金正濱橫
Wang-pun-ching-kum Ngan-hong
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LTD.-Prince's
Building; Tel. Ad: Ginko.
T. Takamichi, manager
M. Kikuchi, sub-manager
M. Susuki, signs per pro.
S. Fujita S. Matsuoka S. Takahashi
J. Washio K. Hara
B. M. Castro
J. X. Batalha
(See Advertisement}
會年青督基
Kei-tak-kau-tsing-nin-wui
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION-
Tel. Ad: Flamingo
European-Alexandra Buildings
President-Sir Henry May, K.C.M.G.
Treasurer-G. Piercy
Secretary J. L. McPherson, M.A. Chinese-34, Queen's Road Central
President-B. Wong Tape Treasurer-Lam Woo
Secty.-T. M. Elliott, B.S. (absent)
Do.F. M. Mohler, B.A.
司公疏燕安源
•
YUEN ON MARINE AND FIRE INSURANCE EXCHANGE, LOAN, AND GODOWN Co., LD. 9, Bonham Strand West; Branches:
Shanghai, Canton, Hankow, Singapore and Tientsin
Chairman of Direcs.-Wong Tsz Kwai Managing Director-Li Yau Shan
F
HONGKONG
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS
(For addresses see preceding pages.)
1165
ACCOUNTANTS & AUDITORS
Lowe, Bingham & Matthews.
Percy Smith & Seth
ERATED WATER MANUFACTURERS
Aquarius Company
Hill, Bergdahl & Co.
Royal Erated Waters Manufactory Co.,
Ltd.
Victoria Dispensary
Watkins, Limited
Watson & Co., A. S., Ltd.
ARCHITECTS & CIVIL ENGINEERS
Abdoolrahim, A.
Denison, Rami & Gibbs
Harker, B. Brotherton
Hazeland, E. M.
Palmer & Turner
Sayer, J. B.
Leigh & Orange
Warren, C. E.
ARCHITECTS & SURVEYORS
Lemm, John
Rose, Louis A.
Weaser & Raven
ARMS DEALERS
Schmidt & Co., W.
ASBESTOS DEALERS
Bell's Asbestos Eastern Agency, Ld. United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld. ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES
Biblochica Portugueza
British Medical Association (Hongkong
and China Branch)
Catholic Union
China Association
City Hall
City Hall Library
German Church and School Society Hongkong Amateur Athletic Association Hongkong Benevolent Society Hongkong Cricket League
H'kong General Chamber of Commerce Institution of Engineers & Shipbuilders Hongkong Horticultural Society
Hongkong Odd Volumes
Hongkong Philharmonic Society
Hongkong Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals Hongkong St. Andrew's Society
Hongkong Volunteer Reserve Association
ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES-Continued
Museum
Royal Naval Canteen Sailors' Home Seamen's Institute
Sociedade Philarmonica
Soldiers' & Sailors' Home
Stockbrokers' Association of Hongkong Theatre Royal
Young Men's Christian Association AUCTIONEERS
Hughes & Hough
Lammert, Geo. P.
BAKERS
Café Weismann
Dorabjee & Son Ruttonjee & Son, H.
BANKS
Bank of Taiwan, Ld.
Banque de l'Indo-Chine
Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China
Deutsch-Asiatische Bank
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corpn.
Hongkong Savings Bank
International Banking Coporation.
Mercantile Bank of India
National Bank of China
Netherlands India Commercial Bank Netherlands Trading Society Russo-Chinese Bank Yokohama Specie Bank Alabaster, C. G.
Berkeley, Sir Henry, K. C. Ho Kai, C.M.G. Pollock, H. E., K.C. Slade, H. W.
BOOKSELLERS
Bible, Book & Tract Depôt Brewer & Co., Ed. Kelly & Walsh, Ld. BREWERIES
Imperial Brewing Co. Oriental Brewery, Ld. BROKERS (Bill and Bullion)
Dastur, R. A.
Gubbay, R. A. Hancock, Alfred Hancock, Sidney Layton & Co. Stewart Bros.
1166
BROKERS (Exchange)
Christiani, Th, Joseph, J. E. Sassoon, M. S.
Schellhass, Albr. W. BROKERS (General)
Allymahomed, Á. T. Basto, H. M. Bisney, S.
Ellis, Frederick
Grimble, Geo.
Haskell, D.
Howard, E.
Jamsetjee, P. A. Joseph, E. S.
Kadoorie & Co., E. S.
Kotwal, E. D. Lammert, Geo. P. Mehta, B. K.
Michael & Co., J. R.
Perry, I. S. Ray, E. C.
Razack, M. A.
Roza Pereira, A. M.
Seth, Harold
Silva, A. H. M.
Wright, J. T.
BROKERS (Share and General)
Gazdar, D. D.
Joseph, E. S
Kadoorie & Co., E. S.
Michael & Co., J. R.
Rose, T. I.
Stoppa, P.
Vernon & Smyth
BROKERS (Ship, Freight and Coal)
Bune, A.
Grimble, George
Himly & Co.
Lamke & Rogge
Ray, E. C.
Roza Pereira, A. M.
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
Li Ping
Warren & Co., C. E.
CAFÉS
Café Weismann
Owl Grill Room
CEMENT MANUFACTURERS
Green Island Cement Co., Ld.
CHEMISTS & DRUGGISTS
Fletcher & Co.
Medical Hall
Victoria Dispensary
Watkins, Ltd.
Watson & Co., Ltd., A. S.
CIGAR MERCHANTS
Kruse & Co. Philippine Co., Ltd. Victoria Dispensary Watson, & Co., Ltd., A. S.
HONGKONG
CINEMATOGRAPH
Pathe Phono-Cinema-China Sulon-Cinema CHURCHES
Bethesda Chapel
"Ohel Leah" Synagague Roman Catholic Cathedral Rosary Church
St. Anthony' Church St. Francis' Church St. John's Cathedral
St. Joseph's Church
St. Peter's (Seamen's) Church St. Stephen's Mission Church Union Church
Wesleyan Garrison and Naval Church CLUBS
Amateur Dramatic Club Club Germania
Club Lusitano
Coal Mine Owners Engineers' Institute Hongkong Club Nippon Club
Parsee Church and Club Peak Club
Zoroastrian Club
(See also Recreation Clubs)
COAL CONTRACTORS
Ataka & Co.
Bismarck & Co,
Blackhead & Co., F.
Cooke, L. F.
Hughes & Hough
Kwong Sang & Co
Mitsui Bishi Goshi Kwaisha Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Miyasaki & Co.
Wallem & Co.
COMMISSION AGENTS
Abdoola & Co., C.
Abdoolally Ebrahim & Co.
Ally, M.
Alvares & Co., L. M. (in liqn.)
Alves & Co., J. M.
Apcar & Co., Arratoon Y.
Arculli Bros.
Arndt & Co.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co.
Arthur & Co., Ltd. (Export) Ataka & Co.
Banker & Co.
Basa, R.
Bawla, O. M.
Bilimoria, R. D.
Bornemann Co., Ferd.
Brandes, Karl
Bume & Reif
Bune, A.
Castle Brothers, Wolf & Sons China Export, Import & Bank Cie. Chinoy & Co.
Connell, Bros. Co.
COMMISSION AGENTS-Continued
Cooper & Co., H. N.
Cruz, Basto & Co. Dady Burjor & Co. Dang Chee, Son & Co. Dinshah & Co., D. Ellis, F.
Essaboy, A. M. Fletcher & Co.
Fromm, Hugo, C. A.
Gamcau, L.
Gazdar, D. D.
Gonzalez, de Bernedo
Gotla & Co., P. D.
Graham, Douglas
Haskell, D.
Guedes & Co.
Heuser, Eberius & Co.
Holmes & Co., H. S.
Humphreys & Co., W. G.
Humphreys & Son, John D.
Jeffries, H. U.
Kruse & Co.
Kwok & Co., P. K.
Loxley & Co., W. R.
MacEwen, Frickel & Co. Meurer Fils & Cie. Meyerink & Co., Wm.
HONGKONG
CONSULATES-Continued
Brazil Chili
Costa Rica Denmark
Equador
France
Germany
Guatemala Italy Japan Mexico
Netherlands
Nicaragua
Norway Panama Portugal Russia Siam Spain
Sweden
United States
CONTRACTORS (Army and Navy)
Arculli, A. F.
Bismarck & Co.
Charles & Co., L.
COTTON MILLS
1167
Hongkong Cotton Spinning Weaving
Kuhn & Komor
Michael & Co., J. R.
Moulder & Co., A. B.
and Dyeing Co.
Musso & Co., L. A.
CURIO DEALERS
Nalladaroo & Co., F. P.
Nemazee, H. M. H.
CYCLE DEPOTS
Nishizawa & Co.
Ollia & Co., N. D.
Osmund, C.
Patell & Co.
Radlecker & Co.
Rahim & Co., Rasid
Remedios & Co., J. C. dos
Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co.
Ronibach & Co.
Sander, Wieler & Co.
Seth, Harold
Shewan & Co., W.
Silva & Co.
Singon & Co.
Smith & Co., J. G.
Soares & Co.
Talati, F. P.
Tata, F. K. Tyebkhan, E. A. Ulderup & Schluter Ullmann & Co., J. Union Trading Co. Vassania, J. J. Vieira & Co., E. Waller & Co. Wendt & Co.
Wicking & Co., Harry
CONSULATES
Austria-Hungary Belgium
Dragon Cycle Depot DAIRIES
Dairy Farm Co., Ltd.
Hongkong Dairy
Kowloon Dairy
DENTISTS
Chaun, Dr. H. M. Kew Brothers, Drs. McKean, Dr. G. W. Noble, Dr. J. W. Wilson, Dr. Newell Yamasaki, Dr. T.
Docks
Hongkong and Whampna Dock Co. Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co.
DOCTORS
Aubrey, G. E. Belilios, R. A.
Gibson, R. Maclean
Gomes, A. S.
Heanley, C. M.
Jamset, K.
Jordan, Forsyth & Gröne
Majima, K.
Muller, Justi & Hock
Stedman, Harston, Marriott, Black &
Hobson
For Doctors in Government Service See under Government Offices page 1119
1168
DRAPERS
Abdoolrahiman, O.
Al Men & Hing Cheong & Co. Bejonjee & Co.
Cassuin Ahmed
Cooper & Co.
Hiptoola & Co., H Hoosainali & Co. Kayamally & Co. M. Mahomed, R. H. Osman & Casum Powell, Ld., Win. Savoy, The
DRESSMAKERS & MILLINERS
Fairall & Co. Gains, M. Kensington House
Powell, Ld., Wm.
EDUCATIONAL
Anglo-Indian School
Asile de la Sainte Enfance
Baxter Girls' School
Belilios Public School for Girls
HONGKONG
Church Missionary Society's Day Schools
Diocesan Girls' School and Orphanage
Diocesan School and Orphanage
Hildesheim Mission Blind Asylum
Hongkong College of Medicine Italian Convent
Kowloon British School Queen's College
R. C. Cathedral School
Saiyingpun School
South China Academy
St. Joseph's English College
St. Paul's College
St. Stephen's College
St. Stephen's Girls' College and Pre-
paratory School
Victoria British School
Victoria Home & Orphanage
Wanchai School
Wesleyan Mission School
West Point Reformatory
Yaumati School
ELECTRIC COMPANIES
China & Japan Telephone & Electric Co.
China Light & Power Co., Ld. Electric Co., Ld., Hongkong
ENGINEERS (Civil)
(See Architect-)
ENGINEERS AND SHIPBUILDERS
Bailey & Co., W. S.
Fenwick & Co, Ld., Geo.
Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co. Jack & Co., Ld., Wm. 0. Macdonald & Co.
Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co.
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS
Bailey & Murphy
Barker & Co., Win.
Carmichael & Clarke
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS -Continued
Gordon & Co.
Jack & Co., Ld., Wm. C. Macdonald & Hunter Witzke & Co., Chr.
ESTATE AGENTS
Linstead & Davis TERRY COMPANY
Star Ferry Co., Ld, FLOUR MILLERS
Hongkong Milling Co. Sperry Flour Co. Stockton Milling Co. FORWARDING AGENTS China Express Co. FRENCH TEACHER
D'Agostini, P. G.
FUMIGATING & DISINFECTING
Fumigating & Disinfecting Bureau, Ld.
Gas Co.
Hongkong & China Gas Co.
HAIRDRESSERS
Campbell, Moore & Co. Paris Toilet Club
Sayce & Co.
HOSPITALS
Alice Memorial Hospital
Alice Memorial Maternity Hospital
Berlin Foundling Hospital
Civil Hospital
Ho Mui Ling Hospital
Infectious Diseases Hospitals Lunatic Asylum
Matilda Hospital
Nethersole Hospital
Peak Hospital Tung Wah Hospital Victoria Hospital
HOTELS
Astor House Hotel Central Hotel Colonial Hotel Cosmopolitan Hotel Criterion Hotel German Tavern Grand Carlton Hotel Hongkong Hotel International Hotel King Edward Hotel Kowloon Hotel
Land We Live In Hotel Matsubara (Japanese) New Travellers' Hotel Oriental Hotel
Peak Hotel
Praya East Hotel
Rose, Shamrock & Thistle Hotel Stag Hotel
Western Hotel
HOTELS (Private)
Braeside
Craigieburn
Kingsclere
Waverley
Wyndham Hotel
HOUSE & LAND VALUERS
Sayer & Co.
HOUSE FURNISHERS
A. Ling & Co.
Lane, Crawford & Co. Powell, Lrl, Wm.
ICE WORKS
Hongkong Ice Co.
JEWELLERS
Falconer & Co., G.
Gaupp & Co., Clis. J.
Sennot Frères
Ullmann & Co., J.
LAMPS DEALERS
Tài Kwong Co.
LAND INVESTMENT COMPANIES
HONGKONG
China Provident Loan & Mortgage Co. Hongkong Land Investment & Agency
Co, L
Hongkong Land Reclamation Co. Humphreys' Estate & Finance Co. Kowloon Land & Building Co., Ld. Sam Wang Land Investment, Loan &
Agency Co., Ld.
West Point Building Co., Ld. LAUNDRIES
Steam Laundry Co., Ld.
LITHOGRAPHERS
Hongkong Lithographic Co.
South China Morning Post, Ld.
MACHINERY AGENTS AND CONTRACTORS
Arndt & Co.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co.
Barker & Co., Wm.
Bumann & Berblinger Carmichael & Clarke Fenwick & Co., Ld., Geo. Holland-China Trading Co. Jack & Co, Ld., Wm. C. Lysaught, Wm. Macdonald & Co. Ulderup & Seltüter MACHINES, SEWING
Singer Sewing Machine Co.
MERCHANTS (Commission)
See Commission Agents MERCHANTS (General)
Aagaard, Thoresen & Co. Abdoola & Co., C. Abdoolally, Ebrahini & Co. Apear &o., Arratoon V. Arculli, Bros. Arnhold, Karberg & Co.
MERCHANTS (General)-Continued
Arthur & Co. (Export), Ld. Ataka & Co.
Barretto & Co. Bilbrough, C.L.S.
Bornemann & Co., Ferd.
Bradley & Co.
Burjorjee Naorojee
Butterfield & Swire
Carlowitz & Co.
Cawasjee Pallanjee & Co.
China Export-Import-and-Bank Cie. Chinoy & Co.
Connell Bros. & Co. Cruz, Basto & Co. Dang Chee Son & Co. David & Co., S. J. Dinshah & Co., D. Dodwell & Co., Ltd. Ellias, Maliomed H. E.
Essabhoy, A. M.
Fernandez & Co Fromm, Hugo C. A. Fung Tang
Garrels, Borner & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Gilman & Co.
Heuser, Eberius & Co. Holland-China Trading Co.
1169
Hongkong & Manila Yuen Sheng Ex-
change & Trading Co. Humphreys & Co., W. G. Hutchison & Co., John D. Italian Far Eastern Trading Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Jebsen & Co.
Jorge & Co.
Kwok & Co. P. K.
Lack & Davis
Lapicque & Co, P. A.
Lapruik & Co., Douglas Linstead & Davis Loxley & Co., W. R. MacEwen, Frickel & Co. McBain, G.
Marty, A. R. Melchers, & Co. Meurer Fils & Co. Meyerink & Co., Wm. Michael, & Co., J. R. Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Mody & Co., N. Moulder & Co., A. B. Nemajee, H. M. H.
Nishizawa & Co.
Pabaney, Ebrahimbhoy
Radecker & Co.
Reiss & Co.
Remedios & Co., J. J. dos
Reuter, Brockelmann & Co.
Robitsek & Reis
Rombach & Co.
Ross & Co., Alex. Rozario & Co.
37
1170
MERCHANTS (General) Continued
Sander, Weiler & Co.
Sassoon & Co., Ld., David Sassoon & Co., E. D. Schuldt & Co.
Shewan, Tomes & Co. Siemssen & Co. Skott & Co., H. Talait, F. P.
Union Trading Wendt & Co.
Co.
Wicking & Co., Harry METAL MERCHANTS
Singon & Co.
MILLINERS
Abdoolrahiman, O. Bejonjee & Co.
Cooper & Co.
Hoosainali & Co.
Hiptoola & Co., H.
Maliomed, Rt. H.
Kayamally & Co., M. Osman & Sasum Powell, Ld., Wm.
MOTOR ENGINEERS
Bailey & Co., W. S. Barker & Co., Wm. Kew & Co., J. W. Jack & Co., Ld., Wm. C.
MUSIC (Professors of)
Dannenberg, F. Gonzales, Francisco MUSIC STORES
Lane, Crawford & Co. Moutrie & Co., S. Robinson Piano Co.
NEWSAGENTS
Brewer & Co., Ld., Kelly & Walsh, Id.
NEWSPAPERS
China Mail Chinese Mail
Chung Ngoi San Po Hongkong Daily Press Hongkong Weekly Press.
Hongkong Telegraph
South China Morning Post
OIL MERCHANTS
Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld.
HONGKONG
Royal Dutch & Asiatic Petroleum Co.
Standard Oil Co.
Vacuum Oil Co.
OPTICIANS
Gaupp & Co., Chs. J.
Lazarus, N.
Ullmann & Co., J.
OUTFITTERS
(See Tailors)
PAINT MANUFACTURERS
Storer & Sons, David White, Hedley G.
Wilkinson, Heywood & Clark, Ld. PAPER MANUFACTURING Co.
Tai Shing Paper Manufacturing Co. PHOTOGRAPHERS
A Fong's Photo Studio Mumeya & Sano, M. Yera, H.
PHOTOGRAPHIC GOODS DEALERS
A. Ling & Co.
Long Hing & Co.
PIANO DEALERS
Lane, Crawford & Co.
Moutrie & Co., S.
Robinson Piano Co.
POSTAGE STAMP DEALERS, &c.
Graca & Co.
PRINTERS
China Mail, Ld.
Eastern Printing Office Guedes & Co.
Hongkong Daily Press Office Hongkong Printing Press Kelly & Walsh, Ld. Noronha & Co. Noronha, L.
South China Morning Post RAILWAYS
Canadian-Pacific Railway Co. Kowloon-Canton Railway
RECREATION CLUBS
Chess Club
Craigengower Cricket Club
Hongkong Civil Service Cricket Club
Hongkong Corinthian Yacht Club
Hongkong Cricket Club
Hongkong Football Club
Hongkong Football Association
Hongkong Hockey Club
Hongkong Jockey Club
Kowloon Bowling Green Club
Kowloon Cricket Club
Lusitano Recreation Club
Parsee Cricket Club
Polo Club
Queen's College Cricket & Football Club
Royal Hongkong Golf Club
Royal Hongkong Yacht Club
United Service Recreation Club Victoria Recreation Club
ROPE MANUFACTURERS
Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co. SHIPCHANDLERS
Bismarck & Co.
Blackhead & Co., F.
Charles & Co., L.
Kwong Sang & C
Lane, Crawford & Co.
Ritchie & Co.
HONGKONG
1171
SAILMAKERS A. King
Bismarck & Co.
Blackhead & Co., F.
Bumann & Berblinger
SHIPPING OFFICES
Aagaard, Thoresen & Co. (Norwegian
Steamers)
Arnhold, Karberg & Co.
Barretto & Co. (Compania Transatlantica) Butterfield & Swire
Canadian Pacific Railway Co.
Carlowitz & Co. (Nav. Gen. Italiana) China Commercial S. S. Co.
China & Manila S. S. Co.
China Merchants' S. N. Co.
China Navigation Co.
Dodwell & Co. (Northern Pacific and
other Lines)
Douglas Steamship Co.
Eng Hok Fong . S. Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Hamburg-Amerika Line
Hongkong, Canton& Macao Stin'boat Co.
Indo-China S. N. Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co.
Java-China-Japan Line
Jebsen & Co.
Lapicque & Co., P. A.
Marty, A. R. (Tonkin Line) Melchers & Co. (N. D. L.) Messageries Maritimes Nippon Yusen Kaisha Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Pacific Mail S. S. Co., with O. & O. S. S.
Co., Portland & Asiatic S. S. Co.) Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co. Sander, Wieler & Co. (Austrian Lloyd) Sassoon & Co., David (Apcar Line).
Shewan, Tomes & Co. (Ain Asiatic Line)
Toyo Kisen Kaisha Wallem & Co.
Yik On Steamship Co.
SHOE FACTORY
Hongkong and China Shoe Factory
SILK FANCY GOODS DEALERS
Dhunamal Chellaram
Pohoomull Brothers
Wassiamull Assomull
SOLICITORS
Brutton & Hett D'Almada & Smith Deacon, Looker & Deacon Dennys&Rowley Ewens & Harston Gardiner, J. H. Golding, Barlow & Morrell Harding, R. A. Hastings & Hastings Holmes, H. K.
Johnson, Stokes & Master Rong Sing, Otto
STOREKEEPERS-Continued
Stephens, M. J. D. Tso, S. W.
Wilkinson & Grist
STABLES
Horse Repository
STATIONERS
Brewer & Co., Ld. Byramjee & Co., J. Cooper & Co.
Kelly & Walsh, Ld. Vasania, J. J. STOREKEEPERS
Blackhead & Co., F.
Byramjee & Co., J. Captain & Co., D. R. Gaineau L.
Hongkong Co-operative Society Kruse & Co.
Lane, Crawford & Co.
Mutual Stores
Ritchie & Co.
Ruttonjee & Son, H. Sincere Co.
SUGAR REFINERIES
China Sugar Refining Co., Ld.
Luzon Lugar Refining Co., Ld.
Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld.
SURVEYORS (Marine)
Goddard and Douglas Hall, T. P.
Lambert, Jno.
(See also Engineers and Surveyors) TAILORS & OUTFITTERS
Ah Men & Hing Cheong & Co. Diss Bros.
Lane, Crawford & Co. Powell, William, Ld. Shaw, James T.
TELEGRAPH COMPANIES
Eastern Extension A. & C. Tel. Co. Great Northern Tel. Co.
Imperial Chinese Tel. Administration
Reuter's Telegram Co., Ld.
TIMBER MERCHANTS
China Borneo Co.
Pacific Coast Lumber Mills, Ld.
TOBACCO DEALERS
Brewer & Co., Ld. Kelly & Walsh Kruse & Co. Lane, Crawford & Co. Price & Co. Lol., H. Prien, G.
Sayce & Co.
Turkish Tobacco Manufactury TOBACCO FACTORIES
Atienza, V. (Germinal Tobac. Factory) British-American Tobacco Co., Ld. The Orient
37*
1172
TOILET COMPANIES
Campbell, Moore & Co. Paris Toilet Co.
TOURIST AGENCY
Cook & Son, Thos.
TRAMWAYS
Electric Traction Co. Peak Tramways Co. TYPEWRITERS, ETC. Ramsey & Co. Rombuch & Co. UNDERTAKERS
Brown, Jones & Co.
WATCHMAKERS
Falconer & Co., G. Gaupp & Co., Chs. J.
Sennet Frères
Ullmann & Co.
HONGKONG
WATER BOAT Co.
Union Water Boat Co. WHARVES AND GODOWNS
Holt's Wharf and Godowns Hongkong & Kowloon Wharf and
Godown Co.
WINE & SPIRIT MERCHANTS Bumann and Berblinger Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co. Gameau, L.
Lane, Crawford & Co.
Mutual Stores
Pereira, J. M. G.
Price & Co., Ld., H.
Ruttonjee & Son, H.
Watson & Co., A. S.
YACHT & MOTOR BOAT BUILDERS
A. King
Ramsey & Co.
Ulderup & Schlüter
INSURANCE OFFICES
OFFICES
Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance Company "Agrippina" Marine Insurance, of Cologne Albingia Fire Insurance Co. (Hamburg) Alleanza Societa de Assecurazione in Genova Allgemeine See VersicherungsGesellschaft(Hamburg) Allgemeine Versicherungs Gesellschaft, Helvetia... Alliance Assurance Company (Fire and Marine). Allianz Insurance Co. of Berlin, London Agency. Allianz Versicherungs Actien Ges. in Berlin Assecuranz Union of 1865
Associated Assurance Companies, Limited, London... Assurance Company "Mercur"
Atlantic Mutual Insce. Co. of New York Atlas Assurance Co., Ld., London.....
"Aurora" Compañia Anonima de Seguros, Bilbao... Australian Alliance Assurance Co. (Marine). Baden Marine Insurance Co. of Mannheim Baloise Fire Insurance Company, Basle. Basler Transport Versicherungs Gesellschaft. Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Company Bayerischer Lloyd, München
Bayerischer Lloyd Transp. Versicherung A. G. Bremen Underwriters
British American Assurance Co.
British Crown Assce. Corporation, Ld....
British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company British Dominions Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Limited
Central Insurance Co., Ld., of London (Fire) China Fire Insurance Company, Limited. China Merchants' Insurance Company
China Mutual Life Assurance Company, Limited..... China Traders' Insurance Company, Limited Chun On Fire Insurance Company, Limited City of London Underwriting Association Comité des Assureurs, Paris
Comité des Assureurs Maritimes du Harve. Comité des Assureurs Maritimes de Paris
AGENTS
Wm. Meyerink & Co. Siemssen & Co. Carlowitz & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. Siemissen & Co. Melchers & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Melchers & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Secretary, China Fire Ince. Co. Siemssen & Co.
Gibb, Livingston & Co. Siemssen & Co. Carlowitz & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Shewan, Tomes & Co.
Schuldt & Co. Siemssen & Co. Melchers & Co. Reiss & Co.
W. R. Loxley & Co. Butterfield & Swire Shewan, Tomes & Co. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Alex. Ross & Co.
C. Pemberton, secretary China Merchants' S. Nav. Co. Lefferts Knox, manager C. M. Ede, secretary Chau Siu Ki, secretary Siemssen & Co. Gilman & Co. Meurer, Fils & Co. Meurer, Fils & Co.
HONGKONG
INSURANCE OFFICES-Continued
OFFICES
Commercial Union Assurance Co. (Fire and Typhoon) Committee of Underwriters of Glasgow. Compagnia d'Assicurazione Generali in Trieste Consolidated Marine Ince. Co. of Berlin....... Continental Insurance Company, Mannheim Continentale Versicherungs Gesellschaft, Mannheim De Private Assurandeurer, Copenhageun Dusseldorf Universal Insurance Company
East India Sea and Fire Insurance Co., Batavia Eastern Insurance Company, Limited
El Dia Companie Anonyme Assurance, Carthagena Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States... Fatum Accident Insurance Company (Accident) Fatum Accident Insurance Company Federal Insurance Co. of New York' Federal Marine Insurance Company, Zurich Fire Insurance Association of Hongkong Fire Insurance Company of 1877, Hamburg Fireman's Fund Insurance Company (Fire) Foncière, General Insurance Company, of Budapest Fortuna General Insurance Co. of Berlin Frankfort Marine Insurance Company Frankona Insurance Co.......
General Insurance Co. (Assicurazioni GeneraliTrieste) German Lloyd Marine Insurance Company German Lloyd Marine Insurance Co., Ld., Berlin... German Marine Insurance Association, London "Germania" Transp. V. A. G., Berlin
Germanischer Lloyd's, Berlin
Globus Insurance Co., of Hamburg..
Gresham Life Assurance Society
Guardian Assurance Company, Limited
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Company. Hanseatic Fire Insurance Company Hansa Insurance Co. of Stockholm "Heilbronner" Vers. Ges.....
Hip On Insurance, Exchange and Loan Company Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Limited.. Hull Underwriters' Association, Ltd.
I On Marine and Fire Insurance Company, Limited Imperial Insurance Company, Limited
Imperial Marine & Transport Insurance Co.,Ld., Tokyo Insurance Company of North America International Insurance Co., Dusseldorf International Lloyd Insurance Company, Berlin...... International Lloyd Marine Insurance Co. of Berlin Internationaler Lloyd Versicherungs Actien Ges. ... Internationaler Lloyd, Berlin
Italiana, Societa d'Assicurazoni, Genova "Jakor" Marine Insurance Company, Moscow Koelner Lloyd Insurance Company, La Aseguradora Espanola, Madrid...... La "Estrella" Soc. A. d'Assurs. Generales... La Foncière (la Lyonnaise réunie de Paris) "La Nacional" (Fire & Marine Insurance) Lancashire Insurance Company (Fire and Life) Law Guarantee & Trust Society, Ld.
Law Inion and Crown Insurance Company.. Liguria Marine Insurance Company, Limited Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co.......
AGENTS
P. Tester, local manager Gilman & Co. Gilman & Co. Holland-China Trading Co. Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Schuldt & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Siemssen & Co.
1173
Shewan, Tomes & Co., gen. mgrs. W. R. Loxley & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co. Dady Burjor & Co. A. R. Lowe, secretary Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co. Carlowitz & Co.
Ferd. Bornemann & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Carlowitz & Co. Barretto & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld. Carlowitz & Co.
Schuldt & Co.
Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Ng Li Hing & Tam Tsz Kong Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld Siemssen & Co.
Chan Shu-ming, secretary Dodwell & Co., Ld. Carlowitz & Co.
Shewan, Tomes & Co. Siemssen & Co. Sander, Wieler & Co. Siemssen & Co. Melchers & Co. Schuldt & Co.
Gilman & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Gilman & Co. Carlowitz & Co. Barretto & Co.
Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Hastings & Hastings Shewan, Tomes & Co. Gilman & Co.
Wm. Meyerink & Co.
1174
HONGKONG
INSURANCE OFFICES-Continued
Liverpool Underwriters' Association.
OFFICES
Lloyd Generali Italiano, in Genova..
Lloyd Meriodionale, Naples
Lloyd Platino, Limited (Fire and Marine). Lloyd Sabando Insce. Co., of Turin.. Lloyd's
London Assurance Corpn. (Marine, Fire and Life). London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company L'Union Fire Insurance Co., L. of Paris
L'Universo, Italian Marine Insce. Co., Ld. of Milan... L'Urbaine Fire Insurance Co. of Paris Magdeburg Fire Insurance Company Man On Insurance Company, Limited Manhattan Life Insurance Company, New York.. Manufacturers' Life Assurance Co., Toronto... Marine Insurance Company, Ld. Maritime Insurance Company, Limited Meiji (Fire) Insurance Company
Merchants Marine Insurance Company, London...... Merchants' Shipping and U'writers' Assn., Melbourne Munchener Ruckversicherungs Gesellschaft National Board of Marine Underwriters, New York National General Insurance Co. of London Neptunus Assecuranz Cie. (Hamburg) Netherlands Fire Insurance Co. Estd. 1845 (Fire) Neuchateloise Société Suisse d'Assurance Neue 5th Assuranz Company..
New York Board of Underwriters
New Zealand Insurance Company, Limited Niederrheinische Güter Assecuranz Ges., Wesel Nippon Fire Insurance Co., Limited
Nippon Marine Transport & Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Nord-Deutsche Insurance Company, Nord-Deutsche Marine Insurance Co., Nord-West Deutsche Insurance Co.,
North British and Mercantile Insurance Company.. North China Insurance Co., Ld.
North German Marine Insurance Co....
Northern Assurance Company (Fire and Life). Northern Assurance Company (Fire and Life). Northern Assurance Company, Moscow...... Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Oberrheinische Versicherungs Ges., Mannheim Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation, Ld. Ocean Insurance Co., Gottenburg. Orient Insurance Company.
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. of California Palatine Insurance Company, Limited Patriotic Assurance Company Phoenix Assurance Company, Limited. Po On Marine Insurance Company. Preuss. Nat. Versicherungs Gesellschaft.. Property (Fire) Insurance Co., Ld., London Providence Washington Insurance Co. Providentia Insurance Company, Frankfort.. Providentia Marine Insurance Co., Vienna Providentia Marine Insurance Company, Vienna Prussian National Insurance Company (Fire) Queen Insurance Company of Liverpool Queensland Insurance Co., Ld... Queensland Insurance Co., Ld. (Marine)
AGENTS
Gilman & Co.
Gilman & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Barretto & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Gilman & Co.
Arnhold, Kacberg & Co. Butterfield & Swire Siemssen & Co. Wendt & Co.
MacEwen, Frickel & Co. Sander, Wieler & Co. Chau Siu Ki, secretary Reuter, Brockelmann & Co. Bradley & Co.
E. A. Hewett, P. & O. S. N. Co. Gilman & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Commercial Union Assurance Co. Gilman & Co. Siemssen & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Reuter, Brockelmann & Co. Siemssen & Co. W. R. Loxley & Co.
Melchers & Co. Siemssen & Co. Arnhold, Karberg & Co. Reiss & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Ataka & Co.
Siemssen, & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Shewan, Tomes & Co. W. F. Gray, acting agent Siemssen & Co. Bradley & Co.
Gibb, Livingston & Co. Gilman & Co.
David Sassoon & Co., Ld. Siemssen & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co. Siemssen & Co. Butterfield & Swire Shewan, Tomes & Co. Butterfield & Swire. John D. Hutchison & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ltd. Un Lai Chuen, secretary Gilman & Co.
Dady Burjor & Co. Dodwell & Co. Ld. Schuldt & Co.
H. Robitsek & Reis Siemssen & Co. Garrels, Borner & Co. E. D. Sassoon & Co. Gibb, Livingston & Co. W. R. Loxley & Co.
HONGKONG
INSURANCE OFFICES-Continued
OFFICES
Record of American and Foreign Shipping.. Reliance Marine Insurance Company, Limited..... Rhenania Versicherungs Actien Ges., Koln
Rhenish Westphalian Lloyd Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Royal Exchange Assurance
Royal Exchange AssuranceCorporation Royal Insurance Company (Fire and Life) Russischer Lloyd, St. Petersburg
Salamander Fire Insurance Co., Amsterdam Salamandra Ins. Co., St. Petersburg Salvage Association, London..
Salvage Syndicate
Samarang Sea and Fire Insurance Co........ Samarang Sea and Fire Insurance Company Savoia Insurance Co. of Turin
Schweiz Allegemeine Vericsherungsactien Ges. Schweizer National Versicherungs Gesellschaft Scottish Imperial Insurance (Life)
Scottish Metropolitan Assurance Company Scottish Union National Insce. Co. Sea Insurance Company, Limited.. Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Ld. Silesia Fire Insurance Company
Societé Anonyme d'Asce. "FrancoHongroise, "Budapest South British Fire and Marine Insurance Company.. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co., Ld... Standard Life Assurance Company Standard Marine Insurance Co, Ld. Standard Marine Insurance Company, Ld. State Fire Insurance Company, Limited Stuttgart Life Insurance Company. Sun Life Assurance Co., of Cañada. Sun Insurance Office
Swiss National Insurance Co., of Basel Thames & Mersey Marine Insurance Co.
Tokyo Marine Insurance Company, Limited Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co. of Berlin..
Transport Versicherungs Gesellschaft "Schweiz" Triton Insurance Company, Limited
Tung On Fire Insurance Company, Limited Underwriters' Union of Amsterdam Underwriting and Agency Association Union Insurance Society of Canton
Union Internationale, Compagnie d'Assce. Antwerp
Union Malonine et Servannaise, St. Malo.. Union Marine Insurance Company, Limited
Union Marine Insurance Company, Liverpool..
Union of Genoa Underwriters
AGENTS
Arnhold Karberg & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co. Schuldt & Co. Gilman & Co. Gilman & Co.
Butterfield & Swire
Melchers & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Holland-China Trading Co.
Siemssen & Co. Gilman & Co. Jebsen & Co.
H. Robitsek & Reis Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Gilman & Co. Siemssen & Co. Garrels, Borner & Co. Vernon & Smyth
Carlowitz & Co.
Butterfield & Swire
Wong Po Chun, genl. agents Siessen & Co. Siemssen & Co. S. J. David & Co. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Dodwell & Co., Ld. Butterfield & Swire Commercial Union Assce. Co. W. G. Humphreys & Co. Hädecker & Co.
Alex L. Stain, manager Siemssen & Co.
Barretto & Co.
Dodwell & Co., Ld.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Schuldt & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Lda, Tong Tze-sau, chief secretary Gilman & Co.
Gilman & Co. C. M. Ede, secretary Siemssen & Co.
Gilman & Co.
Shewan, Tomes & Co.
1175
Commercial Union Assurance Co. Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
United Dutch Marine Insurance Companies, London Siemssen & Co.
Unione Continentale Insurance Co. of Turin
Unit German Marine Insurance Co's...
United Rhenish Insurance Cos., Bradford
United Swiss Marine Insurance Company
Universal Underwriting Association
Upper Rhine Insurance Co., Ld. Mannheim...
Vaterlandische Trans. Vers. Act. Ges Elberfeld Verein Hamburger Assecuradeure
Versicherungs-Gesselschaft von 1873 World Marine Insurance Company
Wurtemburg, Transport Versich. Ges., Heilbroun...
Siemssen & Co. Siemssen & Co.
Melchers & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Carlowitz & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Siemssen & Co.
Shewan, Tomes & Co. Schuldt & Co.
EL
1176
HONGKONG
INSURANCE OFFICES--Continued
OFFICES
Wurttembergische" Transport V. G. zu Heilbronn Yan On Marine and Fire Insurance Co., Limited Yangtsze Insurance Association, Limited Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld Yorkshire Fire Insurance Co.
Yuen On Marine & Fire Insurance Co.
AGENTS Siemssen & Co.
Chan Yüt Ngan, secretary Shewan, Tomes & Co. Shewan, Tomes & Co. Schuldt & Co.
Li Tsin Tong& Wong Sewai, secs.
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Abraham, Mrs. A. E., 1, Gomes Villas,
Kowloon
Abraham, Miss A. E., 1, Gomes Villas,
Kowloon
Abraham, Mrs. R., 2, Hart Avenue, Kowloon Adams, Mrs. P. J. K., Mission Bungalow,
The Peak
d'Agostini, Mrs. P. G., Beaconsfield Arcade Aitken, Mrs., 4, Elliot Cresent Almond, Mrs. Russell, Braeside Apcar, Mrs. E. M. A., Honkgong Hotel Alabaster, Mrs. C. G., Peak Hotel Alvares, Mrs. L. M., 10, Kennedy Road Alves, Miss, Upper Mosque Terrace Alves, Miss, A. À,, 8. Arbuthnot Road Alves, Mrs. A. F., 40, High Street Alves, Mrs. J. A. S., 2, Chico Terrace Alves, Mrs. J. M., Villa Branca, 24, Robinson
Road
Alves, Mrs. J. M. S., Calder, Macdonnell Ed. Alves, Miss Maria Camilia, Villa Branca,
24, Robinson Road
Andrew, Mrs. J. I., 14, Seymour Terrace Arima, Mrs. T., 180, Macdonnell Road Armstrong, Mrs. J. M., The Albany, Peak
Road
Armstrong, Miss, The Albany, Peak Rd. Armstrong, Mrs. F. H., Treverbyn, 18, Penk Armstrong, Mrs. W.,
do. do.
Arnold, Mrs. J., 3, The Albany
Arnold, Mrs., Westbourne Villas, WestPoint Atkinson, Mrs. J. M., Victoria Jubilee
Hospital, Peak
Ayris, Mrs. B. Knutsford Terrace, K'loon. Bain, Mrs. A., East Point
Baker, Mrs. H. G., Central Police Station Baker, S., 24, Morrison Hill Baptista, Mrs. M., 51, Elgin Street Baptista, Miss A., 51, Elgin Street Barker, Miss S. E., Civil Hospital Barnett, Mrs. E. J., St. Stephen's College,
Bonham Road
Barnett, Miss, Naval Hospital
Barrett, Mrs. Edgar G., Haytor, 108, Peak Barretto, Mrs. F. D., 1, Lower Castle Road Barretto, Mrs. O. D., 44, Caine Road Barros, Miss L., 42, Elgin Street Barrow, Miss C. H., Civil Hospital Basto, Mrs. H. M., 53, Elgin Street
Basto, Mrs. J. M. de Castro, 6, Des Voeux
Road
Bateman, Miss, 26, Belilios Terrace Baylis, Miss E.G., Braeside, Macdonnell Rd Beadnell, Mrs., Peak Hotel Beasley, Mrs. H., Kingsclere Beattie, Mrs. J. M., Abergeldie, 122, Plan-
tation Road, Peak
Beck, Mrs. J. M., The Ridge, Mount Gough,
119c, Peak
Becker, Mrs. A., 125, Barker Road, Peak Beckwith, Mrs. C. W., Kowloon Bedford, Mrs. (Colonel), Peak Hotel Belilios, Mrs. R. A., Century Crescent Bell, Mrs. Gillison, Peak Hotel
Bell, Mrs. J., Govt. Civil Hospital Bennett, Mrs., C.M.S. House, West Point Bernardo, Mrs. J. M. G., 13, Mosque Street Bernhardt, Miss C., Berlin Foundling Home Bernheim, Madame E., 39, Robinson Road Bird, Mrs., 2, Cameron Villas, Peak Bird, Miss, Hartley, Babington Path Bisney, Mrs. S., Stillingflete, Peak Road Blanchflower, Mrs. H. F., King Edward
Hotel
Boehme, Miss E., Berlin Foundling House Bolles, Mrs. J. W., 3, Elliott Cresent, 25,
Robinson Road
Bonnar, Mrs. J. W. C., 2, Redhill, Peak, 112 Borbein, Miss, Berlin Foundling House Botelho, Miss M., 44, Caine Road Botelho, Mrs. A. Á. H., 44, Caine Road Botelho, Mrs. B. J. H., Jr., 34, Caine Road Botelho, Mrs. B. J. H., 44, Caine Road Botelho, Mrs. M. J., 44, Caine Road Boulton, Mrs. J. F., Forebank, Magazine
Gap
Braga, Mrs. J. P., Seymour Terrace Braidwood, Mrs. W. D., Inglewood,
Babington Path Bremer, Mrs. A., Sunnyside, 13c, Macdon-
nell Road
Brewin, Mrs. A. W., Ulbank, Man Road Briggs, Miss, London Mission House Brown, Mrs., F., Staff Quarters, Civil
Hospital
Brown, Mrs. A. Bellamy, 2, Ormsby Villas,
Granville Road, Kowloon
Bryson, Mrs. A., Park View, West Point Buckle, Mrs. P., P. & O. Premises Bumann, Mrs. J., 7, Caine Road
Bunje, Mrs. E.T., Durbar House, Carnarvon
Road, Kowloon
T
HONGKONG LADIES' DIRECTORY
Butterworth, Mrs. H., 13, Knutsford |
Terrace, Kowloon
Cabral, Mrs. Carlos A. R., Woolamai, Des
Toux Road, Kowloon
Caldwell, Mrs. G. A., Craigieburn, Peak Campbell, Mrs. H. F., Glendarnal, 13,
Macdonnell Road
Capell, Mrs. J. R., Nathan Road, K'loon Carroll, Mrs. R., 6, Pedder's Hill
Carvalho, Mrs. C. F. de, 14, Arbuthnot Rd. Carvalho, Mrs. E. A. de, 14, Arbuthnot Rd. Carvalho, Mrs. Edith, 14, Arbuthnot Road Carvalho, Mrs. H., Shelley Street Carvalho, Mrs. J., Wyndham Street Chapman, Mrs. J. B., Taikoo Dockyard Chapman, Mrs., Blue Bungalow, Peak Road Chapman, Miss, do.
do.
Chapman, Mrs. R., Govt. Civil Hospital Chatham, Miss, Inverdruie, 128, Barker Rd. Chatham, Mrs. W., Inverdruie, 128, Barker
Road
Clark, Mrs. Duncan, Tusculum, Barker Rd. Clark, Mrs. Francis, Kingsclere Coke, Mrs., Peak Hotel
Collaço, Mrs. V. A. P. I., Woodlands
Terrace
Cooke, Mrs., Dunnotar, The Peak Cousins, Mrs. R. H.
Cordeiro, Mrs. D. A., Seymour Terrace Cousland, Mrs. A. S. D., Peak
Coppen, Mrs. A. G., Tusculum, Magazine
Gap
Crawford, Mrs. F. M., 1, Peak View, Lyt-
tleton Road
Craig, Miss, Victoria Gaol D'Almada e Castro, Mrs. F. X., Elliot
Crescent, 29, Robinson Road D'Almada e Castro, The Misses, Calder, 14,
Macdonnell Road
D'Almada e Castro, Mrs. J, T., 8, East Ter.,
Kowloon
D'Almada e Castro, Mrs. L. G., Rose Ter-
race, Kowloon
D'Almada e Castro, Mrs. Leo., Calder,
Macdonnell Road
Daunenberg, Mrs. C., Lower Castle Road Dannenberg, Mrs. F. P., 2A, High Street,
West Point
Dastur, Mrs., R. A., 38, Queen's Rd. Central David, Mrs. A. J., 2, Gough Hill, 104, Peak Davies, Mrs. A. F., Hongkong Hotel Davey, Mrs. A. E., Harbour Office Day, Mrs. F. O., Tang Yuen, 18, Macdon-
nell Road
ני
Denly. Mrs. T. K., Cragmin E., Magazine
Gap
Denison, Mrs. A., Ebordale, Mt. Kellet Rd. Dennys, Mrs. H. Lardner, Craig Ryrie, 4,
Peak
Detmers, Mrs. Win., Glenshiel, 125, Barker
Road, Peak
Detmers, Miss E., Glenshiel, Peak Detamers, Mrs. K., Courvoisier 2, Conduit
Road
1177
Doberek, Miss A., B.A., 2, Granville Avenue,
Kowloon
Dodgson, Mrs., Peak Hotel Donald, Mrs. W. H., Goodwood, Babing-
ton Path
Drought, Mrs., Craigieburn, Peak Duncan, Mrs. G., Craigieburn, Peak Duncan, Mrs. G. L., 2, Observatory Villas,
Kowloon
Eaton, The Cottage, 126, Barker Road Ede, Mrs. C. Montague, Crow's Nest, 133,
Barker Road
Edkins, Mrs., Eredine, Mt. Kellet Edwards, Mrs. G. R., 2, Victoria View,
Kowloon
Ellis, Mrs. A., Mountain View Peak Ellis, Mrs., Peak Hotel
Ellis, Mrs. I. E., 1, Pedder's Hill Ellis, Miss I. E., 1, Peddler's Hill Elly, Mrs. A., Quarry Bay Ennis, Mrs. A. D., Peak Hotel Eustace, Mrs., Nathan Road, Kowloon Eyre, Miss, Fairlea, Bonham Road Eyre, Mrs. H., Astor House
do.
Fairall, Miss, Braeside, Macdonnell Road Faria-Neves, Mrs. T., Cosmopolitan Dock Faria-Neves, Miss Faria Neves, Miss L., Fayrer, Lady, Peak Road
do.
Figg, Mrs. F. G., Observatory, Kowloon Figueiredo, Mrs. F. M. X. de, 9, Caine Rd. Figueiredo, Mrs. M. A. de, 1, Victoria View,
Garden Road, Kowloon
Finch, Mrs., Peak Hotel
Fisher, Mrs. H. G., King Edward Hotel Fisher, Mrs. (Major), La Hacienda, Peak Fittock, Mrs. C., Kowloon Docks Fletcher, Miss, Fairlea, West Point Fletcher, Mrs. H. L, 2, Mountain View,
Peak
Forbes, Mrs. A., Peak Hotel Ford, Mrs. W. J., Kowloon Docks Forsyth, Mrs., Chater's Bungalow,Kowloon Fowler, Mrs., Military Hospital, Kowloon Franco, Mrs. A. M., 37, Mosque Street Franklin, Mrs. A. C., Goodwood, Babing-
ton Path
Frost, Mrs. B. L., Nathan Road, Kowloon Funatsu, Mrs. T., 19, Macdonnell Road Gale, Mrs. C. H., Des Voeux Villas, 77, Peak Galloway, Mrs. R., Quarry Bay Galluzi, Mrs. A., 2, Queen's Garden Gameau, Madame, Queen's Road Central Garrod, Mrs., Central Police Station Geary, Miss A. K., Victoria Hospital, Penk Gegg, Mrs. G. W., Kennedy's Horse Re-
pository, Causeway Bay Gibbs, Mrs. Lawrence, The Bluff, 107, Peak Gibbson, Mrs. A., 38, Kennedy Road' Gibson, Mrs. Adam, 10, Mountain View,
Peak
Gibson, Mrs., Quarry Bay Gilby, Mrs. H. H., Stewart Terrace, Peak Gittins, Miss L., 17, Caine Road
1178
HONGKONG LADIES' DIRECTORY
Glissimann, Mrs. L., Windsor Lodge, Kim-
berley Road, Kowloon
Gloyn, Mrs. J. W., East Point
་་
Glover, Miss, La Hacienda, Mt. Kellet Rd. Goggin, Mrs., 3, Belilios Ter., Robinson Rd. Goggin, Miss, 3, Belilios Ter., Robinson Rd. Gok, Mrs. C. G., Lyeemun, Barker Road,
134, Peak
Gomes, Miss A., 15, Seymour Road
Gomes, Mrs. A. S., Lena Cottage, 9, Sey-
mour Road.
Gomes, Mrs. F. A., Caine Road
Gordon, Mrs. A. G. Tor Crest, The Peak Gordon, Misses, Tor Crest, The Peak Gorham, Mrs. C. L., Hongkong Hotel Gorham, Miss A. E., Govt. Civil Hospital Gottschalk, Mrs., Berlin Foundling House,
Bonham Road
Gresson, Mrs. W. Jardine, East Point Griffin, Mrs., Martinhoe, Barker Road, Peak Grimble, Mrs. G., Bisney Villa, Pokfulum Grimshaw, Mrs. T., 3, Sea View Terrace,
Quarry Bay
Grone, Mrs. F., 10, Queen's Gardens Grotefend, Miss, Berlin Foundling House Gourley, Miss H. M., Govt. Civil Hospital Gubbay, Mrs. S. D., 9, Macdonnell Road Gutierrez, Mrs. A. A., 14, Mosque Street Gutierrez, Mrs. J. M., Elgin Villa, Caine
Road
Gutierrez, Mrs. Rufus, 49, Wyndham St. Gutierrez, Miss Gussie, 49, Wyndham St. Guy, Mrs. J., Kowloon Docks Hanson, Mrs. J., 158, Praya East Hale, Mrs. B. A., Wellburn, 8, Peak Hallifax, Mrs. E. R., Modreenagh, Peak Halton, Mrs. Fred. J., Exmoor, 2, Conduit
Road
Hance, Mrs., 7, Seymour Terrace Hance, Miss, 7, Seymour Terrace Hancock, Mrs. R., Cheltondale, 100, Peak Hardwick, Mrs. W., Quarry Ray Haiker, Mrs. Brotherton, Seymour Terrace Harker, Miss, Seymour Terrace Harman, Mrs. G. J., Rocklands, Robinson
G.J., Road
Harris, Mrs. Alfred H., Durisdeer, 141,
Peak
Harrison, Miss E., Peak Hospital Hartshorn, Miss Idlewild, 8, Seymour Rd. Hassan, Mrs. Alick R., Richmond House,
127, Barker Road, Peak
Hastings, Mrs. G., Stokes Bungalow, Mt.
Gough Road, Peak
Hatch, Mrs. Alf., 3, Kimberley Villas, K. Hatch, Mrs. c/o Major Hatch, 129th Baluchis Hayward, Mrs., 6, Knutsford Ter., Kowloon Hayward, Miss 6, Knutsford Ter., Kowloon Hazeland, Mrs., E. M., Oriental Hotel
Hazeland, Mrs., 4, Park View, West Point Hazeland, Miss, 4, Park View, West Point Hendley Miss, Dunhaven, Robinson Road Heron, Mrs. A. W., 2, Patell Villas, Gar-
den Road, Kowloon
Heuser, Mrs. C.W., Tangyuen, 18a, Mardon-
nell Road
ני
Hewett, Mrs. E. A. Hongkong Hotel Hewett, Mrs. W. J., Grand Carlton Hotel Hickie. Mrs. S. D., Rocklands, Robinson
Road
Hickling, Mrs. The Manse, 5, Kennedy Rd. Hicks, Mrs. F., 3, Ormsby Villas, Granville
Road, Kowloon
Hipwell, Mrs., C.M.S. House, Robinson Rd Ho Tung, Mrs. Idlewild, 8, Seymour Road Hocking, Mrs. A., The Grove, Macdonnell
Road
Hodgins, Mrs. A E., Peak Hotel Hoffman, Misses S. B., The Grove, Macdon-
nell Road
Holmes, Mrs. H. K., Rockvale, Kimberley
Road, Kowloon
Hooper, Mrs. Shelton, Rougemont, Mar-
donnell Road
Hooper, Miss Shelton, Rougemont, Mac-
donnell Road
Hornby, Mrs. T. W., Stewart Ter, Peak Hoskins, Mrs. T., Quarry Bay
Howell, Mrs. F., 20, Morrison Hill Road Hoy, Miss M. S., Wyndham Hotel Hughes, Mrs. E. Jones, Merion, The Peak Hughes, Miss, Merion, The Peak Humphreys, Mrs. Henry Humphreys, Mrs. W. G., Quarndon, 2
Peak Road
Humphreys, Mrs. W. M., Stewart Terrace Hunter, Mrs. G., 7, Lochiel Ter., Kowloon Hunter, Mrs. T., 4, Humphrey's Avenue,
Kowloon
Hurley, Mrs. F. C. Mason, St. Kilda, 150,
Magazine Gap
Innes, Miss, Royal Naval Hospital Irving, Mrs., Naval Hospital
Jack, Mrs. W. C., King Edward Hotel Jacobs, Miss L. M., Govt. Civil Hospital James, Mrs., Kimberley Villas, Kowloon Johnstone, Miss, Fairlea, Bonham Roul Jones, Mrs. Kennett H., R. N. Hospital Jordan, Mrs G.P.,TheGrove, Macdonnell Rd. Jorge, Mrs. F. J. V., 9, Lower Castle Road Jorge, Mrs. H., Telles, 10, Salisbury
Avenue, Kowloon
Joseph, Mrs. E. S., Peak Hotel Joseph, Miss, Stonehaven, 35, Robinson Rd. Josepli, Miss, Stonehaven, Robinson Road Joughin, Mrs. J. C., 2, Morrison Hill Judah, Mrs. R. S., 11, Seymour Road Jupp, Mrs. J. A., Lan Mor, Peak Road Justi, Mrs.
Kaminel, Mrs. H., 3, The Albany Kemp, Mrs. J. H., 1, Gomes Villas, Kowloon Kennedy, Mrs. J. Stodart, Morrison Hill Kennett, Miss, 4, Knutsford Terrace, Alco Kent, Mrs. W., Central Police Station Ker, Mrs. T., East Point
Kerr, Mrs. A., 4, Blue Buildings Kew, Mrs. F. H., 43, Caine Boad Kew, Mrs. J. W., 43, Caine Road
ני
HONGKONG LADIES' DIRECTORY
Ebaras, Mrs. D. K., College Chambers King, Mrs. W., Magdalen Ter., Magazine
Gap
Klinck, Mrs. C., 10, Arbuthnot Road Knott, Mrs. Craigieburn, Peak
Köhler. Mrs. Arnold, 3, Victora View,K'loon. Knsumoto, Mrs. T., Stonehenge, 5, Robinson
Moal
Kwok, Mrs, P. K., 26, Caine Road Kwok, Miss Alice F., 26, Caine Koad Kydd, Mrs. Thos. W., Craigieburn, Peak Lack, Mrs., Peak Hotel Lafrentz, Mrs., Peak Road
Lambert, Mrs., 4, Ormsby Villas, Kowloon Lambert, Miss, 4, Ormsby Villas, Kowloon Lammert, Mrs. G. R., 1, Seymour Terrace,
Hobinson Road
Lammert, Mrs. G. P., Elliot Grescent,
Robinson Road
Lammert, Mrs. H. A., Cotton Mills Lamperski, Mrs., Peak Hotel
Lander, Mrs., La Hacienda, Mt. Kellet Rd. Langley, Mrs. A. L., Water Police Station,
Kowloon
Langstein, Mrs., Kingsclere Langstein, Miss. Kingsclere Lee, Miss M. A., Civil Hospital
Leefe, Mrs. L. N., Bicton, 117, Plantation
Road
Leiria, Mrs. J. J., Duart, 15, Arbuthnot
Road
Leitao, Mrs. F. F., Greencrofts, Kowloon Leon, Mrs. W. G., 30, Caine Road Lesbirel, Miss, Victoria View, Kowloon Lesbirel, Miss A., Victoria View, Kowloon Little, Mrs. A. C., Nathan Road, Kowloon Lloyd, Mrs. Geo. T., Hongkong Hotel Lochend, Mrs. J., Quarry Bay
Logan, Mrs. A. C., Kingsclere Logan, Mrs. J. D., Kowloon Docks
Longuet, Mrs. C. W., Brockhurst, 119, Peak Looker, Mrs. H. W., Peak
Lossius, Mrs., Claremont, Kennedy Rd. Loueiro, Mrs. M., 2, The Albany Loureiro, Miss, 2, The Albany Loureiro, Miss M., 2, The Albany Lugard, Lady, Government House (absent) Lyon, Mrs. H., H.M.S. "Tamar" Lyon, Miss, H.MS. "Tamar"
Lyons, Mrs. F. W., Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon Lysanght, Mrs. W., Homeville, Wanchai Lysaught. Miss, Homeville, Wanchai Macdonald, Mrs. James, 2, Canton Villas Machado, Mrs. J. M. E., S, Arbuthnot Road Mackenzie, Mrs. A., 6, Barker Road Mackenzie, Miss R., 5, Ripon Terrace Mackenzie Miss D.,
do. do.
Mackie, Mrs. G. C., Cragside, Barker Road Marpherson, Miss, Royal Naval Hospital Main, Mrs., 1 and 2, Knutsford Terrace,
Kowloon
Main, Miss, 1, Knutsford Terrace, Kowloon Maitland, Mrs. F., Nettlewood, Upper
Richmond Road
Maker, Miss E., Civil Hospital Marques, Mrs. E. M. S., 6%, Elgin Street Marques, Miss E. M., 53, Elgin Street May, Lady, Ligoniel, Peak
1179
McCallum, Mrs. A., Taikoo Dockyard Mellroy, Mrs. F., 2, Duddell Street McIntosh, Mrs. A. F., Taikoo Dockyard McIntyre, Mrs. W., Quarry Bay McNeil, Mrs. D., Quarry Bay
Merlees, Mrs. P., King Edward Hotel Michael, Mrs. J. R., 4, Century Crescent,
Kennedy Road
Miller, Mrs. A., 2, Lyeemoon Villas, K'loon Millar, Miss, 2, Lyeemoon Villas, Kowloon Miller, Mrs., J. Findlay, Stokes Bungalow,
Peak
Milroy, Mrs. A., Sailors' Home, West Point Mitchell, Mrs. J., Quarry Bay Molson, Mrs. W. E., 72, Praya East Mooney, Mrs. Chas., 4, Lower Mosque Ter. Moore Mrs. W. B. A., Govt. Civil Hospital Moulder, Mrs. A. B., Morrison Hill Moxon, Mrs. G. C., Mount Kellett, Peak Mueller, Mrs. G., Berlin Foundling House Muir, Mrs. J. G., Quarry Bay
Murphy, Mrs. E. O., Highlands, Kimberley
Roar, Kowloon
Murray, Miss F., Belvoir, 165, Wanchai Rd, Murray, Mrs. P.H., Belvoir, 161, WanchaiRd. Murray Mrs., Plantation Road
Nicholson, Mrs. Alf., Cosmopolitan Dock Nicholson, Miss N. E., Cosmopolitan Dock Nicholson, Mrs. W., Fernside, Mt. Kellet
Road, Peak
Nilsson, Mrs. Hill, Quarry Point,
Nolan, Mrs. N. G., Rock View, 155,
Wanchai Road
Nolasco, Mrs. J., Holyrood, Kowloon Noronha, Mrs. L., 25, Connaught Road Northcote, Mrs. Mowbray, Macdonnell Rd. Oakley, Mrs. H. E., Belvedere, Peak Oishi, Mrs. H., 8, Macdonnell Road Olson, Mrs, and Miss, 52, Caine Road Olson, Mrs. J., 22, Morrison Hill Road Olson, Miss, 22, Morrison Hill Road Ormiston, Mrs. Evan, 6, Queen's Gardens Osmund, Mrs. C. E., The Hut, Castle Road Osmund, Mrs, J. D., 6, Rednaxela Terrace Osmund, Miss, 16, Belilios Terrace
Ough, Mrs., Prince's Building, 2, Des
Vœux Road Central
Outerbridge, Mrs. A. W., 5, Knutsford
Ter., Kowloon
Paine, Mrs. A. E. (absent)
Payne, Mrs. S. J., 26, Belilios Terrace Passmore Mrs. W. C., King Edward Hotel Pearce, Mrs., T. E.
Pearse, Mrs. W. W. J., Cameron Road,
Kowloon
Pearson, Miss, Matilda Hospital, Peak Penfold, Mrs., Naval Yard
Pereira, Mrs., Cita Barros
Piens, Mrs. C., 13, Robinson Rd., Kowloon Piercy, Mrs. G., Diocesan School
1180
HONGKONG LADIES' DIRECTORY
Pinckney, Mrs. H., Stewart Terrace Pitcairn, Mrs. W. G., 2, Hart Avenue,
Kowloon
Plummer, Mrs. John A., Dunhaven, Rob-
inson Road
Potter, Miss, St. George's House, Kennedy
Read
Potts, Miss Hutton, Des Voeux Villas,
Peak
Potts, Mrs. W.H., Des Voeux Villas, Peak Prien, Mrs. G., Blackhead's Point, Kowloon Prier, Miss L., The Ridge, Mount Gough,
119c, Peak
Prior, Mrs., 5, Victoria View, Kowloon Pyne, Mrs., Peak Hotel
Quinn, Mrs. M. H., 43, Caine Road Ram, Mrs., The Homestead, Peak Ramsay, Mrs. Alex. 3, Ormsby Villas,
Granville Road, Kowloon Ramsay, Mrs., Grand Carlton Hotel Rattey, Mrs. W.J., Cosmopolitan Dock Remedios, Mrs. A. dos, The Hut, Castle Rd. Remedios, Mrs. J. J. V. dos, The Hut,
Castle Road
Remedios, Mrs. E. M. O., 17, Shelley Street Remedios, Mrs. J. M. M., dos, 12, Mosque
Junction
do.
do.
Remedios, Miss M. A., 12, Mosque Junction Remedios, Miss J. A., Remedios, Miss R. M., Remedios, Mrs. R. J., Arbuthnot Road Remedios, Miss, The Hut, Castle Road Reusch, Mrs., Basil Mission House Ribeiro, Mrs. J.C., 5, Mosque Street Richards, Miss, A. S. M., Civil Hospital Rissland, Mrs. H., King Edward Hotel Robertson, Mrs., 42, Elgin Street Rocha, Mrs. E. da, Belilios Terrace Rocha, Mrs. L., 9, Glenealy Royal, Mrs., Knutsford Terrace
Rocha, Mrs. J. M., Villa Rosita, Hart
Avenue, Kowloon,
Rocha, Miss M. P., Belilios Terrace Rodger, Mrs. Alex., East Point Rodger, Miss, East Point
Romano, Mrs., Duart, 15, Arbuthnot Road Rose, Mrs. A., 42, Elgin Street
Rowe, Mrs. B., Derrington, Peak Road Rowe, Misses, do.
do.
Roza, Mrs. C. A. da, 4, East Terrace, K'loon Rozario, Mrs. A. J, do, 2, Caine Road Rozario, Miss Maria dó, Duart, 15, Arbuth-
not Road
Rublee, Mrs. W., Mt. Gough Hill, 103, Peak Rumjahn, Mrs. Ahmet, Ahmed Villa, 43,
Robinson Road
Russell, Miss, Glendarnal, 13, Macdonnell
Road
Ruttonjee, Mrs. H., Occidental Hotel, K'loon Ruttonjee, Mrs. J. H., Occidental Hotel,
Kowloon
Ryley, Mrs., Cameron Villas, Peak
Saclise, Mrs. Georg, Kingsclere, Kennedy
Road
Sachse, Miss Georg, Kingsclere, Kennedy
Road
Sanders, Mrs. H., Matilda Hospital Sayer, Mrs. G. I. B., Tang Yuen, 18,
Macdonnell Road
Schindewolf, Mrs. M., Sunnyside, 13,
Macdonald Road
Schmidt, Mrs. W., 5, Beaconsfield Arcade Schmidt, Miss H., 5, Beaconsfield Arcade Schroter, Mrs. C., Shorncliffe, Garden Rd. Seth, Mrs. A., Norman Cottage, Peak Road Sethi, Miss, Norman Cottage, Peak Road Shallard, Mrs. Harold, Bishop's Lodge, 6,
The Peak
Shelbourne, Miss C., Govt. Civil Hospital Shellim, Mrs. Edward Kurrahjeen, 7, Peak
Road
Shepherd, Mrs. E. B., Knutsford Ter., Kloon Shewan, Mrs. R., Inverugie, Peak Road Siebs, Mrs. N. A., Victoria Lodge, Peak Rd. Siebs, Miss, Victoria Lodge, Peak Road Silva, Mrs. A. E. da, 38, Caine Road Silva, Mrs. A. H. M. da, 1, Victoria View,
Garden Road, Kowloon
Silva, Mrs. A. M. C. da, 77, Wyndham St. Silva, Miss M. T. de J.
do.
Silva, Mrs. A. V. da, 7, Barrow Terrace,
Kowloon
Silva, Mrs. E. E. da, 15, Belilios Terrace Silva Mrs. F. F. Eça, 36, Morrison Hill Rd. Silva, Mrs. F.P. da, 10, Queen's Road Cent). Silva, Mr. J. M. da, Old Bailey Silva, Mrs. M. E. da, Elgin Villa, Caine Rd. Silva, Mrs. P M. N. da, 4, Seymour Terrace Silva-Netto, Mrs., Astor House Simpson, Mrs. W., Grand Carlton Hotel Skelton, Mrs. A. II., Cragside, 113, Barker
Road, Peuk
Slade, Mrs. M. W., Lewknor, Plantation
Road
Smith, Miss Dorothy, Craigieburn, Peak, Smith, Mrs. J. Grant, Craigieburn, Peek Smith, Mrs. J. R. M., St. John's Place
and The Cliffs, 42, Peak Smith, Mrs. S., Kowloon Docks Smythe, Mrs. F.
Soares, Mrs. A. F. J., Villa Branca, Robin-
son Road
Soares, Mrs. A. M. D.,
do.
Soares, Mrs. F. P. de V., 5, Caine Road Souza, Mrs. M. A. A., 4A, Upper Mosque
Terrace
Souza, Mr. R. M. de, 5. Upper Mosque
Terrace
Spafford, Mrs. T, 12, Sou Wa Fong, Wchai Spalding, Mrs. A. W., Hongkong Hotel Wrigley, Mrs., Peak Hotel
Spink, Miss, St. Andrew's Church House,
Kowloon Squair, Miss, Kowloon
Square, Miss N., Kowloon Stabb, Mrs. N. J., St. John's Place Stacey, Miss, Peak Hospital Stacpole, Mrs. H. D., Wyndham Street
I
HONGKONG LADIES' DIRECTORY
Stapleton, Mrs. F. W., Oaklands, Bonham
Road
Stedman, Mrs. F.O., Formosa, Peak Stephens, Mrs. M. J. D., The Albany, Peak
Road
Stevenson, Mrs., Kingsclere
Stevenson, Mrs. A., Dairy Farm, Hongkong | Stewart, Mrs. John, Wyndham Hotel,
29, Wyndham Street Stewart, Mrs. J., East Point Stewart, Mrs. W., Kowloon Docks Stewart, Miss, London Mission House Stockhausen, Mrs., 9, Seymour Terrace Stollard, Miss K.C., Victoria Hospital, Peak Sullivan, Mrs. E. O., Central Police Station Summers, Mrs. E. H., 6, Ashley Rd., K'loon Sutherland, Mrs. R.
Sutton, Mrs. F., Richmond House, Barker
Road
Tait, Mrs., Royal Naval Hospital Takamichi, Mrs. T., Birnam Brae, Conduit
Road
Talati, Mrs. K. M., 112, Wellington Street Talati, Mrs. M. P., 6, Ice House Street Tarrant, Mrs. J. A., 2, Gomes Villas,
Kowloon
Tavares, Mrs. J. M. P., 4, Caine Road
Taylor, Mrs. Basil, Kenlis, Mount Kellet Templeton, Mrs. D., Cornhill, Quarry Bay Thomas Mrs. K.D., 56, Leighton Hill Road Thompson, Mrs., Bangour, Mt. Kellet Rd. Tiedman, Mrs. A. M., 5, Queen's Gardens. Tooker, Mrs., The Kennels, Magazine Gap Turner, Mrs. A., Eggesford, The Peak Tutcher, Mrs. W. J., Hartley, 7, Babing
ton Path
1181
Tuxford, Mrs., Diocesan School Vieira, Mrs. B.M., 24, Wyndham Street Vieira, Mrs. J.M., 9, Upper Mosque Terrace Voretzsch, Mrs. E. A., Luginsland E, 18,
Peak Road
Wagner, Mrs. O., Forebank West, Magazine
Gap 143
Walker, Mrs. J., Sasoon's Villa, Pokfulum Walker, Mrs. W. B., Elliott Crescent
Bungalow, 21, Robinson Road Wallace, Miss, 7, Belilios Terrace Warner, Miss, Naval Hospital Watling, Miss R.M., Govt. Civil Hospital Watts, Mrs., Braeside, Macdonnell Road Weill, Mrs. A., 13, Seymour Road Weir, Mrs. J., Braeside, Macdonnell Road Wendt, Mrs. F.A., 2, Hillside, 89, Peak White, Mrs. 11., Peak Hotel
Whyte, Miss M., Civil Hospital Wilkie, Mrs. J., Knutsford Ter., Kowloon Wilkinson, Miss Winifred M. W., The Falls,
Peak
Wilks, Mrs. E. C., 3, Kimberley Villas,
Kowloon
Williams, Mrs. E. T., Wellburn, 81, The Peak Wilson, Mrs. H., 1, Cameron Terrace,
Kowloon
Witzke, Mrs. Ch., 3, Ormsby Terrace,
Kowloon
Wright, Mrs. J. F., 7, Stewart Terrace,
Peak
Wakeman, Mrs. G. H., Mt. Kellet, Peak Walker, Mrs., Magazine Gap, Peak Xavier, Mrs. I. M., Waterford, Macdonnell
Road
HONGKONG STREET DIRECTORY
MEN ABERDEEN STREET, Ap-pa-tin Kai, from 164. Queen's Road Central to Caine Road
A-CHUNG'S LANE, Kwok Taung Kai, from Lower Lascar Row to Ng-kwai Fong BG ALBANY, A-pan-ni, the Garden Terrace, in Albany Road, upper side of Botanic Gardens VE ALBANY ROAD, A-pan-ni To, from Upper Albert Road to Peak Road
ALBANY STREET, A-pan-ni Kai, from 198, Queen's Road East to Praya East ALBERT ROAD LOWER, A-li-pat To, junction of Glenealy and Wyndham Street VEE ALBERT ROAD UPPER, A-li-pat Sheung To, from Albert Road to Caine Road MAH ALGAR COURT, A-li-ka Hong, from 336, Queen's Road West to First Street #U±...|| ALVESTON TERRACE, Oh-wai-soe-ton-toi, from 57 Peel Street
E AMOY LANE, Ha-mun Li, from 158, Queen's Road East
I
AKAUTHNOT ROAD, A-pat-nok Tò, from Caine Road to Hollywood Road G534 ARSENAL STREET, Kwan-hi-kook Kai, from 20-a, Queen's Road East to Praya
BABINGTON PATH, from Fark Road westward across Lyttleton Road and round to
Robinson Road
BATTERY PATH, Pau-toi Lo, from Queen's Road Central to St. John's Cathedral #‡¦ BEACONSFIELD ÅRCADE, Pak-kung-hong, opposite City Hall
BELCHER'S STREET, Sai-wan Kai, at Kennedy-town
BELILIOS TERRACE, Be-li-li-o-se Toi, on Robinson Road, near Mosque Junction BONHAM ROAD, Man-ham-To, from Caine Road to Pokfolum Road
A BONHAM STRAND, Man-ham Tai Kai, from 187, Queen's Rd. Central to Queen's Rd. W.
BONHAM STRAND WEST, Man-ham Sai Yenk, from Bonham Strand to Praya West BOUNDARY PATH, Bow-ta-li Lo, from Garden Road (Lower Tram Terminus) to
Kennedy Road (near German Club)
E BOWEN ROAD, Po-wan Tô, from Garden Road to Stanley Road
BOWRINGTON CANAL BOAD EAST, Ken-na-to-tung, from 143 Praya East
2 BOWRINGTON ROAD, Po-Ling-ton-to, from 135 Praya East
BRIDGES STREET, Pit-lit-chee-see Kai, o ntinuation Wet of Staunton Street from
Shing Wong Street
# BULLOCK LANE, l'o-lok Li, from 120, Wanchai Road to Cross Lane
BURD STREET, Bat Kai, from Mercer Street to Cleverly Street
A BURROWS' STREET, Ba-lo Kai, from Wanchai Road to 87, Praya East
BULK CADOGAN STREET, Ka-tuk-kuu Kai, at Kennedy-town
CAINE LANE, Kin-hong, from West end of Caine Road at junction with Bonham Road CAINE ROAD, Kin To, from Upper Albert Road. Glenealy to Bonham Road
* CALDER PATH, Ko-lo-ta-lo, from Kennedy Road (east of the manse) to Macdonnell Road CANAL ROAD WAST, Kin-na-to Sai, west side of Bowrington Canal, from Praya East
to Leighton Hill Road
CANAL ROAD EAST (See Bowrington Canal Road, East)
CAROLINE HILL ROAD, Ka-lo-lin Shan To, round Caroline Hill
LAS CAROLINE ROAD, Ka-lo-lin-to, from south-west corner of Causeway Bay
CASTLE ROAD, Wai-shing Tò, from 44, Caine Road to Robinson Rond West
E CENTRE STREET, Ching Kai, from 152, Connaught Road West to Bonham Road E CHANCERY LANE, Chan-shi-li Hong, from Arbuthnot Road to Old Bailey
CHAN TONG LANE, from 181, Wanchai Road
TE
FT
里成起
CHATER ROAD, Cha-ta-To, that portion of New Praya between Murray St. & Pedder St. CHATER STREET, Cha-ta-Kai, at Kennedy Town
HEE SHING LANE, Che-Shing-li, from Wanchai Road to Praya East
CHEUNG FUE LANE, Cheung-fuk Li, Cellars of, 1 to 9. Second Street
CHEUNG HING STREET, Cheung Hing Kai, from 219, Hollywood Rd. to L. Lascar Row
1✯ Cheung Kan Lane, from Des Vœux Road West
TZE CHEUNG ON LANE, Cheung Ou Li, from Centre Street
AAM CHICO TERRACE, Chi-ko-Toi, in Peel Street
CHINESE STREET, Chung-kwok Kai, from 73, Queen's Rd. Central to Des Voeux Rd. C. CHIU KWONG STREET, Chiu Kwong Kai, from 365, Queen's Rd., West to Con'ht. Rd. C.
# CHIU LUNG STREET, off 37, Queen's Road Central
CHUEK ON LANE, from Stanley Street to Wellington Street
A CHUEN HING LANE, Tsün Hing Li, in Aberdeen Street
CHUK HING LANE, Chuk-hing Li, off Gage Street
EL CHUNG CHING STREET, Chung-ching Kai, from 339 Des Voeux Road W.
CHUNG WO LANE, Chang Wo Li, from Staunton Street
CIRCULAR PATHWAY, Kung In Hong, from Gough Street Steps to Ladder Street CLARENCE TERRACE, Ka-la-len-see-tor, from Hill Road
ME CLEVERLY STREET, Kap-pi-li Kai, from 143, Connaught Rd. C. to Queen's Rd. Central
COCHRANE STREET, Kok-lun Kai, from 101, Queen's Road Central to Gage Street
HONGKONG STREET DIRECTORY
COLLINSON STREET, Koh-lin-san kai, from 19 Praya, Kennedy Town
1183
I CONDUIT ROAD, Kon-duk-to, above Robinson Road, from Glenealy to Hatton Road, at
Victoria Battery
T CONNAUGHT ROAD, Central, new Praya Central
NIT CONNAUGHT ROAD, West, new Fraya West (from the new Western market) CORONATION TERRACE, Kah-min-toi, from East side Aberdeen Street
EX CROSS LANE, Kau-ka Hong, from 7, Cross Street
CROSS STREET, Kau-ka Kai, from 36, Wanchai Road to Spring Gardens CROSS STREET (See Man Wa Lane)
L D'AGUILAR STREET, Tak-ki-la Kai, from 34. Queen's Road Central to Wyndham St TE DAVID LANE, Da-Wat Li, off Centre Street
DAVIS STREET, Tá-pi-se Kai, at Kennedy-town
DES VŒUX ROAD Central, Dak-fu-to-chung, Old Praya Central
*
ZIN
DES VEUX ROAD West, Dak-fu-to-sai, Old Praya West
#
DOUGLAS LANE, Tak-ki-li Hong, at Kennedy-town
DOUGLAS STREET, Tak-ki-lee-shi Kai, in Connaught Road Central
DUDDELL STREET, To-te-li Kai, from Queen's Road Central to Ice House Street
EAST POINT HILL, Tung-pin Shan, in Queen's Road East
EAST STREET, Tai-ping Shan Tung Kai, from 334,Queen's Hd. Central to Po Ring Fong EASTERN STREET, Tung-pin Kai, from 128, Connaught Rd. West to Bonham Road
I ELGIN STREET, I-li-kan Kai, from 66, Hollywood Road to Caine Road
EZRA'S LANE, E-sz-la-li off Pottinger Street
HAR FAT HING STREET, Fat Hing Kai, from Hollywood Road to 40, Queen's Road West
- FIRST STREET, Tai-yat Kai, from Eastern Street to Pokfolum Road
EN
FORBES STREET, Fo-se Kai, at Kennedy-town
E FRENCH STREET (See Chiu Kwong Kai)
FUR HING LANE, Fuk Hing li, from Jardine's Bazaar
PAM Fox LOK LANE, Fuk-luk Li, from 19, Western Street
E
FOR ON LANE, Fuk-On-li, from Butter Street to Po Hing Fong FUK SHING LANE (or Un Fuk Laue, which see)
M Fux Sau LANE, Fuk-sau Li, from 11, Western Street
* FUNG UN STREET, Fung Un Kai, Jardine's Bazaar
BUELO
X
X
HR
GR
新治左包
街业
GAGE STREET, Kit-chi Kai, from Lyndhurst Terrace to Aberdeen Street
GAP ROAD Wan-chi hap-to, continuation of Queen's Road East to the Monument E GARDEN KOAD, Fa-ün To, from Albert Rd. between Public Gardens to Robinson Rd.
GEORGE'S LANE, Cho-chi-li, from 42, Staunton Street
GILMAN'S BAZAAR, Ki-li-man San Kai, from 143, Queen's Rd. Cl. to Des Voeux Road
Central
GILMAN STREET, Ki-li-man Kai, from 135, Queen's Road Cl. to Des Voeux Road Rd, Cl. GLENEALY, Gi-len-na-li from junction of Wyndham St. & Albert Road to Robinson Rd. GOUGH STREET, Ko-fu Kai, from Aberdeen Street to 244, Queen's Road Central GRAHAM STREET, Ka-ham Kai, from 126, Queen's Road Central to Staunton Street GREAT GEORGE STREET, Ku-li-tsoi-che Kai, from Royal Mint Street to Causeway Bay GUTZLAFF STREET, Kwok-sz-lap Kai, from 120, Queen's Rd. Cl. to Lyndhurst Terrace
* HAM U STREET, Ham-yu-kai, from Eastern Street, between Des Voeux Road West
and Connaught Road West
17 HAU FONG LANE, Hau Fung Li, from Ship Street
HENG HING LANE, Heung-hing Hong, from 45a Queen's Road West
HIGH STREET, KO Kai, from Bonham Road to Pokfolum Road
HILL ROAD, Shan To, from Pokfolum Road to Garden Street
HILLIER STREET, Hi-li Kai, from 127, Connaught Road Central to Circular Pathway HILLSIDE TERRACE, Shan-pin-toi, top of Ship Street
HING LUNG LANE EAST, Hing-loong-li Tung, in Des Voeux Road West
HING LUNG LANE WEST, Hing-loong-li Sai, in Des Voeux Road West
HING LUNG STREET, Hing Lung Kai, from 107, Queen's Rd. Cl, to Des Voeux Rd. West ER HING WAN STREET, Hing Wan Kai, from King Sing Street to Lung On Street
Ho Kwok LANE, from 13, Wellington Street
居
G HOLLAND STREET, Ho-lan Kai, at Kennedy-town
HOLLYWOOD ROAD, Ho-li-wut Tò, from Pottinger Street to Queen's Road West HOLY INFANT LANE, Sing-ying-hai Li, in St. Francis Street
HONG NING LANE, Hong-Ning Li, in Aberdeen Street
HOSPITAL ROAD, I-kun To, from Bonham Road to Eastern Street
ICE HOUSE ROAD, Shut-Cheong-su, from West end of Battery Path to Albert Road
ICE HOUSE STREET, Shut-chong Kai, from 5, Praya Central to Albert Road
IN KU LANE, In Ku Li, Sutherland Street to 48, Ko Shing Street
IN MI LANE, In Mi Li, from Praya West to Queen's Road West
I YIK LANE, I Yik Kai, from 524, Queen's Road West
* IRVING STREET, Yie-wing Kai, behind Yee Wo Street
1184
HONGKONG STREET DIRECTORY
HER JACKSON ROAD, Jack-san-to, from Connaught Road Central, next to Hongkong Club
to Queen's Road Central (next to City Hall)
A
JARDINE'S BAZAAR, Cha-tin Kai, from Praya East to Shau-ki Wan Road
EJERVOIS STREET, Cha-wai Kai, from 187, Queen's Road Central to Morrison Street
JUBILEE STREET, Tso-pi-li Kai, Queen's Rd. Cl. to Praya, West Side of Market KAI UN LANE, Kai Un Li, from Peel Street
OF
KAT CHEONG LANE, Ket-cheong-li, from Square Street to Pound Lane
☆ KAT ON STREET, Kat On Kai, from King Sing Street to Lung On Street
E
KAU U FONG, Kau-u Fong, from Gough Street to Wellington Street KENNEDY ROAD, Kin Ne To, Garden Road to Wanchai Gap
E KENNEDY STREET, Kin Ne Kai, from 207, Queen's Road East
#UNNA KENNEDY KOWN, New Praya, Kin-ne-dak-shang, San hai Pong
KESWICK STREET, Ki-shi-wick-Kai, behind Irving Street
LAKI LING LANE, Ki Ling Li, from 333, Queen's Road West to Des Voeux Road West
HR KING SING STREET, King Sing Kai, from 70, Stone Nullah Lane
KIN SAU LANE, Kin Sau Li, from Gage Street
TKOM U STREET, Kom U Kai, from 119, Queen's Road West to Ko Shing Street
Ko SHING STREET, from Queen Street
C KUI YAN LANE, from 180, Third Street
KWAI WA LANE, Kwai Wa Li, from Hillier Street to Cleverly Street
AH Kwok HING LANE, Kwok-hing Li, off Third Street
Kwong Fung Lane, Kwon Fung Li, between Queen's Road West & Third Street
Ta KwoNG YIK LANE, at the back of No. 37, Queen's Road East
KWONG-YUEN STREET EAST, Kwong Un Tung Kai, Boubam Strand to 39, Wing Lok
Street
NAS KWONG-YUEN STREET WEST, Kwong Un Sai Kai, Bonham Strand to 51, Wing Lok St.
LADDER STREET, Lau-tai Kai, from 292, Queen's Road Central to Bonham Road LADDER STREET TERRACE, Lau-tai-toi, from Ladder Street between Bridges Street
and Caine Road
EG
*
EX
TH HER
LAI ON LANE, formerly Sai Wo Lane
LAMONT'S LANE, Lam-man Hong, from Fük Hing Lane
LAN KWAI FONG, Lan-kwai Fong, in D'Aguilar Street
LASCAR ROW, LOWER, Mo-lo Ha Kai, from Ladder Street to Fat Hing Street LASCAR ROW, UPPER, Mo-lo Sheung Kai, from Ladder Street to West Street
ARY LAU U LANE, Lau U Li, in High Street
U
LEIGHTON HILL ROAD, Lai-tun Shan Tò, round bottom of Leighton Hill LEUNG I'FONG, Leung I Fong, from 34, Third Street
** Leung Wa Tai Lane, Leung Wà Tai Li, in Queen's Road West
*
LE
1
LI SING STREET, Li-sing Kai, between houses 181 and 183, Queen's Road West LI-TUNE STREET EAST, Li-un-tung Kai, from 41, Queen's Rd. Cl. to Des Voeux Rd. C. L-YUNE STREET WEST, Li-nu-sai Kai, from 55, Queen's Road C.
LOK HING LANE, Lok-hing Li, off Pottinger Street
LUNG ÔN STREET, Lung On Kai, from Nullah Lane
LYNDHURST TERRACE, Lun-hat-sz Kai, from Wellington Street to Hollywood Road LITTLETON ROAD, Li-to-tou To, from Park Road
### MACDONNELL ROAD, Mak-ton-na To, from Garden Road
* MacGREGOU STREEr, Mac-ka-lik-ka Kai, from 19, Queen's Road East X MAN HING LANE, Man-hing Li, from 31-a, Peel Street
LUX MAN MING LANE, Man Ming Li, from 99, Queen's Road East to Ship Street
LEK MAN WA Lane, Man Wà Li, from Bonham Strand to Connaught Road C. EH MASON'S LANE, Ma-son Hong, from Wyndham Street to Zetland Street 5 MATHESON STREET, Mat-ti-shi in Kai, from Shan-ki Wan Road to Perceval Street MAY ROAD, from Magazine Gap Road to Peak Road, at Queen's Gardens
* VEE LUN LANE, Mee-luu Li, in Aberdeen Street
# MERCER STREET, Ma-sha Kai, from Bonham Strand to 221, Queen's Road Central
MERCER WANG LANE, Mah-sah-wang-li, from 14 Mercer Street
29 MING YAN LANE, Ming Yan Li, from Tai Wong Lane
#♬ MOON STREET, Yüt-Kai, off Wing Fung St., below Electric Light Station
MORRISON HILL, Mo-li-sun Shan, from East end of Queen's Road East MORETON TERRACE, Causway Bay
5 MORRISON HILL ROAD, Ma-li-sun Shan To, from Observation Place to Wanchai Gap MORRISON STREET, Mu-li-sun Kai, from Connaught Rd. C. to Queen's Road Central *** MoSQUE JUNCTION, Mo-lo Miu Kau Kai, from Robinson Road to Shelley Street
BRIAN MOSQUE STREET, Mo-lo Miu Kai, from Robinson Road to Peel Street * MosqQUE TERRACE, Mo-lo Miu Toi, above Cuine Road, from Peel Street PER MOUNT SHADWELL, Sit Wai Li Shan, East End Queen's Road
di
MURRAY ROAD, Ma-li-to, from Queen's Rd. Central to Connaught Road Central Naw MARKET STREET from 9, On Tai Street
*
P
HONGKONG STREET DIRECTORY
1185
NEW PRATA, KENNEDY TOWN, Kin-ni tuk-shing, San-hoi-pong, Praya, turning to the
right after Sands Street
NEW STREET, San Kai, from Poyan Street to Queen's Road West
NG FOR LANE, Ng Fuk Li, from Eastern Street
# NG KWAI FONG, Ng Kwai Fong, from East Hollywood Road
NULLAH LANE, Shek Shui-ki Hong, from King Sing Street to Praya
1194 OAKLANDS PATH, Oak-lan Chi To, from junction of Park Road and Babington Road
southwards to Lyttleton Road
OBSERVATION PLACE, Ting-lok li, from 112, Praya East to Wanchai Road
* OLD BAILEY, O-lo Pi-li Kai, from Hollywood Road to Caine Rond
ON NING LANE, Ou-ning Li, from 436, Des Voeux Rd. W. to Battery Road ON TAI STREET, On Tai Kai, from Wing Lok Street
R ON WAI LANE, On-wai Li, from 43, Centre Street
THE ON WO LANE, On Wo Li, from 190, Queen's Road Central to Gough Street
OYAMA VILLAS, Han-fung Lane, Ship Street
* PAK TSZ LANE, Pak-tsze Li, off Gage Street
PAN KWAI LANE, Pàn Kwai Li, from Wo Fung Street
PARK ROAD, Pak To, from Robinson Road to Bonhamn Road
PARK VIEW, Pak King, in Lyttleton Road
PEAK ROAD, San-teng-to, from junction of Albany Road with Robinson and Garden
Roads to Peak
PEDDER STREET, Pit-ta Kai, from 29, Queen's Road Central to Connaught R dc. PEDDER'S IIILL, Pit Ta Shan, Albert Road, near Wyndham Street
PEEL STREET, Pi-li Kai, from 140, Queen's Road Central to Robinson Boad ## PENNINGTON STEKET, Pin-ning-tun Kai, from Mint to Shau-ki Wan Road
PERCIVAL STREET, Pa-sz-wá Kai, from Shau-ki Wan Road to 155, Praya East PING ON LANE, (also called Stonecutter's Lane, which Sec. Another luno of the same
name is in Hollywood Road, and a third at Taiping Shan) PORFOLUM ROAD, Pok-u Lam Tô, from 358, Queen's Road West to Pokfolum POSSESSION STREET, PO-se-shun Kai, from Hollywood Rd to 386, Queen's Rd. Central
# POTTINGER STREET, PO-tin-cha Kai, from 37, Connaught Road, C. to Hollywood Road
POUND LANE, Pong Hong, from Hollywood Road to Rutter's Lane
Po HING Foxe, from Po-yan treet to Ladder Street
Po YAN STREET, Pò Yau Kai, from 222, Hollywood Road to Rutter Street
Po YUEN LANE, Po-yuen-li, from 10, Bonham Road
ųļēģiį Prata EAST, Hoi-pong Tung Yeuk, from the Arsenal Yard to East Point ***
PRAYA, KENNEDY TOWN, Kin-li-tak Shing (Hoi-pong), west of Des Voeux Rd. W.
MEL QUEEN'S GARDENS, Wong-how-fa yuen, from Peak Road
IXE QUEEN'S ROAD CENTRAL, Wong-han Tai Tò. W. Main Guard to W. End Hollywood Rd, XE QUEEN'S ROAD EAST, Wong-han Tai Tò Tung, W. Main Guard to Wanchai Market CX6Q QUBEN'S ROAD WEST, Wong-hau Tai To Sai, W. End Hollywood Ed. to Pokfolum Rd. the QUEEN STREET, Wong-hau Kai, from Queen's Road West to Connaught Ed. West SE QUEEN VICTORIA STREET, Wik-to-li Kai, Queen's Road Cl. to Praya, next Market REDNAXELA Terrace, Led-na-se-la toi, from Shelley St. to Peel St. above Caine Rd.
* REMEDIOS TERRACE, Lin-mi-ti-shi-toi, in Arbuthnot Road
RIENAECKER STREET, Lin-neck-ka Kai, between 251 and 253, Queen's Road West RIPON TERRACE, Lit-pon Toi, Hospital Road, West of No. 8 Police Station ROBINSON ROAD, Lo-pin-sun To, from Albany Road to Babington Path ROCK LANE, Shek Hong, from 139, Queen's Road East
PROBARIO STREET, Lo-za-lo Kai, from West side of Ladder Street
ROSE LANE, from 12, Water Street
RUMSEY STREET, Lum-see Kai, from 104, Connaught Rd. Central to 2 Wing Lok St. KUSSELL STREET, La-sz-li Kai, from Bowrington Canal to Percival Street
T BUTTER STREET, Lat- a Kai, from Pó Yan Street to Upper Station Street
RUTTER STREET UPPER, Lat-ta Sheung Kai, above Rutter Street
HE SAI HING LANE, Sai-hing Li, from West side of Chiu Kwong Street
LEN SAT ON LANE, Šai On Li, from Ou Ning Lane
1
SAI WA LANE, Sai Wa Li, from Pokfolum Road to Western Street
SAI WOO LANE, Sai U Kai, from 225, Queen's Road West to Des Voeux Road West
EM SAI YUEN LANE, from 356, Des Voeux Road West
#
SALT FISH STREET, Hám U Kai, from Eastern Street
*A KA LANE, Sam-ka Hong, off No. 14, Aberdeen Street
SAM TO LANE, Sam To Li, from 398, Queen's Road West
SAN HAM YU STREET, San Ham Yu Kai, See Ham U Street
SANDS STREET, San-see Kai, after 51, Praya, Kennedy Town
SAU WA FONG, San-wa Fong, from Queen's Road East to St. Francis Street SECOND STREET, Tai I Kai. from Hospital Road to I okfolum Road
E SEYHOUR ROAD, Sai-mo To, from Bonham Road to Robinson Road
1186
HONGKONG STREET DIRECTORY
Igǹ SEYMOUR TERRACE, Sai-mo Toi, from Castle Steps to Seymour Road
SHAN PIN LANE, from 195, Queen's Road East
SHARP STREET EAST, Shap Tung Kai, from Bowrington Canal to Shau-ki Wan Rd. SHARP STREET WEST, Shap Sai Kai, from Bowrington Canal to Morrison Hill Road HA SHAUKIWAN ROAD, Sow-k wan To, from Eastern houndary of the City to Shaukiwan
TSHER CHAN LANE OF GODOWN LANE, Shek Phan Li, from West side Kai Ling Lane
SHELLEY STREET, Shek-li Kai, from Hollywood Road to Mosque Junction EX SHEUNG FUNG LANE, Sheung Fung Li, from Third Street to Second Street
SHIN HING LANE, Shin Hing Li, from Gough Street to Hollywood Road SHING WONG STREET, Shing Wong Kai, from Caine Road to Gough Street. SHIP STREET, Yeung-ahun Kai, from 14, Praya East across Queen's Road East KⱭ± SMITHFIELD, See-mi-fi-lo, after North Strect
±
1
*
SOUTH LANE, Nau-li, in Hill Road, next to Shektongsui Market
SPRING GARDEN LANE, Chun-yuen Li, from 36, Praya Last to 180 Queen's Road Fast N SQUARE STREET, Sze-fong Kai, from Ladder Street to Market Street
ST. FRANCIS STREET, Shing Fi-làn-sz Kai, from Queen's Road East running south -22 ST. FRANCIS YARD, Shing-to-lan-sz-yat. in St. Francis' Strect
1 ST. JOHN'S PATH, Sing-chan-si-to, in Albert Road
STANLEY STREET, Sz-fan-li Kai, from 3, D'Aguilar Street to Graham Street STAR STREET, Sing-kai, from top of Wing Fung Street
STATION STREET ÜPPER, Chai-kun Sheung Kai, from Hollywood Road U STAUNTON STREET, Szan-tun Kai, from Old Bailey to Bridges Street #E£‡± STAVELEY STREET, Shi-ta-fa-li Kai, from 146, Queen's Road
BEZ STONECUTTERS LANE, Shek-seung Li, from Hollywood Road
STONE GODOWN LANE (see Shek Chan Lane)
LIET STONE NULLAH LANE, Sik-ku Li, from 12. Praya East to Queen's Road East
SUN STREET, Yat-Kai, off Wing Fung St, behind Queen's Road East
4 SUN WAI LANE, Sun Wai Li, of Hollywood Road near Central Police Station SUNG HING LANE, from 328, Des Voeux Rd. West to 2-5, Queen's Road West SUTHERLAND STREET, Sau-ta-lan Kai, from Connaught Rd. W. to Queen's Rd. West SWATOW LANE, Sang-tan Li, from 144, Queen's Road East
GHT
£44 SZE KAN LINE from 39 Pottinger Street
A TA TIT HONG (Blacksmiths' Lane) from Fung Un Street to Fuk Hing Line * Tar Lor LANE, Tai Loi Li, First Street, Sai Ying-pun
TAI-PING SHAN STREET, Tai-ping Shan Sai, from Bridges Street to Fo Yan Street TAI WO STREET, Tai Wo Kai, from Wanchai Road to Praya East
EX TAI WONG LANE, Tai Wong Li, from 128, Queen's Road East to Praya East EA TAI WONG STREET, Tai Wong Kai, from 120. Queen's Road East to Praya East LETAK SING LANE, Tak Sing Li, from Second Street
ES TAK WA LANE, Tak-wa Li, from 24, High Strect
TAM LANE, Tam Li, from 6, Water Street
SK TANK LANE, Shui-chi Hong, from Lascar Row to Caine Lane
THIRD LANE, Tai Sam Hong, from 538, Queen's Road West
THIRD STREET, Tai Sam Kai, from Eastern Street to Pokfolum Rond
TIK LONG LANE, Tik Lung Li, in Queen's Road East
* TIN LOK LANE, Tin-lok-li, from 112, Prayn East
* TIT HONG LANE, Tit Hong Li, from Jubilee Street A TOGO TERRACE, in Kennedy Road
TORSIEM STREET, To-sien Kai, between 263 and 265, Queen's Road West TRIANGLE STREET, Sam Kok Kai, from 58, Wanchai Road to Praya East TSING KAI LANE, Tsing Kai Li, from Nullah Lane to Albany Street
* TSUI IN LANE, from 62 Queen's Road East
TSUI LUNG LANE, Tsui Lung Li, in Queen's Road East
TSVI ON LANE, from Hilliers's Street south Queen's Rd. Cential to Circular Pathway
2 Tsun WING LANE, Tsun Wing Li, off Graham Street
$X$£ TSUNG SAU LANE EAST, Tsung Sau Tong Kai, from 77. Queen's Road West A TSUNG SAU LANE WEST, Tsung-sau Sai Kai, 93, Queen's Road West to Ko Shing St.
Tsz MI ALLEY, Tsz Mi Kai, rom 211, Queen's Road West
Tez TUNO LANE, Tsz Tung Hong, from First Street, Sai Ying-pun
A TUN Wo LANE, Tun-wo Li, in Cochrane Street
TUNG LOI LANE, Tung-loi Li, from Harbour Master's Office, westward X TUNG MAN LANE, Tung Man Kai, from 117, Queen's Road Central 94K TUNG Shing Lane, Tung-shing Li, in Wellington Street
R
TUNG TAK LANE, Tung tak-li from 24, Cochrane Street
TUNG WA LANE, Tung-Wa Li, from 2a, Aberdeen Street
TUNG WO LANE EAST, Tung Wo Tung Kai, from Queen's Road West TUNG WO LANE WEST, Tung Wo Li Sai, from Queen's Road West HAU HING LANE, U Hing Li, from 278, Queen's Road Central
AL
HONGKONG STREET DIRECTORY
U LOK LANE, west side Centre Street, between Third Street and High Street # U PO LANE WEST, U Pò Li Sai, from First Street, Sai Ying-pun 1 U PO LANE EAST, U l'ò Li Tung, from First Street, Sai Ying-pun
THE UYAM LANE, U Yam Li, in East Street
*
HUI HING LANE, Ui Hing Li, Spring Gardens
112 UI LUNG LANE, Ui Lung Li, in Bowrington, Leighton Hill Road 14 UI ON LANE, Ui Ou Li, from Second Street to Third Street
UN FUK LANE, Un-fuk Li, from Second to Third Streets
1
1 UN ON LANE, Un On Li, Hollywood Road to Circular Pathway
I
1187
UN SHING LANE, Un Shing Li, from Third Street to Eastern Street THE UN WO LANE, Un Woo Li, Hollywood Rd. between Houses 278 and 280, I. Lot 853
UPPER ROBINSON ROAD, Lo Pin Sun Sheung Kai, Robinson Rd. to Richmond Ter. UPPER STATION STREET, Chai-kun Sheung Kai, from Hospital Ed. to Hollywood Ed VALLEY ROAD, Wà-li To, round Wong-nai Chung Valley
VICTORIA STREET, Wik-to-li Kai, Queen's Rd. Central to Praya, east side of Market FF VILLAGE STREET, Heung-ha Kai, Leighton Hill Rd. to Jardine's Bazaar, East Point 12 WA HING LANE, Wa-hing Li, in Shing Wong Street
WA IN FONG. Wà In Fong, from Staunton Street
WA LANE, Wa Li, from Lower Lascar Road to Ng Kwai Lone
#4 WA ON LANE, Wà On Li, from Aberdeen Street
EH WAI SAN LANE, Wai-san Hong, between 7 and 8, Jubilee Street
I WAI TAK LANE, Wai-tak Li, in Wellington Street
IF WANCHAI ROAD, Wan-tsai Tò, from Bowrington Canal to Queen's Road East
BWARDLEY ST., Wak-li Kai,Qn.'s Rd.Cl.to Connaught Rd.on the West side of theCity Hall
HA WATER STREET, Sui-kai, from 167 Connaught Rd. West to Poldulam Rd.
# WELLINGTON STREET, Wai-ling-tuu Kai, Wyndham Street to Queen's Rd. Central
WESTERN STREET, Sai-pin Kai, from Connaught Road West to Bonham Road
AKA WEST END TERRACE, Sai-mee Li, in Bonham Road
WEST STREET, Tai-ping Shan Sai Kai, from Queen's Rd. Central to Tai-ping Shan St A WEST TERRACE, Lok Kan, from Castle Road
*A WILMER STREET, Wai-li-ma Kai, from 106, Connaught Rd. West to Queen's Rd. West
WING FUNG STREET, Wing Fung Kai, from 21, Queen's Road East
A
L
WING KUT LANE, Wing Kut Li, M. from 155, Queen's Road Central
* WING LEE STREET, Wing Lee Kai, from Shing Wong Street to Ladder Street * WING LOK STREET, Wing Lok Kai, from 168, Des Voeux Road Central
WING ON LANE, Wing On Kai, from 127, Queen's Road Central
A WING SING STREET, Wing Shing Kai, from 187, Queen's Road Central
* WING WA LANE, Wing Wa Li, from 21A, D'Aguilar Street
WING WO STREET, Wing Wo Kai, from 179, Queen's Road Central
WO FUNG STREET, Wo Fung Kai, from 113, Queen's Road West
I WO ON LANE, Wo On Li, from 15, D'Aguilar >treet
WONGNEICHENG LOAD, Wong-nei-chung, round Race Course WOODLANDS TERRACE, Wood-lan-see-toi, Castle Road
E WYNDHAM STREET, Wan-ham Kai, from 32, Queen's Road Central to Hollywood Road IC YAN SHAU LANE, from 20, D'Aguilar Street
YAN WO LANE, Yan Wo Li, in Aberdeen Street
YAT Foo LANE, Yat Foo Li, from 502, Queen's Road West
1 YAU YEE LANE, from 192, Third Street
GK YEE WO STREET, Yee Wo Kai, from Royal Mint Street to Shan-ki Wan Road
ZETLAND STREET, Sit-lan Kai, from 14. Queen's Road Central to Ice House Street
$
*
PEAK ROADS
UE ABERDEEN ROAD, Ah-pa-ten San To, from Mount Gough Road
BARKER ROAD, Ba-ka To, from Plantation Road station to Magazine Gap CAMBRON VILLAS, Kam-ma-lin Ok U, Mount Kellet Road
E CHAMBERLAIN ROAD, Hom-ma-lin To, from Victoria Gap to Mount Gough Road
DES VEUX VILLAS, Tak-fu Ok U, Mount Kellet Road
UN GOUGH HILL, Gof-fu Shan
ER MAGAZINE GAF, Ma-ge-sin Shan Kap, from Magazine Gap to Wanchai Gap
T1H
KONGKONG AND KOWLOON STREET DIRECTORY
Rules MAMED CHAT ROAD, Ha-geal Shan To, from Magazine (tap to Mount Sough Rag 1 X Moummage View, Shun-king, Plante.io Bong,
8 Moman Goran Roan, Chư-fu Sho To, from Fluckett's (tap
Hawa Moyar Kstuary Road, Karlet-also T5, Tocon Monat Genga Rond to Mount Balk
keeping to right
UAMA MOTNE FIREER, Parka Shan, top at kill sonth of Quarry Bay
Trax ka, Ehin Tong Tv, from jugetica wila Playcation Eld. Las camway si XLR PLANTATIOs Roan, Chice-chic Po, from Chamberlain Rusu so Perk Boar
Tinition Boud tulion
Stewart Tereses, Sapulizo, Mhuoc Googl Food
KOWLOON STREET DIRECTORY
NS AGOCO Bous. Ah Shi Tas 'th, from Kiddie Rawl, northwada HA EN AMETIN ATENDE, U Shi Diu Le, Four Des Your Road
DECH APPck Road, O Ski Din To, from Maslonnall Road to Des Yeux Tiend, noth si
**e Bankow Tanner, Bar Lo Toy, Granville Bond
is Caxares Raas, Osmen Lun To, from Tobias Road to Des Tour Exad
Camerna TerRAER, Çamana Tor Tog, Opevon Road.
Gastos Bear, Kwong Tung Tu, Fruco Booth Bond to Am.in Read
I CANTON VILLAS, Kwang Tang-nok . Kanbarley Real
di Carnotes Boàu, Ks La Fun To, Eva Robira
Road to Kimberley Road
CHATEAN ROAD, Ubuthana To, frem Salisbury Read to Austin Rood
La Grana Vannan, Kauneina Shi-nas U, Des Vebe Road
Em Oranville Aveers, Ko Linai Lo, Granville Road
İH Granville Bran, Ka Lin-mai Lo Tà. Damn Robinson Rand to Des Your Bod
HopEore FIREET, Haiphong K-5 brom West Band to Hovinaca Brad
AUM Harrow Ruan, Haniow To, frez Elgin Ttrad
and Hand Roxa, Janet To, frein Carnações Bad to Dos Vent Read #17 Boazanian, Ayase, Hufulises To, hom
*
Robinson Road to Ceraverco Food Mga Komory Band, Kim Hau Li To, Pain Bebiysen Road to Austin Road (nach Du
UT0 Hill!
WE★ KzoSOLIT VILLAE, Yow Da Lin C. Kimberley Road
E
EXTEMPORD TRESACE, Yuk Big Fat Toy, Kimberley toad Lochiel, Tsamur, Lok-bis-si, in Cameran Road
Trcamonk Trocas Lea-u-man-Nok-Toy, Usa Vieux Read
MIDDLE ROAD. Chẳng Bắc 1, from Water Police Saliva, eastwardą Moor Boas, Ma-ty To, from Toninsey Road to East Road
Naysan Boaty Náthaii Try hom Hout Bund to Yanuali
Onsexyatomy Road, Tin-man-toi To
Caservatory Tomas, Tin-man-bol Of TT,
ORARY Takkave, E cim Shi Pe Toy, Granville Rood
On Fracas, Huim thi Pa Nok T. Omarillo Read
P-TELL VILze, in Garden Road
PERING LOAD, Deting To, hem West Bund to Robinson Head
Bom TERRACK, Yu Kwn Bog, Robinarn Read
SATEAN HOLD, Sairam To, from No 1, Curanrvua Kçad
TEENA SALISBURY ATEND, Sor Lee Shi Thi Leo Lo, roma cast side Carnarvon B2,
tree Grauv'ile Bowl and Cameron Bood
*NE±NA BALDURY ROAD, Box Lee Shi Ba Los Ta, from Nacioncell Beads Des Tem
Road, soul and
More Hovo, Yao Puc (H, & H. Wharf & Gudowa Co's Godorus, ka)
Vicron Fox. Tie Bar Lee Top, Middle Rand
Wear Bord, Bas Por, fogut Naval Dad to Souch Bund
Wornow Tinklas, Wuchow Toy, Bost Road
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|
MACAO
PD Ou-mun 皎 Ma-kan
Macao is situated in 22 deg. 11. min. 30 sec. N. latitude, and 113 deg. 32 min. 30 sec. E. longitude, on a rocky peninsula, renowned, long before the Portuguese settled on it, for its safe harbour for junks and small vessels. The Portuguese, who had already settled on the island of Lampacao, and frequented for trading purposes Chin-chew, Lianpo, Tamao, and San-choan (St. John's Island, where Francis Xavier, the celebrated missionary, died), first took up their residence at Macao in 1557. Shortly after their arrival pirates and adventurers from the neighbouring islands commenced to molest them. The Chinese authorities were powerless to cope with these marauders, who went so far as to blockade the port of Canton. The Portuguese manned and armed a few vessels and succeeded in raising the blockade of Canton and clearing the seas. The town of Macao soon afterwards began to rise, and during the eighteenth century trade flourished there, the difficulty of residence at Canton greatly contributing towards it. The East India Company and the Dutch Company had establishments in Macao.
Historians are divided in opinion as to whether the possession of Macao by the Portuguese was originally due to Imperial bounty or to right of conquest. There can be no doubt, however, that it was held at a rental of 500 taels a year until Governor Ferreira do Amaral in 1848 refused to pay the rental any longer, and forcibly drove out the Chinese Custom-house, and with it every vestige of Chinese authority. This bold stroke cost him his life on 22nd August, 1849, for he was waylaid and barbarously murdlered near the Barrier of Porta Cerco and his head was taken to Canton, The sovereignty of Portugal over the peninsula was, however, formally recognised by China in the Treaty signed with Portugal in 1887.
The colony is separated from the large island of Heang-shan by an arch, built in the year 1870 at the end of the narrow, connecting sandy isthmus. Two principal ranges of hills, one running from south to north, the other from east to west, may be considered as forming an angle, the base of which leans upon the river or anchoring place. The public and private buildings, a cathedral and several churches, are raised on the declivities, skirts, and heights of hillocks. On the lofty mount eastward, called Cacilha, is a fort, enclosing the hermitage of Na. Sra. de Guia, and westward is Lillau, on the top of which stands the hermitage of Na. Sra. da Penha; entering a wide semi- circular bay, which faces the east, on the right hand stands the fort San Francisco; and on the left, that of N. Sra. de Bom Parto. Seen from the roads or from any of the forts crowning the several low hills, Macao is extremely picturesque. The public and private buildings are gaily painted and the streets kept very clean.
In the town there are several places of interest, apart from the fan-tan or gambling saloons. The Gardens and Grotto of Camões, once the resort of the celebrated Portuguese poet Camões, are worth seeing, as also the noble façade of the ancient Jesuit church of San Paulo, burnt in 1835, and the Avenida Vasco da Gama. The Cathedral is a large plain structure having no architectural pretensions, and the various parish churches are stucco edifices, ugly without and tawdry within. A subscription is being raised for the rebuilding of the Church of San Paulo, but it is doubtful whether the large sum required for the purpose will be obtained. The foundation stone, however, was laid with great ceremony on Sunday, December 4th, 1904. Pleasant excursions can be made to the Hot Springs of Yo-mak, about sixteen miles from Macao, accessible by steam launch. In winter, snipe are to be found in the neighbourhood and afford good sport.
After the cession of Hongkong to the British, the trade of Macao declined rapidly and the coolie traffic subsequently developed there gave it a certain notoriety. This traffic, pregnant with abuses, was abolished in 1874. Tea continues to be an article of export, also fire crackers, tobacco and preserves. Essential oils are also exported to some extent. There is likewise some trade in opium. Silk filatures, brick and cement works, and other factories have also been established. The commercial activity of the place, however, so far as the Portuguese are concerned, is a thing of the past. The net total of the year's trade, including the junk trade between Maca vand
1.
1190
MACAO
Hongkong, is given in the Chinese Customs returns from Lappa as Tls. 18,167,073, showing an increase of nearly three million dollars as compared with the returns for 1906. As the harbour is fast silting up, however, most of the native trade will soon desert the place unless efficient dredging operations are inaugurated. Some work has recently been done in this direction, but the operations have been on a small scale. The Home Government, some time ago, decided to carry out an extensive scheme for the improvement of the harbour, and a Commissioner spent the year 1907 at Macao in connection with the scheme. A beginning was made in 1909, the Lisbon Government having decided to grant an annual appropriation for this purpose. Owing to its being open to the south-west breezes and the quietude always prevailing, Macao has become a frequent retreat of invalids and business men from Hongkong and other neighbouring ports. The principal hotels are the Boa Vista, the Macao Hotel and the Oriental Hotel.
The Hongkong, Canton, and Macao Steamboat Company run two steamers daily between Macão and Hongkong, leaving the former port at 7.30 o'clock a.m. and 2 pa and Hongkong at 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. A Chinese Company runs a regular steamer daily between Hongkong and Macao Between Macao and Canton there is a daily steam service, Saturdays excepted. The distance from Macao to Hongkong is 40 miles, and to Canton 88 miles. Macao is connected with Hongkong by telegraph. The population of Macao, with its dependencies of Taipa and Colouan, according to returns made in 1896, was-Chinese, 74,568; Portuguese, 3,898; other nationalities, 161; or a total of 78,627. Of the Portuguese 3,106 were natives of Macao, 615 natives of Portugal, and 177 natives of other Portuguese possessions. Of the foreigners 80 were natives of Great Britain. In November, 1901, an Envoy Extraordinary arrived from Portugal, his mission being to arrange with the Chinese Government for a delimitation of the boundary of the Colony. The line of demarcation submitted by the Envoy included certain islands which the Chinese Government refused to acknowledge as being part of the Portuguese colony, and the Envoy, while not successful in gaining this point, secured a concession for a railway from Macao to Canton. The convention, however, did not meet with the approval of the Cortes at Lisbon, and Senhor Branco came to the East again in 1904. In November a new agreement was arranged with the Chinese Government, but the Government at Lisbon regarded the terms as far from satisfactory, and refused ratification. It was announced in the local Press that a syndicate of Chinese and Portuguese capitalists had subscribed a capital of four million dollars for the construction of the railway, but there are no indications at present of a commencement being made with the work, and it is generally doubted whether a railway through a district so well provided with waterways would prove remunerative. A railway 50 miles in length is, however, being constructed under Chinese direction in the Sunning district, and this will doubtless beneficially affect trade and commerce in the neighbourhood of Macao. A New Commercial Treaty was arranged with China in November, 1904. In accordance with the Treaty of 1887 the Governments of China and Portugal in 1909 appointed Commissioners to delimitate the boundaries of Macao and its Dependencies, but China would not admit Portugal's title to half the territory claimed, and the Portuguese Commissioner interrupted the negotiations after they had been in progress nearly four months and proposed a reference to the dispute to The Hague Arbitration Tribunal. China has definitively refused to agree to this, and so the position remains as it has always been. Macao is garrisoned with European Portuguese troops.
DIRECTORY
Ou-mun-toc-ch'u
Governadorda Provincia S. Exa.O.Capitão do Estado Maior, Eduardo Augusto Marques Ajudante de Campo-Alvaro de Mello Machado, Segundo tenente da Armada Real Official ás ordens-João P. Ruella, Tenente de Infantaria
GOVERNO DE MACAU
JK
Fu-cheng-sz'-shi
SECRETARIA GERAL DO GOVERNO
Secretario Geral-Dr. Manuel Teixeira de
Sampaio Mausilha
房務民 Man-mu-fing
Repartição Civil
Primeiro. Official-S. J. d'Encarnação
Segundo do.-C. J. Borges
Amanuenses-J. F.S. da Silva P. A. da Silva
Porteiro V. C. Fernandes
Fiel do Palacio-Enoch Choi
Kuan-mu-fúng
Secretaria Militar
MACAO
Coronel do exercito do Ultramar-F. J. Rodrigues, chefe interino do Estado Maior Adjunto--Ten. d'infanteria Joao Pedro
Ruella, Promotor de Justiça
Archivista- Tenente Antonio G. Vidigal Amanuense Manuel dos Santos
za. Repartição
Chefe-Tonente A. Ï'Almeida Lima
Amanuenses E. S. do Rozario, A. da Silva
A Chung-toc kung-hui
會公督總
CONCELIIO DO GOVERNO
Vogal Presidente-O Governador Secretario-O Secretario Geral
Vognes-Bispo de Macau, Juiz de Direito,
dois Officiaes Militares, Delegado do
Procurador da Corba, Inspector da
Fazenda, Presidente do Leal Senado e Chefe do Serviço de Saude
會公門澳
A1 On-mun kung-hui
CONCELHO DE PROVINCIA
Vogal Presidente--O Governador
Secretario O Secretario Geral
Vogaes effectivos-Conservador da co-
marca, A. J. Basto, Dr, F. Xavier Pereira Vogues substitutos· Pedro Nolasco da
Silva e C. A. R. d'Assumpção
-
AI Kung-cheng king-hui CONCELHO TECHNICO DAS OBRAS PUBLICAS Presidente-0 Governador
Vogaes-O Director das Obras Publicas
Constancio J. da Silva
Delegado do Procurador da Coróa, e
Inspector da Fazenda
Secretario-J. G. Silva
會公學義 Nyui-koc king-hui
CONCELHO DA INSTRUCÇÃO PUBLICA
Presidente O Governador
Vice-Presidente-O Bispo
Membros P. N. da Silva, Dr. A. Barbosa
de Lemos, M. A. de Lima
Secretario-Conego T. F. Xavier
所公會物公
Kung-mat-hui kúng-so
REPARTICÃO SUPERIOR DE FAZENDA DA PROVINCIA DE MACAU
Inspector Conselheiro Pedro d'Athayde Official-Jão Pacheco de Souza Primeiros Escripturarios-A. C. X. Henri- ques, A. A. Pacheco, A.J. de Brito Rebello Segundos Escripturarios A. G. de Menezes, G. de Noronha H. M. V. Pinheiro, C. G. Marçal, A. L. de Bastos
1191
Aspirantes-P. dos P. Noronha, F. F. C. Xavier de Mattos, J. M. Sequeira, J. A- dos Remedios, M. Carlos de Figueiredo, D. da Luz
Porteiro Archivista-V, d'Oliveira Continuo Antonio Manuel
Ba Lôi Ti A Búng mặt fi fong
THESOURARIA DA FAZENDA Thesoureiro geral-F. C. de Menezes
REPARTIÇÃO DE FAZENDA DO CONCELHO
DE MACAU
Escrivão de Fazenda-A, G. de Menezes Recebedor-F. C. de Menezes Amanuenses-C. F. Lopes, J. M. de Souza, F. M. A. Remedios, F. J. do Rozario e A. Borges Informadores Avaliadores-A. M. Rodri-
gues, M. Q. Gracias e A. L. Lopes Fiscal do Liu-pun-A. E. dos Remedios
Serviço das Execuções Fiscaes
e Administrativas
Juiz-A. G. de Menezes
Escrivāts effectivos-C. F. Lopes, F. Re-
medios
Officines de diligencias effectivos-A. E.
dos Remedios, J. S. Placé
ALMOXARIFADO
Almoxarife J. B. Carmen Amanuense A. F. X. Nogueira
##Fan-yik-kun-föng
REPARTIÇÃO DO EXPEDIENTE SINICO
1° Interprete-traductor de la classe,--C. A.
Rocha d'Assumpção
2° Interprete-traductor de la classe, J. V.
Jorge (Pekin)
3 Interprete-traductor dela classe,-(vago) Interpretes-traductores de 2a classe,-P. Nolasco da Silva, Jr., J. F. Chagas, F. X. A. da Silva e A. M. da Silva Alumnos Interpretes traductores--José M. de Carvalho, Antonio Ferreira Batalha Linguas E. E. Robarts, E. F. de Paula e
Simplicio M. Baptista
FAGI Kung-cheng king-so DIRECÇÃO DAS OBRAS PUBLICAS Engenheiro Director-A. P. de Miranda
Guedes
Pessoal Technico
Idem auxiliares-Joaquim Gonçalves da
Silva, M. I. de Rezende
Conductores Auxiliares-M. I. de Rezende,.
J. G. da Silva e A. P. do Carmo Servindo de Conductor--J. Porphirio
Contabilidade
Encarregado--A. J. L. de Bastos Auxiliar A. J. M. da Luz Pagador-H. M. V. Pinheiro
1192
Secretaria
Io amanueuse-P. A. C. de Sá
20
do. -J. da Silva Pedruco Desenhador-J. U, dos Santos
Obras Publicas
MACAC
Apontadores-M. M. da Rocha, S. J. Dias
e J. P. Moraes
Conductores-Os da Direcção
Obras Municipaes
Conductor-J. Gonçalves da Silva Amanuense-J. J. da Luz
Apontadores fiscaes-A. Fernandes e C.
d'Abre i
Deposito
Encarregado A. F. da Luz Fiel-Chong-Can
SUPERINTENDENCIA DA FISCALISAÇÃO D'IM-
PORTAÇÃO E EXPORTAÇÃO D'OPIO CRÚ Superintendente Luis B. Leitão Xavier Amanuense-F. C. Pereira
DELEGAÇÃO DA FISCALISAÇÃO D'OPIO CRÚ NA
TAIPA
Delegado Capitão Francisco Figueira da
Camara
Amanuense--Eduardo Gracias
廳務政灣路過仔氹
Tim-chai Co-le-van-cheng-ma-trang
ADMINISTRAÇÃO DO CONCELHO DA TAIPA E COLOANE
Administrador Capitão Francisco da
Camara
―
Escrivão--F. X. Brandão
Amanuense-J. E. da Silva
BA⭑# Kan-få kúng-kun INSPECÇÃO DOS INCENDIOS Inspector-A. P. de Miranda Guedes
QUADRO DE SAUDE
Chefe do Serviço Dr. E. da E. P.
d'Almeida Facultativos-Dr. J. M. d'Araujo, (em Timor), A. F. M. Palha (Macau), Cezar Augusto Freire d'Andrade, Arthur Pinto do Amaral, Antonio de N. Leitão, J. Santos
Facultativos addido-Dr. E. M. Alvares
Ê LÀ
TI các king-hai
JUNTA DE SAUDE
Presidente Dr. E. da E. P. d'Almeida
Vogal-Um dos facultativos do quadro
Secretario-idem.
COMPANHIA DE SAUDE
Enfermeiro-mór-M. Pinto
Amanuenses F. P. C. da Silva, R. Xavier
DIRECÇÃO DA IMPRENSA NACIONAL
1
DE MACAU
(Government Printing Office) Calçada de Bom Jesus, No. 3 Director João Victor Pereira Compositor de la. classe, chefe de typo-
graphia-Placido Lino Placé
Professor da escola de Typographia-Pedro
Paulo Placé
Professor de escola de encadernação-
Thomaz J. Leitão.
Compositor de 2a. cl.-Elias T. do Rozario
Do. Do.
-Pedro A. da Luz
司公報電仔氹門澳
Ou mun-tum-shai Tin-pou-kung-sz
SERVIÇO TELEPHONICO, MACAO & TAIPA
Chefe do Serviço Telephonico-J. A.
Sequeira
Telephonistas-Lino V. do Rozario, Augusto R. Marques, José M.Ferreira
院醫營武
Mon-ieng-i-iun
HOSPITAL MILITAR DE S. JANUARIO
Director-Dr. E. da E. P. d'Almeida
Clinicos-Os facultativos do quadro
Tec-mu-chü
DIRECÇÃO DO CORREIO
Director Luiz A. Lopes dos Remedios
Fiel---Ubaldino F. A. Couto
Aspirantes-A. L. Gomes e P. Z. de Souza
Amanuense letrado China-T. C. Lihoy
廳務政華門澳芹西大
Tai-sai-icony-ou-mun-ud-cheng-mou-tiang
PROCURATURA ADMINISTRATIVA DOS NEGOCIOS SINICOS
Procurador admtvo-Dr. C. Mello Leitão Escrivào Alfredo A. F. d'Almeida Amanuense-Fernando A. Victal Official de diligencias Raymundo Simões Addido á Procuratura Administrativa dos
Negocios Sinicos Lingua-O do Expediente Sinico
Cam-fing
CADEIA PUBLICA
Superintendente-J. Rego
Carcereiro-J. M. Vaz
Ajudantes-Galdino A. Rocha, Manoel
LEAL SENADO DA CAMARA
局公事
Người sử trùng của
Presidente Dr. L. G. N. da Silva
Vice-do-C. J. da Silva
Vereadores-D. J. Ribeiro, V. Maher, N A. Gonçalves, Conde Senna Fernandes
MACAO
1193
士紳商會局公事議
Ngườ-s? Aung cộc-huy-scong-son-s CONCELHO MUNICIPAL
Vogaes Effectivos-Eduardo C. Lourenço, Chou Sin- hyp, F. J. Rodrigues, Luiz Ayres da Silva, A. A. de Mello, Francisco Xavier dos Remedios
Vogaes Substitutos-M. A. de Lima, Dr. E. Alvares, Conde de Senna Fernandes, F. H. Fernandes, Eduardo Marques, F. M. de Mendonça
A
Tin-cha kung-hui
SERVIÇO DO RECENSEAMENTO ELEITORAL Secretario recenseador-P, J. da Luz
BK Sai-icong-cheng-mou-tiang
ADMINISTRAÇÃO DO CONCELHO Administrador- J. M. Gracias Administrador substituto-0 Procurador
administrativo dos Negocios Sinicos Escrivão-E. H. R. Vianna Amanuense-E. J. Nunes
Official de diligencias-A. S. Barbeiro.
SECRETARIA DA CAMARA
Escrivào P. J. da Luz Thesoureiro-L. C. Ozorio l'Amanuense-J. J. Azedo
9° do. -J. M. E. d'Almeida Continuo-J. Pancracio da Silva
201703 Chohoc-ngu-soe
ESCOLAS MUNICIPAES
Escola Central do sexo masculino Director J. F. X. Gomes
Professoras-Da. Clara Marques, Da. Ade-
lina O. da Silva
Professores-J. F. X. Gomes, Pe. Theodosio
Xavier
Professor da Lingua Sinica--P. N. Silva, Jr. Professor de Gymnastica-A, A. S. Basto Prefeitos G. Lopes e Pantaleão Gonsalves Escola Central do sexo feminino Directora -Da. Etelvira Ozorio Professoras-Da. M. Rangel, Da. Helena da Silva, Da. Sara l' Encarnação Gomes, Da. Etelvira Ozorio
Professora da Lingua Ingleza e de Costura
--Da. Maria Carmen forge Prefeita-Cassilda Gomes
Curso Commercial
(Annexado ao Lyceu Nacional) Director Dr. M. Silva Mendes Professores da Lingua Sinica-C. A. R.
d'Assumpção, Chau Sau Kun
Professor da Lingua Ingleza e Commercio
-H. Hyndman
Professor de Calligraphia e Escripturação
Mercantil-Joaquim F. X. Gomes Professor de Historia Dr. C. Pessanha Professor de direito commercial e economia
politica-Dr. C. Pessanha
MATADOURO MUNICIPAL
Inspector das rezes-O director do posto
medico
Fiel J. V. Roza Braga
Auxiliares do Serviço-J. Gonsalves, J. P.
da Silva, Manuel Lopes
CEMITERIO DE S. MIGUEL
Fiel-L. Vianna Porteiro J. Joaquim
POLICIA MUNICIPAL
Inspector-F. X. do Rosario Sub-inspector-G. da Costa Zelador de la. classe-M. Placé Zeladores de 2a. classe-E. do Rosario, J. Sequeira, H. da Silva, M. Fernandes Zeladores de 3a, classe L. da Luz, T.
d'Azevedo, C. Collaço, J. Cordeiro
Zeladores auxiliares-M. Teixeira, M. do Rosario, M. Espirito Santo, A. Garcia, M.
Reis, Joaquim Augusto, Silvio de Se- queira, A. Soares, J. Boyol
學義文洋西習學童華
Ua-tung-hoc-chap-su-yeong-man-ngu-hoc
ESCOLA PUBLICA DA LINGUA PORTUGUEZA. PARA CHINAS
Professor--Arthur A. da Silva Basto Prefeito Agostinho da Luz Servente A. Angelo
ASSOCIAÇÃO PROMOTORA DA INSTRUCÇÃO DOS MACAENSES
Presidente-Pedro Nolasco da Silva Secretario-Patricio J. da Luz Thesoureiro Jorge C. Fernandes
Vogaes-Pe. Secundo de Souza, Vicente Gonçalves, F. X. da Silva, J. Canavarro
REPARTIÇÃO JUDICIAL N67** On-ch'at-sz nga-mun
JUIZO DE DIREITO
Juiz-Dr. J. Vidal
Substitutos-Dr. A. Barbosa e Dr. F. X.
Pereira
Delegado do Procurador da Coroa e Fazen-
da Dr. J. M. C. e Rego
Juizes de Paz-Dr. Nolasco da Silva (Sé e Sto. Antonio), V. Gonsalves (São Lourenço)
Escrivão é Tabellião do primeiro officio-
A. de Serpa Corte Real Jr.
Escrivão e Tabellião do segundo officio-
M. Rodrigues Morgado
Contador e Distribuidor-R. P. Xavier Lingua-Os do Expediente Sinico
Officines de Diligencias-A. J. Collaço, A.
R. de Carvalho, A. Guimarães
1194
DE THI LI TI Seong-chong-ngu-mun
TRIBUNAL DO COMMERCIO
Presidente Dr. J. Vidal
Secretario-Dr. J. M. C. e Rego
MACAO
Vogaes Effectivos-D. J. Ribeiro, Conde de
S. Fernandes, R. Pereira, C. Ayres da Silva, Lypat, Lam Lin
司公劵契註
**** Chu-kai-kün king-so
CONSERVATORIA
Conservador-Dr. J. M. de C. e Rego. Escrivão-Jacques Gracias
ESTAÇÃO NAVAL
CRUZADOR VASCO DA GAMA" Commandante--O Capitão de mare guerra,
A. d'Almeida
CRUZADOR "RAINHA DONA AMELIA" Commandante-O Capitão de fragata, J.
da Cunha Lima
LANCHA-CANHONEIRA "MACAU" Commandante O
O tenente Matta d' Oliveira
CANHONEIRA "PATRIA," 636 toneladas, boccas de fogo 11, força de cavallos 1890 Capitão-tenente Jayme
Commandante
Affreixo
OBSERVATORIO METEOROLOGICO DE MACAO Director-Luiz B. Leitão Xavier Observadores-José Maria Lopes, R. J. A.
Nogueira
Guardas-P. Sino, Lo-acan
Sun-cheng-tiang
CAPITANIA DO PORTO E POLICIA MARITIMA Capitão do Porto-Luis B. Leitão Xavier Adjunto Antonio Garcia de Souza
Ventura
Machinista naval-J. M. Lopes Escrivão-J., Gil Pereira
Primeiro Escrevente Saturnino F. do
Rosario
Segundo Escrevente-J. Vianna Novo Amanuense-Miguel Querubim Garcia Mestre J. Martins de Carvalho
Patrão do Escaler do Governo-José
Chefes de Secção-J. M. Galvão, Joaquim
Pereira e Lino
Interprete-José Hü
FORTALEZAS DE MACAU COMMANDO DA FORTALEZA DO MONTE Commandante - 0 Commdte. da Com- panhia d'Artilheria, Ajudante de praça Alferes J. Antunes
ENCARREGADO DO DEPOSITO DO MATERIAL DE GUERRA DE MACAU F. A. Castella, 1° Sargento d'Artilheria
LK H + Súp tàu miền phao doi COMMANDO MILITAR DA TAIPA E COLOANE Commandante-F. de Paula M. A. do L,
Figueira da Camara
OFFICIAES REFORMADOS
Generaes-A. J. Garcia, F. P. da Luz
Tenente-Coronel -C. M. D. d'Azedo, J. L.
Marques, Lucio Borges
Majores A. V. Xavier, C. J. da Silva
Capitães R. da Roza, E. C. Lourenço, A.
J. Malier
Tenentes-Albano da Luz, Verissimo M. C.
Maher
Alferes-C. E. d'Almeida, J. A. M. Maher,
A. E. Nunes
Facultativo de 2a, classe-Dr. L. L. Franco
COMPANHIA DE ARTILHERIA Quartel na Fortaleza do Monte Capitão-Vago
Tenente Luciano José Cordeiro Alferes J. Antunes
COMPANHIA DE INFANTERIA
Quartel da Flora
Capitão--João de Souza Canavarro Tenente-José Teixeira d'Aguiar Do. Manuel M. Fidalgo
CORPO DE POLICIA
DE MACAU
Quartel em S. Francisco
Commandante Major Alfredo A. de
Magalhães
Ajudante-Tenente Antonio J. G. Lobato
La. Companhia
Capt. commandante Azambuja Martins Tenentes J. da C. Vidigal, João P. Ruella Alferes-Vago
2a. Companhia
Capitão commandante Antonio Antunes. Tenentes A. Ribas da Silva
Alferes Julio A. Simoes
DAX Mou-kun kung-sz GREMIO MILITAR
Presidente Fernando J. Rodrigues Vice-Presidente Henrique Nolasco da
Silva
Secretario-João Pedro Ruella Vice-Secretario-Dr. A. do N. Leitão Thesoureiro-Miguel Rodrigues Morgado
GOVERNO ECCLESIASTICO
Bispo D. João Paulino d'Azevedo e Castro Secretario particular
-
Revmo. A. M.
Moraes Sarmento Secretario da Camara Ecclesiastica-
Revmo. Arcediago, G. F. da Silva Ajudante Conego J. M. T. da Luz Meirinho-F. de Paula Rodrigues
CABIDO
MACAO
Deão-Rev. José A d'Azevedo Bartholo,
presidente
Arceliago-Revdo. G. F. da Silva
Conegos--Reydos. S. S. de Souza, C. R. de S. A. Alvares, A. F. d'Arriaga, J. M. T. da Luz, T. F. Xavier, F. X. Soares, H. V. de Figueiredo, F. X. Fernandes
COFRE DE POBRES Presidente-O Exmo. Prelado Diocesano Secretario-O da Camara Episcopal Vogues-Os 3 Parochios dus Freguezias Procurador-Ernesto F. Alvares
ADMINISTRAÇÃO DOS BENS DAS MISSÕES PORTUGUEZAS NA CHINA
Presidente D. João, Bispo de Macau Vognes-Deão J.A. d'Azevedo Bartholo, Po. A. C. Henriques, reitor do Seminario, Pe. A. H. Farto
Secretario S. J. d'Encarnação Advogado-A. J. Basto
Escripturario-S. A. Lobato de Faria Procurador em Macau-Ernesto F. Alvares Procuradores em Hongkong-J. J. dos Re-
medios & Cia.
Procurador em Sg' pura.--Pe. A. A. Carloso
堂大
Tai-tong
SE CATHEDRAL
Cura (interino)-Conego A. F. d'Arriaga
Fung-son-tong
EGREJA DE S. Lourenço Vigario-Conego F. X. Soares
* Fi-vong từng
EGREJA DE STO. ANTONIO Vigario-Conego Dr. J. Gomes
Seng-mi-tong
EGREJA DE S. LAZARO
Vigario--Pe. Athanazio Tang
Ka-lát-tóng
EGREJA DE SANTA CLARA
Capellão-Pe. Manuel M. Alves da Silva
堂嵩龍
Lung-sung-t'ong
EGREJA DE STO. AGOSTINHO
Assistente-Pe. Julio C. da Roza
Sacristão-P. E. Machado
堂暲粄 Pan-cheong-ting
EGREJA DE S. DOMINGOS
Assistente Conego J. M. T. da Luz
Sacristão-P. E. Machado
EOREJA DE NOSSA SENHORA DO MONTE
DO CARMO, TAIPA
Parocho-Deau J. A. d'Azevedo Bartholo
1195
GHI Tung mỏng icon-siu trong
ERMIDA DE NOSSA SENHORA DA GUIA
Encarregado Cura interino da Sé Cathe-
dral
堂小台砲閣媽
Hả-học-phao-toi-sêu thông
CAPELLA DE S. THIAGO DA BARRA
Encarregado-Vigario de S. Lourenço
Elo Bì A Tien cun-giu-đăng
CAPELLA DO HOSPITAL DE S. RAPHAEL Capellão-Pe. Horacio F. da Silva
RICHLE Sám-pá-tchai Sau-tou-yun SEMINARIO DE S. JOSÉ
Reitor Pe. A. D. Henriques Director Espiritual-Pe. L. Mendes
Professores
Theologia Dogmatica-Pe. J. Gonçalves Moral, lo. anno-Pe. J. Lucas Sagrada Escriptura-Pe A. Henriques Portuguez lo, anno-Pe. A. Netto
Do. 20. do. Pe. S. Nazareth Latim 20. anno-Pe. A. D. Henriques
Do. 30. do. -Pc. S. Nazareth Do. 30. do. Pe. L. Mendes Francez 1o. anno-Pe. J. Lucas
20.
do.
Inglez-Pe. William Arkwright e Pe. V.
Keating
Instrucção Primaria Complementar-A.
Castro
Instr. Primaria Elemt.-Pe. A. Barretto
e Pe. J. Pereira.
―
China Cantonense para Chinas José
Young
China para europeus--Pc. J. Lau Piano Pe. J. Lau
Musica Vocal-Pe. Giovanni Fergnani
Secretario d'Estudos-le. J. Lucas
Medico-Dr. E. E. d'Almeida
Bibliothecario-Pe. S. Nazareth
Advogado-A. J. Basto
Prefeitos-Pe, A. Barretto e Pe. J. Pereira
Prefeito de Saude-Pe. J. Lucus
Philosophia, 10, anno-Pe. P. Damião Physica e Chimica-Pe. A. Netto
Empregados
Escrevente-J. Gonçalves
Roupeiro-A. Castro
Dispenseiro-Vicente Agostinho
Enfermeiro S. Affonso
Porteiro Carlos Tang
EGREJA DO SEMINARIO
Reitor--Pe. A. D. Henriques
Prefeito da Egreja-Pe. S. A. Nazareth Sacristão José
I
I
1
I
1196
堂學藝工濟原無
Mu-uen-tsui-kung-gai-hok-tong
MACAO
ORPHANADO DA IMMACULADA CONCEIÇÃO PARA ÅRTES E OFFICIOS (Salesiani di Don Bosco di Torino) 3 Rua da Prata
Director Pe. Luigi Versiglia Professores-Pe. G. Fergnani, Pe. L.
Olive
Mestres de Arte-L. Carmagnola, G.
Rota
Typographo M. J. da Luz
院書女嘛唎唦囉
Lo-sa-li-ma-nu-su-iun
COLLEGIO DE SANTA ROZA DE LIMA Commissão Directora
Presidente D. João Paulino d'Azevedo e
Castro
Secretario-Rev. Manuel M. A. da Silva Thesoureiro-Rev. Conego C. R. Alvares Vogaes-Rev. Joséda Costa Nunes, General
Antonio J. Garcia
Escripturario-Saturnino Lobato de Faria Pessoal do Collegio
Regente-Mde. Maria B. de S. Joaquim Supplente Mde. Maria Léona
Professora de Instrucção Primaria Elemen-
tar-Mde. Maria A. de Brive
Professora de Inst. Prim. Complementar-
Mile, Maria Clothilde e Mde. Maria da Apresentação
Professora de Portuguez 1o. anno-Mde.
Maria da Apresentação
Professora de Inglez-Mde. Maria Dismas
c Mde. Maria Etheldrida
Professoras de Francez-Mde. MariaLéona,
Mde. Maria Chiara
Professora de Aliemão-Mde. Maria Léonic
de la Croix
Professora de Musica-Mde. Maria A. de
Brive e Mde. Maria Dismas Professora de Desenho e Pintura-de. Maria Chiara e Mde. Maria da Apresen- tação
Professoras de Costura-Mde. Maria Clo-
tilde e S. Maria Zelia
LYCEU NACIONAL DE MACAU Reitor (internio)-Dr M. da Silva Mendes Secretario (interino)- Dr. A. N. Leitao Bibliothecario-M. A. de Lima
Professores
10.grupo(Portugueze Latim)-Dr.S.Mendes 20. do. (Portuguez e Francez).-M.A.Lima 30. do. (Inglez)-Henrique Hyndman 40. do. (Geographia e Historia) Dr. A.
N. Leitao
50. grupo (Mathematica, physica e chimica)
L. J. Cordeiro
60. grupo (Sciencias Naturacs, phys. e chi-
mica)-Dr. A. Queiroz
70. grupo (Desenho)-Raul Faria Maia
Philosophia (allido)-Dr. A. B. Lemos Educação physica-J. P. Ruella Empregados Menores
Porteiro-A. J. Gracias Continuo-A. J. Rodrigues Guarda de Museu-Vago
Guarda de Bibliotheca-F. A. Gracias Servente Manuel Maria ડી. -Ham-o-ioc
CADEIRAS ANNEXAS AO LYCEU
Professores
Lingua Sinica-C. A. R. d'Assumpção Lingua Ingleza-H. Hyndman Escript. Commercial--J. F. X. Gomes Historia da China-Bach. C. Pessanha Direito Commercial-Bach,
ENGLISH HIGH SCHOOL
Calçada do Gamboa
do.
R. A. Coates, F. R. MET. SOC. (Trinity
College, Dublin) head master Assistant-R. H. Williams, B. A.
do. -José da Silva (First class, with distinction in Arithmetic and English) London Commercial Exa mination
Assistant B. de Senna Fernandes (First cl. with distinction in English) London Commercial Examination
會公業物堂娶育理管
Kun-li-ioc-ing-tong mat-ip king-hui SANTA CASA DA MISERICORDIA
Meza Directora
Provedor F. J. Rodrigues
Secretario José Luiz Marques Thesoureiro--A. J. G. Lobato Adjunctos-F. X. A. da Silva e E. F. F.
Alvares
Advogado-Dr. L., G. Nolasco da Silva, Escripturaric-8. S. da Silva
Ajudante escripturario-E. L. da Silva Ammanuenses--V. J. Fernandes, F. X.
Mattos
Recebedor-F. J. da Rocha Continuo-J. d'Ascenção
KBARG Sai-iong-ien i-iun
י
HOSPITAL DE S. RAPHAEL
(á cargo da Santa Casa da Misericordia) Mordomo-Um Mesario nomeado annual-
mente pela Mesa Directora Intendente-Vago
Fiel J. C. Lobo
Clinicos-Os facultativos do Quadro de
Saude
Capellão-Revmo. Horacio F. da Silva Enfermeiro-José Caldeira Segundo do. J. F. Antonio
Enfermeiro auxiliar-Antonio d'O. Sar-
razolla
MACAO
Ajudante de enfermeiro-Bernardito dos
Remedios
1. Enfermeira-Maria R. Rodrigues
組
do. -Philomena de Jesus
ASSOCIAÇÃO PIEDOSA DE SÃO FRANCISCO
XAVIER
Primeiro Admidnr.-Pe. J. Roza Segundo do.--Jorge Fernandes Terceiro do.--L. M. dos Remedios Secretario -F. de P. M. da Rocha Procurador-Marcello J. da Luz.
ASYLO DOS ORPHÃOS
Director-Pe. J. da Costa Nunes Prefeito-Pe. Horacio F. da Silva Escrivão Estephanio da Silva Fiel-José Matheus
**ANAK I-ta-li-cheng-nu-iun CASA DE BENEFICIENCIA E ASYLO DE
SANTA INFANCIA
Regenta-M. Forroni, L. Spazzini, M. Barretto, M. Cruz F. Zanettini, C. Barros, M. Hyndman, A. Menegatti, R. Ferreira, E.Adamoli, M. Leon, M. Rosario, A. Sarazzola, O. Asumpcion, M. Souza, R. Alves
行銀局分外海洋西大
Thi Shi Yong hai nhai tiên cuội ngân hàng
BANCO NACIONAL ULTRAMARINO
Endereço Telegraphico-"Colonial"
A. O. Manarte, gerente
José Ribeiro, guardalivros
E. A. Carlos, escripturario
Cesar Ramos
A. D. Costa,
P. J. Pereira,
do.
do.
do.
"A VERDADE," periodico semanal (Weekly newspaper-17 Rua de Praia Grande
C. J. da Silva, editor e redactor
"ALTO DOURO" (Wine Merchant) Antonio
Martins--49 and 51 Rua do Campo. AYRES & Co., Fernão, Wine, Spirit and provision Merchants-3, Rua da Barra.
BACHOO, SALEH MAHOMED, Milliner and
Draper-47, Rua Central
Oosman Jacob Goolam Rusool
H. Molidina
Дte Ba-si-to-chong-sze BASTO, A. J., Advogado-12, Cal ada da Paz
Hoy-kiang Teau-tim
BOA VISTA HOTEL, The Sanitarium of South China-1, Rua do Tanque do Mainato, Tel. Ad: Boavista.
Santa Casa da Misericordia, owners
Proprietor A. Vernon Manager A. Naris Assistant A. O, Britto Compradere-Lü Woo
(See Advertisement)
1197
BRAGA, JERONYMO M., Professor de Musica e Organista da Sé Cathedral, Travessa dos Santos
RAIK Kóng-tiang-hi-iun
CLUB DE MACAU
Presidente-A d'O. Manarte Secretario-M. R. Morgado Thesoureiro-A. A. Pacheco Vogaes--Constancio da Silva e Luis
L. dos Remedios
Escrivão Ignacio M. Baptista
COATES, R. A., Headmaster, English High
School-Calçada do Gamboa
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Consul General - (unoccupied) pro tempore in charge of the Consul in Hongkong
ÈMEHA Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
BELGIUM
*
Consul for Hongkong, Macao and South China (residing in Hong- kong) Francis Janssens
Tai-fai-kuoc-leng-sz'-kun
FRANCE NO. 18, Rua de S. Lourenço Consular Agent--D. da Roza
www
ITALY Comm. Z. Volpicelli (Residing in
Hongkong)
GMAH
JAPAN
Yat-pin-deng-slin
Consul General (acting)--(Residing
in Hongkong)
★¥1W* Ho-lan-leng-32'-kun NETHERLANDS
Consul-General (Residing in Hong-
kong) J. H. de Réus
T‡J#
Chim-lo-leng-sz'-kuu
SIAM-3, Largo do Sto Agostinho.
Consul-Conde de Senna Fernandes
官事頜牙巴斯日大
Tai-yi-si-pa-nyi a-kok-ling-sz-kun
SPAIN
Consul (for Hongkong, Canton and
Macao residing in Hongkong) The
Consul for France at Hongkong
1198
MACAO
Ha-pat-tin-tee
DENT & CO., HERBERT, Public Silk and Tea Inspectors and Commission Agents-2, and 4 Rua dos Prazeres
Herbert F. Dent (London)
D. da Roza
Agencies
"Canadian Pacific Royal Mail S. S. Co. Glen Line of Steamers
China Mutual Steam Navgtn. Co., Ld. Java-China-Japan-Lijn
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Limited North British and Mercantile Insce. Co. South British Insurance Company Commercial Union Insurance Co. Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of U.S. Fire Insurance Co. of 1877, Hamburg
General Accident Fire and Life Assce.
Corporation Ld.
司公報電
Tin-pou-kung-sz
EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA
AND
CHINA TELEGRAPH CO., LIMITED-Head Office: Electra House, Finsbury Pave-
ment, London E.c.; Macao Office: 9, Praya Grande
A. C. da Rocha, operator-in-charge A. J. Victal, operator
C. K. Chune, counter clerk
ELIAS, R., Milliner and Draper-49, Rua
Central
R. Elias
A. Rahmtoola
Sidick Adam
ESACK, S., Milliner and Draper-59, Rua
Central
Ahmed Soomar Joonas do.
Hassan do.
▲
Lim-chun-kung-se
EMPREZA ECONOMICA, Sociedade Anonyma de responsabilidade limitada, Armazem de Modas e Agencia Commercial-26 and 28, Rua Central; Endereço Telegr. Empreza Ernesto F. Alvares, director
F. J. Rodrigues, secretario Arthur S. Basto, thesoureiro
F. X. da Luz, superintendente; S. d'Almeida, e Antonio Campos empre- gados
FARMER, WM-65 Praia Grande; Proprietor of Macan Hotel, Macao Ice Depôt, Victoria Hotel, Canton
Agencies
The Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. The Hongkong Ice Co., Ld.
記三老 Lou Farm Ri
FERNANDES & Co., J. V., Merchants, and
Commission Agents-11, Largo do
Senado; Tel. Ad: Samki
J. V. Fernandes
Jorge C. Fernandes D. J. Ribeiro
Agencies
Butterfield & Swire
London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Royal Exchange Assurance Co. The Palatine Insurance Co., Ld. Orient Insurance Company Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
GONÇALVES, V. A., Advogado-43, Rua do
Pe. Antonio
*** Nga-ico-on
GRACIAS, João M., Advogado-1, Rua
Central
司公限有坭毛鴻洲青
Ching-Chow hung-mo-nai yau-han kung-sz
GREEN ISLAND CEMENT COMPANY, LIMITED
--Head Office: Hongkong
P. Simcock, superintendent
Jas. Boyd, chief engineer
J. Witchell, engineer
C. F. Gomes, assistant engineer
J. Silva,
do.
M. A. Gomes, chief clerk
do.
V. R. V. Ribeiro, assistant L. Xavier, timekeeper
A. Alves, assistant
A. Luz, T. Jensen, J. Braz, cement burners, F. Rozario, assistant
W. Cary, overseer
HASSAM., T., Milliner and Draper-12 Rua
Central.
Bachoo Tarmohomed
Sedick Tarmohomed
Akow Phoby
館冶夜記與
HING KEE, P. L., Auctioneer, and Valuer-
27, Rua F. ‹lo Ámaral; Tel. Ad : Hing kee
P. L. Hing-kee
P. L. Hing-kee, Jr,
L. do Rozario, clerk.
LIMA, M. A., Architect and Surveyor
-16, Travessa de Sto. Agostinho
EJ
LOJA A PORTUGUEZA Portuguese
Wines and Provisions Store-Postage Stamps Dealers-Tel. Ad: Ferro.
Francisco M. Santos Ferreira, Pro-
prietor
Joao de Noronha
商東
MACAO
Lyox, A. & P., Machinery Importers and
General Merchants--27, Rua F. do Amaral, Tel. Ad: Lyon
A. Leong
P. Leong
F. Fung
AER Fi-tang-Kung-se
MACAO CYCLE DEPOT--Praia Grande
C. Ayres da Silva & Co.
店酒記興灣南
Nam-wan Hing-kee Trau-tim
MACAO HOTEL (late Hing-kee's Hotel)-65
Praia Grande
Wm. Farmer, proprietor
H. N. Beaurepaire, manager
Can Pow, compradore
Cheong Foon, guide and runner
At Kwong, Chinese clerk
廠
興
MACAO ICE CO.- Works: Areia Preta; Hd
Office: 51, Rua dos Mercadores; Depot.
27, Rua F. do Amaral; Tel. Ad: Ice
Pedro L. Hing-kee, Proprietor
A. L. Hing-kee, secretary
P. L. Hing-kee, Jr., manager J. Wong, engineer,
MAHOMED, A. H., Milliner and Draper-32
Rua Central
Pal-kap-chau
MARQUES, DR. L. PEREIRA-3, Praça
Luiz de Camões
巢鴿白 Pak-kap-chau
MARQUES, F., PEREIRA-3, Praça Luiz de
Camões
17 Mp Me-lo-chai
MELLO, A. A. DE, Merchant and Commis- sion Agent, Praça Lobo d' Avila (Praia Grande) 22 and 24; Tel. Ad: Mellò
A. A. de Mello
J. Soares, clerk
A. Ton
J. Nogueira, wharfinger
Agencies
H'kong., Canton and Macao S.B.Co.,Ld. Eastern and Australian S. S. Co., Ld. Hamburg-Amerika Linie
Compania Trasatlantica de Barcelona
(passage dept.)
China Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
Sun Life Assce. Co. of Canada
Hongkong Daily Press
MENDES, MANOEL DA SILVA, Bacharel em
Direito-Rua da Estrada de Flora
1199
MOOSA, OMAR CASSAM, Milliner and Draper, Comm. Agent-51 and 3, Rua Central)
Joonas Cassam Moosa (Macao)
Abdool Karim
O. Jusut
Musso, MISS MARIE M., Teacher of English
and Piano-3, Travessa dos Santos
NOLASCO, DA SILVA. DR. LUIZ, Barrister-at-
law-3, Travessa do Pe. Soares
NORONHA & Co., Printers and Publishers
S. Noronha (Canton)
A. Noronha
J. do Rozario
B. Lau
F. Hy
NOORMAHOMED, B., Milliner, Draper and
Hosier--8-10 Rur Central
店酒方東 Tong-fong-chau-tim
ORIENTAL HOTEL-Praia Grande (Central)
F. T. Victal, manager
Pedro P. Angelo, runner
喇
庛師狀
大
PEREIRA, FRANCISCO X., Bacharel em direito
-45, Rua de Praia Grande
PEREIRA, JOSÉ, M. Commission agent-45,
Rua de Praia Grande
房藥大咕冷花門澳
PHARMACIA E DROGARIA, FRANCO & CIA.
-16, Largo do Senado; Tel. Ad: Drophar
Dr. Luiz L. Franco, director
C. M. de Souza'
E. Cordeiro
PHARMACIADE MACAO (Macao Dispensary)-
16 and 18, Rua Central; Tel. Ad: Daturina
Elysio Neves Tavares, director
A. A. Crestejo
L. do Rozario, guardalivros
FRO Pin-man-ioc-fong
PHARMACIA POPULAR-95, Praia Grande;
Tel. Ad: Popular
Henrique Nolasco da Silva, pharmaceu-
tico
Delfino de Rego, ajudante de
pharmacia
Demetrio do Rosario, praticante
REMEDIOS, F. X, DOS-2, Rua de Prata; Tel.
Ad: Cobaschi
1 H TH Người tong hong
REMEDIOS, L. M. Dos, Merchant and Com- mission Agent-2, Rua da Prata; Tel. Ad: Licinio
1200
厘 卑路洋行
MACAO
RIBEIRO & Co., CommissionAgents, Imptrs.
and Exptrs.-35, Praia Grande; Tel. Ad: Rivus
F. J. Ribeiro
H. J. Ribeiro
Felix Tam Domingos Li
RIBEIRO, JOSÉ, Shipchandler and general merchant and Commission Agent-Rua Central, No. 11
Delfino José Ribeiro
L. F. do Rozario F. C. Pereira
H. J. Ribeiro
ROCHA, F. P. MENDES DA, Merchant and Commission Agent-1 Largo de Lilau; Tel. Ad: Toquichi
ROCHA, G., Professor de Musica-Bêco de
Boa Vista, No. 1
SILVA, Henrique NOLASCO DA, Advogado
-Praia Grande, No. 95
師律化利思
*
Si-li-fa-lot-si
SILVA, JOSÉ DA, Advogado-17 Praia Grande
#*# Si-tang-sio-lot-si
SILVA, C.J. DA, Advogado-17 Praia Grande-
D. Rodrigues, escrevente
SOCIÉTÉ ELECTRIQUE D'EXTREME ORIENT
Usines à Cholon et Macau,
Chas. Ricou, directeur général
Armand Laponyade, chef mécanicien
局總務印海鏡
Keng-hoi-yan-mu-chung-coc
TYPOGRAPHIA MERCANTIL DE N. T. FERNAN DES E FILHOS, General Printers and Publishers---28, Rua do Padre Antonio
Jorge C. Fernandes, manager and
proprietor
F. H. Fernandes, proprietor J. V. P. Fernandes,
do. Miss U. J. M. Fernandes, proprietrix V. J. Fernandes, proprietor
A Rozario, foreman
"VIDA NOVA," A Weekly Portuguese news- paper published every Sunday-Traves- sa dos Santos No. 9; Tel. Ad: Vida
Director-Dr. Luiz Nolasco Administrator-Henrique Nolasco da
Silva
Editor-L. Ayres da Silva
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Almeida, Miss G. d', 19, Praia Grande Almeida, Jr., Mrs. J. E. d', 41, Rua do Pe.
Antonio
Alvares, Mrs. Anna, 33, Praia Grande Alvares Mrs. C., 3, Rua de Sta. Clara Alvares, Miss D., 33, Praia Grande Alvares, Mrs. E. M., 23, Praia Grande Amaral, Mrs. R. O., 17, Travessa do Santo
Agostinho
Antunes, Mrs. A., 29, Rua de S. Domingos Assumpção, Mrs. J. C. R. d', 10, Ruada
Penha
Ayres da Silva, Mrs. J., 99, Praia Grande Ayres da Silva, Mrs. L., 21, Rua do Hospital Ayres da Silva, Mrs. C., 99, Praia Grande Azedo, Mrs. C. M. D., 3, Largo da Fonte de
Liläu
Barradas, Mrs. V., 10, Rua do Pe. Antonio Barradas, Miss H., 10, Rua do Pe. Antonio Basto, Msr.A.A. da Silva, 12, Calçada da Paz
Basto, Mrs. A. J., 12, Calçada da Paz Brandão, Mrs. G. M., 45, Rua do Pe, Antonio Brandão, Mrs. F. X., 11, Rua do Hospital Brandão, Mrs. T. T., 17, Rua do Hospital Brito, Miss B., 29, Rua do Hospital Cajigas, Mrs. É. T. de, 39, Rua do P. Antonio Cajigas, Miss C. de
do.
Camara; Mrs. F. M. Figueira da, 57, Praia
Grande
Canavarro, Mrs. J. S., 21 R.do Chunambeiro Carneiro, Mrs. F. C., 1, Praia Grande Carvallio, Mrs. M. A., 12, Rua de S. José Carvalho, Mrs. M. F., 37, Rua dos Prazeres Coates, Mrs. R. A., 2, Calçada do Gamboa Collaço, Mrs. A. J. R., 9, Calçada da Penha Collaço, Miss E. A.,
do.
Cordeiro, Mrs. Luciano, 21, Rua Conselheiro
Ferreira d'Almeida
Ega, Mrs. L. R. d', 23, Rua do Chunambeiro
MACAO LADIES' DIRECTORY
Eça, Mrs. M. P. d', 15, Rua do Chunambeiro
Eça, Miss A. F. d', 23,
do,
Eça, Miss M. J. ď,
do.
Egu, Miss M. T. ď,
do.
Espirito Santo, Miss A., 3, Praia Grande Encarnação, Mrs. S. J. d', 18, Ruado Gonçalo Encarnação, Miss,
do.
Farmer, Mrs. W., 65, Praia Grande Faria, Mrs. S. Lobatode, 25 Rua de S. Paulo Fernandes, Condessa Senna, 3, Largo de
Sto. Agostinho
Fernandes, Miss U., 1, Rua da Casa Forte Ferreira, Mrs. L. A., 71, Praia Grande Franco, Mrs. L. L.. 2B, Rua de Sta. Clara Garcia, Mrs. A. J., 27, Praia Grande Gil Pereira, Mrs. J., 4, Calçada de Gamboà Gomes, Mrs. J. F. X., 14A, Largo do Senado Gomes, Miss L., Rua de S. Lazaro Gonçalves, Miss C., 31, Rua de S. Paulo Gonçalves, Mrs. [,,
do. Gonçalves, Mrs. J. B., 43, Rua do Pe. Antonio Gonçalves, Miss M.,
do.
Gracias, Mrs. J. M., 1, Rua Central
Jorge, Mrs. A. G., Béco do Lildu
Jorge, Miss E., Travessa do Paiva Jorge, Miss I.,
Jorge, Miss M. C.,
do.
do.
Lobato, Mrs. A. G., Calçada do Monte Lobo, Miss A., 9, Calçada da Penha
Lopes, Miss E., 10, Rua do Pe. Antonio Lourenço, Mrs. E. C., 47, Praia Grande Luz, Mrs. F. P. de, 10, Calçada doSto. Agos-
tinho
Luz, Mrs. M. da, 25 Rua de S. Paulo
Luz, Mrs. P. J. de, 37, Rua de Roquette Magalhaes, Mrs. A. A. de, Quartel de S.
Francisco
Maher, Mrs. F. T., 5, Calçada de Sto.
Agostinho
Marques, Mrs., Government House Marques, Miss M. Martinho, 53, Praia
Grande
Marques, Mrs. G. Martinho, 53, Praia
Grande
Menezes, Mrs. A. G., Tap-siac Miller, Mrs. A. C., 9, Praia Grande Mello, Mrs. A. A. de, 22, Praça Lobo d'Avila Milish, Miss L., 9, Travessa de Nivat Morgado, Mrs. M. R., 53, Praia Grande Musso, Miss M. M., 3, Travessa dos Santos Oliveira, Mrs. C. Marques, d', 11, Calçada
da Penha
Ozorio, Mrs. E. J., 7, Praia Grande
Pacheco, Mrs. S. M., d'E., 3, Rua do Gonçalo Pacheco, Mrs. D. C., 4, Rua de Sta. Clara Pacheco, Mrs. J. A., 23, Rua do Hospital Pereira, Miss A., 45, Praia Grande Pereira, Mrs. T. L., 45, Praia Grande Pinheiro, Mrs. H. M. V., 18, Praça Lobo
d'Avila
Pitter, Miss M. C., 3, Praia Grande Queiroz, Mrs. A., Fortaleza do Bom Parto Rego, Mrs. J. M. de C. e., 5, Travessa do
Pe. Narcizo
1201
Remedios, Mrs. C. dos, Pateo da Boa Vista Remedios, Miss A. M. C., 6, Rua de Igna-
cio Baptista
Remedios, Miss J. P. dos, 2, Rua da Prata Remedios, Miss M. B. dos, 2, Rua da Prata Remedios, Miss M. M. dos, 2, Rua da Prata Remedios, Miss Z. M. dos, 2, Rua da Prata Remedios, Mrs. A. M. L. dos, 6, 1 do
Ignacio Baptista
Remedios, Mrs. L. M. dos, 2, Rua da Prata Remedios, Mrs. L. A. Lopes Remedios 15,
Praia Grande
Ribeiro, Mrs. D., 11, Rua Central Ribeiro, Mrs. L., 11, Rua Central Ribeiro, Mrs. M. N., 35, Praia Grande Ricou, Mine. Ch, 13, Praia Grande Rocha, Mrs. A., 4, Pateo da Boa Vista Rocha, Miss A. J. da, 45, Ruado Pe. Antonio Rocha, Mrs. A. C., 36, Rua do Pe. Antonio Rocha, Mrs. F. P. M. da, 1, Largo do Lilau Rocha, Miss L. M. dla, 1 Largo do Lilau Rocha, Miss S. M. da,
Chunambeiro
Rodrigues, Mrs. F., 2, Calçada de Bom Parto Roza, Mrs. A. A. 11, Ruade Iguacio Baptista Roza, Mrs. A. Braz da, 11, Rua do Ignacio
Baptista
Roza, Mrs. D., 18, Rua de S. Lourenço Rozario, Mrs. L. F. do, 1, Rua de Sto
Antonio
Sá, Mrs. Diogo de, Ilarbour Office Sage, Mrs. L., 11, Calçada da Penha Santos, Mrs. A dos, 33, Praia Grande Schlüter Mrs. G., 5, PraiaGrande Senna, Miss A., 7, Praia Grande Seuna, Miss M. V., 7, Praia Grande
Silva, Mrs, F. X. A. da, Bèco do Senado Silva, Mrs. L. Nolasco da, Praia Grande Silva, Mrs. M. Outeiro e,13, Rua do Igna- Silva, Miss A. Outeiro e, cio Baptista Silva, Miss C. Outeiro e, Silva, Mrs. S. R. O, da
do.
do.
Silva, Miss H., 17, Praia Grande Silva, Miss E. da., 17, Praia Grande Silva, Mrs. A. N. da, 2, Travessa dos Santos Silva, Mrs. P. N. da, 2, Travessa dos Santos Silva, Mrs. C. J. da, 17, Praia Grande Silva, Jr. Mrs. P. Ñ. da, 19, Rua do
Hospital
Silva Mendes, Mrs. M., 25, Rua da Estrada
de Flora
Souza, Mrs. A., 6, Pateo da Penha
Souza, Mrs. F. X. M. de, 31, Rua de S
Domingos
Souza, Mrs. M. L. M. de, 23, Praia Grande Telles, Mrs. A. G. da Silva, Calçada do
Monte
Victal, Mrs. M. B., 9, Rua, da Sé
Victal, Miss M. A.,
Victal, Miss M. B.,
do.
do.
Vieira, Mrs. M. Lobato, 25 Rua de S.
Paulo
Xavier, Mrs. R. P., Pateo da Penha
INDO-CHINA
>>
The French possession of Indo-China lies between 8 deg. 30 min. and 23 deg. 23 min. N. lat. and 97 deg. 40 min. and 107 deg, E. long. (Paris), and comprises the colony of Cochin-China, the protectorates of Cambodia, Annam, Tonkin, and the Laos, and the territory of Kwong-chow-wan leased from China, the whole (covering an area of 310,000 square miles) being under the direction of a Governor-General, who is assisted by the Conseil Supérieur de L'Indo-Chine.' The latter is a moveable body, meeting in any of the chief towns according to the summons of the Governor-General; but Hanoi, the capital of Tonkin, has become the principal seat of the administration. According to a decree of the 8th August, 1898, the Council consists of the Governor-General, President, the General Commanding the Troops, the Commander-in-Chief of the China Squadron, the Lieutenant-Governor of Cochin-China, the Residents Superior of Tonkin, Annam, aud Cambodia, a representative of the Laos Administration, five other officials, the President of the Colonial Council of Cochin-China, the Chairmen of the Saigon, Hanoi, and Haiphong Chambers of Commerce, of the Cochin-China and Tonkin Chambers of Agriculture, the Chairmen of the Annam and Cambodian Mixed Chambers of Commerce and Agriculture, and two native members appointed by the Governor-General. The full Council meets once a year, and provision is made for a permanent Commission to transact such business as may arise between the sessions.
The deltas of Cochin-China and Tonkin are fertile; Annam, connecting them, is a long mountainous tract, with a narrow littoral on one side, and a wild sparsely populated hill tract stretching to the Mekong on the other. Rice, cotton, sugar, seeds, tobacco, spice, and fish are the principal productions of the alluvial districts. The principal mineral production is coal, which is mined at Tourane, on the coast of Annam, and at Hongay and Kebao on the Tonkin coast. Other minerals, including gold, silver, tin, copper, lead, &c., exist in the Protectorate and are more or less mined. The principal harbours are Haiphong in Tonkin, Tourane and Thuanan (for Hué) in Annam, and Saigon. The climate in general is hot and humid. The year is divided into two seasons, the wet and the dry.
A loan of 200,000,000 francs was approved by the French Chambers in 1898 for the construction of railways in Indo-China. There are at present about 820 miles of railway completed and open to traffic in Indo-China. These are: Haiphong to Hanoi, 65 miles; Hanoi to Yunnanfu, 296 miles; Hanoi to Langson and the frontier of Kwangsi, 1011⁄2 miles: Hanoi to Vinh, 2024; Tourane to Kwangtri, 1083 miles; Saigon to Mytho, 44 miles. The lines yet to be completed are the extension of the line Saigon-Phantiet along the coast of Annam through Phanrang, Bangoi (on Kamranh Bay) to Nhatrang, a length of 147 miles. Only about 84 miles of this line are at present open to trafic. From Phanvang a branch is to be constructed to the plateau of Lang-bian, which is in- tended to be the future hill-station and sanatorium for Cochin-China. This will have a length of 643 miles. Work is already proceeding on various sections. It is doubtful whether the South Annam coast line will be extended to join the Tourane-Hué line, and the latter connected up with the Hanoi-Vinh line, thus giving railway com- munication between Saigon and Hanoi, which is the original intention. At all events many years must elapse before such a programme can be carried out. The proposel lines from the coast of Annam to the Mekong River are also in abeyance at present The population is estimated at 16,000,000, most of whom are Annamites, the Cambodians and Laotians coming next in about equal numbers.
The Chinese number 150,000, and Europeans amount to a little over 15,000. The Tonkinese are larger and more robust than the Cochin-Chinese, and more intelligent and active. The Chinese have immigrated in large numbers to the south of Cochin-China, where they have obtained almost the exclusive possession of industries and commerce. The Cam- bodians are naturally apathetic, and have given way to the Chinese and Annamites The Laotians and Mois, oppressed by their neighbours and by their mandarin system are lazy, timid and suspicious. The Muongs, who occupy all the basins of the liver Noire and Song-ma, are more handsome and robust than the Annamites. The Nous resemble the Chinese and the Thos belong to the Kiner race.
INDO-CHINA-TONKIN
1203
The actual political situation of Indo-China had for many years been satisfactory in all respects, but the granting of a native Consultative Chamber seemed to create a spirit of unrest, and developed aspirations towards independence which many feared would lead to trouble. Outside events, such as the operations in China in 1900, had no influence upon the imagination of the Annamites, and the fears once entertained as to its effect upon the populations of the borders of China proved unfounded. The success of Japanese arms in the war against Russia, however, left an impression on the inrgina- tion of the natives here as in other Asiatic countries, and in 1908 there was consirable apprehension. But the strengthening of the forces, and the arrival of M. Klubukowski, the new Governor-General, with his previous experience of the country, which enabled him at once to deal with the position in a firm and statesmanlike manner quickly put an end to popular fears and restored public confidence. The exhibition at Hanor (Tonkin) opened in November, 1902, of all products, manufactures, industries, &c., from France, French colonies and Far Eastern countries, was a pronounced success.
The perman- ent Archæological Mission instituted by the decree of December 15, 1898, is now working under the new denomination of "Ecole Française d'Extrême Orient.'
Its object is the search for ancient articles of artistic or historical interest, and the charge and preservation of monuments of public interest. It also studies the philology of idioms, dialects, and ancient languages of Indo-China and neighbouring countries.
The total force of the French army in Indo-China is composed as follows: 17 regiments of Europeans; 17 regiments of natives; 18 batteries of European artillery; and sundry units-altogether about 12,000 Europeans, and 13,000 Natives.
The trade of the Colony is rapidly increasing; the total for 1908, excluding transit trade, amounted to just over £17,000,000, about equally divided between imports and exports. Nearly fifty per cent. of the imports are of French origin. Less than four per cent. of the remainder comes from Europe, as much of the import consists of natural products from neighbouring countries. The Customs tariff on imports may be said to be the same as that in France. By far the largest export is rice.
TONKIN
Originally an independent kingdom, but since 1802 a province of Annam, Tonkin is situated between lat. 19 deg, and 23 deg. N. and long, 102 deg, and 108 deg. 30 min. E. bounded on the north by China, on the west by the Laos country, on the south by Annam, and on the east by the Gulf of Tonkin. The country near the sea is a rich alluvial plain, well watered by numerous rivers, and produces large crops of rice, while sugar, cotton, spices, indigo, silk, and various other articles are also raised. It possesses valuable mines of silver, lead, antimony, and zinc, and gold and copper are also known to exist. Concessions were granted in 1887 for the working of the coal mines at Kebao and Hongay, and coal of good quality from the last-named is now largely exported. By the Treaty of Hue, dated the 6th June, 1884, the Annamite Government placed Tonkin under a French Protectorate, and its affairs are administered under the supervision of French Residents. It is, in fact, now practically a French Colony. Tonkin is divided into twenty provinces, namely, Quang yen, Hai-duong, Bac-ninh, Thai-nguyen, Tuyen quan, Hong-hoa, Son-tay, Hanoi, Ninh-hinh, Hong-yen, Nam dinh, Bachan, Bae giang, Ha-nam, Hoa-binh, Phu-lien, Chai-binh, Van-bu, Vinh-yen, Yen bai, and four military territories, viz. :--1st circles of Langson, Mon-cay, Van-linh; 2nd circles of Can- bang, Bao-lac; 3rd circles of Ha-giang, Bac-quang; 4th circles of Lao-kay, Bao-ba. Hanoi, the capital, is the chief town of the province of the same name, and appears on old maps as Ke-sho. The population of the province is estimated at about 15,000,000. A railway was some years ago constructed from Phu Lang-Thuong to Langson, a distance of 64 miles, but it was little better than a tramway. The gauge of this line has now been widened from 60 centimetres to 1 metre and extended to Hanoi, a distance of 45 kilometres, and a concession has been granted for a further extension from Langson to Lung chow, in the Chinese province of Kwangsi. The new railway running from Haiphong to Hanoi was opened in July, 1902, and Hanoi to Laokay in February, 1906. There are three mills for spinning cotton yarn in Tonkin, one at Haiphong of 25,000 spindles, one at Nam-Dinh of 24,000 and one at Hanoi of 10,000. industries include the manufacture of cement, soap, albumen, matches, &c.
38*
The other
HANOI
>>
Hanoi, the capital of Tonkin, and now the seat of Government, is situated on the right bank of the Songhoi, or Red River, about 100 miles from its mouth. The city is built close to the river and extends about one mile along the bank. The first aspect for visitors arriving from Haiphong by train or river is not an inposing one, as the fashionable portion of the town, the principal European centre, is situated further back, Here the broad and well-kept streets planted with trees, numerous imposing public and private buildings, present a very nice European town of modern style. The city is lighted by electricity and abundantly supplied with good drinkable water by enormous waterworks. Three lines of electric tramways run through the town over a distance of eight miles. A special attraction is the "Petit Tac, a lake of nearly half a square mile in the middle of the town, rendered picturesque by the quaint pagodas, occupying the small islands which adorn it and surrounded by promenades. Facing the lake there is the Square Paul Bert, with a fine bronze statue of Paul Bert unveiled on the 14th July, 1890, and a bandstand in the middle. Close to the square there are the Mairie, Treasury, Post Office, Cercle Union, Bank of Indo-China, Résidence Supérieur and the Hotel Metropole. Other public buildings, as the residences of the Governor- General and Commander of the Troops, the Government Offices, the Hospital and- others, are situated on what was formerly the "Concession," close to the river bank. There is a large Cathedral of the Roman Catholics and a handsome small Protestant church. The imposing palace of the Governor-General stands at the entrance of the Botanic Garden, and other fine buildings in the town are the Theatre, Museum, Palais de Justice, Terminus, etc. There are two first-class Hotels, the Hotel Metropole, with a front of nearly 300 feet, and the Hanoi Hotel, as well as some smaller ones. The "Cercle de l'Union," Société Philharmonique and the Masonic Lodge possess their own buildings. A race course opened in 1890, is situated just outside the new town. Daily and periodical French papers are published at Hanoi. The citadel occupies the highest site and is surrounded by a brick wall twelve feet high, and a moat. It contains the buildings for the troops, arsenals, magazines, etc., and the Royal Pagoda stands within its enclosure.
The ancient city is situated between the citadel and the river and presents a novel appearance, owing to the singular architecture of the houses. Since the occupation by the French great improvements have been effected in the laying out of the town and the formation of roads and streets, of which over 50 miles are already drained, electric lighted, and, even in the native city, well kept and very clean as compared with those of other Eastern cities. Of the numerous temples and pagodas that of the "Grand Buddha," situated on the shore of the large lake, is the most important and interesting for visitors on account of its colossal bronze statue of the idol,
Halls of iron construction, each 160 by 60 feet, for the native markets have been erected in different quarters,
Export and Import trade is steadily increasing and besides many important mercantilo houses there is also a development of industries in this town. A cotton-spinning mill, ice factory, match manufactory, paper manufactory, some distilleries, furniture-shops and a brewery are among the number.
The transit trade will have the greatest development when the different railway lines are opened which connect Indo-China and Tonkin with Yunnan Province. The first part, connecting Haiphong with Hanoi, was opened in July, 1902, and the line enters the capital by a magnificent bridge 5,100 feet in length over the Red River. A railway runs from Hanoi to Dongdang, near the Chinese frontier, and rapid progress is being made with other lines. The Yunnan line is expected to be opened for traffice over its entire length this year.
In November, 1902, a colonial exhibition on a large scale was opened at Hanoi and proved a great success. The Botanic Garden of Hanoi occupies a very fine site and is one of the nicest in the Far East. It contains over 3,000 various species of plants. The climate has undergone a very favourable change by many sanitary works executed by the French, such as drains through the whole European and native city filling up of pools, marshes, etc. There is distinction of season; the summer begins in April, the winter about October. The highest degree of temperature in sumner is 35 centigrade, the lowest in winter about 6° centigrade. The population of Hanoi is about 100,000; 3,000 of whom are Europeans (exclusive of the military), the rest being Annamites, Chinese, Japanese, and Indians. The first meeting of a Native Deliberative Assembly elected on a narrow suffrage was held at Hanoi on November 14th, 1907, when M. Beau, the Governor-General, addressed the assembly.
HANOI
DIRECTORY
BUREAUX DU GOUVERNEMENT GENERAL
GOUVERNEMENT GÉNÉRAL Gouverneur Général-M. A. Klobukowski
CABINET DU GOUVERNEUR GÉNÉRAL Inspecteur des Services Civils, Directeur du Cabinet et du Personnel-M. Simoni Secrétaire Particulier du Gouverneur
Général-M. Chalamel Attaché-M. Despax
Chargé du Bureau du Chiffre,-M. Ferrand
OFFICIERS D'ORDONNANCE
Le Capitaine-M. Fiévet
Le Lieutenant de Vaisseau-M, Chack
BUREAU DES AFFAIRES POLITIQUES Chargé du Bureau-M. de la Blanchard
de la Brosse,
Attaché M. de Villeneuve de la Collette
BUREAU MILITAIRE
Le Capitaine Expert-Bezançon, de l'Infan- terie Coloniale, Breveté d'Etat-Major, Chargé du Bureau Militaire Desabaye, Lieutenant d'Artillerie Coloni-
ale
SERVICE ADMINISTRATIF Robin, administrateur de 3e classe des
Services Civils, Chef de Service Batault, administrateur de 4e classe Le Fol, administrateur de 5e classe, Secrétaire Archiviste du Conseil Supéri-
Sur
Fouque, commis de lère classe Fournier, commis de lère classe
BUREAU DES ARCHIVES
Belloeuf, chef de Bureau
Solicand, adjoint au Chef de Bureau
TROUPES COLONIALES
Généralde Division, Commandant Sup, des Troupes du Groupe de l'Indo-Chine- Général Geil
Chef d'Etat-Major des Troupes-Lieute-
nant-Colonel-M. Puyperoux Lieutenant-Gouverneur de la Cochinchine
-M. Gourbeil
Résident Supérieur au Tonkin-M. Morel Résident Supér. en Annam-M. Groleau Résident Super. au Cambodge--M. Luce Résident Super. au Laos-M. Mahé
CONSEIL SUPÉRIEUR Gouverneur Général, Président-M, A.
Klobukow-ki
1205
Commandant Supérieur des Troupes Le
Général de Division, M. Geil Commandant en Chef de la Division navale de l'Indo-Chine Le Contre-Amiral Richard Foy
Directeur Général des Finances et de la
Comptabilité-M. XXX
Lieutenant-Gouverneur de la Cochin-Chine
-M. Gourbeil
Résident Supérieur au Tonkin--M. Morel Resid. Supérieur en Annam-M. Groleau Résident Supr. au Cambodge-M. Luce Résident supérieur au Laos-M. Mahé Directeur du Contrôle Finan.-M. Gallut Procureur Général, Chef du Service Judi-
ciaire M. Michel
Directeur des Douanes et Régies-M. Pica-
11011
Directeur Général des Travaux Publics-
M. Jullidière
Inspecteur-Conseil du Service de l'Agri-
culture, Commerce et des Forêts-M. Capus
Directeur Général des Postes et Télé-
graphes-M. Vialet
Directeur Général de la Santé- M. Primet Inspecteur-Conseil de l'Instruction Publi-
que-M. XXX
Trésorier Général-M. Sacomant
Président du Conseil Colonial de la Cochin-
Chine-M. Schneegans
Président de la Chambre de Commerce de
Saigon M. Jacque
Président de la Chambre de Commerce de
Hanoi M. Guermeur
Président de la Chambre de Commerce de
Haiphong-M. Porchet
Président de la Chambre d'Agriculture de
Cocohinchine M. Paris
Président de la Chambre d'Agriculture du
Tonkin -M. Launonier
Président de la Chambre Mixte de-Com- merce et d'Agriculture de l'Annan-M. Bogaert
Président de la Chanibre Mixte de Com- merce et d'Agriculture du Cambodge- M. Vandelet
S. E. Hoang-Cao-Khai, Ancien Van Minh
de l'Annam
S. E. Truong-Nhu Cuong, President du Conseil de Regence Ministre de l'Intéri- eur de l'Annam
S. E. Oknha Chokey Ponn, Ministre do
Cambodge
M. Do-Huu-Phuong, Tong-Doc, Honoraire Député de la Cochinchine-M. François
Deloncle
Délégué de l'Annam et du Tonkin au Con- seil Supérieur des Colonies - M. de Monpezat
1206
Délégué du Cambodge au Conseil Supéri-
eur des Colonies-M. XXX
HANOI
Président de la Chambre du Commerce de
Hanoi-M. Veyret
Président de la Chambre du Commerce de
Haiphong-M. Porchet
Président de la Chambre d'Agriculture de
Cochinchine-M. Päris
Président de la Chambre d'Agriculture
du Tonkin-M. Laumonier
S. E.
Président de la Cham. Mixte de Commerce et d'Agriculture de l'Annan-M. Bogaert Président de la Cham. Mixte de Com- merce et d'Agriculture du Cambodge- M. Brisao; S. E. Hoang Cao-Khai, Hoang-Cao-Khai, Ancien Van Minh de l'Annām; Oknha Youmréach, Col. de Monteiro, Ministre de la Justice au Cambodge. M. Do Huu-Phuong, Tong doc. honoraire; S. Truongnhu Cuong Député de la Cochinchine-M. François
Déloncle
Délégué de l'Annam et du Tonkin au Conseil Supr. des Col:-M. de Montpozat Délégué du Cambodge au Conseil Supr. des
Colonies--M. X
TRÉSORERIE GÉNÉRALE DE L'INDO-CHINE M. M. Sacomant, trésorier général
Trésorerie Générale ⋆
Martineau, Payeur de 3e classe, Sous-chef
de Comptabilité
Dessalle, Commis ppal lère cl. Chef du
Bureau du Budget Général
Géhin, Commis de Ze classe Chef de Se-
crétariat et du Personnel
Galiacy, Commis de 2e classe Secrétaire
Particulier du Trésorier Général Gaillens, Commis. ppal. lère cl.
Gouffran, Commis. ppal. de 2ème classe
M. M. Orgnon, Cabbé, Commis de lère classe
Boucher, Payeur de lère cl. ȧ (Bacninh)
Vergé, id.
2ėme (Langson)
Bojon, idl.
icl. (Namdinh)
Versini, id.
3éme
(Haiduong)
Decestier, id.
id.
(Quang-Yen)
Lamotte, id.
4ėme
(Caobang)
Jouy, id.
id.
(Yenbay)
Castel, id.
id. (Tuyenquang)
2e (Kouang-Tcheou)
lère (Phulangthiong)
2ème (Hagiang)
Granier, Commis. ppal. 2ème cl. (Laokay)
Marotte, id.
Aubouy
idl.
Renaudin, id.
Hubert Delisle, Commis. 1ére. cl. (Thai-
Nguyen)
Puech, Trésorier Particulier (Hué en conge) Beaurain, Payeur de 4e el, chef de com ptabilité Trésorier Particulier p.l. (Hué) Fortier, Payeur de 3e cl. (Tourane) Hervé, Commis. de Trésorerie lère cl. (Hué) Rouassant,
Quenin,
id, id.
3e cl. id.
id.
idl.
(Thanh-Hoa)
(Vinh)
Brial, Payeur de 4e cl. á Sarazin, id.
3e
2e
Havy, Commis. ppal. 1ère cl. å (Quinhon) Robaglia
(Phantbiet) Philippe, Commis. 1ère cl. à (Phan-Raug) Gerlier, irl. de Trésorerie lére el à
(Hué)
FONCTIONNAIRES EN CONGE M. M. Dobois, Payeur de 2e classe Thomas, id.
4e
lére
idl.
2e
Vilette, Commis. ppal. lère, el
Lacaze
Barjon, Commis. 1ère. classe
Stibio,
id.
Tarrier,
id.
Nessler,
id.
id. 2ère
Barnardini,
id.
Rousseau,
2ėme
Leroy,
id.
Filippi,
id.
FONCTIONAIRES EN CONGE
Graclit,
id.
idl. id.
Norment,
id.
id.
idl.
Vitalis,
id. 2ème cl.
id,
Tarrier,
id.
idl.
id.
Chapat,
id.
id. (Haiphong)
Mir,
d'Ambert,
id.
id. (Hanoi)
Cébin,
id.
icl.
id.
Leca,
Balisoni,
idl.
id.
id.
Abbatucci,
id. id.
id.
Carrère,
id. 3ème cl.
id.
Piot,
idl.
id.
id.
de Montarlot,
id.
id.
id.
Touston,
idl.
id.
id.
Baylongue Hondaà, id.
idl.
id.
de Wezyk,
idł.
idl.
id.
Delfour,
id.
4ème cl.
id.
Gosselih,
id.
irl.
id.
Poli,
id.
id.
id.
Degiovanni,
id.
id. (Haiphong)
Caratini et Rivoire id.
M. Toschi, Commis. ppal.
à (Haiphong)
idl. (Hanoi)
2e classe Payeur
M. M. Puech, Trésorier Particulier
Fabre, Payeur de 2e classe
id. 3e id.
id.
Bojon, Commis. ppal. de 2e cl.
id.
Bernard, Commis. de 2e classe
MAIRIE DE HANOI
M. Logerot, Administrateur-Maire Conseil Municipal
de Boisadam, Premier Adjoint Mezières, Deuxième Adjoint M.M. Carlos, Delorme, Clement. Sau- mont, Desanti, Levee, Reverony, Bernies, Lachal, Dao-van-su, Do Than, Nguyen-Luong Van-tich thien, conseillers municipaux
ADMINISTRATION DES DOUANES ET RÉGIES
Recette Subordonnée de Hanoi
HANOI
Receveur M. Courty, controleur ppal.
1ère classe Verificateur-M.Gallois Moulbruy,commis. Contentieux-M. Geoffray, commis. Chef de Brigade-M. Astier Brigadier Destellerie Toulame M. Rozier, commis. Destellerie Maron-M. Lavigne, id. Fabrique d'Allumettes-M.Saulelli, id. Manufacture Tabacs-M. Garde, id. Depot Rigional--M. Baldacci, id.
ADMINISTRATION DES POSTES ET DES TÉLÉGRAPHES DE L'INDO-CHINE (Décret du 28 Juillet 1882, Arrêté minis-
tériel du 29 Juillet, 1882.) Arrêté du Gouverneur Général du 24
Novbre. 1901.
Tonkin
Direction du Service
Directeur-chef de Service-Brien Inspecteurs J. L. Hollard, S. J. Coarraze Rédacteur ffons de sous-inspecteur--L.
Desachy
Rédacteur-E. Marin-Lamellet,
Commis fons de rédacteurs-E. G. Sauvage D. Saladin, A. Garde, R. M. H. Berdoulay Brigadier facteur-Anger
Hanoi Magasin
Commis-Delpech
Chefs Surveillants-E. Célerier, H. Joubert
Atelier Hanoi
Chef de l'Atelier-Moyse-Frizé
Recette Comptable de Hanoi
Receveur Comptable Fustier
-
Commis principaux-Meysonnier, Bizet, Ronan, Hennecart, Facteurs-Houlard
Bacninh-Champ, receveur
Caobang-Bonnet, receveur
Dapcau-Esparre, receveur
Dien Bien Thu-Barneoud, receveur
Doson-Alata, receveur; Taillefer, Mar-
tini, commis
Hagiang-Tessodlin, receveur Haiduong Niguin, receveur Haiphong-Cornu, receveur
Do. Clémenceau, commis principal Hanoi-Chateau d'Eau-Chalan, receveur Hongay-Thomas, receveur Langson-Schneider, receveur Lackay-Lavergne, receveur Moncay-Boulay, receveur Namdinh-Sauvage, receveur Phu Lang Thuong-Duya, receveur Quangyen Bienvenu, receveur Sept-Pagodes-Decorsière, receveur Soula -Chatelain, receveur Sontay-Orsini, receveur Thainguyen-Saurel, receveur Thanh Hoa Touze, receveur Tuyenquang-Gougaud, receveur Vanyen-Emery,receveur Thu-Cruveiller
receveur
Yen Bay-Père, receveur
Quang Tcheou-Chappellart, receveur
1207
SERVICE DES TRAVAUX PUBLICS Charles M. Guillemoto, directeur général des travaux publics, en mission en France
Administration Centrale Galuski, chef des services administratifs et des contentieux à la direction générale Circonscription du Contrôle par l'éclat de la Construction des Chemins
de Fer du Yunnan
Etat Nominatif du Personnel Europeen M. Denain, ingénieur en chef de là cir-
conscription (Mongtseu)
M. Goguet, chef de section, adjoint à
l'Ingénieur en chef (Mongtseu)
M. Charton, commis, chargé de la comp.
tabilité (Mongtsen)
M. Jaouen, chef de la lère section du
contrôle (Mongtseu) M. Verley, chef de la
controle (Mongtseu)
2ème section du
M. Poncet, chef de la 3ème section du
contrôle (Mongtsen)
M. André, chef de la 4ème section du
contrôle (Mongtsen)
M. Raynal, chef de la 5ème section du
contrôle (Yunnansen)
DIRECTION DU SERVICE DE SANTÉ Dr. Grall, inspecteur général
DIRECTION DE L'AGRICULTURE, DES FORÊTS ET DU COMMERCE
Capus, Guillaume, directeur Brenier, Henri, sous-directeur
ATTACHES COMMERCIAUX AU SERVICE COM- MERCIAL ET INDUSTRIEL & HANOI Dauphinot, Georges; attachés commercials
de lère classe
Meiffre, Henri, attachés commercials de
2e classe
Maury, Henri, attachés commercials de 4e
classe
AU SECRÉTARIAT
Guerrier, Georges, attachés commercials de
5e classe
DANS LES LEGATIONS OÙ CONSULATS OÙ EN MISSION EN EXTREME-ORIENT Hourant,Emmanuel, attachés comel.lère cl.
SERVICE DE L'AGRICULTURE DU TONKIN Jacquet, Louis, inspecteurs chefs de service
et directeur du jardin botanique de Hanoi Lafitan, Ernest, inspecteurs de l'agriculture Aufray, directeur du laboratoire d'analysis
INSTRUCTION PUBLIQUE Directeur Général pour l'Indo-Chine-
Henri Gourdon
Chef du Secrétariat du Directeur général-
Henri Russier
1208
HANOI
Inspecteur de L'Enseign professionel-Bois Secrétaire Bourgarit
ECOLE FRANCO-ANNAMITE DE NAM DINH Directeur-M. Geyer
COLLÈGE DU PROTECTORAT A HANOI Musdirecteur, Daniel, Le Guen, Maudron, Laures, Taggianelli, Pavli, Durignau, Hanchow Rouilet, Leloup Mme. Bonnet, économe Logiou, Martin, professeurs
3 ECOLES PRIMAIRES INDIGENES DE HANOI (Franco-Annamites)
D'Argence, directeur (groupe sud) Lionet, directeur (groupe nord) Choppy, directeur de Yen-phu
ECOLE PRIMAIRE DE HAIPHONG (Enseignement aux Européens) Lavedan, directeur Rivière, professeur
Bory, Schamaum, Bescond, professeurs
ECOLE PRIMAIRE DES FILLES
DE HAIPHONG
Mme. Décussa, directrice Mme. Tesquet, institutrice
Mme, le Bars id.
Mlle. Thévenin, directrice
Mlle. Barbier, professeur de Musique Mlle. Drapeau, id.
Mme. Boubals
d'Anglais
Mine. Babaud Dulac, institutrice
COLLÈGE DES FILLES DE HANOI (INTERNAT.)
Mme. Martin, directrice
Mme. Martin, institutrice
Mme Mus, professeur
Mme. Duvignau, do.
Melle. Pouymayou, institutrice
Mme. Pradourat,
id.
Mme. Rouvey lolle,
idl.
Mme. Tontanne,
Mercier, Leprivey,
Desnoyers
Mme. d'Argence
Melle. Le Vasseur, surveillante
Mme. Leprivey
id.
Mme. Guex, professeur de Musique. Docteur Hazard, mèd. de l'établissement M. Dubouch, dentiste
id.
ECOLES PRIMAIRES EUROPÉENNES MIXTES DE L'INTÉRIEUR
directrice id,
Namdinh--Mme. Lemoine, Phulanthuong-Melle. Nessler, Quyen Quang-Ane. Colombat, il. Sontay-M. et Mme. Changeant, id. Haiduong-Melle. Bérenguier, id. Dapeau-Daydè, directeur
Mme. Augier De Maintenon, institutrice
COLLÈGE PAUL BERT
Directeur-M. Simonin
Professeurs-M. M. Jégou,
Autigeon,
Quentin, Segond, Lehot, Removile Patris, Giansili, Deletie
Instits. Mmes. Bénard, Deletie, Giansili
Dupesne
Maitres répetiteurs-M. M. Patris Professeur d'Allemand -M. Lehot
d'Anglais-Mme Mus
Id.
Id. de Dessin-M. Leloup ld. de Musique-Mme. Guex Professeur d'Annamite-M. d'Argence
TROUPES DE L'INDO-CHINE
QUARTIER GÉNÉRAL A HANOI Commandant Supérieur des Troupes
Général de division, Geil
Etat-Major
Chef d'Etat-Major-Colonel Hocquart, de
l'infanterie coloniale
Sous-Chef-Lieutenant Colonel Niole, de
l'artillerie coloniale
Chef de Bon l'inf. col.--Dhers
Chef d'escadron d'artillerie col. Didio
Capitaines de l'infanterie col. Sanceau,
Pruneau Panet, Mirville
Capitaines de l'artillerie col. Charnet, Petit,
Teissier, Villain,
Lieutenants l'inf. col.-Texier, Rabier
Service Géographique
Chef du Service-Lt.-Col. Friquegnon, Chief de Bataillon-Scherthem Capitaines de L'infan. Coloniale-Dubas,
Pierre
Capitaine de l'artillerie col.-Benoit
1ère Brigade
Général de Brigade-Houry
Officier d'Ordonnance-Maroix, Capitaine
de l'infanterie coloniale
2me Brigade
Colonel-Bataille
Officier d'Ordonnance-Vitali Lieut. Finf
col.
3me Brigade
Général de Brigade--Com. Tonard Officier d'Ordonnance-Capitaine Laporte Chief d'Etat Major-Peyregne, chief d
escadron
Officier Adjoint-Sourisseau
Commandement de l'Artillerie Général de Brigade Commandant de
Nays-Candau
Officier d'Ordonnance-Capt. Monchet, de
l'art. col.
Chef d'état-major
Péroud
Chef d'Escadroo
Jutendance
Intendant Militaire-Directeur du Service
Linard
Adjoint au Directeur--Piquemal, sous-in-
tendant de 3me cl.
:
I
1
HANOI
Direction du Service de Santé Médecin Inspecteur-Directeur Grimet Adjoint au Directeur-Caujolle, médecin
major de 2e cl.
Officier d'Administration Principal--Lotzer
Service Vétérinaire
Chef du Service des Epizooties et des Eta-
blissements zootechniques
vétérinaire principal
Vétérinaire Major-Camboulives
Telégraphie Militaire
Lepinte,
Chef du Service-Capt. Péri, de l'inf col.
Gendarmerie
Chef d'Escadron-Herqué
Trésorier Lieutenant Gazille
JUSTICE MILITAIRE
Ier. Conseil de Guerre
-
Commis-Rapporteur Capitaine Roux,
docteur en droit, Lieut. Leyendecker Greffier Nickel offr. d'adm. de lère classe
2e. Conseil de Guerre Commissaire-Rapporteur-Capit. de l'art.
Charnet
Greffier--Sergent Candeloy
Conseil de Révision
Commis. Conseil de révision
Adjoint à l'inf, Bertrand
Greffier-Nickel offr. d'adm, de lére el. Huissier apparitieur-Chiroy
PARQUET GENERAL
Procureur Général, Chef du Service Judi-
ciaire-G. Michel
Avocat général-Q. P. Delestrée
COUR D'APPEL (3e et 4e Chambres) Vice-Présidents--Raffray (3e Chambre)
Bandel (4e chambre)
TRIBUNAL DE 1ère INSTANCE Procureur de la République à Hanoi-
Grilhart des Fontaines
President du Tribunal de Hanoi-Carme
AVOCATS-DÉFENSEURS PRÈS LA COUR
DE HANOI
Deloustal, Leclerc, Mettetal, Laurans, Mezières, Le Gac de Lansalut, Dureteste Ferrand, Gounelle
CONSEIL MUNICIPAL
Premier Adjoint de Boisadam Deuxième Adjoint-Mezières
Conseillers-Carlos, Delorme, Clément, Saumont, Desanti, Levée, Reverony, Bernies Lachal, Dao-van-su, Do Than, (Nguyen Luong,) (Van-tich thien) Administrateur, Chef du Secrétariat--
Pretre
Chef de Bureau du Secrétariat-Métailler Chef du Bureau de la Comptabilité-Ma-
thiot
Commis Comptable-Brenier Commis d'ordre, Cougul Commis Rédacteur-Wilkin
1209
Controleur des Contributions Directes-
Vincenti
Commis des Contributions-Wald, Megy Architecte-Voyer, Chef du Service de
la Voirie Babillot (en congé) Conducteurs de la Voirie-Pierre, Harlay Mécanicien-Mante
Agent de Culture-Laforge
COMMISSARIAT DE POLICE
Commissaires Centreaux-Vincilioni and
Kersselaers
Commissaires :-Robillot, Gremeau
Inspecteurs-Raynaud,
Bachmann
Secrétaires de Commissaire :-Rechard et
Brunet
Brigadiers: Castaing, Couleau,Massonnat,
Donze
ALLIANCE FRANÇAISE, Association pour la
Propagation de la Langue Française Comité du Tonkin
Président-L. Babonneau Vice-Président J. Blanc Trésorier A. Blane
Secrétaire Bouchet, commis des
services civils
Inspecteur des cours, M. Léonet, directeur du college des interprètes
ANDRÉ, DESCOURS, CABAUD & Co., de Lyon,
Produits metallurgiques
Antoine Bonnet, répresentant
Alfred Kagy
#
"ANNUAIRE ADMINISTRATIF, COMMERCIAL' ET INDUSTRIEL DE L'INDO-CHINE FRANÇAISE
L.. Gallois, directeur
Imprimerie d'Extreme Orient, edi-
teur Publications Officielles
ASSOCIATION D'ENCOURAGEMENT À L'EN- SEIGNEMENT SECONDAIRE SUPÉRIEURE ET PROFESSIONNEL
Conseil d'Administration
président
Do văn Tâm
hoan Triển, vice-id
Fran Van Thong, id. Dao Van Su, secrétaire Buy huy Do, trésorier
Ngkiêm Xuanquang, conseiller Nguyên Liên,
id.
Comité de Patronage de Hanoi Hauser,
président
Georges Lacaze, vice- id.
Bouchet, secrétaire
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE-Boulevard
Amiral Courbet, 49
A. Szymanski, directeur
H. Lebros, chef de la compté.
1210
G. Marie, caissier
HANOI
H. Lebras, chef de la comptabilité G. Cijoux, chef de la correspondance
BARRY, E. Peinture-ameublement - Rue
Paul Bert
BIEDERMANN & Co., E., Merchants-Boule- vard Carnot No. 3: Tel. Ad: Biedermann
E. Biedermann (Saigon)
O. Schoch, sigus per pro. H. Jenny
L. Robert
Agencies.
Law Union & Crown Insce. Co. of Lon. Sun Life Assce Co. of Canada Western Assurance Co., London Deutscher LloydTransport-Vers., Berlin
BOILLOT, & Co., CH. Mécaniciens, Agents Généraux des Cycles et Autos "Lion"; des Fils de Pengcot Frères
C. Boillot, directeur
Agents de
Horlogerie, Pendulerie
BONNAULT-Rue Paul Bert, 16, représen
tant de Denis Frères, Haiphong
BOURGOIN, HENRI, Agent des Assureurs
maritimes de France à Hanoi
BOURGOUIN-MEIFFRE, Filature de Coton,
etc.-Rue Jean Dupuis
BOYE, Huissier-Rue Jules Ferry
BRASSERIE HOMMEL
Vve Hommel
M. Hominel
B. Koiransky, directeur
G. Kaufl, contremaitre
BRIQUETTERIE TUILERIE
-
MÉCANIQUES Usine à Vapeur á Yên-Viên-Bureaux et entrepôt: 108, Boulevard Gambetta, Hanoi, Maison fondé en 1888; Diplome d'honneur Hanoi 1907
Max. Clément
Chef d'Atelier-Jouffrey
CAFÉ DE L'ETOILE, Propriété de la Société Française immobilière du Boulevard Henri Rivière à Hanoi, Siège Social Avignon, France
CAMIN, Boulanger-Rue Paul Bert
CERCLE DE L'UNION À HANOI-Sq. Paul
Bert
Président M. M. Dureteste Vice-Président Dauphinot
Do. -Guillot
Secrétaire d'Ambert
Trésorier-G. Tunpin
Do, adjoint de la Brosse Bibliothécaire-M. Détieux Commissaire-G. Léonet Do. --Didio
Do.
Do.
Lanchy -Marquis
CHANSON, LEON, Café Restaurant du Grand
Lac-Route du Grand Bouddha
CHARPANTIER, H., Nouveautés Ateliers Sellerie et Tailleur Rue Paul Bert
Hardy, comptable Dupré, coupeur
CHESNAY DE BOISADAM DESPLAND & Co.,
Verrerie, Hanoi
CHESNAY ET DE BOISADAM, Planteurs
Domaines des Pins et du Yên-Thé
CLEMENT, MAX., Fabrique de Céramique de Yen-Vien Carreaux au Ciment, Usine à Vapeur, Briqueterie et Tuilerie mécaniques, etc.
COMITÉ DE PATRONAGE, (Section Polytech-
nique du Tonkin}
Président-Baudet Vice-Président- Bayle Secrétaire-Tissot
COMPAGNIE FORESTIÈRE DU TONKIN-98,
Boulevard Gambetta, Hanoi
Société Anonyme-Usine Route Man-
darine et à Vietri; Ad. Tel: Scierie
COMPAGNIE GÉNÉRALE d'ELECTRICITÉ DE CREIL--Boulevard Amiral Courbet, No. 59A Saint-Fort Mortier, ingénieur
civil, représentant
COMPAGNIE GÉNÉRALE DU TONKIN ET DU NORD-ANNAM. Société Anonyme au Capital de 3,600,000 francs. Siège Social: Hanoi, Boulevard Henri Rivière: Adresse Télégraphique: Commercial, Hanoi Adms. délégués Directeurs
COURSES D'HANOI, SOCIÉTÉ DES Hippo.
drome Gia-Long
Président-Brou
Vice-Président G. Fort
Trésorier-Laurent
Starters H. Hose et Alb. Garnier Secrétaire-Suquet
Daurelle F., Negociant Entrepre
neur -Rue Jean Dupuis, 66
P. Daurelle
R. Daurelle
F. Girard
HANOI
DAYDE ET PILLÉ, Ingénieurs-Constructeurs (Ateliers de Construction de Creil, Oise) Bureaux à Paris:6 bis,Rue Auber;Tel. Ad: Daydpillé, Paris, Hanoi, Hué et Tourane
M.M.-M. Desains, représentant
Bureau, chef d'atelier
DEBEAUX FRÈRES, Négociants, Rue P. Bert
H. Debeaux, directeur
Dessanti, fondé de pouvoir
Frézard
Ridet
Corrizi
Focioli
M. Benazet, caissier
M. Thibault, tailleur
Mme. Faverjon Mme. Podesta
Mme. Benazet
Mlle. Hondy
Mme. Vicomte
DELOUSTAL, J., Avocat Défenseur-Bou-
levard Gialong
R. Deloustal, interprète principal E. Deloustal, géométre
DEMANGE, Négociant-Boulevard Henri
d'Orleans
D'ESCODECA, H., Vius, Spirits-Rue Paul
Bert, Conserves Alimentaires
DIEULEFILS, Photographie-RueJules Ferry
DURETESTE, A. avocat défenseur, docteur
en droit-43, Boulevard Carreau
DUVERGT,Entrepreneur-Rucdes Pavillons
Noirs, 59
EMINENTE, Négociant
FABRIQUE DES PAPIERS & Thuy Chuong
prés Hanoi
F. H. Schneider, directeur propriétaire
FERME DES BACS, de la Province de Hanoi
Tam-Ky, fermeri
Filature de Coton Hanoi-Ad: Tel.
Cotonnier
Meiffre, Cousins & Cie.
A. Meiffre (Paris)
Ch. Meiffre (Paris)
M. Chané, ingénieur directeur, signs
per pro.
E. Morisot, comptable
F. Winckler contremaitre-chef G. Delaville surveillant
G. Strube
id.
1211
GLACIÈRES DE L'INDO-CHINE, SOCIÉTÉS
DES Fabrique de boissons Gazeuses
V. &. G. Larue, propriétaires
GOBERT, Cultivateur
GODELU ET CIE. à la Ménagère, angle Rue Paul Bert--Boulevard Gia Long
G. Besse
GRAND HOTEL METROPOLE, Proprieté de la Cie. Française immobilière du boulvd. Henri Rivière à Hanoi, siège social: Avignon, France
André Ducamp, administrateur
M. Vidal, chef de cuisine
M. Chevalier gérant de restaurant M. Gabai gérant de Cafe Mlle. Muller, housemaid Mme. Malaurie, caissière Brasscire de l'Etoile
Propriété de la Cie. Française Immobilière du boulvd. Henri Riviéro à llanoi
Siège social: Avignon, France André Ducamp, administrateur M. Boysson, gérant
Mme. Perron, caissière
GUILLAUME Ch. ET ALLEMAND, Entre- preneurs de Travaux Publics, Boulevard Carreau, Carrières de l'ierre et Marbre, Plantations de Café
4
Ch. Guillaume
H. Allemand
J. Borel, planteur
M. Borel,
id.
Cuchot, carrier
Brosse id.
GUIONEAUD FRÈRES, Vins et Spiritueux-
Boulevard Gia Long, 28-30
H. Guioneaud
L. Guioneaud (Bordeaux)
A. Guioneaud, fondé de pouvoirs
HALFF, L., Commissionaire agréé en Douane, Demenagements Transports-- Rue Paul Bert, 63
HANOI HOTEL, Café Restaurant
Gaydier, propriétaire
HOTEL DE LA PAIX-Rue Paul Bert
Rapin, propriétaire
IMPRIMERIE D'EXTREME ORIENT (Anciens Etablissements F. H. Schneider et L. Gallois reunis), Société Anonyme au capital de 600,000 Fr. Hanoi, Haiphong L. Gallois, administrateur délégué,
directeur
1212
HANOI
JAMBERT, Coiffeur Modes et Nouveautés-
Rue Paul Bert
Mme. Jumbert
JUBIN, Ingénieur Opticien-Rue Paul Bert
KALISCHER, L., Négociant, Orfèvrerie-
Rue Paul Bert
KOENIG, G., Fermier des Abattoirs
D. Bernhard, fondé de pouvoirs
KRUG, AD., Ingénieur-entrepreneur
L'AVENIR DU TONKIN, Journal quotidien : (deux Editions) Tel. Ad: Avenir-Rue Jules Ferry
Henri Lanmonier, directeur, rédacteur
en chef
Maliverney, administrateur gérant Lamblot, secrétaire de la rédaction Commandant Réverony, redacteur
militaire
Ch. Hazet, échortier
de Cathelineau
Tirard, Bonnafour Botter, chroni-
queurs
Jean Ajalbert,
L'INDÉPENDANCE
TONKINOISE, Journal
quotidien, Boulevard Carrau-16 et 2, Rue de la Sapèquerie
A. Piglowski, directeur et rédacteur
en chef
LABEYE, A., Entreprises de Travaux Pu-
blics-70, Boulevard Armand Rousseau M. Voisin, entrepreneur de travaux M. Rints et Vints, Surveillants Dong Dang-Coobang, Transport de la
Hants Rigian
M. Pueret
M. Parraua
M. Jules Labeye (Thot Rai) Lang Soy, Commission Exportation, Essence de Badiane, Mais Rij Poddy
LACHAL M. Négociant, Importation Ex- portation, Fabricant des Explosifs ched- dite-agent général del'Urbaine Insce Co. -Rue Paul Bert
M. Lachal, directeur
A. Han, compradore-chef
LAMBERT, Coiffeur-Parfumeur-Rue Paul
Bert, 85
LAMOTHE A-15 Rue Paul Bert Sellerie
LAURENT, MADAME VVE, Nouveautés-Rue
Paul Bert, 37
LECLERC, L., Avocát-défenseur-Gambetta,
70
LEGRIS, Planteur à Vinh-yen (Tonkin)
LEVÉE, Intendance Nouveautés--58, Rue
Paul Bert et 13, Rue de
LINOSSIER, R. J., négociant.
L'INDO-CHINOIS, Journal du soir quotidien | LOISY, Boucher-Rue Paul Bert
-Tel. Ad: Gazette
L. B. de Lamotte, directeur rédacteur
en chef
LA MUTUELLE AGRICOLE INDO-CHINOISE, Societé d'Assurances Mutuelles contre la Mortalité du Betail et des Chevaux Siège Social, Hanoi-Rue de l'Intend-
ance
Président M. Th. Chesnay
Adm. dé legue-M. Pierre Dubasg M. Georges Bodin, veterinaire de la
Société
LA REVUE INDO CHINOISE, publication
bi-mensuelle
P. de la Brosse, Secrétaire de la Rédac-
tion
Chas. B. Maybon, secrétaire adjoint
Imprimerie Extrême d' Orient
LABEYE, A., Entreprises Générales, Trans- ports de Dong Dang, Coo Bang, Com- mission Exportation Essence de Badiane
A. Labeye, Dong Dang
MAILLARD, Confisseur Glacier-Rue Paul
Bert
ני
MARON, F., Distillerie Parisienne, Fabrique d'Alcools Supérieurs, Rhum, Tafia, Li- queurs et Spiritueux-4, Rue du Charbon
G. Garnier, distillateur Fugier, comptable
MARON, F., Exportation, Produits la- digènes, Agence de la Maison Ogliastro -2, Rue du Charbon,
J. Clément
MARTY, A. R., Merchant and owner of
Haiphong-Hongkong Steamers
M. A. Baron, signs per pro.
MARTY & D'ABBADIE, ServiceSubventionné des Correspondances Fluviales au Tonkin
M. A. Baron, agent principal MOREAU, RAPHAEL, Photographie fran, çaise (Cartes Postales Illustrées du Ton- kin)-Boulevard Dông-Khanh, 39
HANOI
PERETTI, Planteur, Fermier des Bouages et Vidanges, Imprimeur-Bvd. Carreau, 20 PHARMACIE BLANC-Rue Paul Bert, 31
Julien Blanc, pharmacien de lère classe
L. Blanc, pharmacien. Albert Blanc, comptable
S. Gracias, aide en pharmacie
PHARMACIE CENTRALE DE L'INDO-CHINE Classagne, pharmacien de lère classe Repetto, assistant
PIGLOWSKI, A., Commerçant-Boulevard Carreau, 16; Imprimerie nouvelle; 2 Rue de la Sapequerie
PORTALES, Boulangerie d'Aix-Rue Jules
Ferry
RAVATS, F. M., Entrepreneur, 39, Boulevard
Carreau
Pompes Funèbres-Bouages-Vidanges Répresentations Consignations et toutes merchandises achat et Vente à la Commission
REPRÉSENTATION CONSULAIRE EN INDO-
CHINE
M. Carlisle, consul de S. M. Britanni-
que à Hanoi
M. O'Connel, vice-consul do. à Saigon M. Mottet, consul Imperial de Russie
à Saigon
M. Kost, consul de Pays-Bas à Saigon M. Flambeau, consul de Belgique à
Haiphong
M.Cazeau, consul de Belgique à Saigon M. Lucien Ogliastro, consul Royal
d'Italia à Saigon
M. Fischer, consul d'Autriche-Hongrie
à Saigon
M. Le Coispellier, vice-consul d'Es-
pagne et de Portugal à Saigon M. L. Stang, consul du Danemark, de
Norvège et du Siam à Saigon
M. Gravitz, vice consul de Norvège á
Haiphong
M. Saliège, Consul du Japon á Saigon M. J. E. Conner, Consul des Etats Unis
á Saigon
RICARDONI ET BONY, Négociants
J. B. Ricardoni
J. Bony
Masson
ROCHE, MARCEL DE LA, Commissionaire- 14, Rue de lachaux; Tel. Ad: Commission, Hanoi; Teleph.No. 109,
Agent de
Société Française des Charbonnages
du Tonkin
Asiatic Petroleum Co.
P. Chaffanjon & Cie
M. de la Roche, directeur R. Cottu, assistant
E. Birouste, comptable
1213
Roux, Architecte-Boulevard Rollandes
SARTHÉ, E., Fermier des Marchés, Com-
missionaire Marchandise
SCHNEIDER, E., niné, & Cie., Papeterie,
Libraire--Rue Paul Bert
Bouchon, fondé de pouvoirs Mondon, Renoux.
SOCIÉTÉ D'ENSEIGNEMENT
TONKIN
MUTUEL
Président-Nguyễn Liên Vice-Président-Binhuy Do
AU
id. -Nguyễn dinh Thuật Secrétaire--Le van Lau
Trésorier-Vu dinh Ky
Directeur des Cours -Dao van Sú Conseiller-Ng. diñh Qui id. - Nguyên Sung
-Ng. van Lú -Trán van Téh -Ng, van Nho
id.
id.
id.
SOCIÉTÉ DE TIR ET D'ESCRIME DE HANOI
Président-Dr. Degorce
Vice-Président-Lt. Col. Nicole Secrétaire Lieut. Bancel
SOCIETE FONCIÈRE DE L'INDO-CHINE, Vente de Terrains, Location d'Immeubles Ex- ploitation des Tramways Electriques de Hanoi et Extensions; Usine et Bureaux Route du Village du Papier et Digne Parreau, Hanoi
M. Monavon, directeur Desmots, chef de depot
Chanceaulme, caissier comptable Devineau, mécanicien chef
SOCIÉTÉ FRANÇAISE DES DISTILLERIES DE L'INDO-CHINE, anciens établissements, A. R. Fontaine et Cie. Usines à Hanoi, Namdinh et Cholon; Tel. Ad: Distamy- Siège Social 20, Rue Laffitte, Paris
A. R. Fontaine, administrateur délégué
à Paris
Siège Administratif à Hanoi,53 Boulevard
Gia Long
L. Fontaine, administrateur délégue
L. Boyaval, ingénieur chef, directeur
des services techniques E. Petin, secrétaire général L. Jail, chef de comptabilité Prevel, comptable
Personnel de l'usine de Hanoi
Dubaële, ingénieur directeur Woussen, chimiste
1
1214
HANOL HAIPHONG
Lepinçart, mécanicien Sergent, comptable
SOCIÉTÉ INDO-CHINOISE D'ELECTRICITÉ-
58, Rue de Londres, Paris Usines à Hanoi et Haiphong-G. Her- menier et G. Planté, administrateurs á Paris
SOCIÉTÉ PHILHARMONIQUE D'HANOI-Bou-
levard Francis Garnier
Président J. Blanc
de Thevenard,
Vice Présidents
Lemarie
Secrétaire--Pesi
Trésorier-Cibot
Chef d'Orchestre Capillaire
SPEIDEL & Co., Merchants
Uh. Speidel (Paris)
R. Baur (Paris)
F. Dobrowohl,
F. W. Speidel (Saigon) signs per pro.
H. Hartee
H. Hieber
L. Darr
H. Lauret
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd
"Hongkong Daily Press" Royal Insurance Co., Ld. Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
London & Lancashire Fire Insurance
Co.. Là.
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
TAUPIN ET CIE. G., Imprimeurs-Editeurs, Ancienne Maison Crébessac, Librairie, Papeterie Rue l'aul Bert, Rue Boissière, Rue de l'Intendance; Tel. Ad: Taupin
G. Taupin Delpech
Roussel
Representants des Machines à Ecrire
Oliver"
14
TUILERIES À VAPEUR DE HANOI, ET DAP-CAU
Briqueterie,
Produits Refractraires, Céramique d'Art, Carreaux en Ciment: Tel. Ad: Céramique
H. Bourgouin & Cie., propriétaires-dir. Henri Bourgouin, sous agent des assu-
rance maritimes à Hañoi
UNION COMMERCIALE INDO-CHINOISE---Tel.
Ad: Ucindo
Administration
Fontaine, administrateur délégué J. Binet,
idl.
L.Binet, directeur, chargé particulière-
ment de l'approvisionnement
VERNEUIL, P., Négociant, Importation,
Exportation, Assurances
Verneuil & Pottecher, Pousse-Pousse
caoutchoutés
VITERBO, & Co. Entreprises de Travaux
Publics-Rue Balny, 16
WEIL, BOUCHER-Rue Paul Bert
LAOKAY (TONKIN) INDO CHINE
COMPAGNIE GÉNÉRALE DU TONKIN ET DU NORD-ANNAM. Ch. Dupont, Agent
HAIPHONG
This is the shipping port for Hanoi, Hai-duong, and Namdinh, the commercial centres of Tonkin. It is situated in lat. 20 deg. 51 min. N., and long. 106 deg. 42 min. E. on the two rivers Cua Cam and Song Tam Bac, which are connected by two or more channels or creeks with that great river connecting Yunnan with the Tonkin Gulf, called the Song-koi. The town of Haiphong is about sixteen and a half miles from the lighthouse. The light- house at the entrance of the river Cua Cam on the island of Hon-Do, is visible at a distance of about six miles. The entrance to the port is obstructed by two bars; the outer one sand, the inner one mud. Haiphong is accessible, however, by vessels drawing from 17 to 18 feet and after the completion of the "Conpure de Dinh-vie" for vessels drawing up to 24 feet. There is plenty of water in the river. Vessels anchor about a quarter of a mile from the shore in from 40 to 60 feet of water. The banks of the river are low and consist of alluvial mud, from which the present town has with great labour and expense been reclaimed.
Haiphong proper is situated on the Cua Cam and on both sides of the Song Tam Bac, and is in the midst of an extensive rice swamp with low lying swampy land allaround it for
HAIPHONG
1215
miles, having in the distance the monotony relieved by rugged ranges of low limestone hills, and beyond these to the northward, at a distance of some sixteen miles, is a range of mountains, the loftiest, known as the Grand Summit, being about 5,000 feet high. Most of the native buildings are wretchedly constructed of mud, bamboo, and matting, but a well-built European town with broad boulevards, lighted by electricity, has sprung up and is fast assuming the aspect of a prosperous city. Industries are developing, cotton mill has produced yarn since 1900 and a cement factory has delivered cement and hydraulic lime since the end of 1901. There is a very pretty theatre, built in 1900 by the Municipality. The Hotel du Commerce is a large and handsome structure, its lofty mansard roof dominating every building in the town. There is a church attached to the Roman Catholic Mission. A small dock and some fine wharves and godowns have been made. A Public Garden of rather limited area with a bandstand in the centre has been neatly laid out at the end of the Boulevard Paul Bert. The Cercle du Commerce, which is a well managed Club, has its domicile in the Boulevard Paul Bert, the Cercle Banian, another prosperous Club, has its house in Boulevard Sontay. The Race Course is about a mile from the town on the Do Son road. There are several newspapers published in the town. The population of Haiphong is about 18,480, of whom less than 1,000 are Europeans, about 5,500 Chinese, and 12,000 Annamites. A regular service of river steamers is maintained between Hanoi and Haiphong by the Messageries Fluviales, and Haiphong is connected by submarine cable with Saigon and Hongkong, Haiphong is becoming an important centre of the Tonkin railways.
DIRECTORY
RESIDENCE MAIRIE DE HAIPHONG
Résident-Maire-P. Tournois
TRÉSORERIE
Payeur particulier-Boucher
Payeur Adjoint-Vergé
DIRECTION DU PORT DE COMMERCE Capitaine du Port-Chodzko Lieutenant de Port-Berny
Pilotes Biard, Scott, Poincet, Bronner,
Suzzoni, Ricardoni, Blanc, Bertraud Aspirants Pilotes-Salgé, Larroque Elèves-Pilotes-Douarinou, Roses
DOUANES ET RÉGIES DE L'INDO-CHINE SOUS DIRECTION DU TONKIN Haiphong
Sous-Directeur-Morel Inspection-Rozier, inspecteur ler bureau (Secrétariat)-Anglés, chef de bureau; Poincignon, sous-chef; de Mo- nestrol d'Esquille, Boisson, commis; Mme Thévenin, dame-surveillante; Melle Bastiere et Mme. Vergoz, dames-dacty- lographes; Sauvigné, vaguemestre. 2eme bureau (Contentieux) - Berthelot, chef de bureau; Deyme, contrôleur; Faure, Beau, Guérin de Fontjoyeuse, commis; Melle. Bouquet, dame-dactylo- graphie.
3ème bureau (Régies)-Caille, Chef de bureau; Caffarena, Olivier, Audibert, conmis.
4ème bureau (Comptabilité) - Guasco (Joseph), chef de bureau; Bourrin, sous-chef; Deschodt, Hardouin, Lenoble, Guasco (Cornélius), Pelletier, Blanc, Bacquet, commis; Vivarés, agent tempo- raire; Le Maoût, préposé; Mme. Baron et Deveaux, dames-comptables.
5ème bureau (Statistique)-Jean, chef de bureau; Chérot, Rayne, commis; Bona- mour, Blanc (Louis), Le Baron, Barthe, Pacaud, préposés; Mine. Jallot, damé comptable.
Vérification-Latrasse, chef de vérification; Coulot, chef de la section B; Scheuring, chef de la section C.
Service actif-Gensbitel, chef de brigade
TRIBUNAL DE HAIPHONG
Juge-Président-Carlotti
ENSEIGNEMENT
Directeur des Ecoles-M. E. Bory Ecole Primaire Supérieure et Commerciale
de garçons
Professeurs-Messrs. Bory, Schamaunn, Bescond, Roussel, Mmes. Thuellier, Bar- hier, Breton
Ecole Primaire française de Filles
Professeurs-Mme. Le Bars, Fesquet, Babaud Duclac, Boubals, Barbier, Breton
Ecole franco-annamite de garçons
Instituteurs annamites école franco-an-
namite de filles
Η
I
I
1216
HAIPHONG
Institutrices--Mme. Roché, Nguyên-thi-
Thu
Ecole franco-chinoise en formation
Enseignement Mutuel des Tonkinois Instituteurs dans le jour pour les classes
élementaires cours d'adultes le soir President de la societé-M. Nguyên-hun
Thu
Directeur des cours-M. E. Bory Professeurs Messrs. Bory, Bescond,
Schamaunn, Roux
POSTES ET TÉLÉGRAPHES, TÉLÉPHONES Bureau de Haiphong
Receveur-Cornu
Commis principaux-Clémenceau, Rouanet Commis-Munié, Albugues, Clion, Bruey, Deck, Naz, Rouvier, Boeuf, Billot, Victal, Savary
Mécanicien-Rosaz
Dames téléphonistes-Mme.Drapeau, Mme.
Dupuy, Mme. Haulin
Surveillant des lignes-Villard Facteur chef-Royer
TRAVAUX PUBLICS
Circonscription du Service Maritime du
Tonkin
Lefebvre Paul, ingénieur en chef á
Haiphong
Baron Henri, conducteur, ingénieur
p. i. à Quinhone
1er Bureau Central à Haiphong
Mitouflet, sous chef de bureau Joly, Ruault, Borgna, commis ze Bureau de Quinhone
Betf, sous chef de bureau Subdivisionnaires
Linbet, Régert, conducteurs princi- paux, Filoche, Hainon, Menin, Daret, Burle, et Berger, conducteurs Adjoints aux Subdivisionnaires Goirand, commis; Nezelle, Lebédel, Sauvage, et Lépagney, surveillants Personnels spéciaux Phares
Coat, Coffec, Guillerme, Castellani, Brissiaud, Antoni, Garnier, Raimon- di, Guérandel, Le Gouriff, Vellutini, Criou. Prigout, Collignon Surveillance du Materiel Flottant et
des Appareils à Vapeur Denis, capitaine de baliseur, Thémoin et Briend, lieutenants de baliseur, Bonabel, Laboujomiere, Boubals, Guillaume, Bélat, Calazel, et Gabel- loni, mécaniciens
Ports
Chodzko, capitaine de port, Berny,
lieutenant de port
Dragages
Baret et Maurel, chefs dragueurs,
Poujol et Agostini, dragueurs Commission de Surveillance du Port
de Haiphong
Berger, conducteur principal des Mines,
secrétaire Laboratoire
Dupouy, contrôleur des mines
COMMISSARIAT DE POLICE DE HAIPHONG
Boulevard Amiral de Beaumont Commissaire Chef Service-L. Chesneau Second Commissaire-L. Plagne Inspecteurs-F. Cadro, M. Chirouze Brigadiers-A. Allaud, J. Carrot, L.
Valette
Sous-Brigadiers-F. Jouanolou, C. Muller
SERVICES ADMINISTRATIFS MILITAIRES ET MARITIMES DE L'ANNAM ET DU TONKIN
Arrondissement de Haiphong
Sous directeur du Commissariat--Trioreau Chef des Détails Administratifs-Jouannet Officier d'Administration de 2e. classe-
Moreau Approvisionnements et transports compt.
-Sensacq, offr. d'administration
HOPITAL D'HAIPHONG Médecin-chef Daliot, médecin principal
de 2me, classe
Médecin-Resident-Sambuc, médecin major
de 2e. classe
Médecin traitant-Dévaux, médecin major
de lère. classe
Médecin traitant-Allard, aide-major de
lère, classe
Pharmacien aide-Major de lère. classe-
Authier
Aumonier de Bellanig Pasteur-Bonnet
Sergent. infirmier - Darnois (infir mieur
chef)
ALLATINI & CIE.-Branch Office: Saigon
R. Mathée, signs per pro.
ASSOCIATION AMICALE DE RAPATRIEMENT
DES EMPLOYÉS DE L'INDO-CHINE
Président d'honneur--M. Doumer Président-Lacroix Vice-président Godelu Trésorier-Cullet Secrétaire Chantepie
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE, Succursale
d'Haiphong
A. Bazin, directeur
L. Ardain, id. p.i.
P. de l'Hortet, contrôleur J. Tijoux, chef de la comptabilité L. Pasturaud, caissier Leudet de la Vallée, agent auxiliaire I. Brandela, commis
A. H. Mage, idl.
BERTHET, JULES (Saigon-Haiphong)
HAIPHONG
BLETON, ALCIDE, Négociant-Rue Jules
Henri Bleton, signs per pro.
Ferry
C. Bleton,
A. Bleton,
and Hokiou)
do.
do.
(Mongtze)
(Laokay
Branche Automobiles, Haiphong
Alb. Bleton, signs per pro.
Agences
Lloyd's de Londres
Comités des Assureurs Maritimes de Paris, Marseille, Bordeaux, Anvers, Turin
BONNAL & CIE., Photographers
BRIFFAUD, P., Shipping Agent and Ware- housekeeper, Stevedore of Co. Messa- geries Maritimes, Chargeurs Réunis, Glen Line, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Contractors for Commissariat phone 231
P. Briffaud
L. Dupuy, fondé de pouvoir H. Cognon, chef de service
C. de Marans, chef magasinier
E. Périnaud, commis
E. Aguarone, chef arrimeur C. Mariani, commis
BUCHMULLER, Bousher-boulanger
Tele-
BURDIN & CIE., Marchants, Approvisione-
ment général
CARLOS, P. P., Tailleur--Bert Boulevard
CERCLE DU COMMERCE
E. Brousmiche, Président Cornu, Vice Président Goubier, Trésorier Grawitz, Secrétaire
Martin, Roques, Mazat, Normand,
Commissaires
CHAMBRE DE COMMERCE
Président-L. Porchet
Vice-President-Brousmiche Secrétaire---Linossier Archiviste-J. Lefebvre Members-Bleton, Briffaud, Barrière, Bouchet, Flambeau, Grawitz, Lyard, Roque
CHANTEPIE, A., "Salon de Coiffure "
Sn. Caboulet F. Chavaroux
CHARBONNAGES
DU TONKIN, SOCIÉTÉ FRANÇAISE DES- -Hongay; Siège Social à Paris: 76, Rue de la Victoire
Conseil d'Adminis. de Monplanet (président), L. Passy (vice-président)
1217
Administrateurs-Alb. Luc, Thoumyre Sir C. P. Chater, H. N. Mody, Monvoisin, C. de Monplanet Administrateur délégué-R. Ferrant J. Gollion, directeur-général M. Garand, sous-directeur Service de la Comptabilité
F. Uhler, chef de la comptabilité. Collet, comptbté. générale Desvaux, comptable du jour et cor-
respondance
Donjacour, comptable du fond C. Brihaye, magasinier Lacoste, wharfinger Pennors, comptable 12 commis indigènes Service Technique
Mouchet, ingénieur divisionnaire Lugoy, ingénieur divisionnaire Joannes, ingénieur du jour Preckel, ingénieur électricien Coutillae, chef des ateliers
chef geomètre
Pellet, maître-mineur Régérat,
dlo.
Patard, chef fabrication briquettes 25 surveillants européens
Service Médical
Dr. Erdinger
Service Commercial
E. Bornaud à Hongkong
CHARGEURS RÉUNIS
P. Revert, acting agent
Ch. Bobard
J. Henry
M. Saravane
CHARLES ET CrE, J., Entrepreneurs et
Furnisseurs de Bateaux
CHARRIÈRE ET CIE., Négociants
F. Charrière (Marseille-Paris) A. Poinsard (Paris)
L. Veyret (Hanoi)
J. V. Baron, signs per pro.
C. Pelissier (Hokéou, Chine) Meillon (Mongtseu, Chine)
E. Caffarel (Yunnansen, Chine) H. Merche
E. Douillet L. Laurencin J. Lacourège L. Gantelet L. Gavagnach L. Lesimple
COMPAGNIE DECOMMERCE ET DENAVIGATION d'Extreme - Orient, Société Anonyme- Capital Deux Millions de Francs, (An- ciens Etablissements Allatini & Cio. et Compagnie Française de Cabotage des Mers de Chine)-Siège Social: 21, Rue Vignon, Paris-Direction Générale, 120,
1218
Rue de Rome, Marseille
Mathée, signs per pro.
Cardi
Champagnac
HAIPHONG
CONSEIL MUNICIPAL D'HAIPHONG
Président P. Tournois, administ.-maire
COSTA, Propriétaire
COUPARD, V., Pharmacien
COURRIER D'HAIPHONG, Quotidien 4 et 6 pages le plus grand journal de l'Extrême Orient-41, Boulrd. Paul Bert, Haiphong; Agence à Hanoi: 26 bis, Boulrd. Gia Long Bureaux à Paris: 11, Place de la Bourse Louis Fonvillars,dir.,rédacteur-en-chef P.Hemmet,secrétaire de la Rédaction. A. L. Pouget, comptable
R. Le Gac, informations Ch. Rouyer, correspondant à Hanoi Jean-Bernard (Passérieu), correspon-
dant à Paris
Principaux Collaborateurs à Paris- Jean-Bernard (Passérieu), de Pou- vourville (Matgioi), Emmanuel- Chales Bourcier, Pierre Delabrousse (Dr Sadoul), etc. etc.
DENIS FRÈRES, Merchs. Tel. Ad: Referendis
Alphonse Denis (Bordeaux)
A. Fonsales
L. Stang (Saigon)
L. Gage (Bordeaux)
idl.
C. Grawitz, signs per pro.
Macaire,
Arnoux
G. Demolle
Valette
Dauphin
H. Ragot
Forget
do.
R. Bonnault (Hanoi)
Agences
do.
H'kong & Shanghai Banking Corpn. China Navigation Co., Ld. Fraissinet Line of Steamers
Compagnie Nantaise Line of Steamers Compania Generale Italiana Steamers Gellatly Line of Steamers Gibb Line of Steamers
Northern Pacific Steamship Company Cie. Havraise Péninsulaire de Navgn. South British Fire and Marine Insce. Union Marine Insurance Company Comité des Assureurs du Havre Union Assurance Society of London Deutscher Lloyd Assurances Royal Exchange Assurance Office The Netherlands (Les Pays Bas) China Fire Insurance Co., Ld. British and Foreign Marine Insce. Co.
La Confiance Cie. d'Assurances Vacuum Oil Co.
Remington Typewriter
DENIS & CIE., Naval Constructeurs
L. Denis
Nougaret
Descours, Cabaud et Cie. de Lyon,
Produits Métallurgiques - Tel. Ad Descourfer
E. Gué, directeur
A. Bonnet T. Simonet F. Hegmann F. Rigault M. Grassmuck A. Kagy
DEVAUX, P., Avocat-Défenseur--Boulevard
Henri Rivière, 32
FAUSSEMAGNE, A., Importation, Exporta- tion de produits divers, Entrepreneur, Concessionaire, Carriéres Marbres, Mines Charbon and Fer, Concession Forestière and Agricoles à l'Ile des Deux Songs et Dong-Trieu-Marbres en Feuil- les et Façonnés, Monuments Funéraires Depot et Succursale à Saigon et Cochin- Chine
FOREST, Dr. L. A., Médecin
GLACIERES D'INDO-CHINE, SOCIÉTÉ DES-
Rue Jules Ferry
V. and G. Larue, propriétaires A. Simon, dir, de la glacière
GODELU & CIE., L.
L. Godelu, directeur
G. Gavelle Aîné, comptable Wargnez, employé
GOUBIER, J., Entrepreneur des Docks
GRAND HOTEL DU COMMERCE, Co., LD.-
Boulevard Paul Bert; Teleph. No. 219; Tel. Ad Commerce
GUIONEAUD FRÈRES, Marchands de Vins
-Boulevard Paul Bert
H. Guioneand (Hanoi) L. Guioneaud ( Bordeaux)
A. Guioneaud, fondé de pouvoir
(Hanoi)
Em. H. Leclerc, (Haiphong)
HOTEL DE LA POSTE
HOTEL DE L'EUROPE
HOTEL DE L'UNIVERS
Mme. Caillet, propriétaire
HAIPHONG
L'
Huilerie et Savonnerie de
Extreme-Orient, L. Flambeau & Cie, Adresse Télégraphique: Flambeau, Haiphong
M.M. L. Flambeau, gérant
R. Miot, fondé de pouvoirs L. Bonnast, contre-maitre A. Labardin, comptable L. A. Plat, magasinier
JALLON, J., Mareland d'Articles du Japon
-Rue de Commerce, 56 and 58
T. Shiwota
M. Shiwota
L'UNION, 9, Place Vendome, Paris
M. Dandolo, directeur particulier pour
l'Annam et Tonkin, à Haiphong G. Chardin, signe par procuration G. Ellies, agent à Hanoi
Compagniedes Thés de l'Annam,agents
à Tourane
LABEYE, L. J., Propriétaire
LEDUCE, JULS, Négociant en Tissus
LINOSSIER R. J., Négociant
F. Linossier, signs per pro. R. Linossier, commis
R. Reipert, id.
J. Imprimeur, magasinier
MALOD, Menusier et Entrepreneur
MARTIN, AIME, Négociant; Libraire, Fa- brique de Céramiques, Tuiles et Carreaux en Ciment-Boulevard Paul Bert
MARTY, A. R.-40, Rue du Commerce; Tel. Ad: Orientalis; Merchant and Owner of Haiphong-Hongkong Steamers
AR. Marty
G.Vouillemont E. Daleggio
Agencies
Canadian Pacific Railway Company Sleeping Car Company, Siberian Line China Traders' Insurance Company Davey, Bickford & Cie., Rouen
Mazor, Médecin
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES, COMPAGNIE DES Agence de Haiphong; Téléphone No. 23,
A. Pruche, agent
H. Nard ler, commis R. Guillon, 2me, commis E. Courmont, idl.
A. Thoue, caissier
(For Local Steamers See end of Directory)
MISSIONAIRES
Tonkin, Oriental
Arellano, bishop (Haiphong) Guirro (Bung Hoàng) Carbajo (Késat)
Masip (Nam Am)
Baro, (Moncay)
Ruiz provicaire (Liêudinh) Ramos (Quang Yen) Plaza (Kim Bich) Diez (Haiduong) Merino (My Dong) Ubach (Haiphong) Aparicio (Késat) Bardol (Nam Phap)
De Bellaing (Haiphong)
1219
NAVIGATION TONKINOISE, COMPAGNIE DE
A. R. Marty, owner
A. R. Marty, director and agent, Haiphong, Hongkong, Hoihow, Pak hoi and Quang Tcheou
(For Steamers See end of Directory)
OORIASTRO, A., Merchant
J. Novella Agency
P. & O. S. N. Coy.
PARDIAC, L., Marchant, Wines and Spirits
PHARMACIE CENTRALE DE L'INDO CHINE
Boulevard Paul Bert
Ed. Brousmiche, pharmacien de lére.
classe, directeur
J. Martin, fondé de pouvoirs. Leroux, pharmacien de lère, classe J. Costa, assistant Nghan, comptable Succursale & Tourane
Bernard, pharmacien de lère classe Succursale à Hanoi
Chassagne, pharmacien de lère cl. Repetto, assistant
PHARMACIE PARISIENNE, V. COUPARD- Boulevard Paul Bert et Boulevard Ami- ral Courbet
PORCHET, L., Ingénieur-Constructeur
L. Porchet
RAUZY, P, & VILLA, P., Marchands (Saigon
Haiphong)
Balladi, signs per pro.
Roque, P., Armateur-Bd. Félix Faure; Service subventionné du Bas-Tonkin sur Dapcau, Phulangthuong, Monkay; Ser- vice côtier sur le Nord-Annam; Tel. Ad: Nauta
P. Roque H. Roque
H. Widmer, signs per pro, L. Clément
1220
G. Moncan
J. Foullien
HAIPHONG
L. Bonnafont (Phulangthuong) L. Gouguenheim (Dapeau) J. Monnier (Benthuy-Vinh) A. Ruchetti, superintendent J. Barde (S.S. Perle)
Ed. Boutteville (S.S. Emeraude) M. Guillon (S.S. Saphir) E. Boutteville (S.S. Rubis) J. Ruchetti (S.S. Onyx) F. Hello (S.S. Benthuy)
F. Sirven (S.S. Benthuy)
SALON DE COIFFEURS
A. Chantepie, directeur
Caboullet, ouvrier Chavaroux
id.
SOCIÉTÉ BORDELAISE INDO-CHINOISE, Im- port and Export-Paul Bert, 33 et 35 ; Tel. Ad: Esbei
A. Granval, fondé de pouvoirs.
T. Cathalau
T. Guiraut
A. Jaillet
V. Fauvel
SOCIÉTÉ COTONNIÈRE DE L'INDO-CHINE- Siège Social à Paris; 40, Rue St. Georges; Filature à Haiphong: Avenue de l'Hy- podrome
W. Matthews, directeur C. Erny, sous-directeur
P. Bernard, agent commercial
E. Matthews, contremaître
J. Schmidhauser, comptable
SOCIÉTÉ DE CONSTRUCTION DE CHEMINS-DE FER INDO CHINOIS-Boulevard Henri Rivière
Societe des
Ciments
Portland
Artificiels de l'Indo-Chine, Usine a Haiphong ; Tel. Ad:
Pour la DirectionGénerale-Ciportin
Haiphong
Pour l'Usine
phong
-
Cimenterie Hai-
J. Barrière, ingénieur directeur général E. Martz, Doct. ès-sciences, sous direct.
SOCIETE FRANÇAISE INDUSTRIELLE d'Ex- TREME ORIENT, Entreprise Générale de Travaux Publics, Dragages de Cochin Chine; 38, 39, Quai de l'Arroyo Chinois, Saigon; Tél. Ad: Dragages, Saigon
A. Nicolle, ingénieur du Génie Mari-
time
H. C., directeur général Saigon
SOCIETÉ FRANCO-BELGE, Matériel de Che- min de Fer, Locomotives-38, 39, de l'Arrouyo Chinois, Saigon
A.Nicolle, ingénieurduGénie Maritime,
H. C., représentant
SOCIÉTÉ INDO-CHINOISE D'ELECTRICITÉ
(See Hanoi)
SPEIDEL & CO., Merchants--Teleph. No.822
U. Speidel (Europe)
R. Baur (Europe)
F. W. Speidel (Saigon)
W. Speidel
F. Dobrowohl
K. A. Immieli, signs per pro.
A. Trante,
E. Antoine
A. Harter
H. Kyriss W. Stuebler A. Andersen E. Lepretre
H. Fointint
d'Armau
G. de Lauzainghein
H. Krauss
Agencies
To.
Chartered Bank of India, Australia
and China
Norddeutscher Lloyd
Hamburg Amerika Linie Jebsen & Co's Line of Steamers Canton Insurance Office, Limited North-China Insurance Co., Limited Transatlantic Gueterversich Ges. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Royal Insurance Company Yangtsze Insurance Association Java Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Deutsche Transport Versich. Ges. Verein Bremer Seeversicherungs Ges. Dusseldorfer Allgemeine Vers. Ges. Assicurazioni Generali La Baloise
Deutscher Rhederei Verein, Hamburg Eastern Insurance Company Rheinisch Westphälische Insce. Co. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Aachen & Münchener Feuer Vers. Ges Schweiz National Vers. Ges., Basel Union Internationale Anvers Magdeburger Feuerversicher Ges. Yorkshire Fire and Life Insur. Co. Continentale Versicherungs-Gesellscit Guardian Assurance Company Lloyd Sabaudo
Internationale Transport Vers. Ges.
Providentia, Vienna
HAIPHONG TONKIN
Société Civile du Domaine de Kébao Forsäkrings-Aktiebolaget Hansa
TELEGRAPH Co., EASTERN EXTENSION AUSTRALASIA AND CHINA-31, Rue Paul Bert
Egbert R. Reeves, représentant
1221
TEYSSIER, Mme. Vve., Entrepreneur de Travaux Publics, Enterprise Général- des Eaux d'Haiphong Ville
VIGOUR, R., Merchant, Wines and Spirits
VIDAL, Entrepreneur-2, Rue Tonkinoise
VOLA, Entrepreneur
PROVINCES DU TONKIN
BAC-GTANG
PHU-LANG-THUONG, CHEF-LIEU
Résident de France-Maire Administrateur adjoint--Rols
BAC-KAN
Résident de France-Eckert Administr. Adjoint-Meyer Comptable Pourquier Percepteur- Corandy
Inspecteur Chef Brigade-Wotrosky Gardes Principaux-Charasson, Bauzon,
Labousse, Schiléret, Démariaux Douanes et Régies-Cazenave, Drouard Forêts-
Travaux Publics-Lefevre Société des Alcools-Hug
Prospecteur Mannu
BAC-NINH
Résident de France-A. Bon
Administrateur-adjoint-Deville Commis-Bonnet, David,
Travaux Publics-Brault
Garde Indigène-Chaigneau
Postes et Télégr.-Champ, Champion
Douanes et Régies-Bonlain
Trésorerie Boucher
Police Foucher, Tourenne
COMMERÇANTS & INDUSTRIELS Bourgoin, briqueterie, céramique Darribes, entrepreneur de travaux Olleac, Gayet-Laroche, Rousselet, Poineuf, Rai- noird, Gillard, Mme. Mouillard Marty, planteurs
do.
Wolff, Gouguenhien, Bourrin, cabaretiers
Colonel-Bataille, Commandant le 2e
Brigade des Troupes de l'Indo-Chine Commandant-Vautravers, commandant le 10e Régiment de l'Infanterie Coloniale eut. Colonel-Poirier, commandant le 30 Itégiment de Tirailleurs Tonkinoise, Mgr. Velasco, évêque
CAO BANG
DEUXIÈME TERRITOIRE MILITAIRE Commandant Chef de Bataillon-Dehove✯ Capitaine Adjoint--Bernard # Officier Chancelier-Lieut. Combeau Payeur-Lamotte
Service de Santé-Docteurs Chagnolleau,
Jouveau, Dubriel
Postes et Télégraphes-Bonnet, Claindoux Douanes et Régies-Latargère, Moguès Délégation de Quang-Uyen-Cap.Gibault Do. de Dong Khe-Lieut. Tastet Do. de Nguyen Bink-Lieut. Wendt Do. de Soc Giang-Cap. Dodat
DÉLÉGATION DE BAO-LAC
Capitaine
Délégation de Dong Van-Lient. Arnauld
DOSON
Administrateur adjoint-Vallon Administrateurs de lère. cl.-Fleurot
et Leveque
Elève Administrateur-Fillion
Commis Mureau, Lienert
HADONG (PROVINCE)
M. Bose Résident de France
Administrateur Adjoint-Bride
Commis de Services Civils Laborde,
Jaumont, Pietré Percepteur-M. Rognoni
Garde Indigène, Inspecteur- M. Char-
bonnelle
Travaux Publics, Conducteur-M. Berjoan Gendarmerie et Police-M. Paget, chef Industriel Societé des Cheddites á Phu-xa Fabrique d'Explosifs Ingénieur Directeur-M. Py Ting Doc, S.E-Hoang Trong Phu
HA-GIANG
TROISIÈME TERRITOIRE MILITAIRE
Comdt. du Territoire-Chef de Bataillon- Mortreuil (chevalier de la Legion d'hon- neur)
1222
TONKIN
Adjoint Capitaine - Marquet (chevalier
de la Légion d'honneur)
Chancelier Lieutenant Braconnier M. Mathieu, capitaine délégué à Bac-Quang M. de Marquessac, capitaine délégué à
Hoang-Su-Phi
M. Courrier, capitaine délégué à Bao-Lac M. Arnould, lieutenant délégué à Dong Van
HA-NAM
Résident de France-Peyrabère Administrateur Adjoint-Thézeloup Percepteur-Bertet
Commis des Services Civils-Andrieux Inspecteur-Comdt. la Brigade-Pollak Garles ppaux.-Caro, Girodroux, Ardouin Postes et Télégraphies-Nguyen Van Ky Douanes et Régies Lécuyer, Marty,
receveur: Lamores de la Gironde Travaux Publics-Desailly
HAI-DUONG
Administ. Résident de France-Moulié Administrateur Adjoint-Mourroux Commis de 2e. classe-Favey
Commis de 3e. classe-Delsalle, Goetzinger Trésorerie-Versini, payeur
Douanes et Régies-Bartant, contrôleur
des Douanes
Agents--Dujon, Baumont, Bazile GardeIndigene Hursy,inspecteur de le.cl. Gardes principaux-Marroux, Labourdette,
Montagnis de Lanque
Assistance médicale Pancot, docteur Administration Indigène-Lé Hoan, Tông- Doe, Vu-Thiên Dẻ An-Sat Tan Văn Khang, Doe Noe, Tran Van Long, Lãnh
Binh
HAI-NINH (CERCLE DE MONCAY) Fargeas Guillaume,--Administrateur de
4e classe, Résident
Gourpy Charles,-Lieu Administrateur de
5e, classe, Adjoint
Armauet, Joseph, Joaunés, Commis de
5e classe, percepteur Gluadiér-Commis de 5e, classe, Comptable
et greffier notaire Boulay-Receveur des Postes
D' Esmérard, Receveur des Douanes et
Régies
Rieul, Inspecteur des gardes Indigènes Lavégue,-
do.
Commissaires-Garde Principal de 2e cl. de
la G. T.
Valette,--
Monthárd,-
Poch,
Archiéri,-
do.
do.
de 3, cl. do.
dlo.
do.
do.
do.
HOA-BINH (PROVINCE MUONG)
Administrateur, Commissaire duGouverne-
ment M. Régnier
Administrateur Adjoint-M. Thomas
Percepteur
Travaux Publics-M. Moulin, surveillant
ffons de conducteur
Douanes et Régies M. Ducotton Préposé M. Patry
Postes et Télégraphes-Mai-vang-cuong,
gérant du bureau des postes
Garde Indigène-Auclair, inspecteur Garde Principal-M. Rio
do.
-M. Humbert
Brisson, de Cooman, missionaires Coussot, colon à Cho Bo
Moutte, Borel, Schaller, Lecomte, colons
à Chine
Bourgouin Meiffre, colon à Tuy-C8 Madame Thibaut, colon á Hoa Lac M. Katt, agent commercial à Suyut M. Roux, colon au Rocher Nôtre Dame
HONG-YEN
Résident de France-Culliéret Administrateur adjoint-Ungerer Commis-Goulet Percepteur-Crubellier
Postes et Télégraphes-Bich, receveur Gardles Indigènes -- Schmitt, Occelli,
Clavelin
Douanes et Régies - Nerty, receveur;
Delpuech, préposé
Travaux Publics Eychenne, surveillant Chauvet, de la ferme des Alcools
HUNG-HOA (à Phu Tho)
Résident de France-Bonnetain Adjoint-Poulet
MISSION DU HAUT TONKIN Mgr. P. Ramond, vicaire apostolique P. Goullard, procureur de la mission L. M. Girod, en district à Phu Yen Binh J. X. Robert, aumônier á Sontay L. M. Méchet, curé Hung de Hóa A. Robert, en district.
M. Pichaud, en district E. Ch. Duhmel, en district P. Chatellier, en district E. E. Brossier, en district
J. M. Chotard, aumonier a Tuyên quang P. T. D'Abrigeon, en district C. M. Granger, en district
KIEN-AN
( ex Phu-Lien)
Résident de France-Guerrier Administrateur-Adjoint-Favey
Commis-Moizeau
Percepteur-Deneuil
Travaux Publics-Cordonnier, conducteur;
Assier, surveillant
Commissaires de Police-Rocchi (Kien-n),
Moirod, Doson, Pailhes (Nui-deo)
TONKIN
Garde Indigène-Lameray, inspecteur; Garde principal--Dufréne,
Curé-R. P. Diez, Mission Catholique S. S.
Paul de Chartres
4éme. Régt. Tirailleurs Tonkinois -Ct.
Finet
Observatoire de Phu-Lien
Ferra
directeur, Le Lay, météorologiste, Beljon- ne, Maire, Durand Postes et Télégraphes-Alata Phares-Poiraud, Clément
Douanes et Régies-Pouzenne receveur; Zuccarelli, Emptoz-Lacote, Favey(Rend) Felici, Gouillon, Minter, préposés Colons-Dandolo, Mondange, Coupard Cie. Gale. Tonkin et Nord-Annam
Hornez (Nea-nay)
Commerçants
Leverdien
Grand Hôtel et Hôtel
LANG-SON
Résident: Buffel du Vaure, administrateur
de 2e, cl,
Trésorier Vergé
Postes Schneider, Kieffer
Douanes-Brénot à Langson; Pinder à Dong Dang; Peponnet à Nacham; Bourras et Gresse a That Khế Colons-Becker
Commerçants-Geoffray, Descoins, Lubeye,
Rottfaut
Chemins de fer-Rieus et Oufon
Garde Indigène-Pierrard, inspecteur à
Langson
Gardes principaux
Bonnin, Martini,
Carpier, Fournel, Descor,
Police: Seoen, Gendarme à Langson Tixier, commissaire de police à Dong, Dang et Colin, gendarmes
LAO-KAY
PROVINCE
Administrateur Résident-Tourrés Administrateur Adjoint-Collet Services Civils-Dévé, Martin
Garde Indigène-Sandel, inspecteur Payeur-Chapat
Postes et Télégraphes-Lavergne, Douanes et Régies-Jeandot
receveur
do.
Délégué à Phong Tho-Capitaine Ville
Do. á Pa Kha-Lieutenant Hitier Troupes Coloniales-Commandant Mort-
reuil
Capitaines-Mosse, Vanbergue, Guille Lieutenants-Hitier, Guionic, Petitjean, Ignard, Le Bellour, Lhuinte, Boulanger Hopital Indigène-Docteur Koun Hôpital Militaire-Docteur Cunaud
médecin major
Société de Construction des Chemins de Fer Indo-chinois-à Pho moi: Marc, Boisson Commerçants-Rolpuin, Jeannou, Pienovi Missionnaire Catholique-R. P. Robert Négociants-Dupont, Bleton
NA-DINH
Résident de France-Quennеc Administrateur-Adjoint-Petitet Chancelier Rougier Joly Commis Géhin Trésorerie-Bojon Garde Indigène
1223
Lambert, (inspecteur
commandant la brigade), Rerat, Roffi, Pollack (gardos principaux)
Travaux Publics-Peysson, Mourgue Enseignement-R. Geyer, Madame Geyer Hôpital-Dr. Vallet
Postes et Télégraphes-Sauvage Douanes-
commis
contrôleur;
Renaud et Cadro, missionnaires français Caralp, commerçant
Dupré, Jablin, industriels Debeaux, commerçant
Marty et d'Abbadie Service des Corres-
pondances Fluviales du Tonkin
Mission Espagnole: Fernandez, Evêque,
Gispert, Soriano, Perra, Viade Emery, directeur filature de soie Fontaine, industriel
Caralp, hotel-café Ihler,
idl.
Yolle, industriel
SOCIÉTÉ FRANÇAISE DES DISTILLERIES DE
L'INDO-CHINE
Chimiste-Voirrier, ingénieur
Martellotte, mécanicien
Thierry, comptable
Dubaele, directeur
Douanes-Chéreau, contrôleur Commis-Martin, Bouneville, Rocca Préposés Marty, Arnaud, Bouision,
P'alene
Sous-brigadier--Boos
NINH BINH
Administrateur Résident A. Sartor Administrateur-adjoint-L. Plantier Chancelier-Abeille
Percepteur--de Sourdeval
Administr. del. à Nho-quan-Cousin Délégué à Phat-Diem-Guiraud
Garde indigène-Wetzelmeyer, inspecteur
comdt.;
Gardes Ppaux.-
Sauvezon
X,
X,
Médecin de l'assistance-Dr. Picard
X,
Inspecteur des epijooties--M. Magnin Travaux Publics-Cachon, conducteur
principal
Postes et Télégraphes- Douanes et Régies-
receveur
Receveur à Ninh Binh-Granier Id. à Phat Diem-Breyer Agents-Gardbled, Neza, Vally Commissaire de Police M. Ruffet
Inspecteur des chemins de fer-M. Gallois
1224
'TONKIN
Inspecteur du mouvement M. de Férandy Mission Catholique-Monseigneur Marcou,
evêque; Chèvènement, Feillon, Pilon, Schlotterbeck, Soubeyre, Doumec, Pirot, Delavet, Chaize, Pléneau, Corbel, Roger, missionaires
Commerce et Industrie--Société Industrielle et Commerciale du Tonkin et du Nord Annam: Clerc, Martineau, agents; Ferrand, hôtelier-restaurateur Agriculture-Bernard, Lafeuille,
Lévy, Daurelle, Tournier Yvoir, Cotin, Fau, Moutte, Guillaume et Borel, Castanić et Saissac, planteurs
Mine de Houille: Bui Xuan Phai
QUANG-YEN
Résident de France-Conrandy
Administrateur Adjoint-Bayle Commis Sadde, Mar
Payeur-Descourtier
Garde Civile-Bonneaux, inspecteur Travaux Publics--
Postes et Télégraphes-Bienvenu, receveur Douanes Baron, chef de bureau
Clément, commerçant
Société Française des Charbonnages du Tonkin à Hongay, via Haiphong Société du domaine civil de Kébuo
SON-TAY
Adminst. Résident de France-Poulin adjoint-Gaillard
Id.
Percepteur-Nessler
Commis des Services Civils-Forçons Garde Civile Indigène-Petit "Homme,
Lafaye, inspecteur de 2e. classe, Gardes principaux-Vincent, Cardin Postes et Télégraphes-Père Travaux Publics Saboya
Douane Cheveau, receveur des douanes Médecins Gautier, Perret
Infanterie Coloniale-chef de Bataillon
Tirailleurs Tonkinois Talon, chef de
bataillon
Chef de bataillon Ct. d'armes-Chofflet
Négociant et Colons
Hôtels-Deleveaux, Poncept Colons: Piglowski, Delmas
Fieschi, représentant la Cie. des Alcools Morice, propriétaire, planteur
P. Duhamel, P. Massard, missionaires
THÁI-BINH
Administrateur Résident de France, chef
de la province de Thai-Binh-M. Aner Id. Adjoint--M. Marc
THÁI NGUYÊN
Résident de France-Fort, George Adjoint-Saurel, Lucien
Comptable Glandier
Greffier notaire-Thomas
Percepteur--Hubert de l'Isle
Délégué à Cho-chu-Jabonille Délégué à Hung-son-Nicolle Délégué à Phuong-do- Julian Garde Indigenc-Moll, inspecteur Postes et Télégraphes-Saurel, Jean Douanes-Casenave Forêts-Glutron.
Comt. d'Armes-Capt. Bellon Médecin de l'Assistance-- Dr. Griscelli
Villefranque-Treluyer, Hôtel et Café Reynaud, Blanc et Cie., planteurs Guillaume Frères, Metan et Cie., Godard et Cie.,
Commans,
Démange, exportation
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
Société Métallurgique et Minière de
l'Indo-Chine
Mazières, planteur
Baroudeau, directeur des mines de
Langlit
TUYÊN QUANG
Résident Darles, chef de la province Administrateur Adjoint-Edouard Broui Chancelier-Gillou
Payeur-Castel
Garde indigène-Villain, inspecteur, com- mandant de la brigade; Pellegrini, Fagot, Doyen, gardes principaux Postes et Télégraphies Maupin, receveur Service Santé--Brouillard, médecin chef Douanes et Régies-Geraud, receveur.
préposé: Alata
Commandant d'armes-chef de bataillon au 2, Regt. de la légion étrangère de Juchereau de St. Denys
Officiers du ler. bataillon étrangèr
Capitaines: Colombat, Quirin, Capillery; Lieutenants: Liemsner, Ilnicki, Thevenoty Abbadie
Médecin Major-Dr. Gerbaut
Service Forestier-Proust, garde forestier Vétérinaire, Inspecteur des Epizooties, Barnavon
Inspecteur d'agriculture-Pidance Gendarmeric-Carrère
Societé des Mines de Zinc de Trang
Da-Sas, ingénieur directeur Albert, planteur à Cay Vong Laumonier, planteur à Tuyen Quang Cadars, planteur et industriel à Tuyen Quang Girod, planteur à Phu yen Binh Perrin, Joseph, chimiste à Tuyen Quang Perrin, Louis, planteur à Tuyen Quang Rémery, planteur à Tuyen Quang Gache, commerçant-Issorel, entre-
preneur
Manufacturedes tabacs de l'Indo-Chine Hôtel-restaurant-café-Baud
TONKIN ANNAM
Laboratoire de chimique et d'analyse
-Joseph Perrin
Cultes R. P. Gauja à Tuyen Quang,
R. P. Girod à Phu yen Binh
YEN-BAY
Résident de France-Cambier Administrateur Adjoint-Marins-Collet Commis de 3e. cl.-Dubreuil, Bouillot Payeur Jony
Service Administr.-Miquel
Travaux Publics-Levasseur Douanes Préteigne
Postes et Télégraphes-Rives Médecin--Dr. le Tonturier
Garde Civile Massebeuf, Vanderhaeghe
Verdier, Gendraud,
Carette, Jund entrepreneurs
122 5
Transports Fluviaux :-Union Com-
'merciale Indo-Chinoise
Delbreil, Farcy, Juni, hôteliers Union Commerciale Indo-Chinoise,
commerçants
Canque, Michiel, Courteix, Phily,
planteurs
Exploitation miniére-Marc, Dandalo
a Lang Nhon
VIETRI
Gendarmerie Spinose
Postes et Télégraphics-Bardeould, re-
ceveur, Administration-Martin Travaux publics Cachon,
Duvernei,
Deman,
ANNAM
The Kingdom of Annam is under French protection. It extends along the Eastern coast of the large Indo-Chinese peninsula, between Cochin-China on the South, Cam- bodge and Siam on the West, Toukin on the North, and the China sea on the east, It is an extensive territory bordered by a chain of granite mountains covered with forests and having well-watered and fertile plateaux.
The kingdom is administered by a Privy Council whose members are nominated by the Sovereign. Each ministry has the assistance of a Council. Since the Treaty of 25th August, 1883, France has had a resident superieur at Hud. For administrative purposes Aunum is divided into 19 provinces: Than-Hoa (Th-H), Nghé-An (Vinh), Ha-Tinh (HT), Quang-Binh (Dong-Hoi), Quang Tri (Q-T) Chùa Thien (Huế), Tourane, Quang Nam (Phifo), Quang Nghi (Q-Ngai), Binh Dinh (Qui Nhon), PhuYen (Song Can), Nha-Trang (N1~Tg), Darlac (Ban Me Thuet), Muh Thuan (Phan-Rang), Binh Thuan (Phan Thiết). The agricultural land bordering on the coast is almost exclusively devoted to the culture of rice, of which two corps a year are raised. Imports consist of products for consumption such as flour, wine, liquors, rice spice, also iron manufactures, all kinds of hard word, articles de luxe, cotton goods, &c., the annual value being about 7,250,000 francs, of which about one-fifth come from France and Indo-China. Exports comprise silk, raw and filatured, silk manufactures, and waste silk, ginned cotton, lace, cinnamon, gummed lacquer, oil d'arachides, pre- cious woods, ox hides and horns, dried and salt fish, &e.
HUE
Hué, the capital of the kingdom of Annam, and the seat of government, is situated about 12 km. from the sea on a small, scarcely navigable river named Song-huong and called by the French the Hué river, which debouches on the coast in about lat. 16 deg. 29 min N., and long. 107 deg. 38 min. E. The grand mountain chain of Annam, rising in four successive lines, approaches the coast North and South, forming round the town an immense belt broken only by the sea, giving to the city a smiling and picturesque aspect. Hué consists of two distinct parts-the official quarter and the merchant quar ter. The former is simply the citadel, an immense quadrilateral measuring on each side 2,400 metres with the front bastioned after the type of the fortifications at Vauban Within is another fortified enciente in which the King has his palace. The merchant town stretches along the side of the canal which serves as a moat on one side of the quadrilateral. The centre gate of the inner wall is in the form of a pagoda, gilt and adorned with elaborate carvings. The majority of the houses and even the public build- ings in Hué are, however, very mean and in a bad state of repair. The Royal palace, like that of Peking, has yellow tiles; those of the nobles have red. The population of the city and suburbs is estimated at 40,000, of whom about 800 are Chinese. The only Europeans are the French Resident and his suite. The mouth of the Hué river is defended by forts, which were taken by the French in August, 1883, when the Hue Government at once capitulated,
DIRECTORY
RÉSIDENCE SUPÉRIEURE DE L'ANNAM Résident Supérieur-M. Groleau
Inspecteur des Services Civils Adjoint-M.
Bouyeure
Chef de Cabinet-M. Paréra Secrétaire Particulier-M. Pompei
PROVINCES DE L'ANNAM
TOURANE
The port of Tourane is situated about forty miles to the south-east of Hue, the capital of Annam, but on account of the Thuan-an Bar it is accessible by sea for large craft during only six months of the year, from the end of March to the end of September. The land route from Hué, about sixty-eight miles in length, passes over the Nuages range of hills and is an easy road for horse and foot traffic. The extensive bay of Tourane is surrounded by hills and affords auchorage to the largest vessels. The Government transports and the steamers of the Compagnie Nationale de Navigation and the Messageries Maritimes and the Chargeurs Réunis find an anchorage here at all states of the tide and in all weathers. The Tourane River, which has its source in the mountains of the interior, empties itself into the Bay. It is navigable only for small boats and junks, by which the traffic with the provinces of Quang-nam and Quang-nga is carried on. The town, which is well built, extends for a length of nearly two miles along the left bank of the river. It possesses many public buildings, including the French Residency, a fine Military Hospital, spacious and well ventilated Barracks, the Custom-house, the Treasury, the Post Office, and the Municipal Offices, also a number of well-appointed business establishments, amongst which may be mentioned the Bant
ANNAM
1227
de l'Indo-Chine, the Opium Farm, the Messageries Maritimes Offices, the Morim Ilotel, etc. The Markets, built of brick and stone, are large and contain several hundred stalls. On the right bank of the river also there are a few buildings, which are included in the French concession. A silk filature has been established there. A quarter-of-an-hour's walk from this district is the village of My-khd, which has given its name to a magnificent beach much frequented by the European population The trade of Tourane is considerable and several steamers a month arrive from Hongkong, taking full return cargoes of sugar, rattan, bamboo, areca nuts, silk, cassia, etc. The Messageries Maritimes and the Compagnie Nationale de Navigation have agencies at Tourane, and the vessels of these Companies, together with those arriving from Hong- kong, give a total of about a dozen entering the port every month. Besides these ressels a large number of large sca-going junks from China, Ilainan, and the ports of Annam, Tonkin, and Cochin-China carry on an active and considerable trade in the products of the country, Tea, coffee, and the mulberry tree are cultivated on a large scale in the neighbourhood and there are several plantations owned by Europeans. Less than an hour's journey by boat from the town are the Marble Mountains, un object of interest for travellers, who should not pass through Tourane without paying them a visit. The population of Tourane is about 4,650, of whom 100 are Europeans, 350 Chinese, and 4,500 Aunamites.
QUINHON
Quinhon was opened to foreign trade upon the conclusion of the Treaty between France and Annam, signed in March, 1874. It is situated on the coast of Annam in about lat. 13 deg. 54 min. N., long. 109 deg. 02 min. E. The entrance to the port is obstructed by a bar, which may be crossed, however, by any vessel with a draught not exceeding 16 to 16 feet. The chief articles of export are salt, silk, crapes, beans, arachide oil and cakes, sugar, etc. The population of the province is one million; that of the port 3,000, of whom about 20 are French civilians. The country is well cultivated, and the commercial prospects of the port are improving every year. A considerable trade is carried on, chiefly with Hongkong, Haiphong, Saigon, Singapore, and Bangkok. The trade is at present chiefly in the hands of the Chinese.
BINH-DINH
DIRECTORY
Siège de la Résidence Qui NuON Résident de France-Longellier-Bellevue Administrateur Adjoint de Tastes Administrateur-Guénot Elève-adhuinistrateur-Bourgeois Comunis services civils-Morel, Chenu Percepteur-Havy
Garde Indigene Paris, Coutelle, Guillot, Dereymez, Iberger, Discors, Stenger, Cologon, Lapeyre
Postes et Télégraphes-Tixier, receveur;
Lauber, surveillant
Douaves et Régies-Bompard, inspecteur;
Legras, controleur
Travaux publics-Montagner, conducteur Phares et Balises--Danet, chef de service; Agostini, conducteur: Le Gouriff, maître du phares
Service de Santé-Docteur Lenoir Bervice Vétérinaire Le Louet
Agriculture-Pierre
Cultes Mgr. Grangeon, évêque
R. P. Gagnaire, provicaire Perraud, procureur
Commerce, Agriculture, Industrie
Delignon, filateur ct tisseur en soie
Tortel, Prandoni, Francisoud Dombret, jaunes deufs et albumine
Ducroux
Mathey, hôtelier épicier Mallet, Pagès, épiciers
Derobert & Cie., commerçants, re-
présentés par Corret Héron, commerçant de Montpezat, planteur Perre, planteur
Rideau, planteur
Audouit, agent des Messageries Ma
ritumes
Marcet, entrepreneur
1228
BINH-THUAN
Chef lieu-PHAN THIẾT
Administrateur
Garnier Léon
ANNAM
Résident de France-
Administrateur Adjoint-Vernier, Auguste Chancelier greffier-Sorba
Comptable Sorba
Payeur-Robaglia
Garde Indigène Scholl,
Scholl,
inspecteur ;
Bonnin, Molinie, Vincens, Combette, gardes principaux
Poste Médical--Dr. Hostalrich Postes et Télégraphes-Auger, receveur Douanes et Régies Dumas, contrôleur receveur á Phanthiet; Guidon Lavalleé, receveur à Muiné
Travaux Publics-Bourdeaud, ingénieurdes chemins de fer, chef d'arrondissement & Phanthiet, Despaux, conducteur provincial Missions catholiques--R. R. P. P. Masseron,
Guégen, Kefler
Garde forestier-Abriac
Entrepreneur de Travaux Publics- Déra-
mond à Phanthiét
Colonisation-Casset á Phu Sung, planta- tions de riz et coton; Hótel, Monsieur Yung; Lemai, plantation de caoutchouc a Gian Mau
POSTE DE PHAN-RI Chef de Poste-M. Molinié, garde principal Dejiovanni, receveur des Douanes, chargé du bureau des Postes et Télégraphies Trần Huy Diện
Travaux Publics-Jaud, conducteur
POSTE DE DAMAI
Commandant le détachement-Vincens,
garde principal, chef du poste Conducteur des Travaux Publics, chemin
de fer de Saigon a Khanh Hoa-Lenai Entrepreneurs--Bogliano, Mopin et Bros-
sard, Moretti
Garde Principal chargé de l'Inspection.
Sanitaire
POSTE ADMINISTRATIF DE DJIRING
ANCIENNEMENT HAUT DONNAÏ Chef du Poste administratif - Cunhac,
administrateur
Chargé du bureau Postes et Télégraphes,
Cao Nghiêm Do, télégraphiste indigène
HÀ TINH
Résident M. Soler
Résident Adjoin--M. Breda Greffier M. de Cazes Percepteur M. Couderc
Garde Indigene-Viaux, Martineau, Dan-
drieu, Bourgineau, Casamatta Assistance Medicale Dr. Cazaux
Postes et Télégraphes-Charpentier, re-
ceveur
Douanes et Régies-Fischer, receveur, Tailler, Lesourd, Debaurieux, Lassalle, Saravane, Fontaine, Creveau, André, Bayle, Allegre, Battesti
Colons Deschwanden, Chazet Louis, Chazet, Victor, Didier, Chauvet, Manu Siess, Nivet Missionnaires--Pères,
Dalaine, Roux,
Combette, Fort, Bonnet, Chauvet, Pa- laget. Douquet
Compagnie Générale du Tonkin et du
Nord Annain:
Agent Principal-M, Campagne Agents Marchant, Terrioux, Bergeron
KHANH-HOA
Chef lien-NHATRANG Résident de France-Albert Garnier Adminsteur. Adjoint-Georges Mougenot Percepteur-M. Örbaud
Travaux Publics-M. Paquin Institus Pasteur-Dr. Yersin Vétérinaire--- M. Scheni
Assistance Medicale--Dr. Vassal Commerce-Agriculture-M. de Barthélemy à Cam Ranh, M. Pourtoclis, M. de Piolaux, M. de la Faulotte
NGHEAN Chef-lieu-VINH
Principal Port-BEN-THUY
Administrateur Résident---M.Pascal Balard Administrateurs Adjoints-
Baffeleuf
Greffier Notaire du Peloux Payeur Sarazin
Comptable--Rougier
Garde Civile Arnoux, inspt. comdt. brigade; Kupp, Choulet, Nicollet Var- enne-Caillard, Piot, gardes principaux Service de Santé-Delay
Poste Administratif de Nghia Hung-
Balot
Postes et Télégraphes-Cruveiller Douanes et Régies-Joinie, Verron, Lascher Travaux Publics-Folclier, conducteur
Chemin de Fer-Inspecteur: M. Pisier;
Contrôleur: Borreil Ateliers généraux du Chemin de fer- Tissot, Goddard, Trou, Bonet, Laro- che, Hardy, Muchler
Gendarmerie - Fagandet, Tourenne,
Ruffet
T
Messageries Fluviales-Monnier Société "La Laotienne Rosnet, directeur Roullet, mécanicien Martin, agent
Société Forestière et Commerciale
de l'Annam
Mann, administrateur
Walter,
idl.
Schlatter, id.
Paccarl, comptable
Gries, Dailly, employés
Maison Lejeune Frères, Négociants
Paoli, employé
ANNAM
Compagnie générale du Tonkin et du
Nord-Annam
Bonté, inspecteur
Trapet, agent principal
Fleury, Nicolas, Terny, agents Chavanon, Huaux, Siess, négociants Desgrais, négociant et hôtelier Boeufs et Ferrey, négociants Vasnier, pharmacien Ducom, boulanger Prunier, négociant
Canque et Lanaud, entrepreneurs
PHU YEN
Siege de la Résidence-SÔNGCÂU Résident de France-M. Lehe Administrateurs-Parent, Cottez Percepteur-Mariani
Garde indigene-Fourré, Renard, Chazet,
Dieudonné, Dugas
Postes et Télégraphes-Peyret Cultes-Wendling, Porcher, Jean, Guillot Docteur Perthuisot
Travaux Publics-Roure, Cornu
Douanes et Régies-Morel, Merle, Moreau, Havy, Loupy, Gabella, Couzy, Tranchier, Loupy, Dubois, Valentini, Pereira, Prou- chanly
QUANG-BINH
Capitale DONG-HOI Administrateur Résident de France---
M. Lemaire
Administrateur Adjoint-M. Herbinet Percepteur-C. E. Millard
Gardo Indigene-Delingette, inspecteur Gardes Principaux-Letourneau, du Bou-
vot, Petit, Parisse
Assistance Médicale-Dr. Thiery Postes et Téls.-Granier, receveur Surveillant-Charpentier
Douanes et Régies--Flohic, receveur; Lamoureux, receveur; Chavareau, Cap- deville, Laulanié de Ste. Croix, Coudoux, agents
Travaux Publics --M, Olivier Commerçants-Gauvin, Rivette
Missionaires-Père Afgral, Père Darbon,
Père Neyer
QUANG-NAM
Résident--M. Serizier
Administrateur Adjoint-M. Le Masson Grettier Notaire-M. Rougier Percepteur-M. Daigne
Garde Indigène-M. Breugnot, Inspecteur
Commandant la Brigade
id.
Sogny, garde principal Jacques, Salvant, de Cepoy,
id.
id.
1220
Douanes et Régies-M. Fauché, receveur à Cua Day; Lemée, distillerie de Fai Fo; Bouscaren, entrepôt de pétrole: Rou- quette, distillerie Chocai; Corbier, agent du service actif: Vinel, agent du service actif; Jossalin, receveur à Tamky; Pryol, receveur à Hiep Hoa; Valentini, service actif
Travaux Publics-M. Thomas Gendarmerie-Dauphin
Négociants Français-Dérobert et J. Fiard & Fai Fo et Tamky; Cie. des Thés d'An- nam à Tamky; S.I. C. A. à Tamky, (M. Vacherot)
Mines Mines d'Or á Bong Mieu; Societé des Houilliéres, de Nong Son; Mines de Tlende a Duc Bộ
Planteurs et Colony-Dubois à Tamky; Belle a Tau My; Bertrand a Phuộc Thuong ; Gravelle a Nghi An; Veysset, Martin à Tamky; Cie. des Thés d'Annam; à Dong-nghẻ et Lhu Huong
QUANG-TRI
Chef lieu-QUANG TRI Administrateur Résident, chef de Province
Administrateur adjoint-Jérusalémy Percepteur-Alerini
Garde Indigène Commandant de brigade, Raux; gardes principaux, Dufour- Loriolle, Garchery, Porte (poste de Lao Bao)
Postes et Télégraphes -Izard, receveur, à Quang Tri; un indigène chargé du Bureau à Lao-Bao
Douanes et Régies-Nadaud, Amiand à Quang Tri; Mallien à Cuatung; Le Dorner a Cua Viet; Bonna a Kin Lung
THANH-HOA
Résident de France-Sestier, administra-
teur de lère classe
Administrateur Adjoint de 4e cl., -Erny Administrateur de 3e cl.-M. D. Elloy Administrateur Délégué de 5e cl. à Bai
Thuong-Bonnomme
Greffier Notaire-M, Amondru Services de Santé-Dr. Lacour
Garde indigène-Commandant de Brigade:
M. Lepare
Gardes principaux-Montazel, Louron Postes et Télégraphes Eouze; un indigène chargé du bureau de poste de Sam Son Douanes et Régies--Cavaugnals; Commis:
M.M. Cotti, Hamette
Travaux Publics-Contróleur: M. Goetz
1230
Commerce Agriculture Industrie:
ANNAM
M. Daulax du Meseril, planteur à
Ma Hum
M. Wentzbag, directeur des Scieries
de Haun Roug
M. Gullaud, hotelier M. Guerrier, id.
Compagnie Général du Tonkin et du
Nord-Annam
M. Chanefon, agent principal
THUA THIEN
Siège de la Résidence Supérieure-Hué Administrateur-Résident de France chef
de la province-R. Patry Administrateur Adjoint au Rés, de France
-L. Boudineau, président du Tribunal Chancelier Notaire M. Grossin Percepteur-Vallat
-
Travaux Publics M. Puylagarde, M.
Berque, M. Delpig, M. Rolland Ingénieur en chef-Gajan Payeur Trésorier-Beaurain Receveur des Douanes-M. Boube; Commis d'orde: M. Diet; Préposé: M. Guillard Garde Indigene Gautier, Moudot, inspec
teurs
Gardes-Gozano, Brisson
Postes et Télégraphes-Bauron Agriculture-- Vieillard, ingénieur agrono-
Ine
Service du chemin de fer- Contrôleur: M.
Vallon, Bound, Dupnas
Ecole, Quoc Hoc-professeurs Griffon, Qusignec, Le Breton, Le Bris, Chouquet Ecole Pelerin Bros, Brunel, Bayet, Badiou,
Olie, professeurs
SANTÉ
Piron, médecin ppal, Dr. Mauras, Dr.Meslin COLONS
Chovet,
Vétérinaire épizooties: Mérals Négociant Lacroix, Girard, Dewost, Koch, Morin, Tutier Liverset, Cosserat, Morin, Antoine, Saur Cultes-Evêque Allys Missionnaires Apostoliques Chapins, Etchebarne, Izain. Léculier, Lemasle Société Sportive de Hué-Président: M.
Bondineau
Cercle de la Rine droite -Président: M.
C. Dr. Piron
CONCESSION FRANÇAISE DE
TOURANE
Principal Port-TOURANE
Résident Maire M. Lemasson Secrétaire Municipal-M. Vanez
Chef de la voirie municipale-M. Guiraud Garde Indigène-M. Mizon Commissaire de police-M. Thévenin Juge de paix-M. Lejeune
Greffier notaire-M. Locquet-Duquesne ;
Huissier, M. Janin
Avocats défenseurs
Breteuil
M. M. Deligne, de
Receveur de l'Enregistrement-M. Périer Service des Postes et Télégraphes-Direction Directeur, chef du service de l'Anuam-
Raff
Commis faisant fonctions de rédactems
M. M. Voisin et Martin
Exploitation-Receveur--M. Sasias Coinmis- M. M. Vial, Ricart, Martin.
François
Agent Mécanicien--M. Vouillon Surveillants M. M. Lambert et Rigal Sernice des Travaux publics, Personnel der
chemins de fer
Ingénieur en chef--3. Dussaix Ingénieur adjoint-M. Carton Chief du Bureau de l'Ingénieur en chef-
de Flers
Chef de la Voie & Bâtiments-M. Sylvestre Chef du trafic et mouvement-M. Niobuy Chef de la Comptabilité et des approvi
sionuments-M. Dumont
Chambre mixte de Commerce et d'agricul
ture-M. M. Bogaert, président Compagnie de Navigation, Messageries Maritimes, M. Masson agent; Chargeurs Réunis M. M. Dérobert et Fiard, repré sentants,
Industriel M. Bogart
Mécanicien Constructeur-M. Ryckeling
-Hôtels Morin et Philippe- Commerçants-Warkin, Déroabert-Morin Entrepreneurs-M. M. Leroy, Bogaert, Belles Meubles sébénisseries-M. Pain Ecole Franco-Annamite-M. Reyboubet,
directeur
Ecole Mixte française,-Mme. Reyboulet
directrice
Comité d'enseignementmutuel M.Nguyên
cung Kinh, directeur
Administration des Douanes et Régies- Sous Directeur de l'Annam; M. Duhous Chef du Secrétariat-M. Chauvin Chef du Contentieux-M, Gros
Chef de la Comptabilité-M. Duran Chef de la Statistique M. Ducas Chef de la Vérification--M. Nelson Chef de la brigade active-M. Berthe Receveur secondaire M. Buequet Banque de l'Indo-chine M. Pellet,
directeur Caissier-M. Fliche Cultes M. Saulat, missionnaire Apostoli
que; M. Bonnet, pasteur
QUANG-NGAI
Résident de France-M. Dodey Administrateur Adjoint-M. Péguenet Greffier notaire-Havoux
Percepteur--Havaux
Garde Indigène Darud, Gaudon, La
Brosse, Pagani
Assistance medicale-M. A. D. de Guet-
marquer
ANNAM-COCHIN-CHINA
Postes et Télégraphes-M. Eeste, commis Douanes et Régis-M. M. Darmagnac, Vidal, de Marmicés, de Lugon, Rouzade, Roger Travaux Publics-Conducteur--Hune Colons- M. Duprey
Missionnaires-père Sudu; père Tissier
DARLAC
Chef lien-BAN ME THUOT Résident-M. Quenot
NINH-THUAN Chef lieu-PHAU RANG Part å NINH CHU
Résident M. Retalė
Adjoint-M. Vozon
Greffier notaire-M. de Bélacoviécz Garde Indigene M. Erniquet Tresor-M. Philippe
1231
Postes et Télégraphes-M. Pradels Colons-Baron Peregnon, Grenieux, Motte,
Monne, Bazé
Douanes et Régies-M. Cosby Assistance Medicale-Dr. Ducasse Centre Administratif de Dalut (Tang
Biang)
Administrateur-M. Champondry
Délégué du Résident de Station agricole
-M. d'André
COCHIN-CHINA
Cochin-China is a French Colony. The province of Giadinh, of which Saigon is the chief port, was conquered by the Franco-Spanish fleet on the 17th February, 1859, but Lower Cochin-China (comprising the provinces of Giadinh, Bienhoa, and Mytho, and the Islands of Pulo Condor) was not definitely occupied until 1862, when it was formally surrendered by Treaty; in 1867 three more provinces were conquered by the French and added to their possessions, viz., Chaudoe, Hatien, and Vinhlong. The actual boundaries of Cochin-China now are: on the North the kingdoms of Annam and Cambodia, on the East and South the China Sea, on the West the Gulf of Siam and Cambodia,
The Colony of Cochin-China is divided into seven large provinces, comprising in all twenty-one inspections. Besides Saigon, which is the capital of Cochin-China and at the
same time of the province of Giadinh, the other chief towns bear the names of their respective provinces, Bienhoa, Mytho, Chaudoc, and Hatien. The country is a vast plain with small hills on the West and some mountains on the East and North; the three highest are Batlen 884 metres, Baria 493 metres, and the Mai Mountains 550 and 600 metres in height. The principal rivers are the two Vaico, the Saigon River, and the Donnai river. The lower parts of Cochin-China are wrinkled with small creeks or arroyos, giving easy and rapid communication to all parts of the country. Of late several canals have been opened. The magnificent river Mekong, which descends from the Thibetan mountains, after running through different territories, crosses Cambodia, enters the lower provinces of Cochin-China, by two branches, and empties itself into the China Sea by five large outlets called, respectively, Cua Tieu, Cua Balai, Qua Cochien, Cua Dinh-an and Cua Bassae.
The principal product of Cochin-China is rice. It is planted in almost every province except some of the northern districts. In the last twenty years the number of hectares cultivated has almost doubled, and in 1908 out of a total export of 1.214,512 tons of rice from French Indo-China 949,879 tons came from Cochin- China. After this the chief export are fish, fish-oil, hides, pepper, cotton, dried shrimps, and copra. China grass, sesamum, palma-christi, indigo, saffron, gum-lac, sapan wood and cinchona also exist in fairly large quantities, with several other minor productions. The value of the produce exported in 1906, excluding vice, is given as nearly $12,000,000, fish alone being represented in the list by nearly 5 million dollars.
The principal salt pits are in the province of Baria. The forests contain large quantities of fine timber and abound with game of nearly every description, amongst which may be named elephants, rhinoceros, tiger, deer, wild boar, and eland, while amongst the feathered game the peacock, partridge, snipe, jungle fowl for wildcock), pheasant, &c., may be mentioned. The rivers and creeks' swarm with fish of every description, and alligators abound in some.
1232
COCHIN-CHINA
In the chief towns of each province there is a citadel sufficiently garrisoned, and numerous military posts in the interior maintain and watch over the security of the inhabitants. The Annamites are a race devoted principally to agriculture; they are not so industrious as the Chinese and are indifferent traders. The Chinese have the largest proportion of the trade in their hands,
The whole of the French possessions are now comprised under the title of Indo-China and consist of the Colony of Cochin-China the protectorates of Tonkin, Laos, Annam and Cambodia, and the leased territory of Quoang-tschou-wan, and are under the control of a Governor-General, who usually resides in Tonkin. The Government of Cochin-China is administered by a Lieutenant-Governor, who is assisted by a Privy Council composed of all the Heads of Departments as official members and several unofficials. The Colonial Council of Cochin-China, some of the members of which are elected by the residents, consists of sixteen members, six of whom are natives. In the various arrondissements, moreover, councils have been introduced composed entirely of natives. The towns of Saigon and Cholon are ruled by Municipal Councils, the members of which bodies are partly French and partly native. The Chamber of Commerce at Saigon is also an official body elected by the merchants and traders; formerly it was composed of French, foreigners, and Chinese, but in 1896 its constitution was altered and it is now an exclusively French body.
The population of Cochin-China by the 1901 census was 2,968,529, of whom 4,323 were French (exclusive of the white troops, which were put down at 3,536 men).
Following on irrigation works a great number of concessions have been granted especially in 1899 and 1900, by the Colonial Council of Cochin-China, some to villages, some to settlers. The fields granted to European settlers are only taxed according to their progress, commencing by one-fifth at the end of the fifth year, to which is added another one-fifth at the end of each of the following four years. The Conseil Supérieur, in November, 1900, adopted the following works to improve Saigon Harbour:1. A quay 1,001 metres (3,578 feet) long on the right bank of the river. This quay will permit the mooring of nine vessels of 120 metres (393 feet) long 2. A series of warehouses 25 metres (82 feet) broad and 969 metres (3,178 feet) long, thus making a total surface of 24,225 square metres (260,611 square feet). 3. Railroads in front and at the back of the warehouses. The line of railway leading thereto will be connected with the Mytho and Cholon Railways. 4. About 20 buoys will be established on the left bank of the river, and vessels will be moored on that side as they are now on the right bank. 5. A bridge, level with the ground, will be built in continuation of the street called Rue d'Adran. The total expenses to be incurred for the improvements projected were estimated at f.10,394,000 (£415,760). Several of these improvements have been completed. A postal line of French steamers has been established between Bangkok and Singapore, with a subsidy from the Govern- ment of Indo-China.
SAIGON
Saigon, the capital of Cochin-China, is situated on the Saigon river, a tributary of the Donnai, in lat. 10 deg. 50 min. N., and long. 104 deg 22 min. E. It is about 40 miles from Cape St. James and is accessible to the largest vessels. Since its occupation by the French the climate has undergone a very favourable change, owing to different sanitary works in the town, such as drains, the filling up of pools, marshes, &c. The town presents a fine appearance, the roads and thoroughfares bomg broad and regular. Amongst the public buildings the Government House is the most remarkable; several millions of francs have been spent upon its construction and decoration. The other prominent public buildings are the Palace of the Lieutenant-Governor, the handsome and imposing Post Office on the Place de la Cathédrale, the Custom House, the "Direction de Intérieur," the Treasury, the Land Office, Public Works Department, the Schools, the Supreme Court and the "Hotel de Ville," (Town Hall) the cost of which was over Franes 2,000,000. The Military Hospital is a fine and handsome building, as are also the Arsenal, Barracks,
Plaine des Tombeaux
ROUTE
"Chemin de fer de Mytho
HOLON
Khô - Dui
S4
* TRAMWAY
Caserns
ALLANT
ADUTE HAUTE
FO
CHILD
Plaine
des Tombeaux
Rizieres
Yan-Ong-Lanh
Rizi
Abattoir
Boulevard Abattoir
Arroyo
MARCHAISE
AUE
BORESSE
BUE
AMIRAL
BOUR
AUE
DAYOT
RUE
RUE
HAMELIN
NEMESIS
LEFEBVRE
Chinois
1. Palais du Gouvernement Général
2. Château d'eau et puits hydrostatique
3. Enêché
4, College Chasseloup Laubat
5. Cathedrale
8. Mesa dea Offolers
7. Imprimerie Nationale
8. Trésor
9. Recette speciale
10. Enregistrement et Domaines
17. Cadastre
12. Gendarmerie
13. Prison Centrale
14. Palais du Lieutenant gouverneur
15. Hôtel du Procureur Général
18. Mairie
17. Télégraphe et Postes
18. Hotel du Secrétaire général
18 Secrétariat Général
20., institution municipale de filles
21. Magazine et Ateliere des Travaux publics
22. id du Service local
#. A
d pétrole
4. Abate de Potion
28. direction du Port de Commerce
20_migration
27. Ho veau Théatre-Municipal
28 Ames de Police
20. Devane
30. Pala
1. Kakel
la de Justice
du commdt. supérieur des troupes
Isine
Tam Hoi
Hoa
Dispensaire
COLOMBIER
PLAN
DE LA VILLE
DE
SAIGON
50 200
200
(COCHINCHINE.)
Echelle de 0,001 pow 14′′ (sboo)
300
400
002
400
700
LA GRAN CHỈ Đ
RUE
RUE NEMESIS
POULO
CONDOR
D'ESPAGHE
Magazine Minucipaur COURBET
RUE
WG-MAHON
LEFEBVRE
PELLERIN
SSELOUP LAUD.
30
LABRANDIER
13
28
A
RUE
Metres,
200
900
2000
ELLERIN
Boulevard
Gambett
122
de la
BLANCSUBE D
Pairestixiles
QUE
SARCERTE
Norodom
& $ Redoubtable
LEGRAND
an
Agriculture
Kotet
31
ARONYT
Eustrert.
28
Citadelle
UE
Caserne
Caserno
Boulevard
Norodom
TABERT
業
Cos
das
Semina
20
Laure
ཉི་མ༧་བཞི་པའི་ཤ༧་
Enfance
Artillerie
Pare
rsenal
既
Bassin de Badous
du Telegraph
ROUSSEAD
Pyrotechnis
CHA
que
Arroyo
de
M
Messageries Maritimes?
RIVIÈRE
Vétéran
Village
D E
d' An- Loi-Xa
SAÏ G
N
Gruss flatiurtas
44
L'Avalanche
Rach
Binh
An
Ong
Tien
Village
Village
de
Phu - Mi
32. Justice de paix
33. Gare du chemin de far da Mytho
34. Manufacture d'opium
35. Hangers de vérification (Douane)
36. Mat de signaux
37. Curé de la Cathédrale
98. Hotel Olliefer
30. Banque de l'Indo-Chine
40. Commissaire Central de Police
41. Gare du chemin de fer de Cholon
42. Gars du chemin de før (route basse et de gouap)
43. Daine d'electricité
44. Gerola Sportif Saigonnais
45. Société Philharmonique
46. Surveillant du Jardin
SAIGON
1233
and Artillery Park.
There is also
was
a stately Gothic Cathedral of large proportions, in front of which has been erected the statue of Monseigneur Pigueau de Behaine, bishop of Adran, one of the first French missionaries who came to Cochin-China in the last century. A fine bronze statue of Gambetta stands in the Boulevard Norodom. There are two other Statues, one of Francis Garnier on the Boulevard Bonnard in front of the theatre, and another, that of Amiral Rigault de Genouilly, on the Rond Point Rigault de Genouilly. Saigon has two public gardens, the "Jardin de la Ville," which is maintained at the expense of the Municipality, and the Botanic Garden. The municipal theatre, which inaugurated in 1900, is a remarkable building erected at a cost over 2,000,000 fr. There is good docking accommodation, the Bassin de Radoub being one of the finest docks in the world, capable of receiving the largest men-of-war, and there are two floating lifts. Saigon has two steam rice mills. Two new petroleum godowns built by the Government at a cost of $18,000 are situated at Rach Doi, on the banks of the Saigon River (half way to the town). They are said to be large enough to receive over 400,000 cases. The agents of Messrs. Samuel & Co., of London, have built two petroleum tanks at Nhabé at the point where the Saigon River flows into the Donnaï. The largest of these is estimated to receive 2,300 cubic metres (81,190 cubic feet) of oil. There are (without reckoning the troops) about 3,500 Europeans and about 180 foreigners, of whom there are about 40 British subjects (Europeans and descendants of Europeans).
The M. M. steamers call twice a month at Saigon on their homeward and outward trips. Easy communication is afforded with the principal towns of the territory either by subsidized mail steamers, or railway. There is a railway with Chaudoc, Bien Hoa and beyond, and with Hoc Mon. The bridge of Binh-Loi was inaugurated on the 8th of March, 1902, over the river of Saigon, putting in direct communication the two rives des fours. It is a swing bridge and is of a total length of 276 metres supported by 6 piles (en maçonnerie et à 2-culées). All the principal towns of Cochin-China possess telegraphic communication, and a submarine cable unites the colony with Singapore, Hongkong Haiphong, Amoy, &c. The postal organization of the Colony is very complete and efficient; correspondence can be sent daily to almost all parts of the country. The Journal Officiel is published twice a week, and there are usually one or two other journals published, but they frequently change their titles, and lead a spasmodic existence. The Gia-dinh-bao is the native issue of the Journal Officiel.
DIRECTORY
GOUVERNEMENT GÉNÉRAL DE L'INDO-CHINE
M. KLOBUKOWSKI, Gouverneur-Général de l'Indo-Chine (Commandeur de la Légion
d'Honneur). Gourbeil-Lieut-Gouverneur.
BUREAU POLITIQUE
Sicard, Chef du Bureau
SERVICE ADMINISTRATIF
Du de Marsoulles, Administrateur de 40
classe des Service Civils, Chef
ARCHIVES
Belloeuf, Chef du Bureau, Archiviste
BUREAU MILITAIRE
Leblond, Chef d'Escadron d'Artillerie
Coloniale, Chef du Bureau
BUREAU DU GOUVERNMENT GÉNÉRAL
Á SAIGON
Faucon, Chef de Bataillon, Délégué dans
les Fonctions de Chef du Bureau
|
OFFICIER D'ORDONNANCE Expert-Bezancon, Capitaine Breveté d'In-
fanterie Coloniale
DIRECTION GÉNÉRALE DES FINANCES ET DE LA COMPTABILITE
Pouymayou, Directeur
Directeur Général Finances et de la Comptabilité
des
DIRECTION DE L'AGRICULTURE DES FORETS ET DU COMMERCE DE L'INDO-CHINE Capus, Docteur en-sciences, Directeur de l'Agriculture, des Forêts et du Commerce de l'Indo-Chine Brenier,
la
ancien directeur de Mission Lyonnaise en Chine, Sous- Directeur de l'Agriculture (en congé)
39
1234
Direction
SAIGON
Badetty, Rédacteur principal de 1ère classe,
chef du Secrétariat
Guerrier, agent commercial attaché
Comptabilité
Merle, chef de bureau de ze classe
SERVICES MILITAIRES.
Piel, Général de Division, Commandant Supérieur des Troupes du Groupe de l'Indo-Chine
CONSEIL SUPÉRIEUR DE L'INDO-CHINE Le Gouverneur Général de l'Indo-Chine
Président
Le Général Commandant Supérieur des
Troupes de l'Indo-Chine
Le Contre-Amiral, Commandant en Chef la Division Navale d'Extrême-Orient Le Commandant de la MarineenIndo-Chine Le Lieutenant-Gouverneur de la Cochin-
Chine
Les Résidents Supérieurs en Annam, au
Tonkin, au Cambodge et au Laos
Le Directeur Général des Douanes et
Régies de l'Indo-Chine
Le Contrôleur l'inancier de l'Indo-Chine Le Directeur Général des Finances et de
la Comptabilité
Le Procureur Général, Chef du Service
Judiciaire le l'Indo-Chine
Le Directeur Général des Travaux Publics
de l'Indo-Chine
Le Directeur Général des Postes et des
Télégraphes de l'Indo-Chine
Le Directeur Général de la Santé de
l'Indo-Chine
Trésorier Général de l'Indo-Chine Directeur de l'Agriculture, des Forêts et
du Commerce de l'Indo-Chine Le Directeur Général de l'Instruction
Publique de l'Indo-Chine
Le Directeur de l'Ecole de Médecine de
FIndo-Chine
Le Président du Conseil Colonial de la
Cochin-Chine
Le Président de la Chambre de Commerce
de Saigon
Le Président de la Chambre de Commerce
de Hanoi
Le Président de la Chambre de Commerce
de Haiphong
Le Président de la Chambre d'Agriculture
de la Cochin-Chine
Le Président de la Chambre d'Agriculture
du Tonkin
do.
e
Le Président de la Chambre Mixte
Commerce et d'Agriculture de l'Annam
du Cambodge | L. L. EE. Hoang-cao-khai, Ancien Van-
Minh de l'Annam
Oknha Youmreach Col de Minteiro,
Ministre du Cambodge
Truong-như-cuong, President du Cônt
Ministre de l'Intérieur de l'Annam Do-huu-phuong, Tong-doe, Honoraire de
Cholon
Le Directeur du Cabinet et du Personnel du Gouvernment Général de l'Indo Chine, secrétaire
Le Député de la Cochin Chine Le Délégué de l'Annam-Tonkin au Conseil
Supérieur des Colonies
CONSEIL DE DÉFENSE DE L'INDO-CHINE Le Gouverneur Général de l'Indo-Chine,
président
Le Général de Division, Commandant Supérieur des Troupes du Groupe de l'Indo-Chine, vice-président
Le Général de Division, Cominandant la 2e Division des Troupes de l'Indo-Chine, membre
Le Général de Brigade, Commandant
l'Artillerie en Indo-Chine, membre Le Chef d'Etat-Major des Troupes de
l'Indo-Chine, secrétaire
COCHIN CHINE Lieutenant-Gouverneur-Gourbeil
gouverneur de le classe des colonies
CABINET DU LIEUTENANT-GOUVERNEUE Chef P. Pasquier, administrateur Secrétaire Particulier-Goubert Attaché-Dusan
DÉPUTATION Député-François Deloncle
CONSEIL COLONIAL Président Marquié Vice-Président Flaudoin Secrétaire-Thiemonge
Secrétaire suppléant-Cuong Membres élus Marquié, Pech, Jacque, Claude, Diep, Phong Binh, Vi. Hai, Cuong Délegués de la Chambre de Commerce-
Du Crouzet, Thiemonge
Délégué du Conl, Privé-Gigon, Papin,
Pāris
Secrétaire archiviste -Lebrun
CONSEIL PRIVÉ Président-Le Lieutenant-Gouverneur Le Général Commandant la Division Le Commandant de la Marine Le Procureur Général
Le Chef du Service Administratif Conseillers titulaires -Paris, Schnéegans Conseillers suppléants Mayer, Gigon
Papin, Marquié, Cazeau
LT
Secrétariat du Conseil Privé
Secrétaire Archiviste-Vabois
SECRÉTARIAT
Premier Bureau
Chef-Vinson, adm, 5e. cl.
J
Deuxième Bureau
Chef-de Manas-admr. 4me classe
Troisième Bureau
Chef-Boyer, admr. 2me classe
Quatrième Bureau
Chef Jouanal
Bibliothèque
Bibliothécaire--Grilla
Cung
Bureau des Interprètes
DIVISIONS TERRITORIALES DE COCHIN CHINE
SAIGON
Baclieu, Baria, Bentré, Bienhoa, Cantho, Chaudoc, Cholon, Của-dinh, Gocong Hatien, Longxuyen, Mytho, Rachgia, Sadec, Soctrang, Tanan, Tayninh, Thudaumot, Travinh, Vinhlong
CHAMBRE D'AGRICULTURE
Président--Paris
Vice-Président--Genet
Secrétaire Le Bret
Camerini, Canavaggio, Combes, Perrin,
Duval, Rivière, Hiép
Secrétariat M. E. Cotteret, archiviste
ADMINISTRATION DES PROVINCES Cholon-Rivet, administrateur de 2 cl. Baclieu Krautheimer, administratenr
3me cl
Baria-Lamaire, administrateur Bentrė-Davoine, administrateur Bienhoa Maspero, administrateur Cantho--Outrey, inspecteur administr.
Lebret, administrateur-adjoint
Cap St. Jacques--Metaireau, administr. Chaudoc Cudenet, administrateur Giadinh-Vresne, administrateur Gocong-Moreau, administrateur Hatien-Agon, administrateur Longxuyen-Valentin, adme. Mytho-Conginenu, administrateur
Rachgia--Le Marchant de Trigon, ad-
ministrateur
Sadec-Chabrier, administrateur Soctrang-Doucal, administrateur Sanan-Dobernardi, administrateur
Tayninh--Chrestien, administrateur
Thudaumot Cabaune de Laprade, ad-
ministrateur
Travinh-Mossy, administrateur Vinh-long-Caillard, administrateur
Ville de Saigon
Maire-Gigon-Papiu
Ville de Cholon
Maire-Drouhet
SERVICE DE L'AGRICULTURE DE COCHIN-
CHINE
Inspecteur en chef-Morange
1235
SERVICE DE L'ENREGISTREMENT DES ¢ DOMAINES ET DU TIMBRE DE L'INDO CHINE Directeur Général- Picanon (Hanoi) *823) Chef du 4e Bureau de la Dm. Générale de
Finance Ponsiznon (Hanoi)
Suos Chef Général de Finance-Àguarone
(Hanoi)
Sous-Inspecteurs--Duc; (Saigon) Maurel
(Hanoi)
Redacteur-Barberot (Hanoi) Receveur-Conservateurs-Grison (Hanoi);
Berquet (Saigon)
Receveur Curateurs - Lanchy (Hanoi);
Matti (Saigon)
Receveur Conservateurs et Curateurs-
Roussel (Namdinh); Périer (Tourane); Pujol (Mytho); Pargoire (Vinh'ong) ; David (Cantho); Came (Pnom Penh); Receveur des A. J.-Epron (Saigon) Receveurs sans gestion-Briotet; Santoni;
Birot-Letourneux; Angeli
CADASTRE ET TOPOGRAPHIE 44, Kue Paul Blanchy
Chef du Service-Guichard Vérificateur- Boisson
SERVICE DE L'INSTRUCTION PUBLIQUE
Direction de l'Enseignement
Directeur De Cappe, ofr. de l'Inst. pub.
(en congé)
Secrétaire M. H. Prêtre, Directeur pi. off
d'academie
Inspection des écoles
Inspecteur-Péralle, ofr. d'Acad. Laxxère
Collège Chasseloup-Laubat
Directeur pi-Péron
Professeurs-Blot, Merciee, Beaune, Etellin, Chenienx, Jason, Ourgaud, Petit, Ven- turini, Estébe, Hoacean, Baudet, Bénard, Gros, Saint Gratien
Institutrices-Mmes. Jouanal, Rossi
Collège de Mytho
Directeur Potier
Professeurs-Bulliard, Mussard, Dachary,
Duchesne
Ecole Aonale de Giadinh Directeur Dounodicu, (en congé) Guille-
met, directeur
Professeurs-Caubet, Chassagnoux, Gu-
irriec, Bernat, Ferrando
Ecole d'Apprentissage
Directeur-Taable
Moreau, Aagaud, chefs d'atelier
Ecole primaire de Saigon (rne Richand) Directeur-Manuel
Ecole primaire des garçons
Directeur-Giovansili
Ecole primaire supérieure des filles (Saigon) Directrice Mme. Merlot
Institutrices,
Azéma, Mme. Etellin, Ossini, de la Richaudy, Panton, Losenzi, Giovansili, Baston, Lagrange, Estébe
39*
1936
SAIGON
Prof. de dessin M. Chenieux-Prof. d'an- glais, M. Jason, Professeurs, de solfege, Mme. Campi, Surveillantes, Mlles. Blau- quet, Canal, Lipervanche Mme. Cusiol; agents temporaires, Mlles. Vally, Hac- quart, Fotone, Berey, Payet
Ecole Maternelle (Saigon)
Directrice-Mme
Ribière Mme. Vitton, Pochon, Mlle. Vinson Surveillantes,
SERVICE DES CONTRIBUTIONS DIRECTES ET VÉRIFICATION DES POIDS ET MESURES Rue Catinat, 158
Contrôleur et Verificateur-C. Piequet administrateur des services civils
ADMINISTRATION DES DOUANES ET
RÉGIES DE L'INDO-CHINE DirecteurGénéral-M.Picanon, l'inspecteur
général de lère, classe des Colonies Chef du Secretariat-M. Ponet, adminis- truteur de 4e. Classe des services civils de 1 Indo-Chine
Sous-Directeur du Tonkin--M. Morel
Do. Cornillon
de la CochinChine - M.
Sous directeur de l'Annam--M. Duhoux
du Cambodge-M. Rioque-
do. bourg
Sous directeur du Laos-M. Vincent Inspecteur en chef-M. Cornillon Inspecteurs de le. cl.-M. M. de Thévenard,
Rozier, Morel, Ricquebourg, Guillot Inspecteurs de 2e. cl.-M.M.Cogrel, Merle, Huyghues Despointes; Blanc, Desse, Duhoux
L
Inspecteurs de 3e. cl.-M. M. Blondell,
Thomas, Muraire, Blanchard, Scalla Inspecteurs de. 4e. cl.-M. M. Pendaux, Voreaux, Collard, Rozier, Mèhouas Duguet, Vincent, Lafferrayrie, Ravel, Eychenne
Contrôleurs ppaux. de le cl.-M.M. Perrin,
Boutonnet, Bénigni, Courty, Corras, Toupet, Coffignal, Pietri, Faciolle, Ménétrier
Contrôleurs ppaux. de 2e cl.-M. M.
Dupoy, Baron de Bouvines, Decusse, Joinie, Cessat, Bourguet, Ulman, Bom- par, Latrasse, Beaugendre, Boné Contrôleurs de lère. cl.-M. M. Préteigne, Adam de Villiers, Vaumoron, Merlenghi, Corby, Nesty, d'Esménard, Raud, Louvet, Blanc, Legras, Barbant, de la Barre de Nanteuil, Jean, Troisgros, Boné, Cavai- gnals, Raud, Coulot, Rougetet, Caraman, Jeandot, Font, Goudey, Noë, de Crous- nilhon, Le Roy de Lenchères, Verron, Desjardins, Kieffer, Borel, Vinay, d'Espé riés, Paujade, Charvot, Giroud
Contrôleurs de 2e. cl.-Géraud, Lamore de Lamirande, Ducos, Lasnet, Roig, Guasco, Mauche de Mablanc, Henry, Chéreau, Griffe, Ladreit de Lacharriere, Fournier, Millard, Anglés, Berthelot, Jacob de Cordemoy, Blay, Boube, Duran, Bardet, Carles, Guy, Pérrier, Perret, Lagourgue, Mercadier, Spéder, Le Car- dinal, Granier, Dupuis, de Lavigne, de Sainte Suzaune, Caille, Le Pelletier, Samareq, Lorin, Caillot Contrôleurs de 3e cl.-Duran, Blanc, Bories, Granier, Marty-Brunet, Dussol, Chauvin, Guého, Dupuis, Baudinat, Canale, Dugommier, Couppé de Lahong rais, François, Caille, Augier, Cazenave, Dumas, Dujon, Zoccolat, Boulain, Rabot, Poy, Dérué, Gro., Juventin, Métour, Ballet, Vergé, Besse de Laromiguière, Berger, Deyine, Morin, Fuquet, Chalibert, Gironce, Jacquet, Boissin, Lecomte Commis-462
Dames comptables--44 Préposés-645
Flottille-16
DIRECTION GÉNÉRALE DES POSTES ET TÉLÉGRAPHES
Directeur Général-Vialet
Inspecteur, Chef du Secrétariat-Hollard Rédacteurs-Duflos, Dorche, Lacroix, à
Grand Pierre Commis-Viallet
Toukin Chef de Service-Brien
Rédacteurs Lorans, Desachy, Brousse,
Marin-Lamellet, Gony, Hauser Commis-Berdoulay
Bureaux:
Hanoi Recette Comptable Principale Receveur Comptable prinpal.-Fustier Commis principaux-Meyssonnier, Bizet,
Rouan, Hennecart
Commis-Fererolle, Lampetaz, Trarieux, Gutwiller, Savelli, Malafosse, Le Saulnier, Bréjet, André, Chevalier, Esparre, De- corsière, Emery, Chappellart, Giovanelli, Michel-Briand, Grolleau, Gros-Burdet, Houzelot, Charon, Dosset
Dames Téléphonistes-Lafaye de Michaux,
Reyes, Faguet
Facteurs-Bastenaire, Auger, Houlard Haiphong
Receveur--Cornu
Commis Principaux-Clemenceau, Rou-
anet,
Commis-Bruey, Clion, Munie, Deck, Savary, Albugues, Barnéoud, Naz Dames Téléphonistes-Drapeau, Dupuiy,
Hautin
Namdinh
Receveur-Sauvage
Bacninh
Receveur-Champ
Laokay
Receveur Lavergne
Doson
Receveur - Alata
Commis Taillefer, Martini
Cochin-Chine
Chef de Service-Désormeaux
SAIGON
Inspecteurs-Vouzellaud, Tourier, Dujan-
tieu,
-
Rédacteurs Husson, Imbert, Salmon,
Bourguignon
Commis principal-Audouin Commis-Culot
Bureaux:
Saigon Recette Comptable
Receveur Comptable-Sirugue Commis Principaux-Casset, Fromaget Frieuret, Fréchard, Lanzelier, Védère Commis-Leydet, Bartoli, Guichet, Al- bert, Bonneau, Renaux, Vial, Ronsin, Cornec, Leylavergne, Handry, Gui liardi, Cazaux, Dhume, Bienvenu, Lasserre, Vabre, Costa, Lála, François, Clément, Pellion
1237
Directeur-Dr. J. Yersin (Nha Trang) Sous Directeur-Dr. Ch. Broquet (Saigon) Bactériologiste-Dr. A. Denier Pharm. Chimiste-L. Bréandat
SERVICE PHARMACEUTIQUE
Pharmaciens Majors de 2e. classe-Mirville,
Bréandat
Do. Aide-Major de le. classe- Jard
Officiers d'Adm. de 2e. classe-Grenier,
Monsexu
CONSEIL DE SANTÉ
Président-Hénuff
Membres-Capus, Mirville, Castagne Secrétaire Erdinger
HÔPITAL COLONIAL ET MILITAIRE DE SAIGON
Dafage, sous-directeur du service de santé
de la Cochinchine
Raoul Dumas, médecin chef de l'hôpital Burdin, médecin traitant
Perrot,
Erdinger,
Tanneur, Le-
Grostilez
Expéditionnaires-Bouscary, Gentil Dames Téléphonistes:
blanc, Viuson, Laforgue
id.
id.
id.
Facteur-Claret
Cap Saint-Jacques
Receveur-Pilon
Cholon
Receveur-Voisin
Chaudoc,
Receveur Moleins
Nhatrang
Receveur-Faujon
Vinh-Long
Receveur-Bascou
Annam
Chef de Service-Raffi
Commis-Voisin
Bureaux :
Recette Comptable de Tourane Receveur Comptable--Sasias
TRÉSORERIE DE COCHIN-CHINE Trésorier Payeur-Gros
Payeur chef de Comptabilité-Sarda Payeur receveur spécial-Descourtis,
SERVICE DE SANTÉ
Médecin p'pal de le, classe-Directeur du service de Santé de la CochinChine, du Cambodge et du Bas-Laos-Henaff Médecin ppal, de 2e. el.-Capus Médecins Majors de le. classe-Hauer,
Jujol, Delassus
INSTITUT PASTEUR Institut de microbiologie, de vaccination antirabique, de vaccine animale jen usrienne, de chimie biologique et de sérothérapie: Ad. Tel. Institut, Saigon
Rebuffat, médecin en sous-ordre Botreau-Roussel, id.
Pharmacien
--
Mirville, Daboratoire de
chimie, Pharmacie principale; Jard, Pharmacie de l'hôpital
DIRECTION GÉNÉRALE DES TRAVAUX
PUBLICS
Circonscription Territoriale de Cochin- Chine
Pouyanne, Ingénieur en chef de 2e. classe,
Ingénieur en chef
Bureau de l'Ingénieur en chef
Chef de Bureau-Fratani, conducteur ppal. Commis principaux-Leroy, Gnanou Commis-Savary, Isidore, Grisoli, Michelot,
Jacquey, Marin, Pierre' Surveillants-Genoud, Laval, Doré
Bureau technique
Fratani, Conducteur ppal. ffous.d'Ingénieur
adjoint à l'Ingenieur en chef Conducteur-Morel
Arrondissement de l'Est
Ingénieur Levavasseur, Ingr. chef de
service 2e classe
Chef de bureau-Gauthier, s/chef de bureau Conducteurs principaux--Millet, Brézet Conducteurs-Bérard, Saraudy, Gauthier,
F., Gandré, Roux, Seltenmeyer Commis principal-Claverie Commis-Duchamp, Monnot Surveillants-Bombonnel, Dupaty, Monta-
gnon
Arrondissement de l'Ouest
Ingénieurs-Bénabenq, Ingénieur auxre.
Tre, classe chef de service
Chef de bureau-Texier, conducteur
1238
SAIGON
Conducteurs ppx.-Etienne, Simonin Conducteurs Peggi, Fenasse, Berthe,
Tastet, Pićtri Commis ppx.---Sambet, Doutre, Appavou Sous-Inspecteur ppal.--Duvivier Commis-Ségot, Godard, Sabatier, Sère Surveillants-Ropion, Ducruet, Triaire
Arrondissement des Bâtiments Civils Architecte Thil, Architecte ppal, chef de
service
Inspecteurs principaux - Moreau, Vila,
Jass
Inspecteurs-Joyeux, Pichou
Commis principal-Meunier
Commis--Barusta, Alquier
Surveillants-Borel, Chartier Capitaine de baliseur-Braun Lieutenant de baliseur-Guéneu Maître de phare--Déchaux Capitaines de port-Duchateau, Dapels Maître de port-Le Boulbin
DIRECTION DE L'AGRICULTURE DES FORETS ET COMMERCE DE L'INDO-CHINE Directeur-Capus
Sous-Directeur Brenier
Direction
Badetty, chef du Secrétariat Guerric, agent commercial, attaché
Surveillants Donzella, Hennion, Louis, Merle, chef de la comptabilité
Albert, Muller
Arrondissement de la Navigation Intérieure
- 4
Ingénieur Bénabenq, Ingénieur auxre.
Ire. classe chef de service
Chef de Bureau-Texier, Conducteur Conducteur principal-Guéry, E. Conducteurs - Letty, Roque,
Pestre, Boromée, Lang
Crépel,
Commis principaux-David, Aroull, Bala-
tier, de Roland, Gilart de Kéranffech Commis-Noncet, Mandon, Delay, Vincent,
Bazillio, Dassibat, Couchot, Fauvelle Surveillants Principaux-Main, Lourme Surveillants-Marie, Jully, Tavard, Guéry,
A., Martin, Antonetti, Kopion, G. Arrondissement de la Navigation Maritime Ingénieur--Réthoré Ingr. auxre. Ire. classe,
ffons d'Ingr. chef de service
Chef de bureau-Bonnemaison, Conduc-
teur principal
Conducteur principal--Pierre
Conducteurs-Courtaux, Perdriaud.
Commis principal-Champon
Commis-Floriícourt, Orlandi
Capit. de baliseur-Levaillant ffons. capit. Lieuten int de baliseur--Fajadet ffons. Mécanicien de baliseur-Poggi, ffons. Surveillants-Ropion L., Briant, Pianelli, Guigon, Claude, Roussel, Mallemouche Phares
Maîtres de phare-Ambrosi, Laridon Gardiens de Phares-Le Mare, Loussert, Tanquerel, Mazzola Natta, Giacomoni, Tibul, Quellenec, Chapuis, Bardou
Ports
Lieutenant de port-Levillain
Maîtres de port-Donsimoni, Cottet, Ollive,
Personnel en Congé
Ingénieur ppal, chef de service--Cazenave Ingénieur auxre. Labadens Architecte auxre.-Genet
―
Conducteurs principaux-Bolliet, Beau,
Ducq. Michel, Verret
---
Conducteurs Lebriac, Kéruel, Ricetti,
Terramorsi, Gripoix, Gonnard
Commis-Bessard, Chatelier, Danės, Mulot,
Tardy, Castillon
Service Agricole et des Laboratoires Lemarié, chef du service
Service d'orestier
Ducamp, chef du service
Service Commercial et Industriel Fetterer, chef du service
Service Vétérinaire
Lepinte, chef du service
POLICE JUDICIAIRE ET ADMINISTRATIVE Commissaire central-Auguste Belland Commissaires Lecœur, Gaudillière, Etic- vant, Maroselli, Paganel Mariot, Fargé, Secrétaires Bonhomme, Poillot, Duval,
Clerc, Veyssier
Brigadiers-Embry, Gelormini, Brigadier Chef Pierrucci
Sous-Brigadiers-Lapeyre (Gabriel), La-
lande, Lapeyre (Pierre) Mons
50 agents européens
2 brigdrs., 11 s.-brigdrs, 105 agts, asiatiques 3 interprètes chinois.
POLICE MUNICIPALE
Inspecteur-Leonardi
Secrétaires Lentali, Arnaud Brigadiers-Botton, Guglielmi, Renaud, Sous Brigadiers--St. Louis, Vacher, Cotta,
Ormières
73 agents européens 37 agents indiens 2 brigadiers indigènes 10 sous rigadier indigènes 120 agents indigènes
SERVICE DES MOEURS
sous brigadier
Inspecteur, chef du service-Christofari 3 agents européens, 1
indigène, 5 agents indigenes
PRISON CENTRALE
Directeur-Boyer
Gardien chef-Aujard
HÔPITAL, DE CHOQUAN (INDIGENE) Directeur-Dr. Ferrandini
Infirmier Gerphagnon
SAIGON
SERVICE JUDICIAIRE EN INDO-CHINE M. G. Michel, Procureur Général chef du
service judiciaire en Indo-Chine
COUR D'APPEL DE L' INDO-CHINE Président-Teulet
Vice-Présidents Dürrwell,
Chambaud,
COUR D'APPEL
1ère et Re Chambres
Teulet, président
Durrwell, vice président
Raffray,
Touossaint de Quievrecourt, conseiller
Naquard
id.
Penx
id.
De Boyer de Ste. Suzanne
id.
Duboys de Laramière
id.
Joyeux
id.
Boyer
id.
Sallé
id.
Soulé, greflier en chef
3e. et 4e. Chambres
Raffray, vice-president
Chambaud, irl.
Baudet, conseiller
Campagnol, id.
Rémond, idl.
Monlezun, id.
Manseneul, id.
PARQUET GÉNÉRAL
Michel, Procureur Général
Beuche, Avocat Général
Lévy, Delestrée, Tillet, Avocats Généraux
Lencou, Barčme, Substituts
Vacher,
Gaye, attaché
Larre, id.
id.
Thermies, secrétaire-général
Lambert, chef du Bureau Judiciaire Grisoli, secrétaire-rédacteur Nollet,
idl.
Décostier, Secrétaire Expéditionnaire Nesly, Secrétaire de Parquet
Petitjean, Bibliothécaire Archiviste
TRIBUNAUX DANS LES PROVINCES
Tribunaux de lère. classe
Mytho-Ricard, juge président
Carré, lieut. de juge
1239
Grihault des Fontaines, procureur de la
République
Schaal, groffier
Haiphong-Carlotti, juge président
Dubreuilh, lieutenant de juge Chabanier, juge suppléant
Dain, procureur de la République ;
Canal, greffier
Tribunaux de 2e, classe
Bentré Bourayne, juge président
Briffant, lieutenant de juge Collet, juge suppléant
Habert, procureur de la République Persius, gréttier
Chaudoc-Mabille, juge président
Guiselin, lieutenant de juge Champroux, juge suppléant
Le Hétel, procureur de la République Boyron, greffier
Cantho-Lacaze, juge président
Peux, lieutenant de juge
Alberti, juge suppléant
Massias, procureur de la République Gauvin, greflier
Longxuyên --Regnault, juge président
Dusson, lieutenant de juge
Pujol, juge suppléant
Thermes, procureur de la République Vasson, greffier
Pnompenh -Dartiguenave, juge président
Hubert, juge suppléant
Tricon, procureur de la République
Charmey, griffier
Soctrang Maugain, juge président
André, lieutenant de juge N., juge suppléant
N. procureur de la République Cazaux, gréffier
Travinh Sazie, juge président
Lacouture, lieutenant de juge Barber St. Hilaire, juge suppléant Lacouture, procureur de la République Ganofsky, gréttier
Justices de Paix à compétence étendue Baclieu-Moisson, juge de paix.
Lejeune, juge suppléant Cléonie, greffier
Bienhoa Loye, juge de paix
Jodin, juge suppléant
Pochont, gréttier
Rachgia--Franceschetti, juge de paix
Mathieu, juge suppléant
Descamps, gréffier
Guy de Ferrières, procureur de la Tayninh-de Rozario, juge de paix,
Delacrois, juge suppléant
République
Laurent, gréther
Vinhlong Révol, juge président
N,, lieutenant de juge
Weill, juge suppléant
Adamolle, procureur de la République
Lebreton, gréffier
Hanoi-Carme, juge président
Morchè, lieutenant de juge
Dubreuil, juge suppléant
Lobrani, juge suppléant; Grimaud,
gréffier
Tourane Niel, juge de paix Lamarque, juge suppléant Locquet-Duquesne, gréffier
NAM-DINH
Gaudin, juge de Paix
Pommier, juge suppléant Tallendeau, gréflier
I
-
I
.
י
H
+
•
+
1240
SAIGON
JUSTICE DE PAIX DE SAIGON
Juge de Paix-Legendre
Grether-Dufaux-Darrius
TRIBUNAL DE SAIGON
Hubert, président
Truteau, vice-président
de St. Michel Demezat, juge d'Instruction
Sazie, juge
Sasias, ic.
Doremus, juge suppléant
Gintzburger
Abor
id.
id.
Baurens, juge suppléant
Pochont, N., greffier
PARQUET DE SAIGON
Auber, procureur de la Rep. Barthé de Sandfort, substitut
Béziat,
id.
SERVICE MARINE DIVISION NAVALE DE L'INDO-CHINE
ETAT-MAJOR
Comdt.en Chef-Jan-Kerguistel, capitaine
de vaisseau
Adjudant de Division-Lesparda, Lieut.
de vaisseau
Commissaire de Division-Bró, commre.
en chef de lère classe Médecin de Division-
Mécanicien de Division:-Bergot, mécani-
cien principal de lère. class
Archives et Cartes-Bignon, Lieut. de
vaisseau
FLOTTILLE DE TORPILLEURS DES
MERS DE CHINE
Commandant Badin,Capitaine de frégate Officier adjoint-Du Bourg, Lieut. de
vaisseau
Commandant les Torpilleurs Coüy,
Lieut.de vaisseau
Second des Torpilleurs-Gélis, Enseigne
de vaisseau
Mécanicien du service Central
Mécanicien principal de 2e. cl.
--
Objois,
Médecin Major Chalibert, Médecin de
lére cl.
STATION DES SOUS-MARINS Commandant - Lemoine Lieutenant de
vaisseau
DÉFENSE FIXE
Commandant Changeux, Lieut. de veau.
DIRECTION DES MOUVEMENTS DU PORT DE GUERRE
Directeur-Capronnier, Lieut. de veau. Officier adjoint--Casimir, adjudant ppal.
ARSENAL
Directeur des Travaux-Laucon, Ingénieur
en chef de 2ème classe Commissaire-Brò, Commissaire en chef
de lére classe
Médecin-
Ingénieurs-Lancou, Ingénieur de lére el.
Id. -Sérierfe, id. de 2e. cl. Commissaire adjoint-Ceillier, Commis
saire de lère classe
Agent Comptable-Laperfronie, agent de
2e. classe
Agent Comptable--Buso, agent de lére cl. Agent Administratif-Mornu, agent de
2e. classe
CONTRÔLE RÉSIDENT Arnauld, Contrôleur de 2e classe chef du
Contrôle
SERVICE DU PILOTAGE Chef du Service-Casta Lumio, pilote major Pilotes-Bruno, Perchel, Duliot, Castellani,. Amadéi, Fangeau, Feydel, Fangeau, Guigon, Herigoyen, Massabot, Matté, Le Merdy, Laurentie, Peintre, Feydel, de la Souchère, Benatre, Lafon, Daniel,. Le Hébel, Antoni
Elèves pilotes-Frangeul, Andic
COMPOSITION DES SERVICES MILITAIRES EN COCHINCHINE
3me Brigade
Commandant de la Brigade --- Général
de Beylie
Officier d'Ordonnance-Lieutenant Allard
Etat-Major
Chef d'Etat-Major Chef d'Escadron
Landlais
Capitaines-Duplat, Dominé
1le. RÉGIMENT D'INFANTERIE COLONIALE Commandant-Colonel Diguet
Chef de Bataillon Major--Commdt. Huron-
Durocher
Trésorier Capitaine Habert
Adjoint au Trésorier Lieutenant Rossat
Premier Bataillon
Chef de Bataillon-Marcajour
Adjudant Major-Drincomt Capitaines-Mouriés, Umbricht Montageu Gayda, Unrois, Bachellez, Grall, Amalric Lieutenants-Calvy Buffalan
Deuxième Bataillon Chef de Bataillon-Dagnaux Adjudant Major-Momiés Capitaines-Hitar, Bodez, Drincomt Lieutenants-de Loreido, Truffert, Barck- hausen, Michel, Duffaud, Gondonneix, Brison
Troisième Bataillon Chef de Bataillon-Esselin Adjudant Major-Piard
SAIGON
Capitaines-Goumaire, l'iard, Donalin Lieutenants Deplace, Barrial du Breuil, Saunier, Simonin, Desgruelles, Le Poiz
Quatrième Bataillon
Chef de Bataillon--Fialix Adjudant Major-Umbricht Capitaines Paul, Fro-chen, Frichon,
Benoist
Lieutenants-Larminá, Linot de Moirat, Drouan Noël, Gabaret, Jean, Motte Paillard
le. RÉGIMENT DE TIRAILLEURS ANNAMITES Commandant-Colonel Ronget
Chef de Btn. Major-Commdt. Rott Trésorier Capitaine Rousseau
Adjoint au Trésorier Lieutenant Bumel
Officer d'Habillement Lt. Tagnon
Premier Bataillon
Chef de Bataillon--Riquier Adjudant Major-Kerler
Capitaines-Sanyas, Crébessac, Mengin, Arnoulx de P'frey, Hugan Jabre, Cas- sany, Jouanno, Regnier, Babe, Bollud,
Bostien
Deuxième Bataillon
Chef de Bataillon-Gay
Adjud nt Major-Buisson
Capitaines
Guillermeau Lieuts. Couturier, Hanne, Grégoire, Bou- chet, Neuville, Argence, Coudert, Person, Dion, Le Gros
Tessier, Saillard, Princet,
Troisième Bataillon
Chef de Bataillon-Crepin Baudier de
Beauregard
Adjudant Major-Allard
Capits. Tiffon, Milhau, Triol, Pochelu Lieutenants-Coville, Cros, Abonneau, Bénéthulies, Laralled, Muller, Tulasne, Vonau, Magnenet, Saddier
Quatrième Bataillon
Chef de Bataillon- Chapuis, Adjudant
Major
Capts-Caillet, Gaubert, Bron, Tessier Lieutenants
Olliron, Haran, Valmary, Mastin Pierlot, Basse, Brioulé, Rousset, Morere, Alexandre, Garnier de Laroche, Bouillé, Marfraing
5e. RÉGIMENT D'ARTILLERIE COLONIALE Commandants-Colonel Richard Lieut. Colonel- Delestre Chef d'Escadron Major--Chef d'Escadron
Doré
Trésorier-Capitaine Berngoni, Adjoint
au Trésorier-Viollet
Officer d'Habillement-Lit. Simmendinger Médecins-majors-Cadet, Bernoud
1ère. Batterie (SAIGON) Capitaine-Blaquières Chiriet Lieutenents-Bour, Brossier, de Durand
2e. Batterie (SAIGON)
1241
Capitaine Cuisenier Jean Lieutenants-Royol, Chounot, Hillaireau 4e. Batterie (SAIGON)
Capitaines-Marchat, Petit Lieutenant--de Godon
5e. Batterie (CAP SAINT-JACQUES) Capitaines-Quefelu, Duhantois Lieutenants-Berdalle, Penniel
Ge. Batterie (SAIGON) Capitaines-Tixier, Poinat Lieutenant-Mangard
Te. Batterie (SAIGON) Capitaines--Bourgoin, Le Maguet Lieutenants Raron, Sebillot
8e. Batterie (Car ST.-JACQUES) Capitaine Gerard Lieutenants-Escalle, Benoist
9e. Batterie (CAP ST. JACQUES) Capitaine-Pierre Lieutenants--Eisserpe, Gaud
10e. Batterie (SAIGON)
Capitaines-Bouneaud, Baud Lieutenants-Ardisson, Rendu
11e. Batterie (CAP ST. JACQUES) Capitaine Vast
Lieutenants-Grapin, Petit
12e. Batterie (CAP ST. JACQUES) Capitaine Durnerin Lieutenants-Gabriel, Téopinas
DIRECTION D'ARTILLERIE Directeur-Colonel Barraud
Sous Directeur-Lit. Colonel Bonaccorsi
Sous Direction Permanente
Chef d'Escadron --Vuillard Capts.-Ledoux, Andouit, Genez, Lehuby Sous Direction Temporaire Chef d'Escadron-Schultz
Capitaines--Colas, Lemercier. Denys, Co-
queugmot
Offices d'Adsn. - Charbonnier, Niochet, Toyon, Perlier, Vergé, Ventadour, Labouéric Aymé, Brunet, Volage, Le crirain, Mercier, Minnel, Aubry, Árçon
Te Compagnie d'ouvriers Capitaine-Suche; Lieutenant-Berthon
Compagnie au Génie Capitaine-Buhour Officiers d'administration-
SERVICE DE SANTÉ
Sous Directeur--Lafage Médecin Adjoint-Periot Pharmaciens-Mirville, Jard
Officier d'Adsn.--Grenier-Monseau
INSTITUT PASTEUR
Directeur-- Bréaudat
Pharmacien-Broc
HOPITAL DE SAIGON
Médecin Chef-Dumas
Médecins Majors-Bindin, Masotte, Perrot
ד
է
-
1242
Erdinger, Grofillez, Rebufat, Botreau Officier d'Adsn.-
HOPITAL DE CHOQUAN
Médecin Chef--Mull
Médecin Adjoint-
AMBULANCE DU CAP St. JACQUES
Médecin Chef-Jojaux
AMBULANCE DE MYTHO
Médecin Chef--Roche
INTENDANCE DES TROUPES COLONIALES (Services Administratifs)
Sous Directeur-Even
SAIGON
SECRÉTARIAT GÉNÉRAL
Sous Intendants - Lacouture, Mastel,
Gailhac
Adjoint & l'Intendance--Douenel Néel, de
Laubière, Michel, Lettée
Officiers d'Adsn.--Millet, Casabianca BRIGADE DE GENDARMERIE DE COCHINCHINE Commandant de l'Arrondissement-Capt.
Lelierse
le. Conseil de Guerre Rapporteur-Capitaine Gury Greffier-Adjudant Campistron
2e. Conseil de Guerre Rapporteur-Capitaine Kieffer Greffier Sergent Conjo
:
SERVICES ADMINISTRATIFS MILITAIRES COCHIN-CHINE ET CAMBODGE Sous-Directeur de l'Intendance-Nogués
Sous-Intendant-militaire de lère, classe des Troupes Coloniales
Secrétariat-Officier de l'Administration de l'Intendance des Troupes Coloniales Sous-Intendance (Personnel) Sous-Intendant-militaire de 3e. classe des
Troupes Coloniales Lacouture Officiers D'Admin.-dlc 2e. classe de
Laubière, de 3e cl. Michel
Sous Intendance (Appromission's.) Adjoint l'Intendance des Troupes Co-
loniales--Douenel-Neel
Attaché lère. classe a l'Intendance des
Troupes Coloniales-
Officier d'Admin. de 2e. classe-Pasteur Officier d'Admin. comptable de 2e. classe-
Severin
VILLE DE SAIGON
CONSEIL MUNICIPAL
Gigon-Papin, Maire
Maurice-Ter. adjoint Richaud 2ème. id.
Conseillers,--Cuniac Dupont, Mon- tégout, Tréfaut, Labbé, Perlié, Ri- maud, Massari, Duom, Nghiem, Kinh, Kiệt
Fournier, secrétaire général Wirth, commis
1er. Bureau (Comptabilité communale)
Lansac, chef du bureau Bertrand, commis
Massoulie,
id.
Vincensini, icl.
Donnart
id.
Ducouret, idl.
Gabouty, chargé du contrôle des voi-
tures publiques et des barques Foudere, chargé de la perception des taxes de quais et de trottoirs, et du contrôle des marchands asiatiques Navarre, regisseur général des mar-
chés en régis
2e. Bureau (Etat Civil, élections, hygiene et
salubrité publiques)
Cardi, chef de bureau Faure, commis
St.- Pol, id.
SERVICES TECHNIQUES (Voirie, service des
eaux, eclairage public)
Roche, agent-voyer
Pie, commis
Vally, id.
Julien, contrôleur du service des eaux de la Giraday, contrôleur du service de
l'éclairage
Piqueurs
Barthélemy, Costebonnel, Lorenzi, Mattei, Petrocchi, Plantier, Rabier, Ruffier
Ausilia, mécanicien Grandvincent, id.
Matard, agent du culture, chargé des jardins et plantations de la ville Service des Bâtiments CommUNAUX Bec, architecte
Raguenand, gardien-comptable des
magasins et des ateliers municipaux Bouvet, gardien-comptable de l'abat-
toir
Giorgi, conservateur du théatre muni-
cipal
Franchi, conservateur des cimetières
SERVICES MÉDICAUX
R. Montel, médecin de l'Etat-Civil et des fonctionnaires municipaux, chargé du service des épidémies, de la clinique gratuite et de la natalité indigène
Flandin, médecin chargé du dispen-
saire municipal
SERVICE VÉTÉRINAIRE
Services vétérinaire chargé du service
des abattoirs
DISPENSAIRE MUNICIPAL
Marie-Paul, soeur supérieure
Marguerite, soeur
Claire, soeur
R. P. Lambert, aumônier
RECETTE MUNICIPALE
SAIGON
Le Trésorier-Payeur de la Cochin Chine
ffons de Receveur municipal Pierrat, M. payeur-adjoint
POLICE MUNICIPALE
Belland, comsre, central
Lecoeur, id. du ler arrondissement Gaudilliere, id. du Ze
icl.
id.
Paganel, id. du 3e
AYMARD, Ne., Notaire -Rue Mac Mahon
Bouchen, secrétaire, notaire p.i.
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE
M. M. G. Mayer, Inspecteur, f. fons de
Directeur
J. Perreau, directeur (en congé)
J. Yver de la Bruchollerie, sous direc., L. Trincavelli, controleur
Ch. Gaudiot, chef de la Comptabilité J. Demay, caissier
L. Chevretton, caissier
J. Grenard, chef de la Correspondance Duperret, Agent auxiliaire
J. Lino,
J. Belier,
clerk
do.
Agence de Pnom-Penh
M. M. A. Lecot, directeur p. i.
Gannay, caissier
Agence de Battambang
M. M. Varin, directeur p. i.
Bronder, caissier
BAZAR SAIGONNAIS--Rue Catinat, 96 à 108
A. Courtinat et Cie. Jassociés
J. Créniault
C. Desvignes
L. Crozel
Mme. Malavois
Mme. Autret
Mme. Moreau
BERTHET, JULES, Négociant-Bd. Charner
Tel. Ad: Berthet
B. Garriguene, signs per pro.
G. Schell
A. Pecarrère
G. Du Haut-Cilly
Bézard
Vialar
Pinaire
François
Canavagio
Moulin Boireau
Biasini
Marie
Agencies
Cie. d'Assurances L'Urbaine
Cie, d'Assurances L'Union (Paris)
1243 +
BIEDERMANN & Co., E., Merchants--Saigon
and Hanoi
E. Biedermann
Otto Schoch, signs per pro. Othmar Speck,
M. Biedermann
H. Jenny
A. Beyer
H. Kellersberger E. Guyer
W. Keppler
Agencies
do. do.
Law, Union & Crown Insurance Co. Mannheimer Vers. Ges, o Mannheim General Insce. Co. of Dresden, Berlin .Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada
BLANC, MME., Modes-Boulevard Charner
Bertoz, docteur en Droit, secrétaire
BOCK, PIERRE, Exploitations Forestières Commission, Représentation-11, Rue Cornulier Lucinière
BONNEFOY ET CIE., CHET L., Négotiants Commission, Exportation, Articles d'Usine, Metaux, Quincaillerie, Ciment et Articles divers. Fabrique de Carreaux en Ciment et Mosaique Vénetienne
Ch. Bonnefoy, signs the firm L. Bonnefoy,
Benaveng, sigus per pro. Pindhomme
do.
BONNET, CHARLES, Entreprise Générale de Travaux et Fournitures (ancienne maison H. Péré) Rues Cornulier- Lucinière, Amiral Dupré, Pasteur et Boulevard Bonnard
Lamorte, dessinateur décoratr. artist Yusa, ameublement
Appassamy, caissier comptable
Pierre, comptable interprète
Héral, surveillant des travaux Divi, magasinier comptable Arokiom, comptable
Agence
Brevet's "Septick Tank" pour l'épura-
tion biologique
BRUE ET TOURNIAIRE, "Hótel des Ventes, Commissaires priseurs-Rue Catinat
BRUE, URBAIN, Commissaire-priseur
BRUN, ELOI, Carriage and Harness Maker
-Boulevard Charmer, 110
BUREAU VERITAS
N. Le Coispellier (Messageries Fluvs.),
agent
CAFÉ DE LA ROTONDE
Herbart et Grilhon, propriétaires
L
:
1244
CAFÉ DE LA TERRASSE
Mme. Defforge, propriétaire
CAFÉ DES COLONIES, Rue Nationale
Leseigneur, propriétaire
CAFÉ HOTEL
Mme. Mallet, propriétaire
SAIGON
CAFÉ-HOTEL DE LA MARINE-Place de
Rigault de Genouilly
Z. Angrand, propriétaire
CAFÉ MODERNE-Bds. Charner et Bonnard
Mme. Bonifay, propriétaire
CALLAMAND, Coiffeur Rue Catinat
CAZAL, DABENE & CIE.
Fabrique d'eaux gazeuses de sirops
et liqueurs--Rue d'Ormay, 76-78
CERCLE COLONIAL
Président-Renoux Vice-Président-Moyaux Trésorier Foucque
Secrétaire
Bernat
Bibliothécaire-Ourgaud
Commissaires-Costebonnel, Frichard,
Grenier, Moleins, Rigal
CHAMBRE DE COMMERCE
Bureau
Président Jacque Vice-Président-L. Gage Secrétaire-G. Renoux Trésorier Ch. Graçon Membres-Ascoli Garriguene, Bon
nefoy, du Crouzet, Lacaze, Dupont,
Rauzy, Rousseau, Tranvan-Kiet,
Sécretariat
Secrétaire-Archiviste-A. Coquerel Secrétaire-Adjoint- Guilloraùlt
Dactylographe-Mlle, R. de Jesus
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA-Tel. Ad: Spectacle T. C. Downing, Acting Agent
J. P. Scott, sub-accountant A. C. Times
CHEMINS DE FER DE SAIGON A MYTHO, Société Générale des Tramways à vapeur
B de Cochin-Chine, concessionnaire-Siége Social Rue St. Lazare 24, Paris Conseil d'Administration
Président A. Weil Vice-Président A. Cornu
Membres-Guissez, Ogliastro, Lévy
Comte de Maupeou
Exploitation
L. Cazeau, directeur
Payet, Chapius, Pochont, chefs de gare: Maestracci, Lino, chefs de trains
Girard, Chef de services techniques
Boardes, caissier
Cazcau, chef de bureau
H. Badin, sous-inspecteur
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LD.-
2, Rue Catinat
H. C. Colman, représentation for Indo-
Chine
Compagnie dle Commerce et de Naviga
tion d'Extreme-Orient
(Allatini & Co.,) agents
CIE. COLONIALE D'EXPORTATION, Marchand
de Tissus-Rue Catinat
Rivière, directeur
CIE.DESCHARGEURSREUNIS-2, RueCatinat;
Tel. Ad: Chargeurs
R. Rouelle, agent général
René Duchateau Brunet
S. Saravane
M. Saravane
CLAUDE & CIE., Imprimerie et Librairie,
editeurs-Rue Catinat, 119-129
Condurier, signs the firm
F. Moutégout, do.
COMBES, L., Négociant-Rue Catinat, 7-11
COMPAGNIE DE COMMERCE ET DE NAVIGA- TION D'EXTREME-ORIENT, Société Anonyme-Capital Deux Millions de Francs (Anciens Etablissements Allatini & Cie. et Compagnie Française de Cabotage des Mers de Chine)-Siége Social: 21 Rue Vignon, Paris; Direction Générale: 120 Rue de Rome, Marseille
A. Bloch, président du conseil d'admi-
nistration
G. Allatini, administrateur Ed. Allatini, do.
G. Fernandez, administrateur délégué V. Ascoli,
do.
do.
L. Launay,
do.
do.
A. Vimont,
do.
Cte. R. de Vogüé,
do.
H. Hoffet,
do.
J. Galula,
do.
Ed. de la Chesnais, do.
David Jessula, directeur
R. Mathée
Jacques Jessula
M. Ehrhardt F. Waespé L. Ducroiset S. Joseph
M. Joseph
R. Couturiau
G. Pierret
E. Califano L. Amillae G. Cheminaud J. Moustié Martini
**
Steamers
"Phu-Yen " Binh-Thuan
Agencies
כל
SAIGON
PORTUGAL
SIAM
The China Mutual Life Ins. Co., Ld. The Union Ins. Society of Canton, Ld. The North China Insce. Co., Ld. Alfred Holt & Co., Liverpool The Ocean Steamship Co., Ld. The China Mutual Steam Navigation
Company, Limited
COMPAGNIE DES EAUX ET D'ELECTRICITÉ DEL'INDO-CHINE,Société Anonyme--Siege Social: Paris, Rue Taitbout, 23; Usine des eaux de la ville de Saigon
Guieu, ingénieur et directeur général
Hue, ingénieur directeur de l'usine
COMPAGNIE FRANÇAISE DE TRAMWAYS
(Indo-Chine)
J. Lecarde, directeur
P. Le Fur, caissier comptable E. Durant, chef de Depot
Harel, chef d'Atelier
R. Federhpil, magasinier comptable
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA
Consul-F. Fischer
Acting Consul-Fr. Funk
BELGIUM
Consul-L. Cazeau
DENMARK
Consul-L. Stang
GERMANY-44 Quai de l'Arroyo Chinois
Acting Consul-W. Speidel
GREAT BRITAIN
Vice-Consul-J. L, O'Connell
ITALY
Consul-Lucien Ogliastro E. Saliège, gerant
JAPAN
Consul-E. Saliège
NETHERLANDS
Consul-D. G. Röst
NORWAY
Consul-L. Stang
1245
Acting Consul-N. Le Coispellier
Consul-L. Stang
Acting Consul-L. R. Gage
SPAIN
Vice-Consul-N. Le Coispellier
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consul-
Vice-Consul-Miller Joblin
CORMOD, Pharmacien-Rue Catinat, No.
138 à 142
COUDURIER & MONTEGOUT, Imprimerie et
Libraire, editeurs, Rue Catinat, 119-129
Coudurier, signs the firm Montégout,
id.
COURRIER SAIGONNAIS, LE, Journal par- aissant les lundis, mardis, jeudis et ven- dredis Boulevard Norodom, 16
J. Ferrière, directeur
Edouard Albert, secrétaire de la
rédaction
Jean Ajalbert, corpdt. parisien Paul Valériau et Audré Boyer, cor-
respondants à Marseille
Crespin, Dr. L.
Droguerie--produits photographiques
CUNIAC, Lawyer--Rue Pellerin
R. Cazeau, secretary
DEJEAN DE LA BATIE, T., Lawyer, Cantho
DEJEAN DE LA BATIE, T., Surgeon--Rue
Boulevard Bonnard
DENIS FRÈRES, Merchants-Saigon
Alphonse Denis (Bordeaux) Aimé Fonsales,
L. R. Gage (Saigon)
L. Stang
H. Blanc
J. Billioque
Rousseau
Colin
Girollet
Gallet Colas Cateaux P. Brézet Desvignes R. Brézet Arnoussamy
Agencies
do.
do.
Cie. Havraise Peninsulaire de Navign. Navigazione Generale Italiana
Comité des Assureurs Maritimes de
Bordeaux
·
1246
SAIGON
Comité des Assurs. Maritimes de Havre Comité des Assureurs Maritimes de
Marseille
La Confiance Fire Insurance Co. La Foncière Marine Insurance National Marine Insurance Assn., Ld. South British Fire and Marine Insce. Merchants' Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Union Assurance Society Royal Exchange Assurance
Societé Française des Charbonnages
du Tonkin
Vacuum Oil Company Ld. Remington Typewriter Societé Decanville
DENNEMONT, MME, "Au petit bon marché"
-Rue Catinat
DESCOURS, A. CABAUD ET CIE-1, Quai
de l'Arroyo Chinois
F. Filhol, manager, signs per pro. M. Bergier,
J. Bourrat
L. Ratinet
E. Reverchon
R. Diehl
do.
DIETHELM & Co., Ld., Merchantsand Comm.
Agts. Quai de l'Arroyo Chinois, 23
W. H. Diethelmu (Zurich)
J. van Lohuizen (Amsterdam) E. Hottinger,
D. G. Roest,
C. Frey signs per pro.
J. J. C. de Wolff do.
H. Wohnlich
R. Th. Stuivinga
H. Wiget
Branch Houses at Singapore and Bangkok; Diethelm, & Co. Zurich
Agencies
Bank of Rotterdam
Netherlands Fire Insurance Co.
Baloise Fire Insurance Co. of Basle
Loudon Assurance Corporation
British & Foreign Marine Insurance Co. New Zealand Insurance Co. Manchester Fire Insurance Co. Samarang Sea and Fire Ince. Co. Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Continental Insurance Co., Mannheim Sabang Bay Coaling Station Java-China-Japan Line Pulo Laut Coal Co.
Fraser Neave's Aerated Waters
DUMAREST ET FILS, Merchants, Import
Export-Quai Francis Garnier
A. Rimaud, directeur
A. Sechaud Thimonier Lechenet
Dupré
Tisceront Lebretton (Pnompenh) Morati,
idl.
DUPONT BRON & GRÉGORI, Constructeurs, Mécaniciens Entrepreneurs-Teleph.No. 95; Tel. Ad: Dubrogre
DOVAL, Lawyer-Rue Pellerin
ENGLER & Co., F., Merchants--Quai de
l'Arroyo Chinois and Rue d'Adran
Frederic Engler
Eduard Engler
(Frankfurt o/M)
do.
Th. Rullmann, signs the firm, do. Ed. Henel,
do.
Saigon Fr. Funk, signs the firm, Saigon
E. Brunner, signs per pro.
S. Kahl
H. Zeltmann,
O. Fader
K. Francke
Agencies
do.
Deutsch-Asiatische Bank Siam Commercial Bank, Ld. Austrian Lloyd's Steam Nav. Co. Stoomvaartmaatschappy Nederland Sun Insurance Office, London Commercial Union Assurance Co. Northern Assurance Co., London State Fire Insce. Co., Ld., Liverpool South British Fire and Marine Ins. Co. Salamander Insce. Co., Amsterdam Norddeutsche Insurance Co. Hamburg Prussian National Fire Ins. Co., Stettin General Accident, Fire & Life Assce.
Co., Limited London
Baden Marine Insce. Co., Mannheim Oesterreichische Elementar Vers. A.G..
Wien
National General Insce. Co. London Netherlands Trading Society International Sleeping Car Company
(Tran-Siberian)
ERNST, A., Import and Export (Successeur
de A. Clonet & Co.)
Ch. Ernst
FAURE, E.,
Catinat, 175
Confiseur-patissier - Rue
FIGARO, A'Salon de Coiffeur et Parfumeur
Mie. C. Ardiu
FORAY, Docteur en Droit, Avocât - Rue
Pellerin
GIGON-PAPIN, Notaire-71, Rue Pellerin
SAIGON
GLACIÈRES D'INDO-CHINE, Brasserie et Fa- brique de Boissons Gazeuses, Entrepôts Frigorifiques, Usines à Saigon etholon (Cochin-Chine) Haiphong et Hanoi (Tonkin) Tourane (Annam) et Prom- Penh (Cambodge)
Larue Frères, propriétaires Caillol, ingénieur directeur
Laggriffoul, chef d'entretien (Saigon)
Ricq,
Sliobey,
Simon,
Allégre,
do. (Cholon)
dlo.
do.
(Hanoi) (Haiphong)
do. (Pom-Penh)
GRAF, JACQUE & CIE., Négociants, Industriels Maison More à Paris-Rue Martel, 4; Succursales à Saigon: 65 Rue Catinat; Pnompenh; Ateliers à Kanhoi-Saigon; Tel. Ad: Vorbaud
E. Graf (Paris)
L. Jacque (Saigon)
F. A. Delost, signs per pro. Vatté
H. Fambon, comptable
Courtot, caissier
Bidard, commis
Cero,
icl.
de Roland, id.
Baboulaz id.
Breton
Allignol,
id.
id.
H. Hibry, signs per pro. (Pnompenh) Delfargueil
Cuzin, commis
Douvry (Khanhoi) ingénieur les arts
et manufactures (E.C.P.)
Escaftre Lagravère
GRAMMONT, MME. Sucer. Confections-
Lingerie 114, Boulevard Charner
Grand Hotel Continental ET RES-
TAURANT-Rue Catinat (ler, ordre)
Directeur E. Ferandy, du Gd. Hotel
de Paris
GRAND HOTEL DES NATIONS- Boulevards
Charner et Bonnar
Pancrazi, propriétaire
GRANGE, MME. P., Succr.
Paul Lorin, fondé de pouvoir
GUILLERAULT,
CA
Bazaar Parisien "-Rue
Catinat
HALE & Co., W. G., Merchants--Quai de PArroyo Chinois (Established 1858); Coal Depot: Tamhoi
J. L. O'Connell, proprietor and mgr.
1247
M. A. C. O'Connell, signs per pro. L. A. O'Connell
do.
R. D. Hunter, accountant M. Gallois Montbrun
A. Peux
R. De Heauline
Agencies
Aktiebolaget Stockholms Diskonto
bank, Stockholm
Lloyd's, London
Liverpool Underwriters Association Board of Underwriters, New York National Board of Marine Under-
writers, New York
China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld. Cercle Lyonnais d'Assurances
Comité des Asurs. Maritimes d'Anvers General Insurance Co. (Assicurazioni
Generali Trieste)
Frankfurter Transport Uufall & Glas
V. A. Gesellschaft
London Salvage Association
Liverpool Salvage Association Liguria Mue. Insurance Co., Genoa La Estrella, Sociedad de Segmos, Car-
tagena
Reliance Insurance Company
Società Italiana Assicurazione Mar-
itima, Torino
Societá "Italia," Genoa
Società Italiana "Savoia" Torino Société Russe d'Assurance maritimes,
fluviales et terrestres
Tokio Marine Insurance Company, Ld, Ocean Marine Insurance Co. Ld. Salamandra Ince. Co., St. Petersburg Underwriting and Agency Association United Ince. Co., Lloyd's Austrian Western Clubs, Topsham
China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. North British & Mercantile Insce Co. Royal Insurance Company, Liverpoo! Apear & Co., Steamers
Barber's Line of steamers British India S. N. Co.
Bombay Steam Navigation Company
**
Ben "Line of Steamers
Canadian Pacific Railway & S. S. Co. "Castle" Line of Steamers
China Merchants S. N. Co.
China Shippers M. S. N. Company Boston S. S. Co.
China Navigation Company
China Manila Steamship Co., Ld.
Douglas Steamship Company, Ld.
K
Eastern and Australian S. S. Co., Ld.
Gibb Line of Steamers
Glen" Line of Steamers
Indra Line of Steamers
Millburn's Line of Steamers
Mogul Steamship Company
Mitsu Bishi Steamers
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Northern Pacific Steamship Co.
7248
SAIGON
Occidental and Oriental Steamship Co. Osaka Shosen Kaisha S.S. Co. Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co. Pacific Mail Steamship Company Portland and Asiatic S.S. Co. Shire Line of Steamers Straits Steamship Company Toyo Kisen Kaisha S.S. Co.
Tan Kim Tian S.S. Co., Ld. (S'pore) Union Line of Steamers Warrack Line of Steamers
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING COR-
PORATION Quai de l'Arroyo Chinois.
A. M. Reith, agent
A. Perrin
H. H. Kopsch
P. Lasoli
HOTEL DE L'UNIVERS, et Grands Magasins
d'Approvisionements-Rues
Catinat, Ture et Vannier, Place du Rond- Point de Genouilly, Ollivier & Cie; Tel. Ad: Mottet
Mottet & Cie, successeurs
G. M. Mottet, directeur general
HOTEL DU GRAND BALCON-Rue Nationale
HOTEL ET CAFÉ MERIDIONAL-Boulevard
Charner, 3, 5, 7
HOTEL ET CAFÉ DE LA MUSIQUE-Grand
Rue Catinat et Boulevard Bonnard
Huguenin C., Marchands de Bois
C. Huguenin Charton, gérant
HUGUENIN & VUATTOUX, Horlogerie, Bijou- terie, Armes et Munitions-Rue Catinat
IMPRIMERIE COMMERCIALE--Ruc Catinat
82-84-80
Rey, propriétaire
INDO-CHINE FRANÇAISE ET LA PRESSE INDO-CHINOISE réunies, JournalQuotidien
KLOSS & Co., Merchants-Quai de l'Arroyo
Chinois, 16, and Cholon Walter Kloss (absent) A. Pfeifer, signs per pro. Oscar Pfeifer
Bong
Chan Swee Lim
Tap Chah Teck
Agency
Hongkong Daily Press
"L'OPINION," Journal quotidien indépen
dant-195, 187, Rue Catinat
L. Héloury, directeur propriétaire
A. Ondot, administrateur
do.
A. C. Piaget,
LA MUTUELLE DE FRANCE ET DES COLONIES, Assurance sur la Vie-Rue Ohier, No. 6
Pottecher, agent
LACAZE, G., Wine Merchant and Store-
keeper--Rue Catinat, 17
E. Lacaze, manager
L. Bonchetti, clerk A. Gallien,
A. Michel,
do.
do.
LANGLOIS, Coiffeur-Rue Catinat, 75-77
LEGUAY, Process Server-Bd. Charner, 84
LIBRAIRIE-PAPETERIE COMMERCIALES-Rue
Catinat et l'Or may
Anne. Mon. Rey, Curiol & Cie. et J. Brunet
Marcelin Rey
Paul Lorin, fondé de pouvoir
LUYA, J., Gérances d'Immeubles--22 Rue
Taberd, Bureau d'affaires
Depositaire pour l'Extreme-Orient
du Pepto-fer Jaillet
du Vin Mariani, à la Coca
MAN CHEUNG YUEN, USINE À RIZ--Quai
de Mytho
Lun Luc, dit Nam Long, directeur Suchuong (To' Tong), superintendant Lassen, mécanicien-en-chef
MASONIC
CHAPITRE 38 Rue Taberd, Saigon
Tr. Sage-Roché
le. Gr. Gardien-Philip 2e. Gr. do. Tréfaut Chev. d'Eloquence-Joyeux
Secrétaire-Sabourain Gr. Exp. Gremaud Trésorier Pieguet Hospitalier-Moraux
*
11
11
LOGE LE RÉVEIL DE L'ORIENT-38, Rue
Taberd
Vénérable-L. Philip
Premier surveillant--Joyeux Second surveillant-Nelson
Orateur-Jouanal Trésorier-E. Faciolle Secrétaire Albert Hospitalier-Chassagnoux
LOGE LES FERVENTS DU PROGRÉS,
Venerable L. Philip
le, surveillant-Joyeux 2e. surveillant-Nelson
SAIGON
1240
Orateur-Jouanal
Trésorier-E. Faciolle
Secrétaire-Albert
Hospitalier Chassagnoux
MARQUIE, PAUL, Avocât défenseur---24,
Rue Tabert
MAZET A. E.-Rue Nationale
Jean Mazet, comptable J. Nasuhé, id.
Louis Noorkhan, placier
MERCIER, Shipchandler--Ruc Cutinat, 3
MESSAGERIES FLUVIALES DE COCHIN-CHINE -Siege Social: Paris, Rue Taitbout, 43 Conseil d'Administration
L. de Tinseau, président
F. Bernard, administrateur délégué Borysewicz, administrateur Legris, secrétaire général Exploitation à Saigon
A. Littaye, directeur de l'exploitation
(en congé)
N. Le Coispellier, directeur de l'ex-
ploitation Quesuel,
id.
F. Michel-Villaz, contrôleur général,
chef de la comptabilité
A. Fabry, chef d'atelier
S. Marguerie, capitaine d'armement
P. Veyssier, sous-chef de la compé. G. Girard, econome Beaumont, commis L. Christophe, caissier Bonger, sous-chef d'atelier
C. Grossette, contremaître d'atelier Gery, contremaitre d'atelier Bayle, commis
J. Navarre, comptable
C. Chambon,
L. le Guidec,
id. idl.
A. Trong, sténo-dactylographe
L. Legoff, agent principal du Laos à
Savannakhet
J. Francon, agent à Bangkok (Siam) G. Lignel, agent à Pnompenh (Cam-
bodge)
Dervillee, agent à Bac-Préal (Cam-
bodge)
D'Hennezel, agent à Mytho Mottet, agent a Cantho Lienart, id. à Kratié Brunet, id. à Stungtreng Chabert, id. à Khône G. Ricau, id. à Paksé
Tinel, id. à Vientiane
Artigas, id. à Luang-Prabang Dupont, comptable à Khône
Bazire,
id.
Benquet, comptable à Savannakhet Zuccarrelli, chef d'atelier à Sa-
vannakhet
VAPEURS
Tableau de la Flottille des Messageries
Fluviales de CochinChine
F
**Donai " "Mékong "Nam-Vian 31
Battambang
Attulo "
+
"Namky
"Annam 15
"Hainan "
**Khmer "
"Bossie
J:
--
*Francis Garnier
**Mouhot"
**Pélican" *Vien-Chan "+ Garcerie
EL
"Colombert "
OF
Trentinian
VAPKORS "Massie" "Pluvier
FI
"Hirondelle "
Bengali
** Mouette" "Ibig " "Cygne "Sarcelle
*
53
"Cormoran "
**Flamant "
+1
"P
Cigogne **Marabout
Alcyon
13
*Albatros " "Petrel
"Gooland
E
'Gongearl'
FJ
Vapeurs faisant le Service de la Rade
EL
Aigrette "Sirène "Songké ** Colibri
י
13
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES
H
Tonlésap **Heron " "Fourni
Mesange
F
FA
Maurice, agent principal
נ,
(For Local Strs. See end of Directory)
MICHEL, F., Bijouterie, Armes et Munitions
Artifices-Rue Catinat, 32, 34, 36
Littaye, inspecteur général
J. Pécourt, stenograph dactyle
MIGNOT, FRÈRES, Automobiles- Kuc d'Es-
pagne, 19
C. Mignot
MISSION OF COCHIN-CHINE
Vicar Apostolic--Mgr. Lucien Mossard Provicars General-C. Gernot, A.
Delignon
Secretary to the Bishop-A. Joubert Saigon Cathedral
Curate of Saigon E. Soullard Chaplain to the Military Hospital-E,
Moreau
Saigon Seminary
Superior-J. A. Dumas
Professors F. Humbert, V. Quinton, 11. Bellemin, J. Villeneuve, A. Delagnes
Taberd School, under direction of the
Christian Brothers
Bro. Louis, director Missionaries
C. Gernot, Caimong (Béntré) L. Montmayeur, Thu-thiem (Saigon) R. Delpech, Thinghe (Saigon)
N. Colson, Cholon
J. Favier, Baria
F. Sidot, Bienhoa
C. Laurent, Caibé (Mythio)
A. Abonnel, Gocông
L. Lambert, Chodu (Saigon) J. Poinat, Thudaumot
J. Martin, Bung (Thudaumot) J. B. Clair, Phutho (Giadinh) J. Renier, Mytho
1250
F. Frison, Macbac (Travinh) A. Le Mée, Mihói (Bienhoa) J. Bourgeois, Thuduc C. Desseaune, Giadinh A. Benoit, Chava (Travinh) E. Hay, Caiuhmm (Vinh-long) E. Danvy, Bentré
E. Gerber Danbung (Giadinh) J. Verney, Lai-thien (Thudauinot) X. Bongain, Baria
A. Delignon, Choquan (Saigon) J. Masseron, Phan-thiet (Annam) P. Cransac, Tan-Hung (Giadinh) II. Bar, Baixan (Travinh) J. Boismery, Cap St. Jacques F. Demareq, Tanan
J. Dumortier, Caimon (Bentré) L. Ackermann Vinhlong L. Basvicux (Travinh)
C. Bozec, Tanqui (Luithieu) H. Hay, Cainhum (Vinhlong) Y, Guillou, Thala (Trang bang) J. Guéguend, Cumi (Baria) Keller, Datdo (Baria)
A. David, Phauri (Annam) C. Tranier, Baixan (Travinh) C. Nicolas, Saigon
J. Ferré, (Saigon)
L. Poitier, Caimon (Bentre) G. Lefebvre, Cumi (Baria) P. Bare, Thala (Trang bang)
SAIGON
Printing Office at Tándinh, near Saigon
F. Génibrel, director
Procure des Missions Etrangères
J. Artif, A. Decoopman
MONT-DE-PIÉTÉ DE DAKAO
Du Crouzet, administrateur
MONT DE-PIÉTÉ DE SAIGON-Rue Ohier
M. Costebonnel, gérant
MOSELY, J. BERTRAM, D.D.S,, Dentiste Ame-
ricaine Boulevard Amiral
(Haiphong)
Quong, mécanicien dentiste
Ny Ty, apprentis mécanicien
Courbet
OGLIASTRO, Frères et Cie., Merchants--
Quai de l'Arroyo Chinois
Ogliastro, Frères et Cie (Paris)
E. Saliège, fondé de pouvoir
id.
J. Novella
(Haiphong)
E. Dussol
D. Giorgi Brunner Grammond Trumet
Raymond
Agences Générales de:
"Palatine Insurance Co. Ld., London L'Universo Compagnia Italiana
d'Assicurazione dei Transporti, Milano La Mutualité Française de Paris
The Scottish Union and National
Insurance Co., London
PHARMACIE FRANÇAISE ET ETRANGÈLE-16,
18 and 20, Rue Catinat,
Holbe, pharmacien tre. cl., docteur en
pharmacie
Renoux
do.
Soliréne do., licencié en sciences Heumann, comptable
PHARMACIE NORMALE, Eanx minérales, Accessoires de pharmacie, Instruments de chirurgie, Coton et Pansemonts, Pro- duits chimiques et pharmaceutiques, Drogueric, medicinale et industrielle, Produits-Appareils et Accessoires plo- tographiques, Depot des Specialités françaises et etrangeres
Propriétaire-Molinier, ex-pharmacien
de lère classe de la Marine Gérant sous-directeur- François Laurens, pharmacien-chimiste
PHARMACIE SAIGONNAISE
Alex. André Dourdon, propriétaire G. Bourdon, assistant
Photo Studio Photographie Rue
Catinat, 134-136
PLANTÉ, Photographie-Boulevard Char-
ner, 10
POISANT, E., Négotiant, entreprenneur
14), Rue d' Espagne
PUBLICITÉ, LA, Communale, Publicité com- mercialle et industrielle dans tous les édifices communaux et les marchés de l'intérieur
Prène Jeantet, concessionaire
REY, Librairie et Papeterie Commerciales
-Rue Catinat, et P'Ormay, Saigon
RIZERIE DE L'UNION
W. & Th. Speidel & Co., general agents Head Office: Saigon, Quai de l'Arroyo-
Chinois 45
H. Hoffmann, director, signs per pro- F. C. Lindner, accountant
M. Bennecke, local manager (Cholon) H. Rosenlehner, accountant do. H. Bader, engineer Th. Munster, do. F. Pruckmair, do. W. Steiner,
do.
SAIGON
SOCIÉTÉ COMMERCIALE FRANÇAISED L'INDO CHINE-15 Quai de l'Arroyo Chinois; Tel. Ad Rauzy Saigon
P. Rauzy-Administrateur délégué P. Ville-Administrateur délégué
Ch. Triadou, signe par procuration H. Baladie,
J. E. Sicé E. Camark
J. Maurry
G. Dana
J. B. Casella
A. Casella
P. Augé
H. Minucci
Agencies
do.
East Asiatic Co., Ld., Copenhagen Glen Line, London
RIZERIE "ORIENT", Cholon-Binthay C. Speidel & Co., general agents Head Office: Saigon, Quai de l'Arroyo
Chinois 45
H. Hoffmann, director, signs per pro. F. C. Lindner
ROUSSEL, Mme, Marchand de Bois-Rue
Thu Due
SAIGON HOTEL
Dauphin, gérant
SAMBUC, Dr. en droit, avocát-défenseur-
Rue MacMahon, 78
Girard, Dr. en droit, avocât-défen-
seur, secrétaire
SOCIÉTÉ DE CONSTRUCTION DE LEVALLO18
PERRET Ruo Pellerin, 89
Société de Construction de Levallois
Perret
Reich, ingénieur directeur
Deligny-ingénieur
Cheurlin, ingénieur
Pleutin, secrétaire général
1251
W. V. Ryan, R. Biancardini, A. M.
Ramassamy, électriciens Vidal, chef mécanicien Thomas, second id.
SOCIÉTÉ DES ETUDES INDO-CHINOISES-16,
Rue Lagrandiere
Président d'honneur-Le Gouverneur-
Général, de l'Indo-Chine
Vice-Présidents d'honneur-Le Lieut.- Gouverneur de la Cochin-Chine, le Général Commandant la Brigade, le
Deputé de la Cochin-Chine
Mgr. Mossard, evêque de Médéa Président Dürrwell
Vice-Présidents-Berquet, Ferrière Secrétaire-Trésorier-Manuel Bibliothécaire--Merle
Conservateur du Musée-Mercier
SOCIÉTÉ FRANÇAISE DES DISTILLERIES DE L'INDO-CHINE (anciens établissements A. R. Fontaine et Cie); Tel. Ad: Distamy, Cholon-Binh Tay
E. Dubaele, ingénieur-directeur
SOCIÉTÉ FORESTIÈRE
Scierie à vapeur
D'EXPORTATION,
SOCIETÉ IMMOBILIÈRE DE L'INDO-CHINE
Administrateur directeur-A. Faciolle, directeur des douanes de la Cochin- Chine en retraite
SOCIÉTÉ PHILHARMONIQUE
Président A. d'Issas
Vice-Président-Dr. Flandrin-Teicon Secrétaire Saint-Sernin
SPEIDEL & Co., Merchants; also at Pnompenh, Haiphong, Hanoi, and at Paris: 58 Rue Taitbout; Tel. Ad: Speidel
R. Baur (Paris)
F. W. Speide! (Saigon)
W. Speidel
H. Prescher
do.
do.
F. Klinger, signs per pro.
Chaubert, Cannou, comptables. Rebreyent, conducteur de travaux Nicolas, chef d'atelier
Rogee, Wambold, Wattron, chefs de
chantiers
Werner, H. Eccli, l'esenti-Le Goff, Le
Saux, chefs de poste
Thiebaud, Photiadis, mécaniciens
Ciccada, chef de marine
Martin, surveillant
SOCIÉTÉ D'ELECTRICITÉ DE SAIGON-Tel.
Ad: Electric
P. Bion, ingénieur directeur
A. Loureiro, caissier
E. Breton, comptable
G. Buissot, chef électricien
O. Bezold,
H. Hoffmann,"
H. Meng
F. Denk F. Kertell W. Kraft A. Heim A. Staengle Manshardt
do.
C. Stecker
H. Eckerlin
A. Jourdan W. Walcker L. Goeppert G. Otto Ch. Somers
H. Ficker F. C. Lindner G. L. Cophas
Pnompenh
F. W. Speidel (Saigon) Walter Speidel (Saigon) R. Raur (Paris)
1252
H. Prescher (Saigon)
H. Keller, signs per pro. Th. Boenhof
Rice Mill"Orient" Cholon C. Speidel & Co., general agents
"Union." Rice Mill Cholon
SAIGON
W. & Th. Speidel & Co., general agents
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd Hamburg-America Line Diederichsen, Jebsen & Co.
Flensburger Dampfschiff's Ges, v. 1869 Glen Line of Steamers
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Ben Line of Steamers
Rheederei von J. Jebsen, Apenrade KoninklykePacketvaart Maatschappij Germanic Lloyds Registro Italiano
Aachen and Munich, Fire Insce. Co. Atlas Assurance Company Lt‹l. Eastern Insurance Company Ltd. Feuer Assekuranz Company von 1877 Guardian Assurance Co., Id. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Java Sea and Fire Insurance Co. London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Liverpool & London & Globe Insce. Co. Magdeburger Feuer Vers Ges. Norwich Union Fire Insce. Society, Ld. Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld. Allianz Insurance Co., of Berlin The Shanghai Life Insce Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Limited Imperial Marine Insurance Co. Norddeutsche Versicherungs Ges. Transatlantische Güter-Vers. Ges. Triton Insurance Company, Ld. Vers. Ges. Hamburg
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Verein Hamburger Assekuradeure Verein Bremer See Versicherungs Ges. Deutscher Rheederei Verein La Aseguradora Española Bayerischer Lloyd
Germania Transport Vers. Ges. Internationaler Lloyd, Vers. A. Ges. Mannheimer Versicherungs Ges. Oberrheinische Versicherungs Ges. Providentia Allgemeine Vers. Ges. Schweizerische National Vers. Ges. Basler Transport Versicherungs Ges Deutsche Rück und Mitversich. Ges. Deutsche Transport Versichergs. Ges. Düsseldorfer Allgemeine Vers. Ges. Forsakring Aktiebolaget Hansa Internationale Transport Vers. Ges. Lloyd Sabaudo
Mannheimer Rück Vers. Ges.
Rheinisch Westphälische RückversGes. Rheinisch-Westphälischer Lloyd Schweiz Transport Vers. Ges. Union Internationale, Anvers
Kölner Lloyd
United Rhanish Marine Ins. Co.
10 Agrippina, See, Fluss and Land-
transport, Vers. Ges.
20 Niederrheinische Güter Asseku-
rauz Gesellschaft
30 Badische Assekurauz Ges. A. G.
TALAYRACH, PILS, Vins-Bvd. Charner,27,29
TELEGRAPH COMPANY, LIMITED, EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA AND CHINA- Office: Cape Saint James
S. L. James, superintendent
F. E. Allen, clerk in-charge H. J. Begley,
supervisor
A. W. Polglase, operator do. B. C. Morley,
do.
E. G. Beauchamp,
dlo.
C. N. W. Joyce,
do.
L. McKie,
do.
H. H. Gibson,
do.
C. A. R. Stutz,
do.
W. C. Smith,
do.
A. R. Lambie,
do.
Constructeur
THIEMONGE (Khan-hoi)
Mécanicien
THIOLLIER, AUG., Avocât défenseur-14,
Boulevard Charner
Louis Charouset, docteur en droit,
secrétaire
TOURNIER, C., Saigon, and P. Penh; Nou- veauté Exportation-RueCatinat; Fabri- cations des Pousses: Rue Pellerin, 127
Ch. Marty, directeur
H. Gros, fondé de pouvoirs
H. Lebrun,
id. G. Poulailler J. Comte J. Frèze Gendrier Rochaix
Mme. R. Lebrun Mlle. A. Adamon
TRAMWAYS-COMPAGNIE
FRANÇAISE DE
(Indo-Chine) Siège Social: 40, Rue Laffite, Paris; Direction Exploitation: 19, Rue MacMahon
TRIGANT, G., Harness Maker and Carriage
Builder Rue Bangkok
VACUUM OIL Co.
Manager M. Steele Boyce
Indo China Agents-Dennis Frères VINCENT, Camionnage et de bargquements
-Rue Lagrandière
CHOLON
This town, distant four miles from Saigon, with which it is connected by two steam tramways, is the seat of most of the Chinese trade of the Colony. Cholon may be said to be the granary of Cochin-China, and is the centre of much commercial activity. Most of the rice mills are located in this place, there being no less than six worked by steam, and there are several large brickyards. The town, like Saigon, possesses a Municipal Council, composed partly of French, partly of Annamites, and partly of Chinese. The population is about 70,000. The principal buildings are the Mairie (Town Hall), the Inspection (Provincial Government), the Maternite, and the Hôpital. There are also a fair number of gorgeous Chinese pagodas in the city.
ÅGENT D'AFFAIRES (Cholon)
H. Puychaumeix
BAN AIK GUAN RICE MILL
Tan Ho Sen, director
Yeung Chun Po, manager R. H. Lambert, chief engineer V. Petersen, second do.
DIRECTORY
BAN GUAN & Co., Merchants et Agents, Commissionnaires 221, Quai de Mytho
Tija Mah Yan, directeur
Tija Mah Piow, fondé de pouvoirs Siow Choon Tong,
Ngan Phu,
Agencies
Man On Insurance Co.
I On Insurance Co.
Po On Insurance Co.
Fook On Insurance Co.
Yuen On Insurance Co.
id.
id.
BAN JOO GUAN RICE MILL-Quai de Mytho
Tan Ho Seng, directeur
Lim Keng, supérintendent
L. Richardson, ingénieur-en-chief
C. S. Imail, 2e. ingénieur
Tao Doan Trach, manager and per pro. A. B. Carrier, chief engineer
W. N. Cullen, second do.
CAFÉ DE LA GARE
Bénard, propriétaire
CIE. DES EAUX ET D'ELECTRICITÉ DE L'INDO-
CHINE, Usine de Cholon
Lucas, directeur
FRENCH HOPITAL, HÓPITAL DROUHET
Doctor-Ricou
Assistants; 4 French, 2 Native Women
42 Native men
HOPITAL MUNICIPAL DE CHOLON
Médecin en Chef Docteur Flaudins Médecin en Second Docteur Dhoste Directeur do. Paul Janin Surveillante Générale, Mme. Prudome Infermières Diplomées, Mademoiselle
Gossard
do. Mademoiselle Leclere do.
do. Lozeille do. Madame Vidal
25 infirmiers et infirmières indigènes
BAN SOON AN & Co., Merchants and Com- HÔPITAL DE CHOQUAN
mission Agents
Tan Ho Seng
Tan Yu Wee
Heirs Ong Ka Tiong
Lim: Keng, signs per pro.
Agencies
Shan Line of Steamers
Po On Insurance Company
Yick Tong Jin Insurance Company
Kow Tong Communication Bank of
China
Ban Ajk Guan Rice Mill
Ban Joo Guan Rice Mill
BAN TECK GUAN RICE MILL Tan You Wee, director
Tan Kiong Hong, signs per pro.
Docteur Ferrandini, medecin-en-chef Docteur Lailhengue, médicin adjoint Gerphagnon, infirmier-chef Delery, infirmier-major
Mlle. Léonie Lebrun, infirmière Chau Dac Van, pharmacien
KIAN HONG SENG RICE MILL
Khoo Aing Thuan, director
KLOSS & Co., Merchants Walter Kloss (absent)
A. Pfeifer Oscar Pfeifer, Auguste Hon Chan Swee Lim Yap Chah Teck
125-4
CHOLON-CAMBODGE
MAN CHEONG YUEN USINE A RIZ-Quai de
Mytho
Luu Luc, dit Nam Long, directeur
MAYER, J., Importation, Exportation
MONT DE PIETE
H. de Puychaumeix, agent
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
Councillors Jacque, Ascoli, Gar
riguene, Nguyen Huu Dau, Truông Văn Luong, Lam-le-Trạch, Quach Dam Tribinquang, Tanhoa-Tri Mayor-Drouhet, secrétaire général,
des colonies
Secrétariat
Secretaire-Chassaing Redacteur-Yoon Hygiène de Vegino
Comptable Passerat de la Chapelle Architecte de Voirie-Truitard Deseigneur Alosius Conducteur--Declerc
Chef Survoyeur de Voirie Ropion Surveyeurs Pétra, Didelot, Batas,
Julien Municipal Treasury Receiver-Rocca
Writ Server-Dessaints Commissioner-Lecœur Brigr, chef-Bonhomme Brigrs. Bonhomme, Menu Sub-Brigrs.--Godaime, Viard 12 French police officers.
Municipal Boys' School
Director-Assan-Achou Municipal Girls' School
Directress-Madame Brézet
Teachers-3 native, 1 French Sister
Hospice de la Maternité
Directress-Mme. Pomet
Municipal Hospital
Directress-Madame Prudome
Assistants: 2 French, 6 native women
assistants and 9 native men Doctor-Flandrin, Guilbot Eaux et Electricité-Vergoz
RIZERIE BAN HONG GUAN
Ban Guan & Co., agents générals
Tija Mah Yan, directeur général Siow Choon Tong, sous directeur Lim Phuon, supérintendant Wee Mah Kim, compradore J. Robertson, prenier mécanicien Robitson, second
idl.
RIZERIE "ORIENT"-Head Office: Saigon,
45, Quai de l'Arroyo Chinois
C. Speidel & Co., general agents O. Kings, accountant
H. Dettinger, engineer
W. Jantzen,
A. Sévérac,
J. Léréque,
do.
do.
do.
J. Thuenkér, surveyor
Rice Department of Union & Orient
Rice Mills
P. Sucdhans
R. Millour
RIZERIE, UNION-Head Office: Saigon, 15,
Quai d'Arroyo Chinois
W. & Th. Speidel & Co., general agents M. Bennecke, manager, Cholon
H. Rosenlehuer, bookkeeper H. Bader, engineer
T. Muenster, do.
J. Pruecklmair, bookkeeper
W. Steiner,
do
YEE CHEONG AND YEE TYE & Co. RICE MILL
Quack Dam, director
Tian Ban, signs per pro.
Quack Ngyen, signs per pro. Sim, Hidemann, chief engineer Archards, 2nd engineer
CAMBODGE
Cambodia, the kingdom of the Khmer, extends from 101 deg. 30 min. to 104 deg. 30 min. longitude E. of Paris, and from 10 deg. 30 min. to 14 deg. latitude. It was reduced to its present proportions in 1860 by the annexation of its two richest provinces, Angkor and Battambang, to Siam. Its area is about 62,000 square miles. It is bounded on the south-west by the Gulf of Siam, on the south-east by French Cochin-China, on the north by the French Laos, and on the north-west and west by Angkor and Battambang. The noble river Mekong flows through the kingdom, and, after passing through French Cochin-China, empties itself, by a number of mouths, into the sea. The Mekong is the grand waterway of Cambodia, and, like the Nile in Egypt, lays the greater part of the country under water annually. greatly increasing its fertility. The soil of Cambodia is rich and productive, and rice, pepper, indigo, cotton, tobacco, sugar, maize and cardamoms are cultivated. Coffee and spices of all sorts could be grown. Among woods, ebony, rose, sapan, pine, irra and other valuable sorts exist, no less than eighty different kinds of timber being found
CAMBODGE
1255
in the forests. Iron of good quality has been discovered, and it is affirmed that there are gold, silver, and lead mines in the mountains. The fisheries of Cambodia are very productive, and salt fish forms one of the chief articles of export. Large quantities of fish oil being also produced.
Cambodia was once an extensive and powerful State, and proofs that it possessed a much higher civilisation than that which now prevails in the country are to be found in the architectural remnants of former grandeur. The noble ruins of the ancient city of Angkor are monuments of a people much superior to the feeble race which now inhabits Cambodia. The Cambodians differ entirely from their neighbours the Annamites, both in features and customs. Polygamy is practised among them. The prevailing religion is Buddhism. The people are apathetic and indolent, and have allowed the trade to fall into the hands of Chinese, of whom there are about 160,000 in the country. The entire population of the kingdom is about 1,000,000.. Slavery, since its abolition by the French Treaty of 1884, has almost entirely disappeared.
The Government of Cambodia is a monarchy under French protection. The present King, Sissowath, succeeded his brother King Norodom. In June, 1884, Norodom signed a new Treaty with France, by which the administration of the country was handed over to French Residents. Since the Convention of 1892 the native functionaries are appointed by the king, under the control of the French Administration, and are paid from the treasury of this kingdom.
Phnom penh, the present capital of Cambodia and seat of the Government, is situated on the river Mekong, nearly in the heart of the kingdom. The king's palace is a large building, and the portion devoted to his use is built and furnished in European style. French functionaries have charge of the Treasury, the administration of justice, customs, and public works and taxes. Phnom-penh has been considerably improved under the present rule, especially since the year 1889. Many roads have been made and numerous sanitary works carried out in the town, such as drainage works, the filling up of pools, marshes, etc. The town has also been provided with waterworks and electric light. The new Treasury, in the ancient Khmer style of architecture, is a most remarkable building. The other prominent public buildings. are the Post Office, Court, Hospital, Personnel and Registration Office, Commissariat of Police, new barracks for Marine Infantry, Public Works Office, Commercial Museum, Harbour Office, and the Indo-China Bank and Messageries Fluviales agencies. The Résident Supérieur has a handsome residence in the city. The population of Phnom- penh is estimated at 39,000. Though the country generally is entirely undeveloped, trade at present is considerably extending. Cambodia has no seaports of any impor tance, and the import and export trade passes through the port of Saigon. Customs dues have been imposed since July, 1887, with exemptions in favour of French goods and shipping. The tariff is based on the general tariff of France, modified in certain points.
The port of Kampot can only be frequented by small native coasting vessels from Siam and by Chinese junks. Easy communication is afforded with the principal towns of the interior, Saigon, Angkor, and Battambang, and Stung- treng and Khone, in the Laos, by subsidized mail steamers of the Messageries Fluviales. Telegraphic communication exists between the principal towns of Cam- bodia and a land wire passing through Cambodia and Laos connects Cochin-China with Bangkok and Tavoy (Burmalı).
DIRECTORY
Supreme King -H.M. SAMDACH PRÉA BAT PRÉA SISOWATH
RESIDENCE SUPÉRIEURE,
Résident Supérieur-Paul Luce
Chef de Cabinet-Petillot
Attachés-Duvernoy, Meyer
Bureau des Affaires Indigènes --Jumean,
chef
Bureau de la Comptabilité-Tessarech, chef Commis-Doucet, Prévost, Brun Pey Tral,.
de Conchy, Dowbor, de Lassansaa Résident de Kandal-Jeannerat
Chancelier id. Bussière Résident de Kompong-Speu-Poiret
1256
CAMBODGE
Résdt.de Prey-Veng-Celoron de Blainville Chancelier Prey-Veng Voitel
Résident de Kompong-Chnang-Paulier Chancelier du Laurens d'Oiselny-
Résident de Kampot--Le Roy
Adjoint id.
-Boyer
Résident de Kompong-Chan-Baudoin Chancelier-Pujol
Résident de Kompong-Thom--Chambert Chancelier
id.
Résident de Kratie-Bramel Chancelier Mathurin
Résident de Pursat-Rousseau
-Kieffer
Chancelier id. Crémazy Résidt. de Soairieng-Ozanon Chancelier id. -Truffot Résident de Takéo - Bellan Chancelier id. Crémazy
Nouvelles Résidences
Stung Treng--Salabelle
Battambang-Breucq
Chef du Service de là Trésorerie-Comte Chef du Service des Travaux Publics-
Moreau
Chef du Service du Cadastre-Bornet Chargé du Port à Phnom Penh Penfrat ChefduService de l'Enregistrement-Camé Chef du Service de Santé- Haueur Chef du Service de l'Agric.-Devraigne Police-Dupuis, commissaire central Imprimerie Chartrain, Valenceau Enseignement Fontaine (Ferdinand). Fontaine, Libersart, Poulichet, Orlu, Flament, Mlle. Blanesubé, Mme. Marsal, Mazel, Mme. de Lestrac, Mme. Dubost Garde Indigène-Roux, garde principal Commandant d'Armes-Chef Chapuis Mairie de Phnom-Penh-Leclére, résdt.-
maire
Secrétaire de la Mairie-Lambert Voirie Municipale-Kerjean Chef du Bureau de l'Immigration-Four-
nier Commission Municipale Gravelle, Doucet Hibry Sarreau, Lebretton, Prince Phanuvong, Huynhquyen, Tchéang-Peng Chambre de Commerce Lebretton, Hibry, Bouchard, Manach, Sarreau, Vandelet, Chhun, Pao-Loui-Kheng, Ly-Ek-Kê
TRÉSORERIE PARTICULIÈRE DU CAMBODGE (PHNOM-PENH)
M. Comte, Adrien, Joseph, trésorier
particulier
M. M. Dhers, Payeur. Ancel et Cimper,
commis principaux
M. M. de Blainville, Le Maire, Bayol et
Tourtay, commis
Services des places Battambang M. Fellay, commis prin-
cipal
Kampot M. Reynaud, payeur Kompong-Chinang-M. Gras, payeur Kratié-M. Landrey, commis principal
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE (Pom-Pen!)
Gravelle, directeur
Ganny, caissier-comptable
DUMAREST ET FILS, commerçants Lebretton, signs per pró.
Gay
DUPUY, M., commerçant Importation,
Exportation, Pnom-Penh,
Ad. Telegr. Marpuy
M. Dupuy, directeur de "L'Union."
A. Moneglia (Battambang) signs per pro.
GRAF JACQUE ET Cie,, commerçants
Vatté, signs per pro.
GLACIERE
Dumarest et Fils, propriétaires
GRAND HOTEL
Dumarest et Fils, propriétaires
INSTITUT DE LA PROVIDENCE
Sœur Sylvère, supérieure
MISSION CATHOLIQUE
Vicaire Apostolique-Bouchut
Pro-Vicaire-Hergott
RAFEL ET CIE, commerçants
L. Rafel (absent)
Caen, signs per pro.
RESTAURANT Khmer
Rochard, propriétaire
SARRANT, Pharmacie
SPEIDEL ET CIE., Négociants H. Keller, sigus per pro. Th. Bonhof
Agencies
Eastern Insurance Co., Calcutta Hongkong Fire Insce. Co.
Java Sea and Fire Insce. Co., Batavia Fire Insurance Co. of 1877 Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Yorkshire Insurance Co.
Aacheen & Munich Fire Insce. Co. Guardian Assurance Co., Ld., London Magdeburg Fire Insce. Co., Magdeburg Norwich Union Fire Insce. Society Transatlantic Fire Insce. Co., Ld.,
Hamburg
"Allianz "Vorsicherungs A. G. Berlin Atlas Assurance Vie,, London
VANDELET & FARAUT, Laiterie, ferme modéle; Elevage de chevaux, Bovius, de
O. Vandelet
F. Faraut
CAMBODGE
1257
Leon Faraut, fils, agent assermenté
du Mont de Pieté
Emile Faraut, comptable
POSTE ADMINISTRATIF DE KAMPONG SPEU Chef de poste-Poiret, administrateur
des services civils Percepteur-Juclier,
civals
commis des services
Travaux Pubics-Denkintz, agent voyer Garde Indigène-Rebufat, garde principal
de 2e classe
Douanes et Régies-Thierry, préposé de
Ze classe
Forêts-Lys, garde forestier
Sung, Télégra-
Postes et Télégraphes
phiste, gérant du bureau Ecole Provinciale-Senn, instituteur Administration Indigène
Province de Samrony Tong-N. Gouvr. Province de Phnom Sruoch-Sin, Gouvr. Province de Kong Pissey Yin, Gouvr. Paste Thpong-- Khiêu, Palat
POSTES ADMINISTRATIF DU CAMBODGE Pastes :din. Kompong Speu-M. Jandet
Kompong Kheeang −1. Corcil
id.
idl.
Svai Kheeang--M. Voitel
id.
Bana-M. Parnaud
il.
Siem Pang-M. Malescot
ich.
Résident
Cheamksan-M. Mercier
Résidence de Kampot
Le Roy, administrateur de
2me, classe Adjoint-Chambert
Résidence de Kampong Cham Résident-Baudoin Desenlis
Résidence de Kampong-Thom Resident-Breucq
Résidence de Kratie
Resident Alby, admr. Ic. classe Adjoint-Noivenglowski Percepteur-Landrey Comptable--Tanti Garde ppal.--Imbert
Douanes et Régies---Gaimard
Agent des Messageries Fluviales-Liénard
|
POSTE ADMINISTRATIF DE SVAY-KHLEANG Chef de Poste- Lautier
Résidence de Pursat
Résident-Rousseau admr. 4mc. classe Percepteur Crémazy
Commis--Sonbra
Résidence de Soairieng
Résident Ozanou, adır, öme, classe
Chancelier-Truffot
Percepteur-
Garde indigène-Marchand, garde prin-
cipal
Agent voyer-Kerjean, commis
Résidence de Takeo
Résidence--Bellan, admir. 4me, cl. Chancelier Crémazy Percepteur Saint Leu
TERRITOIRE DE BATTAMBANG
Breucq, commissaire déléguć
Legros, administrateur adjoint Genevet, second adjoint de Juge Tustachou, greffier
Grinaki, comptable
de Lassaussau, commis
Sombsthay, inspecteur de l'ensergnement Dugommier, contrôleur des Douanes Bondu, receveur des Postes
Fellay, payeur
Dru, Freydère, Benoist, Olivier, Collard, Caussave, Buguicourt, Estebe, gardes principaux
Banque de l'Indo-Chine
Messageries Fluviales
Roques, conducteur des T P.
Casenaz, Delfour, Rerjean, agents tem-
poraires
TRÉSORERIE PARTICULIÈRE DU LAOS, Leroy, Tenaud Marie, Oswall, Benjamin, Bureau Central (Vientiane)
Grotzinge commis principal de 2e. cl. Bettant, commis de 2e. cl.
SIAM
The kingdom of Siam, of which Bangkok is the capital, extends from the latitude of about 20 deg. north to the Gulf called after itself. It is bounded on the west by Burmah and the Bay of Bengal, and on the east by the Mekong and the French protectorates of Luang Prabang and Cambodia. Formerly the Lai Mountains were claimed as the eastern boundary, but in 1893 the French pressed the claims of Annam to the territory between the mountains and the river, and the Siamese were compelled to retire. The most important part of the kingdom lies in the valley of the Menam, the country of the truc Siamese. The boundaries of Siam on the Bay of Bengal reach from Burmah in a southerly line to the northern frontier of Kelantan and Kedah in the Malayan Peninsula in the latitude of about 7 leg, south. The island of Junck Salong, containing enormous deposits of tin ore, is included in the territories of Siam. The boundary line runs south-east from the mouth of the Perlis River across the Peninsula slightly to the north of Kota Bharu the capital of Kelantan. Under the Treaty of 1909 Sian ceded to great Britain her Malay dependencies of Perlis, Kedah, Kelantan and Tringganu, and the boundary was delimitated in the cold weather of 1909-10. The kingdom also comprises a great part of the ancient domain of Lao, but the rich and valuable possession of Battambong, once a part of the king- dom of Cambodia, was ceded to France in 1907. A Treaty concluded between France and Siam in 1904 settled some disputed points with regard to the frontier between Siam and Cambodia and Siam and French Indo-China. By a further treaty in 1907 the territories of Battambang, Sien-reap and Ankor were ceded by Siam to France, in exchange for the district of Krat and some slight concessions in Dansai (Laos). France at the same time agreed to the gradual abandonment of the extra-territorial privileges hitherto enjoyed by French Asiatic subjects and protegés in Siam. The various depend- encies and outskirts are peopled by a variety of races, some sui generis, others illustrating every form and shade of the transition between the original race and the Annamites on the east, and the Malays and Burmese on the south and west. The former capital of Siam was Ayuthia, situated on the Menam river (literally the "Mother of Waters"), about 90 miles from its mouth. In 1767 a series of bloody and desperate combats between the Siamese and the Burmese culminated in the capture and destruction of that city by the victorious Burmese general and the consequent exodus of the conquered. They moved down the river about 60 miles, and there founded the present populous and flourishing city of Bangkok, The chief of the Siamese Army rallied the scattered troops, and, building a walled city at Toutaboree, declared himself King under the title P'ya Tak. In 1782 P'ya Tak became insane, and the kingdom passed to his most distinguished general, named Chao P'ya Chakkri, who founded the present dynasty, of which His Majesty the present King (the 40th reigning monarch in Siam of whom we have any record) is the fifth in regular descent. The revenue of Siam for the year ended 31st March, 1910, is estimated at Ticals 63,000,000. The finances of the country have undergone reorganisation, for which purpose a European financial adviser was engaged in 1896. At that time the revenue accounted for was little more than Ticals. 18,000,000, but the amount has since steadily increased. The ordinary expenditure is estimated at Ticals 62,928,921, and the extraodinary (from loan) at Ticals 5,000,000. The present. Financial Adviser is lent by the Indian Government. A proposal to adopt the gold standard was mooted in 1899, but did not come to anything till November, 1902, when the Mint was closed to the free coinage of silver. A triennial poll tax used to be imposed upon Chinese, but this has now been changed to the same annual capitation tax as is paid by Siamese. Siam entered the Universal Postal Union on the 1st July, 1885. The first railway line, from Bangkok to Paknam, was opened by the King on the 11th April, 1893. It is a purely passenger line, having been unable to get any goods traffic worth mentioning, but the dividend averages about seven per cent. Another railway, a Government line vid Ayuthia to Korat, was the first important line completed. The first section, from Bang kok to Ayuthia, a distance of about fifty miles, was opened by the King and Queen of
SIAM BANGKOK
1259
the 26th March, 1997. Another section, to Gengkoi, was opened on November 1st, 1897, a third, to Hinlap, on April 1st, 1898, and the whole line was opened to traffic in November, 1900.
The construction of a line branching off the Korat line near Ayuthia and intended to open up the country to Chiengmai was commenced in June, 1898, and the first section (42 kilometres) to Lopburi was opened to traffic on 1st April, 1901. The next section, Lopburi-Paknampo (118 km.), was opened to traffic in November, 1905, and the section to Pitsanulok in 1907. The line running south-west to Petchaburi, Rathuri, 152 km. long, was opened to traffic in the early part of 1903. The Eastern line from Bangkok to Patriew was completed in 1908. A further section of the North Line, to Bundaria, was opened in November, 1908, and a section to Utaradit and Pang Ton Phung, with a branch line to Sawanhaloh, at the end of 1909. The total length of State railways open to traffic is 926 km. The private railway companies comprise the Paknam, Meklong and Pharabad Companies. These lines have together a total length of 106 km. Surveys have been carried on between Utaradit and Nakawn Lampang in connection with the Northern State railway, but further extension to the north has been postponed for the present. Work on the Southern line down the Peninsula was begun in 1909. A fleet of steam launches runs from the metropolis in all directions up- country to the east and west.
The sea borne trade of the country in recent years has been between ten and eleven million pounds sterling. The principal export is rice, constituting about 75 per cent. of the total. Teak comes next with about 12 per cent.
The Army is small, but in recent years great progress has been achieved in military matters. The land forces of the Kingdom are divided into ten divisions. The First, the division of the Guards, is stationed in Bangkok. Each division consists of two Regi- ments of Infantry, one of either Cavalry or Chasseurs, one Regiment of Artillery, one Company of Engineers, one Company of Transport, and one Ambulance Company. A form of conscription is in force in the divisions referred to.
The Royal Military College in Bangkok has been one of the principal factors in the improvements effected, and young officers trained in this institution are also in great demand for the work of the civil administration of the interior. The Navy is small but efficient, and additions are constantly being made to its strength.
The native population of Siam, with Laos, Cambodians, Peguans, &c., excluding those under Consular protection, is estimated at seven millions at least. The number of Chinese in the kingdom is estimated at about half a million.
BANGKOK
The city of Bangkok is situated on both sides of the Menam about twenty- five miles from where this magnificent stream empties itself into the Gulf. On the left bank of the river is the city proper, enclosed partly by a wall. The Royal palaces and Government Offices are within the wall, the foreign hongs, the Consulates, and tho principal rice mills being on the principal or main street of the city. The right bank is principally occupied by the Siamese, Chinese and Mahomedan residents. The bulk of the business is transacted on the left. Here a road, called New Road-in Siamese, Charurn Krung-extends from the Palace walls to Bangkolem and the electric tramway runs along it for a distance of about six miles. Another electric tramway to Samsen has a length of four miles. Both these are the property of the Siam Electricity Co., Ltd. The lines of the new Siamese Tramway Co., Ltd., opened in 1906, traverse the city and its environs in various directions, the total length being about twelve miles. Various new streets and roads have been made recently, and Bangkok has now over 100 miles of carriage roads. A telegraph line connects the Lighthouse at the Bar beyond the mouth of the river with the business portion of the city. The principal trade of Bangkok, and the foundation on which not only its prosperity but its actual existence mainly rests is rice. This article is drawn in quantities, not only from the innumerable fields which line the fertile valley of the Menam, but from the adjacent rivers which flow into the Gulf from the enormous
1280
BANGKOK
a
watershed of the mountain crescent which fringes the northern extremity of the kingdom. The output of this grain in favourable years is scarcely to be calculated. It not only furnishes support to the native population of Siam and the Malay Peninsula, but largely contributes to the supply of China, Manila, the Straits, Java, and Sumatra a large amount is also sent to Europe and even to South America. There is also large trade in teak-wood and ivory, with very many other minor articles of native produce which are exported to China and the Straits. The steamers of the North German Lloyd Orient Line keep up regular communication with Hongkong (occasion- ally leaving and returning ved Swatow and the Straits Settlements), besides special boats only running during the rice season; while other lines of steamers connect the kingdom with the Straits Settlements. The Nippon Yusen Kaisha also established a line between Bangkok, Hongkong and Swatow, and a rate war between the two companies existed until January, 1908, when the Japanese line withdrew on terms satisfactory to both parties.
The public buildings and institutions include the Royal Museum, which is situated in the Wang Nah, Bangkok, and consists of two buildings; that on the left to the approach contains the natural history collections and ethnological exhibits from Japan, China, Java, etc., that on the right (formerly a royal building) contains the Siamese ethnological collection. There are also the Protestant (Christ) Church, a new building, opened in April, 1905, four Roman Catholic Churches, eight Hospitals (two being maintained by and for the accommodation of Europeans, with a staff of European nurses), a Ladies' Library, and Assumption College, managed by the French Roman Catholic Mission. St. Louis' Hospital, a large and spacious building, situated near the German Legation, was opened in 1899, the Sisters of Charity being in charge. There is one first-class Hotel, the Oriental, and several smaller ones, also four clubs the Bangkok United Club, the British Club, the Dvi Pannya Club (for Siamese, founded by the Crown Prince) and the German Club. The King's palace and the temples are magnificent and on a large scale; the architecture is of a kind peculiar to the country; and there is much more of novelty and interest to be witnessed by passing travellers in Bangkok than can be found in Chinese cities. The roads have been greatly improved. The tramway was introduced in 1888, and has proved financially successful, there being now two lines, both driven by electricity. The city throughout its principal streets as well as all hotels and principal shops are lighted with electricity, incandescent lights being universally in use. A census of the population of Bangkok town was taken in 1909, when the total was found to be 628,675 (males, 379,118; females 249,557). There are 1,604 Europeans in Bangkok, and a couple of hundred at least in the provinces. The number of Asiatic British subjects in Siam is estimated at about 7,000.
The average mean temperature at Bangkok in 1908 was 82:58. The hottest months were February, March and April, when the highest temperature in the shade recorded was over 100. The lowest during that year was 61° Fahi.
The harbour and island of Koh-si-chang, which lie some 20 miles from the bar and about 50 miles from Bangkok, are places of importance. The harbour, formed by a strait of sea running between islands, offers a fine anchorage for vessels loading rice and teak during the south-west monsoon (from April to the end of October.) The largest ships can take shelter there. A lighthouse serves to enable vessels to make the
entrance.
Bangkok itself is improving greatly, new roads having been opened and shops and houses are being built. Gambling has been abolished in the provinces and a new system of assessing land has been instituted which provides a substitute for the revenue hitherto derived from those gambling farms; but it is feared that this measure will ultimately affect the cultivation of paddy. The opium and spirits monopolies are no longer farmed out, but are under Government administration.
BANGKOK
DIRECTORY
H.M. SOMDETCH PERA PARAMINDRA MAHA CHULALONKORN, King of Siam
CABINET COUNCIL (Senabodi)
HR.H. Prince Krom Hluang Damrong Rajanubharb (Interior)
H.R.H. Prince Kroni Hluang Devawongse Varoprakar (Foreign Affairs)
H.R.H. Prince Chow Phya Yomaraj (Local Government and Police)
H.R.H. Prince Chow Fa Krom Hluang Narisaranu vattiwongse (Royal Household) H.R.H. Prince Chow Fa Krom Phra Bhanubandhu wongse (War)
H.R.H. Prince Krom Mun Chanlaburi (Finance)
HE. Chow Phya Vijitawongse Woodikrai (Education)
H.E. Chow Phya Devesr (Agriculture)
H.R.H. Prince Krom Hluang Naresr Voraridhi (Public Works) H.R.H. Prince Krom Mun Rajburi Direkriddhi (Justice)
1261
H. M. PRIVATE SECRETARY DEPARTMENT Private Secretary to His Majesty-H. R. H. Prince Krom Khun Sommot Amorab- handhu
Private Secretary to His Majesty (Foreign Section)-H. R. H. Prince Krom Mun Prachin-Kitibodi
H.R.H. Prince Krom Khun Siridhaj, Mom Chow Taruna, Mow Chow Tanaya, Chow Mun Sri Saraksa, Phra Su van Akshara, Luang Sriraja Akshara
H. S. M's. PRIVY PURSE DEPARTMENT
(Krom Phra Klang Khangti). Director-General-H.R.H. Prince Sommot Deputy do. Phya Subhakorn Legal Adviser S. Brighouse (Tilleke and
Gibbins)
Central Office Correspondent-Luang Rajasupya Secretary-Khan Charern Interpreter-Nai Perm
Revenue Office
Chief Inspector-Khun Charoon Asst. do. -Nai Chuang
Building Office
Chief Inspector-Khun Prakob Asst. do. -Khun Pisarn
Accountant's Office
Chief Accountant--Luang Traikisya
Asst. do.
-Khun Pises
Accountants Khun Raiathon, NaiChoate,
Nai Bit
Treasury
Treasurer-Luang Prakitch
Cashier-Klun Rajavitra Chief Clerk-Nai Choi
Ceremonial Officials
Oficer-Luang Pramuen Assistant-Luang Abhai Chief Clerk-Nai Busaya
LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL (Krom Ratha Montri Sapha) PresidentActing-ChaoPhya Vichitwongse
Woodikrai
Vice-Presid't Atg.--Phya Rajavara Nukoon Secretary--Phya Srisundhon Volarn Assist.Secretary-LuangMahasidh Voharn Prince Chao Få Bhanurangsi Prince Krom Kluang Nares Prince Krom Hluang Bijit Prince Krom Hluang Prachaks Prince Krom Mun Bhrom Prince Krom Khun Sirithaj Prince Krom Hluang Devawongse Prince Krom Khun Sommot Prince Krom Mun Vivith Prince Krom Hluang Damrong Prince Krom Khun Bidyalabh
Prince Chao Fa Krom Hluang Naris Prince Krom Mun Marubhongse Prince Krom Mun Rajburi Prince Alangkarn Mom Chao Phoerm
Chao Phya Bhanu wongse Chao Phya Bhaskarawongse Chao Phya Surasakdi Chao Phya Devesr
Chao Phya Norarat
Chao Phya Surawongse
Chao Phya Sri Dhamatiraj Phya Montri
Phya Sriharaj Ridhikrai
Phya Sri Phiphat Phya Anuchit Phya Bamrerbhakdi
Phya Mahanives Phya Sri Sahadheb Phya Bhibhat Kosa Phya Ridhirong Phya Debvorajun Phya Prasiddhi
1262
Phya Dip Kosa
Phya Surasih
Phya Abhayaranariddhi
Phya Dhamasarnit
MINISTRY OF THE INTERIOR (Krasuang Mahathai)
BANGKOK
Office: Sala Lukhun Grand Palace Minister Prince Damrong Vice-Minister-Phya Sri Sahadebh Private Secty.--Phya Narong Rueng Rit
DEPARTMENTAL ADMINISTRATION
(Palat Banchi)
Director Phya Raj Phinichai Financial Secretary-Luang Naruraj Recorder Phra Bochana Vilas Keeper of the Seals- Do.
Assistant-- Luang Khachentramat
Do. -Luang Anuchit Phithales
PROVINCES
High Com'er for Nakon Sritamaraj (Ligor) Circle, with residence in Singora-Phys Chol Buranuraks
High Com'er for Chumpon Circle, with
resdce. in Chaiya-Phya Mahibal High Com'er for Petchaboon Circle, with residence at Petchaboon-Phya Thepha Thibodee
High Commissioner for Chantaburi--Phya
Trang Phoomaphil
High Com'er for Pataui-Phya Sakdi Seni
FOREST DEPARTMENT Conservator-W F. Lloyd, Bangkok Deputy Conser.-H.B.G. Garrett (on leave) D -Luang Vanarak Damrong
Do.
Do.
POLITICAL DEPARTMENT
Conservator
Director Phya Raj Sena
Do.
Asst. do.
Luang Wichit Seni
Do.
Do.
Khun Pakdi Ronachit
Do.
LOCAL DEPARTMENT
Director-H. R. H. Prince Yucala
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
(Under the Ministry of the Interior) High Commissioner of the Isarn (Eastern) Circle, with residence in Ubol-Rajhad- hani-Prince Krom Khun Sanprasit High Commissioner of the Udon (North- eastern) Circle, with residence in Ban Dua Makeng-Phya Sri Suriya Raj High Commissioner for the Bayap (North- western) Circle, with residence in Chiengmai-Phya Surasi Visithasak High Commissioner for Ayuthia Circle
with residence in Ayuthin-Phya Boran Buranuraks
High Commissioner for the Pitsanulok Circle, with residence in Pitsanuloke- Phya Othai Montri
High Commissioner for the Khorat Circle, with residence at Khorat (Nakara Ra- jasima) Phya Chasaen
Special and High Commissioner for the Pachim Circle, with residence in Patriew -Prince Krom Mun Marubongse High Commissioner for the Nakon Chaisee Circle, with residence at Phra Pratom
-Phya Sunthon Buree
High C'sioner for Ratburi Circle, with residence in Ratburee-- Phya Kraipetch Ratana Songkram
High Commissioner for Nakonsawan Circle, with residence in Nakonsawan -Phya Amarindr
High Comissioner for PuketCircle (Western Coast), with residence in Puket Phya Rasada Nupradit
(Bangkok)
-C. M. Medworth, Lampang
M. H. F. Swete, Nan A. W. Ogilvie (on leave) -F. D. Ryan, Chiengnai -Luang Vaneapruk Pichan,
Nig Bri
-Khoon Daruplan Pitak,
Pahnampo
A. W. Paliner, Mg, Gonau -N. D. Bainbrigge, Lampang -Khoon Phonpalarak, Mauf
mein
Nai Bin, Pahinampo -R. Stokoe, Ban Don --Khun Wankan Pinit, Pit-
sanuloke
-Nai Thién, Lampang
E. H. Luke, Mailongson -R. H. Nisbet, Chiengmai -E. MacWought, Lampang
Nai Lop, Rabing
ww
-Khoon Samnak Kekhom,
Chengmai
-Nai Phune, Lampang
Nai Thong Inn, Ban Don -Nai Lik, Ban Don
ROYAL SURVEY DEPARTMENT (Krom Penti)
Director R. W. Giblin, F.R.G.S. Dep. do.-A. J. Irwin, B.A., B.A.1., A.MLCE. Palat Krom-Pra. Kammuan Kakanan
Do. -Pra. Sakawn Kitpramuan Accountant A. E. de Campos
Do. -Luang Prachum Supt. P. Verdon
Do.-N. E. Lowe
Do. S. Masterman, A.M.I.B.E. Do. P. R. Kemp
Do. -J. Michell Assist.-Supts.
-W. A. Shand
Do.
-J. D. Byrne
Do.
-C. S. McCormick
Do.
A. Edwardes
Do.
-K. C. Gairdner
Do.
-D. T. Sawkins, BA.
Do.
-C. A. Rust, B.Á.
Assist. Surveyors-Ss. J. Pieris
Do.
Do.
Do.
W. G. Swan
-Khun Anutit
-
-Khun Witun
BANGKOK
District Survy.-P. R. Kemp Nakawn
Sritamarst
District Surveyor-N. E. Lowe, Payap
(Chiengmai)
Drafting Branch
H. A. Thompson, acting in charge J. R. Bell, assistant
Photo Zincographic Department
P. Mackenzie in charge
Map Sales Department
Praya Kamnuan Kakanan in charge
Inspector-General
PROVINCIAL GENDARMERIE (Under Minister of the Interior) Head Quarters, Bangkok
Major General G. Schau (Phya Vasuthep) Chief of Staff-Col. Plira Pet Intra Chief Account-Lt. Col. Luang Pitsanusen Investigation Dept.- Lieut. Khoon Phitak Equipment Dept. Capt. Luang Anuchit Officers School-Capt. Khoon Atyaphitak European Officers---Ît. Col. Kolls (Singora), Capts. B. Thorvaldsen (Chingmai), C N. Springer (Nan), Sylow (Lampang), F. M. Fabucius (Me Sot), Seiden Faden (Makeng), Andersen (Mo Hong Song), G. L. E. Warming (Phrapatom), F. Stiener (Ayuthia), H. T. Trolle (Pitsanuloke), J. Jarmer (Muang Juem)
ROYAL DEPARTMENT OF MINES AND GEOLOGY
(Krom Rach Lohakit Phumwityah)
Director-Phya Sri Sahadheb Deputy Director-J. H. Heal, A.R.S.M.,
F.G.S.
Bangkok Office
Inspector--E. Geoffrey Lee, A.R.S.M. Chief Asst. Luang Sakon Lohakarn Accountant W. Eng Yue
Supt. of Boring-J. A. Minto Asst. do.
Puket Office
J. M. Gray
Inspector-Phya Boromabart Bam-
roong
Asst. Inspector-W. Gambell Weeks,
A.R.S.M.
Asst. Inspector-Guy M. Yeets, A.R.S.M. Patani Office
Inspector-Frank P. Clark
MINISTRY FOR WAR (Krasuang Kralahome) Minister-Gen. H.R.H. Prince Somdet Chow Fa Krom Phra Bhanubunduwongse Voradej (Bhanurangsi)
Under Secretary-Major-General Phya
Prasiddhi Salakarn Commander-in-Chief-General H. R. H.
Prince of Nakouchaisi (Chira).
1263
Second in Command-Lieutenant General
Phya Siharaj Dejo.
Aide-de-Camp-Lt. Mom Chow Chuladis
ADJUTANT GENERALS' DEPARTMENT (Krom Palat Thabok)
Adjutant General-Major General Phya
Voradej
Assistant Adjutant General-Lt. Col.
Phra Ramronarong
INTENDANCE DEPARTMENT (Krom Yokrabat Thabok.)
Intendant General-Col. Phya Vijit
Narong
GENERAL STAFF
(Sénathikarn Taharnbok)
Chief of General Staff-Major General
Mom Chatidej Udom
Asst.--Major Luang Bhuvanarth Marubal
MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
(Krasuang Karn Tangprathes) Minister Prince Krom Luang Deva-
wongse Varorprakar
Under Secretary of State-Phya Phipat
Kosa (Xavier)
1st Secretary-Phya Ratana Kosa Secretaries Luang Visutr Kosa, Khun Akson Sombati Smientra, Luang Vises Virajthar, Khun Vithes Vorakitch, Luang Ratanayapit
Political and Diplomatic Director--Phra Dithakar Bhakdi Sub-Directors-Luang Vichar Kosa, Khoon
Sman Maitriraks
Judicial and Consular
Director-Mom Chow Chek
Sub-Director-Luang Phipit Virajkar Asst. Luang Udom Kosa
Archive Department
Sub-Director--Luang Visutr Virajthes
Account Department
Director Phya Raksa Sombati Assistant-Khun Vithih Vorakar
Bureau of the General Adviser General Adviser-Jens I. Westengard Secretaries Phya Boiraks, Luang San-
pakitch
--
Assistants Mom Chow Vibule, Luang SundhornuraksaKhom, BhirajBhisadarn
MINISTRY OF LOCAL GOVERNM'T Minister-Chow Phya Yomaraj
Priv. Sec. to the Minister-Luang Banasar
Prasith
Under Sec. of State-Phya Intrathibodi
Siharaj Rong Muang
Chief Accountant--Phra Prajakor Kich-
vichar
Recorder Luang Suphasar Phinich Correspondents-Luang Santhis Thura-
raks, Luang Kichakar Sithikor
1264
Archivist--Luang Sara Nuboribal
Foreign Department
BANGKOK
Director J. M. de Jesus Translator--Luang Svasd Vieng Chai
Registration Department Director-Luang Sarisdi Karbarchong Asst. Director-Khoon Sara Nukichkosol
-Nai Chan Kim Bee
Do.
District Officers' Department Director-Phra Phechrpani
Asst. Director-Khoon Svasd Nakarinth Asst. Prosecutor-Khoon Phichitr Thora
Phakd
Inspector-Khoon Nara Nukukich
District Officers of Inner Circle City-Luang Phithaks Thepnakor Dusit Khoon Yisar Phakdi Sampeng Luang Visutr Borihar Bangrak-Luang Svasd Nakares Bangkok Yai--Khoon Vichar Maraca Bangkok Noi--Luang Vithi Thamasan-
chor
Banglampoolang-Khoon Phool Phalakorn District Officers of the Outer Circle Round Bangkok
Bangkhoonthien-Luang Lokhabal Rajboona-Luang Tharabal Bungsue-Luang Narabal Bangkhen-Luang Thoranibal Thalingxan-Khoon Buri Raksa Nongkhem-Nai Hoh Phasicharoen- Nai Chin Bangkapi Nai Sagniem
Governors of the Provinces of Bangkok Nontaburi Phra Sayam Nonlakhetr
Khayan (Commissioner)
Samuth Prakar-Phra Phiphit Phola-
phakd (Commissioner)
Nakhor Khuen Khan--Phra Thephalu,
(Commissioner)
Pratoom Thani - Mom Chow Khachor
Suphasavasd (Commissioner) Thanyaburi-Phya Nontaburi Srikrase-
traram (Commissioner)
Minburi Mom Chow Sagna Gnam (Com-
missioner)
Police Department
Comr. of Police-Eric St. J. Lawson Deputy Com. of Police-E. W. Trotter
Bangkok Town
Divisional Supts. of Police-R. C. Whit- ing, Phra Artikorn Prakart, Phra Anan Nararaks, Luang Chammong Nararaks, Luang Chambong Nararaks, Luang Pholaphak Phibal, Luang Pholaphak Phibal, Luang Thorani Narubet Asst. Supts. of Police-Luang Thurakarn Kamchat, Luang Smak Chairas, Luang Vipath Pranoot, Luang Kamchat Sona- thoocharit, Luang Anumat Manukich, Luang Prachar Samosor, Nai Vatana, Nai Ruay, L. Clements, L. Day
Chief Inspectors of Police Nai Soon, Luang Nikor Boriraks, Nai Sooi, Nai Leck, Nai Yoo, Nai Chui, Nai Term. Nai Plang, Nai Lien, Nai Chang, Khun Phol Phibool, Nai Kham
Probationary Chief Inspector of Police-
P. A. R. Barron
Special Branch
Divisional Supt. of Police-Luang Nora.
phak Pratikor
Chief Inspector of Police-S. P. Groves,
H. S. Oldham
Northern Suburbs Division Divisional Supt. of Police-C. B. Follett Asst. Supts. of Police-Luang Smak Buri-
rom, Luang Arsa Pholnikor
Chief Inspectors of Police-C. Forty, Nai
Chow
Southern Suburbs Division Divisional Supt. of Police-C. B. West,
(Acting)
Asst. Supt. of Police-Luang Rithiruang
Bamrabehor
Chief Inspector of Police-Nai Thien
BANGKOK REVENUE DEPARTMENT (Krom Sanphakorn Nai)
Central Office
Director--Phra Ratsdakorn Koson Asst.-(Vacant)
Chief inspector -L. Phalakorn Nuraks Chief Accountant-L. Nipat Pokakorn Assistant--Nai Ame
Secretary-Nai Inn, Nai Chirm Bangkok Revenue Office
Chief Revenue Officer-L.Saravit Vicharn Assistants--Nai Tim, Nai Plien, Khoon
Vicharn Sanphakorn
Nontaburi Revenue Office Assistant-Nai Thong Sook
Samuth Praker Revenue Office Assistant-Nai Thim
Nakorn Khuen Khan Revenue Office Assistant-Luang Mahattai
Pratoom Thani Revenue Office Assistant-Nai Plien
Thanyaburi Revenue Office Assistant Luang Nanthaphol Phibool
Minburi Revenue Office Assistant-Nai Phaeng
SANITARY DEPARTMENT Central Office
Director-Phra Bejrajata Secretary-Luang Prawatr Interpreter-G. Koffoed Accountant-Luang Prawatr (acting)- Chief Clerk-Nai Poh
Northern Section
Director-Phya Mahatep Assistant--Luang Phakdi
Southern Section Director-Phra Rataya Nuraks Assistant--Luang Visai
BANGKOK
1265
Office of the Medical Officer Medical Officer--H. Campbell Highet, M.D.,
C.M., D.P.H. (London)
Assistant M. Carthew, M.B., B.CH. (Edin.) do. James C. Fyshe, B.A., M.D., D.P.H. (McGill)
Veterinary Surgeon-H. S. Leonard,
M.R.C.V.S. (London)
Chief Sanitary Inspector-Khun Sutha
Phithaks
Clerk and Interpreter-Nai Sanor
Engineering Office
City Engineer L. R. de la Mahotierê Superintendent Engineer-F. Didier Assistant Engineer R. Belhomme
do. do. -G. Lewy Architect-P. Ligonnet
Chief Surveyor-E. B. d'Herlinville Asst. Surveyor--P. Montegut.
Do.
-Khun Chakrvichanbodhi Chief Draughtsman--L. Delaunay Asst. de-Nai Man
Clerk and Interpreter-Nai Ti
Electrical Engineering Office Electrical Engineer A. Odent Clerk and Interpreter--H. Ffederichs
MINISTRY OF ROYAL HOUSEHOLD
(Krom Wang)
Minister H. R. H. Somdet Chao Fa Krom
Luang Narisaranuvatiwongs Under Secretary-Phya Bamroebhakdi Director General of Palace Guard-
Phya Viengnai Narubal
CEREMONIES
Chief of Ceremonies-Phpa Anuraks Raj
Montien
Sub-Chief of Ceremonies-Phra Aksorn
Sombung
H.S. M.'s PRIRY PURSE DEPARTMENT(Krom
Phra Klang Khangti) Director General
Sommot
Treasury
Treasurer-Luang Prakitch Cashier-Khun Kajavitra Chief Clerk-Nai Choi Ceremonial Officials
Officer--Luang Pramuon
LICENCE DEPARTMENT Secretary to Licensing Board-Vacant
FINANCIAL ADVISER'S OFFICE Financial Adviser-W. J. F. Williamson Asst. do. do. -O. J. Sykes
Secy, to F, A.-Luang Suphan Sombatti Special Treasury Commissioner-C. H.
Ramsay (attached)
COMPTROLLER-GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT Comptroller-General-Prince Rajani
ACCOUNTS AND AUDIT OFFICE Deputy Comptroller General-E. Florio Asst. Comptrollers-General-J. Langley,
Phra Jaiyos, Luang Vimon
Superintendents-H. Bauer, Mom Chow Sudasinoday, Luang Pipit Sombat, Khun Indr Sombat, Nai King, Nai Kli, Nai Sombun, Nai Chuang, Lhun Cham-
ras
PAPER CURRENCY OFFICE
Director-Phra Manas Manit Treasurer-Luang Supan Ratana Pichitr Accountant Khun Sri Sombat
ROYAL MINT
Director-Genl.-H. R. H. Prince Suriyong Sub-Director-Luang Thonasit Engineer-J. W. Ackling Chief Assayer-A. Marcan
ROYAL TREASURY DEPARTMENT, Director-General-Mom Chao Nane
H. R. H. Prince
Director Vacant
Depty. General--Phya Subhakorn Legal Adviser S. Brighouse (Tilleke
and Gibbins
Central Office
Correspondent-Luang Rajasupya Secretary--Khun Charern Interpreter-Nai Perm Revenue Office
Chief Inspector-Khun Charoon Asst. do. -Nai Chuang Building Office
Chief Inspector-Khun Prakob Asst. do. -Khun Pisarn Accountant's Office
--
Chief Accountant-Luang Traikisya Asst. do. - Khun Pises Accountant-Khnn Rajathon Nai Choate
Nai Bit
REGISTRY OF REVENUE FARMS
CUSTOMS AND EXCISE DEPARTMENT Central Office
Director-General-H. H. Mom Chao Prom Adviser and Deputy-Director-General-
William Nunn
Chief Inspector-R. W. Lamberton. Chief Secretary-Luang Phithak Sombat Asst. Secy.-Luang Upaniksit Saraban Principal Statistical Office-N. Maxwell Analyst-Reinhold Lucius, Dr. Phil Cashier--Tan Chuan Tiong
VALUATOL'S OFFICE
Valuer-Mom Narathiraj
Assistant-Khun Savok Vorayutk
J
40
1266
EXPORT DIVISION
BANGKOK
Director- Luang Saliya Koraphiphat Assistant-Khun Bhanda Lakanavicharn
MPORT DIVISION
Chief Clerk-Kho Poh Yang
INLAND TAX AND EXCISE REGISTER OFFICE Director-Luang Akson Sombat
OUTDOOR STAFF
Chief Surveyor-H. G. Lumberton Surveyors J. F. Collaco, H. G. Bigg-
Wither, Luang Sombat Thanyaphon Chief Preventive Officers-H. Sunkemat, C. Knox, Nai Raks Phumindr, R. J. Gibbons
PAKNAM STATION
Officer in Charge-Phra Racha Sathok
KOII-SI-CHANG STATION
Officer in Charge-T. A. Nicolay
Asst. Luang Abhai
Chief Clerk-Nai Busaya
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
Minister H. R. H. Prince Chandaburi Secretary to Minister-Luang Deb Ratana
Narindr
Central Bureau
CENTRAL DEPARTMENT
Under Secy.-Phya Isarabandh Sobhon Director-Phra Racha Sombat Sub-Director-Luang Kosakara Vicharn
MINISTRY OF LANDS AND AGRICULTURE
(Krasuang Krasetrathikarn)
Minister H.E.Chao Phaya Devesr Wongs-
wiwadhna
Vice-Minister H. E. Lieut-Gen. Phaya
Wongsanuprabhadh
Under-Sec.-H. E. Phaya Sri Sunthorn
Woharn
Secretary-Luang Wiset Salee
ADVISER'S OFFICE
Adviser-W. A. Graham
Assistant Khun Pithet Pochanawisudt
Do. -Khun Tarapakh
CENTRAL OFFICE
Director of Secretariat Khun Kasipon
Pibun (acting)
Director of Accounts Khun Wihikorn
Banakitch
Statisties Nai Tanom
DIVISIONAL COMMISSIONERS OF LANDS AND AGRICULTURE Monton Krung Tepe Commissioner-Phaya Wiset Pochana
Asst. Comsnr.-Luang Pokpol Puntawi
Monton Puket Commissioner-Luang Abhiraks Rachridhi
Asst. Commissioner-(Vacant)
PROVINCIAL SERICULTURE STATIONS Korat Superintendent-Y. Takano
Do. Instructor-K. Juka Buriram Superintendent-H. Jokota
do.
-Nai Fong
Asst.
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL COLLGE
Sapatoom
Director-Mom Racha Wongs Toh Assistant L. F. van Ravenswaay House-keeper-Nai Mai
Lecturers--Mom Rajawongs Toh, P. Freye,
F. Lupsa, Mom Chao Pun Sukasem Teachers-Nai Mai, Nai Looan, Nai Choe
ROYAL DEPARTMENT OF MINES
AND GEOLOGY
(Krom Racha Lohakit)
Director General Phaya Boromabath
Bamrung
Inspector Genl.-J. H. Heal, A.R.S.M., F.G.S. Deputy Genl. Luang Loha Phum Pitaya
Nukarn
BANGKOK OFFICE
Chief Assistant-Luang Sokon Lohakarn Assistants Luang Sanpha Lohakarn, Nai
Kim Chyo, Nai Son
Accountant-Nai Soon Hock
BORING SECTION
Superintendent J. A. Minto
Asst.
do. -James M. Gray
MONTON PUKET-MINES OFFICE Adviser to the Divisional Commissioner for Lands and Agriculture-E. Geoffrey Lee, A.R.S.M.
Assistant Inspectors-W. Gambell Weeks,
A.R.S.M., Guy M. Yetts, A.R.S.M.
Chief Assistant-Mom Racha Wongs Pra-
wase
Assistants Nai Smit, Nai Seng, Khun
Phitak Lohapitr
MONTON PATANI-MINES OFFICE Assistant Inspector-(Vacant) Assistant-Khun Anuphat Thanakorn
LAND SETTLEMENT COMMISSION (Kong Ok Chanote Ti Din)
Director General
Bamrung
-
Phaya Boromabath
Inspector General Phaya Prachachib
Boriban
―
Assistant Inspector-(Vacant)
MONTON KRUNG TEPE Commissioner--Luang Pramuan Pumitet Asst. Comsnr.-Luang Thasa Chit Wicharn
MONTON KRUNG KAO
BANGKOK
Commissioner -- Luang Kasikarn Bancha
(acting)
Asst. Commissioner-Luang Ketanuraks
MONTON PRACHIM
Commissioner--Phra Pochakorn
Asst. Commissioner - Khun Kasipdpibun
MONTON NAKON CHAISI
Commissioner-Phaya Tanyapiban Asst. Commissioner-Nai Sang
1207
Dregemasters-V. Virgen, Van Cuylen- berg, O. Tratnik, O. Massy, Nai Sam, Nai Chang
Overseers-Mom Sihapongs, Nai Huat,
Nai Sorn
CANAL MAINTENANCE SERVICE Engr. in charge - Mom Chao Chalart, C.E. Assistant--Nai Yeuan
Lock Master, Sapatoom-Nai Mongkol
Thakai-Nai Kwan
Samrong-Nai Sorn
Do.
Do.
Do.
MONTON PHITSANULOK
Do.
Bangkanak-Nai Heng Prakanong Nai Inn Thatua-Nai Thong
Commissioner-Luang Pratet Khantakarn
Do.
Do.
(acting)
Asst. Commissioner-(Vacant)
Do.
Do.
DEPARTMENT OF LAND RECORDS
(Krom Tabien Ti Din)
Do.
Do.
Director General
Phaya Boromabath
Baarung
Director (Vacant)
Asst. Dir. Khun Phumpitayaporn
REGISTRARS OF TITLE DEEDS Krung Tepe-Khun Banhan Pumasatit Muang Krung Kao-Khun Sakon Saleekit Muang Lopburi-Nai Aan
Muang Ang Tong Nai Prot
Muang Nakon Chaisi- Khun Rachprakat Muang Suphan-Luang Prakit Kantaket Muang Samudt Sakhon (Tachin) Vacant Muang Prachim-Mun Boriman Niwet Muang Chacherngsao (Petriew) - Khun.
Withet Bomatorn
Muang Chonburi--Luang Borirakbodi Muang Pitsanulok-Nai Kan Muang Pichai-Nai Pong (acting)
Muang do.
Nai Chort
do.
IRRIGATION DEPARTMENT (Krom Klong)
Director-Mon Anuruth Deva, M.A, L.L.B.
Barr-at-Law (acting) Deputy Director (Vacant)
Asst. Dir.-C. P. Vyverberg, c.I. (Mechan- ical), F. C. Nienaber, c.1. (Constructional) Secretary-Nai Wan (acting)
Chief Accountant-Lieut. Nai Tek
Do. Inspector-Nai Thion
Do. Clerk-Nai Chuang
Do. Draughtsman-U. N. Nandy
WORKSHOP AND STORES
Engineer-P. W. Gritters Storekeeper-Nai Yui
CONSTRUCTIONAL AND SURVEYING STAFF
Executive Engineers-B. H. W. Wille- brands, H. F. W. Becking, c.., Nai Sanra Bern, A.M.I.C.E., Mom Chao Chalart, c.1. Surveyor-(Vacant)
Paktaklong Nai Ploi Pasi Charoen (in.)-Nai Sart do. do. (out) Nai Seng Bang Yang-Naí Chem Bang NokKwaak-NaiChoey
MINISTRY FOR PUBLIC
Minister
INSTRUCTION
ECCLESIASTICAL AFFAIRS
-H. E. Chow Phya Vichit Wongsa Woodhikrai
Under-Secretary-H. E. Phya Visuddha
Suriyasakti
Clerk of the Seals--Luang Bhakdi Naru-
besra
Private Secretary --Luang Vichitr Sun-
terakarn
Keeper of Records- Luang Dharmakar-
anuvatr
HIGH SCHOOLS (BANGKOK) KING'S COLLEGE (BOYS' RESIDENTIAL)
Head Master-A. Cecil Carter, M.A. Assistants-C. F. Hare, B. A., C. A. S. Sewell, B.A., E. J. Godfrey, B.S., G. H. Cartwright, B.A.
SUAN KULARB (BOYS' DAY SCHOOL) Head Master--H. E. Spivey
Assistants T. Judge, M.A., N. Sutton,
A. C. Chundell, A. J. Hill
TRAINING COLLEGE FOR TEACHERS Principal-F. G. Trayes
MABAPRITARAM SCHOOL
Head Master-J. Caulfield James
SIAMESE OFFICIALS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES
ENGLAND, NETHERLANDS, AND Belgium H. S. M.'s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Courts of St. James, Netherlands, and Belgium Located in London, at the Legation, 23, Ashburn Place, S. Kensington-Phya Visutr Kosa
Councillor W. J. Archer, c.M.G. 1st. Secty.Phra Chaisurin
40*
1268
BANGKOK
Secretary Interpreter-Lewis C. Bateman Attaché Nai Tiem Student-Interptrs.-Nai Pradit and C.
Loftus
FRANCE, ITALY, SPAIN, AND PORTUGAL H. S. M.'s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary for France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Located in Paris at the Legation in the Avenue d'Eylau-Ninee Bovoradej Councillor-C. Corregioni d'Orelli 2nd Secty.--Luang Montri Nikorn Kosa
Do. -M. Ryckman
Attaché Nai Snók, Nai Chareon
GERMANY, AUSTRIA-HUNGARY, DENMARK, NORWAY AND SWEDEN
H. S. M.'s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary for Germany, Austria-Hungary, Denmark, Norway and Sweden, Located in Berlin at the Legation, 3a, Herwarthstrasse - Phya Sri Dhamasasna
Councillor
H. Keuchenius
2nd Secretary-Luang Bhinit Virajkitch Attaché
Assistants-J. H. Loftus
Do. -Herr Albers
RUSSIA
H. S. M.'s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, located at St. Petersburg-Phya Sudhammaitri
Secretary-M. Cuissart
Attaché Khoon Lipikor Kosol Student Interpreter--
JAPAN
H. S. M.'s Envoy Extraordinary and Min- ister Plenipotentiary, located at Tokyo
-Phra Narison
Secretary-Luang Bhisarbhochanakiteh Student Interpreter-Nai Chuang
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
H. S. M.'s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, located at Washington--
Chargé d'Affaires-Phya Akkharaj Varad-
hira
2nd Secretary-E. H. Loftus Attache Nai Teu
Student Interpreter-Nai Chonte
MINISTRY OF PUBLIC WORKS
(Krasuang Yotha Thikarn) Minister-Prince Nares Yorariddhi Under Secretary-H. E. Phya Sathien
Thapanakitj
Private Secretary-Nai Chua
General Administration
Director-H. H. Prince Suthas Seal Keeper-Luang Visate Banakan Assistant of Works-Luang Boromraj Saev
Correspondent-Luang Visarn Banakitj Interpreter-Luang Visith Banakon Record Keeper-Khoon PraphatrNavakatj
Accounts Section
Accountant-Luang Prapai Hiranraks Asst. do. Nai Phing
ROYAL NAVAL DEPARTMENT
(Krom Tahar Rua) ADMIRALTY STAFF
Commander-in-Chief
Vice Admiral
-
H.R.H. Prince Chao Fa Krom Khun Nakon Sawan Vorabhinit
2nd in Command-Rear Admiral H.R.H. Prince Krom Mun Chumpon Khet Udom Sakdi
Assistant Commander-in-Chief and Chief of the Staff-Rear-Admiral Phya Dhep Orachun
L
Secretary to the Navy Capt. Phra
Orasum Phalaphibarn
Asst. Sec. to the Navy-Lieut.-Comdr.
Luang Harn Hakripu
Secty. to the Commander-in-chief-Sub-
Lieut. Nai Sang
Secretary to the 2nd in Command-Lieut. Comdr. Luang Chakryananubicharn.
ADMIRALTY PAYMASTER STAFF Chief Paymaster-Capt. Mon Chao Toom Asst. do. -Command. Phra Ratna
Chakra
Chief-Auditor-Commander Mom Chao
Oupaphat
Accountant-Lieut. Comdr. Khun Suthe Inspector of Stores-Lieut. Khun Visutr Cashier Lieut. Nai Mee
ADMIRALTY RECRUITING STAFF Inspector of Recruiting Comdr. Phra
Suriyaphakdi (officiating)
JUDGE ADVOCATE DEPARTMENT Director-Lieut. Command. Luang Suthi
Sarn Thamrong (officiating)
ADMIRALTY COURT
Judge Advocate-Sub-Lieut. Nai Thomya Registrar--Nai Un (officiating)
CENTRAL NAVAL COURT
Judge Advocate Junr. Sub-Lieut. Nai
Phatt
Assistant Advocate Junr. Sub-Lieut. Jim Registrar Warrent-Officer Nai Nuan
HOSPITALS
Director of Hospitals-Capt. T. H. Hays,
M.D., PH.G.
Chief Surgeon -- Lient.-Comdr. A. II.
Boehmer, M.D.
Paymaster and Secretary-Junr. Sub
Lieut. Nai Dokmai
BANGKOK
1269
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
Inspector General-Rear-Admiral H.R.H. Prince Krom Mun Chumpon Khet Udom Sakdi
Asst. General--Lieutenant Nai Sri Paymaster-Sub-Lieut. Nai Philoi Secretary-Junr. Sub-Lieut. Nai Siri
ROYAL NAVAL ACADEMY Director-Comdr. Luang Phinit Chakra-
phan
ROYAL NAVAL ENGINEERING COLLEGE Director-Lieut. Comdr. Nai Barr Asst. Director-Lieut. Nai Hang
ROYAL NAVAL GUNNERY SCHOOL Director-Lieut. Luang Sakdadeja
HYDROGRAPHIC DEPARTMENT Director-Lieut. Nai Molin Asst. Director-Sub-Lieut. Nai Chek
ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT Director-Comdr. A. Barnholdt
Asst. Director-Lieutenant Comdr. Khun
Sangsarasit
TORPEDO DEPARTMENT Director-Rear-Admiral H. R. H. Prince Krom Mun Chumpon Khet Udom Sakdi
BANGKOK NAVAL STATION & DOCKYARDS Inspector General --Rear-Admiral Phya
Raj Song Khram
Asst. Inspector General -- Lieut.-Comdr.
Luang Chakraya
Chief Constructor-Engineer Capt. Phra
Vicharn Chakrkit
Asst. Constructor-Comdr. Chamun Chitr
Sneh
Engr. Supt.--Engr. Comdr. F. W. Cookson Asst. Supt.--Engr. Lieut. Comdr. Khun
Charn Chakuni
Chief Boiler Maker--Y. Yasui Inspector of Carpentry--Lieut. Mom Chao
Adya (acting)
Marine Comdr. - Lieut. - Comdr. Luang
Asa Salakarn
Inspector of Boats and Barges-Comdr.
Phra Phairi Phinse
Paymaster-Lieut. Nai Sri
Judge Advocate- Juur. Sub-Lieutenant
Nai Ung
COAST STATION STAFF & FORTS Inspector General-Capt. H. R. H. Prince.
Vadhiijai Chalermlabl
FORTS Plany Fai Fa
Lieut. Khun Bhol Bhikat
Sua Sorn Leb
Lieut. Nai Bhuan
Phi Sua Samuth
Lieut.-Luang Chamnili Cholatharn Sub-Lieut. Nai Chiom
Phra Chua Chom Klao
Lieut.-Luang Indr Bithi
Sub-Lieut.-Nai Bang
NAVAL TRAINING ESTABLISHMENTS Muang Samuth Songkram
Lieut--Nai Ngon
Sub-Lieut.-Nai Hong
Paymaster-Nai Sin
Muang Samuth Sakm
Lieut. Khun Phlarn Marit Rab Sub-Lieut.-Nui Leh
Paymaster-Nai Bhat
Muang Nakon Khuan Khan
Lieut. Nai Chu
Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Poang Paymaster-Nai Chun
Muang Samuth Prakarn
Lieut. Nai Bhuan Sub-Lieut.-Nai Add
Paymaster-Nai Chai
Bang Phra
Lieut.-Comdr. Khun Prab Thavai Soon Sub-Lieut. Nai Term Paymaster Nai Chew
Monthon Chantaburi
Commander-Phra Indr Raksa Paymaster Sub-Lieut.-Nai Sook
Muang Rayong
Lieut. Nai Klieng Sub-Lieut. Nai Naiy Paymaster Nai Kret
Muang Chantaburi Sub-Lieut. Nai Kim
THE FLEET
Commander-in-Chief- Rear-Admiral Phya
Rajavangsan
Assistant Comdr. Phra Amora Mahadej Fleet Inspector of Machinery-Engr. Capt.
A. Jonsen
Paymaster of the Fleet-Lieut. Nai Finh Judge Advocate-Jun Sub-Lieut. Nai Yin Interpreter-Lieut. Nai Tuan
Sec. to the Rear-Admiral.-Lieut.Nai Plaek
TUG AND STEAMBOAT DEPARTMENT Inspector-Lieut.-Comdr. Luang Sakon Asst. Inspector-Lieut. Nai Aire
-Lieut. Khun Kamheng
Saradej
-Sub-Lieut. Nai Lob
-Junr. Sub-Lieut. Nai Laor
Do.
Asst. Inspector General--Comdr. Luang
Artch Narong
Do.
Do.
Do.
Judge Advocate-Junr. Sub-Lieut. Nai
Do.
-Engr. Junr. Sub-Lieut
Nai Lum
Dow
Paymaster-Sub-Lieut. Nai Xam
-Engr.Sub-Lieut. Nai Krut
I
1270
BANGKOK
|
I
I
I
I
1
ROYAL RAILWAY DEPARTMENT
KROM ROT FAI LUANG
Central Administration
Director-Genl.-L. Weiler, Kgl. Baurat Chief Mechanical Engineer P. Giertz,
Royal Prussian Eisenbahn-Bau Betriebs Inspektor
und
Chief Auditor and Traffic Superintendent
-F. Schnerr
Medical Adviser--Dr. T. Heyward Hays Private Secretary and Chief of Personal
Office-Luang Gini Sandananukar
Central Office
Chief-J. S. Braunger Interpreter J. Gardner Record-Keeper-C. A. dos Santos
Assistant Interpreter-Khoon Subhasarn
Praphandh
Clerks Tan Chong Kwang, Nai Lėk, Nai
Boon Chia
Technical Office
Section Engr. in Charge--Phra Rathacharn
Prachaks, C.E.
Head Clerk-Khoon Akani Rotlakarn
Draughtsmen Chin Poon, Nai Thien Hee,
Lien Keng Yean
Executive Service
Section Engineers-E. Eisenhofer, C.E., V. Doering, C.E., Dr. J. Petri, c.E, V. Strauss, C.E., E. Dorow, C‚E.
Asst. Engineers-J. Kienningers, c.E.. F.
Ebel, C.E., F. Richter, c.r.
Asst. Eng, of Works-A. F. Muller Surveyor S. G. H. Adams Bridge Builder--F. Pohlhaus Head-Overseers-R. D. Pereira Overseers-J. John, E. M. Pereira, H. Sharma, R. P. Caldera, Sunderam, Kate Moteo
Sub-Overseers-E. Pillay, Sher Singh, R. Andrews, Rembukwelle, Nai Pan, L. B. Warantenne, Nai Sin
District Medical Officer--Dr. L. Verkey Dressers D. A. A. Ranaweera, Nai Toh Lineman--Nai Man
Maintenance Service Section Engr. in Charge-E. Altmann, C.E. Section Engr.-M. F. Gross, C.E.
Do. -N. F. Passmore, C.. Telegraph Inspectors-K.Brück, R. Lobeck Asst. Teleg. Inspector-P. Fellenberg Chief Perm. Way Inspectors-A. E. Thoy,
J. Emery
Asst. Insps, of Works-C.F.Wehler, R.Götte Asst. Chief Perm. Way Inspector-J. Reina Clerk-Nai Chamroen
Chief Mechanical Engineer's Office Chief Mechanical Engineer--P. Giertz Asst. Chief
do. Traffic Service
-
-O. Brauer
Asst. Traffic Supts.-R. Juerges, M. Wack-
ermann
Traffic Inspector-L. Grenier
Head Clerk-P. Feit
Station Masters-J. Perry (Bangkok), K Behram (Gengkoi), Khoon Bhinit Rotha- karn (Korat), Mas Chinta (Ban Phaji), Khoon Noraphol Rothakam (Ayuthia). Nai Keo Leck (Lopburi), Nai Charoen (Ban Mee), Khoon Rathavisit Sathom (Paknampoh), Khoon Sakon Rathakich (Sung Noen), G. Bamanji (Bangkok Noi), Khoon Phibal Rothayon, (Relieving Sta- tion Master), Khoon Kolayarn Phinit (Phra Patom), Khoon Phibool Rothayarn (Utaradit), Khoon Vicharn Rothukol (Ratburi), Kheon Chamnong Rothakich (Pitsanuloke)
Workshop and Locomotive Service Asst. Workshop and Locomotive Supts.-
L. Rummel, R. Schaedrich Locomotive Foremen-A. Pestonji, H.
Lover
Carriage and Wagon Foreman-J. M. B.
Greene
Paintshop Foreman--C. F. Siegel Carpenter's Shop Foreman-G. Rabe Locomotive Inspectors-E. H. James, (Gengkok), H. Robinson (Pitsanuloke) Book-Keeper-F. W. Rice
Engr. Drivers (Foreign)-H. Hills, E. C. Robinson, H. Keith, L. Heyzer, S. R. Greene, E. Jacobs, R. Sorabjee, K. Jacobs, F. A. van der Smagt, A. W. Wendt, D. Manekjee, L. M. van der Straaten, E. C. Ondatjee, C. E. Ferdinands, J. C Capper, J. A. Lawrence
Chief Auditor's Office
Chief Auditor-F. Schnerr Asst Traffic Supt.-W. Engelhardt
Do.
-O. Neidhardt Cashier-P. A. Pestonji Store-Keeper-P E. Schmidt Interpreter and Translator-Luang Chakr
Rathabodi
Head Clerks--D. A. Pestonji, J. Poulsen, C. P. Wadia, Low Kim Pob, A. Ames, Nai Thomyah
Printing Office Foreman-W. J. Berudt Head Clerk, Goods Office-G. Perosha Clerks C. Tyson, C. Framji, Khoon Sanit
Rathakarn, Khoon Anuman Rothachakr, Low Kim Hin, Kim Kang, Wee ChinSeng
POST AND TELEGRAPH DEPART-
MENT
Deputy Director-General - Th. Collmann
(acting as D.G.)
Assistant to D. C.-G. Wolf Registrar-Richard Götte
Assistant Registrar--Khun Banasarn Chief Siamese Clerk-Khun Prapit Director of Posts-Pra Kabuan
Do. of Telegraphs-Pra Toralek Supt. Foreign Accounts-F. Pickenpack
(acting)
BANGKOK
Chief School Instructor--Pra Toralek Chief Accountant-Kun Anukarn Chief Electrical Engineer-G. Zisswiller
POST AND TELEGRAPH OFFICE No. 1 Superintendent-Nai Fack Assistant-Nai Forn
Telephone Exchange-Nai Toh
No. 2
Supdt. Telegraphs-Luang Chavakit
Do. of Posts-Khun Rajakarn
Mail Officer-Assiz
Assistant Telegraphs-Khoon Chapakit.
Khoon Vicharn
Chief Operator-Nai On
Do.
Nai Meng
No. 4
Post and Telegraph Master-Nai Kart
No. 5
Post and Telegraph Master-Nai Manit
POST AND TELEGRAPH INSPECTORS
(Sarawats)
Bangkok-Luang Pitak
Isarn-Khun Prom
Phajab-Khun Art
Udorn-Khun Pim (acting) Nakonsawan-Khun Borichit Pitsanulok Khun Borirak Korat Khun Kachit
Ayuthia--Khun Pitak (acting) Pachim-Khun Banchong Chantaboon-Nai Bong (acting) Rajburi Nakonchaisee-Lunug Sarawad Choomporn Nai In
Nakon Srithamarat-Khun Chapasarn Puket-Kum Samrit
Patani-Nai Pin (acting)
HARBOUR DEPARTMENT Harbour Master-Luang Anuphan Dhit-
takarn (acting)
Deputy Harbour Master-Luang Anubal
Dhitakam
Assistant do.
MINISTRY OF JUSTICE
1271
Minister H.R.H. Prince Rajburi (Rabi) Deputy Minister-Prince Charoom Under Secretary-Phya Chakrapani Assistant Under Secretary-J.W.Hendriks Assistant U. S.-Phra Thonakitch Raxa Director of Stamps-Phya ChulaRajmontri Judicial Adviser-J. Stewart Black Legislative Adviser-G. Padoux
Legal Adviser--Dr. T. Masao, D.C.L., L.L.D.
ALOIS SCHWEIGER & Co., LD, Merchants
and Commission Agents
A. Hertza, manager L. Bund, assistant Head Office: Vienna
Branches: Hamburg, Manchester, Milan, Lyons, Bombay, Kurrachee, Calcutta, Shanghai, Sydney and Winnepeg
AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY'S AGENCY
Rev. John Carrington, D.D., agent Rev. W. M. Cameron, asst. agent
ANDRE, J.R.(Nachfolyger), Comm.Merchant
Hans Geyer, sole partner Agencies
Adam Opel, motor works
J. Friedmann's Nachfolger, Court
Jewellers, Frankfurt a/M
ANGULLIA, A. & SONS, Merchants and
Commission Agents
ANTONIO & Co., A. M., Manufacturers of
Rubber Stamps-Bush Lane
ARRACAN COMPANY, LIMITED, Rice Millers and General Merchants; Tel. Ad: Arracan
A. A. Smith, manager
W. Mackintosh W. I. Hunter
--A. F. G. Tilleke,
G. I. Thorburn
Nautical Adviser and Assistant Harbour
Master-Captain R. Torresen Chief Clerk-Nai Kuey
Deputy Registrar-Nai Lean Chief Accountant-Nai Roon
Chief Store Keeper-Khun-Anuraks Kosa Supt. of Marine Surveys-J. Mackay,
M.I.M.E.
Assistant Marine Surveyors-C. W. An-
dersen, M.E.
BOARDING OFFICERS' BRANCH Chief Boarding Officer-Capt. R. Torresen
(Nautical Adviser) Asst. Boarding Officer-Capt. C. R. Bargum
do.
do.
--Lieut. G. Foss -Luang Chamnan Navet do. -Luang Buri Raj Bamrung
R. F. Fraser
W. E. Mayger, chief engineer D. G. Smith, asst. do.
Head Office: 574, Old Broad St., London; Branches: Rangoon, Akyab, Bassein, Moulmein, Calcutta and Saigon Agencies
London Assurance Corpn. (Marine) Sun Insurance Office (Fire)
Palatine Insurance Company (Fire)
ASSUMPTION COLLEGE FOR Boys (French,
English, and Siamese Languages) Conducted by the Brothers of St. Gabriel
ASSUMPTION CONVENT SCHOOL-Conducted by the Sisters of St. Paul de Chartres
I
1272
BANGKOK
BADMAN & Co., HARRY A., Naval, Military and Civil Tailors, Court Dressmakers and General Stores
A. C. Warwick, J. P. Gandy, L. T.
Gandy, partners
R. Myram, assistant E. N. Turner, do. P. Christmas, do. R. H. Walters, do. W. H. Austin Miss T. Frankel Miss P. Frankel E. Mumbux, foreman J. Bumet, clerk
BAGAN RUBBER CO., LD.
Directors-W. A. G. Tilleke, Dr. T. Heyward Hays, Phire Moutri, Phra Chareon, J. MacKay, W. Sidney Swart, Phra Ratsoda Korn Estate Manager--Hilton McGill Secretary-G. J. Brnce Registered Office: 10 Collyer Quay,
Singapore
Estate: Bagan Revei, Kelantan
BAN HONG LONG & Co., Merchants
BANGKOK CRICKET CLUB
President J. S. Turner Hon. Sec.-N. Sutton
Committee--C. V. B Davy, C. A Se- well, W. R. H. Taylor, W. G. John- son, P. Nesbitt
BANGKOK
Hotel
DISPENSARY-Near
Oriental
Bangkok Dock Company, Limited
James S. Smyth, M.I.C.E., manager
Cowan Newlands, secretary A. Carson, accountant J. G. Caddger, chief clerk. P. Bulner, assistant
T. Lightbody, technical dept. W. K. Siah, cashier
Shipbuilding and Docking Dept.
John Kerr, Supt. Shipwright and
Dockmaster
A. McKelvie, assistant
Ah Poh, foreman carpenter
Engineering Department
J. Aitchison, A. M.I.E.E., supt, engr. F. Stewart, asst. supt. engineer M. C. Beaton, shop foreman J. Reith, outside foreman
Stores Department
D. Carmichael, storekeeper R. Alexander, inotor garage supt. B. E. Hunt, assistant
do.
BANGKOK GOLF CLUB-Branch Club of the
Royal Bangkok Sports Club
Captain S. Brighouse
Hon. Sec.-C. F. Hare Committee-A. E. Stiven, H. H. Park,
H. S. Oldham
BANGKOK GUN CLUB
Hon. Secretary-C. L. Groundwater
Com.-A. Mohr, J. P. Gandy, J. J. McBeth, A.Tuker, K. W. Wordmann
BANGKOK LAWN TENNIS CLUB
Hon, Sec. and Treasr.-Norman Prentice
BANGKOK LIBRARY (Under the auspices
of the Ladies' Library Association)
President Mrs. W. J. F. Williamson Vice do. -Mrs. S. J. Smith Treasurer--Miss Clifford Gosnell Secretary-Mrs. S. G. Lambert Hon. Librarian- Mrs. T. H. Hays Librarian--Mrs. Jorgensen
BANGKOK MANUFACTURING Co., L., Ice,.
Cold Storage and Aerated Water Fac tory; Tel. Ad: Namkeng
H. Dyson Simpson, geul. mgr. and sec.
K. W. Nordmann, asst.
F. X. Favacho, accountant L. R. Atwell, aerated water dept.
BANGKOK NURSING HOME
Chairman-Judge Skinner
Hon. Treasurer-L. Brewett Taylor Hon.Secretary-R. Clifford Gosnell Miss E. M. Pratt, matron Miss K.Walker
Miss Taylor
BANGKOK OUTFITTING COMPANY-Charoen.
Krung Square
B. Grimm & Co., proprietors
BANGKOK PHILHARMONIC SOCIETY
President E. M. Sequeira Secretary G. E. M. de Jesus Treasurer-L. J. Sequeira Conductor-V. F. Sequeira
Committee--B. R. Gaudart, W. Muller
BANGKOK SAW MILLS, Siam Forest Co.,
Ld., proprietors
T. O'Beirne, mill and yard manager Agencies
National Bank of China, Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld.
(Fire, Life and Marine) Guardian Assurance Co., Ld. Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld. Chubb & Sons Lock and Safe Co., Ld. The Siam Syndicate Ltd. (Phailin Ruby and Sapphire Mines and Kabin Gold Mines) Pacific Mail Steamship Co. Spicer Brothers (Colonial and Foreign)
Ltd.
BANGKOK
BANGKOK TIMES PRESS, LD., Proprietors of Bangkok Times, Daily (English and Siamese), Bangkok Times Weekly Mail, Bangkok S'mai (Siamese), Directory for Bangkok and Siam
Chas. Thorne, managing director
W. H. Mundie, M.A. R. Adey Moore,
E. T. Gatenby
Luang Visut, Siamese editor Nai Chu,
Agency
asst.
do.
Reuter's Telegram Company
BANGKOK TOILET CLUB, Importers and Commission Agents--New Rd., opposite
Bangkok Times"
the
Rossi & Salvi, proprietors E. Rossi Dante, foreman
BANGKOK UNITED CLUB
Committee-J. Caulfield James (chair- man), M. Cooke Dunn, Dr. T. Hey- ward Hays, A. Lennox, P. S. Smith, J. E. Thompson, E. G. Gollo, James Murchie, A. J. Parnotte, Dr. M. A. Smith, W. G. Johnson Secretary J. H. Sedgwick
BANGRAK HOSPITAL-Windmill Road Surgeon T. Heyward Hays, M.D.
BANQUE DE L'INDO CHINE-Head Office: 15, bis Rue Laffitte, Paris: Tel. Ad: Indo- Chine
A. J. Pernotte, acting manager
J. Bernis, accountant
G. Leboucq, cashier
BARMER EXPORT-GESELLSCHAFT, Impor- ters-Head Office: Barmen (Germany), Branch Office, Hamburg; Branches, Medan (Sumatra), Batavia, Samarang and Sourabaja (Java); Bangkok Office: Bush Lane; Tel. Ad: Koch
W. Kochi, manager
BEHN, MEYER & Co., LTD., General Mer-
chants-Head Office: Singapore
E. Lanz and E. Jürgens, managers A. Rabel, assistant F. Mülder
Branches-Hamburg, London, Penang, Manila, Cebu, Iloilo, Zamboanga, Sandakan, Batavia, Soerabaja, Telok Betong, Sumatra,
Agencies
Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co. Hamburg Bremen Fire Insurance Co. Netherlands Fire Insurance Co. Java Sea & Fire Insurance Co. Allianz Fire Insurance Co. of Berlin Mannheimer Insurance Co., Marine General Marine Ins. Co., Ld., Dresden
1273
Nordstern Life Insurance Co., Berlin Western Insurance Co., London Great Eastern Life Assce. Co., S'pore. Insurance Co. of 1873, Hamburg Perofifth Assurance Co., Hamburg Albingia Insurance Co., Hamburg Insurance Co., Hamburg
BENG SENG CHAN RICE MILL-Tel. Ad:
Bengseng
Lau Chong Min (Phra Charoen
Rajathon), proprietor
BERLI & CO., A., M.B.H., Import and Export
Merchants and Commission Agents
H. C. Hanhart, signs per pro.
H. Jucker,
A. Jucker, assistant
Agencies
dlo.
Prussian National Fire Insurance Co. General Average Agents Switzerland
General Insurance Co., Ld.
Salamander Fire Insce. Co. of A'terdam Urbaine Insurance Co. of Paris
Bock, E., C.E., SIAM STONE WORKS
E. Bock, proprietor
BOMBAY-BURMAH TRADING CORP., LD., THE --Head Office: Bombay; Branches: Ran- goon, Moulmein, "Oost Jave,"Sourabaya
Hamilton Price, manager
W. W. Wood,
F. H. Bingham L. Brewitt-Taylor H. Gore-Browne E. G. Herbert G. E. Hewitt
G. Lyun R. B. R. Mair W. R. H. Taylor E. M. Webb
do.
E. C. Favacho, shipping clerk A. W. Trivett, yard clerk H. Jarvis, asst. engineer Chiengmai-E. P. Miller, E. Hut- chinson, A. G. Pardoe, C. A. Sherriff, C. M. Weston
Lakon Lampang-H. W. Clarke, E. J. Walton, C. F. Coates, C. E. Griffith, H. G. Stokes, C. Walter
Muang Prue-W. R. Dibb, J. F. Ked- die, F. J. Francillon, C. B. Atkinson, J. G. Oakden, B. H. Rogers, C. C. Wedderburn, H. C. St. J. Yates Sawankaloke-W. H. Graham Raheng-G. F. W. Elwes, A. A. Porter Paknampho-M. S. Smith
Agencies
British India Steam Nav., Coy., Ld. Imperial Fire Office
Yangtsze Insurance Ass,, Ld.
W. II. Harton & Coy., Calcutta
1274
BANGKOK
BORNEO COMPANY, LIMITED, Merchants- Head Office London; Branches: Batavia, Sarawak, Singapore, Bangkok; and Chiengmai; Stations: Lakon, Paknampho, Raheng Bangkok
J. W. Edie, manager
W. E. Adamı Norman J. Prentice M. T. Cooke Collis A. E. Stiven
H. W. Hall
D. Robertson
G. A. R. Mackintosh
O. M. Peiniger S. G. Lambert
A. R. Malcom
A. Harvey
H. H. G. Massey
D. S. Hewetson
J. M. Blair
Chiengmai, Raheng, Paknainpho, Lakon
D. F. Mactie, manager
R. J. Chaldecott W. G. Peiniger C. B. Ainslie J. D. Macvicar J. E. Dalgleish W. Bain
E. R. Atkins
T. Brodie Chatteris R. W. S. Ogle H. A. Morrison C. H. C. Nash N. C. Braham
C. H. Munro
Rice and Saw Mills (in Bangkok)
W. Muir, superintendent engineer J. Maben, assistant
do.
A. McKendsich, do.
do.
Langkat Crown Oil Depót (Bangkok)
W. A. Robinson, engineer
Agencies
Lloyd's
Asiatic Petroleum Co. Ld. Royal Dutch Oil Company Nobel's Explosives Company Ld. Eastern Insurance Co., Ld. (Fire) Equitable Life Ass. Society of the U.S. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. North China Insce. Co., Ld. (Marine) Northern Assurance Co. (Fire and Life) Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Ocean Marine Insurance Company Ld. Royal Insurance Co. (Liverpool) (Fire) Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Triton Insurance Co., Ld. (Marine) Peninsular & Oriental Steam
Navigation Company
Nippon Yusen Kaisha (Japan Line) Northern Pacific Steamship Company Shire Line of Steamers
BRADLEY L., Merchant
BRITISH-AMERICAN TOBACCO Co., LD.
Head Office: 86, Strand, London, W. C New York Office: 111, Fifth Avenue; Tel. Ad: Bramtoco C. E. D. Warry, manager, Singapore
and Siam
Reginald Page, asst. depôt manager T. A. Slack, assistant
BRITISH CLUB
Committee-W. R. D. Beckett, J. Stewart Black, H. Campbell Highet, W. J. F. Williamson, H. Gittins, A. C. Carter, W. E. Adam, G. E. Hewitt, C. F. Hare
(hon. sec.)
BRITISH DISPENSARY-New Road; Branch
Store: Seekak
CHAROEN KRUNG PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIO
-99, New Road, near Chartered Bank
J. Antonio, proprietor
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA
W. S. Livingstone, agent
G. L. Read, acting accountant A. N. Warrock, sub-accountant J. Cairncross,
do.
J. D. Dossen, chief clerk
C. McIntyre
J. B. Otten
Chea Chee Seng, compradore
CHERSONESE SYNDICATE
Tai Muang, Monthon Paket
A. Steffen--manager
CHIENGMAI GYMKHANA CLUB
Patrons The Siamese High Com- missioner, The Chao Luang, The Chao Uparat, The Commissioner
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE Co., LD. Chief Office for Siam: Oriental Avenue
Louis T. Leonowens, Ld., agents Standley J. Knocker, Singapore,
manager Southern District
CHRIST CHURCH
Rev. H. J. Hillyard, M.A., L.L.D.
CITY DENTAL OFFICE (over British Dis
pensary (See Kak)
G. B. McFarland, M.D., D.D.S.
COHEN, M. B., Timber Merchant and
General Agent (absent)
J. D. Dossen, representative
CONSULATES-See Legations
CONGREGATIONAL MISSION
Miss I. Bradley
BANGKOK
DENNY, MOTT & DICKSON, LIMITED, Mer- chants, Teakwood Exporters, General Importers - Tel. Ad: Denny; Offices, Sawmills and Godowns: West Bank of River; Head Office: London; Branches at Liverpool, Glasgow, Newcastle-on-Tyne, Cardiff, Preston and Fleetwood; also at Lourenço Marques
A. J. C. Dickson, manager
G. Rowland D. McCormack Irvine Simpson T. E. Graham
DEUTSCH SIAMESISCHE HANDELS GESELLS-
CHAFT, M.B.H.
J. Waldburger, manager H. Suhl,
P. Voirol
Agency
Liverpool & London & Globe Insce. Co. Globus Insurance Co. of Hamburg
DEUTSCHER CLUB
Vorstand
Chr. Brockmann, vorsitzender W. Engelhardt, 1 schriftführer
R. Schulz, 2. schriftführer F. Bopp, sackelmeister
P. Hein, 1 hauswart G. Rexhausen, 2 hauswart H. Wilkens, spielwart
DIANA & Co., A., Import and Export Agents Head Office: Bangkok; Branch: San. Pier d'Arena (Italy)
Attilio Diana, managing partner Giuseppe Bovo, do., signs per pro. Goffredo, P. Bovo, acct. secretary Agencies
Italia Marine Insurance Co., Genoa Alleanza Life Accidents, Genoa Assicurazioni Marittime, Genoa Patria Marine Ins. Co. Barcelona La Esperanza Mar. Ins. Co.. Barcelona Riunione Adriatica Socurtá Marit-
time, Trieste
DIETHELM & Co., LD., Head Office Zurich; Branches Singapore and Saigon; Tel. Ad; Diethelmco
F. Leuthold, manager
L. Schneider, assistant
H. Kunz,
W. Ingold,
Agencies
do.
do.
The Netherlands Fire and Life Ins.
Co. (established 1845)
1275
The Continental Ins. Co., Mannheim
(Marine)
The Singapore Rubber Works
DUNLOP, J. M., M.IN.A, M.LE.S.S., Superin- tending and Consulting Engineer, Valu- ator, Marine Surveyor and Importer Bok Kek Xieng-chief clerk
Nai Mow-assistant clerk
Agencies
John 1. Thornycroft, & Co., Ltd. Geo. Jennings, Ltd.
EAST ASIATIC Co., LD., THE, Aktieselskabet Det Ostasiatiske Kompagni - Hend Office: Copenhagen
E. Jorgensen, nictng manager
A. Hetmar, chief accountant, signs.
per pro.
E. Leth, export and import dept.,
signs per pro.
R. Hansen, shipping dept.
O. Mengel, asst. export and import
dept.
Vilh-Jorgensen, asst. accounts dept. F. Ulleriks, manager, Oriental stóre O. Gronemann, asst.,
C. B. Clausen, do.,
do.
do.
H. E. Ritzau, manager, saw mills O. C. Christensen, asst., do.
A. Jonassen,
do., do.
O. Paludan-Muller, superintending
engineer
A. Jõenssen, assistant
M. Tonnesen, wharves and godowns Forest Department
A. J. Mygind, up-country manager Muang Pray-
H. Jagd
E. Mazer de la Garde V. Kruse
O. Bendixsen Bandon
H. E. Hansen Raae
N. Larsen, chief engineer
E. Bendixsen
J. A. Hansen
A. Ascanius
FALCK & BEIDEK, Wholesale and Retail
Merchants; Tel. Ad: Fakbeidek
Ch. Kramer
K. Eisenhofer O. Brandenburg
A. Sandreczki
FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION OF BANGKOK
Chairmen The Siam Forest Co., Ld. Vice do. Windsor & Co. Secretary--W. H. Mundie
GÖTTE & Co., Genl. Printing Establishmt.
W. Evers, proprietor
1276
BANGKOK
GRIMM & Co., B., General Importers, Drug- gists and Analytical Chemists, Head Office: Pali Klong Talat; Tel. Ad: Grimm Partner-F. H. Lotz, analyt. chemist
Do. -F. Bopp
A. Link, analyt. chemist, signs the firm Assistant--H. Fungclaus
Do. -O. Tewes, analyt. chemist Do. ----A. Koch
Branches--
Bangkok Outfitting Co. H. Scheele, manager E. Frings, assistant A. Kraft, cutter A. Haas,
do.
Pratu Samyot Store. General Store
W. Siegert, manager
R. Branscheid, assistant
Market Dept. Racha Wongse Road
L. Bohensky, manager W. Clasen, assistant
HAMBURG-SIAM GESELLSCHAFT(Unverzagt, Bachfeld & Co.), Import and Export firm
L. Th. Unverzagt, partner
A. Bachfeld,
M. Ritter, assistant
T. A. Siamhaus
do.
HAVELIWALLA & BROS., T. A., Bangkok,
Bombay and Surat
T. A. Haveliwalla A. A. Haveliwalla
E. A. Haveliwalla
Head Office: Took Khow St.
Ebrahim Abdoolally Real, manager Abdealy T. Haveliwalla, assistant
HERMANN, CONRAD, painter
HIGH SCHOOLS FOR GIRLS -Convent Board- ing School of St. Joseph, Directed by the Sisters of St. Paul
Lady Superior-Sister St. Xavier, Assumption Day School, Directed by
the Ladies of St. Paul
Lady Superior-Sister Ste. Anne
HIGHET, H. CAMPBELL, M.D., Medical Officer
of Health
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN.
John Scrymgeour, acting agent J. E. Thompson, accountant
F. Nelson
E. C. East
A. L. Johnston clerk
H. Hinch,
do.
James Kerr, do.
HOWARTH, ERSKINE, LIMITED, Engineers, Ironfounders, Shipbuilders, Contractors and General Importers
James Murchie, general manager
R. H. Brown, works manager David Jack, secretary
E. O'Hara, chief assistant H. E. Foster, accountant Hoh Wee Khoon, bookkeeper Stores Department
R. E. Bryant, (in charge) H. Hamilton
R. Vierra
Boon Teck, chief salesman Drawing Office
J. A. P. Strachan (in charge) M. Kassim
Works
J. H. Swanson, superintendent A. Whitelaw, shop foreman Patent Steam Slipway
J. McClure, superintendent City Store
R. E. Bryant (in charge) L. C. Thảo, clerk Constructional Department
F. Edley (in charge) Electrical Department
E. S. Burgis (in charge)
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION
Banque de l' Indo Chine, agents
ISONAGA & Co., K., photographers
KELATAN GOLD DREDGING Co. (No. 1) LD. -15, George Street, Mansion House, London, E.C.
Concession-Dredging right, overfive
miles of the Kelatan River Duff Development Co., Ld., managing
agents
KERR & Co., Importers, Auctioneers and
Commission Agents
H. V. Bailey, sole proprietor Agencies
Yorkshire Fire & Life Insurance Co. National Union Society, Ld.
KLONG KUT MAI CASH STORE, Merchants and Commission Agents-Tel. Ad: Lert
Nai Lert, proprietor and manager
and also of Ice Factory
KLUZER & Co., G.
KWANG HAP SENG RICE MILL
Goh Kim Huey, proprietor
LADIES' LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
President Mrs. W. J. F. Williamson Vice-President-S. J. Smith Treasurer--Mrs. Clifford Garnell Secretary-Mrs. S. G. Lambert Hon. Librn. Mrs. T. Heyward Haya Librarian-Mrs. Jorgensen
1
1
LEGATIONS AND CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY-Consulate
BANGKOK
F. and R. Consul for Siam-F. H.
Lotz
Chancellor-L. Bohensky
BELGIUM-Legation and Consulate-Gl.
Minister Resident and Consul-
General-A, Erere
DENMARK-
Chargé d'Affaires and Acting Consul
General-W. W. Trantschold
FRANCE Legation à Bangkok
Envoyé Extraordinaire et Ministre Plénipotentiaire-M. Jules Lefaivre Consul de France-Jean Knight Premier Interprète Vice-Consul de
France-P. Petithuguenin Chancelier-Interprète Vice-Consul de
France-M. Topenot Elève-Interpréter--F. Fallot
Do.
Do.
-C. Notton
-H. Bonnafous
Délégué à la Cour Internationale-M.
Meillier
Premier Médecin-Dr. A. Poix
Deuxième Médecin-Dr. E. Pin
Consul de France à Nan-H. Lugan
Consul de France à Oubone
(gérant)
Stremler
GERMANY-Legation and Consulate-Gen-
eral: Tel. Ad: Germania
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary--A. von Prollius Vice-Consul-Freiherr von Reidt Chancellor J. Krauss Registrar K. Zobel Assistant-E Natho
Asst. Interpreter A. Ulrich
GREAT BRITAIN H. B. M. Legution and Consulate-General-Envoy Extraordi- nary and Minister Plenipotentiary-
A. R. Peel
Consul, Bangkok (with local rank of First Secty. in H.M. Diplomatic Service)-W. R. D. Beckett, C.M.G. Consul, Chiengmai-T. H. Lyle Consul, Puket-
Vice-Consul, Nakawn Lampang-G.
H. R. Moor
Vice-Consul, Senggora-W. A R.
Wood
Vice-Consul, Bangkok-W. N. Dunn Travelling Vice-Consul, Bangkok
Consular District-J. Crosby First Assistant (with local rank of Vice-Consul in Chingmai Consular District)-F. G. Gorton Second Assistant J. F. Johns Acting Assistant-H. Fitzmaurice, Student Interpreters-D. E. Reid,
1277
R. S. Le May. G. A. Vesey Fitz- Gerald, J. Bailey, J. D. Hogg Medical Attendant, Bangkok--M. A. Smith, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. (London) Clerk--Lim Pang Choo
Siamese Writers-Nai Awn, Nai Wan Hindustani Interpreter--T. Rurguu ITALY-Legation
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary - Federico Cicco- dicolá
Interpreter-Chev. H. de Sá
JAPAN-Legation and Consulate
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-Sakuya Yoshida Secretary of Legation and Consul-
Masaichi Noiña
Chancellor.-T. Yamaguchi
Police Inspector-Tameo Takahashi
NETHERLANDS-Legation
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary-F. J. Domela Nieu-
wenhuis Vice-Consul-
Secretary-Interpreter-Gabriel Lake Chinese Interpreter-Ngo Vie Pin,
Captain China N. I.
Malay Interpr.-Hadji Abdulkadir, Hadji M. Said, Captains Malay Javanese N. I.
Chief Constable-Hadji Abdul Karim
NORWAY
Consul General-J. W. Edie
PORTUGAL Consulate-General
Consul General for Siam and Straits
Settlements-L. L. Flores
Chancellorand Vice-Consul-L.C.M.
de M. Flores
Student interpreter A. J. Flores Clerk-Vacant
Chinese Interpreter-Joseph Hi
RUSSIA Legation
General
and
Consulate-
Minister Resdt.-A. Yacovleff
Sec. of Legation--N. Eltekoff
SWEDEN-Consulate
Consul-A. Mohr
Secretary A. Zum Hingst
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA-Legation
and Consulate-General
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary-Hamilton King Secretary of Legation and Vice and Deputy Consul general-G. Cornell Farler
Interpreter and Marshal--Leng Hui
1278
BANGKOK
LENNOX, ALEXANDER, RNR, M.I.E.S., Marino Surveyor, Ships and Engineer Surveyor to Lloyd's Register of British and Foreign Shipping,and Surveyor to Lloyd's Ageuts
LENNOX & MESNEY, Brokers
Alex. Lennox
R. F. Mesney
Agency
The Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co.
of Canada
LENZ & Co., ROBERT, Photographers to the
Court of Sium
E. Groote, proprietors C. Pruss,
do.
O. Prass, assistant
LEONOWENS, LIMITED, LOUIS T., Timber and General Merchants-Head Office: London; Branches: Bangkok, Rahang, Nakon Lampang and Chiengmai
Louis T. Leonowens, managing director
J. M. Milne
J. A. C. Anderson A. W. Mountain
G.Gordon Macleod(Nakon Lampang) R. V. Jeavons
LI TIT GUAN RICE MILL, Merchants and
Commission Agents
Phya Boriboon, Luang Maitri (Li
Thye Phong), proprietors Luang Maitri (Li Thye Phong) general
manager
Agencies
Khean Guan Ins. Co., Ld. (Penang) Koe Guan Steamship Co., of Penang Godfrey Phillips & Sons, Cigarette
Manufacturers
The Standard Fire Appliance Co.,
of New York
Low BAN SENG & Co., Merchants and Rice
Millers
Sim Tock Seng, proprietor Sim See Hom, manager Sim Kheng Som, assistant Wee Som Teck, clerk
MACARTHUR, & Co., Ld.,J. D. Engineers and
Merchants-Tel. Ad: Looglay
Managing Director--J. D. Macarthur, extra 1st class Engineer, Gold Meda- list, Inst. Marine Engineers; member of Inst.of Engineers andShipbuilders in Scotland, M. Inst. Mining and Mechanical Engineers
Agency
FC. Macdonald & Co., Ld., Glasgow
MACLEAN, ARCHIBALD & Co., Merchants, Commission and Estate Agents and Proprietors Bangkok Brick and Tile Works, Bangkok Engineering and Dock Works, Bangkok Forwarding Agency, Siam Steam Coast and River Bout Co., Steamers "Flyer," "Chantaboon," "Isabel" and Launches,--Teakwood and Hardwood Exporters; Tel. Ad: Archibald
A. Maclean proprietor
Agencies
National Assurance Co. of Ireland Yorkshire Fire and Life Insurance Co. Atlas Assurance Co., Ld.
Manchester Assurance Company Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co. General Insurance Company
MARKWALD & Co., A., LIMITED, Merchants Reiswerke Rickmers M. B. H., Bremen,
proprietors
A. Mohr, manager
R. Rickmers, signs per pro. H. Bullermann, assistant H. Wilkens,
E. Solte,
do.
do.
H. Suhr,
do.
H. v. d. Heide,
do.
A. Zum Hingst
H. Botchen
Lim Kiann Seng, head cashier Steam Rice Mills
R. Bullermann, superintendent G. Wedemeyer, engineer A. Keoh, head miller
Agencies
Ratburi Tin Mining Co. Rickmers Line, Bremen Norddeutscher Lloyd
Norddeutscher Lloyd Coasting Line Austrian Lloyd
Shell Line of Steamers, London London & Lancashire Fire Ins. North British & Mercantile Ins. Co. Fire Ins. Co. of 1877, Nord-Deutsche Insurance Co. Germanic Lloyd's, with power for Bureau Veritas, classing ships Hamburg & Bremen Underwriters Canton Insurance Office, Hongkong Hanseatic Lloyd, Vers. A.G., Hamburg Deutsche Rueck und Mitversich, Ges. Deutscher Lloyd Transp. Vers. A. G. Transatlantische Gueter Vers. Ges. Allianz Vers. A. G., Muenchen and
Berlin
Muencheuer Rueck Versich. Ges. Bayerischer Lloyd Transp. Vers. A.G. Allgemeine Versich. Ges., Dresden Dresdener Feuer Vers. Ges., Dresden Agrippina, Transport Vers. Ges., Koein Rhenania, Versicherung A. G., Koein Duesseldorfer Allgemeine Vers. Cies. Rheinisch-Westfaelischer Lloyd
BANGKOK
Rheinisch-Westfaelische Rueck Vers. Oberrhein, Versich. Ges., Mannheim Badische Schiffahrts Assecuranz Ges. Aachen-Leipziger Versich. A.G. Providentia Allgemeine Vers. Ges. Baseler Transport Versicher. Ges. Eidgen Transport Vers. Ges., Basel Nouveau Lloyd Suisse, Winterthur Foncière, Pester Vers. Anstalt, B. Pest S.-A.d' Assurances, Franco-Hongroise Union Internat. Comp. d'Assurances Assicurazioni Generali, Trieste
MCFARLAND, Geo. B., M.d.
Royal Medical College, Bangkok
MEKLONG RAILWAY Co., LD.
Directors-L. T. Leonowens (chair- man), C. Sandreczki, C. Kramer, J. Mackay, A. Lessler, S. M. Hendrick, G. Salvatore Secretary-G. Dietrich
Manager-H. Ch. Andersen (Tachin) Engineer-W. Goettsche do. Assistant Manager-M. Towfigue
(Meklong)
MENAM MOTOR BOAT Co. LD. (Siamese Co.)
A. Westenholz, chairman L. Grut, vice chairman
J. Bruun, manager
J. Christiansen, assistant
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA, LD.
Windsor & Co., agents
MESSAGERIES FLUVIALES DE COCHIN-CHINE
ET MESSAGERIES MARITIMES
J. Françon, agent
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LD., General Merchants New Road; Head Office: 1, Surugacho, Tokyo, Japan; London Office: Mitsui & Co., 34, Lime St., E. C.
Agent N. Sakabe
MONOD ET FILS, E. C., Import and Export
Merchants
E. C. Monod, partner
H. G. Monod,
do.
P. Massol, assistant
General Agents for The Indo-China
Portland Cement Co., Ld.
MOTIWALLA, F. A., Merchants and Com- mission Agents--Offices: Rajawongse Road; Cable Ad: Abdanbhai ; Tel. Codes. A. B. C. 5th Edition, A1. and Premier
Hiptoolla Faizoollabhoy, manager A. T. E. Mithaiwalla, asst. manager T. A. Nawsariwalla, cashier A. A. Ranpurwalla, clerk A. H. Sulemanji, bill collector
1279
NATIONAL BANK OF CHINA, LD.--Head
Office: Hongkong
The Siam Forest Co., Ld., agents
NAYLOR, C. J., Barrister-at-law
H. R. Lister, solicitor
NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD STAFF Superintendent--K. Freese Engineer--C. Schroder Steam Lighters
S.S. "Bangpakong "-Capt. J. Meyer S.S. Menam-Capt. O. Malitz S.S."Patriu " Capt. N. Siemen S.S." Tacheen Capt. A Surhoff S.S. Meklona"-Capt. E. Schumacher S.S."Chansaboon "Capt. T. Suchse
Tugs
11
S.S. "Undine Capt. A. Ahrens S.S. "Vulcan"- Capt. R. Kluge S.S. "Cyclop"-Capt. A. Schulz
Supt. of Cargo (Kochsichang and
Anglin)-L. Rochga
Supt. of Coal Hulks-T. Bruhn
NORTH GERMAN LLOYD ORIENT LINE
Regular line between Bangkok and Sing- apore, Borneo, Philippines and Sumatra Ports
Tons Reg.
S.S. "Borneo," S.S."Bangkok,"
2,100
1,020
S.S."Korat,"
1,900
S.S. "Patani,"
1,815
S.S."Chiengmai"
1,815
S.S. "Manila,"
1,700
S.S. "Sandakan,"
1,789
S.S. "Singora,"
1,754
S.S. "Marudu,"
1,500
S.S. "Darvel,"
1,500
1,457
1,394
**
1,341
986
901
764
294
S.S. "Dagmar," S.S. "Deli,"
S.S. "Nuen Tung S.S. "Tringganu, S.S. "Malaya," S.S. "Natuna," S.S. "Ranee,'
ORIENTAL BAKERY
G. E. M. de Jesus, manager
ORIENTAL HOTEL-Tel. Ad: Oriental
M. O. Bujault, proprietor
PALACE HOTEL-New Road, near Palace
Miss M. Schunden, proprietrix
PAKYAM RAILWAY CO., LTD.
Directors-Dr. Heyward Hays (chair- man), A. Cecil Carter, W. L. Grut, Luang Prakitch, Dr. Reytter, Luang Sunthorn Kosa, W. A. G. Tilleke, C. Kramer
T. A. Góttsche, manager and secretary
1
1280
PETROLEUM TANKS, Paklat
C. Gerhardt, manager
BANGKOK
PIALET & Co., A., Timber Merchants, Saw
Mill Contractors
A. Pialet, manager and partner
POH CHIN Soo's STEAM RICE MILLS, East Bank Menam River; Tel. Ad: Pohchinsoo
Nai Nieng, proprietrix
PRABAD TRAMWAY CO., LD., Incorporated by Royal Charter of the King of Siam
Nai Soon, manager
PRATU SAMYOT STORE (B. Grimm & Co.)
Ironware and General Store
W. Siegert, manager
PROTESTANT CHURCH
Chaplain, Rev. Dr. Hillyard Committee-W. R. D. Eckett (act- ing chairman), Rev. Canon Green- stock, Judge Skinner Turner, Hamilton Price, Dr. T. Heyward Hays, E. St. J. Lawson, J. Mackay, J. W. Edie (hon, treas.) Dr. Jack (hon. sec.)
PROVISION STORES, Timonelli Bros., General Merchants and Commission Agents- New Road
C. G. Timonelli, proprietor
RATBURI TIN MINING CO., LD.
A. Markwald & Co., Ld., general mgrs.
REID'S VETERINARY HOSPITAL AND HORSE SHOEING ESTABLISHMENT Suriwongse Road
G. Kennedy Reid, proprietor Racing Stable
Hossein-bin Bedyn, trainer (registered)
Native jockeys
REUTER'S TELEGRAM COMPANY
The "Bangkok Times Press, Ld.," Agents
RICE PLANTATION-Canal, 24 Rangsit
Richard Gossow, proprietor
Syed Wahed Ali, manager
RIECHMANN & Co., J. J., Merchants, Rick- mers, Reismühlen, Rhederei Schiffbau A. G., Bremen
A. Mohr,
signs per pro.
R. Rickmers, do.
ROYAL BANGKOK SPORTS CLUB
H. R. H. Prince Maha Vajiravudh, The Crown Prince of Siam, hon. pre- sident
H. R. H. Prince Bhanuraugsi, H. R. H.
Prince Damrong, hon. patrons
H. R. H. Prince Nakonchaisi, president, Caulfeild James, hon. vice
J.
president
Dr. T. Heyward Hays, Fleet-Surgeon, R.S.N., Judge Skimer Turner, trustees Committee J. Caulfeild James (chairman), S. Brighouse, M. F. Buszard, E. S. Smith, W. R. H. Taylor, W. R. D. Beckett, W. G. Johnson, A. E. Stiven, M. Cooke Collis, Dr. M. A. Smith, Frank Tatner (sec. and treas), P. Nisbett (Golf), H. Sutton (Cricket), A. Mohr. (Pigeon Shooting)
ROYAL OPIUM, SPIRITS & EXCISE DEPART-
MENT.
H. R. H. Mom Chow Piya, Pakdi,
director general
Mom Udong Phong Phen Sawads,
assistant director general
ROYAL STATE RAILWAYS REFRESHMENT Rooms, Bangkok, Ayuthia, Hopburi, Patuampoh and Korat
M. E. Nana, proprietor and manager
SAMPSON & SONS, JNO., Court Tailors and Outfitters Asadangand Phra Bidaks Roads, Ban Moh
F. Sampson, proprietor
SCHULE, F. H., G. m. B. H. Engineers and Builders of Rice Mills Works and Head Office: Hamburg, Germany; Bangkok Branch Office: Oriental Avenue
SEE KAK DISPENSARY
Dr. Adamsen, physician
SENG JOO THYE RICE MILL-Tel. Ad: Beng-
seng
Lau Chong Min (Phra Charoen Rajat-
hon), proprietor
Lau Chong Guan, manager
SEQUEIRA, L. J., Auctioneer, Valuer, Land
and Commission Agent
SIAM CANALS, LAND & IRRIGATION Co.,LD., Concessionaires and Directors-Phra Ong Chow Sye Sanitwongse, Dr. Yai Suapan Sanitwongse, M.B.,G.M., Erwin Müller (Pra Pratibat Rachaprasong) Erwin Müller, managing director
Dr. Yai Suapan Sanitwongse. M.B.,
acting director general Sequeira, accountant Wahed Alli, surveyor
SIAM COMMERCIAL BANK LD.
Manager Local Dept.-PhraSanpakarn
Hiranjakiteh
Manager Foreign Dept.-P. Schwarze
BANGKOK
Assistant-O. Kniepf Chief Cashier-Kun Sri Rajada Compradore-Leug Sue Leng Head Clerk-L. Duchamp Clerks D. F. Hendricks, W. P. Chapman, P. Mekaleef, A. P. Prathar, D. E. S. Jajawardene
SIAM ELECTRICITY CO., LTD. (Danish
Company)
Aage Westenholz, general manager W. L. Grut, vice-manager
Manager's Office
Fred. G. de Jesus, assistant Peter O. Jot, assistant Peter Seng, clerk
Accountant's Office
V. Gedde, accountant
O. C. K. Gedde, sub-accountant Siow Siong Wan, cashier
Assistants-Tan Fook Fah, Goh Kim Swee, Tan Wee Lian, Lim Keng Siew, Kiong San Chay, Nai Sam Nieng, Lee Chang Kang, Eusope, Nai Toh, Nai Choie
Electricians
L. Diemer-Hansen E. Fritzboger
K. Jensen
G. V. Kier
Assistants P. Sam Ang, D. Maclean,
L. Chai, M. Khong, B. Lawson
Engineers
0. Ulrich, chief engineer
H. Hansen, 1st engineer
V. Lund,
E. Sorensen,
E. Aspeslagh
Assistants E. A. Phillips, McIntyre, Kassat, Nai Choom, Nai Thong Kee
Workshop
A. Mathiesen, superintendent
Nai Sing, foreman
Armanath, clerk
Teah Kim, do.
Store
A. Heivard, storekeeper Tay Yong Hoa, assistant Neo Beong Siang, do.
Tramways
H. Zachariae, superintendent
Nai Hui, chief inspector
Nai Hung, head inspector (Bangkolem
Tramway)
Nai Thieng, head inspector (Samsen
Tramway)
1281
SIAM ENGINEERING CO., LD. (late Mackay & MacArthur), Consulting and Superin- tending Engineers, Machinery Mer- chants, Contractors and Valuators, Ship and Engineer Surveyors to Bureau Veritas and British CorporationRegistry, Det Norske Veritas, and Local Offices R. Balfour Law, M.L.M.E., manager
T. M. Upton, local secretary
SIAM FOREST Co., Ln.
Arbuthnot Ewart & Co., 2, Fenchurch
Avenue, London E.C., secretaries L. Blech, managing director (Siam.) S. H. Hendrick, general manager for
Siam.
P. Scott, signs per pro.
H. Park,
do.
F. D. Spencer, assistant B. F. Clarke,
do.
C. S. Richardson, do. F. H. L. Perll, do. Song, cashier
A. S. Glover, forest manager, Lakon
Lampang
H. Gardner, assistant Muang Prayow W. A. Elder, do. Muang Ngow
H. E. M. Martin, do.
do.
L. M. Cadle,
do.
do.
J. F. Llewellyn, do.
do.
H. E. Winter,
do.
do.
H. W. Persse,
do.
do.
E. J. Furniss,
do.
Sawankaloke
Nai Pleng, clerk, Paknampoh
SIAM FREE PRESS, Daily Evening News-
paper-Tel. Ad: Lillie'
A. Pialet & Co., proprietors M. D. O'Leary, English editor Mme. Preecha, Siamese editor
SIAM OBSERVER, Daily Newspaper; SIAM WEEKLY MAIL, Weekly Newspaper; SIAM MAITRI, Weekly Newspaper; SIAM DIRECTORY-Publishing Offices: Oriental Avenue, Bangkok; Tel. No. 205; Cable Ad: Observer, Bangkok
W. A. G. Tilleke, proprietor G. J. Bruce, general manager W. W. Fegen, editor "Siam Directory"
and assistant-editor "Observer"
Nai Liem, Siamese editor
Nai Siln, asst. Siamese editor Maha Chan, reporter P. Abrahan, reader Khun Yuen, translator
M. Sallee, clerk Lee Hong, do. Nai Yang, do. Nai Deng, collector
Nai Tob,
do.
B. C. Madan, storekeeper
B. D. Joseph, printing overseer
1282
BANGKOK
A. K. Chowdhury, publisher Thua Pone, head bookbinder A. Salarn, electrician and engineer Natoor Rohoman, asst. electr. eng.
SIAM PHOTO SUPPLY CO.
R. Lenz & Co., proprietors A. Polyzoides, assistant manager
SIAM PROSPECTING CO., LD.--Regd. Office: Collyer Quay, Singapore; General Managers The Siam Engineering Co.
SIAM RICE MILL, KIM CHING & Co.
Lim Teck Lian, manager
SIAM STEAM NAVIGATION CO., LD.
Directors-Phra Moulri Photchana- kitch (chairman), Louang Prakich, E. Jorgensen, S. H. Hendrick, A. Hetmar
Managing Agents The East Asiatic
Co., L.
SIAM STEAM PACKET Co., LD.
Directors J. Aitchison, Andrew Carson, W. S. Smart, D. T. Heyward Hays, W. Duncan
A. Carson, secretary Windsor & Co., agents
SIAM STONE WORKS COMPANY, Limited
E. Bock, managing director
A R. Belotti, secretary
G. Stellino (Pak Preo Quarry) Nai Chamroen Nai Ann
SIAMESE TIN SYNDICATE, LTD., THE -- Head Office: 7, Crosby Square, London, E. C.; Eastern Office Puket (Tongkah), Western Siam; Tel. Ad; in London and Penang Sitinsind; Code used: A.B.C. 5th Ed.
Eastern Staf
H. G. Scott, general manager G. B. Adeney, assist. manager Everett Laurie, assist.
Goon Siah Cheng, accountant
SIAMESE TRADING CORPORATION, LD., THE, Head Office: 5, Whittington Avenue, London
W. Fred. Holmes, engineer F. Nicholls, mining engineer
SIAMESE TRAMWAY CO., LTD.-Office: Siam
Electricity Co., Ltd.'
Aage Westenholz, manager W. L. Grut, vice-manager V. Gedde, accountant Frad. G. de Jesus, secretary
Traffic Department
H. Zachariae, superintendent
Nai Hui, chief inspector
Nai Chem, head inspector (Dusit
Line)
Nai Phin, head inspector (Hualam.
pong Line)
SOCIÉTÉ MUSICALE
President-L. R. de la Mahotiere Secretary-E. B. Gatenby Treasurer-F. Fallot
Librarian-Dr. de Keyser
SOCIETE ANONYME BELGE, pour le Com-
merce et l'Industrie au Siam Office: New Road, City
--
Head
Managing Director-Dr. De Keyser City Branch
H. Baufay W. Blankwaardt L. Riganti Bangkok Branch L. Prévoteau Red Cross Dispensary
Kennedy Reid Moter Garage
G. Govaerts, M. Scailquin, E.
Vandecan
SPIRIT FARM, H. M. S. Excise Dept: Office
-Ban Yhee Kau
Manager-Luang Aksorn
Chief Insp. KhomRaksphumindr Asst. do. R. J. Gibbons First Inspector-L. N. Lamache Storekeeper-Nai Puee
SRIRACHA CO., LD.-Steam Saw Mill at Sriracha (opposite island of Koh-si chang)
L. Lowe,
Borneo Co., Ltd., managing agents G. A. R. Mackintosh, local manager
F. V. de Jesus, supt. sawyer
do. engineer H. W. Hall, forest manager Depots at Lower Paklat, Pakret, Dang- kasa, Ayuthia, Paknampho, Tacheen, Meklong, Bang Nong Quek, Thra- patoom, Ratburi, Petchaburi, Patriew
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY
President W. S. Livingston Vice-President-A. A. Smith Hon. Secretary-A. N. Warrack Hon. Treasurer-A. H. Donaldson Committee--A. Lennox, A. E. Stiven,
D. McCormack, J. Mahen, R. B. Mair
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK
W. L. Blackett, attorney H. D. Warner, chief accountant Rheims F. Lazaroo, asst. accountant
STEEL BROS. & Co., LD., Merchants
BANGKOK
Head Office-6 Fenchurch Avenue, Lon-
don, E.C.
Branches-Rangoon, Moulmein, Bassein,
Akyab and Mandalay
W. T. Milne, manager
H. U. Ireland, assistant C. G. Crammer
STEPHENS, PAUL & Co., General Merchants
Head Office-Macassar
Branches London-Manchester, Singa-
pore, Bali and Ampenan
M. Stephens, partner (London) T. Paul,
Seth Paul,
do.
do.
do. (Arnheim) S. P. Stephens, do. (Macassar) H. S. Arathoon, do. (Singapore)
C. A. Edgar, signs per pro. M. A. Edgar, asst.
TA TIEN DISPENSARY, Seelak Phya Sri
M. Mannsfeldt, analytical chemist,
proprietor
A. Kuby, apotheker, manager
TATNER, FRANK, Commission Agent
TILLEKE&GIBBINS, Advocates and Solicitors W. A. G. Tilleke, act. attorney-general
for Siam
R. B. H. Gibbins, barrister-at-law
(Middle Temple)
S. Brighouse, solicitor and Crown
Advocate
TIMONELLI'S OUTFITTING COMPANY
C. G. Timonelli, proprietor
TISSEMAN & Co., SAMUEL, Importers and Commission Agents, Watch Makers, and Fancy Store- Fuang Nacon Street, City
TRANSPORT CO., "MOTOR" LD., Launch Builders Shop and Office: Wat Liep Menam
UNIONE INDUSTRIALE ITALIANA
Attilio Diana & Co., Import-Export agency (Incorporated with Messrs.
A. Diana & Co.)
VALVOLINE OIL CO. --5, 6 and 7, Chartered
Bank Lane
H. C. Linney Barber, eastern supt. J. L. Wilson, local manager
Cheong Peck Tu, head clerk
WANG LANG HOSPITAL
WANG LEE, Merchants and Rice Millers
Tan Che Wang, proprietor Branch Houses: Hongkong, Kim Tai Long; Singapore, Tan Say Lee
1283
WING SENG LONG & Co., Saw Millers and Timber Merchants, West Bank of the River (opposite Bangrak)
Wong Fooi,
Loli Sum,
manager
do.
Lim Chun Beng, do.
Wong Yek Yue, chief clerk Wong Them, salesman
Tong Soon, engineer
Branch Offices--
Wing Seng Chan
No. 4, Queen's Street, Hongkong
Wing Seng Long
No. 46, Honani Street, Canton Nam Heng, agents in Straits Settlmts,
No. 21, Beach Road
WINDSOR & CO., Merchants-Bangkok and
Hamburg
Partners Chr. Brockmann, A.
Frege, W. Brehmer Shipping General Department
C. P. Norman, signs per pro. Assistants Jas. Hicks, A. Osann, P. Hein, F. Bierwirth, P. Cramer, W. Fuhrhop, W. Mueller, W. Vil Capt. L. Rochga, cargo-superinten- dent at Kohsichang and Anghin Import Department
R. Marty, signs per pro. Assistants H. Schween, W. Meyer,
C. Ehlers, F. Kloeckner Technical Department
G. Behrend, engineer J. Kolbe,
Agencies
do.
Shipping Department American-Asiatic Steamship Co. American and Manchurian Line American and Oriental Line Apcar Line of Steamers Barber Line of Steamers Ben Line of Steamers
British India Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Canadian Pacific Ray. Co's R.M.S.S.L. China MutualSteamNavigation Co.,Ld. China Navigation Co., Ld.
Compania Transantlantica, R.M.S.S.L. Glen Line of Steamers Hamburg-America Line
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Mogul-Line of Steamers
Navigazione Generale "Italiana" Norddeutscher Lloyd Orient-Line Norddeutscher-Lloyd Europe-Line Ocean Steamship Co., Ltd. "Protector" Salvage S/S Rotterdamsche Lloyd Shan Line (Bradley & Co.) Siam Steam Packet Co., Ld. Stoomvaart Maatschappij "Nederland" United States & China Japan Line
Insurance Department
Aachen & Munich Fire Insce. Co., Ld,
1284
BANGKOK
"Albingia" Assurance Co., Ltd. "Alleanza" Marine Insee. Co. (Marine) Batavia Sea and Fire Insce. Co. British & Foreign Marine Ins. Co., Ld. Baloise Fire Insurance Co. China Fire Insurance Ld.
China Traders' Insce Co., Ld. (Marine) East India Sea & Fire Insce. Co. "Italiana" Insurance Co. (Marine) Law Union & Crown Insce. Co. London & Provincal Marine & General
Insurance Co., Ld.
Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Netherlands Lloyd (Marine) New Zealand Insce. Co., Ltd. (F. & M.) Samarang Sea & Fire Insurance Co. Scottish Union & National Insce. Co. South British Insce. Co., Ld. (Marine) State Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada Union Assurance Society, Ld. Union Ins. Soc. of Canton, Ld. (Marine)
Banking Department
Mercantile Bank of India, Ld.
Import Department
A. Borsig, Berlin Tegel, Manufactures
of Locomotives, etc.
Van der Zypen & Charlier, Ltd., Manu
facturers of Locomotives and Wagons Elsaessische Maschinenbau Ges., Gra-
fenstaden (Germany)
Portland Cement Works "Alsen"
Itzehoe (Germany)
Verein Mitteldeutscher Cement Works
Halle a/s (Germany)
**
Portland Cement Works Schwane-
beck" (Germany)
Green Island Cement Co., Ld., H'kong. Hadenfeldt & Co., Calcutta (Coir Rope) Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co.,
Ld., Hongkong (Manila Rope) Maatschappij tot Mijn, Bosch en Land- bouwexploitatie in Langkat, Ld., Tanjongpoera (Kerosene Oil)
Central Agency, Ld., Glasgow (Sewing
Cotton)
Technical Department
The Automatic Scale Co., Gliesmarode
(Brunswick-Germany)
Bergmann & Co., Electricity Works
Ltd. (Berlin)
Gasmotoren Fabrik "Deutz"-Cologne
Deutz (Germany)
India Rubber Factory "Elbe," Pies-
teritz (Germany)
Huckauf and Buelle, Machine Manu- facturers and Rice, MillConstructors. Altona o/E (Germany)
G. F. Lieder, Manufacturers of Con- veying Plants and Elevators, Wurzen (Germany)
Lohmann & Stoiterfoht, Iron Foun
dry and Factory of Machines and Transmission Parts, Witten o/R (Germany)
Mayer & Cie, Manufacturers of Cockle Cylinders and Perforated Iron Sheets-Kalk (Germany) Nordhaeuser-Drahtweberei and Sieb- waren Fabrik, Bernh. Thumann- Nordhauser (Germany) Ottensener Iron Works, Manufacturers of Steam Boilers etc.-Altona/Otten- sen (Germany)
Reichardt-Joachims, Manufacturers of
Scales, Hamburg
The Sprinkler Co. Ltd., Manufacturers of and Contractors for Automatic Fire Extinguishing Equipments and General Fire Appliances, London Sueddeutsche- Automobil Fabrik G. m.b.H., Manufacturers of Motor Cars, Gaggenau (Germany) Weise & Monski, Manufacturers of Steam Pumps, Halle o/S (Germany) Westdeutsche Textilriemen - Fabrik, Mechanische Weberei G. m. b. H, Manufacturers of Camelhair & Cot- ton Belting, Vreden i/W (Germany)
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS
This Colony was transferred from the control of the Indian Government to that of the Secretary of State for the Colonies by an Order in Council dated the 1st April, 1867. It now consists of the island of Singapore, the province of Malacca, the island of Penang, the Dindings further south, Province Wellesley on the mainland, the Cocos or Keeling Islands, Christmas Island (the latter two placed under the same Government in 1886 and 1889, respectively), and Labuan annexed to the Straits Settlements on January 1st, 1907. The seat of Government is the town of Singapore, on the island of the same name. The Government consists of a Governor, aided by an Executive and Legislative Council, the latter body consisting of nine official members and seven unofficial members, of whom two are nominated by the Chambers of Commerce of Singapore and Penang. There are Municipal bodies in each Settle- ment, the members of which are partly elected by the ratepayers and partly appointed by the Governor.
Penang was the first British Settlement on the Malayan Peninsula, having been ceded to the British by the Rajah of Kedah in 1785, and it soon acquired a monopoly of the trade of the Peninsula. Malacca, which had been successively held by the Portuguese and the Dutch, finally passed into the hands of Great Britain by Treaty with Holland in 1824, having been previously held by Great Britain from 1795 to 1818. With the establishment of Penang in 1785 most of the trade which had formerly centred at Malacca was transferred to the former. In 1819 Singapore was taken possession of by Sir Stamford Raffles, by virtue of a Treaty with the Johore Princes, and it soon took the lead of Penang as a commercial centre. In 1826 Singa- pore and Malacca were incorporated with Penang under one Government, Penang remaining the seat of Government until 1830, when the administration was transferred to Singapore.
The census of the Straits Settlements, taken in 1901, gave the population of Singapore as 228,555 (170,875 males and 57,680 females) against 184,554 in 1891; Penang and dependencies, 248,207, against 235,618 in 1891; Malacca, 95,487, against 92,170 in 1891. Christmas Island, 704; The Cocos Islands, 645. The total increase in the Straits Settle- ments since 1891 was 59,907 or 11.69 per cent. The increase in males was 34,600, or 10 per cent, and in females 25,307, or 15 per cent. The resident population of Europeans and Americans increased by 669, or 20.5 per cent. There was a decrease of 1,531 in the whole European and American population (including floating population and British military), mainly owing to there not being a British regiment stationed there when the census was taken. The estimated population of the Colony at the end of 1907 was 619.776, as compared with 572,249 in 1901. The death rate in 1908 was 43.06 per mille of the population as compared with 39.07 in 1907. The Colonial Secretary in his report to the Colonial Office says on this subject: In spite of the high death-rate the climate in the towns and in the country which has long been opened up cannot be considered uuhealthy for Europeans, who, if they take ordinary precautions, can, with their higher and more sanitary mode of life, to a great extent avoid the malarial and other tropical fovers and dysentery which attack the Oriental inhabitants of the peninsula."
C
The revenue of the Colony in 1908 amounted to $8,969,015 (over a million less then in 1907), and the expenditure to $9,837,624. Two-thirds of the revenue is derived from Singapore. 1908 was an exceptionally bad year for the trade of the colony. The average trade for 1901-5 was $577,900,000; in 1906, it was $599,100,000; in 1907, $005,100,000; but in 1908 it fell to $559,100,000. In his annual report for 1908, the Colonial Secretary remarks, in reference to imports, that foreign countries have, in their competition with British countries, in this market succeeded in increasing their business at twice the rate at which British trade has advanced. Railway communica- tion is now established between Singapore and Penang. Speaking generally, it may be said that there are many signs of increasing prosperity of the Colony as a whole, intimately connected as it is with the welfare of the Federated Malay States. The towns of Singapore and George Town, Penang, continue to extend, and the value of town property has enormously increased. Concurrently with a general increase in trade and business, the cost of living has advanced eriormously. House rent both in Singapore and Penang has risen greatly, while the price of labour and building materials deters many from investing their capital in building operations, The increased output and high price of tin in the Federated Malay States, the bulk of
1286
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS SINGAPORE
which finds its way to the Smelting Works in the Colony, have largely contributed to the wealth of the population. Many have made fortunes out of tin and have invested a large proportion of their gains in the Colony. The planting of Para rubber continues to increase.
In the fiscal annals of the Colony a new departure was marked in 1906 by the introduction of a Bill sanctioning the raising of loans aggregating £8,123,039, for paying the shareholders of the Tangong Pagar Docks, which the Government have expropriated, and for carrying out some big improvement schemes. A loan of £5,000,000 was raised in 1907, and of this £3,610,300 have been converted into inscribed 31 per cent. stock.
There has been a constant stream of emigration into the Settlements from China and Southern India for many years past In 1902, 1903, and 1904, the emigrants from China numbered over 200,000 per annum, but in 1905, the figure fell to 173,131; and in 1906 the number was 176,587. In 1907, however, the number rose to 227,342, an increase of 31 per cent. over the figures for 1903, when the previous highest total was reached. The increase was attributed to very bad harvests in Southern China. There was a big decline in the immigration returns for 1908, the total being only 153,000. This heavy decrease was ascribed to good harvests in Southern China, but it was due also in some measure to quarantine restrictions imposed during the year. Free immigrants, ¿e, coolies who obtain free passages in China in consideration of entering into con tracts for service on arrival in the colony, represented in 1906 12 per cent. of the total adult male immigrants, the highest percentage since the year 1900. The immigrants from Southern India in 1908 numbered 154,512, a decrease of ten per cent, on the figures for 1907.
SINGAPORE
The town of Singapore, situated on the southern shore of an island of the same name, in lat. 1 deg. 16 min. N. and long. 103 deg. 43 min. E., is the seat of government of the Straits Settlements.
The Island of Singapore is about 26 miles long by 14 wide, containing an area of 206, or, with the adjacent islets, 223 square miles, and is separated by a narrow strait about three-quarters of a mile wide from the territory of Johore, which occupies the Southern extremity of the Malay Peninsula. Originally taken possession of in 1819 by Sir Stamford Raffles, it was, until 1823, subordinate to our then settlement in Sumatra. In that year it became an appanage of the Indian Government, in which condition it remained until 1867, when it was placed under the Colonial Office in conjunction with Penang and Malacca.
The plain upon which the town and suburbs stand is chiefly composed of deep beds of white, bluish, or reddish sand, averaging 90 to 95 per cent. of silica. The rest is aluminous. Recent shells and sea-mud found in this sand show it to have been formed by a retreating sea. The general composition of the island, which consists of low hills and ridges, with narrow and swampy flats intervening, is sandstone, with the exception of Bukit Timah, which is of granite formation, containing about 18 per cent. of quartz. Colonel Low (J. I. A., vol. i. p. 84) specifies eight varieties. The soil overlying the granite is rather meagre (the stone being neither very porphyritic nor micaceous and not very liable to disintegration), but it of course contains a vast quantity of vegetable mould. The sandstone is of various colours, the darker variety rapidly decomposing in situ in yellow clay, though applicable to building when fresh from the quarry All the sandstones are heavily impregnated with iron, and an ironstone, known as laterite, is, to the casual observer, the prevailing mineral of the island. This occurs sometimes in veins, but more frequently in large beds on the sides of hills, and is extensively quarried for road-making purposes. It is supposed to contain manganese, and is found from the size of coarse sand to that of masses 15 or 20 feet in diameter. It is of dark clove-brown colour externally; internally it is cellular, and varies in density, being often, when freshly dug, soft enough to be cut with a knife, or hard enough to resist the pick. It is not magnetic in the mass, but when pulverized is found to contain grains of magnetic iron. It hardens considerably on exposure to the air. A substance somewhat resembling soapstone, with red, white, or greenish streaks, is sometimes found amongst the clays, being rather greasy to the touch, and occasionally of a
SINGAPORE
1287
fibrous texture. The valleys or flats of Singapore have a peaty substratum, varying in thickness from six inches to a couple of feet. Below this generally lies a bed of cold clay, and below this a stratum of arenaceous clay. In many districts kaolin is found in large quantities and of excellent quality.
The
The town proper extends for about four miles along the south-eastern shore of the island, spreading inland for a distance varying from half to three-quarters of a mile, though the majority of the residences of the upper class Europeans lie much further back, within a circle with a radius of three and a half miles from the Cathedral. This portion of the Settlement is almost entirely level, the highest hill in the island, about seven miles from the town, only rising to a height of 500 feet. country roads are well kept, and, thanks to the luxuriance of tropical vegetation, abound in shade. The town streets, on the other hand, though wide and well metalled are, as regards architectural matters, drains, and gutters, not much credit to the Settle- ment. Government House, the Government Offices, Police Barracks, Magistrates' Courts, Post Office, Library and Museum, Town Hall and Victoria Theatre, the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, the Chartered Bank, and The Arcade are fine buildings, while the Settlement possesses a handsome Club which compares favourably with any in the East. A fine bronze statue of Sir Stamford Raffles stands on the Esplanade, facing the sea.
Singapore possesses a handsome though small Anglican cathedral called St. Andrew's Cathedral, built in 1861; it is in the Gothic style, with a tower and spire 204 feet high. There is a neat Presbyterian Church, St. Gregory's (Armenian) Church, in Hill Street, and several mission chapels. The Roman Catholics have a roomy Cathedral dedicated to the Good Shepherd, at the corner of Brass Bassa Road and Victoria Street, the Church of St. Peter and St. Paul in Queen Street, the Church of St. Joseph in Victoria Street, one newly built in Tank Road, and other smaller churches in the outskirts. There is also a neat Jewish Synagogue in Waterloo Street and one in Tank Road. There is now also a small Church for those professing the Seventh Day Adventist Creed. The principal schools are those of the Raffles Institute, the Christian Brothers, and the Anglo-Chinese School. The Raffles Girls' School and the Convent also provide for the education of girls of the Protestant and Roman Catholic persuasions.
The Singapore Club has a good building in a central position. There are Recreation, Sporting, Rowing, Shooting, Cricket, Lawn Tennis, Art, and Reading Clubs, and the Celestial (Chinese) Reasoning Association. There is a Country Club with a well-built bungalow situated some three miles out of town, at which dances and amateur theatricals are frequently given. The German community have a similar institution. The Raffles Library and Museum, moved in October, 1887, into the new building erected for them, are creditable and well kept institutions, the Museum having made very fair progress since its inception. The Library contains over 16,000 volumes, chiefly of standard modern literature, and includes the valuable philological collection of the late Mr. Logan.
There are several good hotels, of which the Raffles and the Hotel de l'Europe are the best. The Press is represented by the Straits Times and Singapore Free Press with weekly issues of both, and the Government Gazette. There are also two Chinese daily papers, one Malay paper, and one or two papers in Tamil.
Singapore is well off for Docks. The Tanjong Pagar Dock Board premises, which were taken over from a public limited liability company by the Colonial Government in 1906 at a cost of £3,448,339 fixed by arbitration, lie about a mile to the westward of the fine wharf affording berthage for a large number of vessels at one time, with sufficient water alongside for vessels of the heaviest draught, and protected by a breakwater from the swell from the roads and from the strength of the tides. There are commodious godowns erected on the wharf for the storage of goods. Coal sheds, capable of storing 50,000 tons, adjoin the godowns, while hand-cars on rails essentially aid the labour of unloading vessels. The usual accompaniments are also to be found two graving docks, the Victoria Dock, 450 feet long and 65 feet broad at entrance, and the Albert Dock, 485 feet long and 60 feet broad at entrance-a machine shop, boiler, and masting shears, &c. Considerable improve- ments are now under construction, including a railway running from one end of the wharves to the other.
The New Harbour Dock Company's premises, situated about three miles further west, include two docks of 375 and 444 feet in length, respectively, with sheds, workshops, &c. These were purchased by the Tanjong Pagar Dock Com- pany in 1900, and were included in the sale to the Government in 1906, as also was the Patent Slip at Tanjong Khoo, which is 429 feet long and 76 feet broad over piers. The Government contemplate improvements to the docking facilities of the Colony costing £2,092,600. Good progress is being made with the harbour works
1288
SINGAPORE
Singapore is considered to have a big future yet before it. Sir Frank Swettenham, in a speech delivered just before his retirement from the Governorship, indicated the future of Singapore in these words :- "You have in Singapore a city of 200,000 inhabitants, which will one day be a million, and a port reckoned by the tonnage of its shipping as the seventh largest in the world. That is something to begin with. Then you have a maginficent natural harbour on which nothing has yet been spent, but which, if it were protected by works, would afford 1,300 acres of sheltered anchorage. You have wharves and docks which have already fame beyond these shores and are capable of vast improvement. You have the making of a great naval base which we believe is already almost impregnable, Behind you, you have one of the richest countries, well watered and wooded, with no earthquakes or volcanoes, floods or famines or serious epidemics. Something has already been done to develop some portion of this country. Railways have been made, some mines have been opened, and planting has been done, and in the course of less than 30 years the revenue has grown from $5,500,000 to over $20,000,000 and the trade has grown from little or nothing at all to 100 millions of dollars. Then in the Colony you will have next year a revenue half as large again as this year, and united with that of the Federated Malay States it will be far larger than that of any other Crown Colony." To this it has to be added that the Colonial Government has decided upon an improvement of the harbour at a cost of £1,264,000, and a scheme exists for the improvement of the river at a cost of £523,187, but this scheme has been shelved for the present.
The climate of Singapore is remarkable for its salubrity, and the island has been described by medical writers as the "paradise of children," infantile diseases seldom being at all malignant. Despite its proximity to the equator, under normal circumstances a daily rainfall tempers the heat so thoroughly that many sleep beneath blankets. Droughts, however, have been experienced of from one to six months. The climate of the island is thus described by Mr. Thomson, in the "Journal of the Indian Archipelago,"his remarks still holding good:-"Singapore, though within 80 miles of the equator, has an abundance of moisture, either deposited by the dews or gentle refreshing showers, which keep its atmosphere cool, prevent the parching effects of the sun, and promote continual verdure. It seldom experiences furious gales. If more than ordinary heat has accumulated moisture and electricity a squall generally sets in, followed by a heavy shower of rain, such squalls seldom exceeding one or two hours in duration. According as the monsoon blows, you will have the squalls coming from that direction. But the most severe and numerous are from the west, called 'Sumatras,' and these occur most frequently between 1 and 5 o'clock in the morning. The north-east monsoon blows from November to March; after which the wind veers round to the south-east and gradually sets in the south-west, at which point it continues to September. The north-east blows more steadily than the south-west monsoon. The temperature is by one or two degrees cooler in the first than in the last. The average fall of rain is found, from the observation of a series of years, to be 92.697 inches; and the average number of days in the year in which rain falls is found to be 180, thus dividing the year almost equally between wet and dry; the rain not being continuous, but pretty equally distributed through the year, January, however, being the month in which the greatest quantity falls. The mean temperature of Singapore is 81°.247, the lowest being 79 .55 and the highest 82°.31, so that the range is not more than 2.76. It would appear this that the temperature of the island is by 9.90 lower than that of many other localities in the same latitude. Comparing the temperature now stated with that which was ascertained twenty years earlier, and in the infancy of the Settlement, it would appear that it had increased by 2.48 a fact ascribed, no doubt, to the increase of buildings, and to the country having been cleared of forest for three miles inland from the town, the site of the observations. The general character of the climate as to temperature is that the heat is great and continuous, but never excessive, and that there is little distinction of seasons, summer and winter differing from each other only by one or two degrees of the thermometer. Thunder-showers are of frequent occurrence, but the thunder is ly no means so severe as I have experienced it in Java, and seldom destructive to life or property.
from
"The botany of this place possesses several interesting considerations. Being connection-link between the Indian and Australian forms, we have types of both, and many genera of either region. We observe the Indian forms in the natural families Palma, Sictamineæ, Aroide, Artocarpere, Euphorbiacere, Apocyne, Guttifer, Cons vulaceae, Leguminosa, all numerous. The natural families Casuairne, Myrtaceæ, parti cularly Melaleuca and Proteacere, connect us with Australia.
The plants, which usually spring up when the primeval forest has been cut down, and where the bane of
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BAFFLES RECLAMATION
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SINGAPORE
1289
all the rest of the vegetable kingdom-the Andropogon caricosum, or Lalang grass-has not taken possession, belong to the following genera-Melastoma, Myrtus, Morinda, Solanum, Rubus, Rottlera, Clerodendrum, Commersonia, Ficus, and l'assiflora. The forest contains an immense number of species of timber trees, most of them of great height and girth. Above two hundred have been collected, and of these about half-a- dozen afford good timber for house and boat-building. The teak is not of the number. The forest also produces the two species which yield the useful gutta-percha, and a fe which affords an elastic gum. But for use these articles, as well as timber, are not obtained from Singapore itself, but from the wider and more accessible forests of the neighbouring continent."
The zoology of Singapore is that of the neighbouring continent, to the exclusion of some of the larger animals as the elephant, the rhinoceros, the tapir, and the ox. The largest feline animal indigenous to the island is a small leopard, called by the Malays harimau-daan, that is, "the branch" or climbing tiger. But the tiger, an animal unknown to the island in the earlier years of the British Settlement, made its first appearance five or six years later. It seems to have crossed over from the continent, attracted no doubt by the sound of human voices and the lowing of animals. Itmultiplied greatly, and was supposed to destroy yearly from two to three hundred persons, proving The greatest bane of the Settlement. Large rewards have always been offered for the destruction of tigers ($50 per head), and a good number were captured by pitfalls, but all attempts at their extermination were for many years unsuccessful. The spread of population, however, had its natural result; and although specimens are occasionally met with which have swum the narrow strait between the island and Johore, there are not probably more than half-a-dozen now existing in the jungle. Of the natural family of Mustelide there are two in Singapore the musang of the Malays (Paradoxurus musanga) and the binturung (Ictides ater), of the size of a badger. Otters are occasionally seen along the coasts, but are rare. The wild hog is numerous, and there are five species of deer, the usual ones of the Peninsula and Sumatra, from the rusa, of the size of a heifer, to the pelandok, which is hardly as large as a rabbit. Among mammals, one species of bat is often to be seen, the same which is so frequent in almost all parts of the Archipelago, the kalong (Pteropus javanicus). This is about the size of a raven, and a troop of them in flight has very much the look of a flock of crows, and by a stranger may be easily mistaken for one. Among reptiles, crocodiles are common in the salt-water creeks and along the shores of the island, but, having an abundant supply of fish, are not troublesome to man. The Iguana lizard, the bewak of the Malays, is not infrequent, and the noisy house lizard or tokay, the take of the Malays, so common in Penang and so much more so in Siam, is also found in Singapore. The esculent turtle is very abundant along the shores of Singapore and the neighbouring islands, and its use as food being restricted to the Europeau and Chinese- population, it is the cheapest animal food in the market, one of the largest, weighing several hundredweight, selling for $2 or $3. Of snakes, forty-four species have been found to exist, of which fourteen are more or less venomous. The well-known cobra (Raia tripulians) possesses the peculiar property of ejecting venom from its mouth. The Malays say there is no cure for its bite. Those killed have measured from 43 to feet in length. The reptile, being slow and sluggish, is easily overtaken and killed. When attacked, it erects the body and dilates the skin on either side of the head, uttering a noise like that of an irritated cat. If attacked, it throws, to the distance of from 6 to 8 feet, a venomous fluid which, even should it only enter the eye or touch the mucous membrane, or any open sore, is likely to prove fatal. The hamadryad (Ophiophagus elaps) exists, but is fortunately not common. The bungarus is the only other venomous snake of large size; but pythons of considerable length-up to 22 feet are frequently captured. Fish and crustaceans are in great plenty, and some 200 species will be found named in the published lists. About half-a-dozen of these are excellent for the table, fully equal to the best fish of our own coasts. Among the best is the white pomfret of Europeans, the bawalputeh of the Malays, of richer flavour than our soles, though less luscious than the turbot, and the ikan merah, resembling the sam-lai of China.
In recent years there has been a great development of pineapple cultivation in Singapore. Extensive areas of waste ground covered with secondary jungle have been cleared and planted with pineapple for tinning; the whole of this business appears to be in the hands of Chinese. Considerable interest has also been shown in the cultivation of rubber, oil-grasses, lemon-grass and citronella, as well as indigo,. vegetables, pepper and ground nuts. Cocoanut cultivation increases rapidly.
1200
SINGAPORE
Singapore offers but few points of salient interest to visitors, the Botanical Gardens at Tanglin, the Waterworks in Thomson Road, and the Raffles Library and Museum being its only show places. A considerable mileage of electric tramway is now in operation. A railway across the island was sanctioned by a vote of the Legislative Council in 1899, and was opened for traffic on 1st January, 1903. An extension to the Tanjong Pagar Docks and neighbourhood was sanctioned and now runs as far as Tasir Panjang. This line of fourteen miles was the first section of a great Malay Peninsula and India Railway, passing through and opening up the countries of Johore, Malacca, the Native Malay States, some Siamese territory and Burma, on to Calcutta. The Railway now runs direct from Singapore to Penang. The distance from Singapore to Calcutta is just over 2,000 miles.
DIRECTORY
COLONIAL GOVERNMENT
Governor, and Commander-in-Chief Sir John Anderson, K.C.M.G. Aide-de-Camp-Capt. H. H. F. Stockley, R.M.L.I.
Private Secretary-C. Severn Clerk-W. Bachelor
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
His Excellency the Governor, President General Officer Commanding the Troops Hon. Colonial Secretary
Hon. Resident Councillor of Penang
LEGISLATIVE
His Excellency the Governor, President General Officer Commanding the Troops Hon. Colonial Secretary
Hon. Resident Councillor of Penang Hon. Resident Councillor of Malacca Hon. Attorney-General
Hon. Colonial Treasurer
Hon. Colonial Engineer
Hon. W. D. Barnes
(For Government
Hon. Resident Councillor of Malacca Hon. Attorney-General Hon. Colonial Treasurer Hon. Colonial Engineer
COUNCIL
Hon. J. Turner
Hon. Tan Jiak Kim Hon. Hugh Fort
Hon. Dr. D. J. Galloway
Hon. T. S. Baker
Hon. A. R. Adams
Hon. E. C. Ellis
Clerk of Councils-A. H. Lemon Shorthand Reporter-W. C. Suter
Departments See under G.)
ABDULTAYEB ESMAILJEE, Merchant and
Commission Agent-3, Prince Street S. S. Saifi, manager, signs per pro.
A. M. Nasi, clerk
Firms at Bangkok, Pnompenh, Battam- bang, Bombay, Surat and Ahmadabad; Head Office: Surat
ABRAMS, H., Horse Repository, Veterinary and Shoeing Establishment and Carriage Works-5, Orchard Road, Singapore
Proprietor-H. Abrams
Veterinary Surgeon-C. W. Abrams,
M.R.C.V.S., signs per pro. Sub Manager A. Pierbox Jockey H. Kirwan Breaksman-Ejang,
Accountant-C. Becker
Clerks Song Swee Kim, Koh Swee
Hock, Wee Kim Sooi
Cashier J. Klassen Storekeeper-F. de Souza
Manager of Harness and Saddlery
Dept.-J. P. Seth
ADAMSON, GILFILLAN, & Co., Ld., Mchts-
15, Collyer Quay
S. Gilfillan,
Sir Wm. Adamson, C.M.G.,
(London)
H. W. Wood.
directors
James Miller,
W. S. Coutts, (London))
managers
M. E. Plumpton,
A. J. C. Hart,
F. L. Tomlin, signs per pro.
H. A. Low,
R. V. Cuthbert
E. L. Watson
H. Branson
D. M. Doig
C. B. Hadden
W. A. Fell
do.
C. F. E. Sintzenich
A. J. Scandrett, mgr. insce. agencies
A. D. Cox
SINGAPORE
Alex. Colledge, manager machinery
agency
R. C. L'Angellier
A. V. Peralta
N. Stubbs
A. Anchant
C. Westerhout G. E. Boswell
A. N. H. Van Cuylenburg Tun Boon Guan, Cashier Chua Lip How, and others Head Office: London
Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld. Branch House
Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld. Penang Agencies
Fraser & Chalmers, Ld.,Eastern Agency Pacific Mail Steamship Company Occidental and Oriental S. S. Co. Toyo Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha Portland and Asiatic Steamship Co. Rickmers Line of Steamers Commercial Service Line of Strs. Prince Line of Steamers American Asiatic Steamship Co. Asiatic Steam Navigation Co. China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. New Zealand Insurance Company London Guarantee & Accident Co., Ld. Sium Forest Co.
Standard Life Assurance Co. Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Tannadine Co., Ld., Dutch Borneo
ADDA RUBBER ESTATES, LD.
Directors S. Gad, R. L. Leigh-Clare,
J. C. Hermansen
J. Rasmussen, secretary W. N. Gawler, manager (Johore) Agents-East Asiatic Co., Ld., S'apore.
ADELPHI HOTEL 1 and 2, Coleman Street;
Tel. Ad: Adelphi ; Telph. 58
J. Carapiet, proprietor
R. N. Brunet Norman, manager E. S. Johannes, assistant
J. J. Carapieh
do.
Mrs, P. L. Bassey, housekeeper.
ADIS & EZEKIEL, Exchange and Share
Brokers
N. N. Adis
R. M. Ezekiel
AITKEN & ONG SIANG, Advocates and
Solicitors-Battery Road
ALEXANDRA BRICKWORKS COMPANY, LD.
Tel. Ad: Brick
Borneo Company, Ld., general agents
1291
ALKOFF&Co., House and Land Proprietors-
15, Raffles Quay
ALLEN & GLEDHILL, Advocates, Solicitors and Notaries Public--22A, Raffles Place (andat Malaccaand Kuala Lumpur, F.M.S.) R. Allen, LL.B., barrister-at-law, part-
ner, notary public
R. L. Leigh-Clare, B.A. (Cantab) part-
ner, notary public
L. E. Gaunt, barrister-at-law (Aust.)
partner
H. C. Cooke-Yarborough, advocate
and solicitor, assistant F. Salzmann,
do.
do.
ALMEIDA & Co., Civil Engineers, Architects,. Licensed Auctioneers, Surveyors, Val- uers and Estate Agents-No. SB, Change Alley
Geo. d'Almeida, C.E., M.S.E.,B.S.,principal W. M. Kassim, C.E., B.S., manager
engineering department
W. Garnet Richards, G.L.S. Rahmat Bin Abbass, asst. do. Omar Bin Gempih, chief draftsınan
W. Iddress al Habshee, do. A. A. Marican, cashier
ANGLO-SAXON PETROLEUM Co., LD., THE-- Telegraphic Address: Poel, Singapore Telephone Number 325
H. Poel, marine superintendent H. van Meines, superintg. engineer N. J. Dalmeyer, assist. marine supt. H. C. Kissing,
do.
W. A. Verschoor, asst. supt. engineer K. W. Kruse, assistant
A. L. R. van Renesse, do.
J. Heertjes,
do.
ANN LOCK & Co., Merchants and Store.
keepers-7A, Battery Road
Chia Keng Chay
Chia Keng Chin
Lee Cheow Lim, signs per pro.
ARMENIAN CHURCH OF ST. GREGORY-See
under Churches and Missions
ART NEEDLEWORK AND FLOWER DEPOT, Florists, Fancy Work and Fresh Flower Decorators 217, Orchard Road; Teleph. 737; Gardens and Nurseries:Vernon, 1091, Serangong Road
Proprietress-Mrs. H. A. Moss Manageress Miss Edith Norris Assistant-Miss A. Misson
Do. -Miss Ada Tan
1292
SINGAPORE
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., LD., THE-Win- chester House; Telegraphic Address: Petroatic, Singapore; Telephone 839 and
840
F. E. Jago, manager
Assistants--A. Agnew, J. Lauder, C. M. Howe, C. B. de Bruyn, H. L. Vogelesang, G. R. Marshall, C. M. Phillips, F. R. Lubbock, B. Bromfield, D. Hazard, F. J. Fis- cher, E. T. Marples, H. S. Finck Installation Engineering Department
R. C. Hislop, resident engineer
F. W. Coates, assistent engineer J. T. Rearl,
H. A. Jones,
do.
do.
Puloe Samboe Tank Installation
H. E. de Blank, manager M. C. Adam, engineer
do.
J. R. H. Eysbroeck, engineer J. F. Wyngaard, J. F. Maagdenberg, do. R. Y. Moon,
do.
P. A. van Lith, chemist
B. Williams, ships' store clerk C. P. Laporte, assistant C. B. Wilmot,
do.
Raden Rvem, doctor
Puloe Bukom Tank Installation
J. T. Cochrane, manager
P. E. J. Smith, assist. manager Agencies
The Anglo-Saxon Petro. Co., Ld.,L'don. De Bataafsche Petro. Mij., The Hague.
BALGOWNIE RUBBER ESTATES, LTD., Ex-
change Buildings
Directors-W. M. Sime, A. W. Bean,
R. C. M. Kindersley Secretaries-Gunn & Co.
Manager P. F. Wise (Balgownie
Estate, Kajang)
Manager F. O. Kingsmill Brown
- (Bangi Estate, Bangi)
BANQUE DE L'INDO-CHINE 31,Raffles Place;
Head Office: Paris
V. Marsot, manager
J. Olivier, accountant
P. Pretie, cashier
M. Henne Kindt, assistant
G. A. Germann,
E. Henne Kindt,
do.
clerk
J. C. Silveira Nunes, do. Branches-Hongkong, Shanghai, Can- ton, Hankow, Tientsin, Peking, Sai- gon,Haiphong Hanoi,Tourane Prom Penh, Battambang, Bangkok, Pon- dichery, Noumea,Tahiti andDjibouti
BARKER & Co., F. W., Accountants, Secre- taries and Auditors-Winchester House, Collyer Quay; Tel. Ad: Kinrara; Teleph.
963
W. Lowther Kemp, C.A., partner Oswald A. Kimmel,
do.
G. C. Procter, C.A., assistant C. Ransford,
C. B. Redway, S. Whitaker, C.A.,
Offices and Agencies
do.
do.
do.
Lunadron Rubber Estates, Ltd. Ledbury Rubber Estates, Ltd. The Singapore & Johore Rubber Co.,
Ltd.
The Sandycroft Rubber Co., Ltd. The Senawang Rubber Estates Co.,
Ltcl.
Cluny Rubber Estates, Ltd. Alma Estates, Ltd.
The Batang Benar Rubber Co., Ltd. The Penkalan Durian Estate The Jementah Rubber Co., Ltd. The Ledbury Rubber Co., Ltd. The Sione Rubber Co., Ltd. Lalang Rubber Plantation (Malacca) The Merton Rubber Syndicate, Ltd. Salak South, Ltd.
Kanaboi, Ltd.
The Kinta Association, Ltd. Sorokai, Ltd.
Kemaman, Ltd.
Ocean Accident & Guarantee Cor-
poration, Ltd.
BARKER & KENGCHUAN, Merchants and Commission Agents-15, Battery Road
A. Barker
Kho Keng Chuan
BARLOW & Co., Merchants and Agents-
D'Almeida St.
E. Bramall, manager
Thos. Black
E. F. Salzmann L. Hinnekindt H. M. Caldicott A. L. E. Makinson G. O. Dorrity H. M. Morschell Claude Waller G. V. Hansen C. N. Desker
Kow Tiam Chuan, chief cashier Kow Tiam Hock, storekeeper, Head Office: Thomas Barlow and Bro, Manchester; Thomas Barlow and Bro, London; and Barlow & Co., Calcutta and Shanghai Agencies
Compañia Trasatlantica, Barcelona Imperial Insurance Company, Ltd. Union Marine Insce. Company, Ltd. Anglo-Sumatra Rubber Co., Ltd. Batu Caves Rubber Co., Ltd. Bukit Rajah Rubber Co., Ltd. Bandjasarie (Java) Rubber Co., Ltd. Chersonese (F.M.S) Rubber Co., Ltd
SINGAPORE
Consolidated Malay Rubber Estates,
Limited
Damansara (Selangor) Rubber Co., Ld. Federated (Selangor) Rubber Co., Ld. Highlands & Lowlands Para Rubber
Company, Ltd.
Klabang Rubber Co., Ltd.
Krian Rubber Plantations Co., Ltd. Krubong(Malacca)Rubber Plantations,
Limited
Kuang (Selangor) Rubber Co., Ltd. Muar River Rubber Co., Ltd. North Hummock (Selangor) Rubber
Company, Ltd.
Pelepah Valley (Johore) Rubber Es-
tates, Ltd.
Rembia Rubber Estates, Ltd.
Riverside Rubber Co., Ltd. Seafield Rubber Co., Ltd. Sekong Rubber Co., Ltd. Strathmore Rubber Co., Ltd
Sungei Krian Rubber Estate, Ltd.
(Samagaga)
Sungei Liang Rubber Co., Ltd. Sungai Way (Selangor) Rubber Co.,
Limited
Tremelbye (Selangor) Rubber Co., Ltd. Ulu Buloh (Selangor) Rubber Co., Ltd.
BERN, MEYER & Co., LIMITED, Merchants -Collyer Quay, Singapore Branches: Penang, Manila, Iloilo, Cebu, Zam- boanga, Sandakan, Batavia, Soerabaya, Telock Betong and Bangkok
Agents in London: Arnold
Otto
Meyer & Co.,36, Lime St., London E.c. General Agents for Europe and Ame- rica-Arnold Otto Meyer, Scholvien- haus, Glockengiesserwall, Hamburg Directors-Hans Becker (chairman) A. Asmus, A. G. Faber, F. Katen- kamp, A. Diehn and J. M. Menzi E. Lehrenkrauss secty., signs per pro. A. Brennecke, signs per pro. E. Arbenz
H. Wack O. Elmenhorst
F. Goos
H. Schuengel A. Schmidt E. Jens T. Stohp
M. Matthiessen A. Strack
J. Rohrmann
T. Hirsch
R. Antholz
F. A. Kretzschmar K. H. Doerger J. Haderup I. Dovemühle W. Woelber P. Wesemann
Agencies
1293
H. C. Meyer, Jr., Hamburg-on-Elbe,
Rattan and Cane Manufactory
H. Luenschen, representative Suther, Hartmann & Rahtgens, Com-
position Co.,Ld.
T. Whitfield, representative Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremen Ostasiatische Kuesten fahrt K. Leege signs per pro. A. Rohrmann G. Becker
H. Schwarting
Capt. Hugo Krebs, chief inspector Fr. Fritzsche, wharf assistant B. Beilken suptg. engineer
C. Habekost, storekeeper, N. D, L. Store, Tanjong Pagar
Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hamburg
R. Martens, cargo and lighter supt. Deutsche Dampfschiffahrts- Gesells-
chaft Hansa," Bremen
C
Navigazione Generale Italiana Deutsch Austral. Dampfschiffs Ges. Indra Line, Liverpool
Dampfschiffs Rhederei Union A. G. Robt. M. Sloman & Co., Hamburg Hambg. Sued-Amerik. Dampf. Ges. Allan Royal Mail Steamers New Guinea Compagnie Deutsche Ostafrika Linie North British and Mercantile Insce. Royal Exchange Assurance, London. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Company Albingia Assur., Co. Ltd., Hamburg Deutsche Transport Versichers. Ges. Neuer Schweizerischer Lloyd Deutscher Lloyd Transport Vers. Ges Agrippina of Cologne
Düsseldorfer Allg. Vers. Actien Ges. Aachen-Leipziger Vers. Actien Ges. Niederländ "Allgemeine Vers. Ges. Rhenania Vers. Action Ges., Cologne Nieder Rheinsche Gueter Assecuranz La Neuchateloise, Neuchatel
La Foncière, Pester Versich. Ges. Fortuna, Allgemeine Vers. Act. Ges. Allgemeine T'sport Vers. Ges., Vienna Münchener Rückversicherungs Ges. Allianz Marine Inse. Co., Berlin, Munich Bayerischer Lloyd, Munich Hanseatischer Lloyd, Hamburg Frankfort Marine Insurance Co. K.K. Priv.Oesterreich Vers. Ges. Donau Pomerania, Transp. Vers. Ges., Stettio Badische Schiffahrts Assce. Ges. Union Internat. Co. Assur., Antwerp Norddeutsche Versich. Ges., Hamburg Nordwest Deutsche Vers. Ges., H'burg International Lloyd, Berlin. Hamburg Board of Underwriters Boards of Underwriters, New York,
Baltimore, Boston, Philadelphia National Board Marine Underwriters
1294
SINGAPORE
Germanischer Lloyd, Berlin Record of American and Foreign Ship'g Hull Underwriters' Association, Ld.
BEHR & Co., Merchants-3, Malacca Street;
Tel. Ad: Behrco
S. Behr (London) S. Rosenbaum
M. Traub
R. Luttwig
W. S. Behr
Branches Belir Bros., 21, Mincing Lane,
London, Behr & Co., Penang Agencies
General Marine Insurance Co., Dresden Consolidated Marine Insurance Com- panies of Berlin and Dresden, Ld. State Fire Insurance Company
BELAT TIN MINING Co., LTD.-Gresham
House, Battery Road
Directors G. A. Derrick, H. Abrams,
A. Reid, Yow Ngan Pan
McAlister & Co., Ld., general agents H. R. Llewellyn, secretary
BELILIOS, I. R., Merchant and Commission Agent-104, Rochore Road; Depots: Belilios Road, and at Penang
BELL'S ASBESTOS EASTERN AGENCY, Ld.- 43, Raffles Place: Tel. Ad: Asbestos ; Head Office: 79, Gracechurch Street, Lon- don
J. Lennox, secretary (London) M. Nathans, manager
Tay Joo Hong, assistant Heng Ah Choon, cashier Ng Choon Kim, clerk
BERSAWAH GOLD MINING COMPANY, LD. (in liquidation)-Gresham House, Bat- tery Road
H. R. Llewellyn, A.C.A., liquidator
"BETHESDA" FREE MEETING HOUSE-See
under Churches and Missions
BLACK, NORMAN, M.B., CH.B. (Edin.), L.M, (Dublin)-14, Battery Road, or Rochalie, Grange Road
BOARD OF EXAMINERS FOR MASTERS' AND
MATES' CERTIFICATES
Comdr. C. A. Radcliffe, R.N. (Master
Attendant, S.S.)
Lieut. B. A. Cator, R.N. (Deputy Mas-
ter Attendant)
A. B. Chamberlain
H. S. Hauxwell
BOLTER, M. Importer of Russian and French,
Special Provisions and Liquors
Sole Proprietress-Mrs. M. Bolter
BORNEO COMPANY, LIMITED, Merchants- Finlayson Green; Tel. Ad: Borneo, Singapore; Telph. 33 and 1015
W. Patchitt, manager
St. V. B. Down, signs per pro. F. Hilton,
J. Denniston,
F. C. Wreforl
E. G. H. F. Hartnell
W. A. Darke
E. C. Morrison D. Lewis
L. M. Patterson C. S. Malcolm
do.
do.
Head Office: 28, Fenchurch St., London Branch Houses:
Bangkok, Batavia,
Sarawak,Chiengmai, Rahang, Lakon and Soerabaya
Agencies
Russo-Chinese Bank
Home Bank of Canada, Ltd. Northern Steamship Co., Ltd., St.
Petersburg
Russian Steam Navigation and Trad
ing Company Odessa
Atlas Assurance Co., Ld. (Fire) Norwich Union Assce. Co., Ld. (Fire) Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of
United States
Federal Life Assurance Co. of Canada
BOUSTEAD & Co., Mchts.-18, Collyer Quay
T. Cuthbertson (London)
Arthur Young
J. B. Young
Robt. Yeats
W. P. Waddell
E. D. Hewan
D. J. Boyd
do.
do.
do.
Geo. Macbain (Penang)
D. T. Boyd, signs per pro.
E. D. Hewall,
R. J. Addie,
F. H. Darke
do.
do.
F. Y. Blair, signs per pro. D. Drummond
J. L. Lonie
W. P. Millar
H. O. W. Allen H. O. Maas K. M. Millar
F. M. Philip
T. S. Nash S. L. Thompson R. W. Runciman E. Tessensohn P. McIntyre L. C. Lemon R. Tessensohn H. A. McIntyre W. W. Johnson W. F. Scully A. Gomes J. E. Haderup
SINGAPORE
1295
Agencies
Baring Brothers & Co., Limited Brown, Shipley & Co.
Glen Line of Steamers
Canadian Pacific Railway Company British-India S. N. Company, Limited Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Shire Line of Steamers Gulf Line of Steamers
Western Australian S. N. Co., Ld. Russisch Baltische Dampfschiffahrts
Gess.
Burns, Philp Line of Steamers Union Steamship Co. of N. Z. American & Oriental Line to and
from New York (Joint Agency) China Traders' Insurance Co., Limited Canton Insurance Office, Limited Union Marine Assurance Co., L. Merchants' Marine Insurance Co., Ld Royal Insurance Company
London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Eastern Insurance Company, La. Boston Insurance Co.
Penang Sugar Estates Co., Limited Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation Arracan Company, Limited
Christmas Is. Phosphate Co., Ld., L'don. Malaysian Rubber Co.
Westport Coal Co., Ld., of N. Z.
Marudu Bay Co., Ld.
Ed. Boustead & Co., 3, Lloyds Avenue,
London
Boustead & Co., Penang
BOUSTEAD INSTITUTE FOR SEAMEN
Hon. Secretary-S. A. Lane
Treasurer C. H. Follett
Manager-R. Nolan
BRADDELL BROTHERS,
Advocates and
Solicitors-24, Raffles Place
Roland St. J. Braddell, barrister-
at-law, advocate and solicitor T. J. M. Greenfield, barrister-at-law,
advocate and solicitor
John G. Campbell, enrolled law agent (Scotland), advocate and solicitor
BRANDT & CO., D., Merchants--Boat Quay
E, Schmid (Paris)
J. Schudel (Europe)
G. Schudel
D. Brandt
O. Muller
Agencies
North German Insurance Co. Assicurazioni Generali of Trieste
BRAY, HOWARD W.
St. James, Singapore
BREMER STUHLROHR-FABRIK, G. M. B. H., (Bremen Chaircane Mfg. Co., Ltd.)--4A, Prince Street
Menck Schultze & Co. (Bremen) Chr. Kroncke, manager do,
H. Winkelmann, do. (Singapore) W. Lübking, assistant Teo. Kim Swee, storekeeper Yam Quee, asst.
do.
Teo. Ah Khit, store clerk Low Leng Kian, clerk
do.
BRINKMANN & Co., Mchts. 12, Collyer Quay Charles Hiltermann (Manchester) Gustav Friedrich (London) Ernest Hiltermann (Manchester)
P. Cunliffe, signs per pro. E. A. Brown W. Driesen E. A. Abrams E S. Jones A. van der Haarst S. Dunn F. W. Lyall W. Obermuller H. L. Barsma
R. H. Anyon
Head Office: Hiltermann Bros., Man- chester and Bradford; London Office: Brinkmann & Co., 7, Mincing Lane; Hamburg Agency: Mecklenburg & Co. Agencies
Sun Insurance Office, London
Liverpool & London & Globe In-
surance Co., Liverpool
Thames & Mersey Marine Insurance
Co., Ld., London
BRITISH-AMERICAN TOBACÇò Co., LD.- 52 and 53, Robinson Road; Tel. Ad: Seminole, Singapore
Head Office-Cecil Chambers,
Strand, London, W. C.
86,
New York Office-111, Fifth Avenue,
New York
C. E. D. Warry, depôt manager R. W. Kaak," assistant
M. E. C. Hussey, do.
J. Kerr Black
A. J. Woodford, bookkeeper
BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY-See
under Churches and Missions
BRITISH DISPENSARY, Chemists and Op-
ticians-4, Battery Road
wwwwww
BRITISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Malaya
Branch
President--Dr. G. D. Freer (Singapore
Division)
President Elect-Dr. Malcolm Watson
(Klang Division)
1296
SINGAPORE
Vice-President-Dr. P. Fowlie (Singa-
pore Division) Vice-President-Dr. G. W. Park (Pe-
nang Division)
-
Vice-President Dr. Henry Fraser, Kuala Lumpur (Native States Divi- sion)
Secretary-Dr. G. A. Finlayson Treasurer-Dr. N. Black
Representatives on Straits and F.M.S. Medical Council- Dr. Lim Boon Keng, Dr. W. R. C. Middleton (Singapore Division), Dr. Avetoom, Dr. J. Kirk (Penang Division) Representative on Medical School-
Dr. Lim Boon Keng Representative on General Council of British Medical Association-Dr. D. J. Galloway
BRUANG, LIMITED-Gresham House, Battery
Road
Directors-A. D. Allan, H. Abrains,
G. A. Derrick, A. Gentle Secretary H. R. Llewellyn
BUSRAI A. & E., Commission Agents-28,
Malacca Street
Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Wine Merchants; London Office: Macgregor, Caldbeck & Co., 1, 2 and 3, Rangoon Street, Crutched Friars; Branches at London, Glasgow, Hongkong, Shanghai, Tientsin, Singapore, Penang, and Kuala Lumpur, with Agencies throughout China, Japan, and the Federated Malay States
J. Macgregor (London)
E. J. Caldbeck
do.
Kenneth A. Stevens (Singapore) E. A. Swan, signs per pro. V. R. Oliveiro, bookkeeper C. K. Padday, stenographer
CAMPBELL & Co., J. L., Tailors and Gen-
tlemen Outfitters-Battery Road
J. L. Campbell, proprietor and mangr.
H. B. Winter
F. J. MacDougall Gwee Hock Seng
CARAPIET & Co., Commission Agents-18,
Raffles Place
CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEP- HERD See under Churches and Missions
Central Engine Works, Civil, Marine, Motor, Mechanical, and Electrical En- gineers-55, Victoria Street; Tele. 136; Tel. Ad: Central
Lim Ho Puah, proprietor
J. A. Hamilton, A.M.I.MECH.E., mgr.
G. B. Harley, asst, manager J. L. McNair, shop foreman J. Smith, outside foreman
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND EXCHANGE
BUILDINGS
Committee--D. T. Boyd (chairman), Hon. C. MeArthur (leputy chair man), Hon. T. S. Baker, W. G. Hennings, A. Asmus, W. Ewald, W. Patchitt, M. E. Plumpton, C. W. Darbishire, T. Jones Alex. J. Gunn, secretary
CHANGKAT SALAKRUBBER AND TIN, Co., LD. Secretaries--Gibson & Anderson Resident Manager-A. B. Milne Agents-Guthrie & Co., Ld.
CHART DEPOTS-ailors' Home
Commander C.A. Radcliff, R.N., Adlty.,
sub-agent
Capt. A. A. Fyfe, supt.
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA, AND CHINA-Battery Road; Tel. Ad Sladang
Thos. Jones, manager
W. G. Peter, accountant
N. H. Hunt, sub-accountant
T. H. Fraser,
do.
J. C. Lennie,
do.
W. O. Hildred,
do.
J. G. Barclay,
do.
A. E. MacDonald
do.
E. J. Barker,
do.
CHEEK, M. A., Merchant (Straits Produce)
-Arcade Building
"CHIN GIAP"-Chop, Pine Apple Planting and Preserving Co.-2, North Bridge Road
"CHIN HIN," Chop, Land Proprietor-2
4 and 6, North Bridge Road
CHINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., LTD. Head Office: Canton Road, Shanghai; Southern District Office, No. 2, Finlayson Green, Singapore
J. A. Wattie, managing director S. Knocker, resident manager J. R. L. Calder, resident secretary
C. A. da Costa, clerk (Policy Dept.). A. L. Reutens, do. Lim Swee Boon, do. Tan Tiang Chye, typist Tan Tiang Seng, cashier Tan Choon Chiew, collector Agencies
Kuala Lumpur-Tiang Lee & Co. Penang--Tiang Lee & Co.
SINGAPORE
Ipoh-Aylesbury & Garland Bangkok-Louis T. Leonowens, Ld. North Sumatra-F. M. Curties
Agents
W. S. Vincent, Lim Kian Hock, S. Vincent, Tan Cheng Joo, Chia Tek Chye
CHINESE ADVISORY BOARD
The Secretary for Chinese Affairs, the Asst. Protector of Chinese, Lim Boon Keng, M.B., C.M., Hon. Tan Jiak Kim, Lee Cheng Yan, Lim Ho Puah, Choá Giang Thye, Lau Kim Pong, Tehan Chun Fuk, Yau Ngan Pan, Liong Man Sau, Che Chi Cheng, Cheong Quee Tiam, Chong Yong Khay, Seah Leang Seah, Tan Yong Siak, Wee Kim Yam, Lau Long Teng, Chhua Tsz Iong, Ui Chiau Keng and Han Kui Phong
CHINESECHRIST'NASSN.-PrinsepSt.Chapel President Song Ong Siang, M.A., LL.M. Vice-President-Rev. W. Murray, M.A. Hon. Secretary-Tan Boon Chin Hon. Treasurer-Teo Choon Hean Librarian-Lim Tian Pee
Members Comtee. ChewCheng Yong,
Lim Liang Quee
CHINESE GOSPEL HOUSE-See Churches
CHOP WAN SEN CHUAN KEE, House and
Land Proprietors-6, Nassim Road
Cheang Jim Chuan
Chan Koon Leong, cashier
CHRISTIAN INSTITUTE-See under Churches
CHURCHES, MISSIONS, &c.
ANGLO-TAMIL SCHOOL
Principal -Marianne Sutton Head Master-Cunanayakam
ARMENIAN CHURCH OF ST. GREGORY,
Hill Street
Vicar-Rev. H. S. Vardan Hon, Warden-M. C. Martin Trustees-T. Sarkies, H. S. Aratoon Warden-M. S. Aratoon Treasurer-H. S, Aratoon
"BETHESDA❞ Brass Bassa Road
Missionaries.-W. D. Ashdown, A.
E. Green, A. R. Thoburn Trustees W. D. Ashdown, A. W.
Bean, A. A. O' Reilly
1297
BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY, Agency for Malaya and the Philippine Islands Bible House, 17-2, Armenian Street; Telephone 77; Telegraph Ad: Testament, Singapore
Address: C. E. G. Tisdall, agent
E. A. C. Van Wulven, depository
and accountant
P. Penninga, sub-agent, Lawang, E.
Java
Ben. Purdy, sub agent, Malay Pen-
insula and Penang
F. J. Chapman, sub-agent, Batavia,
W. Java
T. Eldridge, sub-agent, Manila P.I. W. H. Williams, do.,
Singapore
THE
CATHEDRAL (ROMAN CATHOLIC) OF
GOOD SHEPHERD"-Brass Bassa Road
Right Rev. E. Barillon Right Rev. C. A. Bourdon Rev. H. Rivet, vicar
Rev. L. Pouget, assistant Rev. L. Lambert, procurator
CHINESE GIRLS' SCHOOL (C.E.Z. M.S.) -
Government Hill
Miss Gage-Brown (absent) Miss Ryan
Miss Tolley
Miss Abel, acting hon. secy.
CHRIST CHURCH (Church of England)
Col. Chaplain-Rev. F. G.Swindell, M.A. Warden (Chaplain's)-Hon. W. Evans Do. (People's)-W. A. R. Knight Vestry Clerk-T. C. Matthews
CHURCH OF ENGLAND, Boarding House
for School Boys
Committee:-
President-The Rt. Rev. The Bishop
of Singapore
Vice-Pres.-The Colonial Chaplain, W. A. Cuscaden, P. T. Evatt, P. Gold,
F. C. Wreford
Hon. Sec. The Colonial Chaplain Hon. Treasurer-P. Gold
House Master-M. B. Brockweall Asst. do. -J. Daking Matron-Mrs. Miller
CONVENT OF THE HOLY INFANT JESUS-
Victoria Street
The Lady Superioress-Rev. Mother
St. Hombeline and 23 sisters
FRENCH ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rt. Rev. Dr. E. Barillon, Bishop of
Malacca
Rt. Rev. Dr. C. A. Bourdon, Bishop
of Dardanie
Rev. H. Rivet, vicar of the Good
Shepherd
41
1298
SINGAPORE
Rev. L. Pouget, assistant Rev. L. Lambert, do. and procurator Rev. V. Gazeau, vicar of Ss. Peter
and Paul
Rev. E. Mariette, do.
Rev. J. M. Vey, assistant Rev. A. Devals,
do.
Rev. L. Bürghoffer, vicar of Our
Lady of Lourdes
Rev. J. M. Belliot (Bukit Timah) Rev. C. Saleilles (Serangoon) Rev. A. Laurent, assistant
JEWISH SYNAGOGUE, "MagHAIN ÁBOTH"
-Waterloo Street
Minister-Rev. Elias Sherida Trustees M. Meyer, S. J. Nathan Hon. Treasurer-S. J. Nathan Hon. Secretary J. Abed
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-Wesley Church (English), Ft. Canning Road
Pastor Rev. George C. Cobb Middle Road Church (Baba-Malay)
Middle Road and Waterloo Street
Pastor Floyd Sullivan
METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION
Rev. W. T. Cherry, District Supt. and Methodist Publishing House Rev.G.C.Cobb, pastor,English Church Rev. K.E.Pease, supdt.Boardg. school
and principal A.-C. school Rev. B. F. Van Dyke, actg. prin. C. C. Underhill F. H. Sullivan
teachers in
Miss Read
Miss Matthews Miss Stefanski
A.-C. school
Miss Smith
Miss Myers
Miss Blackmore, woman's work
Miss M. Sutton,
Miss Petersen,
do.
Miss R. Sunderland, do.
do.
METHODIST PUBLISHING HOUSE-Cor. Stamford Road and Armenian Street; Telph. 996; Tel. Ad: Empress
W. T. Cherry, superintendent
OUR LADY OF LOURDES CHURCH (Tamil
Mission) Ophir Road
MISSION HOUSE, THE 92, Neil Road Pastor A. R. Thoburn, missionary,
Miss M. N. Frame
PORTUGUESE MISSION-CHURCH OF "ST. JOSEPH"-Victoria Street, under the ju- risdiction of the Bishop of Macao
PORTUGUESE MISSION ST. ANTHONY'S,
Boy's School
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Minister-Rev. John A. Gray Elders-Rev. J. A.B. Cook, R. Little, S. Tomlinson, W. G. Niven, J. McKenzie, Rev. W. Murray, Alfred Lea, A. Proctor, R. D. Pringle (session clerk)
Board of Managers The Minister (chairman), the Elders, A. Knight, J. H. Drysdale, C. McArthur, J. Aitken. Å. Peid
Treasurer A. Proctor Secretary A. Knight
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF ENGLAND, CHINA MISSION- Churches:Baba,Bukit Timah, Seranggong, Tek Kha, Gay- lang, Selitar, Tanjong Pagar, Pago, Tampoi, Paya Lebar, Johor Bahru, and Muar Schools, Bukit Timah, Johore, Selitar, Paya Lebar, Tanjong Pagar and Muar (Chinese)
Rev. J. A. B. Cook, missionary; res:
*
Gilstead," Bukit Timah Road Rev. W Murray, M.A., missionary: res: "Gilstead," Bukit Timah Road
PROCURE DES MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES-78
River Valley Road
Procurator-Rev. N. J. Couvreur Assistant Rev. G. Gex
SACRED HEART CHURCH-Tank Road
Rev. V. Gazeau, vicar
Rev. J. Vey, assistant
SOCIETY OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL
President G. S. Reutens Vice-President-D. M. Martia Treas. and Secty.-L. J. Shepherdson
ST. ANDREW'S CATHEDRAL
Bishop of Singapore Rt. Rev. C.J.
Ferguson Davie, M.A. Colonial Chaplain-Surrogate and Commissary, Rev. Marsh Kirkby,
M.A.
Registrar of the Diocese-Rev.
H. C. Izard, M.A. Organist -E. Salzmann Trustees--The Colonial Chaplain (chairman), the Colonial Secretary, the Colonial Engineer, W. Pal chitt, E. D. Hewan Vestry Clerk-James Gurupatham
ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH MISSION
Committee-Trustees of Cathedral (if subrs.), Bishop of Singapore, Hon. Secretary-Colonial Chaplain Hon. Treasurer-Rev. R. Richards Superintendent Rev. R. Richard
SINGAPORE
1299
ST. ANTHONY'S GIRLS' SCHOOL
Correspondent, Very Rev. A. Cardoso Rev. Mother, L. Marelli
Fourteen Cannossian Sisters
ST.PETER&ST. PAUL'SCHURCH-QueenSt.
Rev. E. Mariette, vicar Rev. A. Devals, asst.
CINEMATOGRAPH PATHÉ, Importers of Pathé FréresCinematographs and Films- 19, Stamford Road; Tel. Ad: Pathé, Singapore; A. B. C. Code 5th Edition; Telph. 982
F. Dreyfus, general agent
Conway C. Sarre, assistant Qim Ah Kok, general do. J. de Wells, J. Young, clerks
CLARKE & Co., F., Livery Stables--207, Queen Street, Breakers and Trainers, Horse Dealers, Forage Contractors, Hirers of Horses and Rubber-Tyred Carriages
C. Zimmermann, proprietor and mngr.
CLOUETT & Co., A., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-7, Raffles Quay
A. Clonëtt
V. Clumeck
W. Woelz, assistant
H. C. Clouett, do.
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES
ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERS, THE-Dis
pensary Buildings, Raffles Place; Tel. Ad: Engine
COELHO H., Piano, Organ, Musical Instruments Dealers, Tuners, and Re- pairers-Selegu Road
F. W. Coellio E. A. Coelho
COGHLAN & Co., H. L., Licensed Auc- tioneers, Surveyors, Land Agents and Valuers, Brokers, and Insurance Agents: Salerooms-5, Raffles Place
Partner and Manager--H. L. Coghlan Managing Asst. Harold Carpinael,
signs per pro.
F. Merrells, assistant
A. Perreau, cashier
L. O. H. Minjovt
N. Sta. Maria, clerk
C. L. Pereira, draughtsman
Ibrahim bin Hadji Mohd. Ariff, sten-
ographer
Abdul Rahman, crier Sub-Agencies
The New Zealand Insurance Co. (Fire
and Marine)
The Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada
ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY, STRAITS BRANCH
Presidt. Hon. Dr. Galloway Vice-Presidt. for Singapore-Hon.
W. D. Barnes
Do. for Penang-Hon. R. N. Bland Hon. Secretary-H. N. Ridley, M.A. Hon. Treasurer-Dr. Hanitsch Hon. Librarian-W. Makepe.ce Council--Rev. W. Drury, A. Knight,
V. A. Flower
SINGAPORE BAR COMMITTEE
Cecil I. Carver (hon. sec.) C. Emerson
F. M. Elliot, Hon. E. C. Ellis
SINGAPORE CATHOLIC CLUB
Presidt.and Treasurer-Rev.H.Rivet Hon. Secretary--W. Mosbergen Committee Rev. L. Lambert, E. Tessensohn, R. Tessensohn, J. T. Lloyd, D. M. Martin, E. L. Seth, CA. da Silva, F. M. Chopard, S. C. de Souza, J. J. Pereira, W. Mosberger
SINGAPORE CLUB
Committee F. M. Elliot (chair- man), A. D. Allan, Dr. A. P. Bowes, L. R. Bremner, G. A. Derrick, Dr. J. A. R. Glennie, G. C. Mur- ray, J. D. Saunders, G. B. Strat- ton, Geo. B. Morris (secretary
SINGAPORE RIFLE ASSOCIATION
Head Quarters-S. V. C. Drill Hall President The Commandant
SINGAPORE GARRISON GOLF CLUB-Head
Quarters, Napier Road, Tanglin
President Major-Genl. T. Perrott,
C.B.
Hon. Sec. Lt. G. N. Humphreys,
A.S.C., Fort Canning
Committee consists of a representative
from each Corps in Garrison
STRAITS PHARMACEUTICAL ASSOCIATION President J. Mackenzie, M.P.S. Vice-President-DanielTimms,M.F.A. Hon. Sec. and Treas.--D. Turner,
M.P.SC., 4, Battery Road
STRAITS PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
President--H. N. Ridley, M.A. Oxon.
F.R.S., F.L.S., F.R.H.S.
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-Arthur Knight Committee G.E.N. Thomas, M.I.E.E., W. G. Bell, M.A. (GLAS.), W. A. Sims
TANGLIN CLUB
President-C. J. Carver Vice-President-C.W. Dar Bishiro Hon. Treasurer-W. A. Sims
41*
1300
SINGAPORE
Hon. Secretary-G. R. K. Magliston Committee G. U. Farrant, C. L.
Craig, H. Freeman
TEUTONIA CLur
Committee-0. Schwemer (president),
H. Winkelmann (vice-president) A. Pellmann (hon. secty.)
M. Matthiessen (hon. dep. secty.) A. Kroeucke (hon. treasurer) B. Laeschke (accountant)
G. Schudel (assessor)
COLONIAL PRESS-83, Brass Bassa Road
(Raffles Hotel Buildings)
Syed Gulabshah, proprietor and ingr.
COMMERCIAL PRESS-9, Raffles Place
Esharac Khan, proprietor
Osman Khan Suratee, cashier Chas. Jos. Peter, printer
COMMERCIAL UNION ASSURANCE Co., LD., Eastern Branch-Robinson Road and Telegraph Street; Tel. Ad: Salamander
W. A. Sims, branch manager
C. A. Molz, assistant
C. H. Elliott, assistant
CONFIDENTIAL ENQUIRY AGENCY (Legal and Mercantile) Private Detective-Cecil Street, 173
F. K. Jennings
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY-Hotel de l'Europe
Acting Consul E. Von Zach Secretary Karl Berger
BELGIUM-3, Malacca Street
Consul S. Rosenbaum
CHINA--76, Brass Bassa Road
Consul-General for Straits Settle-
ments-Tso Ping Lung Secretary-Yang Chieu Yeng do. --Tséh Chien Pu Interpreter-Tsao Tsien Hon. Assistant-Tso Chiu
do.
-Tchan Chwe Siak
DENMARK-6 and 7, Telegraph Street
Consul-Svend Gad
FRANCE-106, Orchard Road; Tel. 116 Consul Comte R. de Bondy-Riario Vice-Consul-(Vacant)
Chancelier and Commis.-R. Doures-
samy
Consular Agent, Penang J. Mitchell Do. K. Lanpur-G. Kester
GERMANY-Tel. Ad: Germania; Teleph,
112
Consul-General-R, Kiliani Vice-Consul-Baron Rüdt Secretary-O. Pellmann Assistants-R.Fischer, E.Oehmichen
ITALY Raffles Quay
Acting Consul-General for Straits Settlements-Chev. H. Spakler Secretary and Chancelier-Chev. F.
A. Lobato de Faria
JAPAN
Acting Consul-Kuramatsu Kishi,
also for Straits Settlements Office 97, Robinson Road Residence-3, Leonie Hill
NETHERLANDS-Raffles Quay
Consul-Genl.-H. Spakler
Consular Cadet-D. J. Steyn Parvé Clerk-V. Lunberg
Do. Tan Seng Watt
NORWAY-Collyer Quay
Consul-E. D. Hewan
PORTUGAL Raffles Quay
Acting Consul-Chev. H. Spakler Secretary and Chancelier-Chev, F.
A. Lobato de Faria
RUSSIA Hotel Adelphi
Consul-General A. de Wywodzeff
SIAM-7, Battery Road
Consul-Gen.-Hon. John Anderson
(on-leave)
Acting Consul-A. E. Baddeley Chief Clerk-A. W. Gooneratne Siamese Interpreter-Nai Wan
SPAIN 106, Orchard Road
Vice-Consul-Comte R. de Bondy
Riario (Consul de France),
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA-Consulate- General, 92, 93, and 94, Brass Bassa Rd., Raffles Hotel
Consul-General for S. S., Christmas and Cocas Islands; also represent- ative of Republics of Cuba and Panama James T. Du Bois Vice and Deputy Consul-General-
George E. Chamberlin Secretary-George E. Chamberlin Medical Officers-Drs. Searle and
Simpson
CONVENT OF THE HOLY INFANT JESUS-S
under Churches and Missions
SINGAPORE
CRAIK, D. MCLEOD, A.R.L.B.A., Architect,
The Arcade, Raffles Place
Res: Dunluce, Leonie Hill
CRANE & Co., Auctioneers, Share Brokers
and Valuers
F. W. Crane
T. Maclean
J. F. Hendricks
CROWN DISPENSARY 95, Selegie Road
J. C. Pestana, proprietor
G. J. Pestana, dispenser D). B. Pestana,
do.
DALLAN'S AUSTRALIAN HORSE REPOSITORY AND VETERINARY ESTABLISHMENT 3, Kock Road (off Orchard Road); Tel. 540
Geo. A. Greaves, manager
DALMANN & CO., Merchants-2, Bonham St.
H.Diedericksen
U. Hafner
A. Zurcher, signs per pro.
J. Pommierenk
Agency
The Continental Insce. Co., Mannheim
DERRICK & Co., Public Accountants and Auditors Gresham House, Battery Road
G. A. Derrick,
H. Roland Llewellyn, C.A. F. E. Gallimore, C.A. W. P. Plummer, C.A. C. F. Brison, C.A.
Secretaries and Agencies
Straits & General Development Co.,Ld.
(G. A. Derrick)
Port Dickson Rubber Estates Co., Ld.
(G. Maltby)
Malacca Tin Dredging Co., Ld.
G. W. Derrick
Sipiau Tin Co., Ld. (G. Maltby) Ranb Australian Gold Mining Co., Ld.
(G. A. Derrick)
Belat Tin Mining Co., Ld. (G. Maltby) Kuantau Tin Mining Co., Ld. (Maltby) Bruaug Limited (E. D. Butler)
Bukit Kajang Rubber Co., Ld. (Der-
rick & Co.)
Fire Insce. Association (G. A. Derrick) Marine Insurance Association (G. A.
Derrick)
DEUTSCH ASIATISCHE BANK-de Souza and Prince Street Corner; Tcl. Ad: Teutonia,
F. Kilian, manager
H. Koch, sub-manager E. Volger, signs per prò. Fr. Schroetter
A. Grothe
B. Laeschke
C. J. Hardy
Seow Ewe Lin, compradore
1301
DIETHELM & Co., LD., Merchants-20,
Collyer Quay
M. L. Stalemann, manager W. R. Diethelm, signs per pro.
H. C. F. flerbell
H. Ph. Groskamp
W. Looser
Head Office: A. G. Zurich; Branch
Houses: Saigon, Bangkok
DISPENSARY LD., THE, Chemists, Pharma- cists and Opticians-43, Raffles Place
D. Tennent, sec. and manager
DOMON, O. F., M.I.E. E., Consulting Engineer,
-P. O. B. 48, Kuala Lumpur
DONALDSON & BURKINSIIAW, Advocates, Solicitors and Notaries Public, 19, Coll- yer Quay: Tel. Ad. Denotation
Hugh Fort
Cecil Ingram Carver
Harold Millard Gilbert S. Carver A. S. Bailey J. Crabb-Watt C. Kim Boon F. W. R. Scott Newbold B. Westerhout R. Govinda Samy
N. E. Gomes and others
DR. WILLIAMS MEDICINE Co., TUE, Cave-
nagh Bridge
S. W. Wolfe, manager
J. 1. Knox, signs per pro, W. H. Kerr
T. A. Davidson
Wong Yong Poh, bookeeper Abdul Rahman, typist
DREW & NAPIER, Advocates, Solicitors, and
Notaries Public, 10, Collyer Quay
Evelyn C. Ellis, advocate & solicitor E. F. H. Edlin,
D. Y. Perkins,
M. J. Upcott,
A. P. Robinson, A. Z. à B. Terrell,
A. de W. Harries
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
F. G. Allen, managing clerk A. H. Todd, costs clerk
DUNMAN & Co., Exchange, Share and
General Brokers
DUNN, R. W., Consulting Engineer and Surveyor, Supdt. Engr. 24, Raffles Place
DUPIRE, BROTHERS, Merchants-8, Raffles
Quay
Paul Dupire Louis Dupire
1302
Agencies
SINGAPORE
Rhenish Marine Ince. Association SalamanderFireInce.Co.of Amsterdam La Mutuelle de France et des Colonies
EAST ASIATIC Co., LD., Shipowners and Merchants-6 and 7, Telegraph Street; Head Office, Copenhagen; Branches: Bangkok, Shanghai; Tel. Ad: Orient
S. Gad, manager
J. C. Hermansen J. Rasmussen A. Gravesen
H. B. Claussen (Tringganu) A. Tvilde
Agencies
Russian East Asiatic S.S. Co., Ld., St.
Petersburg
Swedish East-Asiatic Co., Ld., Gotlien-
burg
ELLISON, I., Merchant and Moneylender-
147, Selegie Road
ERROL ESTATE, Parit Buntor
A. McKenzie, manager
ESSABHOY, A. M., Merchant and Commis- sion Agent--11, MalaccaS treet; Tel. Ad: Essabhoy; Telph. 147
Partner Shaik Abdulkyum Mulla
Essabloy
Manager-E. S. Abdulkader Asst. Manager Hoosenibhoy Alibhoy Cashier-Abdeali S. Yusufali Book Keeper-Tyebjec Ahmedbhoy Bill Collector-Tyebbhoy Abdulali
EVANGELICAL ALLIANCE See Churches
EVANS & KITOVITZ, Advocates and Solici-
tors--2, Raffles Place
C. A. Evans, advocate and solicitor D. Kitovitz,
do.
Yeo Hock Hoe, manager clerk
Chew Peng Lin, conveyancing clerk Lee Choon Hong, clerk
Yeo Kim Whye,
do.
Low Kim Seng, do.
Gay Ah Yew,
do.
S. Leelayah, court clerk
Abdul Wahied, collector
EVATT & Co., Accountants and Auditors
The Arcade; Tel. Ad: Evatt, Singapore;
Telephone 853
P. T. Evatt, incorporated accountant
(partner)
P. Gold,assistant chartered accountant Edward Gattey, incorporated accoun-
tant manager (signs the firm) H. B. Ward, asst, chartered accountant,
and at Penang
FEDERATED MALAY States - High Commis
sioner's Office, Singapore
High Commissioner-Sir John Ander-
son, G.C.M.G,
Secretary to High Cominissioner-
Oliver Marks (absent)
Acting do. Claud Severn Clerk J. D'Aranjo
do.-S. G. Arudpragasam do.--R. Murugiah
do. Chew Hock Chyc Malay-writer-Magat Osman
FERNANDEZ & Co. G. A., Licensed Auc- tioneers, Surveyors, Architects, &c.-10, Raffles Place
G.A.Fernandez, F.N.B. A.,F.R.M.S.,M.K.S.A. A. A. Dors, clerk
Survey and Architectural Department
G. A. Fernandez
J. A. Zuzartee, draughtsman David, plan custodian
FITTOCK, CHAS., Surveyor to Germanischer Lloyd, American Record, Registro It aliano, Lloyd's Agents and Local Offices- 8, Cavanagh Bridge Road, opposite Post Office
Agent and Surveyor Det Norske
Veritas
FONES BROTHERS, Dentists-Brass BassaRd.
FOSTER & Co., Quarrymen and Contractors
-29, Winchester House
H. P. Bagley
C. Foster, C.E.
FOWLIE, P., M.3., C.M., Medical Practitioner
-14, Battery Road
FRAMROZ & Co., Aerated Water Manu- facturers-87, Cecil Street; Tel. Ad: Framroz; Teleph. 1011
P. M. Framróz, proprietor
FRANKEL & Co., A., Furniture Manufac-
turers and Importers
Senior Partner A. Frankel (Vienna) Managing do. --A. Clouet (Singapore Partner V. Clumeck (Singapore) Assistant--David Frankel Bill Collector-D. Izraelski Clerk-F. Clouett
Sole Agents: Kohn's Bentwood Furniture
FRANZEN, Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents-5, Malacca
A. Franzen
M. Schulze
SINGAPORE
FRASER & CO., Exchange and Share Brokers
-1, De Souza Street
David Kerr
F. George Penny
G. U. Farrant, signs per pro. J. H. C. Lane, assistant
C. J. Baker,
do.
FRASER & CHALMERS, LD., Eastern Agency,
Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld.
Manager A. Colledge Asst. do-F. J. Blyth
FRASER & CUMMING, Timber Merchants.
H. P. Bagley, partner
Cheam Cheow Seng and other clerks
FRASER & NEAVE, LIMITED, Aerated Water Manufacturers and Printers-2-2, Rames Quay; Tel. Ad: Atlas
Alex Proctor, secretary
Wm. C. Phipps, accountant A. W. Larkin, do.
Aerated Water Department
A. Morrison,
manager
A. E. Webster, asst. do.
J. Forrest, assistant
A. C. Wall, engineer
Branch Factory, Argyle Street, Penang
Thos. F. Dixon, manager
E. J. Roberts assistant Branch Factory, Campbell Road, Kuala
Lumpur
Geo. Flanagan, manager Branch Factory, Bangkok
W. M. Foreman, manager Branch Factory, Selibin Road, Ipoh,
A. W. Sturgess, manager Printing Department
T. G. Scott, manager
W. M. Butchart, asst. manager D. Main, assistant
FRENCH CATHOLIC MISSION- See Churches
FRESH FLOWERS & ART NEEDLEWORK DEPOT
-217, Orchard Road
Mrs. H. A. Moss, proprietress Mrs. Edith Norris, manageress Miss A. Misson, assistant
Miss A. Tan,
do.
GADELIUS & Co., Merchants-10, Raffles
Quay
K. Gadelius, partner
C. E. Gadelius, partner and manager
G. J. Dammers, assistant manager.
signs per pro.
G. Ehn, engineer
W. Pereira, assistant
Seng Poh,
lo.
1303
GAGGINO & Co., Shipchandlers, Provision Merchants, General Storekeepers, Sail- makers, and Navy Contractors-2 and 3, Flint Street
G. Gaggino, managing director E. F. Gaggino, manager, Singapore Paolo Consigliere, partner
C. Gaggino, assistant
Tan Lian Pitt, asst. storekeeper
and 6 others
Scandinavian Department
Capt. E. B. Flak, manager
GAGGINO & Co., G., Merchants and Com- mission Agents, Surveyor, Registro Italiano-2, Flint Street
G. Gaggino
Agencies
Soc. Reunite d'Assicurazione, Genoa
GALLOWAY, D. J., M.D., C.M., F.R.C.P. MORE, F. W., M.D., CH.B., B.SC. A. LEITCH, M.B., CH.B., D.PH. (Cambridge) Medical Practitioners-4, Battery Road
GARCIA, W. J., Pianoforte and Music
Dealer-219, Orchard Road
GAREH & Co., M. A., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents, 15, Change Alley
A. M. Gareh
GENTLE, ALEX., Accountant, Auditor and Commission Agent and Coroner for Singa- pore-27, Winchester House, CollyerQuay
GOSLING & Co., T. L., Wine and Spirit. Merchants, Commission, Parcel Express and Passengers Agents-36, Robinson Road,
T. L. Gosling
C. L. Gosling Yap Tuck Heye
GOVERNMENT OFFICES
ATTORNEY-GENERAL
Attorney-General
Matthews, K.C.
J. Bromhead
Assistant G. G. Seth (on leave) Act. Asst.-M. Thunder Clerk J. Borgonah
AUDIT OFFICE
Auditor-Genl. S. S.-A. T. Bryant Chief Clerk-W. C. P. Keun Acting Chief Clerk-J. W. Salmon Clerks, Class L.-J. F. de Souza, G. W. Meyer, L. M. Thexeira, W. A, de Souza
Clerks, Class II.-E. A. Pereira, G. Veragoo, A. K. Mootoosamy, A. S. Pereira
1304
SINGAPORE
Clerks, Class III.-J. L. d'Almeida, L. G. Laporte, Abdul Hamid bin Mohamed Ali, Koh Keng Boon, Song Ong Datt, D. Sobramanrin, J. A. Van der Beck Railway Audit Clerks, Class II.-A.
R. Fernandez, Lim Khye Liang Asst. Audit Clerk, Class III-Low
Leng Chuan
BANKRUPTCY OFFICE
Act. Official Assignee D. Beatty Chief Clerk-G. W. Gostelow
BOTANICAL GARDENS
Dir.-H. N. Ridley, M.A., F.R.S.F.L.S. Curator-R. Derry
Asst. Curator-T. W. Main Chief Clerk-J. S. Isaac Clerk-I. Sandosum
Foreman, Botanic Garden-B. K.
Sahib
Foreman, Economic Garden-S. A.
Sathianathen
Inspector of Coconut Trees-A. B.
H. Omar
Overseer-Custawi Bin Jalil
CHINESE PROTECTORATE
Secrety. for Chinese Affairs, S. S. and
F. M. S.-Hon. W. D. Barnes Clerk and Trans.-Leung Kwong Hin Asst.Pro. of Chinese-A.M.Pountney Acting do. -W. Peacock Second asst. act. -A. W. Bailey Registrtn. Officer-J. C. Fernandez Chief Clerk-Chan Cheow Lye Clerks-Ong Kim Hok, Choo Kim
Swee, Lin Cho Meng Writers-Wong Chak Chow, Phua
Kim Bun
Extra Clerk-Benjamin Cheah Hoi Extra Ch'se Writer-Chong Lin
Kung
Chinese Interpreter-Ho Siak Kuan Assistant Translator-Tsoi San Un- Inspector W. Ryan
Japanese Interpreter-S. H. Tajiri
Boarding Officer S. C. de Souza Assistant do. -C. J. D'Cotta
Clerk Class II.-A.Abdul Aziz Sahib
Do.
Do.
-J. E. de Souza III. Arnasalam Pillay
Do.
-C.A.C.Christiansen
Extra Clerk-H. de Rozario Office-Keeper-Suppayah
Stamp Office
Chief Clerk-F. W. Eber Clerk Class III.-F. C. Pereira Probate Examiner-LeongSiew Hong Shroff-Heng Seng Guan 2nd Shroff-Wee Lian Bee Head Pressman-Rama Chotta Accountants' Branch
Accountant--T. W. Stubbs Clerk Class I.-H. d'Rozario
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
-A. G. Theseira II.-E. M. Perrean
-S. H. Bateman
J. R. Angus -Chua Lip Tee --E. Fernandez
Currency Note Branch
Clerk Class I.-E. F. Pestana Cashier-Chea Hood Teck Asst. Cashier-Song See Kuan Counter Clerk-Teo Beng Geok Do. -Lim Siew Long Widows' and Orphans' Pension Fund
Secretary-A. R. de Souza
CORONER
Coroner -Alex, Gentle Clerk and Interpr.-Koh Teng Hai
DISTRICT & POLICE COURTS
District Judge and First Magistrate
--E. G. Broadrick
Acting do. -L.E. P. Wolferstan Second Magistrate-W. Langham
Carter Acting do. Third
C. F. J. Green
do.
-T, Lornie
Acting
do.
-E. E. Colman
Fourth
do.
-B. Nunn
Acting do.
-A. de Mello
Chief
Second
do.
Third
do.
-S. Kylahsum
Fourth
do.
-D. M. Fernandez
Fifth do.
Clerk-E. Chong Choon,
W. W. Chopard
COLONIAL TREASURY
Treasurer, and Collector of Stamp Duties and Accountant-General Supreme Court, S. S.-Hon. J. Ó. Anthonisz
Assistant Treasurer-J. L. King (on
leave), Do. J. S. W. Arthur
Treasury
Chief Clerk-W. Clarke
Clerk Class L.-A. Fernandez
Do.
-E. A. Rodrigues
Do.
II. S. J. Yzelman
Do.
-R. B. de Roza
-Tan Ong Seng
Sixth do. E, Nalpon
Seventh do.
Cheong Keng Liat
Extra Clerk-Tock Seah Wee
Shroff and Clerk-Tan Boon Guan Asst. do.
-Tan Tian Yan
Typewriter-Lim Chu Suan
Ushers J. Blieeni, E. D. Cruz, K.
Dorasamy
Malay Interpreter-N. Md, Hashim
Do.
Do.
-S. Ahmed Ally
-A. Manan
Tamil do.-J. N. Mahalinghum, C
M. Chelliah
SINGAPORE
Hindustani
Ishwar Das Chinese Interpreters-Leong Kam Tsun, Goh Nee Kiam, Goh Kwok Seong, Lee Shak Pin, Chan Eng Choon, Song Deung Ngak, Song Eng Chong
Interpreter Babu
Student Interprs-Ha Yong Wah,
Goh Khee Hee
DISTRICT COURT
District Judge-G. A. Hall Acting do. C. J. Saunders Chief Clerk-Chew Chong Sim Second Clerk-J. Dorni Third do. S. Dorasamy Fourth do. -Lee Kwee Siew
-C. G. Pestana
do.
Fifth Sixth do.
Seventh do.
A. Rajagopaul -Koh Choon Yip
Eighth do. -A, Pereira Bailiff T. de Silva
Asst. Bailiffs-A. C. Pestana and
Narainasamy
Tamil Interpreter-R. Sopaya Chinese Interpreters-Ong Chin Tai,
Tan Hak Yam Process Servers
Baboo, Abdur
Kadir, Gulam Kadir, Abdul Kar- rim, Nanoomeah, Kechut, Kassim
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Director of Education S. S. and F. M. S.-J. B. Eleum, B.A. (OXON.) Inspector of Schools S. and M.-M.
Hellier
Chief Clerk-J. Jivanason Second do.-N. S. Kalimutu Malay Writer-Abdul Rahman Clerk to I. of S.--Alias bin Kachong Visiting Teacher-Abdul Aziz bin
Musa
Schools, Raffles Institution
Principal-C. M. Phillips M.A., LL.B. Asst. Principal and Science Master-
R. J. Bartlett
European Masters-R. E. Smith B.A. (CANTAB) J. Watson, M.A.,B.Sc., J. McLeod M.A., C. F. C. Ayre., J. P. Macaulay, M.A.
Assists. J. A. Fernandez, B. V. Ri- chards, A. B. John, Seah Seng Kang, Chia Cheng Jin, J. M. Mehta, R. H. Minjoot, Seow Kway Fah, D. S. Ferroa, C. McKeon, Chan Keng Swee, H. A. R. Paulusz, L. C. Pennefather, W. A. Aeria, A. Molteni, B. W. Ayadurai
Commercial Master-W. N. Haigh,
F.I.5.S.T. Raffles Girls' School
Principal-Miss J. Tarbat (on leave),
Miss D. M. Buckle (Actg.)
1305
Asst. Prin.-- Miss J. Sharpe (Actg.) Assts. Miss E. F. Suter, Miss J.
Campbell, Miss E. Norris, Miss E. Le Cain, Miss H, de Souza, Miss N. Zohnder, Miss C. Buxton, Miss H. Norris, Miss V. Coveney and Miss R. Stuart
Visiting Teacher-J. Watson Outram Road School
Headmaster-M. B. Brockwell (act.) Assists. V.R. Menon, A. S. Ponniah, P. H. Fernandes, Miss E. da Silva, Miss P. d'Almeida, S. Alwee, Miss C. Reutens, Miss A. Hodge, Miss S. Robinson, Miss F. Carrut- hers, Miss C. Hendricks, Mrs. L. McKeon, L. Samarasinghe, Miss H. Cooke
Cross Street Preparatory School
Headmistress-Miss M. Buxton Assists.-Miss K. M. de Souza, Miss E. Hogan, Miss M. d'Almeida, Miss K. M. Leicester, Miss D. Rcoke, Miss J. Hogan, Miss E. A. Wheeler, Miss J. Burt, Miss I. Aería, Miss D. Richards
Victoria Bridge School
Headmaster-H. Laugher European Master-G. Stockwell Assistants D. A. Yzelman, W. Ahin, Mohd. Sheriff, G. E. Velge, A. P. Pennefather, T. C. Archer, W. J. de Cruze, O. Richards, A. Kaufman, V. Gopalswami, F. K. Oorloff
Reformatory School
Superintendent E. Prior (on leave),
J. G. Howell (actg.) Asst. Supt.-A. Lazaroo
INDIAN IMMIGRATION DEPARTMENT
Asst. Supt.-E. L. Talma Clerk S. Anandayah
LAND OFFICE
Collector R. J. Farrer Chief Clerk-L. P. de Souza Second do. Kiong Chin Eng
Third do.-N. Agamparam Fourth do. Lim Geok Siang
Land Bailiffs - H. C. P. de Souza, K. Tamby Rajah, F. T. Rodrigues, E. F. Rodrigues Shrots-Tan Song, Kheo Extra Clerk-F. Xavier Bailiff G. R. de Souza Assistant do. -P. Berry Forest Ranger-J. C. M. Pielay
MARINE DEPARTMENT
Master Attendant S. S. and Shipping Master, Conservator of the Port, Receiver of Wrecks, etc.-Comm. C. A. Radcliffe, R..
1306
SINGAPORE
Deputy Master Attendant-Lieut.
B. A. Cator, R.N. Engineer-Edgar Galistan
Senior Boarding and Emigration
Officer-E. Edwards
Boarding Officers-A. H. Chalmers Joshua Cohen, A. S. Pestana, S. E. Francis, S. Mayo
Clerk (special class)--R. C. Nonis. Clerks (class I.) Soo Chong Chin Clerks (class II.) T. Eber, C. J. Monteiro, Tan Joo Khoon, J. W. Pereira, J. Lye Yew Clerks (class III.) Chiang Cheng Lim, Goh Chin Siew, James bin Ali, Lim Teong Ghie, Daud bin Abdullah V. Gorindasamy, Koy Tek Wi, Ahmet bin Mydin, M. Thampiah, R. Gopalsani, Goh Hood Seng, Lim Ah Kwee, M. Pereira, T. Carruthers, Ahmat bin. Mydin, R. Gopalsami, M. Tham- piah
Deputy Registrar of Shipping and
Time Bill Observer-R.S. Fry Registrar of Imports and Exports- A. Stuart (on leave), W. C. Keun (acting) Lightkeepers-C. J. Monteiro, W. A. Berry, R. Dias, M. Gomes, Priana Yagasamy, F. E. Desker, S. A. Mackendray, A. W. Rozells, A. Reincastle, D. C. Monteiro, F. D'Rozario, D. A. Adams Sigual Sergeants-W. D. Nicholson,
J. Lee
Bill Collector-W. J. Foley Board of Examiners for Masters' and Mates' Certificates-The Master At- tendant, S. S., the Deputy Master Attendant, A. B. Chamberlain, H. D. Hauxwell
Colonial Steamer Sea Mew
Commander-P. M. Murphy Chief Officer A. B. Chamberlain Chief Engr.-J. Dewar 2nd do. T. Wemyss Chinese Interpreter to the Marine
Court -Tan Joo Khoon Storekeeper-Teo Guan Quee
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Prinpl. Medical and Health Officer-
D. K McDowell, c.M.G. Chief Clerk-C. P. Martinus Senior Medical Officer-R. Dane,
M.R.C.S., L.R.C+P12 Supernumerary Med. Officers-J.
Gray, E. A. Smith, R. J. Rattray Port Health Officer-G. E. Brooke,
M.A., D.PH., F.R.G.S.
Deputy Port Health Officer C. C.
Robinson
Government Analyst-F. Dent 1st. Asst. do. -J. W. Haddon 2nd Asst. do. -Vacant Public Vaccinator-C. Pang General Hospital, Sepoy Lines
Senior Medical Officer--J. Leask,
M.B., C.M.
Medical Officer, M. P. Scanlon Do. ----J. S. Webster Matron-Miss M. McNair Pauper Hospital, Sirangoon Road
Medical Officer-H. J. Gibbs,
M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.
Assistant Surgeons-J. W.W. Hogan, D. Ghoshal, W. A. D' Cruz, K Appadurai, M. S. Mehta and K Sinha
Prison Hospital, Pearl's Hill In Charge-Dr. R. Dane Assistant Surgeon-A. Hale Lock Hospital and Govt. Dispensary Assistant Surgeon-C. V. Norris Matron-Mrs. Ganno
Outdoor Dispensary, Victoria Street
Assistant Surgeon-J. V. Pestana Lunatic Asylum, Sepoy Lines
Medical Superdt.-Dr. W. G. Ellis Assistant Surgeon-T. G. A. Scully Matron-Mrs. E. C. Gunn Maternity Hospital, Sepoy Lines
Hon. Surgeon Dr. Fowlie Matron--Mrs. Lewis Quarantine Station, St. Jolm Isl,
Dr. R. J. Rattray (acting)
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Inspector-General-W. A. Cuscaden Superintendent -- Captain A. R.
Chancellor
Second Superdt.-E. A. Gardiner Assistant Supts.-C. B. Whitehead, H. Gouch, V. Sair, E. E. Harmer A. R. J. Dewar Financial Assistant-J. N. van der
Beek, 1.8.0.
Chief Inspector-C.J. Sheedy (actg.) Inspectors J. Murphy, H. Hart
W. G. Oxley, P. Branagan, W. H. Taylor, R. W. Meredith Chief Clerk-A. J. D'Conceição Clerks J. B. Pereira, V. Selapan, K. P. Menon, W. N. Thuriappa and E. de Rozario Cashier-Lim Tye Keng Clerks to Inspector General-Chiang
Koh Tuan, Goh Lai Kang Inspr., G'p'der Ord.-A. Knox Clerk, Excise Ord.-Syed Malumoud
bin Abdul Kader Storekeeper, Alexandra Powder Na-
gazine S. Samuel
Clerk, Powder Mag-Tay Ngi Chin Inspector, Weights and Measures-
J. C. Fitzgerald
POST OFFICE, GENERAL
SINGAPORE
Pustmaster-Genl-H. C. Sells (actg.) Asst. do.- --W. Craig (acting) Superintendent of Money Orders & Savings Bank-W. H. Threlfall (acting)
―
T. A.
Superintendents of Mails Melville, R. R. Bullmore Superintendent of Registration-T.
A. Melville (acting) Chief Clerk-A. Smith
Clerks E. P. Holloway, F. Leynard, T. H. Nonis, H. Hubbard, Ali Akbar, Lee Guan Hock, C. W. A. Valberg, Lao Khian Siew, Cheang Koh Eng, E. J. Beins, Tan Tiam Kiat, D. C. Perreau, Kweh Boon Kiang, W. Wilson, Chee Chin Ngian, Yeo Say Chye, A. M. De Fontaine, S. Kiam Koo, V. E. Yzelman, S. Govindasamy, S. A. Lingam, W. H. Sinclair, J. C. Holmberg, Song Ong Toh, E. C. Van der Beek, Tan Yew Siong, J.B. Pestana, J. Johnson, E. Faan Kee, J. M. Cordeiro, C. J. E. de Souza, L. R. Lazaroo, C. W. Leicester, C F. Klyne, W. Marsh, J. A. de Rozario, F. Lange, Seah Neo Hee, A. Leicester, A. W. Kessler, A. P. Gammell, J. C. Coelho, A. H. Gauder, Kwan Nee Lip, Gay Chin Tiong, Lee Lee San, A. L. Mowe, Lee Tian Yew, A. Dorei Rajoo E. Thesiero, Lim Thian Pee, Choa Yeo Choo, W. E. Jansen, F. Cor- nelius
Stamp Vendors-Kee Ah Seng, P. D'Cunha, Tan Cheng Poh, Chua Yong Heng
Tamil Clerks-K. S. Chakravorthi,
Balbahadur Singh Bisht Sorters L. M. de Fontaine, P.
Krishnasamy, A. M. Nonis
Mail Officers-D. Sta. Maria, Dohl bin Mohamed, Awang bin Husen, Arsat bin Abdul Malim Shroffs-Kam Swee Siew, Sim Kim
Chua, Koh Chong Beng Shroffs, Savings Bank-Tan Beng
Tek, Chia Toon Whatt Printer--J. Louis
Sub-Postmasters-S. Muthia, Goh Cheng Chia, C. Monteiro, Monel Raedin, J. B. Bounaparte, P. M. bin Rodriguez Shroff-Yeo Kim Soon Head Postman-Mahmood
Ch nese Sub-Post Office
Sub-Postmaster-Ho Chin Hock Clerks-Teo Yeong Chee, Chua
Soon Choo
Telegraph Branch
1307
Inspector of Tel.-Tan Cheng Tiong Telegraphist, Class I.-T. S. Kelly
Do.
do. -F.D.Khoswalla
Do. Class II.-V. P. Jeremiah Do. do. Lin Shiew Hin
Do. Class III.-G. David
Do. Counter Clerk--Low Chye Hin Asst. do. L. Rodrigues Temporary Clerk-Koh Swee Cheng Lineman Mat, B, Triang Dutch Postal Agency
do. -T. A. Reneaux
Agent-W. G. Brock
Assistant do.-H. J. C. Heytman Clerks M. Kraft van Ermel, W. N.
Brown
PRINTING OFFICE- Office of "Straits Set-
tlements Government Gazette"
Superintdt.-J. E. Tyler
Asst. do. J. J. Pereira Supdt. Job Printing J. A. Varella First Proof Reader-F. Jenkins Second do. -M.C. Rodrigues Chief Clerk-J. A. Pereira Second do. K. Balasubramanien Permanent Clerk-D. Alcantara Frmn. Compositor-W. H. Gammell Compositor--M. Rodrigues
Machine Foreman J. Alwies and
137 other workmen
PRISONS DEPARTMENT
Inspector of Prisons, Straits Settle-
ients H. W. Firmstone (acting) Chief Warder-F. Stanley Senior Warder-C. J. W. Burt 46 European Warders
―
Clerks M. A. Patail, Khoo Jim Sein, Ngo Yam Liang, N. Govind- asainy Storekeeper and Printer-L. Rangel Clerk and Interpr.-Chee Nian Hee Second do. -Lim Teck Lye Matron-Mrs. C. Baker 50 sub-warders
PUBLIC WORKS AND SURVEY DEPARTMENT
(See also Penang and Malacca) Colonial Engineer, Surveyor General, and Comptroller of Convicts, S. S. - Hon. F. J. Pigott, C.E., M.LC.E. Deputy Colonial Engineer, Penang-
C. G. May
Superdt. of Works and Surveys, Sing-
apore-H. V. Towner
Superdt. of Works and Surveys,
Malacca G. Holden
Assistant Superintendents of Works, Penang-F. T. Kinder, S. E. A Linton
1308
SINGALORE
Assistant Superintendents of Works, Singapore N. Wilkinson, W. J. Haskins
Clerks of Works, Singapore-C. van Cuylenburg, E. D. Hogan, E. C. McCleland
Chief Draftsman-
Senior Survey Officer, Singapore-
R. H. Young
Overseers, Singapore-$. Nagaling-
am, P. S. Muhisamy Storekeeper E. H. Shears Chief Clerk-Ben de Cruz
Clerks J. W. Dias, J. W. R. Bloom, R. Subrahmanyam, Aug Boon Hock, A. E. Coelho, Soo Chong Sz, R. Jacob
Engineer Surveyor-R. McCleland Senior Surveyor-J.Athiness, Penang Senior Surveyor-E. J. de Souza,
Malacca
REFORMATORY (See Under Education)
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS' OFFICE
Registrar of Deeds-F. J. Hallifax
(absent)
Acting do. -R. J. Farrar Deputy do. W. Bartley Chief Clerk-P. H, Nonis REGISTRATION DEPARTMENT
Registrar-General of Births and Deaths D. K. McDowell, c.M.G. Deputy Registrar of Births and Deaths Cyril P. Martinus, J. W. Bloom
Deputy Registrars of Deaths-J. S. Webster, K. Appathurai, C. V. Norris, K. C. Sinha, E. Boomgadt, P. M. Mehta, D. Goshal, J. W. W. Hogan, J. V. Pestana, W. A. D'Cruz, T. G. A. Scully
Assistant Registrars of Deaths-
Wong Wan On, R. Paulusz Clerk P. Joseph
do.-M. Sabapathy
SAVINGS BANK
Postmaster-General-W. G. Bell Superintendent-W. Craig Cashier-Tan Beng Tek
Assistant Cashier-Chia Toon Watt
SECRETARIAT
Colonial Secretary-Captain Sir A. H.
Young, K.C.M.G.
Asst. do.
-R. H. Lemon
Second Asst.-H. Marriott Chief Clerk-W. Suter
Second Clerk-W. P. Hale
Passed Cadet
do.
do.
F. Robinson
-E. E. Colman
-G. A. J. Smith Stein-
metz
Asst. Col. Sec.-A. de Mello
-F. T. Ellis
do.
do.
-J. E. Nathan
do.
J. L. Humphreys
do.
-J. S. W. Arthur
do.
-M. Thunder
Cadet-W. M. Millington
do.
do.
do.
do.
E
-N. K. Bain
-M. E. Sherwood
E. H. M. Robinson
A. C. Baker
do. W. Bartley
SUPREME COURT
Chief Justice-Sir W. H. Hyndman
Jones, Kt.
Puisue Judge T. Sercombe Smith Private Secretary to Chief Justice--
do.
do.
J. H. Baldwin to Puisne Judge-
W.A. Hale
Registrar F. H. V. Goltlieb Deputy Registrar-M. Rodesse
-E. L. Talma Chief Clerk-W. M. Beins Clerks J. B. K. Palmer, M. Suppiah, Boon Lim Seng, Syed Idros biu Abubakar, Ong Boon Chwee, M. A. Pushpanathan, and J. M. Fernandez
Tamil Intptr.-C. J. Rajah Krishnen.
do. do. -S. Sopaien Malay do. H. H. Norris
-
do. do. -H. A. Ismail Chinese Interpreters Goh Lye Quee, Yeo Tiang Swee, and Tan Pong Guan
Sheriff's Branch
Clerks S. Anandayalı and Teo Gim
Seng
Bailiffs G. C. Scharnhorst, W. W.
Norris
VETERINARY SURGEON
Government Veterinary Surgeon-
P. S. Falshaw, M.R.C.V.S.
GRAND HOTEL EUROPE-Esplanade; Tel.
Ad: Europe
N. N. Adis, proprietor
H. L. Schutz, general manager
GREEN ISLAND CEMENT Co., LTD.-25-1, Boat Quay; Head Office: Hongkong
W. A. Stopani, agent
W. H. Moore, assistant
GROVE ESTATE--Tanjong Katong, Gelang
Brick Works
GUNN & Co., Accountants-Exchange Bdgs,
T. Hart, Jr., C.A.
A. Lindley, C.A.
SINGAPORE
1309
•
Alex. H. Donaldson, (Bangkok) R. M. Neill (Kuala Lumpur)
T. F. Anderson Pole (Seremban)
GUTHRIE & Co., LIMITED, Merchants-5,
Boat Quay
Hon. John Anderson, m'ging. director
A. E. Baddeley, signs per pro. R. W. B. Cochran
J. I. Dawson
H. Elphick
H. Freeman, signs per pro.
F. C. Gregson
F. Hill-Cottingham
F. A. Y. Langley W. B. Michie
J. T. Nicol
H. W. Noon
J. Robertson, signs per pro.
James Robertson
K. B. S. Robertson
C. B. Towill
S. Aroozoo
Tan Boon Chin and other clerks Teo Hock Jin, chief cashier London House-Guthrie & Co., Ld., 5, Whittington Avenue, Leadenhall St., Branch House Guthrie & Co., Ld.,
Penang
Agencies
London and Westminster Bank Ulster Bank, Limited
Federated Malay States Government British North Borneo Government Eastern and Australian S. S. Co., Ld. Shan Line of Steamers
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld London Assurance Corporation
Triton Insurance Company, Limited Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Phoenix Assurance Co., Ltd. Western Assurance Co.
Imperial Mar. Transports Fire Ins. Co.
HAMMER & Co., Water Suppliers-6, Flint
Street; Telephone 123
Widow of C. Hansen (Europe) Widow of Johann Tutein
D. J. Reek, managing partner A. Hagedorn, assistant
HANDELSVEREENIGING "HOLLAND" (Trad- ing Company "Holland"), merchants-14, Collier Quay; Head Office: Amsterdam" P. H. Geraerds Thesingh (Amstd.),
managing director
Th. C. Schouten (Amstel.), mang, dir. D. C. van Leeuwen Boomkamp, man-
ager (abt.)
D. Blaauw, signs per pro. G. M. Boers, bookkeeper Chan Boon Chuan, assistant Tan Kim Chye, cashier,
Chan Cheng Kin, storekeeper
HANSEN & Co., Merchants and Commission
Agents--3, Victoria Street
HANSEN, J. A., Professor of Music, and
Piano Tuner-3, Victoria Street
HARTWIG & Co. (Late), Shipchandlers, Gen- eral Merchants and Commission Agents -5, Flint Street; Tel. Ad: Hartwig
O. Muhlenbein, manager
HONGKONG ROPE MANUFACTURING Co., LTD.-25-1, Boat Quay; Head Office: Hongkong
W. A. Stopani, agent
W. H. Moore, assistant
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING COR- PORATION-Collyer Quay; Tel. Ad: Pacific
T. S. Baker, manager
G. C. Murray, acting sub-manager R. C. Edwards, accountant
E. H. Moss
H. A. Courtney A. Boyd
F. H. Pentycross C. Holland A. S. G. Smith H. E. Nixon C. L. Cookes F. Bateman1 E. H. Desker T. S. Cornelius Chia Thiam Chye G. S. Rodrigues H. L. Rodrigues H. S. Eber S. Sta. Maria S. Long A. de Souza H. S. Cordeiro
D. O. Richards
HOOGLANDT & Co., Mers. and Commission
Agents-20, Collyer Quay (Est. 1860)
W. H. Diethelm (Zuerich),
J. van Lohuizen (Amsterdam) W. E. van Rijnberk (Singapore)
G. Keulemans, signs per pro. A. C. Bouten, Chas. Minjoot, Agencies
Bank of Rotterdam
do,
do.
The Sumatra Para Rubber Plantations,
Ld.
Netherlands India Discount Company,
Batavia
Eastern Mortgage Bank, Amsterdam Kennemerland Ld., Alkmaar Netherlands Gutta Percha Co. (The
Singapore Rubber Works)
Queen's Insurance Co., Ld. (merged in the Royal Insurance Co., Liverpool)
1
1310
SINGAPORE
Netherlands Fire Insurance Company (Est. 1845), The Hague, Netherlands Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Neth. India Sea and Fire Insurance Co.,
Batavia
Samarang Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Amsterdam Life Insurance Company Fatum Accident Ins. Co., Barcelona La Esperanza Ins. Co., Barcelona The International Sleeping Car and Express Trains Co., Trans-Siberian Route
The Peretah Mining Syndicate, Ltd. Kromhoul Parafine Motors
HOON KEAT & Co., Merchants and Store-
keepers-22, Raffles Place
Ching Keng Lee
Tan Kok Cheng
Tan Kok Puan
HOTEL DE LA PAIX-3, Coleman Street; Tel. Ad: Lapaix; A.B.C. Code, 4th and 5th Edition
Proprietor A. MacDougall Gibson Managers-Mrs. E. George and A.
Mac D. Gibson
HOTEL VAN WIJK Co., LD.
Directors--J. C. Coopman (chairman), D. J. van Wyngaarden, Capt. D. J. Reek
Manager-H. van Wijk Secretary-G. Siemers General Asst.-Leo. Nonis Clerk-F. A. de Souza
HOWARTH, ERSKINE, LD., Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineers, and Con- tractors. Registered Offices and Works: Merban Road, Singapore. Town Store: Battery Road. Branches: Bangkok, Rangoon, Penang, Ipoh, Kwala Lumpur, Canton, Hongkong, and Shanghai; Tel. Ad Erskine
Directors A. Gentle (chairman), G. A. Derrick, F. Pollock, W. E. Finnie, J. Murchie
General Manager-D. Macdonald,
M.I.C.E.
Secretary-V. V. Lemberger Office Staff
T. S. Crockford
T. D. Canning
S. H. West
T. D. Betteridge
A. E. Beavis G. King
T. J. Harrington H. Leatherbarrow P. J. C. Daniel R. A. Dround
Technical Staff
W. E. Finnie
W. Kennedy F. W. Howl H. T. Toogood T. Finnie W. F. Ravenor J. M. Watt J. H. Quinn W. Anderson
S. M. Kirkpatrick A. MacLennan N. A. Watson A. Simpson A. O. F. Cobley S. A. Miller
HUTTENBACH BROS. & Co., Merchants-13,
Collyer Quay
August Huttenbach (Penang) Ludwig Huttenbach (London) W. Ewald
F. C. Lean, sigus per pro. G. Reuss
E. Swan
H. M. Poths T. C. Hay
B. A. Biddulph
F. J. Porteous
Branch Houses: Huttenbach Bros.& Co., Penang Huttenbach & Co., 4, Fen- church Avenue, London, E.C. Agencies
American & Oriental Transport Line British and Foreign Marine Insurance Palatine Fire and Accident Insce. Co. Royal Johore Tin Mining Co., Limited Hamburg Berzedorfer Stuhlrohrohr
Fabrik
INSURANCE ASSOCIATIONS (Fire Insurance
Association of Singapore) W. A. Sims, chairman
J. Henry, deputy chairman Secty, and Treas.-G. A. Derrick
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION- Collyer Quay Head Office: New York D. G. Maclennan, acting manager Alan E. Irving, sub. accountant INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS, LTD., of Kingsway, London; Agency for Malaya-27, Syed Ali Road, Singapore
General Agent J. H. Whitaker, PH.M. Sub-Agt. for Singapore-Albert Mills INTERNATIONALE CREDIET-EN HANDELS- VEREENIGNING "ROTTERDAM," General Merchants-1, Almeida Street; Head Office Rotterdam
ISMAIL & RAHEEM, Diamond Merchants Manufacturing Jewellers, and Deal- ers in Precious Stones-82, Brass Bassa
Road
SINGAPORE
Jaeger & Co., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-Raffles Place
O. Jaeger
M. Eisenring, assistant
P. Jaeger
W. Guldner,
do.
P. Wolf,
do.
R. Strohl,
do.
G. Gnelim,
do.
H. Haesler,
do.
H. Jezler, consulting mining engr.
Agency
Law Union and Crown Insurance Co. United Sumatra Rubber Estate, Ltd.,
Serdang, Deli
JEMENTAH RUBBER Co., LD, THE
W. Lowther Kemp, liquidator
JOSEPH, EZRA S., Opium, Gunny and Share
Broker -15, Change Alley
JUDAH & Co., S. J., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-15, Change Alley
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE FOR SINGAPORE
A. D. Allan
E. Anderson
J. Anderson
S. B. Archdeacon T. S. Baker C. W. Bernard
W. M. L. Bower
J. Bowman
D. T. Boyd
E. Bramall
G. E. Brooke
J. R. Brooke H. W. Buckland C. B. Buckley A. R. Chancellor C. S. Cheng T. C. A. Cleverton W. W. Cook
J. C. Cowap
P. Cunliffe
W. A. Cuscaden R. Dane
C. W. Darbishire C. J. Davies
F. Dent
A. R. J. Dewar C. Dunlop
W. G. Ellis, M.D. P. T. Evatt M. Falcon G. A. Finlayson G. D. Freer P. Fowlie
A. Y. Gabagan D.J. Galloway, M.J). H. P. P. Gallwey E. A. Gardiner J. H. Garratt
A. Gentle
J. A. R. Glennie F. H. V. Gottlieb E. H. T. Gough W. A. Greig A. J. Gunn J. W. Haddon J. Hardie
F. E. Harmer W. R. J. Hawtrey W. G. Hennings E. D. Hewan A. Jackson
F. E. Jago E. M. Janion J. H. D. Jones T. Jones D. Kerr K. E. Watt
S. A. Lane
J. Leask, M.B., C.M. L. S. Lewis
L. C. Yan
L. P. Keng L. B. Keng, M.B. A. R. Linton W. Macbean D. P. Macdougall J. W. B. Maclaren W. W. Macmillan H. B. Marten C. G. May
C. McArthur D. K. McDowell,
C.M.G.
A. E. Mulholland A. Murray, C.E.,
M.I.C.E.
J. R. Nicholson
W. Patchitt
A. Pearce
R. Peirce F. G. Penny M. E. Plumpton J. Polglase H. N. Kidley E. Roberts A. Robertson T. M. Robertson J. D Saunders V. G. Savi R. F. M. Scott Seah Liang Seah C. Severn S. Hussain D. K. Somerville K. A. Stevens H. H. F. Stockley E. L. Talma
T. J. Kim
13/Y
F. E. W. Taylor T. S. Thomson S. Tomlinson J. Tyrrell
H. V. W. Vade A. G Vanscolina A. V. Vanscolina C. E. Velge W. P. Waddell P. R. Warren A. J. W. Watkins J. K. Webster C. B. Whitehead A. W. Wigram G. B. Wilkinson Sir A. H. Young,
K.C.M.G.
J. B. Young W. R. Young
KANABOI, LIMITED,- Office: Winchester
House, Collyer Quay
Directors-M.E. Plumpton, A. D.Allan, J. Salomon, W. Lowther Kemp, A. Braddon
Secretaries-F. W. Barker & Co. D. Ross, manager, Negri Sembilan
KATZ BROTHERS, LIMITED, Merchants, Com- mission Agents, Storekeepers, &c.; Head Office, Singapore, and at Penang, London, and Frankfort o/M.
Directors-Louis Katz (chairman), Sig.
Katz (vice-chairman), A. Loeb, Gansloser, O. Schüle, K. Kirch- berger, and J. A. Webster
G. A. Chaney
E. G. Webster J. Brandenburger L. Goldschmidt A. Coulcher
E. M. Ellis
C. C. Oehlers
L. Levis
A. Katz
R. Payne-Livock G. Heidrich E. Brandenburger W. Wolber
D. F. Flanagan A. Vaz
Agencies
Prussian National Insurance Company Mannheim Insurance Company
Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance
Baloise Fire Insurance Co.
North German Insurance Co.
Continental Insurance Co.
Hamburg Bremen Fire Insce. Co. Teban Louisa Estate
Straits' Ice Company
1312
SINGAPORE
New Singapore Ice Company Maatschappij tot Mijn Boseli en Land-
bouw Exploitatie in Langkat
KELLY & WALSH L., Publishers, Printers, Bookbinders, Booksellers, Stationers, and Newsagents-32, Raffles Place and 194, Orchard Road
George Brinkworth, John West, John
Morris, directors (Shanghai)
W. J. Mayson, manager
D. Halpern, accountant J. W. Dossett
H. E. Trenerry
Printing Office-194, Orchard Road
R. W. Chater
V. C. Labrum
KEMAMAN LTD.-Office: Winchester House
Collyer Quay
Secretaries F. W. Barker & Co. Directors--E. Rostades, C. E. F. San-
derson, S. Gad, Chew Woon Poh
KINTA ASSOCIATION, LD., Miners--Office:
Winchester House, Collyer Quay
Directors-C. McArthur, J. Salomon,
J. H. Tatlock
Secretary-W. Lowther Kemp, A.C.A.,
(F. W. Barker W.)
R. C. Petherbidge, manager, Perak J. C. Baumann, manager (acting)
KOEK, EDWIN ROWLAND, Barrister-at-law, Advocate and Solicitor-29, Malacca St. V. D. Knowles, barrister-at-law, asst.
KOMBOK RUBBER CO., LTD.-Head Office:
Battery Road
Directors R. F. McNair Scott, C. M.
Cumming, K. A. Stevens Superintendent--A. N. Harcourt,
Sungei Gadut, Negri Sembilan Agents and Secrectaries Guthrie
& Co., Ltd.
KUANTAN TIN MINING Co., LD.
L
Directors-G. A. Derrick, II. Abrams,
A. Reid, Dr. E. de Vos, Lee Choon Guan
McAlister & Co., Ld., general agents H. R. Llewellyn, secretary
KUMPERS & Co., Merchants-17, Collyer
Quay
August Kessler (Cologne) John Salomon
Wilhelm Kessler
Otto Bohn
Agencies
Consolidated Marine Insurance Com-
panies of Berlin and Dresden Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co.,
Limited, of Berlin
Atlas Assurance Company, Ld. Badische Anilin-and-Soda Fabrik-
Ludwigshafen A/Rhein
Continental Caoutchouc and Gutta-
Percha Co., Hannover
LABU (F.M.S.) RUBBER CO., LTD.
Secretaries Guthrie & Co., Ld. Resident Manager G. B. W. Gray Agents-Guthrie & Co., Ld.
LAMBERT & Co., G. R., LD., Photographers -Gresham House, and 3, Orchard Road Directors--0. Schwemer (chairman),
H. L. Coghlan, W. Ewald
H. Th. Yensen, managing operator S. Gauder, cashier and bookkeeper R. Matsunaga, printer and operator
LAMBERT W., Coach Builder, Singapore Carriage Works-193, Orchard Road
W. Lambert, manager
LANADRON RUBBER ESTATES, LTD., Local Agents: F. W. Barker & Co.--Winchester House, Collyer Quay
Head Office-H. E. Solly (secretary) 6, Lloyd's Avenue, London, E. C. Resident Estates
F. Pears, manager (Muar, Johore)
LATHAM & Co, Brokers, Exchange, Share, Produce, Ship and Coal Broker-Win- chester House, Collyer Quay
H. Latham
A. M. S. Hermann
LEDBURY RUBBER ESTATES, LTD., Local Agents: F. W. Barker & Co. -Winchester House, Collyer Quay
Head Office-H. E. Solly (secretary),
6, Lloyd's Avenue, London, E. C. J. Gilbert, manager Ledbury Estate A. McIntyre Glen, mngr. Sione Estate M. Sharpe Smith, mngr. Kumara Estate
LEONG FONG Cheong & Co., Firm "San Ku Tai," Timber Merchants and Pro- prietors of Steam Saw Mills-107, Boat Quay Works, Tanjong Rhoo and Cam- pong Bugis
Leong Man Sau
LIM BOON KENG, M.B., C.M., Medical Practr. "The Dispensary," Raffles Sq.
L
LINGGI PLANTATIONS, Ln.-Seremban and
Rantau
C. Malcolm Cumming, res. manager J. le P. Power, assistant manager
SINGAPORE
LITTLE & Co., LD., JOHN, Wine, Spirit and Provision Merchants, Tailors, Drapers, Milliners and Dressmakers, Stationers, Watchmakers, Ironmongers, House Fur- nishers and General Outfitters-Raffles Place, and 10, Pancras Lane, London
S.R. Carr, managing director (London) W. Hutton,
E. Scott-Russell,
A. G. Meggy, secretary
do.
do.
do.
do.
do.
C. W. Banks, do.
do.
R. Scoular, do.
do.
do.
R. Little, director (Singapore)
W. Blunn,
do.
Assts.-E. N. Benjafield, A. C. Jackson, J.E. Oldham, A.T. Hancock, J. Ruch- waldy, F. J. Hodgins, J. Daking, Jacob Hodgins, T. J. Hume, G. C. Parr, E. G. Millin, R. E. McKenzie, A. M. Coppin, F. E. Couch, F. E. Iveny, A. T. Stokes, W. Hodgins, F. A. Sefton, A. N. Chainarette, C. V. Yanno, J. de Cruz, G. R. Boyd, N. Polonosky, D. Kleinmann, J. M. Perreau, H. J. Van Buren, M. S. Fernando, E. Challen, E. S. Wooller, A. Peacock, Miss de Souza, Miss Cum- berlidge, Miss D'Rozario, Miss Fernandez, Miss Maguire, Mrs. Slade
LLOYD'S REGISTER OF BRITISH AND FOREIGN SHIPPING 6A, Flint Street; Tel. Ad: Couper
A.Couper, Ship and Engineer Surveyor
LYALL & EVATT, Exchange, Share and
General Brokers--Winchester House
W. W. Macmillan
A. Robertson H. M. Cantrell
MACKTE, D. D., Consulting Engineer and Surveyor-WinchesterHouse; Consulting Engineer, Surveyor; and Marine Supt. to the E. E., A. & C. Telegraph Co.; Wee Bin & Co.; Ban Kèng
Ca
Sin Teck Hin & Tong Ek & Co.; Tel. Ad: Mackie: Telephone 388
D. D. Mackie, Jr., M.J.M.E., assistant Agencies
Engineer Surveyor to the Registro
Italiano
The Stewart Patent Marine Economiser
MALACCA TIN DREDGING CO.,LD.-Gresham
House, Battery Road
Directors-F. M. Elliot, J. A. Macgre- gor, J. Gardner, A. A. Gunn, G. A. Derrick (secretary)
1313
MALACCA RUBBER PLANTATIONS, LD.-Lon- don Office: 4, Sun Court, Cornhill, E. C.; Head Office for the East; Tel. Ad: Mal- vaceous; Codes used: A.B.C. 5th Edition, Western Union
F. W. Collins, general manager F. R. Hill, financial
do.
Glover, accountant Dr. I. Anderson, medical officer A. H. Stuart McGee, chief engineer Estate Managers-C. H. Niven, H. J. Murdoch, S. M. Peralta, A. P. Wil- kins, S. H. Burgess, W. Nicol, R. W. Fox-male, C. W. Koppel Powis, H. P. Curtis, C. E. Cunningham. G. R. F. Sayle, J. L. Burgess, Captain A. G. Tozer, J. F. S. Carmichael, B. W. Barr
Assistant Engineers-M. W. Dodd, A.
E. Heming
Assistants A. J. B. Carruthers, C. A. Lacy, E. E. C. Lacy, J. A. Sands, H. D. Row, G. Gordon Cunning, A. B. S. Mortón, L. G. Verner, A. Tul- loch, Fitzwarren Smith
Agencies
Chartered Bank of India, Australia
& China
Straits Steamship Co., Ld. Holt Line of Steamers
South British Insurance Co., Ld,
MCALISTER & Co., LTD.
A. D. Allan, director (chairman), S'pore. G. A. Derrick, director (Singapore) Sir Malcolm McEacharn, dir. (London) Andrew McIlwraith, director (London)
Alex Reid, secretary
J. White, accountant
E. D. McPherson, signs per pro.
(manager, Ipoh)
W. S. Goldie, signs per pro. (manager
Penang)
David W. Reid, signs per pro.
F. Dennys Alex. Johnston J. Nelson W. F. Barns J. D. Robertson L. T. Bird
A. P. Williams, manager, Dubash
Department
Capt. W. Foster, assistant, L. F. de Souza, chief clerk G. W. Holloway, bookkeeper A. P. Merrells,
do.
do,
Clerks F. L. de Souza, Yeo Keng Wee, D. Angus, F. O. Mitchell, Beng Boon Kee, G. Koenitz, E. Kay Hoe, D. A. Mingoot, and others Shipping Clerk-Neo Ewe Kiang Collector-Chew Yean Chuan
1314
Produce Department
SINGAPORE
Wee Tiam Beng, storekeeper and
others
Dubash Department
Clerks S. Kupusamy, S. H. Min-
joot, and others
Agencies
A. Currie & Co.'s India-Australia
Steamers
Mellwraith,
Steamers
McEacharn & Co.'s
Queensland Insurance Co.
Bucknall's American-Manchurian Line
of Steamers
Seaham Coal Co., Ld., Australia Ragalla Rubber Co., Ld.
The Ammonia Co. of Australia
MANASSEH & Co., S., Merchants - 7,
D'Almeida Street
MANSFIELD & Co., LD., W., Steamship Agents
-9, Collyer Quay
E. Anderson,
manager
J. G. Berkhuysen, do.
W. G. Hennings,
do.
E. R. Weare, signs per pro, P. L. Williams
D. MacLennan
A. Jackson
D. C. Wellington W. R. Taylor B. Cowan
K. Douglas
M. J. Bateman
F. A. Peralta
Wee Choon Lim and others
L. F. Payne, supt. engr., O. S. S. Co.,
Ld., C. M. B. N. Ca, Là.
J. Farmer, wharf office
Agencies
Ocean Steam Ship Company, Ld. China Mutual Steam Navigation Com-
pany Ld.
China Navigation Company, Ld.
MANUFACTURERS' LIFE INSURANCECO.THE- Head Office: Toronto, Canada; Branch Office: 7, Battery Road
General Agents-Guthrie & Co., Ld.
F. S. Evans, manager for E. Ásia &
India
O. Bruce, district manager, S'pore A. A. Brown, do. F. M. S.
A. S. Desker, assistant
MARINE AND GENERAL MUTUAL LIFE
ASSURANCE SOCIETY-Collyer Quay MARINEINSURANCE Co., LD.-Collyer Quay
Agent H. W. Buckland
Martin & Co., M. S.-92 and 93 Robinson Road (Singapore), Importers, Exporters, Gnl. Merchants and Timber Contractors
MASONIC
CHAPTER MOUNT CALVARY IN THE EAST
-47, ROSE CROIX
M.W.S.-A. W. Bean
E.P. Rev. H. C. Izard First G.-G. B. Stratton Second G.-W. J. Kemp Treasurer-D. Macdonald Recorder-F. M. Elliot G. Marshall-W. A. Sims R.-H. C. E. Zacharias Herald D. Macdonald Cap. Guard-G. H. Day Dir. Cer.-I. A. R. Glennie
"DALHOUSIE
ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER
508, B.D. 1,850
DISTRICT GRAND LODGE OF THE EASTERN
ARCHIPELAGO
D.G.M.-The Hon. W.J.Napier, D.C.L. D.D.G.M.-F. M. Elliot
D.S.G.W.-J. G. Allan D.J.G.W.-J. R. O. Aldworth D.G. Treasurer A. W. Bean D.G. Chaplain-J. P. Parry
-H. C. Izard
Do.
D.G. Registrar J. A. R. Glennie Pres. D.B. Genl. Purposes C. Severn D.G. Secretary.-H. L. Coghlan Pres. B. of Ben. The Rev. H. C. Izard D.S.G.D.-W. S. Boteler D.J.G.D.-J. G. Koch
D.G. Supt. of Works R.W. Harrison D.G. Div. of Cer.-T. O. Mayhew D.A.G. Dir. of Cir.-E. Pugh D.G. Sword Bearer-R. Owen D.G. Standard Bearer-G. Moir
-W. Careless
Do.
D.G. Organist C. M. Phillips D.G. Pursuivant-W. A. Sims D.A.S. Pursuivant H. Pizer D.A.G. Secretary--W. Carelees D. G. Stewards J. Moore, G. B. Stratton, R. H. Pinhorn, W. M. Phillips, R. Charter, E. Denyer D.G. Tyler--F, W. Jones
EASTERN GATE LODGE-2970, E. C.
Singapore
Wor. Master-J. W. Littlefield I. M. P.-W. Careless Chaplain W. Allen D. of C.-W. King S. W.-W. J. Miller S. D.- W. R. O. Pearce Treas.-J. W. Turnbull J. W.--T. Morris J. D.--W. G. Chawkley Sec.-J. B. Mead I. G.-F. G. Bourne Stewards-G. Swift, E. A. Slade Tyler-F. W. Jones
SINGAPORE
1315
>>
"EDALJEE KHORY LODGE OF MARK
MASONS, No. 436
W.M.M.-T. O. Mayhew I.P.M.M.-II. Q. Coglan S.W.-H. C. Izard J.W.-F. Apps
M.O.-G. B. Stratton S.O.-C. J. W. Burt J.O..
S.D.-F. B. Morris J.DJ. W. Littlefield I.G.-H. Raison
O. G. F. W. Jones Secretary--H. Carpmael Treasurer-T. Morris
EMULATION LODGE OF INSTRUCTION, (attached to Lodge Zetland in the East No. 508)
Preceptors-Wor. Bro. W. Make- peace, P.M., Wor, Bro. T. O. Mayhew Secretary & Treasr.-C. J. W. Burt
LODGE ST. GEORGE--1,152 E.C.
W.M-W. A. Sims I.P.M.-H. C. Izard S.W.-G. B. Stratton J.W.-T. O. Naughton Treasurer G. R. K. Mughston Sec.-J. A. R. Glennie D. of C.-H. L. Coghlan S.D.R. L. Leigh Clare J.D.-H. Carpmacl LG.-H. R. W, Lobb
Stew'ds-F.Y. Blair, C. B. Mc Ritchie Tyler-F. W. Jones
LODGE ST. MICHAEL-2,933 E.C.
W.M. Elect-Rev. H. C. Izard I.P.M.-G. A. Derrick
LODGE ZETLAND IN THE EAST--508 E.C.
Worshipful Master-T. A. Mayhew Im. Past Master--F. Apps Senior Warden-J. Moore Junior Warden-C. J. W. Burt Secretary. Carpmael Treasurer--J. Apps
MASONIC CLUB
President The R. W. D. G. M. Vice-President W. Makepeace Hon. Sec, and Treas.-T. O. Mayhew Asst. Sec.-Treas.-A. Rahman Khan Committee J. Moore, H. R. W. Lobb, F. Y. Blair, C. J. W. Burt, J. A. Hamilton
ST. GEORGE CHAPTER, OF ROYAL ARCH
MASONS-1152, E.C.
Z.-M. E. Comp. J. A. R. Glennie H.-M. E. Comp. A. Knight J.-E. Comp. Bro. H. C. Izard Scribe-E. Comp. W. A. Sims
N. Comp. C. B. Stratton P. S.-Comp. T. O. Naughton Treasurer--Comp. H. Carpmael Janitor-Comp. T. W. Jones
MATILIEW, E. Agricultural Adviser, Estates Valuer, Land Examiner and Reporter
MAULEFFINCI, K. H., & Co., Surveyors, Civil Engineers, Architects, Estate Agents, Valuers, Lithographers Brokers 9, Raffles Place; Tel. Ad: Ffinch, Singapore
K. H. Maulettinch, F.S.I., F.R.M.S., M.S.A. J. W. Browne, L.S., arct. and surveyor Chia Kim Teck, clerk and typist
and other clerks.
MAXWELL, T.-6, Battery Road
MAYNARD & Co., LTD.-Chemists, Drug- gists and Opticians 14, Battery Rd.; Tel. No. 80; Branch: 309, North Bridge Rd.; Tel. No. 1028
F. W. Davies, M.P.S., member of the British Optical Association(London),
manager
Alex. Gentle, secretary
MEDICAL HALL, Chemists and Druggists,
opposite Post Office; Tel. Ad: Obat K. Struve, apotheker, manager
E. de Vos, M.D.
C. Schroeder, apotheker
E. Giese,
do.
MENKE & Co., WM., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents--4, Prince Street
Wm. Menke
E. Esche, signs per pro.
G. Knopfe, assistant
Lim Swee Guan, and other clerks
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA, LD., THE-
21, Raffles Place
A. R. Linton, acting manager R. D. Young, accountant
H. L. Cochrane, asst. accountant J. Turnbull,
C. Muir,
do. do.
W. F. Chopard, chief clerk Goh Kean Lok
Chia Hood Theam, head shroff Chia Hood Cheng, asst.
do.
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES, COMPAGNIE DES- 1, Robinson Road; Tel. Ad: Messagerie
C. Tournaire, agent
R. Delacotta, chief assistant
METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION-See under
Churches and Missions
1316
SINGAPORE
MEYER BROS., Merchants and Commission Agents-14, Collyer Quay; Tel. Ad: Sinai
Manasseh Meyer
J. A. Meyer, assistant
I. Meyer
J. Meyer
R. Meyer
Chan Kian Watt, bookkeeper Tan Kim Boon, clerk
Sub-Agency
South British Fire & Marine Insce. Co.
of New Zealand
Meyer & Co., E., Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents--Head Office: Calcutta
E. Meyer (Calcutta)
J. S. Judah, manager
F. B. David, assistant
J. Abed, cashier
S. Joseph
S. I. Jacob, assistant
Tan Hoon Kim, chief clerk
Wee Yau Tee,
Yan Eng Hoon
do.
J. B. Meyer, storekeeper
Cheong Seng Geok, salesman
MEYER & Co., M. A., Merchts. and Commis- sion Agents-10, Raffles Place; Tel. Ad: Hayeem
MICHAEL, GEO., Photographic Dealer and Commission Agent-1, Robinson Road, and 186, Oreh Road
MILITARY
STAFF
General Officer Commanding the Troops in Straits Settlements- Major-General T. Perrott, C.B., R.A. A. D. C.-Lt. A. H. Perrott, R. Berk-
shire Regt.
D. A. A. & Q. M. G.-Capt. F. C. Dundas, Argyll & Sutherland High- landers, F.S.C.
Officer Commanding Royal Artillery-
Colonel H. S. Nelson, R A. Commanding Royal Engineers-Major
H. A. A. Livingstone, C.M.G., R.E. Senior Medical Officer-Lieut.-Colonel
H. J. Barratt, R.A.M.C. Chief Ordnance Officer-Captain D.
J. J. Hill, 4.0.D.
Inspector of Ord. Machinery-Captain
H. A. Marshall, A.O.D.
District Paym. Straits Settlements-
Lt. Col. H. Q. Pinhorn, A.A.D. Station Paymaster-T. Rishworth 2nd class asst, accountant, A.A.D. Church of England Chaplain-Rev. W.
Drury, A.C.D.
Presbyn. Officiating Clergyman-Rev.
J. A. Gray, M.A.
Roman Catholic Officiating Clergyman
-Rt. Rev. Bishop A. Bourdon Wesleyan Officiating Clergyman-
Rev, G. Carroll-Cobb
Chief Clerk Head Quarter Office- Staff Sergt. C. E. Quarrier, A.s.C.
ROYAL ARTILLERY
Colonel Commanding Royal Artillery
S. S. Col. H. S. Nelson
Adjutant R. A. Sts. Sts.-Lieut. R. H.
Clarke
Instructor in Gunnery S. S.--Lieut.
A. F. P. Wehner
Armt. Officer-Lieut. T. Donnelly, 2nd
Lieut. R. Crofton Major A. F. S. Scott
Captain H. St. J. Cruickshank Lieut. C. H. Gay
2nd Lieut. H. R. Thomas
Do. V. G. Duke
No. 80 Company, R.G.A.
Major-F. F. Lambarde Captain C. E. T. Rolland Lieut. W. B, P. Thring Lieut. M. Sykes
Do. C. Colson
No. 4 Company, H. K.-S. B. R.G.A.
Captain R. H. M. Waston
Lieut. J. H. Johnston
Do. C. H. Reynolds Subadar Pir Bux Jemadar Ramzan Khan
R. A. District Office (Fort Canning)
Armament Office -Master Gunner
T. Armstrong
C. R. A.'s Office--Sergt. (Artillery
Clerk) W. L. Maisey
ROYAL ENGINEERS
Lient.-Colonel H. A. A. Livingstone,
C.M.C., R.E. Captain-R. F. Knox
Do. E.E.B.HoltWilson, D.S.O., R.E. Lieut.-B. L. Eddis R.E.
Lieut. G. E. B. Dobbs R.E. Do.
-M. Stagg, RE.
Lieut. and Qr.-Master-W. Reid R.E. Inspector of works-Capt. E. J. Bone,
S.R.E.S.
ARMY ACCOUNTS DEPARTMENT
Treasury Chest Officer and District Paymaster Lt. Colonel H. Q Pinhorn, A.P.D. (1st class assistant accountant)
T. Kishworth, 2nd class assistant
accountant
Clerks A. P. Corps, 1st class Staff Sergt. major M. J. Hanney, Stad Q.-M. Sergt. C. Shonfeld, Staff
SINGAPORE
Sergt. J. Mackenzie, Staff Sergt, G. E. Lambert, Staff Sergt. A. J. Hutchings, Sergt. J. W. Turnbull
ARMY ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT, Straits
Settlements Fort Canning
Chief Ordnance Officer--Capt D.
J. J. Hill
Ordnance Depot, Pulo Brani
Ordnance Officer i/c, and Inspecting Ordnance Officer-Lieut. R. Ở. Sheppard, R.A,
Capt. T. Lilly, A O.D.,
Capt. H. A. Marshali, A.O.D., 1.0.M. Chief Clerks
To C. O. 0.--Sub-Conductor B. J
Collingwood
To Ordnance Officer Staff Sergt.
M. Davidson
Foremen F. Goulding, W. King
AMMY SERVICE CORPS-Office: Fort Cann-
ing
Officer Commanding A. S. Corps
S. S.-Major W. S. Swabey In charge of Barracks-Lieut.-Q. M.
J. A. Hebb
In charge of Supplies and Transport
- Lieut. G. N. Humphreys Assistant to O. C. Supplies, Trans- port-First Class Staff Sergt. G. C. Wadler
Tanglin A. Albuquerque Blakan Mati C. Cooniarasamy Principal Clerk-H. N. Angus Clerks A. Pestana, A. Ibrahim, H.
O. Pestana, C. P. H. Webb
ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS-Office:
Fort Canning
Lieut.-Colonel--H. J. Barratt, S.3.0.
8.8., Fort Canning Major C.V.R.A.M.Ü. and A. C. No. 32, A. O. MacCarth, in charge Military Hospital, Tanglin. Major E. M. Pilcher, in charge Military Hospital, Blakang Mati Capt. H.S. Taylor, in charge Military
Hospital, Fort Canning
Capt. k. R. Dennis, Tanglin, Sanitary
Officer, S.S.
Capt. McL. Skinner, medical charge
Pulau Brain Capt. A. A. Sutcliffe
S. M. O.'s Clerk-Sergt. W. G. Pullen.
SINGAPORE ROYAL ENGINEERS (VOLUN-
TEERS)
Captain-A. M. Thompson Lieut.-G. H. R. Webb Second Lieut.-W. L. Kemp
Asst. Adjt.-Lieut. G. E. Dobbs, R.E.
1317
SINGAPORE VOLUNTEER ARTILLERY
Hon. Colonel-Sir C. C. Smith, G.C.M.G. Major--G. A Derrick
Captain-F. Hilton
Lieutenant-D. Robertson
Second Lieut.-A. A. Lermit (Reserve) Lieutenant--G. B. Stratton
Second Lieutenant-W. O. Hildred
-J. G. Campbell
Do.
Maxim Company S. V. A.
Captain--F. J. Benjafield Lieutenant-H. Tongue
Second Lieutenant-R. N. Cuthbert
SINGAPORE VOLUNTEER INFANTRY
Officer Com'ding-Major-E. C. Ellis A.-Company
Captain--F. M. Elliot Lieut.-H. R. Llewellyn Lieutenant-G. S. Carver
Do. - Song Ong Siang B.--Company
Captain-J. Glennie Lieut.-H. Millard
Second Lt.-E. A. Brown
CADET CORPS S. V. I.
Capt.-C. M. Phillips Lieut.-D. A. Bishop Do. J. Watson
SINGAPORE VOLUNTEER CORPS STAFF
Lt. Colonel-E. G. Broadrick Captain-C. N. Ewart, R.A. Surgeon-Major W. H. R. Middleton
Do. Captain P. Fowlie (Reserve) Surg. Captain-G. X. Freer, (Reserve) Surg. Lieut.-G. A. Imlayson
Do. -M. Black
Hon. Capt. and Chaplain-H. C. Izard.
Do. ---J. A. Gray
Do. -H. Rivett, M.a,
Hon. Capt. andl Qr.-Mr.--H, L. Coghlan Sergt. Major T. Morris, R.A.
MISSIONARIES-See under Churches
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Ltd., Mchts,
-2, Finlayson Green; Tel. Ad: Mitsui
T. Hayashi, manager
S. Takano (Sourabaya) H. Kasahara
R. Murata (Sourabaya) N. Sakabe (Bangkok) K. Sugiura
M. Tago
T. Shiota
Y. Ogawa (Rangoon) M. Kwanze N. Kato
T. Noro (Sourabaya) N. Hirowoka N. Ishikawa
H. Arikawa
1318
Agencies
SINGAPORE
Tokyo Marine Insurance Company, Ld. Meiji Fire Insurance Company, Ld.
MOINE-COMTE & Co., Merchants: Branch Firm--Moine-Comte & Co.--28, Rue Thiars Marseille
D. Moine-Comte P. Laval J. Orner Agencies
Chargeurs Réunis (Line of Steamers) Compagnie Française de Cabotage des mers de Chine (Line of Steamers) L'Union of Paris (Fire Insurance Co.) La Foncière (Paris Marine Insce. Co.)
MOSES & Co., "The Standard Photographic
Studio 1, Orchard Road
M. C. Moses, proprietor
MOTION & Co., JAMES, Watch, Clock and Chronometer Makers, Jewellers, and Opticians and Compass Adjusters, &c.- Flint Street
D. Maw, proprietor
D. A. Walker
H. Harris
Agencies
Lord Kelvin's Nautical Instruments Heath Patent Hezzanith Nautical Instruments
MOUNT AUSTIN RUBBER ESTATES, LD.
Directors S. Gad, R. L. Leigh-Clare J. C. Hermansen, J. Rasmussen (sec.) East Asiatic Co., Ld., agents Manager A. Vesterdal
Assistants-H Engberg, W. Petersen,
Fr. Elholm
MUNICIPALITY
Commissioners-E. G. Broadrick (Pre- sident), A. J. W. Watkins, Dr. P. Fowlie, Wm. Macbean, C. I. Carver, W. Peacock, Ong Tek Lim, C. W. Darbishire, J. Carapiet, Ching Keng Lee
SECRETARIAT
Secretary and Assessor-J. Polglase Financial Assistant-F. J. Benjafield Chief Clerk-F. W. Whitfield Assessment Officer-H. P. Kinghorn
HOUSE & LAND ASSESSMENT DEPARTMT. Assessment Officer- H. P. Kinghorn Bailiff F. Roppa
Clerk in charge--H. Beadsworth Collector of Suburban Rates Wee
Siang Kim Rai, and 6 others
Cashiers-Low Peng Hong, Lim Cho Leng, Vacant House Inspector-C. De Roza, House Number do.-Aman bin Baboo Gulanee
WATER RATE DEPARTMENT
Clerk-in-charge W. Quin First Clerk-F. Rappa
HACKNEY CARRIAGE AND JINRICKSHA
DEPARTMENT
Registrars-W. E. Hooper, E. G.
Goodland
Deputy Registrar-S. P. Joaquim Inspectors-F. W. Jones, F. H. Smith,
S. R. Francis
Usher-F. W. Anthony
Storekprs. Tan Eck Lin, Tay Yam Seck Interpreters-N. Swee Ton, Tan Poh,
Tan Ah Kow
Cashiers-Tan Hin Seng, Yeo Leong
Chuan
SUPPRESSION OF RABIES DEPARTMENT
Superintendent-G. P. Owen Ward Inspector H. Blackburn Clerk-W. Govindasamy
ENGINEERS' DEPARTMENT
Munpl. Enger.-R. Peirce, M.I.C.E.M.S.A, Assistant Municipal Engineers (Water Works)-S. G. Williams A.M.L.C.E., F. E. Marsh, H. Gostwyck,
A.M.I.C.E.
Assistant Municipal Engineer (Electrical dept.)-J. H. Mackail Assistant Municipal Engineer and Surveyor-D. M. Martia, M.S.E. Chief Architectural Assistant-W. H.
Ferguson
Chief Building Insptr.- John Jackson Chief Clerk-G. F. Towers
HEALTH OFFICER'S DEPARTMENT
Health Officer-W. R. C. Middleton,
M.A., M.B., C.M., D.PH.
Assistant Health Officer-J. A. R
Glennie, M.B., C.M., D.PH.
Second Assistant-R. A. Campbell
L.R.C.S.I., L.R.C.P.I., L.M. Municipal Analyst A. G. Harrington Chief Sanitary Inspr.-T O. Mayhew Sanitary Inspectors-O. Olsen, J. Rodrigues, T. R. Glass, F. A. Barth- lomeuz, A. Pereira, L. Fernandez, W. Plunkett, H. C. Brett, E. E. de Souza, A. H. D. Beins, H. Nunes, R. E. Smith, C. B. Eke, G. Armstrong, S, Jansen, C.H. Rose, J. Hook, R. E de Silva
Clerks Lim Cheng Tee, Tan Hock Seng, M. Salam, Oh Joo Yee, Sham Swee Siong, Laini bin Hd. Osman Inspr. of Burial Grounds-H. J. Grosse
SINGAPORE
1319
Registrars Christian Cemetery-Bida-
dari, F. Bayley
Do.--Bukit Timah F. ArovzOO Inspector of Markets U. J. Cuckney Market Keepers-C. H. Clarke, M. Fernandez, A. Perreau, W. Perreau Hawkers, Licenses Inspectors W. Hoeden, H. Perreau, Tan Pack Cho
MUNICIPAL FIRE BRIGADE
Superintendent-Montague W. Pett Second Officer---T, Wilson
MUNICIPAL GAS DEPARTMENT
J. P. Hallaway, gas engineer A. M. Thompson, asst. do. K. Vallupilai, works foreman A. E. Parsons, clerk in charge.
MUNICIPAL SLAUGHTER-HOUSES W. Holley, superintendent
P. S. Falshaw, M.R.C.V.S., vet. surgeon
MUNICIPAL STORE AND WORKSHOP
Storekeeper J. M. Cameron
Supt. of Workshops-A.W. Neubronner
PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS
DEPARTMENT
Superintendent-W. E. Hooper
Govt. Veterinary Surgeon --P. Scott
Falshaw, M.R.C.V.S. Inspector-P. O. Pestana Sub-Inspector-F. W. Jones
Infirmary Assistant-Chas. Joseph
NATHAN, EDWARD M., Exchange and Share Broker and Comsn. Agent-7, D'Almeida Street
NEDERLANDSCHE GUTTAPERCHA MAATS- CHAPPIJ (Netherlands Guttapercha Co., Ltd.) India Rubber and Guttapercha Manufacturers-197, Passir Panjang
T. C. Koopman, delegué
H. Lalleinent, manager
G. de Vries van Doesburgli, sub-
manager
A. Chauvaux, foreman
factory
rubber
W. G. ten Houte de Lange, engineer A. Boers, bookkeeper
NEDERLANDSCH INDISCHE HANDELSBANK, (Netherlands India Commercial Bank) -Cecil Street; Tel, Ad: Handelbank
J. Th. Lohmann, manager
A. D. H. Heringa, accountant G. Vermey
J. Meyerink A. Kruseman M. P. de Souza
W. Nonis Lim Kay Choon
Tan Swee Piow, compradore Tan Boon Yong, asst. do. Neo Chay Tiong, cashier
NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL MAATSCHAPPIJ (Netherlands Trading Society)-1 and 2, Cecil Street; and 10 and 11, d'Almeida Street; Tel. Ad: Gardona; Head Office: Amsterdam
G. J. Houtsina, acting agent
C. W. A. M. Groskamp, sub-agent W. L. de Beus, accountant L. J. S. van Leeuwen, cashier C. C. Mul
H. Serry, Jr. A. A. Pauw
D. M. G. Gratama P. M. Soeters
Th. E. A. Boereboom E. G. Veenendaal
Seow Tiang Quee, chief cashier Ong Kim Seah, chief godown-keeper Factory of the Society at Batavia; Agencies at Samarang, Soerabaya, Rangoon, Hongkong, Shanghai; Sub- Agencies at Penang, Medan, Palem- bang, Kota Radja, Band Jermasin, Padang,Cheribon, Tegal,Pekalongan, Tjilatjap and Macassar
NEW SINGAPORE DISTILLED WATER ICE
FACTORY, LIMITED 98, Sungei Road W. K. F. van Bijlevelt, manager
NOBLE, DR. JOSEPH W., Dental Surgeon-
43, Battery Road
Jos. W. Noble, D.D.S. J. M. Crags, D.D.S. E. G. Curry, D.D.S. E. Evan-Jones, D.D.S.
NOORDIN & Co., M. M., Merchants and Commission Agents-193, Cecil Street
M. M. Noordin (Penang)
A. M. Nakloda
Lim Liang Quee, assistant
London Agents, Samuel Toye & Co.,
Heneage Lane, E. C.
NORTH CHINA INSURANCE CO., LIMITED-
1, Finlayson Green
A. H. Turner, acting agent Agency
Maritime Insurance Co., Limited
OPIUM AND LIQUOR FARMS; Chop Guan
Hock Hin--80 to 83, Cecil Street
ORIENTAL COMPANY, LD., Advertising Contractors Suite E, Cavenagh Bridge Buildings
1320
SINGAPORE
ORNAMENTAL TILE WORKS-51, Hill Street
Alfred Lea, proprietor
OUR LADY OF LOURDES CHURCH-See under
Churches and Missions
PAGAM LIMITED-Batang Benar
A. McKenzie, manager
PARSONS & RHODES, Advocates and Solici- tors--7 Battery Road; Tel. Ad: Parons; Teleph. 970
T. Dudley Parsons, B.A., barrister-at-
law (Gray's Inn, London) Hasting Rhodes, solicitor
C. B. Cooper, barriser-at-law (Gray's
Inn, London)
H. R. S. Zehnder, barriser at-law
(Gray's Inn, London)
Articled Clerk-George McBreen
PATERSON, SIMONS & Co., Ld., Merchants-
Prince Street, Collyer Quay
H. Melvill Simons managing W. H. Shelford
Wm. McKerrow
directors
Graham Paterson) directors
Alfred H. Drew
C. W. Darbishire, mgr. in the East
F. Ferguson, signs per pro.
R. F. Binnie,
assistant
A. W. Blackstone,
do.
C. C. Cruttwell,
do.
A. P. Cameron,
do.
F. K. Dickson,
do.
G. G. Horsfall,
assistant
W. P. W. Ker
do.
J. B. Myles,
do.
J. R. Murray,
do.
J. T. Newall,
do.
do.
P. P. Newton,
W. C. Southam, signs per pro.
A. G. Watson, assistant
C. F. Oliveiro,
clerk
W. A. Pereira,
do.
E. C. Oliveiro,
do.
J. T. Andrews,
do.
R. J. Pereira,
do.
F. A. Pereira,
do.
F. A. Lazarro,
do.
W.
Gomes,
do.
L. H. Gomes,
do.
do.
E. L. do Vries,
do.
Agencies
J. N. Nunis,
Johore Government
Sarawak Government
Eastern Mortgage and Agency Co.
(1902), Ld.
Ben Line of Steamers
Gibb Line of China-Australian Strs. Nippon Yusen Kaisha Mogul Line of Steamers
Warrack Line of Steamers
Apcar Line of Steamers Barber Line of Steamers Northern Pacific Steamship Co. Bank Line, Ld.
New York and Oriental S. S. Co., Ld. Natal Line of Steamers
Guardian Assurance Company, Ld. Alliance Assurance Company, Ld. Scottish Amicable Life Insurance Co. United Dutch Marine Insce. Co. Kelantan Rubber Syndicate Scottish Provident Institution Assam Railways and Trading Co.
PENINSULAR & ORIENTAL STEAM NAVI- GATION COMPANY-Office: Collyer Quay; Wharves Keppel Harbour
Town Office
H. W. Buckland, agent
R. E. Kozhevar, chief assistant C Biron, freight assistant E. W. H. Carpenter, passage asst. Keppel Harbour
H. S. Hauxwell, pilot
Town Office
Lim Cheng Wee, cashier K. Tiang Bee, freight clerk T. Hoon Siang, asst. do. Wee Mong Seng, accountant Low Boon Tiong, transhipment clerk Low Boon Ann, asst.
do.
Tau Yew Yiang, passage clerk
Oh Poh Soo,
collector
Gan Hock Chuan, do.
Yeo Mui Choon, clerk
Low Kye Choon, typist Low Kye Wee, clerk
Keppel Harbour
E. W. Gunatilaka, wharf manager, D.T. H. Madapathe, asst. wharf magr. A. K. Arokisamy, clerk
J. Jayaratna
A. Sebastian
13 Chinese clerks
Agencies
do.
do.
The Marine Insurance Company, Ld. Reuter's Telegram Company, Ld. The Marine and General Mutual Life
Assurance Society
PEREIRA, J. d'A., Horticulturist and Florist Collector and Exporter of Orchids and Rare Plants
PERTILE & Co., Merchants
M. Schiffmann
Ch. Sesone, signs per pro.
J. A. Boyes,
do.
PHARMACY, THE, Chemists, Druggists and Opticians-Chartered Bank Buildings, 2 Battery Road
Geo. W. Crawford, M.P.S., manager
―
SINGAPORE
PILOT BOARD
President Comr. C. A. Radcliffe, R.N. Members
E. D. Hewan, H. W. Buckland, S. A. Lane, A. Snow Pilots T. Mackie, A. Snow, Josephi Gray, H. D. Hauxwell, E. F. Stovell, W. M. Lalds, Wm. Dawson, J. E. Farrell, J. Williamson, T. Robinson
PONS & CARLO, Merchants and Commission
Agents-6, d'Almeida Street
PORT DICKSON RUBBER ESTATES Co., LD.-
Gresham House, Battery Road
Directors-F. M. Elliot, H. Abrams,
J. A. Macgregor, G. A. Derrick Secretary H. R. Llewellyn
PORTUGUESE MISSION, CHURCH OF "ST.
JOSEPH"-See under Churches
POWELL & Co., Auctioneers, House and Estate Agents-20 and 22, Raffles Place John T. Lloyd, proprietor and mngr. J. J. Lloyd
P. Lloyd
J. B. Kozario R. Olivero Tan Tee Kiah
Hong Guan
Tan Yew Lee
Cheong Koon Hong
Tan Tiang Choon, storekeeper Cheong Koon Seng, cashier
Agency
Lancashire Fire Insurance Company
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF ENGLAND, CHINA MISSION See under Churches and Missions
PROCURE DES MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES See
under Churches and Missions
RAFFLES HOTEL (Sarkies Brothers)-Tel.
Ad: Raffles or Sarkies
T. Sarkies (Singapore)
A. Sarkies (Rangoon)
Arshak Sarkies (Penang)
M. S. Arathoon, sec., signs per pro Joe Constantine, manager S. M. Papasian
Otto Muller
G. M. Gregory
Branches--
E.&O. Hotel, Penang
Strand Hotel, Rangoon
The Crag Sanatorium, Penang Hills
RAFFLES INSTITUTION
Principal-C. M. Philips, M.A., LL.B.
1321
Science Master-J. Watson, M.A., B.SC. Commercial Masters-W. N. Haigh,
F.I.S.S.T., J. Macaulay, M.A. Senior Assistants-R. E. Smith, B.A., J. McLeod, M.A., C. F. C. Ayre, Junior Assistants-16
RAFFLES MUSEUM & LIBRARY-Stamford
Road
Committee Hon. Colonial Secretary (chairman), Hon. Dr. Galloway, V. A. Flower, W. Makepeace, W. Nanson, H. N. Ridley
Director R. Hanitsch, PH.D. Taxidermist-V. Knight
Assist. do.-P. M. de Fontaine First Clerk-Soh Ewe Jin Second do. -Chua Hong Kay
RAJBHOY & Co., H., Merchants and Com-
mission Agents-15, Raffles Place
RAUB AUSTRALIAN GOLD MINING CO., LIMITED-Head Office: Brisbane; Branch Office: Gresham House, Battery Road
Local Directors-G. A. Derrick, A.
Gentle
H. R. Llewellyn, local secretary Wm. J. Oates, manager
RAUTENBERG, SCHMIDT & Co., Merchants-
4, Cecil Street
R. Klünder (Hamburg)
M. Suhl
R. Sturzenegger
M. Hasche
RAVENSWAY & Co., Monument Masons and Marble Merchants-187, Orchard Rd.
RAVENSWAY, J. C. V., Collector and Ex- porter of Orchids-187, Orchard Road
RECREATION CLUBS
CHESS CLUB
President Hon. J. B. Elcum Hon. Secretary-E. E. Coleman Hon. Treasurer-L. M. Cordeiro
CRICKET CLUE, ŠINGAPORE
President Hon. Capt. Sir A. H.
Young, K.C.M.G.
Secretary and Treas.-G. P. Owen
LADIES' LAWN TENNIS CLUB
Hon, Sec. and Treas.-H. M. Cantrell
SEPOY LINES GOLF CLUB
L
Committee His Hon. Sir W. H. Hyndman Jones (president), Dr. Keith (captain), Dr. Gray" (hon. secy.) Dr. Dent (hon. treas.), Hon. J. O. Anthonisz, Hon. F. J. Pigott, Dr. J. Leask
1322
SINGAPORE GOLF CLUB
SINGAPORE
President The Hon Capt. Sir A.
Young, C.M.G. Captain-F. Ferguson, Jr. Hon. Sec.-W. J. Mayson Hon. Treas.-J. Henry
Committee J. Crabb-Watt, R. Scoular, Capt. Dundas, P. Fowlie, G. A. Finlayson, C. V. Miles
SINGAPORE RECREATION CLUB
Committee-D. M. Martin (president), A. V. Peralta (hon. secretary and treasurer), G. R. Oehlers (captain), J. Van Cuylenburg, E. J. Gomes, G. E. Bogaars, A. E. van Wulven, A. E. Coelho
SINGAPORE ROWING CLUB
President-F. M. Elliot Hon. Sec.-F. J. Benton
SINGAPORE SPORTING CLUB President-H. Hugh Fort Secretary-G. P. Ŏwen
STRAITS CHINESE RECREATION CLUB
Dunman's Green
Presidt. Song Ong Siang, M.A.,L.L.M. Hon. Secretary-Kiong Chin Eng
STRAITS RACING ASSOCIATION
Secretary-G. P. Owen
SWIMMING CLUB-Tanjong Katong
President-F. M. Elliot Vice-President-W. Makepeace Hon. Treasurer-W. A. Sims Hon. Secretary-M. B. Brockwell
RECREATION HOTEL-Tramway Terminus,
Seranggong Road
Proprietor & Man.-G. A. Fernandez
REEK, D. J., Surveyor, Dutch Underwriters
Association-6, Flint Street
REUBEN, N., Share and General Broker and Commission Agent-8, Prince Street
M. Guston
REUTER'S TELEGRAM CO., LTD.-Collyer
Quay
Agent-H. W. Buckland
RIBEIRO & Co., Ltd., C. A., Stationers,
Printers, Bookbinders and
General
Commission Agents-Registered Office:
6 and 7, Raffles Place
C. A. Ribeiro
F. Martens
H. Rickard
B. Moore
R. de Cruz F. Diniz C. A. Rode
RIGOLD, BERGMANN & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents-1, 2, 3, Change Alley; and at London, Calcutta, Bombay, Delhi and Lahore
Geo. Bergmann (London) A. Ochs (Singapore)
K. Teichmann, signs per pro. A. Stockfisch, assistant J. H. Willcocks, do.
Agency
Rhenish Westphalia Lloyd Insce. Co. RILEY, HARGREAVES, & Co., LD., Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineers, Founders, Shipbuilders, and Contrae- tors, Kampong Malacca, Tanjong Rhu, and at Ipoh (Perak), and Penang
C. E. F. Sanderson managing director T. C. B. Miller, secretary and director R. M. Goldie, manager
D. Miller, accountant A. Fleming, asst. do.
do.
P. M. Robinson, electrical engineer F. P. Harris assistant Geo. Farr,
do.
W. D. Fisher, civil engineer
do.
do.
H. C. Paxon,
do.
R. D. Pitceathly, office assistant
W. Cook,
do.
J. McCreadie,
do.
James Henderson,
do.
W. M. Jack,
do.
W. L. Weir,
do.
E. N. Watts,
do.
J. A. J. Maclean, works supt.
J. McLachlan, shop foreman W. Stevens,
do.
do.
A. J. Crofts, chief draughtsman E. Grant, assistant do. H. Flemming, do. Wm. Gibson, do. do. G. Hutchison, shipyard supt. W. M. Blake, draughtsman Neil Robertson, foreman boilermaker H. Cunningham,
do. A. Wilmot,
do. blacksmith
Geo. Chapman, loftsman
J. H. Drysdale, in charge town store J. Allan, outdoor foreman
J. M. Armstrong,
do.
H. A. Sellers, traveller
E. Gill, chief storekeeper
ROBERTSON, T. MURRAY, M.D. (EDIN.), M.R.C.S.
-43, Raffles Place
ROBINSON & Co., Drapers, Milliners, Dress makers and Tailors-26, Raffles Place; London: Balfour House, Finsbury Pave ment, E.C.
SINGAPORE
do.
S. R. Robinson, partner
A. W. Bean,
W. W. K. Robinson, do,
G. W. Pugh
W. S. Elmslie J. Bentley J. W. Dando H. T. White
P. R. Hall
S. Sowdon
H. E. Olive
J. McCubbin
F. Apps W. Allen J. Woods
A. Frois
F. Fox
E. C. Kraal
G. W. Branson E. S. Angus L. Koenitz
E. Ryan
V. Van der Beck
H. Armstrong P. R. Lewis J. de Souza
A. D. Baker Mrs. Beal Mrs. Orr
Miss Inglis Mrs. Corby
Mrs. Neubronner
Miss Bernard Miss Adams Miss Peterson
ROBINSON PIANO Co., LD., Makers, Dealers, Repairers and Tuners, Music and Musical Instrument Sellers-33, Raffles Place; and at Bangkok, Penang, Hongkong, Shanghai and Tientsin; Tel. Ad: Pianomaker
W. G. Vaughan Robinson.
J.H. Pearson
J. D. Frost
H. C. Hudson
J. Oliviero
F. A. C. Pestana
E. C. Simpor W. J. 1). Trengöve
Mrs. B. Norman
RODYK & DAVIDSON, Advocates, Solicitors, and Notaries-4, Raffles Place; Tel. Ad: Rodyk
William Nanson, B.A., F.S.A.
Frederick M. Elliot, B.A.
Charles V. Miles, B.A.
Hugh Bernard Baker, assistant
F. G. Stevens,
do.
L. M. Cordeiro, bookkeeper
P. I. Woodford, managing conveyan-
cing clerk
1323
N. Kathirayson, m'ging, court clerk Chua Seck Leng, court clerk and
interpreter
London Agents E. F. Turner &
Sons, 15, Leadenhall Street, E.C.
ROYAL HAIR DRESSING SALOON-30-1 and
30A, Raffles Place
G. Sabatier, proprietor
Miss Kohl, cashier
J. Muller,
assistant
R. Allegra,
do.
M. De Martino, do.
L. Milen,
do.
do.
J. Wemura,
Gee Koek Tso, book-keeper
Amat, collector
ROYAL JOHORE TIN MINING Co., LD.
Directors-C. B. Buckley, J. Salomon,
Geo. Derrick, W. Ewald
Hüttenbach Bros. & Co., general agents
ROYAL NETHERLANDS PETROLEUM CO.- See
Hooglandt & Co.
RUBBER COMPANIES
BATANG BENAR RUBBER CO., LTD., THE- Office: Winchester House, Collyer Quay Directors F. Pears, M. R. Plumpton, V. A. Flower, G. S. Bailey, W. Lowther Kemp
Secretaries -F. W. Barker & Co.
CLUNY RUBBER ESTATES, LTD.-Office:
Winchester House, Collyer Quay
Directors-J. Somerville, W. W.
Cook, C. McArthur
Secretaries-F. W. Barker & Co. Aylesbury & Garland, agents at Ipoh
GLENEALY PLANTATIONS, LTD.-Register- ed Office: Gresham House, Battery Rd. Directors-A. D. Allan, A. J. W.
Watkins, E. T. C. Garland Secretary H. R. Llewellyn
KHOTA BAHRU SYNDICATE, LTD.--Re- gistered Office: Gresham House, Battery Road
TT
Directors J. A. Macgregor, J.
Gardner, H. R. Llewellyn
KWALA MERSING, LTD. Registered Office: Gresham House, Battery Rd. Directors R. W. Harrison, A. D. Allan, H. R. Llewellyn, J. Th. Lohmann
Secretary F. E. Gallimore
PANDAN MINING CO., LTD., THE--Re- gistered Office: Gresham House, Battery Road
Directors-F. A. Turner, D. K.
1324
SINGAPORE
Somerville, W. J. Muller, W. G. H. Morrell, S. Knocker Secretary-H. R. Llewellyn
Office:
PEGOH, LIMITED-Registered
Gresham House, Battery Roadl
Directors-Wm. M.Sime, A. W. Bean, Tan Chay Yan, Chan Kang Swi Secretary H. R. Llewellyn
RAGALLA RUBBER CO., LTD.
Directors A. D. Allan, C. L. Gibson, G. A. Derrick, H. L. Coghlan
Secretary-D. W. Reid McAlister & Co., Ltd., agent
SANDYCROFT RUBBER Co., Ltd., The
Directors.--E. F. Jago, W. W. Cook, M. E. Plumpton, E. H. Bratt, Alex. Gentle, W. Lowther Kemp, A.Ç.A. (seey.), R. B. Murray, (mngr., Bruas)
SINGAPORE & JOHore Rubber Co., Ltd.-- Office: Winchester House, Collyer Quay. Directors-W. D. Fisher, A. J. W.
Watkins, D. T. Boyd, F. E. Jago W. Lowther Kemp A.c.A. (secretary) J. Giles (manager, Muar, Johore)
SENAWANG RUBBER ESTATES Co., LTD.-- Winchester House, Collyer Quay; Head Office: 4, Foochów Road, Shanghai Local Agents-- F. W. Barker & Co. Manager (Negri Sembilan)- C. F.
Lushington
SUA MANGGIS RUBBER CO., LTD.-Re- gistered Office: Gresham House, Battery Road
Directors-C. W. Darbishire, C.
Emerson, K. A. Stevens Secretary-H. Roland Llewellyn
TELUK ANSON RUBBER ESTATE, LTD., THE Registered Office: Gresham House, Battery Road
Directors-F. A. Turner, J. Boy, J.
R. Crawford
Secretary H. R. Llewellyn
THE MEKTON RUBBER SYNDICATE LD.
Local Agent-F. W. Barker, W. Win-
chester House, Collyer Quay Head Office-Messrs. Taylor, Noble & Co. 47, Fenchurch Street, London Manager, Selangor-C. W. Thuny John Buttery (London)
James Gibson,
A. G. Wright,
17
D. Gilchrist, Jr. (Penang) A. K. Buttery (London)
C. E. Craig, signs per pro. O. P. Griffith-Jones
G. A. K. Mugliston
Agencies
"Northern Assurance Co. (Fire & Life)
Yorkshire Insurance Co.
RUSSO-CHINESE BANK (at Borneo Co.'s
Office)
Agents The Borneo Co., Ld.
SAID MARICAN & Co., Military and Civil Contractors, Shipchandlers" and Com- mission Agents, Established 1864-20, Robinson Road
Mohamed Ali Marican, partner
M. Kanisah Marican,
Y. H. Thobat,
do.
do.
Sheik Dawood, chief clerk
Pakeer Mustan, runner
Nathirsah,
Agency
do.
Singapore Cattle Trading Co.
SAIDIAH PRESS, Malay Printer and India-
rubber Stamp Maker-82, Arab Street
Sole Proprietor-H. M. Said Manager-H. Abdullah
Asst. Manager and Collector--Khalid
b. H. M. Said
Salesman and Clerk-Mohamed b. H.
M. Said
Agency and Branch-
H. Mujtahid bin H. M. Said, Penang
SANDILANDS, BUTTERY & Co., Merchants-
3. Cecil Street; and at Penang
SALAK SOUTH, LIMITED (Miners)-Office:
Winchester House, Collyer Quay
Directors-W. F. Nutt, A." J. W.
Watkins, A. D. Allan
Secretaries--F. W. Barker & Co. Gen. Manager-W. Stewart, Selangor
SARKIES & MOSES, Merchants-Raffles Place
A. C. Moses N. C. Moses Wee Eng Too Agencies
Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Union Assurance Society (Fire & Life)
SAUNDERS & Co., Exchange and Share Bro- kers-Winchester House, Collyer Quay
SAVINGS BANK-See under Govmt. Depts.
SINGAPORE
SCHAEFER & Co., H., Merchants and Com- mission Agts.-26, Prince St. (Compagnie Française des Indes et l'extreme Orient Paris & London)
H. Schaefer
K. Gottschalk, signs per pro.
A. Durler (Palembang) signs per pro. H. Vollmerhaus (Bandgerinasia)
signs per pro.
F. A. Teale
C. B. Leicester
Branches Palembang, Bandger-
masia
SCHOMBURGK, C, Exchange and Share
Broker-28, Malacca Street
SCHWEIGER IMPORT AND EXPORT CO., LTD., THE; Tel. Ad: Schweiger; Head Office: Milan, Italy; Branches: Singapore, Manila, Hankow
C. Ambrosoli, manager, signs per pro.
SERLE, G. B., M.D., C.M., D.PH. (Edin.)
A. B. Simpson, M.B., CH.B. (Aberd.)
The Singapore Dispensary, Ld., Battery
Road
SHANGHAI LIFE INSURANCE Co., LD.
General Agents The Netherlands
India Commercial Bank
SHARPE, Ross & Co., LTD., Merchants-3, D'Almeida Street, Singapore; 120, Fen- church Street, London, E.C.; Tel. Add: Sharperos
Director-E. H. Sharpe (London)
Do. -A. J. Ross (Singapore) Assistant-R. H.Sharpe, signs per pro.
Do. G. Maltby
Do. -R. Pons Clerk--J. Nonis Stenographer-P. A. Beins.
Agencies
Banque de Cochin-Chine Central Insurance Co., Ltd.
Indemnity Mutual Marine Assurance
Co., Ltd.
SHIPS AGENCY, LIMITED, Shipbrokers and Agents-2 and 3, Collyer Quay; Tel. Ad: Agentuur
T. C. Mustert, agent
M. Artz
A. van der Ras
W. F. H. Wynstroon H. J. Hooghwinkel A. Westhoff
J. McCully
C. Stewart
Agencies
1325
Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland Java-Bengal Line
Java-China-Japan Lijn.
Sabang Bay Harbour & Coal Co., Ld.
SIEVERTS & Co., RUD., Merchants-19, Boat
Quay
Rud. Sieverts (Hamburg) Otto Schwemer
Ad. Koch, signs per pro. K. Kipp
SINGAPORE AERATED WATER FACTORY- Barugh & Co. Ld.; Tel. Ad: Barugh
G. P. Nicholson, managing director
SINGAPORE COLD STORAGE Co, LD.- Registered Office: Borneo Wharf, Keppel Harbour Road
Directors K. A. Stevens, (chairman), Hans Becker, C. W. Darbishire, Hon. E. C. Ellis, F. R. Heron, H. G. Hodder (Secretary)
SINGAPORE DISPENSARY, LIMITED, Che- mists and Druggists-12, Balkey Road
Branch Office: 83, South Bridge Road J. McKenzie, M.P.S., manager and
secretary Consulting Rooms
G. B. Serle, M.D. (EDIN.), D.PH. A. B. Simpson, M.B., C.M.
SINGAPORE ELECTRIC TRAMWAYS LD., THE Power Station, Car Shed and Office: MacKenzie Road; Head Office: 19, St. Swithin's Lane, London, E. C.
J. H. Garratt, general manager and
chief engineer
J. H. Waring, manager's secretary H. R. W. Lobb, traffic manager F. H. Robinson, power station
superintendent'
H.G. Wightwick, electrical engineer W. Travis, Asst. electrical engineer H. J. W. Habekost, car
shed superintendent
A. McIntyre, assistant engineer V. Galistan
R. Bateman
11
1
E. Stuart, chief traffic inspector Koh Seck Tian, compradore Lee Boon Swee, accountant
SINGAPORE FOUNDRY LTD., Civil, Mechan- ical and Electrical Engineers, Boiler- makers, Bridge Builders, Iron and Brass Founders, Ship Builders and General Contractors Mohamad Sultan Road and Teck Guan Street
LL
H. C. Hogan, general manager S. Collins-Paton, secretary
1326
N. E. Hogan, foreman
A. Monis,
71
SINGAPORE
F. A. Hendricks, asst. book-keeper Ang Boon Poh,
J. Hogan, draughtsman F. Monis, asst.
**
ן!
Tan Hook Chiang, cashier H. Hogan, asst, draughtsman Kok Hock Chye, storekeeper E. Palmer, asst.
}}
SINGAPORE FREE PRESS AND MERCANTILE ADVERTISER, Daily Morning Newspaper with Weekly Mail Edition Raffles Place; Tel. Ad: Advertiser
W. G. St. Clair, proprietor and editor W. Makepeace, proprietor and mangr.
R. D. Davies, sub-editor
F. S. B. Jennings, reporter
SINGAPORE & KRANJI RAILWAY
J. H.Williams, manager and engineer
T. Howard, locomotive foreman D. P. Pillay, accountant P. J. Gomes, chief clerk
A. J. Wells, 1st clerk, acct's office A. Arokiasamy,
T. Rayney, driver
A. don Daniel, guard
S. Johnson,
J. Christian,
S.
多少
**
Thuryappah, station master (Singapore)
R. Tambyah, station master (New-
ton)
P. Silvaniagum,
(Cluny Road)
station muster
Ponatheray, station master (Holland
Road)
Kasipily, station master (Bukit
Timah)
S. Suthasivam,
(Woodlands)
station master
B. James, station master (Borneo-
Wharf)
H. Supramanian, clerk in charge
(Johore)
K. Marimuttu,
(Pasir sPanjang)
station master
M. Rajasurai, inspector
R. J. Caldera, permanent way
inspector
SINGAPORE MARINE INSURANCE AGENTS
ASSCN. Gresham House, Battery Road
Committee-W. Macbean (chairman), J. Henry (deputy chairnian), G. A. Derrick (secretary and treasurer)
SINGAPORE MERCHANT SERVICE GUILD
Secretary J. G. Boyd
SINGAPORE OIL MILLS, LTD., THE-Office: Arcade, Raffles Square; Bintang Mills, Havelock Road; Tel. Ad: Bintang
Directors-W. H. Macgregor (chair- man), F. C. Muhlinghaus (on leave).
and A. Asmus
SINGAPORE PHARMACY, Chemists and Drug-
gists-94, North Bridge Road
F. O. de Souza, M.B., C.M., consultant
SINGAPORE SLIPWAY AND ENGINEERING COMPANY, LIMITED, Ship Builders, Ship Repairersand Engineers; Works:Tanjong Rhoo; Registered Office: Tanjong Pagar Telephone 10
J. R. Nicholson (chairman) Captain Sir A. H. Young, director W. P. Patchett, director William McDonald, R.N.R., M.I.M.E.....
A.M.I.N.A., manager
W. G. Niven, secretary
C. H. Fellett, accountant J. J. do Rozario, clerk Mee Hoey Hye, assistant clerk A. Holmberg, storekeeper
SINGKEP TIN MAATSCHAPPIJ (Tin Mines)-
Tel, Ad: Singkep
Jlir. J. P. J. van der Does de Bye, direc
tor (Holland)
F. H. J. Ludwig, head mgr., Singkep
Dr. M. Maying, doctor
C. A. Pynenburg, assistant P. Lammers, bookkeeper
Th. B. Eastes, adjunct manager Th. W. van Schaik, do.
J. C. Jansen,
R. G. Bruggeman,
assistant
do.
Jhr. J. J. V. Suchtelen von de
Haare, surveyor
A. F. Zylker, techincian N. J. Pels, mechanician J. C. Tjebbes, do. P. A. Ficauly, clerk Karimon Branch
M. Jappar, surveyor Representative-H. Loriaux (Rhio)
SIONE RUBBER COMPANY, LTD., THE
Liquidator-W. Lowther Kemp, A.C.A. (F. W. Barker, Winchester House, Collyer Quay)
SIPIAU TIN Co., Lp.---Gresham House,
Battery Rond
Directors-G. A. Derrick, H. K.
Llewellyn, J. L. Montgomery Secretaries-Derrick & Co.
|
SINGAPORE
SIR JOHN JACKSON, LTD., Harbour and Dock Contractors - Telok Ayer Reclama- tion, Robinson Road; and 53, Victoria Street, Westminster, London, S. W. Governing Director--Sir John Jackson,
F.B.S.E, LL.D. (London)
G. H. Scott, M. INST.C.E. (London)
H.C. Wynne Edwards, M.INST.C.E. (L'don) Arthur Jackson, M.INST.C.E. (London) John J. Warbrick, M.NIST.C.E. (London) Manager and Chief Engr. Singapore-
G. B. Wilkinson, M.INST.C.E.
Asst. Engr. Singapore-L. H. Axten
(sigus per pro.)
Civil Engineer B. Meek
Asst. Do. -W. Henderson
Do. Do. -D. Paterson
Do.
Do. --R. H. Stockman
SISSON & DELAY, Advocates and Solicitors.
-16B, Change Alley
James Arthur Delay
Charles Emerson
Clement Everett
H. D. Mundell
E. L. Seth, managing clerk G. Govindasamy, and others.
SOCIETY OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL-See
under Churches and Missions
SOMERVILLE & Co., F. G., Exchange,, Share and General Brokers-3A, Finlayson Green; Tel. Ad: Gunnery; Telph. 463
F. G. Somerville (London) A. F. Comrie (Singapore)
SOUTH BRITISH INSURANCE Co., LD.-
2, Finlayson Green; Tel. Ad: British; Teleph. 30; London Office: Jerusalem Chambers, Cornhill E.C.
Local Board-L. Engel (chairman), Hon. Tan Jiak Kim, Lee Choon Guan, Lim Hạ Pual
Staff J. Henry, local manager F. P. Cruttenden, assistant Chew Swee Teong, cashier
SOUTH RAUB GOLD MINING SYNDICATE, LD.
-Gresham House, Battery Road
Dir.-G. A. Derrick, G. A. Derrick,scey. SOUZA, F. O. de, M.B., C.M., Medical Prac-
titioner-10, Dhoby Ghaut
SPERRY FLOUR CO., Merchant Millers-74, Robinson Road; Head Office: 133, Spear Street, San Francisco
W.S. Allen, resident manager(H'kong) G. W. Hayes,
do.
Do.
Chas, E. Kichardson, manager (absent) J. R. Hargreaves, acting manager
Soh Eng Lim, clerk
Soh Eng Siung, clerk
-
1327
ST. ANDREW'S CATHEDRAL See under
Churches and Missions
ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH MISSION See under
Churches and Missions
ST. ANTHONY's Boys' SCHOOL (Portuguese
Mission), Victoria Street
ST.
Correspondent--The Vicar-General
Rev. A. A. Cardoso
Manager and Director-Rev. F. B.
Bragança
Head Master-F. A. Thomasz
ANTHONY'S CONVENT (Portuguese Mission)--Middle Road
Superioress-Luiza Marelli, and 14
Canossian sisters
ST. JOSEPHS INSTITUTION, conducted by
the Brothers of the Christian Schools
ST MARY'S DISPENSARY & DRUG STORE, Chemists and Druggists-48-4, Hill St. Dr. Handy, consultant, 28A, Syed
Alley Road
M. R. Parthaserathy, in charge J. Miles, compounder
G. Hoisington, accountant N. Subrayon, collector
ST. PETER AND ST. PAUL'S CHURCH-See
under Churches and Missions
STANDARD OIL Co. OF NEW YORK-The
Arcade; Tel. Ad: Secony
J. Love Montgomerie, attorney
K. F. Hand, assistant J. L. M. Gibson, do. G. Rayner,
D. Price,
F. G. Keiller,
do.
do.
do.
S. Mowe, book-keeper
Thompson & Bedford Department- Mineral Lubricating Oils, Wax and Grease--Cable address: Lubriwax Oriental Freight Department-Cable
address: Standline
Agents
The Anglo-Amern. Oil Co., Ld. (London)
Oriental Freight Line Oriental Pacific Line
Agencies
Adamson, Gilfillon & Co., Ld. (Penang) Zacharias & Co. (Kuala Lumpur) Kong Lang (Seremban)
Yet Hin & Co. (Kuantan)
Withelmina Trading Co. (Pontianak
1328
SINGAPORE
STANDARD PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIO, THE, Photographers and Dealers in Photo- graphic Materials-4, Orchard Road (Established 1874)
Proprietors-Moses & Co.
18,
STCHERBATCHOFF, Tenoкoff & Co., Mer- chants, Commission Agents, and Agents of the Russian Volunteer Fleet Raffles Quay; Tel. Ad: Tehokoff
J. A. Steherbatchoff (Moscow) T. C. Tchokoff (Colombo) A. J. Ivashoff, signs per pro. N. T. Neubronner, assistant
STEPHENS, PAUL
1, Robinson Road
& Co., Merchants-
M. Stephens (London)
Seth Paul (Arnheim)
T. Paul (London)
S. P. Stephens (Macassar)
H. S. Árathoon (Singapore)
L. S. Arathoon, signs per pro. A. C. Arathoon
S. A. Edgar
Lim Tay Yan
Lim Tay Swee, storekeeper
STRAITS CYCLE & MOTOR Co., LD., Electrical Engineers, etc., Platers and Enamellers -15, Battery Road; Tel. Ad: Velocipede Directors A. Barker, S. O. Alsagoff
Kho-Keng Chuan, Yeo Phec Gin
STRAITS & GENERAL DEVELOPMENT Co., LD., THE Gresham House, Battery Road
G. A. Derrick, agent
STRAITS ICE COMPANY, LIMITED, River
Valley Road and Mirbau Road
W. Cummings, superindg, engineer J. Mills, asstant
do.
Katz Bros., Limited, gencral agents
STRAITS INDUSTRIAL SYNDICATE, General
Merchants, Steam Saw Mill and Ice Fac tory-Kallang Road; Trade and Commis- sion Bureau 9, Cecil St.; Tel. Ad: Industry; Codes used: A.B.C. 4th and 5th Editions
A. W. Westerhout, manager
C. B. Hawkshaw, assistant H. B. Paliner, book-keeper Wee Guan Eng, clerk and typist Song Hock Lin, shipping clerk Tan Bee Tong,
Chua Lek Poh,
engineer
do.
do.
E. Dupt.
W. Webster, M. I. MECH, E.,
STRAITS INSURANCE COMPANY, LIMITED,
(in liquidation) Gresham House, Bat tery Road
G. A. Derrick, liquidator
STRAITS MOTOR GARAGE SYNDICATE, THE Automobile Engineers-5A, Orchard Rd (Adjoining Abrams' Horse Repository); Tel. Ad: Abrams; Teleph. 719
H. Abrams, managing director A. Steuart, manager
Tan Cheng Yeok, clerk O. B. Claessen, assistant D. Goldenburg,
do.
STRAITS ORIENTAL Co., Importers-Grind
Hotel de l'Europe Buildings
Sole Partner T. Maclean Manager-J. E. Vierra
STRAITS-SIAM MERCANTILE Co., General Merchants and Commission Agents- Grand Hotel de l'Europe Buildings
Sole Partner-T. Maclean Manager--A. Maclean
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS ASSOCIATION (Singa-
pore Branch)
President F. M. Elliot
Vice-President-Hou. T. S. Baker Hon.Secty, and Treas.-D. Y. Perkins
STRAITS SHIPPING & PARCELS AGENCY, Passenger, Tourist and Carriers' Agents -Cavenagh Bridge Road and Robinson Road
Proprietors-Gotsling & Co.
Agencies
Wells Fargo, London and Branches Pitt & Scott, Ltd., London and America G. W. Wheatley, or Globe Express United States Express American Express New Zealand Express Sutton & Co. Stevely & Co.
Pall Mall Forwarding Co.
Penang Agents-Allen Dennys & Co
STRAITS STEAMSHIP CO., LD.--4, RafflesQuay Directors D.K.Somerville(chairman)
C. McArthur, Tan Jiak Kim, Lee Choon Guan, Yow Nan Pan; Tel. Ad: Kapal
D. K. Somerville, general manager
H. E. Somerville, manager L. Tait, assistant
Lee Keng Kiat, sub-manager P. A. Reutens, secretary A. H. Carlos, book-keeper F. A. Cordeiro, clerk
E. B. Carlos,
F. Sta. Maria,
do.
do.
Ang Hock Siew, head cashier Lee Peck Hoon, shipping clerk, J. H.Sunner, marine superintendent,
and supt. engr.
SINGAPORE
STRAITS TIMES, Daily Newspaper; and STRAITS BUDGET, weekly issue, Stanley Street, Straits Times Press, Limited proprietors
A. W. Still, editor
Thomas Rutherford, manager
E. A. Snewin, sub-editor and reporter A. P. Ager, reporter
J. H. Whitaker, reporter Lim Tek Wee, chief clerk
STRAITS TRADING Co., LD.-17, Collyer
Quay, and at Penang
C. McArthur, managing director W. W. Cook,
do.
Frank Adam, inspector of branches E. F. Mauldon, manager
C. S. Crane, secretary
H. M. Nairn, accountant
H. A. E. Thomson, assistant B. M. Collisen,
H. Ironside,
W. M. Crum.
do.
do.
do.
Pulo Brani, Smelting Works
S. B. Archdeacon, manager
A. V. Kemp
J. McA. Russell
L. O. H. Bruyeres J. H. MacNaughton C. V. Bielby B. M. Peters
G. R. W. Lawson
E. C. Ward
F. L. Okell
M. E. Rudolf
A. P. Neal
K. K. Mactaggart T. H. Dennis D. Brodie H.. Heaney A. Johnson
L. C. Apps W. Locks E. Armis
J. Brown
C. Millar
T. Holland
H. E. Baker
W. H. Noble
W. J. Hancock
SUN LIFE ASSUrance Co. of Canada Head Office-Montreal, Canada London Office-93, Queen Victoria.
Street
Trustees The Earl of Albemarle, Sir Charles Dalrymple, Bart., M. P. Chief Office for South-Eastern Asia, 6A,
Battery Road,
Manager-W. A. White, Singapore Secretary-L. Ashcroft Penang Agent Kennedy & Co.
1329
Sungei Gan TIN MINING CO., LTD., THE -Registered Office: Gresham House, Battery Road
Lirectors -Lee Choon Guan, G. A.
Derrick, S. Katz
Secretaries-Derrick & Co.
SWAN & MACLAREN, Civil Engineers, Architects and Surveyors-2, Battery Rd.; London: Winchester Rd.; Singapore House, Old Broad St.; Singapore and Bangkok Tel. Ad: Framboise; London: Ascendo
A. J. W. Watkins, M.INST.C.E.
R. A. J. Bidwell, F.S.I., chartered
surveyor
V. A. Flower T. Brameld J. G. Graves P. Gazille
SYME & Co., Merchants-Collyer Quay
Ker, Bolton & Co., Glasgow and London A. M. McNeil (Sourabaya)
R. S. Menzies
T. I. Tayler (Samarang) W. Haffenden, signs per pro, H. C. Smith
A. H. Anderson
Branches: Ker, Bolton & Co., Glasgow and London; Pitcairn, Syme & Co., Batavia, Sourabaya and Samarang; Ker & Co., Manila, Iloilo and Cebu Agencies
Lloyd's, London
Salvage Association, London
North of England Protecting & In-
demnity Assurance
Scottish Union and National Insce. Co. Scottish Imperial Insurance Company Orient Insurance Co.
Liverpool Salvage Association The Liverpool Underwriters' Associa-
tion
The United Kingdom Mutual Steam-
ship Association, Ltd. "Dollar" Line Steamers
THE SZE HAI TONG BANKING & INSURANCE Co., L.-37 and 58, Kling St. (Found- ed January 7th, 1907)
Court of Directors-Sim Kiok Choon, Leow Chia Heng, Tan Swee Phiow, Lee Wee Keng, Nah Kim Seng, Teo Hoo Lai, Cheong Quee Siam, Sim Kia Jian, Tan Cheng Juay, Yeow Lee Chiang, Law Guck Seng Managing Director-Tan Teck Joon Sec. and Asst. Manager-Tan Swee Khi
TAN KIM TIAN LINE OF STEAMERS-4 and
5, Raffles Quay, and 8, Telegraph Street Tel. Ad; Tan Kim Tian
42
1330
TANTOCK SENG'S HOSPITAL
SINGAPORE
President--The Colonial Secretary
TAN Y., Dutch Lawyer-1, Flint Street, near Cavanagh Bridge; Tel. Ad: Ytan Singapore
Y. Tan, chief
Quek Kim Guan, assistant
Miss Oyosah, chief clerk and typist Mansoor, clerk
Agencies in all parts of Java, Batavia
Samarang, Sourabaya, Padang, Ma- kassar and Medan (East Coast of Samatra), also Proprietor of the "Japanese Immigration Office"
TANJONG PAGAR DOCK BOARd, The
Head Office-Tanjong Pagar Town do. 10, Collyer Quay Members J.R. Nicholson, M. INST. C.E., M.I.M.E. (chairman), Sir Arthur H. Young, K.C.M.G. (official member), Hon'ble C. McArthur, W. Patchitt. C. W. Darbishire, E. D. Hewan, A. Asums
Asst. General Manager-S. A. Lane,
A.M.I.C.E.
Secretary W. G. Niven
Asst. Secretary-J. S. M. Rennie, a.s.
A.A., F.C.I.S.,
Manager, Wharf Dept.-Wm. King Manager, Docks and Machine Shops.
-G. F. Robson
Office Staff
Chief Accountant-C. H. Follett Secretary's and Accountant's Office
Assistants-D. Noble, W. S. Barrett, J. O. Davis, C. R. Crawford, J. C.
Warrington
Dock Accounts Office
Chief Clerk S. Cockburn Wharf Accounts Office
Chief Clerk-H. Tongue
Town Office, 10, Collyer Quay
Clerk-Chan Twee Siang
Manager's Office
Assistant J. Inglis
Wharf Department
Wharf Supt.-F. H. Brooksbank
Traffic Department
Traffic Superintendent-A. H. Cox Asst. Traffic Supt.-H. MacDermott Chief Warehouseman-G. Bacon Clerks H. Bodestyne, H. A. Pagler Chief Clerk, Transhipment Dept.-W.
G. Reed
Chief Clerk, Tonnage Dept.-A. J.
Plumb
Lighter Foreman-W. Hardwick Coal Department
Chief Coal Clerk-A. Lane Water Service Supt.-M. Cresson
Lighterage Town Office, 10, Collyer Quay
Lighter Supt.-F. W. King
Railway Department
Locomotive Inspector-J. M. Inglis Dockyard and Workshops
Superintendent S'wright--W. Wright Foreman Platers-R.Spence, J. Lunney Chief Draughtsman-K. G. Yule Draughtsman-C. D, MacLachlan Foreman Sawyer-P. G. Fish Engineer's Department
Superintendent F. Niblock, M.I.ME. Assistant-A. Sharp Coppersmith--J. Davidson Blacksmith J. Kennedy Boilermakers-R. Carruthers, D. Baird Draughtsmen-E. Appleton
Chief Electrical Engr.-J. H. Murray Asst. Timekeeper-C. A. Taylor Dock Store
Chief Storekeeper-G. Thompson Keppel Harbour Section
New Workshop Dept.-W. R. Swan,
engineer-in-Charge
Chief Clerk-J. Binnie (on leave) (Acting)--W. S. Barrett Assistant-A. M. Sellar Estates Manager--E. R. Taylor Graving Docks
Supt. Shipwright-J. Graham Chief Draughtsman--W. Kelso Shipwright-R. Wallace
TELEGRAPH Co., LD., EASTERN EXTENSION AUSTRALASIA AND CHINA-Head Office: Electra House, Finsbury Pavement, London, E.C.; Singapore Office: 3, Raffles Quay
A. Y. Gahagan, manager Straits Dis. Siugapore Station
R. T. Wolfe, superintendent T. E. Winfield, clerk-in-charge K. H. Wadmore (ag.) station electri-
cian
A. W. Duncan W. S. Bevan
J. E. Mercer
N. H. Wilson L. J. Wishart W. F. Morgan P. J. Gray C. P. Templeton A. E. Cherry R. A. Cringle S. C. Vickers R. B. Nunneley S. C. Vickers J. W. Keenan J. T. Stavers R. L. Cuscaden A. M. Griffin F. W. Stretton J. F. Wright W. Coombes E. Evans
Staff
A. S. Sullivan R. O'H. Dawes G. W. F. Shannon A. R. Duckworth W E. Gray, W. M. Curties W. R. A. Godfrey T. Hartley M. H. Mergler F. R. Callaghan A. C. Mergler H. C. Westwood J. J. Minjoot R. Rozario S. G. Wilmot Wm. Leighten H. J. Topliss H. Thomas L. H. Penuy R. D. Walton
E. F. Biven
A. W. Walsh E. W. Newell C. E. Shortt
A. W. J. Beake
A. B. Blunn
A. C. Elton
H. S. Naylor T. H. A. Melhuish W. G, C. Blunn L. C. Robinson
R. B. B. Donnell
K. M. Douglas
Counter
SINGAPORE
A. R. Lenthall C. R. Mathews
C. L. Clerk
E. J. Thoy H. E. Middleton W. Hudson J. A. C. Spencer E. K. Coombes P. N. Huffton B. G. Grigor
T. H. Wilton
F. P. Kohlhoff, accountant
C. V. Ryan, counter clerk
P. G. Pereira, do.
C. Hendricks, do.
C. Misson,
do.
S. S. Patrol
F. Bredenberg, commander A. R. Martin, chief oflicer J. H. Roche, 2nd do. B. W. Bokenham, 3rd do. S. J. Mash, 4th do. H. S. Ollerhead, surgeon H. Critier, chief engineer J. Legg, 2nd
do. A. R. Reid, 3rd do. W. Black, 4th
do.
F. Cumberledge, 5th do. S. S. Recorder
W. J. Kemp, commander
W. S. Wade, chier officer T. A. Flett, 2nd
do.
P. J. Thomson, 3rd do.
D. Alexander, chief engineer
A. D'Cotta,
G. Craig, 2nd
do.
F. P. Wheeler, abstract clerk
K. K. Archibald, 3rd
do.
R. D'Cotta, abstract clerk
S. S. Magnet
S. Regumatlı,
do.
A. De Costa,
do.
T. K. Welsh, commander
C. A. Peal chief officer
P. D. Wilmot,
do.
R. G. Lane, 2nd do.
1331
Check Office
S. Sanmugam
E. d'Souza, V. Pereira, J. Conceicao,
asst. clerks
Electrical Department
Cable Depot, Keppel Harbour
J. H. D. Jones, manager and divi-
sional electrician
J. C. H. Darby, electrician
B. M. Woolcombe, do.
H. B. Salmond,
do.
C. A. Leggatt,
do.
G. R. H. Webb, asst. electrician
R. H. Ellis,
do.
J. M. H. Butt,
do.
K. J. Blair, junior electrician
G. Wald,
do.
H. N. Soper,
do.
J. P. Parsons,
do.
do.
E. A. Leggatt,
H. J. C. Large, accountant
W. E. Gibson, engineer
J. Evans, storekeeper
R. W. Reeder, cablehand
W. Bircham, supt. jointer R. E. Rye, jointer
W. Mitchell, do.
H. A. Allen, asst. jointer B. J. Rivers, junior jointer A. Platt,
J. de Souza, clerk
J. E. de Mello, do.
A. Pereira,
do.
A. M. Gomes, do.
G. de Mello,
do.
do.
Workshop, 3 Raffles Quay.
F. J. Benton, superintendent HI. M. Cuft, nechanician J. F. Cole, assistant
A. V. C. Rodrigues, storekeeper
W. Barker, 3rd do.
J. A. Thomson, chief engineer
G. Rode, 2nd
L. Crichton, 3rd
do.
do.
TELEPHONE AND ELECTRIC Co., ORIENTAL LIMITED Offices and Exchange: Teleph. House, Hill Street; Tel. Ad: Oakenpin
TOMLINSON & LERMIT, Civil Engineers, Architects, Surveyors and Valuers-1, Raffles Quay
S. Tomlinson, M.INST.C.E., M.AM.SOC.C.E.
A. W. Lermit, F.S.I.
H. P. Jansen, typist
E. Kiam,
do.
Chan Al Lim, draughtsman
Usman bin Amat, Ah Leong, tracers Agency
Northern Assurance, Co., Ld.
TOZER, EDGAR MADER, Solicitor, Adocate and Solicitor S.S. and F.M.S., of the Supreme Court of Hongkong-9, Raffles Place, Singaporo
TRAVERS, JOSEPH & SONS-LD., Registered Office: 119, Cannon Street, London; and at 44, Stanley Street, Liverpool; 7, D'Almeida Street; Tel. Ad: Traverser; Telph. 345
J. Innes Rogers, chairman and manag-
ing director, London
H. Adamson, joint manager
A. G. Busli, do. do.
B. L. Williams, assistant
C. E. Cutting, manager electrical dept Agencies
Reliance Marine Insce Co. Ld., L'pool
42*
1332
Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld. Bernese Alps Milk Company General Electric Co., London Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago Cope Bros., Ltd., Liverpool
SINGAPORE
R. Haworth & Co., Lɗ,, Manchester
UNDERWOOD & UNDERWOOD, Stereoscopic Photographs-51, Hill Street; Tel. Ad:
Views
Manager Eastern Dept.-E. H. Foot
UNION INSURANCE SOCIETY OF CANTON, LIMITED-6, Collyer Quay; Tel. Ad: Union; Teleph. 266
Wm. Macbean, agent
E. R. Thomas, assistant Lee Chim Bock, cashier
Agency
"London and Provincial M. & G. Ins. Co.,
London
UNION TRADING Co., THE, Import and Ex-
port Merchants-6, Raffles Quay
Khoo Wepuan, manager K. Wee Moi, assistant K. Ewe Kheng, clerk C. Beng Line
Agencies
J. W. & T. Connolly, Ld., London Whalley's Sanitary Fluid Co., London W. J. Bush Co., Ld., London
UNITED ASBESTOS ORIENTAL AGENCY, LTD., THE, Hongkong, China, Japan, S. S. and F. M. States, Sole Agents for The United Asbestos Company, Limited, London, Paterson, Simons & Co., Ltd., Agents,
S. S. & F. M. S.
Superintendent-James Le Mesurier Asst. Supt.-J. H. ter Veen Assistant W. A. Harding Clerk-Khoo Peng Boon Storekeeper-Peh Wah Kok
Agencies
The United Flexible Metallic Tubing
Company, Limited, London
James H. Tozer & Son, "Cauricedale"
Antifriction Plastic Metal
"Bromell" Patent Fire and Water Tube Scrapers and Valve Re-Seating Machines
Patent Asbestos Furnace Arches and
Stay-Nut Protectors
"Manganesite " Jointing Compound The Asbestos Fireproof Paint Co., Ltd. Alexander Fergusson & Co., Ltd., Colour, Paint and Varnish Manufac turers
VADE AND Co., Merchants-8, D'Almeida
Street
Agencies
World Marine Insurance Co., Ld. General Accident, Fire and Life Assur-
ance Corporation Ld.
VAN ANDEL & SNABILIE, Dutch Solicitors -12 A Raffles Quay; Tel. Ad: Vansnab Singapore
Partner-Dr. J. C. F. van Andel, L.L.D; Dutch Lawyer (Lyden. Holland)
Partner-C. Y. W. Snabilié, Dutch
Solicitor
VAN RIJN, A.P., M.D., Physician-Surgeon- 2, Battery Road; Res: Cairnhill Road
VAN SOMEREN, R. G., Advocate and Solicitor-33 (upper floor), Raffles Place R. G. van Someren, "advocate and
solicitor
Muncherjee Pallanjee, chief clerk Abdul Gafoor, chief Tamil clerk Seow Kye Soon, chief Chinese clerk,
and other clerks
VICTORIA CONFECTIONERY, THE, Fancy Confectioners, Wedding Cake Makers, and Caterers for Picnic Parties, &c.-387, Victoria Street
C. A. da Silva, proprietor
VIZCONDE, J., Coal and Timber Merchant- Hotel de l'Europe Building, High Street
VOLUNTEER ARTILLERY-See Military
VOLUNTEER RIFLES See under Military
WASSIAMULL ASSOMULL & Co., Indian Store, Wholesale and Retail-56-57, High Street and 42, Arab Street
N. Choithram, partner and manager
(Bombay)
Rewachand Kehubehand, act. mang".
WATKINS, W. L., Exchange and Share Broker and Accountant-Winchester House; Tel. Ad: Waltherie; Teleph. 287
WAVERLEY HOTEL-59, Hill Street
WEBSTER, WILLIAM, M.I.MECH.E., Con- sulting Mechanical and Electrical Engineer, Contractor and Importer of Machinery, Commission Agent-9, Cecil Street, Singapore
WEILL & ZERNER, Diamond Merchants and Watch Dealers-2, St. Andrews Rd
Charles Weill (Paris)
SINGAPORE
1333
M. Zerner (Singapore)
A. Montor (Europe)
H. Reder
M. Goldenburg
A. E. Petterson, clerk
WEST, A. AND
AND PARTNERS, Engineers, Stationers-3, Battery Road
Sole Agent
H. C. Paxon, A.M.I.C.E,
WESTMINSTER CONSTRUCTION Co., LTD., THE, Public Works Contractors-Town Office: Cavangah Bridge Buildings; Kal- ang Reservoir Works: Thomson Road Woodleigh Filter Bed Works: Serangoon Road; Singapore Bridge Works: Sing- apore River
M. B. Friedberger, manager
C. B. McRitchie, assistant engineer H. H. Ellis, cashier
WHITEAWAY, LAIDLAW & Co., LD., Tailors, Milliners, Drapersand Outfitters Stam- ford Road and Hill Street; Tel. Ad: Warfield, Singapore; Teleph. 860
manager E. V. Mitchelmore, asst. do.
F. MacDougall,
W. M. Collins, assistant
H. L. Durham,
do.
R. Carruthers,
do.
R. C. Skingle
do.
Miss Dickson,
do.
WILLIAMS, DRAPER
AND
STEADMAN, Architects, Civil Engineers, Surveyors, Estate Agents and Valuers--Gresham House, Singapore and Chye Phin Build❜gs. Ipoh, Perak
C. R. Williams W. B. Y. Draper V. Steadman Tay Ah Choon Seet Ban Jee
WILSON & Co., Photographers--17, Ar-
menian Street
WOLSKEL & Co., H., Mers.- 1, Raffles Place
H. Wolskel, manager
Jos. Wilson, signs per pro. Seet Tiang Seng, clerk
YAMATO & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents, Dealers in Japanese Goods, Contractors to the Japanese Navy and the Nippon Yusen Kaisha (Japan Mail Steamship Company)-41, High Street S. Nagano, proprietor and manager
K. Kawabuchi, assistant
M. Nakamura, H. Machida,
T. Hayeno,
Sole Agents for
do.
do.
do.
Tokyo Seikosha (Clock and Watch
Factory, Tokyo, Japan)
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF SINGAPORE, THE-Stamford Road (Es- tablished 1903)
Patrons Sir John Anderson, G.C.M.G. Rev. W. F. Oldham, D.D., Bishop,
Methodist Episcopal Church
Hon. Vice-Presidents-E. C. Hill, S. Tomlinson, M.INST.C.E., Rev. H. C. Izard, M.A., H. L. Coghlan, F. J. Benjafield
General Sec.-Robt. D. Pringle Directors: J. Polglase (acting- president), A. W. Bean, S. Tomlinson, E. V. Mitchelmore (hon. treasurer), J. H. Whitaker, W. H. Shelford, Rev. W. Murray, Percy Gold, T. C. Hay, Rev. W. T. Cherry, James Aitken
1334
SINGAPORE
CLASSIFIED LIST OF TRADES AND PROFESSIONS
(For addresses see preceding pages.)
ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS
Barker & Co., F. W.
Derrick & Co.
Evatt & Co.
Gentle, Alex.
Gunn & Co.,
Watkins, W. L.
ADVERTISING CONTRACTORS
Oriental Company, Ld.
AERATED WATER MANUFACTURERS
Framroz & Co.
Fraser & Neave, Ld.
Singapore Ærated Water Factory
ARCHITECTS
Almeida & Co.
Craik, D. McLeod Fernandez & Co., G.A.
Mauleffinch, & Co., K. H.
Tomlinson & Lermit
Williams, Draper & Steadman
ASBESTOS AGENCIES
Bell's Asbestos Eastern Agency, Ld.
United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld. ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES Association of Engineers
Board of Examiners for Masters and
Mates' Certificates
Boustead Institute for Seamen
British and Foreign Bible Society
British Medical Association (Malaya
Branch)
Chamber of Commerce
Chart Depôt
Chinese Advisory Board
Evangelical Alliance
Pilot Board
Raffles Museum and Library
Royal Asiatic Society (Straits Branch) Singapore Bar Committee Singapore Rifle Association Society of St. Vincent de Paul Straits Pharmaceutical Association Straits Philosophical Society Straits Settlements Association Young Men's Christian Association AUCTIONEERS
Coghlan & Co., H. L.
Fernandez & Co., G. A.
Crane Brothers
Powell & Co.
BANKS
Banque de l'Indo-Chine
Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China Deutsch Asiatische Bank
Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorpn,
BANKS Continued
International Banking Corporation. Mercantile Bank of India
Nederlandsch Indische Handelsbank Netherlands Trading Society Russo-Chinese Bank
Savings Bank
Sze Hai Tong Banking & Ins. Co., Ld. BOOKSELLERS
Kelly & Walsh, Ld. BRICKWORKS, de.
Alexandra Brickworks Co., Ld. Grove Estate Brick Works Green Island Cement Co., Ld. BROKERS (Exchange and Share)
Adis & Ezekiel Crane Co.
Dunman & Co. Fraser & Co.
Lyall & Evatt
Nathan, Edward M.
Reuben, N.
Saunders & Co.
Schomburgk, C.
Somerville & Co., F. G.
Watkins, W. L.
BROKERS (Opium, &c.)
Joseph, Ezra S
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
Westminster Construction Co., Ld. CINEMATOGRAPHS
Cinematograph Pathé
CHAIR-CANE MANUFACTURERS Bremer Stuhlrohr-Fabrik
CHEMISTS & DRUGGISTS British Dispensary Crown Dispensary Dispensary Ld., The Maynard & Co., Ltd. Medical Hall Pharmacy, The
Singapore Dispensary, Ld. Singapore Pharmacy St. Mary's Dispensary
CHURCHES
Armenian Church of St. Gregory "Bethesda " Free Meeting House Cathedral Church of the Good Shepherd
Chinese Christian Assn. Chapel
Chinese Gospel House
Christian Institute
Christ Church
Church of St. Joseph"
Jewish Synagogue Maghain Aboth Methodist Episcopal Church
CHURCHES- Continued
Our Lady of Lourdes Church Presbyterian Church Sacred Heart Church St. Andrew's Cathedral
St. Peter & St. Paul's Church
CLUBS
Singapore Catholic Club Singapore Club Masonic Club Tanglin Club
Teutonia Club
COACHBUILDERS
Abrams, H.
Lambert, W.
SINGAPORE
CONFECTIONERS
Victoria Confectionery
CONSULATES
Austria-Hungary Belgium
China Denmark France
Germany
Italy
Japan
Netherlands
Norway
Portugal
Russia
1335
COLD STORAGE COMPANY
Singapore Cold Storage & Co.
COMMISSION AGENTS
Abdultayeb Esmailjee
Ann Lock & Co.
Barker & Kengchnen Barlow & Co. Belilios, I. R.
Bray, Howard, W.
Busrai, A. & E. Carapiet & Co.
Check, M. A.
Clouett & Co., A. Ellison, I.
Essabhoy, A. M. Franzen Co.
Fraser & Chalmers, Ld. Gaggino & Co., G. Gareh & Co., M. A. Gentle, Alex.
Gosling & Co., T. L. Hansen & Co. Hartwig & Co. Hooglandt & Co. Hoon Keat & Co. Jaeger & Co. Judah & Co., S. J. Katz Brothers, Ld. Maxwell, T. Menke & Co., Win. Meyer Bros
Meyer & Co., E.
Meyer & Co., M. A.
Michael, Geo. Nathan, Edward, M.
Noordin & Co., M. M. Pons & Carlo Rajbhoy & Co. Reuben, N.
Ribeiro & Co., Ld., C.A. Rigold, Bergmann & Co. Said Marican & Co. Schaefer & Co., H.
Stcherbatchoff Tchokoff & Co. Straits Industrial Syndicate Straits-Siam Mercantile Co. Yamato & Co.
Siam Spain
United States of America
CYCLE DEALERS
Straits Cycle & Motor Co., Ld.
DENTISTS
Fones Brothers
Noble, Dr. Joseph W.
DIAMOND MERCHANTS
Ismail & Raheem
Weill & Zerner
DOCK OWNERS
Tanjong Pagar Dock Board
DOCTORS
Black, Norman Fowlie, P.
Galloway, More & Leitch
Lim Boon Keng
Robertson, T. M. Serle, G. B. Souza, F. O. de Van Rijn, A. P.
DRAPERS, &C.
Little & Co., Ltd., John Robinson & Co.
Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Ld.
ENGINEERING ESTABLISHMENTS
Central Engine Works Howarth, Erskine, Ld. Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Ld. Singapore Foundry, Ld.
Singapore Slipway & EngineeringCo.,Ld.
Tanjong Pagar Dock Board
ENGINEERS (Civil)
Almeida & Co.
Mauleffinch, & Co., K. H.
Swan & Maclaren
Tomlinson & Lermit
Williams, Draper & Steadman
ENGINEERS (Consulting)
Domon, O. F.
Dunn, R. W.
Mackie, D. D.
Webster, Wm.
1336
ENGINEERS (Electrical)
Straits Cycle & Motor Co., Ld.
SINGAPORE
Oriental Telephone & Electric Co., Ld.
ESTATE AGENTS
Almeida & Co.
Coghlan & Co., H. L.
Crane, Co.
Mathiew, W. E.
& Co., K. H.
Mauleffinch,
Powell & Co.
Williams, Draper & Steadman
FLORISTS
Art Needlework Depôt Pereira, J. d'A.
Ravensway, J. C. V.
FURNITURE MAKERS Frankel & Co., A.
GOLD MINING COMPANIES
Bersawah Gold Mining Co., Ld. Raub Australian G. M. Co., Ld. South Raub G. M. Syndicate, Ld. HAIRDRESSERS
Royal Hairdressing Saloon HARBOUR AND DOCK CONTRACTORS
Sir John Jackson, Ld.
HOTELS
Adelphi Hotel
Grand Hotel de l' Europe
Hotel de la Paix
Hotel van Wijk Co.,
Raffles Hotel
Recreation Hotel
Waverley Hotel
HOSPITAL
Ld.
Tan Tock Seng's Hospital
HOUSE AND LAND PROPRIETORS
Alkoff & Co.
"Chin Hin
*
Chop Wan Sen Chuan Kee
ICE FACTORIES
New Singapore Distilled Water Ice
Factory, Ltd.
Straits Ice Co., Ld.
INDIAN GOODS DEALERS
Wassiamull, Assomull & Co.
INQUIRY AGENTS
Confidential Inquiry Agency
JEWELLERS
Motion & Co., James
LAWYERS
Weill & Zerner
Aitken & Ong Siang
Allen & Gledhill
Braddell Brothers
Evans ahd Kitovitz
Donaldson & Burkinshaw
Drew & Napier
Koek, E. R.
LAWYERS Continued
Parsons & Rhodes Rodyk & Davidson Sisson & Delay Tan, Y.
Tozer, E. M.
Van Andel & Snabilie
Van Someren, R. G. LIVERY STABLES Abrams, H.
Clarke & Co., F.
Dallan's Australian Horse Repository
MERCHANT MILLERS Sperry Flour Co.
MOTOR GARAGE Co.
Straits Motor Garage Syndicate MEDICINE MANUFACTURES
Dr. Williams Medicine Co., The MERCHANTS (General)
Abdultayeb Esmailjee Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld. Barlow & Co.
Behr & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld.
Belilios, 1. R.
Borneo Co., Ld.
Boustead & Co. Brandt & Co., D. Brinkmann & Co. Bruang, Ld.
Clouett & Co., A. Dalmann & Co. Diethelm & Co., Ld. Dupire Brothers
East Asiatic Co., Ld. Essabhoy, A. M. Franzon & Co.
Fraser & Chalmers, Ld.
Gadelius & Co.
Gaggino & Co., G.
Guthrie & Co., Ld.
Handelsvereeniging "Holland"
Hooglundt & Co
Huttenbach Bros & Co.
Internationale Crediet-en-Handels. Ver.
Jaeger & Co.
Katz Brothers, Ld.
Kumpers & Co.
McAlister & Co., Ld. Manasseh & Co., S. Martin & Co., M. S. Menke & Co., Wm. Meyer Bros.
Meyer & Co., E.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, Ld.
Moine-Comte & Co.
Noordin & Co., M. M.
Oosman, J. M.
Paterson, Simons & Co., Ld.
Pertile & Co.
Rautenberg, Schmidt & Co. Rigold, Bergmann & Co.
SINGAPORE
1337
MERCHANTS (General) -Continued
Sandilands, Buttery & Co. Sarkies & Moses
Schaefer & Co., H.
Schweiger Import & Export Co., Ld,
Sharpe, Ross & Co., Ld.
Sieverts & Co., Rud.
Stcherbatchoff, Tehokoff & Co.
Stephens, Paul & Co.
Straits Industrial Syndicate
Straits-Siam Mercantile Co. Straits Oriental Co.
Straits Trading Co. Syme &Co.
Travers, Joseph & Sons, Ld.
Union Trading Co.
Vade & Co.
Wolskel & Co.
Yamato & Co.
MONUMENT MASONS Ravensway & Co.
MUSIC (Professor's) Hansen, J. A.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT DEALERS
Coelho H.
Garcia, W. J.
Robinson Piano Co., Ld.
NEWSPAPERS
Singapore Free Press
Straits Times
OIL MERCHANTS
Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co. Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld.
Royal Netherlands Petroleum Co. Singapore Oil Mills, Ld. Standard Oil Co.
OPTICIANS
Dispensary L., The
Maynard & Co., Ld.
Motion & Co., James
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Lambert & Co., Ld., G. R. Moses & Co.
Standard Photographic Studio Underwood & Underwood Wilson & Co.
PHOTOGRAPHIC GOODS DEALERS
Michael, Geo.
PILOTS
(See Pilot Board, page 1236)
PLANTING COMPANIES
Chin Giap Pine Apple Planting & P. Co.
Errol Estate
Kanaboi, Limited
Kemaman, Ld.
Linggi Plantations, Ld.
Pagam, Limited
Straits and General Development Co.
PRINTERS
Colonial Press Commercial Press Fraser & Neave, Ld.
Kelly & Walsh, Ld.
Methodist Publishing House Ribeiro & Co., Ld., C. A. Saidiah Press
QUARREYMEN
Foster & Co.
RAILWAY CO.
Singapore and Kranji Railway
RECREATION CLUBS
Chess Club
Ladies' Lawn Tennis Club
Sepoy Lines Golf Club
Singapore Cricket Club
Singapore Garrison Golf Club
Singapore Golf Club
Singapore Recreation Club
Singapore Rowing Club
Singapore Sporting Club
Straits' Chinese Recreation Club
Straits Racing Association Swimming Club
ROPE MANUFACTURERS
Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Ld.
RUBBER ESTATES
Adda Rubber Estates, Ld.
Balgownie Rubber Estates, Ld.
Batang Benar Rubber Co., Ld.
Changkat Salak Rubber and Tin Co., Ld. Cluny Rubber Estates, Ll. Glenealy Plantations, Ld. Jementah Rubber Co., Ld. Khota Bahru Syndicate, Ld. Kombok Rubber Co., Ld. Kwala Mersing, Ld.
Labu (F.M.S.) Rubber Co., Ld. Lanadron Rubber Estates, Ld.
Ledbury Rubber Estates, Ld.
Malacca Rubber Plantations, Ld.
Mount Austin Rubber Estates, Ld. Pandan Mining Co., Ld.
Pegoh, Ld.
Port Dickson Rubber Estates Co., Ld.
Regalta Rubber Co., Ld.
Sandycroft Rubber Co., Ld.
Senawang Rubber Estates Co., Ld.
Singapore & Johore Rubber Co., Ld.
Sione Rubber Co., Ld.
Sua Manggis Rubber Co., Ld. Sungei Gan Tin Mining Co., Ld. Teluk Anson Rubber Estates, Ld.
RUBBER MANUFACTURERS
Netherlands Guttapercha Co., Ld.
SCHOOLS
Anglo-Tamil School
Chinese Girls' School (C.E.Z.M.S.) Church of England, Boarding House for
School Boys
1338
SCHOOLS-Continued
SINGAPORE
Convent of the Holy Infant Jesus Cross Street Preparatory School International Correspondence Schools Outram Road School Raffles Girls' School
Raffles Institution Schools Reformatory School
St. Anthony's Boys' School (Port Mission) St. Anthony's Girls' School St. Joseph's Institution Victoria Bridge School
SHIPCHANDLERS
Gaggino & Co. Hartwig & Co.
Said Marican & Co.
SHIP BROKERS
Ships Agency, Ld.
SILK STORE
Wassiamull, Assomull & Co.
STEAMSHIP OFFICES
Behn, Meyer & Co.
East Asiatic Co. Ld.
Mansfield & Co., Ld., W.
McAlister & Co., Ld. Messageries Maritimes Paterson, Simons & Co., Ld. Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co. Stcherbatchoff, Tchokoff & Co.
Straits Steamship Co., Ld. Tan Kim Tian Line
STOREKEEPERS
Ann Lock & Co.
Bolter, M.
Gaggino & Co.
Hoon Keat & Co. Katz Brothers, Ld.
STOREKEEPERS-Continued Little & Co., Ld., John
SURVEYORS (Ship)
Couper, A.
Fittock, Chas,
Reek, D. J.
TAILORS & OUTFITTERS
Campbell & Co., J. L. Little & Co., Ld., John Robinson & Co.
Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Ld. TELEGRAPII COMPANIES
Eastern Extension, Australasia & China Reuter's Telegram Co., Ld.
TELEPHONE COMPANY
Oriental Telephone and Electric Co. Silk Store
Wassiamull, Assomull & Co.
TILE WORKS
Ornamental Tile Works TIMBER MERCHANTS
Fraser & Cumming
Leung Fong Cheong & Co. M. S. Martin & Co. Vizconde, J.
TIN MINING COMPANIES
Belat Tin Mining Co., Ltd. Kuantan Tin Mining Co., Ltd. Malacca Tin Dredging Co., Ltd. Royal Johore Tin Mining Co., Ltd. Salak South, Ld.
Sinkep Tin Maatschappij
Sipiau Tin Co., Ltd.
TOBACCO MERCHANTS
British-American Tobacco Co., Ld. TOURIST AGENCY
Straits Shipping and Parcels Agency TRAMWAY Co.
Singapore Electric Tramways, Ld. VETERINARY SURGEONS
Abrams, H.
WATCHMAKARS
Motion & Co., James
Weill & Zerner
WATER SUPPLIERS
Hammer & Co.
WINE MERCHANTS
Caldbeck, MacGregor & Co. Gosling & Co., T. L. Little & Co., Ld., John
SINGAPORE
INSURANCE OFFICES
1339
OFFICES
Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance Company Aachen-Leipziger Versicherungs Actien Gesellschaft Agrippina of Cologne....... Albingia Assurance Co., Ld......
Allgemeine Transport Versicherungs Ges., Vienna... Alliance Assurance Company, Ld....
Allianz Marine Insurance Company, Berlin, Munich Amsterdam Life Insurance Company Assicurazioni Generali of Trieste
Atlas Assurance Co., Ld. (Fire)
Atlas Assurance Company Limited....
Badische Schiffahrts Assecuranz Gesellschaft
Baloise Fire Insurance Company.
Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Company Bayerischer Lloyd, Munich..
Boards of Underwriters, New York, Baltimore,
Boston, and Philadelphia
Boston Insurance Company
+
British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company Canton Insurance Office, Limited
Central Insurance Company, Limited.
China Fire Insurance Company, Limited
China Mutual Life Insurance Company Limited China Traders' Insurance Company..
AGENTS
Katz Bros., La.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Paterson, Simons & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld, Hooglandt & Co. D. Brandt & Co. Borneo Co., Ld. Kumpers & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Katz Brothers, Ld. Hooglandt & Co.
Behr, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld.
Boustead & Co.
Huttenbach Bros. & Co. Boustead & Co.
Sharpe, Ross & Co., Ld. Adamson, Gilfillan, & Co. J. R. L. Calder, res. secretary Boustead & Co.
Commercial Union Assurance Company (Marine) w. A. Siuns, branch manager
Department) London
Consolidated Marine Cos, of Berlin and Dresden Consolidated Marine Cos. of Berlin and Dresden Continental Insurance Co.
Continental Insurance Company, Mannheim Deutsche Transport Versicherungs Gesellschaft Deutscher Lloyd Transport Versicherungs Ges....... Düsseldorfer Allgemeine Vers. Actien Gesellschaft... Eastern Insurance Company, Limited
Equitable Life Assurance Soc. of United States, Am. Esperanza Insurance Co., Ld., Barcelona Fatum Accident Insurance Co., Barcelona Federal Life Assurance Company of Canada Fire Insurance Association.
Foncière (Paris Marine Insurance Company) Foncière Pester Versicherungs Gesellschaft Fortuna, Allegemeine Versicherungs Actien Ges. Frankfort Marine Insurance Company
General Accident, Fire and Life Assce. Corp., Ld. General Marine Insurance Company, Dresden.. Germanischer Lloyd, Berlin...... Guardian Assurance Company, Limited. Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co., Hamburg. Hamburg Board of Underwriters.. Hanseatischer Lloyd, Hamburg
Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Limited Hull Underwriters' Association, Ld.... Imperial Insurance Company, Limited Imperial Marine Transports Fire Ins. Co. Indemnity Mutual Mar. Assce. Co., Ld. International Lloyd, Berlin
Behr & Co. Kumpers & Co. Katz Brothers, Ld. Dalmann & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co. Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Boustead & Co. Borneo Co., Ld. Hooglandt & Co. Hooglandt & Co. Borneo Co., Ld. Derrick & Co. Moine-Comte & Co. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld, Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Vade & Co. Behr & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Paterson, Simons & Co., Ld. Katz Bros., Ld.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Guthrie & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Barlow & Co. Guthrie & Co., Ld. Sharpe, Ross & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld.
K. K. Priv. Oesterreich Versicherungs Ges., Donau... Behin, Meyer & Co., Ld.
1340
SINGAPORE-MALACCA
OFFICES
Lancashire Fire Insurance Company..
Law Union and Crown Insurance Company
Liverpool, London & Globe Ince. Co., Liverpool. Liverpool Salvage Association
Liverpool Underwriters' Association Lloyd's, London.......
London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company London and Provincial Marine and General Insce. Co. London Assurance Corporation...
London Guarantee and Accident Company, Ld. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Company, Hamburg. Mannheim Insurance Company. Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Marine Insurance Association
Marine Insurance Co., Ld...
Marine and General Mutual Life Assce. Society Maritime Insurance Company, Ld. Meiji Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Merchants' Marine Insurance Company, Ld.. Münchener Rückversicherungs Gesellschaft Mutuelle de France et des Colonies
National Board of Marine Underwriters, New York Netherlands India Sea and Fire Insurance Company Neuchateloise, at Neuchatel
Neuer Schweizerischer Lloyd..
New Zealand Insurance Company (Fire and Marine) Nieder Rheinsche Gueter Assecuranz Ges. in Wesel.. Niederland Allgemeine Versicherungs Ges., Tiel..... N'lands Fire Ins. Co. (est. 1845), The Hague, N'lands Norddeutsche Versicherungs Ges., Hamburg Nordwest Deutsche Vers. Ges. H'burg..
North British and Mercantile Insurance Company.. North China Insurance Company
North of England Protecting and Indemnity Assce. North German Insurance Company, Hamburg North German Insurance Co.
Northern Assurance Company (Fire and Life). Norwich Union Assurance Co., Ld., (Fire).
Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation, Ld...... Orient Insurance Company
Palatine Fire and Accident Insurance Company Palatine Insurance Company,
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
London..
Pomerania Transp. Versicherungs Ges., Stettin Prussian National Insurance Company of Stettin
Queen's Insurance Company, Limited..
Queensland Insurance Company
Reliance Marine Insurance Co., Ld., Liverpool.
Rhenania Versicherungs Actien Ges., Cologne Rhenish Marine Insurance Association
Royal Exchange Assurance, London
Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool (Fire and Life)
Salamander Fire Insurance Co. of Amsterdam......
Salvage Association, Liverpool
Salvage Association, London
Sumarang Sea and Fire Insurance Company
Scottish Amicable Life Insurance Company
Scottish Imperial Insurance Company
Scottish Union and National Insurance Company Shanghai Life Insurance Company, Limited Singapore Marine Insurance Agents' Association..... South British Fire and Marine Ince, of New Zealand
Powell & Co.
AGENTS
Jaeger & Co. Brinkmann & Co, Syme & Co. Syme & Co. Syme & Co. Boustead & Co.
Union Ins. Society of Canton, Ld. Guthrie & Co., Ld.
Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Katz Bros., Ld.
Guthrie & Co., Ld.
Derrick & Co.
P. & O. Co.
P. & O. Co.
North China Insurance Co., Ld.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, Ld. Boustead & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Dupire Bros.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Hooglandt & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Belin, Meyer & Co., Ld. Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Hooglandt & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. A. H. Turner, acting agent Syme & Co.
D. Brandt & Co. Katz Brothers, Ld. Sandilands, Buttery & Co. Borneo Co., Lal.
F. W. Barker & Co. Syme & Co.
Huttenbach Bros. & Co. Pertile & Co.
Guthrie & Co., Ld.
Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Katz Brothers, Ld.
Hooglandt & Co. McAlister & Co., Ld.
Travers, Joseph & Sons, Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld." Dupire Bros.
Behin, Meyer & Co., Ld. Boustead & Co. Dupire Bros.
Syme & Co.
Syme & Co.
Hooglandt & Co.
Paterson, Simons & Co., Ld. Syme & Co.
Syme & Co.
The Ned. Ind. Commercial Bank G. A. Derrick, secretary Meyer Bros.
OFFICES
SINGAPORE
South British Insurance Company, Limited State Fire Insurance Company
Sun Insurance Office, London
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada
Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance Co., Ld., L'don Tokyo Marine Insurance Company, Limited. Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co., Ld., of Berlin... Triton Insurance Company, Limited Union Assurance Society (Fire and Life) Union Insurance Society of Canton.............. Union International Company, Assur., Antwerp Union Marine Insurance Company, Limited.. Union Marine Insurance Company, Limited.. Union Marine Assurance Company, Limited.. Union of Paris (Fire Insurance Company)..... United Dutch Marine Insurance Co. Universo Insurance Company, Milan Western Assurance Co.
World Marine Insurance Company, Limited Yangtsze Insurance Association, Limited Yorkshire Insurance Co.
Yorkshire Insurance Co., Limited....
AGENTS
L. Engel, chairman Behr & Co.
Brinkmann & Co. W. A. White, manager Brinkmann & Co.
Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, Ld. Kumpers & Co. Guthrie & Co. Ld. Sarkies & Moses Wm. Macbean, agent Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld. Barlow & Co.
Sarkies & Moses
Boustead & Co.
Moine-Comte & Co.
Paterson, Simons & Co., Ld. Pertile & Co.
Guthrie & Co., Ld.
Vade & Co.
Adamson, Gilfillan & Co.
Sandilands Buttery & Co.
Travers & Sons, Ld., Joseph
1341
MALACCA
The settlement of Malacca excites more interest from a historical point of view than either of its sister towns, but has so completely fallen to the rear commercially since the establishment of Penang and Singapore as to merit but brief notice in this compilation. It is now seldom visited by foreigners except for purposes of relaxation. Originally settled by the Portuguese in 1511, it retained its importance as the one foreign entrepôt in the East until the founding of Penang, when its fortunes as a port rapidly declined. The settlement, however, has made considerable progress in agriculture since the formation of new roads. At the present moment it is the least European of all British Settlements in the East, though the fact that it has given its name to the Peninsula and that it was the cradle of Anglo-Chinese study attest its former importance. Its area is embraced by boundaries some 42 miles in length, with a breadth of from 8 to 25 miles. It is governed by a Resident Councillor in subordination to Singapore.
The geological formation of the territory of Malacca consists chiefly of granite rocks, overlaid in several places by the red cellular clay iron-stone called by geologists laterite. Many of the low plains are alluvial, the soil composed of decayed vegetable mould interlaced with sand. The metallic ores are iron, gold, and tin. The surface generally is undulating, consisting of low round ridges and narrow valleys, the only mountain of considerable elevation being the Ledang of the Malays, and the Ophir of the Portuguese, 4,400 feet above the level of the sea, or less than one-half the height of the principal mountains of the volcanic islands of Java-Bali and Lomboc-or those of the partially volcanic neighbouring island of Sumatra.
The mineral products of Malacca were at one time looked upon as offering valuable prospects. Gold to the extent of 1,500 ounces yearly was obtained in 1857-8, but the yield decreased to such an extent that it is no longer worked. Tin, about the same period, assumed considerable importance. The first mines were opened in 1793, but no great enterprise was displayed until 1848, when some 5,000 cwt. was the annual product. This increased until 1858, and a large number of Chinese were employed in the industry. The superior yield of the Native States, however, combined with the exhaustion of the surface washings, resulted in mining enterprise in Malacca being virtually abandoned, although both gold and tin probably still exist in workable quantities.
The climate of Malacca as to temperature is such as might be expected in a country not much more than 100 miles from the equator, lying along the sea shore-hot and moist. The thermometer in the shade ranges from 72 to 80° Fahrenheit, seldom being so low as the first of these, and not often higher than the last. The range of the barometer is only from 29.8 to 30.3 inches. Notwithstanding constant heat, much moisture, and many swamps, the town at least is remarkable for its salubrity, and, with the exception of the early period of its occupation by the Portuguese, has always enjoyed this reputation.
Malacca offers numerous attractions to the ornithologist and entomologist, but it is less rich in mammals than many other tropical districts. Nine species of quadrumana, the tiger, black leopard, wild cat, several species of viverra (such as the musang and binturong), the elephant, one-horned rhinoceros, tapir, six species of deer, and two of the wild ox comprise a nearly complete list. Fair sport can be obtained by those fond of shooting, from tiger to quail. It is noteworthy that the existence of the tapir was unknown until 1816, although European intercourse dates back to some three centuries before. Tigers in the early days of Portuguese occupation were so plentiful that the want of inhabitants was seriously attributed to this cause. As with the birds and insects, so with the reptiles. The snakes, lizards, and crocodiles are, as a rule, those of the peninsula generally, the birds alone presenting a rather larger variety than those of other districts. Nor does the vegetation present any exclusive features, being that of the surrounding states. The coast line is poor in shells, and the absence of limestone accounts for the few species of land shells found within the district.
Beyond its interest to the sportsman or naturalist, Malacca possesses no attrac- tions except to those who like to visit scenes famous in the annals of discovery for the bloody fights they have witnessed between the natives and the European nations who contended for their possession. Its population in 1901 amounted to 945,870.
The trade is almost entirely with Singapore and the Federated Malay States. The cultivation of tapioca has hitherto been the principal industry, an area of about 40,000 acres being under tapioca cultivation, but Rubber is now extensively planted and several large Companies have been floated to buy up small estates. The con- struction of a railway has had considerable influence on the cultivation of tapioca, inasmuch as the demand for pigs (which are largely fed on tapioca refuse) has risen owing to the increased facilities for sending them to the Federated Malay States.
MALACCA
DIRECTORY
1343
(For Govt. Departments See under G.)
BUKIT LINTANG RUBBER ESTATES, LTD.
W. M. Sime, manager
CHURCH OF THE "ASSUMPTION OF THE
VIRGIN MARY"-Banda Praya
Acting President--Rev. A. M. Coroado Treasurer-Rev. J. F. da Silva Secretary-Rev. F. W. Dias
Church of "SACRED HEART"-Tranquerah President-Rev. A. M. Coroado (actg.) Secretary--D. Pereira
Treasurer-Rev. J. F. da Silva
CONVENT OF THE HOLY INFANT JESUS
The Lady Superior Sr. St. Clotilde
CONVENT OF THE SACRED HEART OF JESUS
Banda-Hilir
Superioress-Rev. Mother H.Conceição Sisters H. Rozario, C. McBean, F. Victor, J. Cordein, J. Marçal, A. Rodrigues
FRENCH ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
St. Francis Church
Rev. P. Ruaudel, vicar
Rev. Max de Souza, assistant
St Mary's Church (Ayer Salak)
Rev. H. Duvelle, vicar
GOVERNMENT OFFICES
CORONER'S DEPARTMENT
Coroners Superintendent of Police, Medical Officer, District Officer North, District Officer South and the District Judge
DISTRICT COURT
District Judge-C. V. Dyson Chief Clerk-A. J. Minjoot Malay Interpreter-H. A. Hanen Chinese do. --Goh Peng Lim Tamil
-S. Ganasen
do.
DISTRICT OFFICE, ALOR GAJAI
Acting District Officer-W. M. Mil-
lington
Chief Clerk-E, Sta. Maria
Second Clerk-Yio Seng Watt Third Clerk-Tan Yew Lim Land Bailiff-A. L. Klassan
Chinese Interpreter-Tan YongBeng Malay Writer- Abdulraman biň
Arshad
DISTRICT OFFICE, JASIN
District Officer-C. F. Green Act. District Officer--N. K. Bain Chief Clerk-B. Sta. Maria Second Clerk-A. Athisayam Third do Chiang Tiong Hock Fourth Clerk-N. Thomazios Chinese Interpreter-Tan Choon Hin Land Bailiff A. Miller
Asst. do. M. Hendricks Tracer-Lim Tiow Wan
ECCLESIASTICAL DEPARTMENT
Col. Chaplain-Rev. F. G. Swindell,
M.A. (Oxon),
Churchwarden (Chaplain's) - Hon.
W. Evans
Churchwarden(People's)-W. A. R.
Knight
Vestry Clerk-T. C. Matthews
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Inspector of Schools, Singapore and
Malacca M. Hellier
Head Malay Training College-H.
T. Clark
Chief Clerk-Guan Kah Jin
LAND OFFICE
Collector Land Revenue-H. W.
Firmstone
Acting Collector R. Scott
Deputy Collector Land Revenue-
A. C. Baker
Chief Clerk-J. Beins
2nd Clerk-Lim Kim Seng
3rd do. R. de Rozario
4th do.
5th do. --C. Rodrigues
Extra Clerk--A. Sta. Maria
Malay writer and Shroff-Abdul
bin Haji Abdulmann
Bailiff Janudin bin Haji Abu Land Bailifts-P. A. de Rozario,
R. Hendricks Tracer-Max. Teixeira
LICENSING DEPARTMENT
Chairman-The Sitting Magistrate Members R. Scott, Ong Kim Wee, J. A. Howell, G. Halden, Chan Kom Cheng, Tan Chay Yan Secretary-J. d'Arcy Symonds
MARINE DEPARTMENT
Flarbour Master-Lieut. A. J. Cole-
man, R.N.R.
1344
MALACCA
Acting Harbour Master-J. d'Arcy
Symonds
Boarding Officer--E. de Silva
Chief Clerk-D. Theseira
Second Clerk-A. Rakim bin H.
Bedin
Boat Tindal-Hasan bin Tahir Signal Tindlal-A, S. Pillay Steam Launch Alert
Serang--Osman bin Abdullah Engineer-Ismail bin H. Saleli Light House-Cape Rachado, One
Fathom Bank, and Pulau Undan Light Keepers-S. Adams, W. A. A. Berry, A. W. Kozells, F. de Rozario
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Medical Officer, Registrar of Births and Deaths, Deputy Supt. of Vac- cination, Inspector under the Pet- roleum Ordinance, Coroner, Health Officer-E. G. Weir, M.D., M.R.C.S. Assistant Surgeons-C. T. de Souza,
A. L. Williams
Dressers S. J. Dias, F. Nonis, R. M. Nonis, Max. José, M. Danker, I de Souza, Kass bin Adiman, Voon Tian Lok, C. P. Pillay, Wee Kiat Swee, Buang bin Adiman Steward C. Thomazios Clerks E. Astrock, Tan Quee Seng Deputy Registrar of Deaths-Sit
Peng Lok
POLICE COURT
Magistrate-C. V. Dyson Chief Clerk-Goh Peng Lim Chinese Interpreter-Goh Peng Lim Tamil Interpreter--S. Ganasen Malay do. - Hamid Abdul
Hannen
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Superlt.-J. d'Arcy Symonds Chief Inspector-R. Williams Inspector, first class-F. J. Brace Acting Inspector-R. Little Inspector (2nd class)-R. Purvis Acting Inspector-É. Coulan Chief Clerk-Seow Ban Seng 2nd Clerk-Md. Arslınd
Chinese Inptr.-Cheong Chin Thong
Poou Kah Kan
Do.
Malay Writer- H. Noordin Pobee Training Depot
Inspector-A. S. Wilson Sub-inspector-Abu-Çakar
POST OFFICE
Postmaster-Li Kim Koh
Chief Clerk-L. Kanagasavie Chitty Second do. Lim Tiow Yong
Stamp Vendor-K. Letchemena Sub-Post Office-Jasin
Postmaster J. A. Arokianaden Sub-Post Officer-Alor Gajah Postal Clerk-James Nonis
PUBLIC WORKS AND SURVEY DEPT.
Superintendent of Works and Sur- veys-H. V. Towner, M.S.I.,M.C.E. A. -G. Holden
Acting
do.
Chief Clerk-E, C. Lazaroo Contract Clerk-F. E. N. Minjoot Correspondg. Clerk-J. Paulo Extra Clerk-A. R. Minjoot Storekeeper-F. W. Dias Public Works Branch
Clerk of Works A. G. Westerhout Överseers-M. de Rozario, A. Bruyns,
C. R. Capper
Passed Apprentice Overseer-F. E
Dias
Asst. Draftsman-Ong Boon Swee Tracer M. C. Ratnan Guardian of Stadt House-Mabashim Survey Branchi
Senř.Svy. Oflicer-E. J. de Souza First Clerk-S. Danker Second Clerk- V. E. Dias Chief Draftman and Computer-J.
W. Fernandis
Draftsman and Computer-C. J.
Pereira
Temporary Draftsmen J. Thom- azios, P. V. Ruthnam Pilly, Koh Khang Hoh, Lee Teck Bong and R. Silva
Asst. Surveyor-S. Tambayyah Sub-Surveyor-R. Kandiah Temporary Surveyors A. Chella-
pah, H. G. Pennefather, Alisha- kan, A. Dorasamy Apprentice Surveyors-R. de Silva,
É. V. Rodrigues
Plan Custodian--Teo Chin Watt Tracers.-C. Tamby Pillay, Wee Kim Seng, Eusope bin, Salib Jahn Computer-Lee Ann Whye Apprentice and Tracer--Moht bin
Saat
REGISTRATION OFFICE
Registrar of Births and Deaths-
Dr. E. G. Weir
Deputy Registrar of Deaths-Sit
Peng Lok
Clerk Tan Quee Seng
RESIDENT COUNCILLOR'S OFFICE
R'dt. Councillor-Hon. W. Evans Chief Clerk-A. A. Rodrigues Second Clerk-Soh Chieng Bun Third Clerk-L. de Souza Fourth Clerk-F. M. Beins Malay Writer-Haji Abdul Jalil Bin
Abdullah
SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT
Sheriff C. V. Dyson
Bailiff L. Annamalie Chitty
SUPREME COURT
Registrar C. V. Dyson
Chief Clerk-R. S. de Souza
TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT
MALACCA
Sub-Inspector of Telegraph-R.V.
Chapman
Lineman of Telegraph--Haji Mamat
TREASURY AND STAMP OFFICE
In charge R. Scott
Chief Clerk-W. H. Nonis Second do. -M. C. Pereira
GOLF CLUB MALACCA
President The Resident Councillor Hon. Secretary-G. Holden
Hon. Treas.--Rev. F. C. Swindell Committee-W. M. Sime, L. Weir Green Committee - Humphreys and
Mackenzie
HIGH SCHOOL
Head Master J. Howell (on leave) Acting do. -R. J. Bartlett, A.R C.SC. Assistant Masters A. Keir, H. J. Stocker, W. B. Campbell, M. Gomes, A. H. Fredericks. C. Pillay, Tan Chong Lek, Li Yu Peng, T. C. Matthews J. G. Hobday, Q. J. Lazaroo, K. L. Chitty, V. L. Rod- rigues
JASIN RECREATION CLUB-Jasin
President-N. K. Bair
Hon. Scretary-B. Sta. Maria Committee-A. Atisayamı
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE
Ông Kim Wi Tan Chay Yan Tan Hoon Guan Dr. Croucher
(Penang) Nio Hong Hee Chan Koon Cheng Sit Kee An J. D'arcy Symonds Tan Teng Siong A. Custance Baker
| Geo. Holden
Donald K. McDowell W. A. Cuscaden
(Singapore) W. M. Millington N. K. Bain Chua Poh Swee J. L. Humphreys Hussan C. Sulong. Rev. F. C. Swindell S. W. Moorhouse
LONDON ASIATIC RUBBER AND PRODUCE
Co., LIMITED, THE--Jasin
1. Mckenzie, manager
assistant
C. Revel,
Gwern. Williams, do. Van der Pfordten, do.
A. Sithamparapury, clerk P. Jaganeítulu Chetty
MALACCA CLUB
1345
Committee Hon. W. Evans (presi- dent), W. M. Sime (vice-president), R. Scott (hon. treas.), W. A. K Knight (hon. sec.), Rev. F. C. Swindell (captain), F. W. Collins, H. T. Clark
MALACCA DISPENSARY-86, River Side
Teol Tiang Chye, propr. and manager
Teoh Seng Whatt manager Teoh Hong Tye, asst. do. Dr. Peng Lok, surgeon Teoh Hong Teat, saleman
MALACCA LIBRARY
Hon. Sec. and Treas.- H. T. Clark
MALACCA RUBBER PLANTATIONS LD.-Tel.
Ad: Malvaceous, Malacca
F. R. Hill, financial manager G. Glover
E. A. Hemming M. Dodd
H. Morton
MALACCA TRADING Co.. General Store- keepers, Coumission Agents, etc.-149, First Cross Street: Tel. Ad: Trading, Malacon
MUNICIPALITY
Commissioners-Hon. W. Evans (presi- dent), Ong Kim Wee, Tan Chay Yan, Sit Ki An, Chan Koon Cheng Secretary-L. E. Koek
Chief Clerk-Tan Kwi Hi Second Clerk-Chi San Cheng Third Clerk-Low Sek Kai Cashier Tan Tiam Tye
Health Officer-E. G. Weir, M.B. Municipal engineer-G. Holdees Clerk of Works-V. L. Bateman Bailiff I. Klyne
Storekeeper-J. Dias
Insptr. of Nuisances-E. Dias, A. A.
Dias, S. Nazaligum
Engine driver-J. Pereira Fire Engine Tan Chin Baw Insp. do. Capt.J. D'Arcy Symonds Inspector R. Williams
Registrar of Jinrikshas, L. E. Kock
Hackney Carriages
Asst.
do.
-E. Dias
NEW DISPENSARY, THE-168, Heeren St.
Mrs. F. Nonis, proprietress
A. Nonis, manager
Chan Cheng Kai, medical practitioner
NIKER & Co., Timber Merchants and Commission Agents Timber Depot: 141, Rungah Rayah
1346
MALACCA--PENANG
Mngr. and proprietor--L. Namaziva-
zane Chitty
Manager-L. Kishna Niker
Foreman of Works--Kim Choon
PORTUGUESE MISSION, Girls' School-Tran-
querah
6. Sisters
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHINESE CONGREGATION Rev. P. Ruandel, missionary apostolic
ST. FRANCIS CHURCH
Vicar Rev. P. Perrichon, mission apo-
stolic
ST. PETER'S CHURCH
Acting Vicar-Rev. A. M. Coroado Assts.Rev. J. F. da Silva Rev. A. A. Arillo
Girls' School, Tranquerah
Superioress--H. Conceiçao Directress-C. McBean
STRAITS INDUSTRIAL SYNDICATE, General Merts., Steam Saw Mill and Ice Factors, Kallang; Tel. Ad: Industry; Town
Office: 9, Cecil Street
A. W. Westerhout, manager
TAN JIAK HOE, Merchant and Commission
Agent 132, First Cross Street
Lim Eng Siew, clerk and cashier
Agencies
Straits Steamship Company, Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. South British Insurance Co., Ld.
China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld.
TELEGRAPH COMPANY, LIMITED, EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA AND CHINA
W.A.R. Knight, acting superintendent
P. E. Aveit, operator
do.
A. B. C. Doyle, Tan Chim Swee, do. Wi Keat Ghi
PENANG
Penang, or Prince of Wales Island, as it was formerly called, is situated on the west coast of the Malay Peninsula in 5 deg. north latitude. With the Dindings and a strip of land on the opposite coast known as Province Wellesley, from which it is separated by a Strait varying from 2 to 10 miles in width, it constitutes the second in importance of the three governments known as the "Straits Settlements." The island contains an area of about 107 square miles, being 15 miles long and 9 broad at its widest portions, while Province Wellesley extends for a distance of 45 miles along the coast, and has an average width of 8 miles, containing 270 square miles, and about 200 more for the Dindings The chief town of Penang is George Town, but the name of the island (which signifies "Betel-nut Island") has become so identified with the town that the specific designation has almost dropped out of use.
Penang was ceded to the famous Captain Light for the East India Company in the year 1786 for an annual payment of $10,000 to the Rajah of Kedah, a step which was followed 13 years later by the cession of Province Wellesley. In the year 1805 Penang was elevated to the rank of a presidency, its rising fortunes even then bidding fair to eclipse those of Malacca, while Singapore was as yet unknown as a settlement. In 1836 Singapore and Malacca were incorporated with Penang, and the three were designated by the title they still retain. But as the fortunes of Singapore brightened, those of Penang declined, until the former quite overshadowed her older sister, and in 1837 the principal seat of government was transferred to Singapore.
The settlement of Ponang is governed by a Resident Councillor, and has two unofficial representatives in the Legislative Council, which sits at Singapore An important department of its trade lies in the business transacted with the Dutch settlements in Sumatra. Penang will always remain of a certain importance, although it is not likely to again assume the position in the com- mercial world it formerly held. It is a convenient coaling and man-of-war_station and is of yet greater necessity, as the virtual seat of government for Province Wellesley, which must always be an important centre of British influence. The Government in 1906 acquired the graving dock at Prye River in Province Wellesley, 250 feet in length and 50 feet broad at entrance; also a slip for vessels 100 feet long.
George Town is built on a plain, at the back of which rises the hill which, as Penangites declare, renders life on the island more enjoyable than in any othe part of the Colony.
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1347
The formation of Penang is granitic, being covered in many places with a sharp sand or stiff clay, the produce of the decomposition of the granite Above this again comes a coat of vegetable mould of greater or less thickness. With the exception of a plain about three miles in depth, upon which stands the town and environs, the whole of the island consists of hills with narrow valleys. No minerals of commercial value are found in Penang.
The influence of the regular monsoon is more distinctly felt at Penang than in the most easterly part of the Straits of Malacca, owing to the wideness of the latter to the west and vicinity to the Bay of Bengal. During the north-easterly monsoon, from November to March inclusive, clear settled weather prevails, and in the south-westerly, from April to October, the rains take place. But neither rain nor drought is of long continuance. The average heat of the year at the level of the sea is 80°, and at the height of 2,500 feet, the highest inhabited point, 70°, the annual range being about 20°. Where there is free ventilation the climate is equal in salubrity to that of any other tropical one, but in a few close valleys wanting this advantage, the malaria is deemed poisonous, and such localities, few in number, are not inhabited by Europeans.
Of mammals, the principal species are monkeys, loris, wild pig, and two species of viverrida the musang and binturong. The ornithology calls for no special remarks. The island is a happy hunting ground for the entomologist, numerous fine species of lepidoptera frequenting the hills. The botany of Penang is perhaps better known than that of any part of the Peninsula, and, for the area involved, is particularly rich. Palms, bamboos, bauana and other fruit-trees, and nutmegs clothe the hillsides, while ferns are also plentiful. The high land permits the cultivation of many flowers and other plants which will not thrive in the flat level lands of Singapore or Malacca.
As evinced by its name, the chief product of Penang is the betel nut, which, with all kinds of fruit and nutmegs, is the only indigenous article of trade. Nutmegs were at one time a most important branch of industry, but the blight, which simultaneously Affected the whole Peninsula, destroyed it. Their cultivation has, however, now been resumed, and Penang nutmegs stand high in the market. There is no agriculture properly so called. Pepper was at one period of its early history produced to the extent of three and a half million pounds annually; but the competition of other places, notably of Netherlands-India, proved fatal, and it is now only cultivated in small patches, and is not classed as an article of export trade. Tapioca, Cocoanuts, Gutta, Rubber, Citronella and Cotton are also among the products cultivated.
The Perak Penang railway has now been open for over two years. The terminus for Penang is at Prai, which is connected with the town by a ferry service. The line is 317 miles in length and connects Penang with Port Dickson, and Singapore, and may subsequently be extended to connect with Burmah on the North and Siam on the East. An extensive scheme for the improvement of Penang harbour has been receiving consideration.
The town possesses few attractions, and the public buildings are mediocre, with the exception of the Government Offices, a fine new block erected in 1889 near the jetty. St. George's Church is an unpretending edifice of 80 years standing, centrally situated. There is also a Roman Catholic Church and several mission chapels. The census of 1901 gave the total population of Penang and Province Wellesley as 248,207, as compared with 235,618 in 1891.
The aggregate trade of the port (including inter-Settlement trade) amounts to $193,490,300.
DIRECTORY
(For Government Depts. See under G.)
ADAMS & ALLAN, Advocates and Solicitors, Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States; Tel. Al: Adallan
Arthur R. Adams Murison Allan Geoffrey Norman Saye
Wm. Huctable Thorne, asst. advocate
and solicitor
ADAMSON GILFILLAN, & Co., LD., Merh ts.- Hongkong & Shanghai Bank Buildings
S. Gilfillan (Europe)
W. Adamson,
do.
H. W. Wood, do. James Miller,
do.
John Mitchell, manager D. Duncan signs per pro.
C. Matthew
A. F. Low
1348
J. H. Keer N. P. Walsche H. R. Bell
A. J. Reutens
Z. C. Aeria
Branch Houses:
PENANG
Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., London Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore Agencies
Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Company W. Milburn & Co.'s Steamers
Northern Pacific Steamship Company Commercial Service Line Spanish Strs. Rickmers Line of Steamers
Standard Oil Co, of N. Y. Steamers Marine & Gen. Mutual Life Ass. Soc. New Zealand Insurance Company Marine Insurance Company, Limited. Scottish Union & National Insurance China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Chargeurs Reunis (French Line Strs.) Asiatic Steam Navigation Co.
Northern Steamship Co., Ld. (Russian
Line Steamers)
American & Asiatic S. N. Co. The Rahman Tin Co.. Ld.
The Rahman Hydraulic Tin Co., Ld. The Siamese Tin Syndicate, Ld."
ALLAN & IRVING, Engineers, Iron and Brass Founders, Boilermakers, Ironmon- gers, Oil Merchants, Electrical Engineers, and Genl. Contractors-Works: No. 40, Weld Quay and Singora Lane; Store and Electrical Department: No. 31, Beach. Street
J. G. Allan, manager and partner James Irving, partner
ALLAN RENNY, Consulting Engineer, Mar- ine Surveyor and Contractor-Office: Bedford, Scotland Road; Surveyor for Germanischer Lloyd, Bureau Veritas; Tel. Ad: Light
ALLEN DENNYS & Co., Forwarding and Commission Agents No. 7, Union St.
A. Dennys, manager and partner Agencies
Penang Transhipping & Forwarding Co. The Continental Insurance Co. of
Manheim (marine)
The Property Insce. Co., London (Fire)
ALMA ESTATE SOCIÉTÉ, Rubber, Cocoanuts and Tapioca Cultivation and Manufacture
Emile E. Chasseriau, manager
ANTHONY, J. M., Licensed Auctioneer under the Pawnbrokers' Ordinance Downing Street
J. M. Anthony
A. S. Anthony, partners
J. E, Doral, Lim Kian Siang
ANTHONY & ANDERSON, Exchange and Share Brokers-Town Club Buildings, Downing Street
J. M. Anthony, partner A. S. Anthony,
do. A. F. G. Anderson, do.
E. E. Sykes, signs the firm J. G. Anthony, assistant
Cheh Wan, S. T. Jensen, Cheh Din, clerks
ANTHONY & Co., A. A., Merchants-Down-
ing Street
Joseph M. Anthony A. S. Anthony
G. B. Nonis J. E. Doral Lim Kain Siang
S. T. Jansen
Agencies
Apcar & Co.'s Steamers
Douglas Steamship Co., Limited Bombay & Persia Steam Navigation Co. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
AVETOOM, T. C., L.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. ED., Practitioner-37A, Beach Street
Medical
W. H. N. Bright, M.B., C.M., B.A.O,
(Ireland), assistant
BARNETT, CHAS, WM., Civil and Consulting Engineer, Architect, Surveyor and Agent 8, Logan's Buildings, and Chung Tye Phins Buildings, Ipoh Agency
Yorkshire and State Fire Insce. Co.
BATU KAWAN RUBBER AND COCOANUT
PLANTATION Co., LD.-Tel. 817
Administrator--Hon. J. Turner, Cale-
donia Estate, P.W. General Agents-Huttenbach Bros. &
Co. (Penang)
J. C. Ebbels, manager
W. W. Dean, W. Forsyth, L. L. D.
de Garnier, assistants
BEHN, MEYER & Co., LTD., Merchants-5,
Weld Quay
Directors-Hans Becker (chairman), Ad. Asmus, F. Katenkamp, A. G. Faber, J. Menzi, A. Diehn, R. Schubert (Penang)
A., Schönberg signs per pro.
P. Nolze
A. Hoeffer P. Desebrock R. Fröhlich
K. Groth
W. Wilmer
F. A. Kretzschinar
F. Eichenberg
Boey Siew Chan, cashier
PENANG
Boey Siew Leong, assistant cashier Agencies
Deutsch Dampschiffahrt-Ges. Hansa,
Bremen
Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Shanghai Norddeutscher Lloyd (Breman), Im-
perial German Mail Steamers Hamburg-America Line, Hamburg Navigazione Generale Italiana, Genoa German Australian S. S. Co., Hamburg Union Line, Hamburg
Indra Line of Steamers, Liverpool Atlantic Transport Line, London Allan Line, Canada & United States
Royal Mail Steamers Wilson-Hill Line of Steamers Robt. M. Sloman & Co., Hamburg Deutsche Ostafrika Linie, Hamburg Suter Hartmann & Rahitjen's Com-
position Co., Ld., London William Gossage & Sons, Ld., Widnes Neu Guinea Compagnie, Berlin Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Ges., Berlin. Takashima Coal of Mitsu Bishi Colliery,
Nagasaki
F. W. Heilgers & Co., Calcutta and London, managing agents for the Standard, Ondal, & Borrea Coal Cos. Steenkolen Maatschappij Poeloe-Laoet,
Amsterdam
Cowie Harbour Coal Co., Ld., Tawao Gesellschaft fur Drahtlose Telegraphie,
Berlin
Farbwerke vorm. Meister Lucius &
Bruning, Hoechst
Nahnsen's Explosives Kali-Syndicate, Stassfurt
Insurance Companies
North British and Mercantile Insce.
Co., London
Royal Exchange Assce. Corpn., London North German Fire Ince. Co., Hamburg Allianz Insurance Co., of Berlin Münchener Rückversicherungs-Ges.
Munchen
Albingia Assurance Co., Ld. Nordstern Life Insce. Co. Ld.
Ocean Marine Insce Co., Ld., London Deutsche Transport Versicherungs Ges. Maritime Insurance Co., Ld., Liverpool Deutscher Lloyd, Berlin
General Average Adjusters for: Pommeranina See and Fluss Versi-
cherungs Ges., Stettin
Badische Assectiranz Ges.. Mannheim Internationaler Lloyd Versceherung
Ges., Berlin
Deutsche Mit-Rück Versicherungs
Ges., Berlin
Union Internationale Compagnie d'As-
surafice, Anvers
Hull Underwriters' AssocationLd., Hull National Board of Marine Under-
writers, New York
1349
Versicherungsgesellschaft von 1873 Western Assurance Co., London Saint Paul's Fire & Marine Insce., Co. Providence Washington Insce., Co.,
BEHR & Co., Merchants-22, Beach Street;
Tel. Ad Untong; Teleph, 537
S. Behru London)
S. Roseaum)
M. Traub
Carl Bolius, signs per pro.
Agencies
The General Marine Insce. Co., Ld. The Transatlantic Mar. Insce. Co., Ld. Branch
Behr Bros.--21, Mincing Lane, London
BOUSTEAD & Co., Merchants-1, Weld Quay
T. Cuthbertson (London) Arthur Young J. B. Young Robt. Yeats
do.
do.
do.
do.
W. P. Waddell D. T. Boyd (Singapore) E. D. Hewan do.
Geo. Macbain (Penang)
V. Gibbons (signs per pro.), A. E. T. Johnson, F. A. Pledger, E. Arnold, assistants
J. F. de Mello, Chas. Robless, P.
Langan, E. Lesslar, clerks
Khoo Ban Ho, Cheah Cheng Jee,
cashier
Branches
Ed. Boustead & Co., 3, Lloyd's Avenue,.
London E.C.
Boustead & Co., Singapore
Agencies
Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Co., Limited
China Traders' Insurance Co., Limited Triton Insurance Company, Ld.
London and Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Eastern Insurance Company, Ld. Allianco Assurance Company, Ld. South British Insurance Co., Ld. World Marine Insurance Co.
The Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld. North China Insurance Co., Ld., "Glen" Line of Steamers "Shire" Line of Steamers, Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Company Compagnie des Messageries Maritimes Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Nippon Yusen Kaisha
American & Oriental Line of Steamers
(Joint Agency) Baring Bros & Co., Ld. Brown Shipley & Co.
BROWN (D. A. M.) & PHILLIPS, Public Accountants and Auditors-1, Downing Street, Penang; and 23, Station Rd., Ipoh
1350
D. A. M. Brown
R. P. Phillips, P.S.A.A., F.C.I.S.
R. S. Stewart, C.A.
E. R. Henderson, C.A.
J. M. Barclay
Tay Thean Hock
Chan Tiang Chune Low Choo Guan Khoo Cheng Keali R. G. Young
PENANG
BROWN, DAVID, & Co., Estate Agents and
Auditors--56, Beach Street
Partner-David Brown
Assistant--J. R. Brown, signs per pro.
Do. --O C. Mraun
CEYLON TRADING Co., Commission and Forwarding Agents; Tel. Ad: Sailany- 38 and 56, Burmah Road
Hajee Mohamed, Quaslm Sahib, Al-
Sailany, managing proprietor
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Committee-Cecil Guiness (chairman), G. Macbain (vice-chairman), A. G. Faber, D. W. Gilmour, A. Hood Begg, R. T. Reid, O. Schule
D. A. M. Brown & Phillips, secretaries Lim Kian Thong, Oon En Sean, clerks
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA,
AND CHINA
D. W. Gilmour, manager
W. J. Hodge, accountant F. Fairnie
P. Ambler, sub-accountant
A. Brearley,
N. J. Austin,
A. F. Duncan,
do.
do.
do.
Yeo Boon Swee, chief cashier
Goon Fook Ghee, chief clerk
J. A. Robertson, sub-agent (Medan) W.J. Morrisson, sub-accountant, do.
J. F. Duncan,
do.
do.
do.
S. M. Throne, do. (Ipoh, Perak) A. Scott, sub agent C. J. Fulton, sub-accountant (Ipoh,
Perak)
A. Gray, sub-agent (Taiping, Perak)
CHASSERIAU FRÈRES, Planters and Manu- facturers, Alma Estate, Tasek Estate, Tapioca Factory and Distillery, Prov. Wellesley-Office: 58, Northam Road
CHURCHES, MISSIONS, &c.
CHURCH OF ENGLAND
Colonial Chaplain-Rev. Frank W.
Haines, M.A. (surrogate) Organist W. A. Ward Clerk S. John
Province Wellesley
Chaplain (S. P. G.)-Rev. H. C. Hen-
hanı (Bukit Tengah)
CHURCH WORK ASSOCIATION
Vice-President-Mrs. Bland Hon. Secretary Mrs. Hames Hon. Treasurer-Mrs. J. Anthony
CONVENT
Lady Supr.-Rev. Mother St, Herminie
and 18 sisters
METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION
Rev. G. F. Pykett, district superia- tendent prinpl., Anglo-Chinese School
Miss C. Martin, deaconess) Girls' Miss Brooke, deaconess J School Ng U Tin, Chinese Church J. Appadussi, Tamil Church English Church-Rev. R. F Maynard Bukit Mertajam,-A.C.S.-V Samuel Nibong Tebal, do. J. Jesudason Kulim Chinese Church--Lau Kia
MISSIONS ETRANGÈRES GENERAL COL-
LEGE OF THE-Pulo Tikus
Superior-Very Rev. E. Wallays Director-Rev. J. J. J. Girard
Do. -Rev. M. C. Laumondais Do. Rev. J. Pages
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Minister-Rev. Ernest Lawson, MA, (EDIN.); Res.: Rhuboan, 4 Logan Rd. Hon. Secretary and Treas.- Balfour
E. Ross
Organist J. S. Cunningham Board of Mgrs.-A. Lawrence, J. Stronach, T. Gawthorne B. Purdy (session), M. Allan, B. Ë. Ross Presbytery Elder- A. D. Fairbairn
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Rt. Rev. J. Meneuvrier, vicar general, chaplain to the R. C. Volunteers, Penang and vicar Assumption Church
Rev. L. Perrichon, vicar, Tamil
Church, Penang Road Rev. J. Cesbron, assistant Rev. C. Letessier, vicar, Chinese
Church, McAlister Road
Rev. R. Cardou, Macham Bubo Rev. P. Perrichon, vicar, Pulo Tikus Rev. E. Becheras vicar, Bt. Merta-
jam, P. W.
Rev.R. Maury, vicar, MatangTinghi,
P. W.
Rev. H. Germaue, vicar, Balek Pulau
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER'S CHURCH, Tamil
Mission
Vicar-L. Perrichon
Assistant-T. Cesbron
Boy's Anglo-Tamil School
Manager-Rev. L. Perrichon
PENANG
ST. GEORGE'S TAMIL MISSION CHAPEL,
S. P. G.
Missionary-Rev. D. A. Peter Lay Reader S. John
Hon. Organist-L. B. Balavendrum
CLUBS AND SOCIETIES
CHINESE CLUB, THE-202, Macalister Rd.
President-Yeow Ooi Gark
Hon. Secretary--Lim Mah Chye
ENGINEERS' INSTITUTE--Leith Street
President-W, S. Boteler Secretary-D. Graham
PENANG CLUB
Trustees E. W. Presgrave and Hon.
A. R. Adams, J. W. Hallifax President-Hon. A. R. Adams Secty, and Treasurer-D. A. M. Brown Committee O. Schule, F. J. Hallifax, D. W. Gilmour, E. S. Haslam, S. C. Ambrose, J. Pickenpack
PENANG FOOTBALL LEAGUE
President Dr. T. Hill Jamieson Vice-President-H. A. Neubronner Hon. Sec. and Treas.-Jas. T. Dobbie
TOWN CLUB
Committee Hon. A.R. Adams; (Chair- man) J. W. Hallifax, J. Pickenpack, O. Schüle, C. G. May, J. B. Peterkin, A. B. Smith, D. Brown(sec. and treas.)
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Acting Consul-Alfred Suhl
BELGIUM
Consul-John Mitchell
Acting Consul-H. R. Bell,
c/o Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld.
DENMARK-33, Beach Street
Vice-Consul-H. Pickenpack
FRANCE
Consular Agent-John Mitchell
Acting Consular Agent-H.R. Bell, c/o Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Ld.
GERMANY
Vice-Consul R. Schubert (acting)
ITALY
Consular Agent-Arthur Oechsle
NETHERLANDS
1351
Acting Consul-P. R. Borger Chinese Clerk-Khoo Teng Hoon
NORWAY
Vice-Consul-Joseph Heim
PORTUGAL
SIAM
Acting Vice-Consul-J. M. Anthony
Consul-General and Special Agent for Receiving the Revenues of the Western Provinces and for Issu- ing and Cashing Drafts between the Siamese Western Provinces and Penang-A. D. Neubronner Vice-Consul H. A. Neubronner,
L
A.R.I.B.A,, P.A.S.I.
SWEDEN
Vice-Consul-F. Duxbury
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Consular Agent-Otto Schüle Clerk-Chew Khuan Sim
CRITERION PRESS LD., THE, Printers, Pub- lishers, Lithographers, Bookbinders and Stationers 226, 288, 230 and 232 Beach Street, Proprietors of "Straits Echo" and "Sui Poe
CUNNINGHAM, CLARK & Co., Auctioneers, Valuers, Estate and Commission Agents and Musical Instrument Importers- Union and Beach Streets
J. S. Cunningham
DAVID BROWN & Co., Estate Agents and
Auditors-56 Beach Street
DENNYS, A., Insurance Surveyor and
Valuer--7, Union Street
房藥西臣王
DISPENSARY, THE--2, Bishop Street; Che- mist and Opticians; Tel. Ad: Chemoptist A. MackintoshStewart,F.C.S.,proprietor J. Macrae Chalmers, M.P.SC., manager
EASTERN AND Oriental HOTEL--10, Far-
quhar Street
Sarkies Brothers, proprietors
C. C, Owen, assistant
C. B. Gasper, do.
EASTERN SHIPPING CO., LTD. (EngineWorks and Dockyard) Engineers, Shipbuilders, Brass and Iron Founders, Engineering Appliances and Fittings in Stock-Weld Quay, and 37, 41 and 43, Beach Street
J. L. Wemyss, M.I.N.A., manager
1352
PENANG
EVATT & Co., Accountants and Auditors; Tel. Ad: Evatt, Penang; Tel. 492-Feder- ated Malay States Railway Buildings
Partner-P. T. Evatt, incorporated
accountant
Assistant H. V. Edwards, chartered
accountant
O. F. Odell, chartered accountant Assistant E. H. Pitt
EXCELSIOR AERATED WATER WORKS Co.-- Factory; 50, Cantonment Road; Office; 97, Bishop Street
Stronach & Co., proprietors
FRASER & NEAVE, L., Aerated Water
Manufacturers-190, Argyll Road T. F. Dixon, branch manager
E. J. Roberts, clerk and assistant Teoh Tek Ewe, cashier
Head Office: Singapore; London Agt.: P. Spink, 66, Fenchurch St., London, E.C.
FREELING & DUKE, E. W., Appraisers,
Brokers, Contractors, Valuers,
Valuers, and General Estate, Commission, Financial Agents and General Merchants-7, Church Street, Penang; Telegrams: Duke; Codes A. B. C.4th and 5th Editions
GAWTHORNE, Tuos., Barrister-at-Law, Ad- vocate, Solicitor and Notary Public, 4A, Beach Street
F4 Kim-sie-eok-pung GEORGE TOWN DISPENSARY, LD.-37A,
Beach Street; Tel. Ad, Elixir
W. F. Clarke, M.P.S., chemist and
druggist
J. R. Brown, secretary
GOLDENBERG & ZEITLIN, Merchants-35,
Beach Street; Tel. Ad: Goldgeit M. Goldenberg (Hamburg)
A. Zeitlin
H. Keitel, sigus per pro, P. Baerlocher
GOVERNMENT OFFICES
AUDIT OFFICE
Auditor-W. A. Bicknell Chief Clerk-A. A. Aeria Clerks N. O. Pasqual, B. C. Corn- elius E. C. d'Orville, Khow Loon Chong, L. B. Balavendrum, G. Sammy Pillay, Che Teh, Lee Poh Soo, P. Ponoosamy, Yong Kee Teih
BANKRUPTCY OFFICE
Actg. Official Assignee-P. A. F
David
Chief Clerk-Mahomed Ismail 2nd Clerk-J. B. Loh
3rd Clerk--H. B. Sledge Chinese Translator-Chin Kok Kes
CORONER'S DEPARTMENT
Coroner A. V. Brown (Second
Magistrate)
DISTRICT COURT
District Judge-W. C. Michell Acting do. G. Hall
Asst. Dist. do.
-A.7. Brown (actg.)
Chief Clerk-Chee Kok Foo
Second do. -N. A. R. Gregory
Thirdl do.
-Mohamed Hoosain
Fourth do.
-F. Peterson
Fifth
do.
-G. A. Gregory
-M. Narayahasany
Sixth do.
Tamil Interpreter-T. A. S. Pillay Bailiff-Tang Cheang Pow
Bailiff J. Dominic
Asst. Bailiff--Abdul Kader
do. --Kassimsat
DISTRICT OFFICE, BUTTERWORTH
Dist. Officer--R. J. Farrer
S. Codrington
Acting do.
Chief Clerk--H. Noordi Land Bailiff-Kadir
Asst. do. -Jusoh
Malay Interpreter--P. Shaik Kalwa Chinese do.
-Chin Fook Seong Tamil interp.--Kadir Mustan Sahib Sub-Inspector Hackney Carriages→→
S. W. McIntyre
Sanitary Inspector-G. W. Freeman
DISTRICT OFFICE, DINDINGS
Acting District Officer-J. Lornie Chief Clerk-J. F. de Mello Chinese Interpreter and Clerk-
Chan Shoon Nean
Tamil Interpreter and Clerk-C, V.
S. Naidu
Land Bailiff, Lumut---Chow ah Nyee
Do. Bruas-L. de Silva Sub-Postmaster- C. J. Fox Malay Writer-Mohamed Ali Police Sergt.-T. G. Hawkins Forest Ranger-G. M. O'Hara Deputy Ranger-J. Sanib Forest Clerk-Jaynul
Senior Dresser-P, Jayasekara Dresser-Kung Toh Kent
DISTRICT OFFICE, NIBONG TEBAL (Pro-
vince Wellesley South)
Act. District Officer-J.W.Goldthorp Chief Clerk-Lee Swee Bee Telegraph Clerk-S. Asirvadam Second Clerk-Mohamed Tambi Land Bailiff Teh Eu Quee Tamil and Malay Intpr.-S. K. Md.
Ismail
Chinese Interptr.-Ui Thin Yeng
PENANG
1353-
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Inspector of Schools-A. E. Pringle Chief Clerk-C. Keng-Leong
2nd Clerk-H. B.H. Alley
FORESTS DEPARTMENT
Superintendent-Walter Fox Forest Ranger J. Abrams Clerk-L. S. Ingram
GAOL DEPARTMENT
Superdt. of Prisons-W. C. Michell Acting do.
-G. A. Hall
Gaoler J. Burke
Warder-F. Shellcock
First Clerk-C. A. Balhetchet
Second do.
K. Karumbayerum
Chinese do. -Khoo Ewe Boon
INDIAN IMMIGRATION DEPARTMENTS
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS & F. M. S.
Superintendent of Immigrants S. S. and F. M. S.-L. H. Clayton Clerk and Interpreter V. V.
Krishnier
Assistant Superintendent of Immig-
rants-A. S. Haynes (acting) 2nd Assistant Superintendent of
Immigrants---A. F. Davies Chief Clerk A. Veerappa Pillay Second Clerk and Boarding Officer-
A. Renganathen
Financial Clerk-V. V. Peters Assistant Superintendent of Immi- grants Klang-A. H. do R. Fon- seca G.A. Smith-Steinmetz(acting)
LAND OFFICE & REGISTRY OF DEEDS
Collector of Land Revenue and Re-
gistrar of Deeds--R. Scott First Clerk-C. C. Stewart
MARINE DEPARTMENT
2nd.
Harbourmaster, -Commander D. C.
Macintyre, R.N.R. (Retired) 1st. Boarding Officer-S. R. Perkins
do. -J. Melly do. -A. W. Anderson do.-Leen bin Abubakar Signal Sergeant--T. L. Sutherland
-Tan Hock Huat Chief Clerk A. C. Thomas
Brdl.
4th.
do.
2nd do.
3rdl do.
4th
do.
5th
do.
6th
do.
Wee Soon Chye -M. Shunder Pillay
-A. d'Araujo -Oon Tiang Yeam -R. Kumaravellu ---Lee Soon Keng
- O. bin Jumansab -T. J. Dorasamy -Lim Kee Chay 11th Clerk-Teoh Cheng Too Store Keeper-S. Subbiah
7th do. 8th do. 9th do.
10th do.
Light Houses
Light Keeper A. J. Okeeffe
do. -J. de Cruz do. -P. de Souza
Steam Launches "Booby "
Engineer Charles Abram Serang Mat bin Ismail
"Rosebud
Engineer-Mch Tindal-Mahomed
"Cutter"
J
Engineer Kamis bin M. Jusohn Tindal-Darus
"Penguin "
Engineer-Mat Saman bin Mahat Serang Mahamed bin Drahud
"Seagull "
Master-Long bin Mat Engineer-F. Peterson 2nd do. ---Lim Ah Meng Deck Serang-Mat Issa bin Long
Seabird"
**
Engineer-Mat bin Brahim Tusdal-Meah Hoosain Khan
MARINE SURVEYOR'S DEPARTMENT
Senior Govt. Marine Surveyor-H.
Muir, A.M.I.M.E.
Clerk S. Munisamy
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Senior Medical Officer, Health Officer, and Registrar of Births and Deaths F. B. Croucher, M.D.C.M. Medical Officers General Hospital-
H. W. Hurnivall, M.B.B.S., E. A. Smith, L.R.C., P. & S. (EDIN.), L.F.P.S. (GLAS.) Medical Officer-J. C. C. Ford, L.M.S. (MAD.), L.R.C.P. & S. (EDIN.), L.F.P. & S. (GLAS.)
Medical Officer, District Hospital-
A. H. Keun, M.B.C.M.
Asst. Surgeons-F. Rodriguez, M. E. Scriven, N. G. Sardesai, C. J. Baterran
―
Apothecary in charge Civil Dispen-
sary J. H. L. Westerhout Deputy Regr. of Deaths - Dr. C.
Francis, L.R.C.P. & S. Hospital Assistant-S. Kandiah Dressers Lim Tai Lee, V. Daniel Pillay, M. Carmagam, M. Aeria, M. A. Gasper, S. Jivanadem, L. Shaik, V. Krishnaswamis Naidu, V. Mayandy, J. R. Edwards, P. P. Aeria, G. V. J. Dawson, S. Muru- gaes, S. Babooram Das, B. Perkins, J. Alcain, Kam Hong Leng Vaccin'rs.-J. Samuel, Wan Chee Bin,
Mohamed Hussain
J 254
PENANG
Clerks T. A. Angus, T. C. Mitchell S. Sibooram Das, Che Din, C. R. Rozells
Clerk, General Hospital-Kung
Sinco
Asst. Surgeon Leper Hospital, and
Superintendent J. R. Bruce Dressers A. F. Arokiasamy, Phang Chock Seng, V. Santiago, Lee Chin Tee
Quarantine Station, Palan Jerejak Asst. Surgeon (Vacant)
Dressers R. Govindasamy Naidoo, M. Govindasamy and S. Dyriam
POLICE COURT
First Magistrate-W. C. Michell Acting do. ---L.E.P.Wolferstan Second do. -A. V. Oxown Third do. -D. Beatty Acting do. -B. Nunn Chief Clerk-B. Augustin
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Superintendent and Licensing Officer
Major H. Barry de Hamel Assistant do., Province Wellesley--
Capt. W. L. M. Bower Assts. H. Perrett, Capt. H. A.
Anderson
Financial Assistant F. Aeria Chief Inspector-R. Evans Do. Detective Insptr.-R.J. Kirke Inspectors F. Mann, M. O'Niel, T. Connor, H. Pearse, J. J. Dunne, F. J. Bruce, R. Purvis, T. A. Leo- nard, L. Hicky, T. G. Hawkins, P. Gilroy
do.
T
Insptr.G'powder Ord'e.-B.P. Pereira Clerk,
-S. Rocken Inspector of Weights and Measures
-B..P, Pereira
Clerk do. Chin Kim Fook Chief Clerk-F. P. Scully Clerks Nutter Baboo, Lim Kean Thuan, Gopal Dass, G. G. Balaven- drun Lim Sin Hean, Mahd. Shariff Clerk for Registration of Crime-
Chow Ah Hem Cashier-Cheah Eng Ho Interprs.-Goon Chin Foon & others
POST OFFICE, GENERAL
Asst. Postmaster-Gen).-H. C. Sells Superintendent of Mails-W. H.
Threlfall (absent) Acting Do.-T. Gordon
Superintend't, Money Order Branch
and Savings Bank-T. de Cruz Chief Clerk Edward Bacon Acting Do.-P. P. S. Pillai
POSTAL AND TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT
Asst. Postmaster Genl.-H. C. Sells Supt. of Telegraphis C. P. Buckell,
A.I.E.E.
Supt. of Mails-W. H. Threifall, T.
I. M. Gordon (acting)
Supt. Money Order, Branch and
Savings Bank-T. J. de Cruz Chief Clerk- E. Bacon Inspector of Telegraphs-Mohamed
Sheriff
Clerks Class II.--P. P. S. Pillai, N. S. Jeremiah, A. Julian, J. Nelligan. F. Forest, E. S. Kitto Clerks Class III.-H. M. Joseph, B. Hamood Malimu, Cee Choon Seng, H. L. Baptist, T. Aroolandum, P. Green, Shaik Eusoof, D. T. Mcln- tyre, T. H. Coombs, R. P. Waller, S. John, S. Govindasamy, C. Ya- hambaram, W. C. Gaskell, O. A Filmer, S. Asirvadam (at Nebong Tebal), A. Thathuvanaden (at Bukit Mertajam) V. Suppish (at Butterworth)
Clerks Class IV.-D. L. Wong, S. Anukragam Pillai, S. J. Dason, H. W. Karl, C. S. Webb, W. H. J. M. Aeria, T. J. Williams, C. Langan, T. Dorasamy, J. W. Boudville, P. M. Nalpon, S. Ambrose, B. H. McIntyre Telegraphists Class II.--C, Amirth- anayagam (at Bukit Tambun) Cheah Yew Lim, K. Murugasen Pillay, S. Emmenuel (at Balek Pulau See Lin Tnoo, Lim Seng Kee, Theah Kye Choe (at Dato Kramat) A. Kandiah (at Prye) M. P. Santhappan (at Penang Hill) P. Kalimuthu, D. Jambu. S Maruthamuthu, Choon Eng Hae, Boey Swee Kong, Telegraphists Class III.-C. Tham- piah Pillai, R. V. Jambu, M. Thumbusamy, C. R. Ramakrishna Probationers A. Anthonysamy, T. Y. de Bruyne, Lim Chong Kung Shu offs Chew Ah Sang and Tan
Hock Beng
Stamp Vendors-Gan Kim Tek and
Lee Kod Fah
Chinese Sub Postmaster-Low Yau
Long
Head Lineman-Mohamed Hassan Counter Clerk-G. H. Shaik Hussain Store Clerk-Abdual Rahaman
M. Apparow Pillay
Mail Officers
and M. J. Schwartz Printer D. Njanadicum
Head Postman-N. Nayandy Pillay
Telephone Exchange
Supt.-C. P. Buckell, A.L.B.E.
Inspector Mohamed Sheriff
Mechanician-Ismail Clerk and Bill Collector
Meng Fat
PENANG
Boey
Operators-H. Ahamad, P. Z. Ami- noordin, T. Kathirasen, Mahmood, Abdul Rahman, Mohamed Ghonse, Mohamed Kamis, A. Iunacy, Baker Meah Mohamed Din Female Staff
Operators Misses L. Jambu, M. Doral, T. Doral, B. Reutens, J. F. Smith, G. Moreton, E Jalleh, E. Scully, J. de Olivero, M. Nichol Dutch Postal Agency
Agent E. A. A. Maareks
PROTECTORATE OF CHINESE
Assistant Protector of Chinese-
C. J. Saunders
Acting Protector-A. M. Pountney Second Asst. do.-W. l'eacock Chinese Branch
Chief Clerk-Lim San Ki Boarding Officer-R. A. Monteiro Inspector J. H. Logan
PUBLIC WORKS & SURVEY DEPARTMENT,
PENANG General Branch
Deputy Colonial Engineer and Sur-
veyor-General-F. J. Pigott Acting C. G. May Store-keeper-M. A. Theseira Chief Clerk-Ong Thean Lye Financial Clerk-P. M. Jalleh Clerks Jidil bin Abdulrahim, Kam Kee Leong, V. Subbiali, V. Veerap-
pen
Asst. Supts. of Works-S. E. A.
Linton and N. Wilkinson Clerks of Works--F. X. Holmberg (2nd grade), O. H. Wait (3rd grade), G. W. B. Agle (3rd grade) Overseers-A. Poulier, W. A. Fernan- do, J. Scully, Ong Beng Cheang, Che Dain (temporary), Poomalny (temporary)
Apprentices
A. B. Hogan, Kihoo Keng Poe, H. Schmidt, Chual Soon Thye
Asst. Draftsman-H. H. Cornelius Engineer Dredging Master Steam Dredger Crab-W. Houston Survey Branch
Senior Surveyors-J. Ashness District Surveyor-P. W. Richards,
T. S. Layn
Asst. Surveyor-W. A. Clough Acting 2nd S. S. (N.B.) District Surveyor-P. W. Richards, acting 2nd Senior Surveyor
Draftsman-H. O. Felsingre, Kung Theom Sung, acting Draftsman and Computer
1355
Assistant Draftsmen-C. Ramsamy Modaly, Ong Cheong Swee, P. Szeeramuloo, Leong Joseph, Coo- pooneng Pillay, Mahomed Din, R. De Silva
Sub Surveyor-R, Ethirajalu Plan Custodian-W. E. Jamba Clerk-V. Krishnasamy Asst. Clerk-Syed Ahmed Record Keeper-Sk. Rahmathulla Area. Comptr-Syed Hamad, Kee
Ann Yean, Md. Oosope Typist-Arokiasamy
Tracers Md. Zenalabdain, Shaik Oosope, G. A. Aeria, Shaik Dawood, R. N. Kangel, P. Kandasamy, A. B. Celestine, Mohamed Bapp Plotters M. R. Govindasamy
Othman, C. E. de Witt
Province Wellesley
Supt. of Works and Surveys G.
Holden, H. Lupton (acting) Chief Clerk-Gan Kian Hoon Clerks Md. Hashim, Md. Nina
Merican
Clerk of Works, 3rd Grade-S. E.
Misso Overseers-F. J. G. Aeria, S. E. Schaungerined, S. Jalleh, S. Latch- man Das (Temporary)
RESIDENT COUNCILLOR'S OFFICE
Resident Councillor--Hon. R. N.
Bland
Chief Clerk-J. H. Phipps
Clerks Mahomed Rouse, Kassim Ahmad, S. Saravanam, N. A. Janson, F. D. C. Aeria
Malay Writer-Maliomed Hashim
SAVINGS BANK, GOVERNMENT
Superintendent-Theo. de Cru
SENIOR DISTRICT OFFICE, BUKIT MER-
TAJAM
Senior District Officer- L. E. P.
Wolferstan
Acting Senior District Officer-W.
Langham Carter
Chief Clerk-M. V. Emuang Clerks-Tan. Hock Ann Shaik
Ibrahim,F.L.Boudville, Chan Fook Siew, C. Quah Choo, M. Nasurdin, Wong Ah Woo, Goh Wee Pah Ahamad, and C. de Bruix Chinese Interpreter-Tan Kee Chong Tamil Interpreter-K. Chellapah Land Bailiff-Wan Chi Sanitary Inspector-J. Jambu Clerk and Shroff-Che Rouse
SUPREME COURT
Senior Puisne Judge-Hon'ble S. L
Thornton, private secretary
1366
PENANG
Senior Puisne Judge-P. W. Abbott Puisne Judge--Hon'ble T. de M. Brad-
dell, private secretary Puisne Judge - J. W. Scott Registry
Registrar R. C. Edmonds, H. G.
Sarwar (acting)
Deputy Registrar
Nunn (acting)
H. G. Sarwar, B.
Chief Clerk-K. S. Scully
Clerks Class II.-E. Merican, S. Man-
ikhram
Clerks Class III,
Mahomed Abbas,
Loo Hoe Cheng, Shaik Maho. ed Tamby
Tamil Interpreters M. S. Chinniah,
A. Ponoosamy
Malay Interpreters-C. P. C. Aeria, E.
Mohamed Kassim
Chinese Interpreters-Lo Man Yuk,
Chan Wah Hem
Stamp Vendor-A. Nagalingam Sheriff's Department
Sheriff-R. C. Edmonds, H. G. Sarwar
(acting)
Clerk Class III.--Cheah Chin Kung Sworn Bailiffs-S. Ponoosamy Solicitor General's Department Acting Solicitor-General-P.J.Sproule Clerk Class II.-G. Poooosamy
TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT
Supt.-C. P. Bucknell, K.I.E.E.
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE, GOVERNMENT
Supt.-C. P. Buckell, A.LE.E.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Assistant Treasurer, Collector of Stamp Revenue, and Deputy Acent. General Supreme Court -Geo.Copley
Chief Clerk-Tioh Hean Fng Stamp Office
Chief Clerk-F. A. Palmer
VETERINARY DEPARTMENT
Veterinary Surgeon W. H. MacAr-
thur, M.R.C.V.S., &c.
Veterinary Inspector-A. White
Do. --Pall Singh Do. -R. V. Patel
Clerk A. Singaram
GRAHAM & NICHOLSON, Aerated Water Manufacturers-Office: Logan's Build- ings; Factory: 209, McAlister Road
GREEN ISLAND CEMENT CO., LTD.-F.M.S. Railway Buildings, China Street, Ghaut; Head Office: Hongkong; Tel. No. 351
R. Henderson, agent
Tan Hong Kee Cheah Hock Lye
HONGKONG ROPE MANUFACTURING Co., LTD.-F. M. S. Railway Buildings, China Street, Ghaut; Head Office: Hongkong;
Tel. No. 351
R. Henderson, agent
Tan Hong Kee Cheah Hock Lye
GUTHRIE & Co., Ltd.-49 and 51, Beach St.
Registered Office: Battery Road
Branch Office: London, 5, Whitting ton Avenue, Leadenhall Street, E.
Dir.-Hon. J. Anderson (Singapore) Manager A. Hood-Begg, signs
per pro.
Asst. C.M. Anderson, signs per pro. Assistant J. Hammond Agencies.
Government of British North Borneo Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Phoenix Insurance Company New Zealand Insurance Co. Hongkong Fire Insurance Co. Western Assurance Co. Eastern & Australian S.S. Co., Ltd. Osaka Shosen Kaisha
HOEFELD & Co., Exchange, Share and
General Brokers-6A, Beach Street
Sole Partner-L. Hoefeld
HOGAN, REGINALD A. P., Barrister-at-law, Advocate, Solicitor and Notary Public- 2, Logan's Buildings, Beach Street
Reginald A. P. Hogan, barrister-at-law, advocate, solicitor and notary public S.S., and in the Federated Malay States
George E. Wright-Motion, solicitor, Supreme Court (England), advocate and solicitor S.S. and in Federated Malay States
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPN.
Cecil Guinness, agent
W. S. Nicholls, accountant
G. W. Wood, assistant F. C. Kendall,
E. H. Gardon,
do. do.
HOWARTH, ERSKINE, LD., Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineers; Office and Show-rooms: 28, Beach Street, and at Battery Road, Singapore; F. M. S., Siam, Rangoon, Hongkong, Canton and Shang- hai; London Agents: James Pollock Sons & Co., Ld., 3, Lloyd's Avenue; Telegrams
Erskine
J. W. Stokes, local manager
A. S. Hall, draftsman
HUTTENBACH BROS, & Go., Merchants -27,
Beach St.; Tel. Ad: Habiture
August Huttenbach
Ludwig Huttenbach (London)
W. Ewald (Singapore)
F. Duxbury, signs per pro.
R. S. Jarvis
PENANG
A. Anthony
S. Ryley
Machinery
& Electrical Dept.
A. Sadler, A.M.1.E.E.
F. N. Bell
F. Pritchard
Lin Chee Cheng,
do. (Beach St.)
Lin Ewe Sean, chief clerk
Koe Kiang Hong, cashier
A. E. Herbert, storekeeper (Sunghei)
Teang Choon, asst. bookkeeper
Branch Houses: Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore; Huttenbach & Co., 4, Fenchurch Avenue, London, E. C.
Agencies
Allegemeine
chaft, Berlin
Electricitats Gesells-
-
Penang Ice & Industrial Co. Ld. British American Tobacco Co. Ld. Chubbs, Sons Co., Safes and Strong
Room Doors
A. & J. Main, Ld., Glasgow, Iron Struc-
tures
Lever Brothers, Limited, Soaps
Tangyes Ld., Oil Engines and Pumps Kitson Lights & Foreign Supply Co.,Ld,
HUTTENBACH, LIEBERT & Co., Shipping, Business and Str. Agency-27, Beach St.; Tel. Ad: Huttlieb; Telphi 521
August Huttenbach"
Ludwig Huttenbach (London) W. Ewald (Singapore) Jos. Heims, signs the firin F. Duxbury, signs per pro.
L. H. Wemyss
Họ Chye Teong, Hajee Mahomed,
brokers
Mahomed Hassan, bill collector Agencies
British India Steam Nav. Co., Ld., Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij American & Oriental Line to and from
N. Y. and Boston (joint agency) Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland Stoomvaart Maatschappij Rotter-
damsche Lloyd
The Queensland Royal Mail Line
British & Foreign Mar. Insce. Co., Ld. Board of Underwriters of New York Philadelphia Board of Marine Under-
writers
INTERNATIONAL PRESS, Printers, Stationers
and Book-binders-25, Beach Street
Proprietor M. Jelupdin
Assistant-Che Din Abdul Ghany
JAMIESON, T. HILL, M.B., C.M.-Consulting room: 8, Beach St.; res: 36, Northam Rd.
JEBSEN & Co., HERM., Merchants
H. Pickenpack,
Johs. Pickenpack
Ferd. Hunaeus, assistant
Agencies
1357
Northern Assurance Co., Ld. Prussian National Insurance Co. Hanseatic Fire Insurance Co., Ltd. "Schweiz " Transport Insurance Co. General Insurance Co., Dresden Bureau Veritas
South British Ins. Co., Ltd.
Badische Aniline & Soda Fabrik-
Ludioyshafen
Continantal
Caoutschon & Gutta
Percha Co., Hannover
Joo TER & Co., Merchants, Commission
Agents and Storekeepers.
Tan Khoen Giok (Penang) Sée Goat (chair)
Ong See See (Compradore)
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE
J. M. Anthony A. S. Anthony T. C. Avetoon G. N. Bee W. M. L. Bower E. H. Bratt E, A. B. Brown W. A. Cuscaden J. Donald, M.B. Cheah Chen Eok W. H. Fry
H. B. de Hamel R. C. Guinness W. R. J. Hawtrey F. O. Hallifax
J. W. Hallifax
H. Hilton
S. H. R. Lucy
G. Macbain C. G. May A.deW.Neubronner H. M. Nurdin H. F. Perrett F. J. Pigott K. T. Quee A. B. Smith J. Sargant W. S. Sheppard J. Turner
C. B. Whitehead Capt. H. A. Ander-
8011
G. R. Brooke
G. C. Cowap
T. H.Jamieson, MB., F. B. Croucher
C.M.,
A. H. Keun M.B.
C. A. Law
Lim Hua Chiam
Liong Lok Heng
D. W. Gilmour
G. Slothard
Lim Eu Toh V. G. Saoi
(All Magistrates are ex-officio Justices of the Peace for the Settlement for which they are appointed)
Katz Brothers, LIMITED, Merchants- Registered Office, Singapore; Branches: London and Frankfurt a/M.
Otto Schüle, manager and director
Harry Waugh, signs per pro. Ernst Reimann, do.
Richard Kober C. D. Young
Agencies
Hanseatischer Lloyd
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co., Queen Insurance Company Royal Insurance Company
Mannheimer Insurance Company
1358
PENANG
Manchester Fire Assurance Company Aachen Munich Fire Insurance Co.
KAULFUSS, AUG. E., Photographie Studio
-27, Farquhar Street
KER CHUAN Co., Merchants-15, Church St.
KENNEDY & Co., Exchange and Share Brokers, Estate and General Agents- Government Buildings
C. A. Law, partner
A. Bowers Smith, partner
B. C. Criswick, assistant
M. K. Whitlock,
W. K. Sharpe
E. H. Syers,
Agencies
do.
do.
do.
Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Ltd. Kalumpong Rubber Co., Ltd, Sun Life Assce. Co. of Canada Canada Accident Assce. Co. Guardian Assce. Co., Ld.
KIE HENG BEE (Estate of the late Puah Hin Leong) Riceand Oil Mills-294, Brick Kiln Road, Sungei Pinang, Penang; Telegraphic Address: Khiehengbe; Codes used: A.B.C., 4th and 5th editions; Telephone No. 422
Ong Teng Neoli, executrix and trustee Chuah Chooi Glee, executor do. Lim Cheng Teik, managing executor Lim Cheng Law do. partner Lin Joo Tek, general assistant C. A. Waller, C.E., Engineer
KHYE HO FOUNDRY Co. Engineers, Boiler
makers, Iron and Brass Founders and Contrs. Weld Quay, and 31, Beach St.
LIBRARY, PENANO
President-Hon. R. N. Bland
Librarian and Treas.-W. A. Bicknell
LOGAN & Ross, Advocates and Solicitors, Straits Settlements, F.M.S., Penang and Ipoh; Tel. Ad: Sharp
MACBETH AND BARRETT-7, Union Street;
Tel. Ad: Macbee
David Macbeth, A.M.I.E.E., partner
do.
J. C. H. Macbeth, do.
J. W. Barrett,
Agencies
The British Dominions
Marine
Insurance Co., Ld., London Great Eastern Life Assce. Co., Ltd.
MCALISTER CO., Ld., Shipchandlers, Mer- chants and Shipping Agts.-19, Beach St.
A. D. Allan (chairman) director F. M. Elliot, director
Sir Malcolm McEacharn (London)
Andrew McIlraith (London) Alex. Reid, secretary
W. S. Goldie, signs per pro. J. D. Robertson
G. W. Holloway, bookkeeper G. F. B. Ühen J. B. Capel
G. Thomas
MCINTYRE, C. A., Land and Commission Agent and Appraiser-21, Bishop St. MALAKOFF PLANTATIONS, Co., Ld. - Pro-
vince Wellesley
Boustead & Co., agents (Penang) Geo. Stothard, inanager
MANSFIELD & Co., Ld., W.-33, Beach St.
E. Anderson, manager (Singapore) W. G. Hennings, do. do. J.G. Berkhuijsen do.
K. Douglas
Choon Seng Hin
Oh Seng Swee Ismail
(Penang)
Maliomed Syer, cashier
Branch
W. Mansfield & Co., Ld., Singapore
Agencies
Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. China Mutual S. N. Co., I. China Navigation Company, Limited Penang Water Boat Co., Ld.
MANSON, W., American Dentist
Wong Chin Ngo-Assistant
MANUFACTURERS LIFE INSURANCE Co., THE-Head Office: Toronto, Canada General Agents-Guthrie Co., Ld.,
49, Beach Street
MARTYN & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents--35, Beach St.; Tel. Ad: Martyn
H. J. Martyn, jr., The Hague
J. Ellerman,
do.
H. Goldenberg, Hamburg
H. Keitel, manager, signs per pro. P. Baerlocher, assistant
Agencies
Royal Dutch Oil Company, Langkat Peter Dawson's Whisky
Java Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Van Strualen Monsieur & Erkelens,
Rotterdam, Wines
T.Van Nelle, Rotterdam-ShagTobacco Erven Lucas Bols, Amsterdam-Bols
Gin and Liqueurs
MASONIC -Freemasons' Hall, Northam Rd. LODGE ROVAL PRINCE OF WALES, NO.
1555 E. C.
W. M.-W. Marsh
S. W.-F. Daniel
J. W.-P. Ambler Treasurer- J. T. Dobbie Secretary-H. de L. Cook S. D.-O. V. Thomas J. D.-J. R. Evans Dir. of Cer.-N. Young I. G.-Z. A. A. Oechsle Tyler-R. G. Andrews
LODGE SCOTIA, No. 1003, S. C. R. W. M.-Jas. T. Dobbie I. P. M.-F. M. J. Skae D. M.-T. Stuart Rose S. M.--J. G. Allan
W. S. W.-L. Haig Wemyss W. J. W.-W. A. Ward Secy. John Creig Trea.-J. Huese S. D.-W. N. Bright J. D.-A. M. Stewart Steward-F. A. Heise
Do. --E. E. A. Maarcks Tyler-R. G. Andrews J. G.-W. W. Wilson D. Y. C.-H B. Joseph Organist J. C. H. Macbeth.
PENANG
VICTORIA JUBILEE ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER
1555 E. C.
P. Z.-R. Owen
P. H.-Jas. T. Dobbie P. J.-J. S. Cunningham Scribe E.-J. R. Evans Scribe N.-R. K. S. Pertney Treasurer--Walter Marsh P. S.-W. S. Bobeler, P.Z. Asst. S.-J. R. Logan Janitor R. G. Andrews
MUNICIPALITY
Commissioners-F. J. Hallifax (pre- sident), Qual Beng Kee, L. H. Clayton, J. W. Hallifax, Lim Cheng Teik, Dr. P. V. Locke Secretary-L. A. C. Biggs Asst. do.-W. Marsh, A.C.1.S. Clerks H. H. Peterson, R. L. de Souza, Yeoh Ang Kee, Wong Ho Lai, Khoo Kay Bor, Chan Cheng Goh, M. Naina, R. Andres, V. Peter- son, Md. Meah, S. P. Mainkum, Cheah Eng Eow, Boy Cheng Chuan, E. A. Scully
Bailiffs-T. J. Lesslar, Tan Cheung
Siew
Inspector of Vacant Houses L.
D'Araujo
Inspector of Markets-A.B.C. Doral Jinricksha Department
Regr.Jinrikshas,&c.-A.W.B.Hamilton
Assistant
--J. Velge
Chief Clerk-Khoo Ean Beng
Second --Leon Jeok Leong
Engineers' Department
1350
Engineer L. M. Bell, M.L.C.E. Chief Assistant-W S. Dunn Overseer of Works-H. G. Caunter Draughtsman-G. H. Irwin
Clerks to Engineer-Lim Eanchuan,
Ong Seang Wan, R. Rangel Building Inspector-J. Rutherford Assistants
-R. G. Andrews,
ע
Sk. Md. Ismail
Overseer of Roads E. R. Scully Asst. Overseer of Roads-G. R. Wood-
ford Overseer of Scavangers-W. D'Oliveiro Water Inspector-D. T. Pasqual Waste Water Inspector V. D'Souza Asst. Waste Water Inspector-L. M.
Robless
Fitters-S. Pasqual, J. Symons, M. Gregory, C Pasqual, J. Dielenberg, A. Felix, R. Synions, J. Bondville, J. Jeremiah
Health Officer's Department
Health Officer-G. W. Park, M.B. C.M.B. Asst. Office- J. S. Rose, M.B.
B.D.P.H.
CH.
Inspector Sanitary Improvements-I.
E. Robless
Deputy Inspector do. B. D'Souza Sanitary Inspectors W. A. Ward, A. Woodford, E. U. D'Orville, A. Jeremiah, J. Reutens, F. Rozells, L. Subbiah, J. Nicholas, J.B. Hobbes, A. W. Taylor, R. V. Gregory, G. A. Wills Inspector of Cemeteries-F. Matthews Fire Department
Supdt. Fire Dept.-A. W. B. Hamilton Superintendent Engineer-J. G. Allan Electric Supply Department
Electrical Engineer-O. V. Thomas Asst.
E. S. Haslam Mains Superintendent--C. C. Rogers Jointer-C. Fletcher
3
Traffic Supt.--W. P. V. Jones Asst. Tramway Engineer-S. H. May Meter Inspector-Th. Rodriguez Steam Engineer-H. Calderwood Drivers L. Gautier, P. Joseph, E.
Baptist
Clerks H. M. Joseph, J. Gregory, C.
Andres
Veterinary Dept.-M. Vet. Supt. E
Bell, M.R.C.V.S.
Veterinary Inspt.-J. M. Wesley Assistant do. -H. P. Read
Do.
do. -H. C. Rice
MUSHIM SOCIETY-Kapitan Kling Mosque,
Penang
President-E. Abdullasah Merican Vice-President-Syed Mashoor Cin
Ali, Muhammed Ismail
Hon. Treas.-Mas Abdul Aziz
1360
PENANG
Hon. Secy.-H. M. Qassim Sahibal-
Sailany
Arabic Corpd-Shaik Avad-Saidan High Priest--Syed Abdul Bari Ahdali Mufti Shaik Davood Tamim Kathi--Syed Hussain Idroos Imam.-Haji Abdulla
NAMBYAR AND GOULD, Advocates and Soli- citor, Supreme Court of the Straits Set- tlements and of Federated Malay States -3, Union Street, Penang
Nambyar, P. K., B.A. (Cantab) Barris-
ter-at-Law (Inner Temple) Gould, R. C., Solicitor (England) V. Chelliah Pillai, B.A., articled clerk V. Reutens, managing clerk
NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL-MAATSCHAPPIJ (Netherlands Trading Soc.)-9, Beach St.
W. van der Woude, sub-agent
J. H. Schröder, accountant L. H. Gorris
J. R. de Jong
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE ESCOMPTO-MAAT- SCHAPPIJ (Netherlands-India Discount Bank)-22-A, Beach Street, corner of Church Street; Head Office Batavia
G. R. van Kralingen, agent Joh. H. Pooties, signs per pro. J. M. Enger, accountant Tan Choo Fat, cashier
Teoh Boon Hong, assistant cashier Teoh Cheng Hooi, Tay Tiang Huat, Lim Yee On, Lim Kean Leong, Lam Hor Chuk, clerk Branches:-
Amsterdam, Soerabaya, Samarang, Padang, Weltevreden, Bandoeng, Cheribon, and Tandjong-Priok
P.A.S.I.,
NEUBRONNER, H. A. AR.I.H. A.,
Architect, Civil Engineer, Licensed Land Surveyor and Valuer, and Vice- Consul for Siam-33, Beach Street; Tel. Ad: Newner; Teleph. No. 672
X. Dominique, draughtsman E. Scully, typewriter and tracer
OPIUM AND LIQUOR FARMS-Queen Street
OTHMAN MERICAN & Co., Merchants and Commission Agents, Valuers and Land Speculators-555, Penang Road, Penang; Established 1872; Tel. Ail: Othman
Partner A. O. Merican
Assists. Shaik Md. Othman Merican,
Ali Othman Merican
Manager and Accountant---Abu Kas-
sim Merican
Clerk and Cashier-Mahomed Ghouse Store keeper and Bill Collector-
Swathee
Patell and Co., Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents
M. J. Patell (Hongkong)
C. Burjorjee, manager
PATERSON, SIMONS & Co., LTD., Merchants -9, Weld Quay; London Office: Paterson Simons & Co., Ltd., 10 and 11, Lime St., E.C.; Singapore Branch: Paterson, Simons & Co., Ltd.
H. M. Simons (chairman)
W. II. Shelford, Williani McKerrow.
managing directors
Graham Paterson, A. H. Drew, direc-
tors
R. T. Reid, manager (signs per pro.) T. A. Martin, assist. dlo. J. R. Stronach
A. Mourin
Agencies
London Assce. Corpt, Fire and Marine Alliance Assce. Co., Ld, Fire
Karangan Hyd., Tin Mining Co., Ld. Dodwell's Line of New York steamers United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld. The East Asiatic Co., Ld., Copenhagen The Russian East Asiatic Co., Ld.
The Swedish East Asiatic Co., Ld.
PENANG AMATEUR DRAMATIC SOCIETY President-Allan W. B. Hamilton Hon. Sec. and Treas.--H. A. Neubronner Committee H. A. Neubronner, Robert Young, E. E. Sykes, O. V. Thomas
PENANG DISPENSARY LTD., THE, Wholesale Chemists and Opticians-4, Beach St. Directors--Dr P. Liston, Dr. K. L. Leng, Quah Beng Kee, CheackCheng Lean
W.D. Wilson, M.P.S., managing director
PENANG FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION
A. E. T. Murray, chairman
R. P. Phillips, A.Š. A.A., F. C.L.S., secretary
PENANG ICE AND INDUSTRIAL CO., LD.-Batu
Ferenggi
Huttenbach Bros. & Co., agents
J. Kelly, engineer of Ice Works
PENANG KHEAN GUAN INSURANCE COY. LTD., THE-Head Office: No. 38, Beach Street
PENANG MUNICIPAL ELECTRIC TRAMWAYS Offices: Res. Engineer and Manager: Municipal Offices; Asst. Engineer and Traffic Dept, Workshop, etc.: Dato Kramat Road
Res. Engineer and Manager-Orlo V
Thomas, M.L.E.E., A.M.I.C.E. Assistant Engineer-S. H. May Traffic Superintendent -W. P.V. Jones
ELECTRIC LIGHT DepartmeNT
PENANG
Mun. Elect. Engr.-O. V. Thomas Chief Assistant-E. S. Haslam Mains Supt.-C. C. Rogers.
PENANG PILOT ASSOCIATION-Office: Gov-
ernment Buildings
Members-Capts. F. Daniel, R. Owen, J. S. Liddell, R. S. Pentney, W. Brown
PENANG SALES ROOM-38, Beach_Street; Established 1892; Auctioneers, Brokers, Valuers, House and Land Agents, Import Merchants, Dealers in Continental and Oriental Curios, Cabinet Makers and Complete House Furnishers
PENANG ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY
Trustees Dr. G. W. Park, W. J. Muri-
son Allan
President Dr. J. Kirk
Hon. Secy, and Trea.-Jas. T. Dobbie Committee Dr. Jameson, T. B. Peter
kin, A. Wilson, D. W. Gilmour, J. Stark, W. S. Goldie, J. G. Allan, Hon. J. Turner, W. J. Murison Allan, J. T. Donak, Rev. E. Lawson, M.A.
PENANG SUGAR ESTATES CO., LTD., THE,
Hon. John Turner, ML.C., administr.
and attorney
Joseph Sargant, accountant H. C. Hughesdon,
W. Flett,
Caledonia Estate, P. W.
do. assistant
do.
do.
D. Douglas, field manager
W. B. Wilson, superintät. engineer
W. M. Miller, F.C.S., factory manager
and chemist
W. M. Dodds, assistant engineer
J. Rankine,
K. McLeod, assistant manager
do.
O. B. Pike,
do.
J. Fraser,
do.
G. Parker,
do.
H. C. D'Arcy Irvine, do.
M. McKinnon,
do.
J. H. McLeod,
do.
H. K. C. Tobbutt
do.
J. A. Macdonald,
do,
F. J. Holbrook,
do.
C. B. Ussher,
do.
G. W. Lendrum,
do.
S. Roberts,
do.
A. Cowburn,
do.
Byram Estate, P. W.
Yeoh Poh Chuan, chief clerk
W. E. Goodman, manager
K. McAulay, asst.
D. J. McIver,
do.
do.
G. Robertson, do.
A. K. Atkinson,
do
Golden Grove Estate, P. W.
R. Joshua, overseer in charge Tali Ayer Estate, Perak
Bruce Petrie, manager
A. C. Boyd, assistant manager F. C. Marples,
J. Burling,
do.
do.
1361
Strathmashie Estate, Bagan Dato, Perak
R. H. Phillips, manager
Selaba Estate, Teluk Anson
G. T. Lachlan,
manager B. H. Harrison, asst. do. D. D. Matthew, do. W. Shairy,
do.
Sungei Separap Estate, B. Pahat, Johore
W. Duncan, manager
Sabrang Estate, Teluk Anson, Perak
W. Duncan, manager Boustead & Co., agents
PERAK GOVERNMENT AGENCY A. D. Neubronner, agent
PRYE RUBBER & COCOANUT PLANTATIONS,
LTD.-Province Wellesley
Prve Estate
Hon. J. Turner, administrator McAuliffe Dairs, Evens & Co., ac-
countants
T. Wilson, manager
T. N. Symous
Cheah Cheng Paik, store-keeper M. V. Nateson, asst, surgeon
J. R. Gordon, asst. manager A. D. Duncan
R. W. Turner Ong Ho Tat, clerk Toli Born Nuat, do. T. M. Comaru, overseer Batu Kawan Estate
J. Paul, manager E. Chin Egge Bob, clerk Permatang Pow Estate
T. Wilson, manager
Penang agents: Huttenbach Brothers
& Co.
London agents: Huttenbach & Co. Hon. J. Turner, administrator
PHARMACY, THE-80, Bishop Street
Dr. J. E. Smith, medical practitioner C. J. Boudville, dispenser
PINANG GAZETTE PRESS, LD., Daily and Weekly Newspaper-Logan's Buildings, Beach Street
Directors R. Young, A. B. Smith,
Hon. A. R. Adams
H. Welham, editor
Jas. T. Dobbie, sub-editor
D. A. M. Brown, general manager
43
1362
PENANG
PRESGRAVE & MATTHEWS, Advocates, Soli- citors and Notaries Public-13, Beach St.; Tel. Ad: Presgrave
S. C. Ambrose, solicitor
W. E. Cleaver, barrister-at-law C. R. Samuel, solicitor
Jos. Gawthorne, managing clerk
PRITCHARD & Co.-15, Beach St.; General Merchants, Complete House Furnishers, Outfitters, Tailor's and Breeches Makers, Drapers, Dressmakers, Wine, Spirit and Provision Merchants, Booksellers and Stationers
G. H. Pritchard, partner
G. H. Lees,
E. Lees,
do. do.
H. T. Petts, signs per pro. J. W. Webb
F. S. Physick
W. C. Anderson Law
A. D. Brown
W. S. Woolnough
C. T. Smith
D. W. Coleman
W. Simpson L. S. Jolinson S. I. Humphrey G. H. Cooinbs Tan Ghim Chooi Lye Poh Swee Lin Poh San G. de Reis S. E. Matthieu C. Torris W. M. Allan
Miss Reuten
Miss Gregory
Miss Capel
Miss Miss Felix
RECREATION CLUBS
BUKIT MERTAJAM RECREATION CLUB
President-W, Langham Carter Hon. Secretary A. H. Wheatley Hon. Treas.-M. V. Emuang
BUTTERWORTH RECREATION CLUB
Presidt.-The
District
Butterworth
Officer at
Vice-Presdt.--The Med. Officer, P. W. Hon. Secretary--Capt. Win. Arthun Games Captain-B. G. H. Johnson Hon. Treasurer-Mohamed Eussoof
PENANG AUTOMOBILE CLUB
President Robt. Young
Hon. Sec. and Treas.-D. A. M. Brown
PENANG CRICKET CLUB
President-Dr. T. Hill Jamieson Vice-President-W. S. Dunn Captain-0. P. Griffith Jones
Vice-Capt.-H. A. Neubronner
Football Capt.--G. S. Goldie C'mittec-J.W.Hallifax, W.S.Lecky A. S. Anthony, Hon. A. R. Adams, J. R. Brown (Sec.)
PENANG GOLF CLUB
President-Cecil Guinness Captain-T. R. Peterkin Hob. Secretary-- N. Fox Treasurers-D. A. M. Brown & Phillips
PENANG MOSLEM ASSOCIATION
President-H. M. Noordin Vice-Presidents-M. M. Noordin and
Haji Zachariah
Hon. Secretaries-H. G. Sarwar, A. O.
Merican
Asst. Hon. Secretary-Mahomed Ariff Hon. Treasurer-Mahomed Ismail
PENANG RECREATION CLUB
President-J. D. Scully
Hon. Secretary--C. C. Stewart
PENANG SWIMMING CLUB - Tanjong
Bungah
President-Hon. A. R. Adams, M.L.C. Vice-President-F. Duxbury
Captain B. C. Criswich
Secretaries and Treasurers-Evatt &
Co., Railway Building
PENANG TURF CLUB
President J. F. Wreford
Secretary and Clerk of the Course-
D. A. M. Brown
Committee-Hou. A. R. Adames, W. E. Cleaver, Cecil Guiness, Captain Macintyre, Jules Martin, W. S. Lecky
SEPOY LINES RECREATION CLUE
President Asst. Surg. M.E. Scriven Hon. Secretary-E. G. Culln Hon. Treasurer-M. E. Scriven Committee-Asst. Surgeon F. Ro- driguez, R. J. Kirke, W. B. Ogle, and Lim Tai Lee
RIGOLD, BERGMANN & Co., Merchants-25-A,
Beach Street
Geo. Bergmann (London)
Manager-H. Cooke (signs per pro.) Assistant J. H. Willcocks
RILEY HARGREAVES & Co. LD., Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineers, Founders, Shipbuilders and Contractors
W. E. Hutson, manager
ROBINSON PIANO Co., LD.
Piano and Organ Manufacturers, Repairers, Tuners, Music and Musical Instrument Sellers-Beach Street
Principal-W. Vaughan Robinson Manager-W. J D. Trengove Store Asst.-Miss L. de Mornay
PENANG
ROUSE & FRIENDS, Merchants and Com- mission Agents-25, Beach Street; Telpli. Ad: Rose, Penang
Sole Proprietor-C. M. Ibrahaim Partner-Mohd. Mastun Collector-Mohd. Hussein
SANDILANDS, BUTTERY & Co., Merchants-
29, Beach Street
SCHIFFMANN, HEER & Co. (in Liquidation) Special Manager of the Estate Jos. P.
Welker
SCHMIDT, KUSTERMANN & Co., Merchants
R. Klünder (Hamburg)
M. Sull
R. Sturzenegger (Schaffhausen) Alfred Suhl, signs per pro.
I. Tschudi,
do.
do.
L. Saladin, assistant 0. May, Agencies
Austrian Lloyds' Steam Navgn. Co. Fire Insurance Co. of 1877, Hamburg Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co. Transatlantic Marine Insurance Co. Hamburg Underwriters
North German Marine Insce. Co. Bremen Underwriters
Assureurs Maritimes d'Anvers Dresden Insurance Company Sun Insurance Office
Assicurazioni Generali, Trieste Foncière Pesther Versicherungs Ges. Rheinisch Westfaelischer Lloyd Allgemeine Transport Versich. Ges. Badische Schiffahrts Assecuranz Ges. Sjó Assurans Foreningen in Finland Elementar Versicherungs Actien Bank Magdeburger Allgemeine Vers. Ges, Basler Transport Versicherungs Ges. Basler Vers. Gesels. gegen Feuerschaden Oberrheinische Versicherungs Ges. Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Ei dg. Transport Vers. Ges. Rhenania Vers. Actien Ges., Coln Aachen Leipzig Vers. Ges., Aachen Schweiz Transport Versicherungs Ges. Deutscher Lloyd Transport Vers. Ges. Deutsche Rück-Mitvers Ges. in Berlin
SCHOOLS
ANGLO-CHINESE METHODIST EPISCOPAL
SCHOOL-Maxwell Road
Rev. G. F. Pykett, principal Rev. D. M. Toomey R. F. Maynard, B.A. J. W. Eckersall
S. Augustine B.A., B.L.
G. Logan
K. Vanaiasingham Miss Young
Miss Eileen Young Miss Rita Burke Miss Campbell
Miss Aeria
ANGLO-TAMIL SCHOOL FOR GIRL:
Mistress-Mrs. Esther Ezekiel
Boys' SCHOOL, PULO TIKUS
Manager-Rev. Bro. James
FREE SCHOOL, Penang
1363
Managing Committee Hon. The Re- sident Councillor (chairman), Colo- nial Chaplain, Assistant Treasurer, Auditor, Inspector of Schools Assistant Protector of Chinese, C. G. May, A. D. Neubronner, Yeoli Guan Seok, Chung Thye Phin, Cheal Tek Thye, Goh Taik Chee, H. G. Sarwar, Lim Eow Hong, Leong Lok Hing, R. H. Pinhorn (hon. secretary), George Copley (hon, treasurer) Head Master R. H. Pinhorn, M.A. Assistant Masters--W. Hamilton, B.A., F. H. Hawkins, R. Butler, H. Starr, W.E.Mann, H.A.R. Cheeseman, W.E. MacDonald, M.A., C. H. Davis, M.A., (Oxon.) and 16 native assist. masters
GIRLS' SCHOOL-Pulo Tikus
Manager-Rev. P. Perrichon Mistress Miss M. Jeremiah
S. GEORGE'S GIRLS' SCHOOL- Transfer Rd. Head Mistress-Miss Hodgkinson
S. GEORGE'S MISSION ANGLO-TAMIL SCHOOL
FOR BOYS
Correspondent-Rev. F. W. Haines Superintendent-Rev. D. A. Peter Head Teacher-A. Amirtham 3 Assistants
ST. XAVIER'S INSTITUTION- Tel. Ad:
Brothers
Principal-Rev. Bro. James
SHEARWOOD, J. A., B.A., Barrister-at-Law
-8, Beach Street
SIEMENS BROTHERS DYNAMO WORKS, LTD. -Manufacturers of and Dealers in Electrical Machinery, Apparatus and Accessories, and Contractors for Electric Light and Power Installations--Head, Offices: Caxton House, Westminster, London, S. W.; Works: Stafford, England; Straits Settlements, Federated Malay States and Burma Representative: G. E. Veuning Thomas, M.L.E.E. (Singapore)
43*
1364
PENANG
Penang Office-ti, Beach Street, Tel. Ad: Siemens, Penang.
W. Stanley Lonsdale, A.M.I.E.E., mngr.
Boey Beng Swee, clerk
Koh Choo Syn, store-keeper A. Solomon, foreman.
SLOT & Co., G. H., Merchants-35E, Beach
Street
SMITH, JAS. M. P., Broker, Auctioneer Land and Estate Agent-7, Church St.
SOCIETE D'ALMA-Alma Estate (Tapioca
Rubber and Cocoanuts)
E. E. Chasserian, manager B. L. Finck, accountant
STARK, JAMES, Civil and Consulting En- gineer, Architect and Surveyor-22-A, Beach Street
Principal-James Stark
Assistant-Shaik Ahmed Meal Draftsmen-Mahomed Zain
-Pawan
· Do.
STRAITS ECHO, Daily Newspaper
Tom Wright, editor
Ung Bok Hoey, manager J. C. J. da Silva, sub-editor
STRAITS SUGAR COMPANY, LTD., THE
The Hon. John Turner, administrator
and attorney
Gedong Estate, Perak
D. Ritchie, manager W. Rankin, engineer
C. Renwick, asst. manager
A. McIver,
W. Adair,
G. Stables,
do.
do.
do.
C. Drummond, do.
Nova Scotia Estate, Perak
W. Duncan, manager
A. Macnab, asst. manager
N. R. Plummer,
A. W. Wilson,
J. M. Counsel,
Rubana Estate
do do.
do.
J. Wilson, manager
N. Macdonald, asst. manager
W. R. C. Gray,
do.
Hai Kee Estate, Bagan Serai, Perak
F. Campen, manager
Boustead & Co., agents
STRAITS TRADING CO., LTD., THE-Hong- kong & Shanghai Bank Buildings; Tel. Ad: Sword, Penang
G. D. N. MacCunn, acting manager
Harold King
H. E. Richards
Works: The Penang Smelting Works,
Butterworth (Province Wellesley)
STUHLMANN & Co., ALFRED, Merchants-- Beach Street; A.B.C. Code 4th and 5th Edition, A. 1. Code; Tel. Ad: Alfrestuhl, Penang
Partner -A. A. Stuhlmann Agencies
Globus Insurance Co. of Hamburg International Lloyd Insurance Co.,
Ld., Berlin
TAMIL MISSION ASSOCIATION
President-Rev. F. W. Haines Vice President-Rev. D. A. Peter Hon. Secretary-S. Jolin
Hon. Treasurer-Rev. D. A. Peter
TELEGRAPH COMPANY, LIMITED, EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA AND CHINA- Beach Street and Northam Road
R. G. S. Buckland, superintendent A. Macartney, electrician and acting
Asst. supt.
W. H. Newitt, supervisor
E. J. W. Eames,
J. Ince,
do.
do.
E. G. B. Dunkerley, electr. mechn.
H. R. Buckland, operator
G. B. F. Southam, do.
E. A. Karl,
do.
J. W. D'Almeida, do.
J. W. McNamee, chief counter clerk
THOMAS, ORLO V., A.M.INST.C.E., M.I.E.E, Engineer-in-Chief Electricity Supply Department, Penang Municipality and Res. Engineer and Manager Penang Municipal Electric Tramways
WHITEWAY, LAIDLAW & Co., Ld., Drapers and Complete House Furnishers-8A-8B and 10, Beach Street
S. G. Parrett, manager J. M. Pennycuick, assistant E. P. White,
F. Baptist, cashier
do.
M. Jeremiah, assistant
do.
Miss Kennedy, do.
P. Joseph,
Miss Aeria,
do.
Miss Rose, do.
and 7 others
WILSON, ALAN, Civil Engineer, Architect, and Licensed Land Surveyor-350,Beach St.; Tel. Ad: Winner; Telep. 397 Alan Wilson, A.M.I. C.E., M.S.E.
Mat Din, draughtsman babjan tracer
WOODFORD, JAS. L., Draper, Outfitter
Bookseller, &c.-2A, Beach Street
WOODFORD & Co., W.N., Merchts.-Beach St.
PENANG-JOHORE
WREFORD & THORNTON, Advocates and So- licitors-27, Beach Street; Branch Offices: Kuala Lumpor, Selangor and Ipoh, Perak
J. F. Wreford, B.A. (Oxon.)
M. R. Thornton,
David Freeman, assistant solicitor
J. Dunford Wood
C. Nelligan, managing clerk Shaik Eosoff'
do.
Oh Kok Eng,
do.
J. Peterson, asst. clerk
A. Bakar,
do.
Md. Merican,
do.
1365
YOUNG, W. MCKNIGHT, Barrister-at-law, Advocate and Solicitor,Supreme Court- 4a, Beach Street
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF
PENANG "Roseneath," 12, Logan Road
President Dr. G. W. Park Vice-President-Rev. G. F. Pykett Hon. Sec, and Treasurer-F. N. Bell
YOUNG, L. J., Agent-12, Barrack Road;
Tel. Ad: Diadem
YOUNG, ROBERT, M.L.M.E., Consulting Eng
-Chamber of Commerce Buildings
J. W. Hunt, assistant
JOHORE
This State occupies the southern portion of the Malayan Peninsula, and has an area of about 9,000 square miles. The State is ruled by a Sultan, who is independent, bet under the protection of the British Government so far as external policy is concerned. The present Sultan, Ibrahim, was born in 1873, and succeeded his father, the late Sultan Abubakar, in 1895, being crowned on the 2nd of November of that year. The country has made great progress in material prosperity, and its orderly condition has attracted a good deal of European capital, invested in planting enterprises.
The capital is the town of Johore Bharu, or new Johore, as distinguished from Johore Lâma, or old Johore, the former seat of the sultans of Johore, which was situated a few miles up the wide estuary of the Johore river. The new town is a flourishing little place on the nearest point of the mainland to Singapore island, and lying about 14 niles to the north-east of Singapore city, in 1° 26' N. It contains some 20,000 inhabitants, mostly Chinese. Amongst the Government buildings are the Istana, court and police stations, barracks, gaol, hospital, market, railway station and a mosque.
A steam saw-mill, owned by Chinese, does a good business. A plentiful supply of water, by means of pipes from a stream in the hills about 12 miles distant, has been provided since March, 1890. Good roads are being made, and, to meet the requirements of the Padang district, a light railway was completed during 1890 as far as Parit Jawa, a distance of eight miles.
The population of the State is remarkable for containing a larger number of Chinese than of Malays. The exact figures have not been ascertained, but probably come to 200,000, viz., Malays, 35,000, Chinese 150,000, and Javanese 15,000. More than half are found within 15 miles of the Singapore Straits. The Chinese are chiefly found as cultivators of gambier and pepper, and are spread over about the range of country in the extreme southern end of the peninsula, nearest to Singapore.
European pioneers have, in the last few years, made some experiments in planting, on a large scale, sago, tobacco, coffee, tea, and cocoa. These have been grown in five different districts-Batu Pahat, Pulau Kokob, Panti, Johore Bharu, and Pengerang ; but it is uncertain how many of them can be considered established industries.
At the present time the principal exports of Johore are the carefully cultivated gambier, pepper, and sago, and the natural products of timber, rattans and damar, for almost all such produce Singapore is the port of shipment.
Rubber Estates are now dotted over a large area of the country.
The only mineral in which the country is really rich is iron. It is nowhere worked, but is found almost everywhere. Deposits of tin are known in several places and gold in one or two spots. A little tin is worked at Seluang, but no considerable mining is actually carried on, unless the islands of the Carimons be included. Though now politically separated from Johore these islands are geologically part of it, and were formerly a dependency of the kingdom.
Coaches and steam-launches run daily to Singapore, whence letters and passengers find easy access to all other ports. A telegraph line has been erected between Johore Bháru and Singapore, and a railway has been constructed across the latter island.
1366
JOHORE
DIRECTORY
Sovereign Ruler-His Highness IBRAHIM, Sultan of the State and Territory of Johore, K.C.M.G., Sovereign of the Most Esteemed Darjah Krabat (Family Order) and the Most Honourable Darjah Mahakota Johore (Order of the Crown of Johore) First Class Osmanieh Order
COUNCIL OF STATE
The Dato Mentri Besar, D.K., S.P.M.J., O M.G,, president The Dato Mohamed B. Mahbob, S.P.M.J., vice-president
SECRETARIAT
The Dato Mentri Besar
Asst. Inchi M. Said B. Abdullah Auditor-Inchi Mustapha Bin Jaafar English Translator-H. G. Yzelman
ECCLESIASTICAl and Education Dept. President-Unku Sulieman Secretary-Hadji Ismail bin H. Sulieman Inspector of Schools-A. H. Chilvers
Schools
Johore Bahru-Malay
Head Master-Mahmood bin Awang
Johore Bahru-English
Head Master A. H. Chilvers Asst. do. -J. Zaralpragasam
GAOL DEPARTMENT
Governor-Dato Yahya b. Shaaban, S.P.M.J. 1st Gaoler-Inchi Mohamed
Abdullah
―
Nor
bin
2nd Gaoler-Inchi Jamak bin H. Omar 3rd Do. Do. Mohamed bin Abdullahı Clerk--Inchi Awang bin Mahinoud Overseer-Inchi Awang bin Idris 1st Sergeant-Inchi Awang bin Konet 2nd Do. Do. Sheik Abdul Rahman Store-keeper Do. Ksem bin Tanjab
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE Superintendent-Haji Ismail bin Sulieman.
ISTANA (Johore Bahru)
In charge Inchi Mohamed Arif bin
Yahya, S.M.J.
Clerk-Wan Mohamed bin Mahmond
MARINE DEPARTMENT
Inspector Engineer-R. Eve
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Principal Med. Officer J. P. A. Wilson,
F.R.C.S.E, D,P.H.
District Surgeon, Muar-Andrew Grant,
M.B., D.PH. (Edin.)
Asst. Medical Officer-Dr. Weber Apothecary Johore Bahru-K. Trutwein
Do. Batu Pahat-Chan Kim Tsun Do. Kotta Tuiggi-W. Boyers
St'keeper-Johore Bahru-TanHuahThong Chief Clerk-A. Kadir
Dressers, Johore Bahru Raof B. Kimes,
Omar bin Chik
Tanka Hospital Asst.-R. B. Pereira Segamat Hospital-B. K. Ram
MILITARY
Head Quarters-The Fort, Johore Bahru Detachment--Mu
Iuar, Bandar Mahrani
Johore Military Forces and Volunteers Colonel & Commandant-H. H. Ibrahim,
Sultan of Johore, D.K., K.C.M.G., &c. Adjutant-Lieut. Horace Cullimore (late
R.M.A.)
Johore Artillery Captain Abdul Gaffor Lieutenant-Fuzzel Deen
Johore Timbalan Stia Negri Captain-Abdul Jabar bin A. Samnad Capt. Moh Salleh Bin Dapat Lieut.-I. Othman bin Mobin Lieut. I. Yahya bin A. Talib
Muar Timbalan Stia Negri Captain A. Hamid bin Yusof Second Lieut.-Hj. Hashim
Johore Volunteer Infantry Major-Daud Bin Sulieman, S.M.J. Captain-Ungku Ahmd, D.K.
Do. Ungku Mohamed Lieut. Moh Atiff Bin Yahya Lieutenant- W. M. Salleh
Do. -Hj. M. Said
Second Lieut.-Tengku Mahmood
Do. -I. Kassim bin Mohamed Do. -Unku Abdul Rahman
-Wan Ibrahim
Do.
Muar Volunteer Infantry Major Dato Abdullah, D.K., D.P.M.J. Captain-I. Haron bin Rejab
Do.
-I. M. Arshad bin Mohamed Lieutenant-I M, Taib bin Abdullah
Do -Hj. Yunos
Second Lieut.-I. Abdullah bin Esa
Do. -I. Mohamed bin M. Sallel Batu Pahat Volunteer Infantry Captain-I. Md. Doon, S.M.J. Lieutenant-Ungku Mansor
Second Lieut.--Ï. Haron bin Hj. Kassim
JOHORE
1367
OPIUM AND SPIRIT FARM
Farmers-Chop Chin Ho Bee
MUAR STATE RAILWAY Acting Traffic Mgr --Molid Taib
POLICE
Chief Commissioner-Inchi Ismail S.M... Deputy Commnr.-Inchi Mohamed Taib
9.M.J.
Acting Chief Inspector-Inchi Bababin
Hads Huain
GENERAL POST OFFICE Postmaster-Gen.-Hadji Mahomed Said
(acting)
Chief Clerk-Inchi Abdullah
Muar Post Office
Acting Postinaster-I. A, Lah Bin Esa
Batu Pahat Post Office
Acting Postmaster---Inchi Haron Kota Tinggt Post Office Officer-in-charge--Inchi Omar
Segamat Post Office
Acting Postmaster A. Azis
Cucob Post Office
Acting Postmaster A. Hamid
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT
Chief Engr.-F. Glendinning
STATE COMMISSION FOR MUAR
Padang and Kessang (West Coast) the Hon'ble Dato Abdullah bin Jaffar, D.K.
D.P.M.J
Magistrate Inchi Abu Bakar
Commr. of Police-Inchi Mohd. Arshad bin
Mohamed
Medical Officer-K. Trutwein (acting). Traffic Manager and Loco. Supt. Muar State Railway-Inche Mohd. Taib bin Abdullah (acting)
Treasurer--Hadji Mohd. Younos bin H.
Ibrahim
Auditor-Inche Abdullah bin Allie Supt. of Custom Office-Inche Mohammed
bin Mohd. Salleh ·
Surveyor-in-Charge-Inche Awang hin
Hussain
Assist. Supt. of Municipality Mohammed bin Mohd. Salleh
Registrar of Deeds
Bachok
―
Inche
Inche Awang bin
Supt. of Schools --Inche Abdullah bin
Allie
Inche Abdul
Registrar of Regulation
Gaffar bin Arshad Supt. and Engineer of Public Works and Town Survey Dept.:--A.J.Thamboosamy Postmaster Inche Abdullah bin Esa Supt. of Water Works-Inche Moham-
med bin Mohd. Salleh
-
Harbour Master-Syed Mohammed bin
Othman (acting)
MUAR CLUB
President The Hon'ble Dato Abdullahı
bin Jaffar, D.K., D,P.M.J.
Honorary Secretary--Inche Abdullah bin
Allie
HIGH COURT
Chief Hakim--Ungku Omar bin Ungku
Almad D. K.
Honorary--C. B. Buckley
Actg. Registrar and Chief Clerk-Syed
Abdullah bin Mohindan
2nd Clerk-Syed Ali bin Hussain
3rd Do. -Wan Jusoh bin Ali
4th Do Inche Abdul Hamid bin Chik 5th Do. -Inche Mobamed bin Abdullah Cashier-Inche Ibrahim bin Na-am Chinese Interpreter-Seah Lam Siew
Do. --Wak Musa
Tanuil
POLICE COURT
Magistrate-Syed Abdul Rahman bin
Omar
1st Clerk- Inche Abu Bakar bin Awang 2nd Do. Hadji Abdul Rahman Ibrahimi 3rd Do. Inche Jaafar bin Pandak Chinese Interpreter-Chia Yong Seng Tamil Do. -T. Gooindasamy
TREASURY AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT President Dato Mohd Hassan, S.P.M.J. Secretary Unku Ali bin A. Majid, D.K. Cashier Inchi Esa Ibrahim bin Abdul
Majid
Chief Clerk-Sheik Yahya Arishee Clerk-Inchi E. S. A. bin Abdullah
TYERSALL
(Singapore Residence of H.H. The Sultan) In charge Inchi Yusof
ADDA RUBBER ESTATES LD.-Tebrau ; Post
Office: Johore Bahru
W. N. Gawler, manager
J. Rasmussen, secretary
S. Gad, R. L. Leigh - Clare, J. C.
Hermausen (directors)
Agents
The East Asiatic Co., Ld., Singapore
BATU TIGA JOHORE RUBBER ESTATE-Postal
Ad: Kota Tinggi
J. A. le Doux, manager
CASTLEWOOD RUBRER CO., LD., THE-Near
Johore Batun
J. L. Walker, manager R. Phillips, asst. manager
McAlister Co., Ld., Singapore, agents
LANADRON RUBBER ESTATES, LTD. The Bandar Maharani, Muar, Lanadron and Jementah Estates
Francis Pears, resident estates mngr.
1368
Roger Pears,
JOHORE--FEDERATED MALAY STATES
F. C. Harrison,) managers
H. M. Drabble, staff James Mitchell,
do.
F. G. Howard,
do.
H. A. Mason,
do.
G. R. Rippon,
do.
A. G. Grahami,
do.
R. A. Vade,
do.
A. D. Crombie,
do.
W. H. Hofland,
do.
H. I. Stennit,
do.
Agents
F. W. Barker & Co., Singapore
LE Doux J. A., Planter-Kota Tinggi,
Johore
Agency
Commercial Union Ass. Co., Ld.
HEVEA RUBBER PLANTING CO., LD.-Cucob,
Johore; Tel. Ad: Hevea
Manager--E. D. Lane Superintendent W. Frahm
Do.
Agents
J. Nichol-Spears
Gino Pertile, Singapore
PELEPAH VALLEY (JOHORE)
RUBBER
ESTATES, LTD.-Postal Address: Kota Tinggi (via Singapore)
Manager A. H. Malet
Chief Assistant J. Earl Myring Second do. -J. H. Moir
Barlow & Co., Singapore, agents
JOHORE PLANTERS, ASSOCIATION--Johore
Bahru
R. Pears, chairman
W. N. Gawler, hon. secretary
JOHORE HOTEL-Johore Bahru; Tel. Ad: Johtel; Codes, A.B.C., 5th Edition and Unicode; Teleph. No. 464
Secretary Inchi Mohd. Ariff bin
Yahya
Asst. Manager-Iuchi Othman bin
Abdullah
Clerk-Inchi Sirkawee bin Hadji
Abdullah
Manager-P. Debieux
MALAYA GENERAL CO., LD.-Sedmak and
Rengam
Manager W. R. I. Hawkey
MOUNT AUSTIN RUBBER ESTATES, LTD., Directors S. Gad, R. L. Leigh-Clare.
J. C. Hermausen
Secretary J. Rasmussen Manager A. P. N.Vesterdal Assts.-W. Petersen, Fr. Elholm, H.
Engberg
ROYAL JOHORE TIN MINING Co., LD.
Messrs. Huttenbach Bros., general
agents, Singapore
SAW MILLS, JOHORE STEAM-Johore Bharu
Fraser & Cumming, lessees
H. P. Bagley, manager (signs per pro.)
SINGAPORE AND JOHORE RUBBER Co., LD, -Office: Winchester House, Singapore; Plantation: Muar, Johore James Giles, manager
W. P. Mackenzie, assistant A. G. Darke,
do.
TANJONG OLAK RUBBER PLANTATION, LD.
Head Office: Honolulu, T. H. President Dr. E. C. Waterhouse Vice-President-Paul R. Isenberg Sec. and Tre. Fred. T. P. Waterhouse Manager-Frank G. Wallace (Muar) Assistant-J. Macmillan,
Do. -E. H. P. Edmondson
Agents
"Hogg & Co., Singapore
THEMANAH TIN SYNDICATE, LD.
V. Finkleston, general manager
P. Gold, secretary
do.
FEDERATED MALAY
STATES
The Protected States comprise four Residencies, namely, Perak, Selangor, Negri Sembilan, and Pahang. These have been federated, the federation taking effect from the 1st July, 1896, and the administration is presided over by a British Officer styled the Resident-General. Each State has its own Resident and the native rulers retain their titles and dignity. The head offices are at Kwala Lumpur, Selangor.
The record of these States is one of progress and prosperity. The revenue for 1908 was $24,623,325 Perak contributed $9,419,352, Selangor $6,081,169, Negri Sembilan $1,685,041, and Pahang $750,679. The net value of the surplus assets of the Federation on January 1st, 1909, was $35,325,162. The aggregate recorded value of
FEDERATED MALAY STATES
1369
the trade for the year was $113,771,176, showing a decline of some twenty-six millions compared with the returns of the previous year. The returns showed a heavy fall in exports in all four States, and in Perak and Selangor a big decrease in imports. These States have 453 miles of railway (which have been paid for out of current reven- ue), yielding good income; they have 2,000 miles of roads; and over 1,000 miles of tele- graphs. Waterworks, wharves, hospitals, prisons, schools, and many other public build- ings have been constructed, while the Government of Perak is engaged upon an important scheme of irrigation which will benefit about 60,000 acres of land and cost about $100,000. The principal sources of revenue and prosperity are the alluvial tin deposits which, at the present price of the metal, can be worked at considerable profit. About 600,000 tons of tin, worth over £50,000,000 sterling, have been exported during the last fifteen years. Tin has been worked in the Malay Peninsula for centuries, and it is believed it will still be produced there centuries hence. The industry has grown of recent years to very large proportions, but it would take a long time to work out the alluvial deposits in the lands already alienated, and these comprise but a fraction of the unexplored lands which still remain, where there is every reason to believe the mineral will be found in payable quantities. This only applies to alluvial deposits, No one can guess what are the reserves of ore in underground rock formations, as at Kwantan in Pahang, Slim in Perak, and Jelebu in the Negri Sembilan.
The export of tin from these States in 1908 was valued at over $55,846,240, a decrease of nearly $150,000,000 in value as compared with the returns for 1907, The Government has not overlooked the fact that in the export of tin its capital was being reduced, and it has made an effort to supply another and more useful invest- ment by the construction of Railways, with part at least of the revenue. Since British Protection the royalty on tin has yielded a total of over $60,000,000, and the Federated States have in the same time expended $29,000,000 in the construction of railways. The profits give a return of over 6 per cent. on the capital expended.
Planting enterprise in the Federated Malay States has not hitherto proved very successful but that has not been due to any lack of enterprise or hard work on the part of the planters, who when one product failed tried another. The prospects of rubber, according to the High Commissioner, are so good that, unless some unforeseen disaster happens, the future is full of promise for those who have taken up this cultivation. Within the last few years great strides have been made in the planting of Para rubber. The total area now under cultivation is something like 200,000 acres and the export of Para rubber in 1908 was 3,165,000lbs., nearly double the quantity exported in 1907. The sugar estates have done well, and will continue to earn fair profit so long as their machinery and methods of treatment are kept up-to-date. Over 40,000 acres of land are under coco-nuts, for which the soil and climate of these States are peculiarly well suited; and the cultivation of rice is only a question of irrigation and labour. The irrigation scheme in Perak is making but slow progress, but the success of every form of agri- culture and of all the efforts of the Government to develop the country by means of railways, irrigation, and other great public works, depend upon an adequate supply of labour. To meet the demand the Federated Malay States have endeavoured, hitherto without success, to arrange for a direct line of steamers to carry Chinese labour from Canton to the ports of the Malay States. As regards Indian labour, the Govern- ments of the Colony and the Federated Malay States, supported by the planters, are making every possible effort, by a new system of recruiting and by offering higher wages and other advantages, to secure an adequate supply of Indian labour. The question of creating an agricultural department to foster agricultural interests, encour age the cultivation of new products, to conduct experiments and be a general source of information for planters, is under consideration.
It is estimated that there are in the Federated Malay States about 70,000 children of a school-going age, but only 9,000 of these attend any recognised school, while many live in places far removed from any school-house; it is a fact that education has no great attraction for Malay parents, or Malay children, who might contribute by far the largest number of scholars. The Government offers every reasonable encouragement, and there is even a law in force in Selangor and the Negri Sembilan for compelling the attendance of children who live within reasonable distance of a school. A census was taken throughout the Federated Malay States on the 1st March, 1901, and the corrected returns show the population to have been, on that date, 678,095, an increase of 62 per cent. over the census of 1891. It is interesting to notice that the Malay population shows an increase of 35 per cent. in the decade. The Federal Council was inaugurated on 10th December, 1909.
1370
FEDERATED MALAY STATES
DIRECTORY
FEDERAL OFFICERS
Secty, to High Comr.-O. Marks
do.
do. U. Severn (acting) Resident-Genl.-- Sir W. T. Taylor, K.C.M.G., Federal Sec., F.M.S.-R. G. Watson Assistant Secretary--Claud Severn
do.
do.
Second
do.
do.
do.
-F. E. Taylor (acting) --C. W. H. Cochrane
W. H. Lee-Warner (act.)
Chief Judicial Comsnr.-Sir A. F. G. Law
Judicial Comr.-J. R. Innes
do.
-L. M. Woodward
do. -T. de M. L. Braddell
Legal Adviser-F. Belfield
Commandant, Malay States Guides-1. S.
F. Walker, C. M. G., Lieutenant Colonel Director of Public Works--J. Trump Treasurer, F. M. S.-H. Vane Auditor-General--W. P. Hume
Comr. Trade & Customs-J.R. O. Aldwortli Secy. for Chinese Affairs-W. D. Barnes Senior Warden of Mines-F. J. B. Dykes Const. of Forests-A.M.Burn-Murdoch Commissioner of Police-Vacant Surveyor-General-Colonel H. M. Jackson Deputy Surveyor-General-A. E. Young Director of Education-J. B. Eleum
Do. Posts and Telph.-C. H. Allin Superintendent of Indian Immigrants -L,
Ĥ. Clayton
Director of Agriculture and Govt.
Mycologist-W. J. Gallagher Geologist J. B. Scrivenor
Director of Museums-H. C. Robinson General Manager for Railways---Vacant Supt. Govt. Printing Department - J.
Russell
MALAY STATES GUIDES Taiping, Perak Comdt. Lt.-CL. R. S. F. Walker, c.M.G. Second-in-Comd.-Major E. R. B. Murray Field Officer--Capt. C. A. L. Graham Adjutant--Captain B. W. E. Dunsford Coy. Comdrs.-Capt, C. A. L. Graham
do. A. D. Molony
Do.
Capt. B. W. E. Dunsford
do. C. H. M. McCallum R. J. Cargill
Coy, Comdrs.
Do.
Do.
do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
do. E. C. Irwin
Lieut. S. A. MacMillan
do. G. V. D'A. Innes F. Golding
Quarter Master- do,
Master Tailor-P. Moss
Asst. Master Tailor-J. W. M. Gray Subadar Major-Kala Singh
Munshi and Native Adjutant-Subadar
Fateh Singh
Subadar-Jewala Singh
Gurdit Singh (I.) -Jewand Singh - Mewa Singh
-Gurdit Singh (II.)
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
-Wadhawa Singh
Do.
-Elim Din
Do.
-Fateh Singh
Jemadar
Mahomed Zaman
Do.
-Prem Singh
Do.
--Radha
Do.
Jagar Singh
Do.
Jag Singh
Do.
-Jewala Singl
Do.
Sham Singh
Do. Mool Chand
Medical Officer-Capt. F. E. Wood, M.B. Armourer W. Field
Asst. Armourer Jemadar Jumah Khan Office Assistant-W. E. Siddons Chief Clerk-W. P. Gomes Financial Clerk-Cheah Cheang Chuah Second Clerk-S. L. Vengataraman Chetty
Do. -D. Namsivayam (acting)
SINGAPORE PARA RUBBER ESTATES, LTD. (London); Hansa Estate, 2,000 acros, 740 acres Rubber; Teleph. No. 34/2- Perhentian Tinggi
W. R. Rowland, visiting agent E. von Bockum-Dolffs, supt.
PAHANG
The State of Pahang lies between Tringganu and Johore, and extends along the eastern side of the peninsula from 2 deg. 40 min. to 4 deg. 35 min. N., its coast line being about 130 miles in length. The area of the State is estimated at 10,000 square miles, and its principal river, which drains a large extent of country, is known by the same name. The river Pahang is, however, owing to its shallowness, navigable for small craft only, The country is sparsely populated, there being, according to the census of 1904, 84,113 inhabitants, of whom about 73,462 were Malays and 8,695 Chinese.
The capital of the State is Pekan, a town situated a few miles from the mouth of the river Pahang, where is also the seat of Government. The State is under British protection, and in August, 1888, the Sultan, acting under the advice of the Sultan of Johore, applied for a British Resilent to assist in the administration of the country, which request was acceded to in October of that year.
the
The predominant rock is slate, but granite, sandstone, limestone, quartz, and schist abound, while traces of volcanic action at some remote age are shown by the presence of basalt, trachyte, etc. As regards its minerology, the State has always possessed a high reputation for its product of gold and tin. Though during recent periods these have been but little sought, the wonderful old gold workings discovered by Messrs. Knaggs and Gower show that, wild, desolate and abandoned as the greater portion of the State now appears to be, it must, at some very remote time, have been well known and populated. "At the present day," says Mr. Skinner, principal gold mines are in the valley of the Pahang, at Lipis, Jelei, Semantan, and Luet gold is also found as far south as the Bera. There is also a mine of galena on the Kwantam at Sungei Lembing; and tin is found throughout the country, both in the neighbourhood of the gold mines above mentioned, and in places like the river Triang and the river Bentang, where gold is not worked." The Pahang Corporation has opened tin mines at Sungei Lembing and Jeram Batang, another mine at Kabang having also been commenced. These mines are situated at the Kuantan district. The gold-bearing districts, Punjom and Raub, have, however, attracted far more attention from European capitalists. The principal gold-workings of the peninsula lie almost entirely along a not very wide line drawn from Mounts Ophir and Segama (the southern limit of the auriferous chain), through the very heart of the peninsula to the Kalian Mas or gold-diggings of Patani and Selepin in the north. The best tin workings of Pahang lie near the Selangor hills on the river Bentong and near the gold workings at Jelei and Talom. Pahang tin is said to be the only tin on the east coast which can rival that of Perak and Selangor in whiteness and pliancy.
The administrative expenditure exceeds the income and the State is heavily in debt with a loan account standing at nearly three and a half millions of dollars, mostly advanced by the State of Selangor. The value of the import (exclusive of bullion and specie) in 1908, was $1,692,950, while the exports amounted to $2,852,384. Little has been done in planting beyond experimenting with tapioca and coco-nuts. Mining, however, gives encouraging results, and there is a considerable demand for mining land. "Land is also in demand in the Pekan and Kuantan districts, where it is proposed to open up tin mining operations on a very extensive scale. In the Kuala Lipis district extensive areas have been applied for, which it is proposed to work for alluvial gold by improved hydraulic methods.
DIRECTORY
GOVERNMENT
Sultan-His Highness SIR AHMAD MAATHAM SHAH IRINI ALMERHUM ALI, K.C.M.G.
Acting British Resident-E. L. Brockman, C.M.G.
COUNCIL OF STATE
Tungku Besar, C.M.G., president (Regent of
Pahang)
The British Resident
The Tungku Muda
The Ungku Muda
The Dato Mahraja Perba of Jelai Imam Prang Indera Mahkota Imam Prang Indera Stia Raja Tuan Mandak
1372
BRITISH RESIDENCY
PAHANG
British Resident-E. L. Brockman, C.M.G. Office Assistant-A. E. E. De Vos
Chief Clerk-T. A. Reutens
Second do.
-J. M. Jansen
Third do. -E. B. J. Monteiro
COURTS
Judge The Chief Judicial Commissioner,
A. F. B. Law
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Senior Medical Officer-Dr. S. G. Fox Medical Officer, Raub-Dr. Cecil Nicholas Do. do., Pekan-Dr. W. Leicester Do. do., Kuantan-Dr. Alfred Reid
Gaoler A. Nutt
POLICE
PRISONS
Asst. Commissioner-G, Li. Jones Passy Chief Inspector-H. Burton Acting Inspector-D. Butler Inspectors
H. Ryder, G. W. Bruoard,
G. C. Jackson, A. E. Lewis
POSTAL AND TELEGRAPH DEPT. Superintendent of Posts and Telegraphs-
C. R. Carmac, A.M.I.E.E. Assistant Supt.-T. Fitzgerald
STATE TREASURY
State Treasurer-C. C. Thompson Acting do. -A. H. do R. Fonseca Chief Clerk-J. Theseira
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT State Engineer-N. T. Gray
Executive Engineer-J. P. Swettenham (on
leave)
do, E. L. Bennett
do. -S. K. Sibbold
Acting-F. W. Mager
Assistant Engineer G, T. Tickell
do. do.
-J. S. Drew
do.
do.
-J. A. Moore
do.
do.
-R. F. V. Leach
do.
do.
-H. L. Bennett
do.
do.
-T. C. Blatherwick
Clerk of Works-A. E. Yzelman
MINES DEPARTMENT
Asst. Warden-F. C. Marshall
Inspector-S. G. George
Inspector-Mungo Park
BATANG TRAS SYNDICATE, Miners-Tras
Manager-
Accountant-G. T. Buxton (Tras) Agent and Secretary--J. V. Booth
Kuala Lumpur)
BELAT TIN MINING CO., LD., THE-Sungei
Gumbang
Manager-Wm. M. Bath Assistant-H. S. Grunstein Dresser A. David
Chief Clerk-Low Fuee Chin Storekeeper-Belat, Lee Kim Chuan
GAPIS TIN MINING CO.
Mine Owner-Y. W. H. Stadt Director-B. F Boerma General Manager-Y. C. Zonne Mine Overseer-Ban Kwee Chief Clerk-Chua Giok Hin Storekeepers-Hap Ek & Co.
LIANG TIN LANDS, LIMITED C. J. Ruxton, manager
MAYNARD & OATES, Contractors-Bentong
Pahang
F. Ede Maynard Fred. Oates
Tan Thean Beng
PAHANG CONSOLIDATED, Co., LIMITED- Head Office: Blomfield House, London Wall, London, E.C.
R. Paule, A.R.S.M., M.I.M.M., general supt. H. E. Nicholls, A.R.S.M., M,I.M.M., mgr.
of mines
G. D. O. Gowan, A.R.S.M., M,I.M.M
assistant mining engineer
R. B. Scott, chief engineer M. A. Francis, A.R.S.M., mine captain C. G. C. Clarke, assayer
W. McAlister, surveyor
W. H. Williams, accountant W. T. Sobey, mine foreman
J. Bullen, assistant engineer
M. Bullen,
W. Mills,
J. Kinnear,
E. Hughes, miner
E. Hughes, do.
J. Jones
do.
do.
do.
do.
S. Selwood, tin dresser
J. Jose,
do.
W.O.Pou, M.D., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.(Lond.),
medical officer
J. Forbes, agent, Kuala Kuantan A. V. Reutens, conductor rubber
estate
QUEENSLAND RAUB GOLD MINING CO., LD.,
Raul
G. A. Derrick, representative
KAUB AUSTRALIAN GOLD MINING COM- PANY, LIMITED-Raub, Pahang, F. M.S;
Head Office: Brisbane
Secretary-Chas. A. Clarke Local Secretary (Singapore) - H.
Roland Llewellyn, A.C.A.
Staff at mines
PAHANG-THE NEGRI SEMBILAN
Genl. Mngr. Wm. I. Outes. Surveyor C. M. Henley Assayer-E. J. Raper
Mechanical Engineer-D. I. McKay Electrical Engineer-L. Zotznan Battery Manager-A. G. Coleman Mine Agents-A. E. Jeffery, N. G. Pelmear, L. Paveglio, H. Cock, D. W. F. Hatelie, Accountant-H. Hull
Do.
-W. B. Rowlands
Staff at Power Station
Electrician-F. L. Milne
Shiftsman-A. J. Bangerson
--G. Barre
Do.
Do.
-A. S. St. Martin
1373
TONG SHOON KONGSI, Bentong, Pahang, F. M. S., Land Owners, and Miners
Towkay Loke Yew and H. E. Cheng
Bik Sze
Jim Boon Hugh, general manager Wong Long Yu, cashier Lom Wing, chief clerk Lo Ah Kai, assayer Smelting Works
Lam Kit, head overseer
THE NEGRI SEMBILAN
This is a group of seven States-Johol, Tambin, Sri Menanti, Jempol, Rembau- Sungei, Ujong and Jelebu, the two latter having been confederated with the original group of five in 1895.
They occupy together some 3,000 square miles of the interior of the peninsula, bounded on the north and east by Pahang, on the west by Malacca, and on the south by Johore. The five States originally known as the Negri Sembilan were brought under British protection by Sir Frederick Weld in 1883, and by an agreement with the respective chiefs, signed on the 13th July, 1889, they were con- federated as one Residency. They are governed by the native chiefs or penghulus, assisted by the British Resident and Magistrates under him.
Under the later scheme of confederation, brought into force in 1895, by which Sungei Ujong and Jelebu were brought in, there are five districts, viz., Seremban, the Coast, Jelebu, Kuala Pilah, and Tumpin. Seremban is the head office, where the Resident and heads of departments reside. Heads of departments are for the whole State and thus a double staff is saved, as had two States remained alone it would have been necessary, as the Negri Sembilan developed, to make further appointments of European officers. The political affinity of the States is undoubted, and the same tribal and customary laws exist in both, together with the system of the election of the chiefs.
Sungei, Ujang und Jelebu have together an area of about 1,200 square miles, and a range of hills in the north attain a height of about 3,800 feet, the slopes of which have been pronounced by Ceylon planters as most suitable for the cultivation of coffee, cocoa, etc. On the lower ground, nearer the coast, tapioca is successfully cultivated, but during the past year or two, tapioca. as well as coffee and cocoanut cultivation have been abandoned to a considerable extent in favour of rubber, the prospects of this branch of agriculture being considered highly satisfactory. Tin mining is carried on to a con- siderable extent. The river Linggi is the only considerable stream in the State, and was formerly navigable for upwards of 40 miles from its mouth. The principal town of Sungei Ujong is Seremban. The port of Sungei Ujong was opened on the 1st September, 1884, at Pengkalan Kompas on the Linggi river, at a distance of about seven miles from the mouth of the river, and a well laid-out town has sprung up. Port Dickson (district and port) lies south-west of Seremban, and promises to become of some importance. The harbour has from eleven to fifteen fathoms of water and is well sheltered. A railway connecting it with Seremban was opened in July, 1891, and has greatly facilitated trade. There is a first-class road from Pengkalan Kompas to the Residency at Seremban, and thence on to Pantai, a distance altogether of about 31 miles, Pantai being 8 miles from the seat of Government and leading to the coffee estates on Bukit Berembun, which are in a flourishing state. To these, a distance of 13 miles, a cart road has been constructed. A cart road from Seremban to Setul, 9 miles distant, and extendling to Bernang, 6 miles further on the Selangor border, has been made, and has opened up an extensive and rich tin mining district, which is being rapidly taken up by the Chinese, who are the real wealth producers of the country, as elsewhere in the native States. Two large tin fields were opened in 1902, and the future output of this State is likely to be enhanced very considerably, especially as means of communication in the district are being gradually improved. Communication with Malacca is kept up by subsidized steam-launches, and there is a cart road, five miles in length, from the State to Lubok China in Malacca.
The total trade of the State of Negri Sembilan in 1908 was $10,207,663
1374
THE NEGRI SEMBILAN
DIRECTORY
BRITISH RESIDENCY
British Resident-D. G. Campbell Secretary-(Vacant) Acting do.--E. B. Maundrell Chief Clerk--V. K. Sabapatty First do. A. Sequerah Record clerk-Khor Sin Huat Second do. P. L. Zuzarte Third do.
C. R. Skelchy
Fourth do.
-L. F. Wooden
P. Ardy Pillay
Fifth do.
Malay Writer-Raja Aman
COURTS
Magistrate and Registrar of Courts and
Marriages A. W. Just
Acting Magistrate and Registrar of Courts
and Marriages--T. W. Rowley Chief Clerk-T. A. Monteiro
DISTRICT OFFICE (COAST)
District Officer T. W. Rowley Assistant do. -G. L. Ham (actg.) Chief Clerk-J. F. D'Rozario Shroff Seow Eng Keng Clerk, Class III.-M. Pinto
Chinese Inptr.-Wan Meng Yee (acting) Tamil do.
-R. A. John
Malay Writer-Abdul Latip bin Bujal Inspector of Penghulus--Raja Kadir bin.
Raja Jahya
Penghulu of Linggi-Abu bin Haji Lamid Penghulu of Si Rusa-Ma'Ali bin Dorasib
Do. Pasir Panjang-Ujang bin Mohd. Ashim
DISTRICT LAND OFFICE, PORT DICKSON Settlement Officer-R. F. R. Swettenham Malay Settlement Officer Ahmat bin
Mohamed Aris
Chief Clerk Class II.-A. Venasitamby 2nd Clerk Class III.-K. Arumugam Tracer.-M. Joseph
SURVEY OFFICE
District Surveyor-E. R. Richardson Assistant Surveyor -M. Fernandez
MARINE OFFICE
Chief Clerk and Boarding Officer-A.
Thillinather
Second Clerk-B. M. Pereira Steam Launch Hilda
Engr.-Osman bin Haji Addulraman. Serang Long bin Hají Dand
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Apothecary R. van Guyzel
Dresser in Charge-P. La Brovy Assistant do.-S. M. Sarwar
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT (Coast) Assistant Engineer Geo. Sturrock Chief Overseer-G. M. Kelaart Clerk-Tam Kim Hong
SANITARY BOARD, COAST Chairman-District officer
Members Ass. District Officer, J. McClymont, The Asst. Engineer P. W. D., The Assistant Surgeon, Raja Kadir, Sheikh Abdulraman, Tai Boo Siew Inspector-G. L. Felsinger
DISTRICT OFFICE, JELEBU District Officer--W. T. Chapman Acting do. -A. Caldecott Chief Clerk-J. Alcantara Second do. --Lit Poey Chew Third do. K. Ahmud Zainudin Chinese Interpreter-Ho Shu Fan Malay Writer-Mohamad Tahar Chief Land Clerk-Loi Num Peng
DISTRICT OFFICE, TAMPIN District Officer-W. Peel
Do. do. J. E. Bishop, (acting) Asst. do. --A. E. C. Franklin (abst.) Acting do. G. Heminant Malay Settlement Officer-Mansur Bin H.
S. Samal
Malay Magistrate (Tampin)-Tungku Syed
Abdullah
Malay Asst. (Gemas)-Tunku Syed Omar Do. (Batang Malaka)-Raja Chik Chief Clerk--C. Nagaratnam Second do.-R. Philip
Chief Clerk Land Office-A. S. Coit Second do. do. -S. S. Pillay
Chinese Interpreter-Vacant
Acting do. do. Ngoh Tuck On Chinese Interpreter and Clerk, Rembau
Chang Joon Long
Second Clerk, Rembau-S. Ayadurai Malay Writers-Arshad bin Jadi;Abubakar
Bin To Pulee
Asst. Surgeon-B. N. Sen.
LAND OFFICE, TAMPIN
Settlement Officer-A, P. Marshall Asst. Collector of Land Revenue, Rembau
POLICE OFFICE, TAMPIN
Inspector of Police-J. C. Dowling Clerk-Chan Kim Choe
THE NEGRI SEMBILAN
AUDIT OFFICE, SELANGOR, NEGRI SEMBILAN, PAUANG
Revenue Auditor-Q. B. Mills Acting do.
Asst.
do. Acting do.
-F. A. S. MacClelland
-A. H. de R. Fonseca
C. F. McCausland
Chief Clerk-J. B. Siriwardene and other
clerks
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT Inspector of Schools-H. L. Sumner (abt.) Acting do.
-A. Keir Visiting Teacher-IIaji Ahmat Asst.
do. --Mohamad bin Ismail Clerk-Yap Swee Watt
MUNICIPAL AUTHORITY, SEREMBAN Chairman and Sec.-R. F. R. Swettenham Chief Clerk--S. A. Nonis
Second Clerk-A. L. Blankanette Third Clerk- Mohamed bin Penghulu Abu. Chinese Clerk and Intpr.-Phang Ah Pau Sanitary Inspector-W. L. Valberg
Do.
-G. H. Squibb
Building Inspector-R. H. Woodford
FOREST OFFICE, SEREMBAN
Deputy Conservator of Forests-F. O. B.
Dennys
Ranger (1st grade) Vacant
Chief Clerk-Sim Choon Ghee Second do. -E. B. Thomazios
Third do. R. A. Noronha
Malay Writer-David Sta. Catherina Chinese Asst. to Dey. Con.-Chin Min Sam
Forest Office, Kuala Pilah Asst.Conservator of Forests--W.E. Kinsey,
E. A. Gregory (acting)
Clerk Class II.-T. P. Pillay
Do.
-C. Pinto
Forest Office, Tampin
Ranger (1st Grade)-G. C. Keun Clerk Class III.-Koh Boon San
Forest Office, Jelebu
Ranger (2nd Grade) Abdul Rani bin Md.
Usoph
Clerk Class III.-K. Thilliampalam
Forest Ofice, Coast
Ranger (3rd Grade)--Mat Zin bin Lamsah Clerk Class III.-K. Nallatamby
ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT OF INDIAN
IMMIGRANTS
Asst. Supt.-F. M. S., Klang,
Do. -G. H. Smith-Steinmetz Clerk and Interpreter A. Thambiah
LAND REVENUE DEPARTMENT
Collector-F. B. S. Cox
Asst.do. J. W. Simmons
Act. do.-C. S. Robinson
Settlement Officer-A. E. C. Ward
Do.
-N. Falls
Malay Settlement Officer-Mohamad Idris
bin. Ahmad
1375
Chief Clerk-V. Nagalingam First Clerk- L. J. Pereira Second do. A. A. P. Schelkis Third do, J. R. Sta. Maria Fourth do. -J. A. Rodrigues Fifth do. -T. S. Mohamad Sixth do. --Tan Kan Choon Seventli do.-Hue Than Siew Tracer Mohamed Sidik bin Abu Bakar Malay assistant Haji Mohamad Yatin
bin Haji, Mohamad Baki
Malay Writer-Hassan bin Haji Jamil Bailiff-Abdul Samat bin Haji Abdul Karin
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
General and Pauper Hospitals
State Surgeon-W. L. Braddon, M.B., B.S.C.
(LOND.), F.R.C.S., L.S.A.
District Surgeon-A. A. Woods., L.R.C.S.,
L.R.C.P., etc.
Assistant Surgeon-Wi Kit Chong Apothecary R. Van Geyzel
European Nurse-Miss R. M. Shankland Chief Clerk-P. C. Weller
MINES DEPARTMENT
Asst. Warden, N.S.-G. E. E. Hughes Inspr. of Mines-E. I. Vallentine, F.G.S.,
A.I.M.M., M.I.M.E.
L'OLICE
Asst. Commr.-G. P. Cuscaden Inspector, Seremban A. McRory
Do.
-T. Goggin (Mantin)
-F. C. Biles
Do. P. Dickson E. Dunster
Do.
Do
Jelebu K. Pilah
Do. Tampin
J. C. Dowling -W. F. Lamonby
Chief Clerk-Â. G. Lopez
Second do.-M. P. Hendroff
Third do. -T. S. Abu Bakar Record Clerk-C. Katheravelu Chinese Interpreters-Rong Tek Boh, Lee Hok Seng, Pang Soon Seng, Sho Loy Kwong, Ooi Sioi Geok, Chiah Chin Hean, Chua Swee Choi
Regn. Clerk, Births and Deaths-A. Majed Armourer Wi Boon Seng
POST AND TELEGRAPH OFFICE, SEREMBAN Chief Postmaster-R. Chelliah Inspector of Tel.-R. J. Galistan Sub-Inspector of Lines-A. Suppiah
PRISON DEPARTMENT
Superintendent-G. P. Cuscaden Gaoler-J. Bailey
European Warders-G.Tomlinson, W.Towle Chief Clerk-S. Amarasu Second do. -Fam Ah Loy
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT Head Quarters Office, Seremban States Engineer-E. H. Wallich
1376
THE NEGRI SEMBILAN
Do.
Acting Engineer-W. Eyre-Kenny Assistant. Engineer-V. J. Martin
-W. H. Morgan Draftsman S. Maruthamuttu Asst. do. K. Nallatamby Tracer D. De Broins
do. T. Kulasagaram Pillay Chief Clerk-W. Marsh Second do.
B. A. Especkerman.
Third do. S. Govinda Pillay Fourth do.-A. Mat Yassin
Fifth do.
Paranirupasingam
District Office
Executive Engineer-H. E. Steele Clerk of Works-R. H. Woodford Storekeepers G. Stephens Asst. do. A. Dodampe First Clerk-A. Edmonds
Second do. -C. L. Mauricio
Third do. A. D. R. Senapathy
Fourth do.-V. Sivanadyan
Coast
Assistant Engineer H. H. S. Upton
(on leave)
Acting Assist. Eng.--G. Sturrock
Overseer, 1st. Grade-G. M. Kelaart
Clerk-Tan Kim Hong
Jelebu
Assistant Engineer -J. A. Swift
Overseer, 2nd. Grade-S. A. Francis Clerk-J. G. Alcantara
Kwala Pilah
Executive Engr.-H. W. Jones Acting do.
Overseer, 1st Grade- S. Kailasam
Do. 3rd. do. V. Thamotharam
Pillay
Chief Clerk-V. V. Ratnam
Second do.-C. P. Lazaroo
Third do. J. D. Especkerman Storekeeper--S. Kindiah
Tampin
Assistant Engineer-H, W. Jones
Acting Overseer, 2nd Grade-N. Tambiah Clerk-Koh Swi Tuan
SURVEY DEPARTMENT, E.M.E. REVENUE
BRANCH, NEGRI SEMBILAN Supt. of Revenue Surveys C. M. Goodyear District Surveyors E. Sweney, E. W.
Geyer, E. E. P. Clare
1st Grade Surveyors-D. S. Richards, E. C. Dew, H. J. Mackenzie, A. P. Schreiber, W. R. C. Piers, W. J. C. Stevens, R. C. S. Booty
W. N. Horne, J. Griffiths.
1st Grade Asst. Surveyors-K. Prins, M.
Fernandez, W. E. Kraal
Chief Draftsman-W. H. Hanson
1st Grade Draftsmen-P. Renganadan, P.
Bastian
3rd Grade Draftsmen-N. Valloopillai, S.
Kanagaratnam, V. Samirajoo, T. L. Mau ricio, Chan Seng Long
Chief Clerk-F. A. Especkerman Second do. -J. L. Pinto Third do.-M. L. Lopez
STATE TREASURY N. S. (Seremban) State Treasurer-C. D. Cardew (on leave),
C. C. Thompson (acting)
Chief Clerk-S. de Silva
Clerks F. R. Lazaroo, M. Nonis, A.
Mahalingam
Cashier Chua Hun Kiong Asst. Cashier--A. Senathi Rajah
SANITARY BOARD (Seremban)
F. Bede Cox (chairman), A. S. Newton Horne (secretary) Assistant Commis- sioner of Police, State Surgeon, Execu- tive Engineer, Tokays Tam Yong, Chan Chin Ek, Sheik Abdulrahman, Hadjee Osman
Chief clerk-S. A. Nonis Second do. S. Cumurasu Chinese clerk and Intptr.-Phang
Ah Pau
Third clerk M. Lopez
Sanitary Inspectors-W. L. Valberg
G. H. Squibb
Building Inspector-R.H. Woodford
KWALA PILAH DISTRICT OFFICE
District Officer-C. F. McCausland Acting do. E. A. Dickson Assistant do. A. K. Peck Acting do. -J. W. W. Hughes Chief Clerk-Chan Tek Swee
Second Clerk--S. Chelliah
Malay Asst. Dist. Offir.-Ismail bin Manat Do. Gunong Pasir-Laxamana Salleh Do. Limpol-Tunku Mahmed
Do. Torachi-Haji Sohar
Malay Clerk--Mohamad Salleh
Ďo.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Ujang bin Haji Derani Johol-Paham bin Kulop Sati Terachi-Ismail
Jempol--Manap
LAND OFFICE
Chief Clerk-C. A. Spykerman Second do. -E. E. Especkerman Third do. N. Nagalingam Fourth do. S. Thamb Pillay Settlement Officer-Mohamad Pilus bin
Ismail
Bailiff Mohama bin Mentri Jayha Tracer-Abdul Jalil bin Badat
MEDICAL
Medical Officer-Dr. P. H. Hennessy Asst. Surgeon-E. H. de Vries Dressers K. Duraiappah, V. Vytilingam,
S. Anamalai and A. Kandiah
SANITARY BOARD Inspector-C. de Cruz Clerk-K. Kandiah
Mandore Hussein bin Kibik
SURVEY
THE NEGIR SEMBILAN
District Surveyors-E. W. Geyer, Acting
D. S. Richards and W. N. Horne
FOREST
Asst. Conservator of Forests--W.E. Kinsey,
Acting-E. A. Gregory
Clerks-C Pinto and T. P. Pillay
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT Executive Engineer-F. Glendenning Acting do. -H. W. J. Jones
Overseer, 1st Grade-S. Kylasam
Do. 3rd Grade-V. Thamotharam Pillay Chief Clerk-V. V. Ratnam
Second do.
C. P. Lazaroo
Third do. J. D. Especkerman (acting)
T. Paranirupasingam
COURTS
Chinese Inspector-Mak Eng Siong Tamil do. --C. A. Tamby Rajah
POLICE
Inspector of Police J. C. Dowling Police Club-Yeo Swee Geok
BERSAWAH GOLD MINING CO., LIMITED (in
liquidation)
Derrick & Co., Singapore
MALAY MINING GOMPANY
G. Laws, mining manager C. Crosby, assistant
SUNGEI UJONG
ATHERTON, Ainsdale and Leigh Estates (4307 acres, cultivated 1720 acres in Para Rubber)
The C. M. R. E. Ld., proprietors F. M. Porcher, manager Barlow & Co., agents (Singapore)
BUKIT NANAS ESTATE--Seremban (331 acres,
133 Coffee and Rubber, 45 Coco-nuts)
H. E. M. Hill, proprietress
CATHOLIC CHURCH OF THE MATERNITY-
Batang Labu
Rev. C. Nain
Rev. S. Fourgs
CHURCH OF "OUR LADY"
CATHOLIC
Port Dickson
Rev. C. Nain
CATHOLIC CHURCH OF ST. AUGUSTINE-Titi
Rev. C. Nain
CATHOLIC CHURCH OF THE VISITATION-
Seremban
Rev. C. Nain, vicar
Rev. S. Fourgs
lev. A. Devals
Rev. D. Perrisoud
CHINT&Co., Chemists, Importers, etc.; Tel. Ad: Áthall; Telephone No. 24-
Seremban
Partner-James McClymont
Do. -P. P'Chient, manager Assistant-Lee Lai Hoe Dispenser-V. Kaudayah
1377
CHURCH OF ENGLAND, The Church of S.
Mark-Seremban
Rev. F. G. Swindell, M.A. (Oxon.), Chaplain of Seremban. Address: Malacca, Straits Settlements
Co-OPERATIVE COFFEE TRADING Co., LD.-
Port Dickson
Directors-D. C. Neave, C. M. Cum-
ming, V. R. Wickwar
Managers and Secretaries--J. & Q.
MeClyment & Co.
CROSS, AMBROSE B., Advocate and Solicitor
-129, Paul St., Seremban, and Malacca
John David, clerk
Leong Eng Watt, clerk
GERVIS XAVIER & COMPANY, LD., Chemists
and General Merchants-Seremban
C. Xavier D'Souza, managing director J. Gervis Mendis, assistant manager C. Joaquim, accountant
J. M. Lobo, bookkeeper G. Joseph, cashier
R. M. I. Fernandiz, salesman
L. E. Vaz,
do.
N. A. De Souza, dispenser
GUNN & Co., Accountants-18, Birch Road,
Seremban; Teleph. 17.
HANSA ESTATE-Sungei Gadut (700 acres,
240 acres Rubber and Coffee)
HILL, T.HESLOP, Protector of Labour F.M.S., Bukit, Nanas Seremban, Negri Sem- bilan Estate: Rubbi Estate; Klang Land Estate, Selangor; Haron Estate--- Selangor
HUBBACK, THEODORE R., A.M.I.C.E., Consult- ing Engineer, Pertang, Jelebu; also proprietor, Hoscote Estate, Pertang, Jelebu: 175 Acres Para Rubber-2 to 4 years old
J. G. Hubback
KANABOI, LTD.-Seremban, Negri Sembilan
Mines Manager-D. Ross. Assistant F. Craven
Secretaries J. W. Barker & Co.
(Singapore)
LANDQUARTESTATE-Port Dickson (70acres Coconuts interplanted with Para Rubber)
W. R. Rowland, proprietor
1378
THE NEGRI SEMBILAN
LEE KEE & Co., Wine and Spirit merchents, Dealers in Tinned Provisons, Bakery, Paints & other Sundrie (Seremban), Paul Street & Birch Road
Lee Cwhee Eng, manager
LEIGH ESTATE, Port Dickson (1,552 acres, 110 Coffee and Para Rubber and 140 Coco-nuts)
H. Tunniclife, F M. Porcher, proptrs. LINSUM ESTATE, Anglo-Malay Rubber Co. (under cultivation 1,100 acres Para Rub- ber; Post and Telegraph Town-Rantau)
K. Allan Clark, manager
A. P. Marshall, 1st assistant E. J. Henderson, 2nd do.
MARGOT ESTATE (555 acres, 450 acres Rub-
ber and Coffee)
The Singapore Para Rubber Estates
Co., Ld., (owners)
W. R. Rowland, manager J. G. Ogilvie-Mitchell, supt.
NEGRI SEMBILAN CLUB
President The British Resident Hon. Secretary-J. Griffiths
NEGRI SEMBILAN PLANTERS' ASSOCIATION Committee James Le P. Power(chair- man), C. M. Cumming, J. A. Mac- gregor, F. M. Porcher, J. B. Douglas, G. W. Templer and G. W. Hingston (hon. secretary)
PERHENTIAN TINGGI ESTATE-Railway Station: Perhentian Tinggi; 970 acres- 505 Rubber and Coffee
W. R. Rowland, visiting agent
W. Crüsemann, superintendent E. A. Cleaver, accountant
E. Gilham, assistant W. M. MacKerrow, do.
E. Barlow,
do.
A. Schafer, factory engineer Perhentian Tinggi Saw Mills
Railway and P.O.:-Perhentian Tinggi;
Superintendent: A. Schäfer Owner The Singapore Para Rubber
Estates, Ltd. (London)
PORCHER, F. M., Planter and Visiting
Agent-Port Dickson
Director-Sungei Salak Rubber Co.,Ld. RICHANDSON & HENGGELER, Consulting Engineers and Surveyors-Seremban
E. R. Richardson
A. A. Henggeler
SEREMBAN ENGINEERING Co., Engineers, Founders and Contractors-Cable Ad: Serenco
James Craigie, manager
Alfonso Santa Maria, bookkeeper Agency Kitson Lights
SETUL HYDRAULIC TIN MINING CO., LD.-
18, Birch Road, Seremban
Directors-C. Malcolm Cumming, T. H. Tedlie, E. A. O. Travers, A. A. Henggeler, T. F. Anderson Pole (secretary)
SIPIAU TIN COMPANY, LD.-Seremban
Derrick & Co., secretaries (Singapore)
ST. MARK THE EVANGELIST (Church of
England)-Seremban
Chaplain-Rev. F. G. Swindell, M.A. Church Wardens--E. B. Maundrell, E. H. Wallich (hon. sec. of church com.
ST. PAUL'S INSTITUTION-Seremban
Director-Rev. Bro. Benedict (acting) M. d'Cruz, assistant teacher
F. Vikeram
J. E. Woodford
do.
do.
Hup Chui and 4 Christian Brothers Girls' School (Convent)
Lady Superioress-Rev. Mother St.
Camille and 7 sisters
STRAITS TRADING COMPANY, LD., Seremban
E. Cameron, manager
C. R. McLeod, assistant
Tan Chin Fook, clerk and storekeeper Smelting Works at Pulo Brani, Singa- pore and Penang; Branches at Perak, Selangor and Tongkah
SUNGEI SALAK RUBBER Co., LTD.-Port Dickson (600 acres, 100 Para Rubber)
G. W. Templer, manager Whittall & Co., Klang (agents)
SUNGEI UJONG CLUB
Committee-C. Malcolm Cumming, Dr. Lucy, A. Dupuis Brown, J. H. Logan, A. B. Cross, C. C. Thompson, T. F. Anderson Pole
Honorary Secretary and Treasurer
--T. F. Anderson Pole Assistant Secretary-D. Ashton
TERENTANG ESTATE-Sungei Gadut (1,850 acres, 510 acres Rubber in bearing, 586 acres Rubber not yet in bearing)
J. Bloomfield Douglas, manager Harrisons & Crosfield, Ltd., Local
Agents, Kwala Lumpur
JELEBU
GARDNER, JNO., Tin Mine proprietor
JELEBU CLUB
Hon. Secretary-A. Braddon
JELEBU READING ROOM
Hon. Secretary-A. Caldecott
SELANGOR
This protected native state, containing an area of about 3,200 square miles, lies on the western coast of the Malay Peninsula, and is bounded by the protected native States of Perak on the north and Negri Sembilan on the south, extending inland to the mountains in the centre of the peninsula, which divide it from Pahang and Jelebu.
The Government consists of the Sultan, advised by the British Resident, and assisted by the State Council. The State is divided into the following six districts:-- 1. Kwala Lumpur, the central district, where the Residency and principal Government Offices are situated, and which also contains the richest tin mines that have yet been developed. 2-Klang, the principal port, situated about 14 miles from the mouth of the Klang River. 3.--Krala Langat, an agricultural district, in which the Sultan resides. 4.-Kwala Selangor, containing the most important fisheries in the State. 5.-Ulu Langat, an inland mining district on the borders of Negri Sembilan. 6.-Ulu Selangor, a district adjoining Perak, containing much valuable mining land, as yet comparatively undeveloped.
Each district is under the charge of a European District Officer, from whom the Native Penghulus (in charge of the mukims into which each district is subdivided) receive instructions The Police Force consists of a deputy Commissioner, assistant deputy Commissioner, seven European inspectors, and 568 native non-commissioned officers and men.
The population of Selangor in 1884, when the first census was taken, was 46,568; in April, 1891, the total population of the State amounted to $1,592 persons, but at the last census, taken on March 1st, 1901, the returns gave a total of 168,789, of whom 108,768 were Chinese, 33,997 Malays, 16,748 natives of India, 4,166 Japanese, 1,063 Europeans, 1,875 aborigines and the remainder Arabs, Singhalese, Boyanese, Siamese, etc.
The principal industry of the State, and from which it derives the largest portion of its revenue, is alluvial tin mining, on which a duty is charged.
In addition to its mineral resources the State, however, possesses large tracts of land well adapted for agricultural purposes, and the removal of restrictions on the free importation of Indian coolies into the Protected Native States rendered it possible for European planters to obtain cheap labour and to open estates on a large scale. Small plantations of coffee, cocoa and pepper have already been successfully commenced, and rice, sugar and other products of the Peninsula under native cultivation are doing well in various parts of the State, and to encourage pioneer planters, large grants of land have in recent years been made, on special terms, for the planting of sago, pepper, and gambier.
The principal exports are tin, hides, garmwood, tapioca, canes, rattans, and guttapercha. The principal imports are opium, salt, salt-fish, rice, oil, tobacco and tea. The only import duties are on opium and spirituous liquors, while export duties are payable only on minerals, agricultural products, ivory, fish, horns and hides, jungle produce and guttapercha, The export duty on tin has, in recent years, amounted to about four million dollars a year, the duty on the gross value of the tin being, roughly, 14 per cent.
There is frequent and regular communication, by means of coasting steamers, between the Straits Settlements and Selangor, and from Kwala Lumpur a system of cart and bridle roads extends to the boundaries of Perak, Negri Sembilan and Pahang. A line of metre gauge railway, connecting Kwala Lumpur with Klang (a distance of 21 miles 14 chains) was formally opened by Sir F. Weld, then Governor of the Straits Settlements, on the 15th Sept., 1886, and an extension, Kwala Lumpur to Kuala Kubu, was opened on the 6th October, 1894. A further extension, Kuala Kubu to Tanjong Malim, on the Perak frontier (14 miles 45 chains), was completed and opened on November 1st, 1900. A line from Kuala Lumpur to Kajang (17 miles 24 chains), was opened to traffic in August, 1897, and the continuation of this line (28 miles 75 chains), to Seremban, the capital of the Negri Sembilan, was completed in February, 1903. The total length of railway open for traffic is about 150 miles. On 1st January, 1899, the extension from Klang to Port Swettenham (5 miles 40 chains) was opened for passenger traffic. Port Swettenham is the terminus of the railway, on Klang Straits, and wharves have been constructed there, capable of accommodating ocean-going
steamers.
1380
SELANGOR
Telegraph lines connect the State with the Perak and the Negri Sembilan and Malacca systems, and Postal Telegraph Offices are
established at Kuala Lumpur, Klang, Kuala Kubu, Serendah, Kuala Selangor, Sabak Bernam, Rawang, Jugra, Kajang, Sepang and Sungei Besi and at all Railway Telegraph Offices. It the request of the Pahang Government, the Selangor line has been extended also to Raub and Kuala Lipis. The State revenue has more than doubled in the last decade.
DIRECTORY
GOVERNMENT
Sultan-His Highness ALA'IDIN SULEIMAN BIN ALMERTRUM, RAJA Musa, C.M.G.
British Resident-H. CONWAY BELFIELD, C.M.G.
H. H. The Sultan, president
The British Resident
COUNCIL OF STATE
The Secretary to Resident, Kwala Lumpur Raja Muda
Chan Sow Lin, Kwala Lumpur Raja Hassan, Klang
Raja Haji Bot, Kwala Lumpur E. B. Skinner, Kwala Lumpur Saiyid Mashhor
Lee Kong Lam
KWALA LUMPUR
RESIDENCY AND SECRETARIAT British Resident- H.Conway Belfield,c.M.G. Secretary to Resident-R.C. Grey (on leave) Acting
do. -W. Peel
Asst. Secretary to Resident-A. S. Jelf Office Assistant C. H. C. Buchanan Clerk, class L.-F. L. de Rozario
Do.
Do.
Do.
-G. A. St. Maria
II.-W. N. Paulus
-S. Renganathen.
Do. -V. Suppiah
Do. III. Daud, A. Eliatamby, Mo-
hamed Syed, M. Sundrampillai, S. Raja, Harban Singh
Malay Writer-Puteh Bin Ayal
AUDITOR GENERAL'S OFFICE
Auditor General-W. J. P. Hume (abt.) Acting do. J. R. O. Aldworth Chief Clerk-W. E. Ferdinands 23 Chinese Clerks
COURTS
Magistrate A. F. Worthington Acting Magistrate-C. E. Donaldson Second Magistrate-F. E. Taylor Act. Second do. C. W. H. Cochrane
Bailiff and Auctioneer Haji Abu Bakar Chief Clerk-V. K. Pillay 1st Clerk-C. R. de Mello 2nd do. D. J. Abeyeratne
3rd Clerk S. Kandiah 4th do. A. H. Zain
5th
do. -J. L. Skelehy
Chinese Interpreter-Lim Moh Seng Office Chinese Interpreter-Tai Ah Wang Tamil Interpreter-C. Thambapillay Hindustani do. Abas Khan Malay Writer-Mohamed Arsad
Native Magistrates
Raja Laut, Raja Bot, Loke Yew
OFFICE OF SECRETARY FOR CHINESE AFFAIRS, FEDERATED MALAY STATES Sec. for Chinese Affairs-W. D. Barnes Chinese Translator-Leong Kwong Hin Chinese Writer-Chan Tak U
Chinese Teacher for Student Interpreters
-Kwok Pak Tho
Second Chinese Teacher for Student
Interpreters-Tiú Nai Yiek Fifteen Student Interpreters
Matron to Federal Home-Yun Shun Yi
CHINESE SECRETARIAT, SELANGOR AND NEGRI SEMBILAN
Protector of Chinese-H. C. Ridges
Acting
Assistant
do. -Wm. Cowan do. --G. C. Valpy
Inspector under W. and G. Protection
Enactment-Woon Hong Heng
Chief clerk and Inter-Chan Kam Ming Clerk and Trans.-Vacant
LAND OFFICE
Registrar of Titles, Selangor, and Collector of Land Revenue, Kuala Lumpur-E Burnside
Acting do. -H. B. Ellerton
Asst. Collector of Land Revenue-T. W.
Clayton
Acting do.-H. E. Swan
Settlement Officer-W. E. Lott (absent) Chief Clerk-Chan Ah Thong
SELANGOR
Registration Clerk-Chok Shin Cheow
1st
2nd
3rd
do.-S. E. Bux do. -K. Thamboo
do.
Junior clerk-A, Jaffar
C. T. Hendroff
Do.
-K. Chellaturai
Do.
-Chong Chin Yong
Do.
-J. S. Ayathuray
Do.
-P. Deogupillay
Raja Ahmad
Malay Writer-Raja Zainal Rashid Bin
Tracers-L. Gomez, S. Chelliah
FEDERATED MALAY STATES MINES
DEPARTMENT
Senior Warden of Mines-F. J. B. Dykes Inspector under the Mineral Ores Enact-
ment--R. G. Evans Clerk-R. M. Joseph Shak Kwan Siew Lit Kam poh
(For Officers of the Department at Perak, Selangor, Negri Sembilan and Pahang, See list of Government Officials in respective States)
REVENUE SURVEY OFFICE Superintendent -H. R. Shaw District Surveyor, Kuala Lumpur-L. U.
Stafford
Do. Ulu Selangor-F. J. Gore Do. Ulu Langat-C. J. Perkins Acting do. -J. W. Johnston
District Kuala Langat and Klang R. A.
Crawford
Do. Kuala Selangor-O. E. Jansz (actg.) First Grade Surveyors-J. W. Johnston, O. E. Jansz, J. W. Logan, J. M. Favell, E. T. Peck, J. K. Van O. Duminy Asst. Kuala Lumpur--M. A. M. Mudelliar
do. -V: Suppiah Asst. Supt. (office)-W. T. Wood (on leave) Acting C. J. Perkins
Do.
European Draughtsman-C. C. McCarney 1st Grade Draughtsmen-C. de Silva, S. S. Dorai, J. St. Marin, J. R. Vethaneya- gam, S. Chelliah
TREASURY DEPARTMENT (Administrative Branch)
Treasurer, F.M.S.-H. Vane
Chief Clerk-P. B. St. John
2ud.
do. K. Candiah and 6 other clerks
Accounting Office
Accountant-H. J. Dorall
1st. Clerk-C. E, Carlos 2nd. do. G. C. Fernando
Extra do. -F.P. David and 10 other clerks State Treasury, Selangor Assistant Treasurer, F.M.S. and State
Treasurer, Selangor-E. M. Baker
1st Clerk-A. Eberwein and 13 other clerks
1381
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT Head Quarters Staff, Kuala Lumpur State Engineer-E. R. Stokoe, A.M.L.C.E. Asst. Engineer-T. J. McGregor
Do. do. -W. J. Smith
Overseer (1st grade)--R. A. Naganather Assistant Draftsman S. Muttutamby Tracer-S. Kandappoo
Clerk (class I) -‚ A. Peter
Do.
do. II)-A. Seenivasagam, 4 third- grade clerks
District Staff, Kuala Lumpur Executive Engineer (1st grade)-W. Eyre.
Kenny, A.M.I.C.E., T. Groves (acting) Asst. Engineer-R. D. Jackson
Do. do. -S. R. Smith Clerk of Works-R. Charter
Do. do. S. B. R. Reyne Overseer, 1st grade-N. Visuvalingam
Do. 3rd do.-K. Venasitamby Do. do -M. Sinnatamby (1) Clerks 2nd class-E. Kandiah, C. V.
Doraisamy
Type Writing Clerk-Ho Saik Chin
Store Staff, Kuala Lumpur
Storekeeper-J. J. Meadway
Furniture and Bill Clerk-S. Sinnathurai Clerks J. Sta. Maria (2nd class), B. de
Rozario (3rd class)
Storeman E. Van Weiringen
J
Klang District
Executive Eng. (2nd grade)-J. F. Ward,
H. E. Byrne (Acting)
Asst. Draftsman-G. C. Chelliah
Overseer (3rd grade)- R. K. Arulampalam Do. (3rd do. -V. Venkataswami Tracer-Raja Hitam
1st Clerk-S. Navaratnam
Kuala Langat District Overseer (2nd grade)-G. S. Naidu. Clerks (class 3)-S. Supramaniam and T.
Kanagasabai
Ulu Langat District
Executive Eng. (3rd grade)-H. R. Moullin Overseer (3rd grade)-B. M. Selvatamboo Head Clerk 2nd Class-T. D. Rozario
Kuala Selangor District Assistant Engineer-H. O. Robinson Overseer (3rd grade)-M. Sinnatamby (2) Tracer--V. M. Sinnaduray
Ulu Selangor District
Executive Eng. (3rd grade)-H. E. Byrne,.
W. R. Sanguinetti (acting)
Overseers (3rd grade)-A. S. Duray, K.
Thambiah, S. Canapathypillai
Sanitary Board Staff
Draftsman and Surveyor-A. Amalanath Factory Staff, Kuala Lumpur
Executive Engineer (2nd grade)-W. A.
Wilkinson
Foreman-H. J. Markes 1st Clerk-E. G. Pereira 2nd Clerk-E. R. Lodwick 5 other assistants
1382
SELANGOR
Water Works Staff, Kuala Lumpur Executive Engr. (3rd grade)-A. T Mac-
Dermott
Assistant Engr.--R. St. G. Caulfield Inspector, Kuala Lumpur-J. O'Hara Assistant Inspector, K. L.--J. A. Morris Insptr. Impounding Reservoir-J. De Vos Water Works Staff, Klang
Inspector--A. Pereira
Electric Lighting Office, Kuala Selangor. Asst. Engr. Elec. Light-J. C. M. Matthews
POSTAL AND TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT Director's Office, Post and Telephs. (Federal) Director C. H. Allin
Chief Clerk-L. M. Johnson
Aramuntant's Offi e
Accountant-W. A. White
Asst. do.
Do.
--A. H. Green
S. C. Colomb
Selangor, Negri Sembilan and Pahang Superintendent C. R. Cormac, A.M.L.E.E. Assistant-T. Fitzgerald Inspector-C. A. Jausz
Postmaster, Kwala Lumpur-E, V. Xavier Chief Clerk-E. A. Jalleh
Tel. Master, K. Lumpur-L. Taveira
EDUCATION
Inspector of Schools F. A. Vaurenen (abt.) Acting
do. -D. A. Bishop, M.B.
Clerk to Inspector-M. A. Buyong Visiting Teacher-Haji Mohamed Assistant do. -Ibrahim
Malay Master, K. L.-Mahomed Tamby
Victoria Institution, Kuala Lumpur
Hon. Secretary-B. E. Shaw, M.A. Head Master-B. E. Shaw, M.A.
Assistant Masters-W.Proudlock, Coleman,
Dainton
ST. JOHN'S INSTITUTION Director--Brother Gilbert
METHODIST BOYS' SCHOOL
Principal-R. T. McCoy
PUBLIC GARDENS
Committee-A. R. Venning (chairman), S. Arden, J. P. Joachim, Towkay Loke Yew, Dr. E. A. O. Travers, Tamby Abdullah
ECCLESIASTICAL
Chaplain and Surrogate
Tamil priest-Rev. Samuel Richards
FOREST DEPARtment, Kuala Lumpur Depy. Conservator-P. Phillips
Actg. Assistant Conservator--A.S. Mitchell Clerk (class 2)-E. A. F. Nonis
Clerks (class 3)-V. Kanapathypillay, S.
G. Green and V. Nalla Tamby and Loh Kiong Ho
Rangers-H. E. de Silva, W. L. Stock. G.
U. Young
Chinese Assistant-Cheong Yit Kwee
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Senior Medical Officer-G. D. Freer Medical Officer I-A. J. McClosky
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
-P. N. Gerrard II-T. G. D. Cooper
-H. M. Harrison
House Surgeon-J. P. Masters
Office of the Senior Medical Officer Senior Medical Officer-G. D. Freer Chief Clerk and Office Asst.-R. Goonting Clerk Class II.-Tan Ong Goon Clerk Class III.--A. Valupillai
-C. Narasingam
Do.
Clerk for Reg. of Births and Deaths-Raja
Ibrahim
Storekeeper, Central Drug Store--J. N. de
Souza
Travelling Vaccinator 2nd grade-V, Sin-
natamby
Do.
Student Apothecary-M. Naganather Student Hospi. Asst.-Narain Singh
do. -S. Kathirgamu Veterinary Surgeon Veterinary Inspectors M. C. E. Rebello, Veterinary Surgeon T. A. Ford
H. Hashim, M. B. Wijayaratne
European Hospital, Kuala Lumpur Consulting Surgeon-E. A. O. Travers Visiting do. G. D. Freer House Surgeon-J. P. Masters Matron-Miss M. Houghton Nurse-Miss H. M. Shaw Do. Miss C. E. Taylor
Do. --Miss A. M. MacBride Nurse (for private nursing)-Miss A. E.
Fletcher
General Hospital, Kuala Lumpur Medical Officer-T, G. D. Cooper Assistant Surgeon-E. T. MacIntyre Apothecary-R. T. Williams
Do. -A. Ponniah
Do. --L. V. de Jong
Do. (2nd grade)-P. de Rozario Do. do. -J.R. Jonathan
Do. do. - Vong lin
Do. do.
-E. Abraham
Do. (3rd grade)-A. Kailasampillay Do. do. -K. E, Webb Probationer-James de Souza
Do.
Do.
-Yeo Poh Seen
-W. H. T. Abraham
Dispenser (2nd grade)-S. Canagaratnam
Do. Steward (2nd grade)-G. Zechariah Nurse-Matron-Miss G. R. Reeve Nurse Miss M. de Souza
do. -S. Marbeck
Do.Miss L. Fernandez Female Attendant-Ah Col
SELANGOR
Lunatic Asylum, Kuala Lumpur Medical Officer in charge-T. G. D. Cooper Assistant Surgeon-E. T. MacIntyre Dresser (2nd grade)-N. Siew Hin
Gaol Hospital, Kuala Lumpur Medical Officer in charge-J. P. Masters Dresser (1st grade)-T. H. Sarnelis
District Hospital, Kuala Lumpur Medical Officer I-A. J. McClosky Assistant Surgeon--D. R. Gupta Apothecary-L. Tsan Fan
Do. -K. Ngai Leung Do. -C. Arulampalam Dresser (1st Grade)-D. S. Pillay
R. W. B. Lazaroo Do. (2nd grade)-S. Sinnatamby
Do.
do.
-L. Cheng Hoon K. Boon Chuan
Do.
do.
Do.
do.
Do.
do.
-A. Sequersh
Do.
do.
-S. P. Joseph
Do.
do.
Mohamed Raflis
Do.
do.
-E. T. Scott
Do.
do.
-V. Chellaturai
Do.
do.
Do.
do.
Do.
do.
Do.
do.
-N. Thambyturai
Do.
do.
-S. Sinniah
Do.
do.
-J. R. Chelljah
Do.
do.
--V. Chinnjah
Do. do.
-V. Arupillai
Do. (3rd grade)-J. D. Rozario
Dispenser (1st grade)-K. Ponnempalam
Steward (2nd grade) E. M. Sequerah
Leper Hospital, Kuala Lumpur
Medical Officer in charge-A. J. McClosky Dresser (3rd grade)-Yap Hoon Fook
District Hospital, Sungei Besi
Dresser (2nd grade)-J. M. de Costa
District Hospital, Klang
Medical Officer I-P. N. Gerrard Dresser (1st grade)-G. L. de Costa Do. do. -S. Arumugain
Do. (2nd do.) F. Van Weiringgam
Do.
Do.
do. do.
Do. (3rd do.
Do. do.
Do. do.
-M. Chellapah
-A. B. Ponniah
)- M. Ramasawmiypillai
-S. Chelljah
-P. Nadarajah
Probationer -S. Sanmugam
Do.
-S. Kanapathypillay
Travelling Vaccinator (2nd grade)---Syed
Abdul Karem
Clerk Class III.-A. Velupillai Deputy Health Officer-I. S. John
District Hospital, Kuala Selangor Dresser (2nd grade)-M. Chelljali
Do. (3rd grade)-P. Nagalingam
District Hospital, Kuala Langat Dresser (2nd grade)-G. Arumanaygam
dlo. -J. Lewis
Do.
District Hospital, Kuala Kubu Medical Officer-H. M. Harrison Assistant Surgeon-K. N. Ghosh
Dresser (1st grade)-S. Sabapathy
(2nd grade)--S. C. Hazara (do. 8. Swaminather
Do
Do.
Do.
(3rd grade)-S. Nagalingam Clerk Class III.-S. Arumugam
District Hospital, Serendah Apothecary-R. M. Keun
1383
Dresser (1st grade)-R. Breckenridge
Do. (3rd grade)--T. Tai Seng
do. -N. Murugasu 'District Hospital, Rawang
Do.
Apothecary-E. R. Keun
Dresser (1st grade)-W. K. Pachymuttu Do. (2nd grade)-A, H. de Rozario Dispensary, Rasa Dresser (3rd grade)--Teo Tiang Ann
Dispensary, Sungei Choh Dresser (2nd grade)-Lim Sam Kee
District Hospital, Kaiang Assistant Surgeon D. Dutta Dresser (2nd grade)-J. M. Goonting Do. do. -V. Sivagumi Do. (3rd grade)-N. S. Kanagasabai
POLICE
DeputyCommissioner Police--H.M.Hatchell Do. do. G.L.Jones Parry (actg.) Asst. Commr. of Police--G. S. Magill Detective Inspector-C. Wyatt (on leave)
-G. Cullen (acting)
Do.
Inspector of Explosives-H. C. Taylor Inspectors D. Wilson, J. Feeney, J. G. Beckles, T. Darcy, S. Woolley, A. L. Simmons, H. J. Gowland, F. S. Grant, R. H. Legge (on leave)
Chief Clerk--Soh Swee Kee
Second Clerk--C. H. Santhanathan
S. Seenivasagam
Third do.
Fourth do.
-M. Jamil
Fifth do.
Chooi Yeng Poi
Sixth do. D. B. Thambiah Criminal Statistic clerk-Wadhawa Singh Malay Writer-Haji Arshad
Chinese Clerks and Interp'rs.-Tan Guan Ngai, Lim Tiang Huat, Tan Kim Kiat, Leak Kim Swee, Ng Hoong Sool, Liew Kim Wah, Yew Taik Guan, Wong Kim Choon
Non-commissioned officers-652
Detectives
GAOLS
40
Superintendent of Prisons-E. S. Hose Gaoler-John Galloway
Chief European Warder-C.Scroby(on leave) Acting do.
--W. Ross European Warders-Fourteen Chief Clerk-A. Venasitamby Interpreter-Choy Kee Yeow
FEDERATED MALAY STATES GOVERN- MENT PRINTING OFFICE
Superintendent John Russell Assistant Printer-J. Brown
1384
2nd asst.-B. Mahony Foreman Cassim Jayne
SELANGOR
Sub-Foreman--H. Magimaypragasam
Do. -M. A. Paul, A. F. Solomon,
Loh Ah Seng
Asst. reader-Ã. Murugesam Machine Foreman-Gelis Appu Chief Clerk-R. N. Tamby Thurai Second do. Yeoh Seng Niah
Third do.-V. Kylusam Stock-keeper-S. Antonisami Asst. do. -S. Jesudasan
REVENUE AUDIT BRANCH Revenue Auditor-C. B. Mills Acting do. -F.A.S. McClelland
SANITARY BOARD Chairman E. S. Hose Members-Dr. G. D. Freer, Dr. A. R. Wellingston, Tamby Abdullah, G. L. Jones Parry, H. B. Ellerton, T. Groves, H. R. Shaw, Lee Kong Lam, W. F. Nutt, W. Cowan, W. S. Huxley, Raja Mahmud bin Sultan Mohammed, San Ah Wing, Raja Alang, R. Doraisamy Pillay Secretary L. B. von Donop
Clerk of Works-T. C. van Langenberg Inspr. Hackney Carriages-Siat Nyan Fat Inspr. Weights and Meas.---D, V. Candiah Town Inspector-A. G. Lee
Asst. Town Inspector--G. C. Gurzomthan Inspector of Deaths-J. R. Naidu Sanitary Inspectors G. Herft, P. A. Fonseca, E. F. Bodestyne (S. Besi) M. K. R. Akbar (Ampang), Chan Kim Loy Assistant Inspector Hackney Carriages-
Mohamed Jamil
First Clerk-V. Sanmugan
Clerks R. Arumugam, S. Lucaspillay, K.
Sinadurai, A. de Costa, M. Samy Storekeeper-Tay Kim Guan Tracer-V. C. Appucutty
Scavenging Overseer-I. A. Rahim Khan Market Inspector-C. A. Newman Chinese Clerk and Inpter.-Yeow Yong Kim
FEDERATED MALAY STATES RAILWAY General Manager-C. Edwin Spooner, c.M.G. Office Assistaut-F. H. English Chief Draftsman-A. H, Alston Chief Acc'tant and Auditor-S. M. Gregory Asst. Acc'tants-E. Pugh, W. E. Venning
(on leave), W. C. King Divisional Engineer,North-H. C. Barnard
South D. J. Highet District Engineers-G. H. Fox, F. Mills,
J. H. Logan
do.
Asst. Engs.-H.G.Richards, A. M. Stevenson Inspectors Ways and Works W. Rouse
J. Cornwell, W. H. Blackmore
KLANG
District Officer-C. W. C. Parr
Acting do. N. A. Crum Ewing
Asst. Officer-W. S. Gibson Acting do. W. H. Macray Chief Clerk-C. Anthony
Clerk of Courts-Wong Tack Hin Harbour Master W. E. Maddocks
Acting do. Commander T. F. Mills,
R.N. (retired)
Executive Engineer--II. E. Byrue Senior District Surgeon-P. N. Garrard,
M.D.
Asst. Supt. Immigrants - G. A. Smith-
Steinmetz
Foreman of Works-R. K. Arnlampalam First Clerk P. W. D.-S. Navaratanam District Surveyor-R. A. Crawford Tamil Interpreter-F. R. Subramanya Postmaster S. Ramasamy
Boarding Officer J. John
Chief Dressers-S. Armurugam, G. L. D.
Costa Dressers--F. van Weiringen, P. Nadarajah Syed Abdul Karcem, Š. Chelliah, A. ́E. Ramasamy Pillay, Á. B. Ponniah, M. Chellappah, S. Sammugam, S. Kanapat- by Pillay
Sanitary Inspector-J. F. Nonis
Clerk and Steward District Hospital-
A. Valuppillai
KUALA LANGAT
Acting District Officer-II. Norman Chief Clerk-A. Subramaniam Clerks K. Kandiah, Chew Guan On, La
Si Po, F. Nonis
Dressers G. Arumanayagam, J. Lewis District Surveyor-R. A. Crawford Asst. Engineer-F. D. Evans Tracer-Ahmat bin Tamby
Clerk, Sepang Wang I Chang and N.
Chinniah
ULU LANGAT
District Officer-C. W. Harrison Acting do. R. J. B. Clayton Assistant do. -H. R. Maiskion Executive Engineer- Chief Clerk-S. Kandyah Government Surveyor-J. W. Johnston Mining Inspector S. G. George Sanitary Board Inspector-T. Curniam First Clerk, P. W. D.-T. D. Rozario
KUALA SELANGOR District Officer-E. F. Townley Assistant District Officer--G. J. Amery Settlement Officer-Syed Mohd. Sagap Chief Clerk--Ho Kok Leng
Do. Dresser-M. Chelliab District Engineer-H. O. Robinson Malay Assistant to District Officer-Johar
KUALA KUBU
District Officer-C. D. Bowen
Asst.
SELANGOR
do. W.H. Dinsmore (absent)
J
H. C. Eckhardt (acting)
Second Asst. Officer-
Chief Clerk-Yap Swee Hin
Cashier A. Chelliah
Land Clerk-V. Assaipillai
Tamil Interpreter-S. C. Ponniah Chinese
do. -Cheang Ah Heang Hindustani Interpreter A. C. Chatterjee Sanitary Inspector-Abass
Sanitary Board Clerk-M. Vallupillai Mining Inspector-E. Nightingale Do. Overseer-Abdul Rahman District Surgeon--H. M. Harrison Assistant Surgeon K. N. Ghosh Chief Dresser A. Sabapathy Ex. Engr.-W. R. Sanguisati Overseer--A. S. Duray First Clerk-G. V. Chellapah District Surveyor--F. J. Gore Act. Postmaster-B. M. Joseph Sub-postmaster A. Kandiah Settlement Officer-Mohamed Arif
SERENDAH
Town Overseer--Mat Yunan
Overseer of Mines-Haji Zai Noordin and
Hassan (Rawang)
Police Inspector-J. Darcy Apothecary-R. Kewn
Asst. Surgeon-E. R. Keun Dresser R. Brekenridge
Postmaster S. Sinnatamby
Postmaster-K. Appacutty (Rawang)
MALAY
AGRICULTURAL
SETTLEMENT
Kuala Lumpur
Committee of Management H.H. The Secretary to the Resident Selangor (vice-president)
Raja Muda (president), The Inspec- tor of Schools Raja Mahmud, Raja Ali, Katel Koyan H. C. Robinson, H. B. Ellerton, C. J. Perkins, Ham- zahı (hon. sec.)
AGENT CONSULAIRE DE FRANCE, F.M.S.
Kuala Lumpur-G. Kester
BAIN'S PRESS, Printers and Publishers-11,
Barrack Road, Kuala Lumpur
Proprietors-George Bain, A. Bain,
R. E. Bain
Publication "In Tinland," a Journal of interesting Mining News; published weekly
Geo. Bain, editor and manager C. McIntyre, assistant manager
BAXENDALE & DEVITT, Managers, Planter's
Stores and Agency Co., Ld.
1385
BLACK & ROBERTSON, Constructional Engineers and Contractors-7A, Batu Road, Kwala Lumpur; Tel, Ad: Contract
BLUFF ROAD HALL, Bluff Road Minister of the Gospel
T. R. Angus
BOOTH, & Co., Produce and General Melts.,. Accountants, Auctioneers and Share Brokers 10, K. Loke Yew Buildings, Kuala Lumpur; Telephone 189
J. V. Booth
Ong Ban Sang, clerk
BRYANS' HORSE REPOSITORY, Trainer, Horse Dealer, Forage Contractor, Farrier, Harness Maker and Saddler, Livery, and Letting Stables-90, Ampang Road,. Kuala Lumpur
R. Bryans, proprietor Geo. A. Pitt, manager
CATHOLIC CHURCH OF ST. JOHN
Vicar-Rev. V.M.Renard, miss. apost.
(absent)
Acting Vicar-Rev. L. M. Duvelle, do. Asst. do. Rev. J. Passail, do.
Do.
-Rev. J. B. Souhait, do.
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA-Kuala Lumpur D. A. Dalziel, sub-agent
A. E. Graves, sub-accountant Chas. E. Stewart do.
A. Lochore
do.
D. S. Van Geyzel, chief clerk Quay Cheng Liang, cashier
CHINESE GIRLS' SCHOOL-Pataling Hill Miss B. Shirtliff, head mistress Miss La Brooy, assistant Miss A. Charter do. Miss C. Bain, do.
CHINESE GOSPEL HALL-Pataling Hill
T. R. Angus, Minister of the Gospel
Miss Maclay, lady missionary Miss Shirtli, do.
Miss B. Shirtliff, do. Miss Lindsey
CHURCH OF ENGLAND
Clergy-Rev. G. Monteath Thompson, M.A. (Oxon.), chaplain (of Selangor) and surrogate, The Parsonage, Kuala Lumpur
Rev. Samuel Richards, Priest in charge
(Tamil Mission), Kuala Lumpur Churches-
S. Mary the Virgin, Kuala Lumpur S. Barnabas, Klang
1386
CHURCH OF THE HOLY ROSARY
Vicar-Rev. F. Terrien
SELANGOR
DALRYMPLE, &Co., Forwarding and General Agents, Miners and Contractors-Kuala Kubu
Norman Dalrymple
T. Davidson, manager Serensingh, commissionaire
Agencies
Raub Australian Gold Mining Co. Sempam Mining Company, Limited Sungei Gan Tin Mining Co., Ld. Sungei Liang Rubber Co., Ld. Karak Rubber Co., Ld.
DAY, G. HAROLD, Barrister-at-law, Ad- vocate and Solicitor, and Notary Public -Kuala Lumpur
DREW & NAPIER, Advocates and Solicitors -Kuala Lumpur (and at Singapore); Tel. Ad: Drew, Kuala Lumpur; A. B. C. Code 5th Edition
EASTERN SMELTING CO., LTD., THE--Head
Office: Penang; Kuala Lumpur
J. D. Smith, manager Chan Guan Beng, cashier Koo Chye Pol, clerk
Cheak Choo Lay, assayer
Tan Tek Swee, asst, assayer Quah Boon Swee, cashier
Rawang Branch
Khoo Chin Kheng, branch manager Oon Hong Hooi, clerk
FEDERAL DISPENSARY, LD., Wholesale and Retail Chemists, &c.-Kuala Lumpur; Tel. Ad: Federal; Telephone 102
Directors-Loke Chow Kit, Tong Wai Wai, Geo. Harold Day, Dr. E. A. O. Travers, Wm. Nicholas'
Manager and Secretary--F. V. Guy,
pharmaceutical chemist
Assistant Managers--H. L. Johnstone,
D. McGregor, pharmaceutical chemist
FEDERATED ENGINEERING Co., LD., Engi- neers, Boilermakers, Iron' and Brass Founders and Contractors-Head Office and Works: 245, High Street, Kuala Lumpur; Town Store: 105, High Street, Kuala Lumpur; Branch Office: Klang; Tel. Ad: Federated
G.Dearie Russell, manager and director James Craig, M.I.E.S., A.M.I.M.E., asst.
manager
Walter Grenier, accountant
J. H. Linscott, engineer
E. C. Sparkes
D. S. Little
do.
do.
David Gall, foreman
J. A. Godwin, storekeeper
E. G. Walker, electrical engineer S. Smith, foreman
E. W. Savage, resident engr., Klang K. Walton, engineer
FEDERATED MALAY STATES HOTEL
G. A. Ketschker, proprietor I. David, clerk
FERRERS, HUGH NORMAN, LL.M., M.A., Bar- rister-at-Law, Advocate and Solicitor, Supreme Court of Federated Malay States and of Straits Settlements-2, High Street, Kuala Lumpur
SH. Carnelley, advocate and solicitor
FRASER & NEAVE LD., Aerated Water
Manufacturers-Kuala Lumpur Branch manager-C. Flanagan
Clerk and Assistant-Poh Wee Hong
Clerk-Tiam Siew
Van clerk-K. Sariff
Head Office-Singapore
Branches Penang, Kuala Lumpur and
Ipoh
Fox, ALEX., Appraiser, Auctioneer, For- warding, Insurance, Commission, and Estate Agent-52, Klyne Street, Kuala Lumpur
HAMPSHIRE & Co., A. K. E., Merchants
A. K. E. Hampshire
D. H. Hampshire
C. B. Colson, assistant
E. H. Everest, do.
Khoo Kheng Cheang, cashier (abt.) E. Kim Swee, acting
do.
Oh Joo Hee, bookkeeper. E. Chin Teck, Cheo Eng Yam, Lee Kim Seang, Choo Kay Wan, clerks Northern Assurance Co., Ld., Fire & Life South British Insce. Co., Ld. (Fire
& Marine)
Agencies
British India S. N. Co., Ld. Ocean S. S. Co., Ld
China Mutual S. N. Co., Ld. Glen Line of Steamers Shire Line do.
Ben Line
do.
Kent & Uganda Estates Kepong (Malay) Rubber Estate, Ld West Country Estate Batu Caves Estate
HARPER & Co., A. C., Merchants, Com mission Agents and Contractors and Share Brokers; Tel. Ad: Harper, Kuala Lumpur
R. F. Grey
F. Ede Maynard
H. A. Wotton, Klang and Port
Swettenham, agent
D. F. Topham, assistant J. W. Boyd Walker, do. L. Pettei, accountant C. Martin, chief clerk
Agencies
SELANGOR
Straits Steamship Company, Ltd. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ltd. Asiatic Petroleum Company, Ltd. South British Insurance Co.
Lloyd's
Norddeutscher Lloyd's Hamburg-Amerika Linie Nippon Yusen Kaisha
Federal Life Assce. Co. The Borneo Co. Nobel's Explosives
HARRISON, R. W., Visiting Agent, Estate
Valuer and Planter
HEWGILL, C. W., Advocate and Solicitor,
Notary Public-Kuala Lumpur
HEWGILL & DAY, Advocate and Solicitors-
Kuala Lumpur
JOHN LITTLE & Co., LTD. (of Singapore)-
Loke Yew Buildings, Kuala Lumpur
Manager A. C. Jackson Cutter C. K. Pearson
Travelling representative-E. G. Millin Cashier-Low Kim Teck Clerk Seong Poh
JUGRA RECREATION CLUB
Chairman-District Officer
KEMPSEY ESTATE-Kuala Selangor
A. G. Tanner, planter
KESTER G., Mining Engineer
Kuala Lumpur
KOONG YAIK COFFEE CURING Co., Klang
Loke Yew, proprietor
KRIAN IRRIGATION WORKS-Perak
J. E. Jackson, A.M.I.C.E., executive eng. F. G. Finch, assistant engineer
C. R. Harihara Subbier, do.
KWALA LUMPUR AERATED WATER CO., LD, Aerated WatersManfacturers-2, Barrack Road, Kwala Lumpur
Manager-J. H. Littlefair Secretary-H. C. E. Zacharias
LAKE CLUB
President-Sir A. F. G. Law
Hon. Secretary-C. W. H. Cochrane Treasurer-R. M. Neill
MALAY MAIL, Daily Newspaper, with Weekly Mail Edition Java Street, Kuala
Lumpur; Telephone 162
1387
J. H. M. Robson, managing director
F. M. Price, editor
S. C. Yeomans, manager
H. N. Marriott, assistant editor
Lim Boon Chiang, clerk
所公務錫
MALAYSTATES MINERS' ASSOCIATION -Birch
Road, Kuala Lumpur
Chairman L. K. Yzelman
Vice do.-Low Leong Gan
Members-Loke Chow Tye, San Ah Wing, Fung Sui Chi Wee Hap Lang, Chu Ching Khay, Teh Seow Teng, Yio Ching Lian, Chua Eug Hua, Kan Ching
MALAY STATES TIN MINES-Kuchai and
Sungei Getah; Tel. Ad: Mengelen
G. Cumming, manager
MALAY STATES VOLUNTEER RIFLES, Rifle
Club
0.
President Surg. Capt. E. A. O.
Travers
Vice-Presidt-Major A. B. Hubback Hon. Sec. Capt. H. R. Shaw Hon. Treas.-G. Ketschker
MASONIC READ LODGE, E. C., No. 2337
W. M.-R. Charter
I. P. M.-E. Pugh
S. W-D. St. L. Parsons
J. W.-A. H. Alston Treasurer-G. A. Ketschker Secretary-G. H. Day Asst. Secy.-F. H. English S. D.-A. Jack
J. D.-C. B. Mills
Dir. of C.-H. C. E. Zacharias Org. -A. Dubois
I. G.-H. T. Treacher
Stds.--D. Gall, C. J. Perkins
Ty. J. B. Matthews
MAYNARD & OATES, Contractors-Bentong,
Pahang
F. Ede Maynard Fred. Oates
METHODIST BOYS' SCHOOL-Kuala Lumpur
R. T. McCoy, B.C., principal
E. Foster Lee, headmaster
Rev. Thos. C. Maxwell, PH.S., English
master
M. S. MILLING AND MINING CO., LTD.-
Kuala Lumpur
Directors-G. Cumming, G. Kester,. L. Chow Kit, A. K. E. Hampshire Secretary--A. K. E. Hampshire
1388
SELANGOR
NICHOLAS, W., Architect and Contractor
-Kuala Lumpur
PASQUAL, J. C., Mine Owner and Planter
Estates K. Lukat and
(Kedah)
W. Jack, estates manager F. Sisteron, mine manager
POLO CLUB
Jazzm
Henrietta
Committee H. C. Belfield, C.M.G. (president), G. D. Russell, R. Crichton, C. W. C. Parr, S. R. Smith, (hon, secy.)
PUBLIC GARDENS
Committee R. G. Watson (chairman), E. S. Hose, H. C. Robinson, Towkay Lee KongLam, Inchi Tanby Abdoolah. Superintendent J. W. Campbell
PLANTERS' ASSOCIATION OF MALAYA
Chairman-C. M. Cumming Secretary-H. C. E. Zacharias
PLANTERS' STORES & AGENCY CO., LTD., Estate Agents, Share Brokers and Gen- eral Merchants-Kuala Lumpur, Klang, Port Swettenham, Malacca; Tel. Ad: Bandit
H. M. Devitt, manager H. P. Clodd, manager Gladstone Hammond, M.I.S.A. A., acent. A. H. Pearsall,
assistant
W. Leggatt, A. H. Wemyss (Klang) W. Quin (Malacca)
H. P. Cork, chief clerk
L. Sheng Loy, clerk
J. O'Hara,
Beng Seang,
K. Kandiah
do.
do.
lo.
Khoo Heng Hooi, do.
Agencies
Sun Fire Office
do.
do.
do.
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld. Rawang Rubber Co., Ld.
Ulu Pahang L.
The Cheras Rubber Estates, Ld. Sunjei Buroh Rubber Co., Ld. Ijok Selangor Rubber Co., Ld. Eastern Mortgage Agency Co., Ld. Tampoy Syndicate, Ll.
London Office: 1, Great Winchester
Street, E. C.
POOLEY, J. G. T., Advocate and Solicitor -74, Klyne Street, Kuala Lumpur; Telegraphic Code, Western Union
REST HOUSES
Kwala Lumpur, Klang, Kuala Kubu, Kajang, Rawang, Serendah, Kuala Selangor, Jugra and Semangko Pass.
RIVER-SIDE ESTATE--Kuala Selangor
ROBERTSON, LD., D. G., Civil, Mechanical Mining and Electrical Engineers Works: 2A, Robertson Road
ROBSON, J. H. M., Land and Registration Agent, and Managing Director, "Malay Mail" Press Co.-Holland Road, Kuala Lumpur
ROGERS, THOS. H.T., Advocate and Solicitor
-64, Klyne Street, Kuala Lumpur Chin Jut Chin, managing clerk Mahomed Cassim, asst. clerk
RUSSELL, J. ARCHIBALD (Chop "Thai Ying") Miner, Contractor and Land agent-17, Old Market, Kuala Lumpur, Tel. Ad: Jar; Teleph. No. 77
R. C. Russell, assistant
D. O. Russell, M.E., mining assistant
RUSSELL, PHILIP C., Architect and Civil Engineer, Agent for Swan & Maclaren, Singapore-Loke Yew Buildings
SEAPORT ESTATE-Batu Tiga, Selangor
H. L. Jarvis, manager
SELANGOR BOOK CLUB-Kuala Lumpur Hon. Secretary-H. Norman Marriott
SELANGOR CATHOLIC CLUB
Rev. L. M. Duvelle, president R. G. Watson and J. J. McEwan, vice-
presidents
Committee--C. de Silva, L. M. Joh- mon, R. Goonting, D. A. Aeria, W. Paul, L. Taveira, H. de Souza, E. Reutens
SELANGOR CLUB-Kuala Lumpur
President The British Resident Secretary M. H. Graham
SELANGOR GOLF CLUB
President-W. F. Nult Captain--C. G. Glassford
Hon. Secretary and Treas.-F.E.Taylor Committee L. C. Brown, D. A. Dalziel, D. J. Highet, M. A. V. Allen, R. M. Neill
SELANGOR TURF CLUB--Tel. Ad: Racing
President-E. A. O. Travers Vice do. G. A. Hereford Secretary C. E. Strode Hall Committee-R. F. Grey, Captain R. W. Harrison, I. A. Dalziel, R. Crichton, L. R. Yzelman, C. B. Mills
SELANGOR UNION CLUB
President G. Gopal Rajoo
SELANGOR
Vice-President-N. T. Veerappapillay Hon. Secretary-M. Samy
Asst. Hon. Secretary-A. Murugasoo Treasurer-P. Marimuttoo
Asst. Hon. Treasurer-G. Krishnan Captain-M. Kandiah
-
Vice Captain-N. Packerisamy Committee K. Sinnapen, R. M. Rengasamy, M. Kassim, Vythilingam, A. Govindasamy
SELANGOR VOLUNTEER FIRE BRIGADE
Chief Officer R. Charter First Lieut.-C. Buchanan Second Do.-W. Proudlock Third Do.-J. O. Guy Fourth Do.-C. E. Donaldson Inspector-D. Gall
Hon. Surgeon A. J. McClosky Engineer W. Muir
Secty, and Treasr.--W. E. Lott
and 24 European firemen
SEEDDON & Co., House Furnishers, Drapers,
Milliners, Haberdashers
―
52, Klyne
Street, Kuala Lumpur
Mrs. E. A. Fox, sole proprietress Alex. Fox, manager, signs per pro. Miss G. Woodford, assistant
STRAITS
TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED
(Selangor Branch)
Head Office: Kuala Lumpur
W. F. Nutt, manager
D. St. L. Parsons, accountant
J. Baird Matthews, H. Treacher, G. W. Duncan, R. S. Preeston, W. B. Caver- hill, assistant
Kuala Lumpur Agency-A. Jack, agent;
J. Newman, assayer
Sungei Besi Agcy.--Alex Stronach, agt. Kajang Agency-J. L. Sime, agent Rawang Agency--A. E. Bailey, agent Serendah Agency-H. L. K. Graburn
(acting agent)
Kuala Kubu and Tranum Agencies-W.
Murray, agent
Pudu Agency-N. W. Reid, agent, H. A.
La Brooy, assayer Sungei Besi Ore Mill
Alex Stronachi, agent W. Archer, accountant P. Stutfield, chemist
J. Collingwood Phillips, ore dresser Port Swettenham Agency
Hampshire & Co., agents F. D. Rees, (on leave)
Inspector of Branches and Agencies-
Frank Adam
Head Office-Singapore Branches:-Perak, Negri Sembilan, Penang, Tongkah, and Smelting Works at Pulo Brani (Singapore), and But- terworth (Province Wellesley)
1389
SWAN & MACLAREN, Civil Engineers and
Architects-Loke Yew Buildings
Head Office-Chartered Bank Build-
ings, Singapore
Representative-Philip C. Russell
拿域 Wee-na
WAGNER, C., Barrister-at-law, Advocate and Solicitor-Weng Chieu Buildings,
Old Pudu Road, Kuala Lumpur
C. Wagner, barrister-at-law
WALSH BROS., Surveyors-Railway Bridge
and Wharf Builders, Kuala Klang
Western Walsh Nugent Walshi
WHITTALL & Co., Estate Agents, Merchants
-Klang
Mgr., Visiting Agent and Estate Valuer -R. W. Harrison, signs the firm Manager-F. O. Sander, signs per pro., J. K. Mandy, signs per pro. Assistant-W. Gubbins Accountant-H. T. A. Biddlecombe
Agencies
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Ld.
North China Insurance Co., Ld.
WREFORD & THORNTON, Advocates and Solicitors -3, Court of Justice, Kuala Lumpur; and at Ipoh and Penang
Partner (Penang)-J. F. Wreford,
B.A. (Oxon.)
Partner (Penang)-Maxwell R. Thorn-
ton Solicitor
Freeman
(Kuala Lumpur)-David
Solicitor (Penang) A. Mackenzie.
Robinson, B.A., LL.B. (Cantab.) Solicitor (Ipoh)-J. Dunford Wood Managing Clerk-W. Beng Keong Assistant do. Lee Chan San
Do. do. Khoo Eng Keong Do.
-Mohamed Sherift Orderlies Mohamed bin Mohamed
Amin, Ali
do.
ZACHARIAS & Co., General Merchants-1,
Old Market Square, Kuala Lumpur
H. C. E. Zacharias
D. Christie
Agencies
Standard Oil Co. of New York Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld., London British-American Tobacco Co., Ld. India Rubber, Gutta Percha and Tele- graph Works Co., Ld., Silverton, London
Great Eastern Life Assce. Co., Ld. Birkenhead Trading & Export Co.,
Birkenhead
1390
Name of Estate.
SELANGOR
AGRICULTURAL ESTATES KLANG DISTRICT
Proprietors.
Iesident
Managers,
Acreage.
Under
Cultivation.
Pendamaran
Blackwater
Superintendents, etc. Total. Culti-
Ceylon Planters' RubberSyndicate W, H. Trotter, supt.
Limited..
vation
884
600
C. E, Bracken, W. Trotter
Para Rubber, Coffee and
Coconuts.
Blackwater EstateRubber Co.,Ld.
G. N. Magill
1,342
403
Para Rubber.
Highlands & Lowlands Highlands and Lowlandsand Para
Rubber Co., Ltd.
O.
(manager): supts.:
R. D. Greenliill,
T. A. E. Penny
Batu Unjor
Do.
C. W. Thring, 2,382
1,020
manager; C. A.
Pfewingwerth 1,848
1266 Para Rubber, Coffee &
Sundry Products.
Para Rubber, Coffee and.
Coconuts.
Buxton, assistant
Jalan Acob
4,000
Do.
manager; J. M. Craib, assistant ..
Sungei Kapar ·
1,898
Golconda
0804
9591 Para Rubber, Coffee and
Coconuts.
Brafferton
G. V. L. Scott mans-
460
100
Do.
géi
Vallambrosa
Kapar
Shelford
Beverlac
Ayer Kuning
Emerald
Merton ..
Glenmarie
Sungei Way
Sungei Rengan
The Kapar Para Rubber Co., Ld W. R. G. Hickey 1,019
The Sungei Kapar Rubber Co.,Ld. G. V. L. Scott mana-1,338
ger H. P. Hard- ingham, asst.
Golconda Estate Rubber Co., Ld.] N C. S. Bosanquet
Sungei Kapar Rubber Co., Ld. Vallambrosa Rubber Co., Limited,
M. S.
manager, Smith, assistant
H. M. Darby, mana-1,309 1,3094 Para Rubber.
ger: H. Graham,
V. Kinlock asata...
Beverlac(Selangor)RubberCo.Ld. E. W. Harvey mana-
Shelford Rubber Estate, Limited R. Wallis Wilson
Beverlac(Selangor)RubberCo.,Ld. E. W. Harvey
Highlands and Lowlands Para J. Whitham
Rubber Co., Limited..
332
339
Para Rubber and Coffee
ger; J. Bligh- Orr, assistant
588
527
Para Rubber and Co-
conuts.
2331,
170
Para Rubber.
10,000
500
Do.
700
900
Do.
684
260
Do.
II. E. G. Solbe
1,450
538
Para, Rubber andCoffee,
2,505
720
Para Rubber.
C. I.
1,890
1,679
Para Rubber Coffee
W. W. Bailey, G. S. Murray and W. R. F. Brock
H. Pallwey
J. M. Kirwan
Batu Tiga Rubber Co., Ld.
Sungei Way (Selangor) Rubber
Co., Limited
The Selangor Rubber Co., LA,
A. C. Corbetta,
manager; Arnold, assistant P. W. Parkinson
manager; G., W. Templer, H. Jar-
and Coconuts
vis, W. G. Johns, assistants ..
Sungei Puloh
St. George
Federated Rubber Co., Ld.
Jan Forbes
725
055
Rubber.
Do.
Do.
208
263
Do.
Labuan Padang
Malay States Coffee Co., Limited
075
310
Do
Bukit Lanchong
E. W. Johnston, D. W. Mellby, C. B. Holman-Hunt
and Capt. R. W. Campbell
1,000
150
Do.
Bukit Raja
Bukit Raja Rubber On., Limited C. T. Hamerton
1,201
332
Rubber,
Coffee andi
manager; R. K.
Coconuts.
Walker, W. E. L.
Shand, E A. Ash,
assistants
Sungei Binjai ....
Do.
908
481
Do.
New Eskdale
Do.
G10
218
Do.
Bukit Duku
Do.
321
135
Rubber, Coconute, and
Coffee.
Delabole
Do.
320
196
Rubber and Coconuts.
New Forest
Do.
597
350
Do.
Block No. 24)
Do.
372
108
Rubber.
Boon Hean
Do.
105
97
Rubber,
Coffee and
Tunku's Land
Do.
1,098 100
Coconuts, Rubber.
Tremelbye
Tremelbye (Selangor) Rubber John Gibson..
1,042 500
Do
Co., Limited
SELANGOR
AGRICULTURAL ESTATES-Continued
1301
Acreage.
Resident
Name of Estate.
Proprietors.
Managers,
Under
Cultivation.
Superintendents,etc. Total, Culti-
vation.
Ebor..
*Sungei Nibong Seafield..
Klang Landy Haron Damansara Teluk Batu
Suugel Serdang
Harpenden
Triangle
Beaumont Padang Jawa
New Padang Jawa New Comet
•Golden Hope
Sunget Timah.,
Tremelbye (Selangor) Rubber A. G. Glassford
Co., Limited
Do.
Bukit Nanas Syndicate
Do.
Damansara (Selangor) RubberCo.
Do.
Do.
J. E. B. Baillie Hamilton, P. J. Healing and N. C. S. Bosanquet. Harpenden (Selangor) Rubber W. M. Browell
Co., Limited
G. B. Leechman
Klang Produce Co., Limited Padang Jawa Rubber Co., Ld. New Padang Jawa RubberCo.,Ld. R. K. Walker, H. E. G. Solbe and
H. S. K. Morrell Klang Coffee Cultivation Co., Ld.
A. G. Glasyford
W. Harvey
500
306 Rubber.
Do.
550
200
Do.
Leybourne Davidson, H. K.
Rutherford and C. Meikle
H. R. Quartley A. J. | 2,833
Fox, assistant
1,220
Do.
W. R. T. Mackenzie 1,518
Do.
353
Do.
1,043
533
Do.
II. F. Browell
*
1,224
830
Rubber and Coffee.
043
386
Do.
N. C. 8. Bosanquet
470
245
Para, Rambong
and
Coffee.
1,257 1,134
Rubber, Coffee
and
Coconnuts.
100
100
Rambong and
Para
Rubber.
W. Greig E. B. Prior
301
170
Coffee and Rubber.
424
424
Rubber.
Do.
346
Do.
R. K. Walker
304
Do.
E. B. Prior
919
495
Rubber, Coffee and
A. G. Glassford
1,118
50
Coconuts. Rubber.
KUALA SELANGOR DISTRICT
Tjong Permatang Parsangan
A. R. Wilson, Wood and H. M. Darby...
1,008
82
Do.
943
60
Do.
The Kuala Selangor Rambong Rubber Co., Ld.
1,023
3:0
Coffee, Rambong and
other fruit trees.
Do.
The Rubber Growers Co., Ld.
639
200
Coconuts, Coffee, and
J
Rubber.
Do.
Do.
Compagnie De Selangor Société à Bruxelles M. H. G. Peterkiro, J. E. Buchanan, B. Hamilton P. Ilealing and F. C.-Smith
500
300
Coffee and Coconuts.
600
Para Rubber.
+
Api-Api
The Kuala Selangor Rubber Co., Id.
Do.
Boustead Bros. and L. T. Boustead
1,200 1,000
500
Do.
Do.
Do.
W. A. B. Hamerton
574
Do.
Jeram
The Sungei Butoh Rubber Co., Ld. C, and RS. Meible
1,200
Coconuts & ParaRubber.
Para Rubber.
49
48
Coconuts.
Do.
Do.
Do,
The Kappar Para Estates Co., La.
The Sungei Kapar Rubber Co., Ld. C. K. Hamerton
2,183
250
Para Rubber.
050
50
Do.
500
Do.
Do.
Do.
The Scottish Malay Rubber Co., Ld.
Do.
320
320
Do.
679
160
Do.
IN.
R. W. Harrison, H. O. Bagot, Hanly & F. C. Roles
1,387
Do.
Do.
P. W. Parkinson
989
Do.
Do.
A. J. Volum, and L. B. Greig
651
Do.
Hunla Selangor
The Federal Oil Mills, Limited
15
Oil Mill Site.
KUALA LANGKAT DISTRICT
'Telok
Telok Rubber Syndicate
650
250
Rubber, Coconuts and
Coffee
Jesmond Dusun Durien
W. R. Spencer
497
200
Rubber.
Klanang Permataug Jugra
Banting
W. S. Laidlaw
487
250
Do.
Klanang Produce Company
1,927
426
Coconuts and Rubber
Morib Cocoanut Estate Syndicate
768
300
Coconuts
Jurga Estate Co., Limited
2,888
1,000
Coconuts and Rubber,
H. F. and F. F. Dumpius
400
150
Rubber.
1392
Naine of Estate.
SELANGOR
AGRICULTURAL ESTATES-Continued
ULA SELANGOR DISTRICT
Acreage.
Proprietors, Managers, &c.
Under
Cultivation.
Total. Culti- vation.
Balary Kali Ula Yam, Anglo-Malay Rubber Company; manager, N. A. B.
Haunerton,
Sungei Chul
Ula Bernam
N. Dalrymple, Loke Chow Thye, Loke Chow Kit and
L. K. Yzelma; N. H. Barrell, manager
Loke Yew Choo Kin Peng, manager
550
800
Coffee 250 acres; Rubber
50 acres.
1,000 Nil. In Rubber.
bearing!
1907.
20,000 6,000 Gambier,
Pepper and
Rubber.
ULA LANGAT DISTRICT
Inch Kenneth, Reko Inch Kenneth Rubber Estates, Ltd.
Mill, Dunedin
1,075
750
Para Rubber.
Balgownie Bangi
Balgownie Rubber Estates, Ltd.
1,027
650
Do.
Glenshiel
Glenshiel Rubber Syndicate, Ltd.
250
650
Do.
Sungei Tankas..
Sungei Tankas Rubber Syndicate, Ltd.
670
100
Do.
Emmott Estate
Emmott Estate
100
76
Do.
Braemar
Asiatic Rubber Co., Ltd.
500
300
Coffee and Rubber.
Semenyih,
Do.
714
400
Coffee, Rubber, Durian,
Colwall
Eastnor
Ayer Hitam
West Country and F. M. S. Rubber Co.,
Belmont
Broomie
1,000 213
Para Rubber.
1,500
78
1,600 200
4,747
1,315
Coffee, Tea and Para
359
60
Rubber.
Para Rubber.
Clove, Coconut, Are canut.
Do.
Do.
PERAK
Perak, the premier State of the Federated Malay States, is on the west coast of the Malay Peninsula, and lies between Kedah on the north, and Selangor on the South. The coast line is about 90 miles in extent; the greatest length of the State, in a north and south direction, is 120 miles, and the breadth, in an east and west direction, 90 miles. It is estimated to contain 6,580 square miles; that is to say, it is about the size of Wales and Monmouth joined together. The soil is suitable for the cultivation of rubber, rice, cocoa-nuts, Liberian coffee, spices of all kinds, and grasses from which essential oils are extracted.
The State is well watered by numerous streams and rivers, of which the river Perak is the most important. This river runs nearly south until it turns sharply to the westward and falls into the Straits of Malacca. It is navigable for about 40 miles from its mouth by steamers of 300 to 400 tons burden, and for another 100 miles by cargo boats. The upper part of the river is rocky and abounds in rapids, and_conse- quently, except for small boats and rafts, is impracticable. The Kinta, the Batang Padang and the Plus are the three large tributaries of the Perak river, and all are navigable by cargo boats. These rivers rise in the main mountain range and flow west and south until they discharge themselves into the Perak river.
The climate of Perak is good, the temperature in the low country averaging from 60° Fahr. in the night to 90° Fahr. in the heat of the day. The average mean is about 70° Fahr. in the night and 87° Fahr. in the day. The nights are uniformly cool. At 3,000 feet the average is 63° Fahr, at night to 73° in the day. The rainfall varies consid- erably, Taiping, the capital, registering as much as 154 inches, but the average else- where is about 90 inches. There is no true rainy season, but the wettest months are October, November and December, and the driest are March, June and July.
а
The State has been under British Protection since 1874 and has since that date been administered under the advice of the British Resident. The State Council, deliberative, legislative and advisory body, consists of the Sultan and several Malay Chiefs, the British Resident, the Secretary to Resident, an English unofficial member, and four Chinese members,
The seat of Government is at Taiping in the Larut district, three hours from Penang by railway. The Malay States Guides, a body of Indian troops maintained and equipped by the Rulers of the Federated Malay States, are quartered at Taiping. The residence of His Highness the Sultan is at Bukit Chandan in the town of Kuala Kangsar, reached by rail from Taiping in about an hour. The High Commissioner of the Federated Malay States has also a residence at Kuala Kangsar, which town, situated as it is on the Perak river, here some 200 yards wide, lies in the midst of beautiful scenery and is the centre of the Malay life of Perak. The British Resident has residences at Taiping and Ipoh.
The most important district in Perak is Kinta, of which the principal town is Ipoh, reached by rail from Penang in five and a half hours. The tin deposits in the Kinta valley and neighbourhood are of great value, and recent developments in rubber plant- ing indicate that agricultural industry as well as mining will shortly characterise this district. Mining is here conducted on the most scientific principles, and many mines are equipped with the latest machinery.
Other districts in Perak are Krian on the Province Wellesley (Penang) border. Here the Government has completed an extensive and costly irrigation scheme and large areas are under rice, sugar and rubber. A somewhat similar district is Lower Perak in which is situated Teluk Anson, the principal port of the State. This port is connected by a branch railway with the main line of the Federated Malay States Railway and there is frequent communication by steamers between Penang and Singapore.
The Larut district was formerly famous for its tin deposits, and faction fights for the possession of the tin mines before 1874 were the immediate cause of the British intervention in and eventual protection of Perak. The Larut mines have of late years, however, somewhat sunk in importance.
Matang, a sub-district of Larut, contains several large rubber estates and a con- siderable fishing industry exists on its coast.
44
1394
PERAK
The large districts of Batang Padang and Upper Perak are as yet less developed than the rest of the State. The railway runs through the Batang Padang district six miles from the headquarter town of Tapah, for which the station, Tapah Road, is some seven hours from Penang. A metalled cart road is now being completed to Grit. the headquarters of the Upper Perak district, on the boundary between Perak and the Native State of Reman, which is under Siamese influence.
The population of Perak in 1901, when a census was taken, was 329,665, and in 1906 it was estimated at over 400,000. It consisted in 1901 of 149,375 Chinese, of whom 13,724 only were females, 141,723 Malays and other natives of the Archipelago, 34,710 natives of India, of whom only 8,678 were females, and 3,587 persons of various other races, including Europeans, Eurasians, Africans, Annamese, Arabs, Armenians, Jaffna Tamils, Japanese, Siamese and Singalese. The Chinese form the labour force of the tin mines and the Tamil natives of India the labour force of the plantations, but it is noticeable that large numbers of Tamils are now employed in the mines. The Malays engage in native cultivation and various other pursuits.
The Federated Malay States Railway runs through the whole length of Perak from Parit Buntar on the Penang (Province Wellesley) border to Tanjong Malim on the Selangor border, Branch railways run from Taiping to Port Weld and from Tapah Road to Teluk Anson, thus connecting the coast with the interior.
There are in this State about 600 miles of metalled roads, 100 miles of earth roads, and nearly 700 miles of path constructed and open for traffic. There are 540 miles of telephone and telegraph lines.
There is no public debt and the revenue is steadily increasing. It now amounts to about fifteen million dollars per annum, over one-third of it being derived from an export duty on tin. The trade of the State in 1908 was valued at $55,480,569: imports, $21,624,083; exports, $33 856,486.
DIRECTORY
GOVERNMENT
His Highness Sir IDRIS MERSID-EL-A AZAM SHAH, G.C.M.G., Sultan of Perak
His Highness the Sultan
COUNCIL OF STATE
The British Resident, E. W. Birch, C.M.G.
The Secretary to Resident, R. J. Wilkinson The Raja Mula, Raja Abdul Jalil Raja Chulan bin Ex-Sultan Abdullah Raja Ngah Abubakar bin Raja Omar The Orang Kaya Mentri, Paduka Tuan,
Wan Muhammad Isa
The Orang Kaya Temenggong, Wan
Hussein
The Orang Kaya Kaya Laksamana, Inche
Hussei
The Orang Kaya Kaya Sri Adika Raja,
Wan Muhammad Saleh, 1.s.O. The Orang Kaya Kaya Stia Bijaya di Raja,
Jeragan Abdul Shukar
TheDatoh Panglima Besar, Haji Abdul Raof The Datoh Muda, Kinta, Chẻ Wan F. D. Osborne
Towkay Chung Thye Phin
**
Leong Fee
Foo Choo Choon
"
33
Heah Swee Lee
Asst. Sec. to Resident, Clerk of Council
RESIDENT'S OFFICE
Resident E. W. Birch, C.M.G.
Secretary to Resident-Vacant
(Acting) R. J. Wilkinson Asst. Secty.-L. McLean
(Acting) A. S. Jelf
Second. Asst. Secty.-C. S. Robinson. Office Assistant-L. Francke Chief clerk-Vacant
Clerks F. N. McKenzie, A. L. Minjoot, S. Arriacuddy, S. M. Che Teh, Cheah Tek Chye, S. S. Backus, R. Carrapathy Pilly, Teoh Teong Aik, Mahyudin, R. E. Colmb, Gau Boon Teong, E. F. F. Nicholas, Loh Ah Lan, A. C. Mukherjee, Chan San Pou,
Resident's Clerk-J. M. Rozells Malay Writers-Alang Ahmad, Sheik
Hassan
REVENUE AUDIT BRANCH Revenue Auditor-F. W. Talbot Assistant do. -J. W. Kriekenbeek Chief Clerk-H. S. Baptist and 6 clerks
CHINESE SECRETARIAT, IPOH, KINTA Protector of Chinese-Wm. Cowan Acting
do. ---H. C. Ridges
Opium Inspector-Lee Ah Weng Chief Clerk-Tan Chin Seng. Clerk and Interpreter-Lee Ah Fook Clerk-Ee Kwee Huat
Clerk (Taiping)-Chan Ali Choy
Clerk (Krian)-Chee Ah Thoo
EDUCATION
Inspector of Schools-H. B. Collinge
-W. M. Phillips
Assistant
PERAK
1395
Medical Officer
Ipoh-J. T. Clarke
Do.
Tapah-A. A. Woods
Do.
Do.
Parit Buntar-J R.Delmege Kuala Kangsar-D. Bridges
Do.
Do.
Taiping W. B. Orme Teluk Anson-E. N.Graham
Head Master, King Edward VII. School-
R. F. Stainer
Anderson School (Ipoh), Head Master-J.
H. Tute
FOREST DEPARTMENT (Perak) Deputy Conservator-B. H. F. Barnard
Assistant
Asst. Srgn., B. Serai-S. Manickan,
Taiping-N. Kanapathy Pillai Tapali-M. Sangarap lai
Apothecary, Taiping-F. W. Nicholas
Do.
Do.
do.
G. J. Henbrey
Do.
Ipoh-D. B. Pereira
Do.
do.
-A. E. Wells (absent)
Do.
Gopeng H. E. Hughes
Do.
do.
-J. P. Mead
Do.
Do.
do.
-H. Turnivall
Do.
Acting asst. do.
-S. G. A. Maartensz
CONVICT ESTABLISHMENT (TAIPING) Superintendent Convict Establishment--
A. B. Voules Gaoler H. Pizer
Chief Warder-R. S. Pharoah European Warders R. Bunter, D. Bailey, D. Keilich, A. H. Lloyd, J. C. Loveridge, J. Topliss, P. W. Caudle, W. Towle, G. Tomlinson, W. H. Moir, A. F. Bowers, A. A. Day, T. Edgar, H. Bailey, J. Postlethwaite, H. F. Elliott, F. W. Fitzpatrick, F. W. Anres, S Keen, J. J. Steward, E. Lewis and J. Lovett Chief Clerk-Raja Gopal Registration Clerk-Ng Ah Kan Second Clerk-Soo Hoy Choon Third Clerk-Neoh Hock Seng Fourth Clerk-Looi Ah Kim Native Warder-Azard Khan
GOVERNMENT PLANTATIONS
Superintendent F. R. Long
Assistant District Officer, Courts (Larut)-
T. W. Rowley (acting)
Asst. do. Lands H. A. Burges Chief Clerk-
First Settlement Officer-F. T. Velge
SUPREME COURT, Ipon.
Judicial Commissioner--L. P. Elxlen
Do.
Kampar-J. E. Lesslar Batu Gajah-G. Abraham Ipoh-E. J. D'Cruz Matron, Taiping-Miss M. Johnston Nurse-Matron, Batu Gajah-Vacant Nurse, Taiping-Miss K. Henry
Do. Do.
-Miss S. E. Whittle
Miss M. I. Gillespie
Nurse, Batu Gajah-Miss F. Sykes
Do. Do.
-Miss V. E. H. Foly -Miss F. C. Row
Office Assistant-W. J. B. Ashby Financial Clerk-K. Murugasu First Clerk-Gan Boon Tek Second Clerk-Leo Swee Leong Third Clerk-S. Saravanamuttu Bookkeeper--Qua Gong Kow Relief Clerk-Ong Tat Cheang
MINES DEPARTMENT Warden of Mines-W. C. Vanrenen Asst. do. -M. A. V. Allen Inspectors of Mines-P. A. Satow (absent) G. E. Greig (absent), A.J. Dishman, J.H. Johnston, E. C. Hatch, M. S. Coxon, E. A. Langslow Cock, A. G. Mondy, J.S. Berger, J. E. Greene
Inspector of Boilers-G. C. Marshall
-H. Cropley -D. F. McIntyre
Asst.
Do.
do. do.
Chief Clerk and Inter.-Chong Ah Sin
MUSEUM
Acting Curator-C. Borden Kloss Collector and Taxidermist E. Keilich
POLICE DEPARTMENT
do.
Acting
Clerk to
-S. Secnivasagam Assistant Registrar-H. B. Ellerton
do. -J. McCabe Reay
2nd do. R. Abraham
5th do.
Tamil
Chief Clerk-J. S. M. Holinberg
3rd do.-N. K. Vallipuram
4th do. -Khoo Chong San
Raymond A. Mocke
Chinese interpreter-Ng Lean Haing
do. -A. S. Pillay
Deputy Comr. of Police, Perak-W. W.
Douglas
Do.
do.
Perak H.M.Hatchell
(Acting)
Asst.
do.
Taiping-H.Fairburn
Hindustani do.
Mainy do.
-A. B. Singh
-Abubakan
Bailiff-Ho Chye Ghee
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Senior Medical Officer-Vacant
Medical Officer, Batu Gajan-S. P. Peart
Detective Br., Kinta-
E. Spinks
Acting Asst. Comr. of Police, Ipoh--D. M.
Police Probationer-D. M. Barry Chief Inspector-J. A. Haylor
First Class Inspectors, Ipoh-H. Bailey, Taiping-A. Wilson, Tapah H. Conway, Krian M. J. Hollywood, Kuala Kangsar -G. Simpson
44*
Do.
do.
Barry
1396
PERAK
Second Class Inspectors, Ipoh--H. Robil- liard, Ipoh-D. J. Marquess, Kampar- J. H. Hollywood, Krian-J. Cullen, Men- glembu -C. E. Mayo, Tapah-W. G. O, Woodroffe, Kampar-F. J. Kennedy, Gopeng W. A. Newman, Batu Gajah- H. Doel, Papan T. Malley, Kuala Kangsar H. Hinton, Teluk Anson-P. Flood, Taiping-H, W. Porter, W.Miller, (on leave)
POST AND TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT Supt. Posts and Telegraphs-R. Pinkney Asst. Supt. S. G. Hobson, A‚M.I.EE. Insptrs. of Telphs.-A. Arputham Pillai,
Haji Osman
Special Class Clerk--E. A. Clay
First Class Clerks-J. S. Woulfe, K. D. Mariasusay, Ong Keat Ewe, C. V. Pon- niah V. Arunasalam, D. Mariadoss Second Class Clerks S. Tamothiram Pillai, Kong Leng Cheng, K. Kandasamy, S. Subramanian, A. Vytilingam, M. Nagalingam, K. Chellapah, V. Am- palavanar
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT State Engineer-R. O. N. Anderson (abt.)
Do. -E. H. Wallich (acting) Ex. Engr. 1st. Grade-T. Groves, Batu
Gajah
J. Ward (acting) W. W. Acton, (abt.) W. N. Cosgrave,
(on leave) J.E. Jackson, Krían A. J. Slater, Kuala
Kangsar
H.J.D.Potter, Larut
and Matang
-G. H. Richards,
Asst. Engr.-J. Ward, Batu Gajah
Ratnam, M. Hendrick, Choy Ah Tan, E Kamaldin
Financial Clerk-Gwee Keng Guan Storekeeper-Joseph Chong
Clerks of Works-A. L. Jumeaux, C. M.
Keriappa
Financial Assistant-Norman Grenier
REGISTRY OF CHRISTIAN MARRIAGES Senior Registrar-The Secretary to Resi
dent of Perak
Registrar, Larut, Kuala Kangsar, Upper
Perak, Krian-The Secretary to Resi dent of Perak Registrar,
Officer, Ipoli
Kinta-The Asst. District
Registrar, Lower Perak and Batang Padang
The District Officer, Lower Perak
LI
SANITARY BOARD
Chairman--Dr. M. J. Wright Secretary W. Sayers
Building Inspector-T. B. Martin Sanitary Inspectors-E. Askey, G. S
Evarts
Chief Clerk-J. Davadason Second -Moung Yah
*
Market -Qua Hong Goo
"}
FEDERATED MALAY STATES RAILWAYS
Perak and Province Wellesley Engineering Department Divisional Engineer, North, Stationed at
Taiping--H.C. Barnard, M.I.C.E. District Engineer, Taiping-H.G.Richards Acting District Engineer, Ipoh-A. M.
Stevenson
Inspector of Ways and Works, Ipoh-J.
Cornwell
Clerk of Works, Taiping-M. M. Dins Clerk of Works, Ipoli-W. Wigaratram Foreman Platelayer, Ipoh-J. Tolos
Stanford
Do. do. do.
Do.
2nd. do.
Do.
do. do.
Do.
do. do.
Do.
3rd. do.
Do.
do. do.
Do.
do. do.
Batang Padang
Do.
Batu Gajah-H. J.
Do.
-H. J. Cooper, Ipoh,
Do.
Do.
-F. F. Faithful, (absent)
Do.
Taiping-F. Wood Teluk Anson-J.
Do.
A. B. Potts, Raman
Do.
-F. G. Finch, Krian
Do.
-H. F. Waters, Lower Perak
Do.
-G. N. Nicholas, Kinta
Do.
-E. D. Kibble, Taiping
Do.
--D.H. Laidlaw, do.
Do.
---L. Rosario
do.
Overseers--S. Supramanian, A.H. Dragon, P. Chelladuray, P. Chinnatamby, B. S. Rajaranam, R. Arumugam Pillai, S. Rasaiya, S. Rabnam, Y. Chellapah Draftsmen A. K. Packian, R. I. Dorasami Tracers A. Rajah, R. Appiah, N.S. Cassim, J. Baptist, A. A. Vandort, S. Thamboe, S. Samuel, P. A. Simon Improvers-Lebay Baker, M. Kandiah, S. Barnabas, P. Muttiah, V. Ambalavanar Clerks F. G. Baptist, S. P. Lourdes, S. N.
Dalton
Pondok Tanjong-S.N.
Nagandram (act.) P.Buntar K.M. Carey Sungkai-J. P. Wijia-
Foreman Platelayer (on leave)-V. Waiti-
lingam
Traffic Department Traffic Manager--E. A. Cook Deputy Traffic Manager-P. H. Henshaw
Store Department
Storekeeper-C. Curtis
TRIGONOMETRICAL AFD GENERAL SURVEY DEPARTMENTS (Federated Malay States) Surveyor General-Colonel H. M. Jackson
Cate R.E., (Kuala Lumpur)
Do.
Do.
Do.
suria
PERAK
Chief Clerk-S. S. Subramaniam (Kuala
Lumpur)
Second Clerk-A. Emmanuel (Kuala
Lumpur)
Third Clerk-A. T. Rajah (Kuala Lumpur)
TRIGONOMETRICAL BRANCH Deputy Surveyor General-A. E. Young F.C.G.L., A.M.I.C.E., F. R.A.S., F.K.G.s.(Taiping) Chief Clerk--A. M. Wirasinha Second Clerk-Tuan Chee
do.
1397
Asst. Survr. III-Naiz Mohamed Khan
(Taiping) Asst. Survr. (Taiping)
Mansur Ahmad Khan
Asst. Surveyor-Abdu Majid (Taiping)
B. H. S. Alimed do. -Abdul Aziz Khan do. -Sakhorwar Ali
Do.
Do.
Do.
do.
Do.
-Mohamed Mansur do.
Do.
--Mohamed Hussain do.
Do. --Hedayet Ali
do.
do.
Asst. Supt.-W, A. Wallace
do.
Do. -F. R. Twiss
do.
Do.
A. S. Nagalingam do.
Office Asst.(Larut)-F.A. Sugden(Taiping)
Surveyors I.-V. A Lowinger,
do.
Do. (Kinta)-R. Gillet
do.
Do.
N. F. J. Haszard,
do.
Draftsmen I. -A Wyramuttoo
do.
Do.
Do. -R. R. Goulding,
-A. Cochrane
do.
Do.
J. W. Ferdinands
do.
do.
Do.
-B. E. Manen
do.
Asst. Surveyor III.-P. Sinnappu,
do.
Do.
-G. II. Poulier
do.
Do.
Computer L-V. Namasivayam, do.
II.-N. Supramanian,
Do.
-A. E. Clough
do.
do.
Do.
-P. Aeria
do.
Do.
III.-C. Tharmalingam, do.
Do.
-Goh Keat Leong
do.
Draftsman I.
-W. Van Dort,
do.
Do.
-A, S. Read
do.
Do.
-Teo Toong Lyo,
do.
Do.
II.-Mas Kamaludin, III. do.
Do.
-P. Jesudasan II.
do.
TOPOGRAPHICAL BRANCH
Do.
do.
Supt.-E. W. Hedgoland, B.E., A.M.I.C.E.
(Taiping)
Do.
Do.
Asst. Supt.-J. N. Sheffield (Taiping) Clork-J. P. Kathiravaloo
Do.
do.
Do.
Asst. Survr. III.-A. Sanmugam
do.
Do.
Do.
-K. Chanmugam
do.
Do.
Do.
--K. Visuvalingam do.
Do.
do.
Do.
Draftsman I.-A. G. Pillay
Do. III.--Chong Yew Cnong do.
REVENUE SURVEY BRANCH (Perak) Superintendent--J. P. Harper (Taiping) Chief Clerk-S. Muttiah
do. Second Clerk-P. C. Albuquerque do. Deputy Supt.-E. J. K mplem
Clerk R. E. Mack
-H. S. Mason III.
--R. Nagalingam III. do.
III.-A. Rahim Khan II. do.
-Ong Ban Seng III.do. --Chong Ah Thiam III.do. -S. Abdul Kaiyum III. do. Teow Khay Pong III.do. --Tech Tiang Seng III do. -V. Chinniah
Selangor
do.
Supt.-H. R. Shaw (Kuala Lumpur) Chief Clerk-G. V. Seenivasagamı (Kuala
Lumpur)
Second Clerk-S. Mylvagaman (Kuala
Lumpur)
Third Clerk--A. Somasundaram (Kuala
Lumpur)
Fourth Clerk--Ahmad Bin Haji Ibrahim
(Kuala Lumpur)
Fifth Clerk S. Kulasagaram (Kuala
Lumpur)
Asst. Supt.-R.W.B.Darkc(Kuala Lumpur)
Do. -L. U. Stafford Do. -R. A. Crawford
--F. J. Gore
do.
do.
Asst. Supt.-A. F. Harper
do.
Do. -E. J. Wood
do.
Do.
--J. G. Koch
do.
Do.
--W. H. Mackensie
do.
Surveyors
G. A. Hodges.
do.
Do.
R. L. Buckwell
do.
Do.
--A. A. Campbell
do.
clo.
Do.
-W. A. Gunimer
do.
do.
Do.
-C. Krook
do.
Do.
do.
Do.
-F. B. Sewell
do.
Surveyor I.-O. E. Jansz
do.
Do.
-B. Cooper
do.
Do.
-J. W. Johnston
do.
Do.
-R. V. Morris
do.
Do.
-J. W. P. Logan
do.
Do.
-E. A. Barbour
do.
Do.
-J. M. Favell
do.
Do.
C. Y. B. Sewell
do.
Do.
-E. J Peck
do.
Do.
do.
do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
-R, D. Jackson
Asst. Survr. I.-Moung Tha Nyo
-W. B. Fernando do. -H. E. W. Koelmeyer do. -W. Hitchcock do. Asst. Survr. III.-Mohamed Tahar do. -Mohamed Sheriff do. -Moung Shawy Tee do. -Mohamed Ali do.
Asst.Survr.I.-M.A.M.Nudolliar do.
Do. -V. Suppiah
do.
Asst. Survr. III.--- Mohamed Moshin(Kuala
Lumpur)
Asst. Survr. III.-Mohamed Ali (Kuala
Lumpur)
Asst. Survr. III. --Mohamed Bashir (Kuala
Lumpur)
Do.
-O. K. Van Duminy do.
1398
PERAK
Asst. Survr. III.--Mohame Ismail (Kuala
Lumpur)
Asst. Survr. III.-Haji
Lumpur)
Osman (Kuala
Asst. Survr. III.-J. F. de Silva (Kuala
Lumpur)
Asst. Survr. III.-A. Thambyayah (Kuala
Lumpur)
Asst. Supt. (Office)-W. T. Wood (Kuala
Lumpur)
Asst.Survr.III.-M.Arumugam(Seremban;
Do. (Seremban)
-V. A. Subramaniam
Asst. Survr. III.-M. Kandiah (Seremban)
-S. S. Velupillai do. -K.Saravanamuttu do.
Do.
Do.
Office Asst.-W. H. Hanson Draftsman I.-P. Renganadon
-P. Bastian
Do.
Draftsman III.-N. Valoopillai
do.
do.
do.
do.
Do.
-S. Dangaratnam
do.
Do.
-V. Samiraju
do.
Do.
T. L. Mauricio
do.
Draftsman I.-C. de Silva (Kuala Lumpur)
Do.
Do.
I.-J. Sta. Maria
do.
Do.
I.-S. S. Derai
do. do.
Acting C. J. Perkins (Kuala Lumpur) Draftsman (European)-C. C. McCarney
(Kuala Lumpur)
Do. I.-S. Chelliah
Do. I.-J. R. Vethanayagam (Kuala Lumpur) Draftsman II-Mohamed Ibrahim (Kuala
Lumpur)
DraftsmanlI.-T. Skelchy (Kuala Lumpur)
-A. Gabriel
Do.
do.
Do. -S. Thamby Rajah do. Draftsman III.--Sutan Baginda do.
-J. White
do. -Osman bin A. Mutalib
Do.
Do.
(Kuala Lumpur) Draftsman IV.-K. Sinnatamby (Kuala
Lumpur)
Draftsman IV.A. Spykerman (Kuala
Lumpur)
Supt.-C. M. Goodyear (Seremban)
ChiefClerk F.A. Especkerman(Seremban)
Do. -E. W. Geyer
Supt.-G.
-Chan Seng Long do.
PAHANG
M. Stafford (Kuala Lipis) Chief Clerk-P. Visuvalingam do. Second Clerk-A. S. Nalliah do. Third Cerk--S. J. Cyril
do.
Asst. Supt.-T. Le Fevre (acting) do. Surveyor S. Bunting
do.
Do.
Do.
T. Dewar -H. Robinson
do.
do.
Do. -E. Aune
do.
Asst. Survr. I.
V. N. Rajoo do.
Do. II.
Do.
Do.
Elahi Bakhx do.
III. S. Ahsippillai do.
-V. Chelliah do.
Asst. Supt. (Office)-J. T. Wood do. Draftsman I. -F. D. David
do.
do.
Do. II.-S. S. John
III.-K. Karthigasu do.
-A. Chelliah
State Treasurer-C. S. Alexander
KUALA KANGSAR
DISTRICT OFFICE
District Officer-F. J. Weld
do.
Chief Clerk, District Office-K. Ah Piang
Second
Malay Writer-Ngah Idin
-C. Yong Kan
do.
LAND OFFICE
-J. W. Simmons
Asst. District Officer-J. Reay
Draftsman IV.--Ineyt Khan (K. Lumpur)
Do.
Do.
-Pong Kam Tin
do.
Do.
NEGRI SEMBILAN
STATE TREASURY-Taiping
Second Clerk-Z. J. Pinto
do.
Third Clerk-M. Lopez
do.
Asst. Supt.-E. Sweney
do.
do.
Acting D. S. Richards
do.
Do.-E. E. P. Clare
do.
Surveyor-H. J. Mackenzie
do.
Do.
-E. C. Dew
do.
Do.
A. P. Schreiber
do.
Do.
-W. C. R. Piers
do.
Act.
Do.
-W. H. Horno
do.
Do.
-J. Griffiths
do.
Do.
-W. J. C. Stevens
do.
Do. -R. C. S. Booty
do.
Asst. Survr. I.-K. Prins
do.
Do.
-M. Fernandes
do.
Do.
-W. E. Kaal
do.
Asst. Survr. III.-Raja Tachi
do.
Do.
-N. Rasingam
do.
Do.
-V. V. Rajoo
do.
do.
Do.
-Haji Sleinan
do.
Acting
do.
Do.
-Shappi
do.
Third
do.
Do.
-Abdulraliman
do.
Fourth
do.
-Megat Omar
Do.
-Mat Usope
do.
Malay Writer do.
Do.
-Dollah
do.
Second
do.
Do.
-Mat Taib
do.
Assistant District Officer (Benas)--C. S.
Alexander
Acting District Officer (Bruas)-C. W.
Bresland
2nd Asst. District Officer (K. Kangsar)-
H. C. Eckhardt
Acting District Officer (K. Kangsar)-A.
Campbell
Chief Clerk, Land Office-C. C. do Rozario
Second
-Pow Tek Anu
-A, Vallupillai -Chow Piang Lin
-Anjang Aris
-Nokman
District Surveyor-E. G. Woods
PERAK
1399
Tracer D. Sivapragasam Do. N. Nagaleingam
COURT
Clerk of Courts-S. Navaratnam Tamil Interpreter-T. H. Sitaran Chinese do. -Ng Kheng Tan Bailiff--S. Louis Pillay
Process Server--Anjang
SANITARY BOARD OFFICE Sanitary Inspector-M. S. Naeken Overseer-Yeop Nordin
Clerk Sanitary Board-Lee Choo Chye
EXECUTIVE ENGINEER'S OFFICE (Kuala
Kansa)
Executive Engineer-A. I. Slater Head Overseer-N. Chellappah Building Overseer--N. S. Cassim Clerk S. S. Sulramanian
2n1 Clerk--Baubjee
POLICE DEPARTMENT (Kuala Kangsa) Inspector of Police-G. Simpson Asst. of Police--H. Hinton
Clerk Police Office K. K.-C. Quee Chong
LOWER PERAK DISTRICT District Officer J. C. Fleming Acting do. - Oliver Marks Assist. District Officer--E. Pratt Act. do. --G. E. Shaw
Chief Clerk-Lim Kong Cheow Tamil Interpreter R. Rassialı Financial Clerk G. C. Fernando Chinese Interpreter-Low Kee Boo Clerk of Courts and Actg.--(Vacant) Harbour Master, Perak--A. K. Peck Supervisor of Customs-E. W. Neubronner Settlement Officers-Yeop Abdul Shukor Raja Salim, Raja Omar, Yeop Noordin and H. Palmer
Chief Clerk-J. M. Arul
Medical Officer-E. N. Graham Dresser-C. Jasudasan
Executive Engineer-W. W. Acton First Overscer- T. Rasoiya
Clerk and Storekeeper R. Chinniah Inspector of Police-P. Floorl Sanitary Inspector-S. F. Meerwald Kailway Station Master-J. A, Mc Rae Railway Guard-J. A. Cornelius Locomotive Drivers-A. Wray, P. W.
Fitzgerald
District Land Surveyors-J. G. Koch, and
1st grade A. A. Campbell
Forwarding Agents---W. E. Smith, H. J.
Hamilton
Foreman Platelayer-J. Daulton
Mngr. Rubana Sugar Estate-W. Duncan
MATANG SUB-DISTRICT
Assistant District Officer-J. S. Glover
-R. O. Winstedt
Acting
do.
Assistant Collector of Land Revenue and Settlement Officer-Raja Abdul Rashid
bin II. H. Sultan Idris
District Surveyor W. H. Mackenzie Asst. Conservator of Forests-J. P. Mead Inspector of Police-C. S. Mayo Overseer, P. W. D.-G. J. Giffening
KRIAN DISTRICT
Assistant District Officer-H. H. Raja
Chulan
do.
Second Asst. District Officer-B. W. Ellis Acting
-L. McLean Clerk of Courts-A. V. Ponnial Chinese Interpreter Ooi Song Soon Tamil Interpreter-C. V. Bonney Treasury Clerk--A. Muttukemaroo Custom Clerks P. S. Pillai, Ng Fook Siew Settlement Officers Mohamed Talha,
Abdul Tahim
Chief Clerk, Land Office-P. Amedius Clerks, do.
Teong Kong, Ishak
--Abdullah, Chu
Executive Engineer-J. E. Jackson (actg.) Assistant do.
Do. do.
-G. II. Finch
-C. R. Harihara Sub-
biar
Clerk, Storekeeper--Yope and Hider Clerk--J. Lim Hoon Bee
Sanitary Inspr. and Registrar of Vehicles
-D. E. Woodford, F. dos Remedios Clerk, Sanitary Board-Lee Nam Siew District Inspector-F.M. Hollywood-II.
Class Inspector, J. Cullen
Clerk and Interpreter--Seow Cheng Guan
Chong Yoon Fatt
District Surgeon-D. Delmege, M.D.
Asst.
do. -S. Manikam
Dresser Ding Leong Dong
Clerk and Storekeeper -A. Kathiravaloo Post Master-V. Annasalam
Malay Writer D. O. Abdul Latiff Chinese Clerk-Chee Ah Too
(Chinese Protectorate)
Forest Clerk-Cheah Keng Hoon
KINTA DISTRICT
Batu Gajah Division
District Officer and Superintendent of
Prisons-E. J. Brewster
Chief Assistant District Officer and Deputy
Registrar of Titles-J. F. Owen
Acting do.
-F. A. S. McClelland
Asst. District Officer--G. A. Herefordl
Acting do.
---J. S. Glover
Settlement Officer-S. G. Falls District Surveyor-E. J. Kemplen Chief Draftsman R. Gillett
Surveyors-J. Bowes, R. L. Buckwell, A. A. Campbell, F. B. Sewell, B. Cooper, R. Gummer
I'
?
1400
Executive Engineer--W. W. Acton
Acting
do.
Assistant do.
- J. F. Ward
--J. Ward
Senior District Surgeon Matron Miss Johnston
PERAK
Dr. S. P. Peart
Nurses Miss II.Haughton, Miss K. Henry,
Miss F. Sykes
Inspectors of Police-H. Doel and W.
Miller
Warden of Mines-W. C. Vanrenen Assistant do. -E. A. Langslow Cock Inspector of Mines-J, H. Johnston Inspector of Boilers-G. C. Marshall Asst. do. -H. Cropley, D. F.
McIntyre
Chairman, Secretary Sanitary Board,
Kinta South-N. Kendall Assessment Officer and Coll'r.--V. R. Souee Gaoler--R. Foster
Inoh Division
Junior Judicial Commr-L. P. Ebden Registrar of Courts--W. B. Ellerton
Acting do.
-J.M. Reay
Deputy Public Prosecutor-R. C. Edmonds Acting do. -Noel Walker
Magistrate-A. L. Knaggs
Asst. District Officer-N. R. Crum Ewing Acting do. J. H. Langston Chairman and Secretary, Sanitary Board,
Kinta North-F. W. Douglas District Surgeon-Dr. J. T. Clarke Protector of Chinese-W. Cowan Acting do. --H. C. Rigdes Assistant Engineer-R. B. Potts Inspector of Mines-A. J. Disluman Settlement Officer-J. A. A. Toft
Inspectors of Police-Bailey, Golland and
A. C. Mayo
Gopeng and Kampar Division Asst. Dist. Officer-C. H. P. Clarke Acting do. -W. Pryd District Surgeon-II. E. Hughes Inspector of Police-W. A. Newman Inspector of Mines S. Coxon Settlement Officer--H. H. Bauks Second Class Magistrate, Kampar-Raja
Johor
Inspectors of Police, Kampar-J. H. Holly-
wood, F. J. Kennedy Inspector of Mines, do. Settlement Officer, do. Apothecary,
do.
E. J. Vallentine
W. L. B.Symes J. E. Lessler
BATANG PADANG DISTRICT
District Officer-O. F. Stonor
Asst. District officer-S. H. Langston
do. --P. T. Allen (acting)
-R. J. B. Clayton
do.
Acting do.
-A. E. C. Franklin
do. T. Malim-W. H. Mackary, W. Burton
Chief Clerk-A. V. Sandford
Clerk of Courts A. Veluppilli (acting),
Pow Tek Un (acting)
Tamil Interptr. Tapah-C. A. Odyar Chinese Interptr. T. Malim--Lee Ah Pow Tamil Interptr. T, Malim-E. Asahel Inspector of Mines-B. B. Bayly District Surveyor-G. A. Hodges Asst. Surveyor-Alaniad
Executive Engineer G. H. Richard Clerk of Works-C. M. Kariappel Clerk and Storekeeper, P. W. D.-V.
Naidoo
Dist. Surgeon--A. A. Woods Asst, do. M. Sangorappilli, Dispenser--S. K. Šinnappo Dressers P. A. Ekambaram Pillai, V.
Saravanamattoo, Lim Sin Ku
-
Clerk and Storekeeper Mohd. Zin Inspectors of Police-H. Conay, W. G. 0.
Woodroffe
Native Officers Datoh Tan, Dewa Sakti Abdulrahman, Shelk Abdulrani, Syed Alwi, Haji Tahir
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Clerical Asst.-Vong Lean Choy Tamil Teacher-K. Ramasamy Pillai Malay Teachers-Abdul Yacob, Molid. Larsce, Mohd. Ali, Yeop Kassim, Abdul Rahapar, Yeop Mat Ludin, Mohd. Jaffar Amenudin
Mistresses-Marimusal, Kal-Son
LAND DEPARTMENT, TAPAH Collector A. E C. Franklin Settlement Oflicer-P. M. Carrier
-Wan Abdullah
Do
Chief Clerk-S. K. Langha Moothu Second do. T. Vytialingam Third do Ng Kim Kooi Fourth do.-B. Mahd. Saad Malay Writer-Baludin Chinese do. -Chin Sing Notice Servers Mat, Kodin Forest Clerks-Kechut, Loh Ah Swee
--
Post Office, Tapar Postmaster-B. G. Smith
Clerks Rajoo, S. J., T. V. Suppusamy, K. Thimrappal, C. S. V. Sapakatnaw
SANITARY BOARD, BATANG PADANG Chairman The District Officer Members Executive Engineer, Chief Police
Officer, Medical Officer, Assistant Dis trict Officer, Etc.
UPPER PERAK DISTRICT
District Officer-H. Berkeley
Asst. do. -G. M. Laidlaw
Malay Magistrate-Raja Ngah Abubakar Chief Clerk--A. B. Peel Second Clerk-Chu Cheong Third Clerk-Mat Saman Customs Clerk--Top Hasein MalayWrtrs-Mat Piah and Long Abubakar
PERAK
1401
Executive Engineer- A. J. Slater Surveyors-Maht. Tahar, H. Koelmayer Dresser in Charge Hospital--Kandiah
do.
S. Pillay
Do. Postmaster-K. Chellapah Do. -Mahomet Clerk and Storekeeper-Supiah Inspector of Mines-Haji Brahin Asst. Warden of Mines --Vacant Forester--Husein
Chief Overseer-P. Chiladuri Overseers-Abas, Jebyi Baker San. Board Overseer-Pandak
DISTRICT OFFICE SELAMA
District Officer-H. Berkeley Asst. do.
-G. M. Laidlaw
Malay Magistrate-Raja Ngah Abubakar Chief Clerk--A. B. Peel
ALL SAINTS' CHURCH-Taiping
Chaplain-Rev. F. R. B. Pinhorn
Anglo-Chinese SCHOOL-Ipoh
Rev. A. J. Amery, B.D. principal Miss Nettie Moore
Miss E Cowan
Miss L. Watts
Mrs. Stanhope
Miss L. Rohilliard
AYLESBURY & GARLAND, Contractors, Commission Agents, Rubber Planters, Tin Miners and General Merchants- Head Office: Ipoh; Branches: Tapah, Tanjong Malim; Ad: Hawaland, Ipoh
E. T. C. Garland, A.M.I.C.E. partner G. L. Bailey,
do.
G. R. Stuckey, import H. Jennings, shares F. Garland, export Chew Ewe Soo, bookkeeper Choong Ah Phin, salesman R. Muttiah, typist and clerk.
Tapah
A. J. Boase, assistant
D. H. Hobbs, assistant Kok Seong San, bookkeeper Abdul Hamid, mines overseer Tanjong Malim
Hatim, mines overseer
Agencies
New Zealand Fire Insurance Co. China Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld. Klian Bahru Syndicate, Tapah. Jeram Mining Syndicate. Chumor Mining Syndicate.
Cicely Rubber Estates, Ld. Teluk Anson
Dominion Estates Ld. Trolak Estates, Ld.
Glenealy Rubber Estates Ld.
Cluny Rubber Estates, Ld.
Barnam Perak Rubber Estates, Ld. Ratanni Rubber Estates Ltd.
BAN HOCK HENG EST.-Krian; Sugar Cane
Tan Kang Hock, proprietor
BATU GAJAH CLUB
President-E. J. Brewster
Hon. Secretary-Edward B. Williams Hon. Treasurer-
Do. Committee-E. Bradbery, N. Ken-
dall, J. Ward, W. A. Gummer
BLAZE & Co., Chemists, Druggists and
Commission Agents-Ipoh
BOOTH & Co., Chemists and Druggists, Wine and Spirit Merchs., Auctioneers and Valuers "Larut Pharmacy,"Taiping
BRATT, E. H., Planter--Taiping
Visiting agent Sandycroft Hidden Streams Syndicate, Ledbury, Sione, Senawang, Pengkalan Durien and Hidden Treasure Rubber Estates Proprietor, Belle Plaine Estate, Palang
BROWN, JOHN A., Auctioneer, Broker, and Estate Agent-Hale Street, Ipoh; Special representative "Times of Malaya Press," Ld.
HYDRAULIC TIN MINING Co.,
BRUSEH
LD.-Bidor
H. Brett, manager
R. J. Acton, assistant
R. R. Hartley, assistant
H. Richter,
do.
S. P. D'Oliveiro, clerk and dresser Managing Agents
The Borneo Co., Ld., Singapore
BRYANT, F. J., B.A., Barrister-at-law, Advo- cate and Solicitor (Partner, Bryant & Taylor)-Ipoh; and also Advocate and Solicitor at Taiping, Perak
A. M. Taylor, solicitor (Partner, Bryant
& Taylor) Ipoh, Perak
W. N. Buckmaster, B.A., advocate and solicitor, assistant to F. J. Bryant, Taiping, Perak
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA--Taiping
A. Gray, sub-agent
Khoo Keng Hean, cashier
Lee Swee Cheng, Toh Kim Toon,
and Chow Ah Yow, clerks
1402
PERAK
Chung Thye PHIN, Miner-Station Road,
Ipoh; Mines at Jelantoli,
Tronoh, Taipeng
Gopeng;
CONNOLLY, R.M., B.A.,L.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.(Edin.),
Medical Practitioner--Ipoh
CORBETT, R. L., F.R.G.S., Miner
F. Upton Corbett,
do.
CRAWFORD, J. R., Engr. and Miner-Ipoh Director Teluk Anson Rubber Estate,
Ltd., Lower Perak
DAVIES, D. PICTON, Licensed Surveyor-
Ipoh
DRUMMOND, Jas., M.B.CH.B. Medical Practi-
tioner--Ipoh
EASTERN SMELTING CO., LTD., THE Head
Office: Penang, Ipoh Branch
General Manager for Perak F. O.
Hallifax
Assistants J. H. Allan, A. Stronach Bookkeeper-Ong Kee Cheang
Clerks Tan Tek Seng, Cheak Ewe
Cheng, Lee Choon Kung
FOO CHOO CHOON, M.C., F.R.A.C.s., Propri- etor of Mines and Estates, Chop "Wing Foong "--Head Office: Lahat, Kinta, Perak; Tel. Ad: Fortune, Lahat; Code used (Moering and Neal), A. B. C. 4th and 5th Editions
Foo Ban Seng, attorney
Foo Chow King, head cashier Chen Piang Nam, assistant
Khoo Theam Seng, general assistant Law Ek Ching,
FRENCH CATHOLIC MISSIONS
do.
Rev. E. J. Mariette (Taiping)
do.
do.
Rev. R. Cardon,
Rev. V. Hermann,
Rev. J. B. Coppin (Ipoh,
Rev. E. Chevauche (Batu Gajah, Kinta)
Rev. E. Sausseau (Ipoh,"
do.
do.
Rev. F. Le Malec (Bagan Serai, Krian) Rev. J. J. Passail (Tapah, Teluk Anson) Rev. A. Auvé, Parit Buntar (Krian)
GEORGE TOWN DISPENSARY, LTD., THE, Wholesale and Retail Chemists and Druggists, Dealers in Photographic and Eyesight Goods, &c. - 27, Station Road, Ipoh (and 37A, Beach Street, Penang); Telegrams: Ubat, Ipoh; Telephone 64
Manager-C. Trim Johnson, phar-
maceutical Chemist, M.P.S. Dispenser Pursothan Dass Assistant-Kheng Leong
Agencies
Anti Moskeet
Zotal Disinfectant
Virol
Common Sense Rat Exterminator
Ornamental Heraldic Ware
Picture Post Cards and Local Photo-
graphs Lotus Soap
Kodak Cameras and Films
GIBB, A. M., Advocate and Solicitor-Ipoh
GIBB & HOPE, Advocates and Solicitors,-
Chung Thye Phin's Buildings, Ipoh; Tel. Ad: Hope, Ipoh
→
Managing Partner H. Ashworth Hope, Solicitor, Supreme Court, England; Advocate and Solicitor, F. M. S. Assistants Raymond B. Bannon, Solicitor, Supreme Court, England, Advocate and Solicitor, F. M. S.; F. Norman Sanderson, Solicitor, Supreme Court, England, Advocate and Solicitor, F. M. S. Managing clerk-Ng Chak Tong Clerks B. T. Pereira, Abdul Rani, Ho Boon Hong, K. M. Yusoff, G. S. Suppiah
GOLF CLUB, PERAK-Taiping
Hon. Sec.-B. H. F. Barnard
GOPENG RECREATION CLUB President J. Reay
Hon. Secretary-Voon Thian Soo
HARPER, ZACHARIAS & Co., General Mer-
chants, Kampar
Partners R. F. Grey, F. E. Maynard,
H. C. E. Zacharias, D. Christie Manager-G. F. Rodwell
Chief Clerk-Yeoh Heong
Agencies
South British Insurance Co., Ltd. Phoenix Assurance Co., Ltd.
Sub-Agency
Beck's Key Brand Beer
HAWES & HAWES, Miners, Commission
Agents and Brokers-Ipoh
M. A. Hawes E. M. Hawes
HEAWOOD ESTATE-Sungei Siput, Kuala
Kangsar
Proprietor Chung Ah Yong, Taiping
HOWARTH, ERSKINE & Co., Ld., Mechanical and Electrical Engs., Boilermakers, etc,
H. P. Lawrence, manager
PERAK
1403
E. J. Hodges, assistant
R. Kellar,
do.
J. Berry,
do.
C. A. Wenborn, do.
J. Lambert,
do.
J. Joyce,
do.
IDRIS CLUB-Kuala Kangsa
President H. H. the Sultan Vice-president-F. T. Weld Hon. Secretary--J. O'May
IPOH CLUB
President District Ollicer, Kinta Vice-President J. I. Philips Hon. Secretary -A. Knaggs Secretary C. E. Cockram
IPOH EXCHANGE-11, Chung Thye Phin's
Buildings, Ipoli
J. B. Robertson, sole proprietor Tan Teck Hock, clerk
Agency
The London Liverpool & Globe In-
surance Co.
China Mutual Life Insce. Co., Ld.
IPOH FOUNDRY COMPANY
J. R. Crawford, managing director 8. H. T. Welch, chief clerk Ah Kee, foreman
JACKSON, WA
ALTER, Miner aud Mine Ow- ner, Ipoh; Tel. Ad: Reefer
JEBONG RUBBER ESTATE Co., Ld.
B. C. N. Knight, manager
JCHER HYDRAULIC TIN MINING CO., LD.,
Malim Perak
C. C. W. Liddelow, manager
JIN HENG ESTATE-Kuala Kurau; Sugar
Cane Heal Swee Lee, proprietor
JUNJONG MATI SUGAR ESTATE Bukit
Mertajam, P. W.
Ong Mea Han, proprietor
KALUMPONG RUBBER Co., Ld.-Kalumpong Estate, Bagan Serai Rubber and Sugar Cane; Head Office: in Shanghai Thos. Boyd, general manager A. Lawrence, accountant Dr. A. B. Jesser Coope, M.B.G.M. W. Sim
N. Davie
D. C. Thirlwall
Mohamed Ibrahin, chief clerk Kennedy & Co., agents in Penang
KINTA AERATED WATER FACTORY AND
BAKERY-Station Road, Ipoh
Proprietor-M. S. Adam
Manager M. Rahman Saheb
Clerks M. A. Gafur, D. K. Sundrum,
M. K. Hoossain, S. Duraisawmy
KINTA ASSOCIATION, LD.--Tanjong Ram-
butan
R. C. Petherbridge, manager
KINTA CLUB-Batu Gajah
President E. J. Brewster Hon. Sec.-R. Gillett
Hon. Treas. A. F. Worthington Committee--E. Bradbery, J. S. Glover, W. R. H. Chappel, E. J. Kemplen, N. Kendall
KINTA GYMKHANA CLUB-Batu Gajah
President--E. J. Brewster
Hon. Sec. and Clerk of Course-C, A.
Baker
Hon. Treasurer-Noel Kendall
KINTA ICE FACTORY-Selebin Road, Ipoh
M. Shaik Adam, proprietor
E. Hodges, engineer
M. K. Hoossain, clerk
Ice Depots
Kinta Aerated Water Factory, Station
Road, Ipoh
Kinta Aerated Water Factory, Kampar
Branch
KINTA POLO CLUB
Hon. Secretary-A. Baker
KUALA KANGSAR PLANTATIONS Co., LD.-
Gapis Estate, Padang Rengas
Penang Agents-Boustead & Co.
LAHAT MINES, LTD., THE-Kinta, Perak. Registered Office: 22, Budge Row, Can- non Street, London, E. C.
Foo Choo Choon, director O. S. Dawbarn, manager G. Tomson, assistant F. A. Nissen, engineer D. McCowan, miner
H. S. Whiteside, accountant
LARUT TIN MINING COMPANY
Sandilands, Buttery & Co., agts., Penang
LEECH-CORBETT, LD.-Ipoh; and 2, Great
Marlborough Street, London, W.
R. L. & F. Upton Corbett, managers
LEWIS, ARTHUR E., mining engineer-
Ipoh
LEONG SENG SMELTING WORKS Taiping
Lee Chin Ho & Bros., proprietors
1404
PERAK
LESSLER, E. E., Licensed Land Registration Agent, Auctioneer and Broker, Land, House and Estate Agent-Asam Kum- bang Road, Taiping
Agency
China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld.
LOCHMAN & Co., Medical Store-3, Cross
Street, Taiping
S. Numamech, proprietor
LOGAN & Ross, Advocates and Solicitors-
Penang and Ipoh; Tel. Ad: Sharp, Ipoh; Code used, A. B. C. 5th edition
Assistant-H. Lloyd Cowdy, B.A., signs
per pro., Rowan Shaw, B.A. Managing Clerk-Cheah Siew Cheong Tamil Clerk-M. Gulam Mydin Asst. Clerk Chan Kim Khay, Jahaya,
Moo Kooi Fatt
-
Process Servers Long,
Hashim
London Agents:
Oosman,
Loughborough, Gedge, Nisbit & Drew,
23, Austin Friars, London, E. C.
LOWER PERAK CLUB-Teluk Anson
President Oliver Marks
Hon. Secretary-E. W. Neubronner Committee --M. Maude, A. Duncan,
A. A. Campbell, H. F. Waters
MADDEN, L. J. B., Contractor and Agent--
Taiping, Perak
Assistant G. B. Madden (Pahang) Do. --F. B. Madden (Taiping)
MASONIC
LODGE KINTA, No. 3212
W.M.-H. Piser
I.P.M.-C. V. Stephens
S.W.-F. B. Sewell
J.W.-E. Spinks
Chap.-J. P. Parry
Treas.-C. E. Cockram Sec.--W. Bodger S.D.-R. Risk J.D.-F. U. Corbett I.G.-F. A. D. Evans Stewards-J. B. Martin Organist-H. M. Hodges D. of C.-F. M. T. Scae
PERAK JUBILEE LODGE, NO. 2,225
W.M.--G. Moir, D.G.S.B.
I.P.M.R. Pinkney, P. D. S. G. D. S.W.-W. M. Phillips Treasurer-F. A. Sugden Secretary J. W. Manington Senior Deacon-J. Russell Junior Deacon-C. E. Symonds Inner Guard-W. T. Kellow Tyler P. Pedley
Steward-W. J. Murray -
Organist H. S. T. Smail D. of C.-Wor. Bro. Sayers
PERAK ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER
Z.-G. Finch
H.-W. Sayers (P.Z.) J.-G. Moir
Scribe E.-J. W. Manington Scribe N.-W. T. Kellow Principal Sojr.-H. Pizur 1st Asst. Sojr.--R. L. Corbett 2nd do. -F. R. Howlett Treas.-J. A. Roberts Janitor-C. E. Symonds
MAXWELL & KENION, Advocates and
Solicitors Station Road, Ipoh
MCALISTER & Co., L.--Ipoh W. F. Barns, manager
J. Nelson
METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION-Ipoh, and
Out Stations
Pastor and Principal Anglo-Chinese
School-Rev. A. J. Amery, B.D., Chief Assistant-Miss Nettie Moore Mistress (Girls' School)-Mrs. Monera.
singhe
Sitiawan-Rev. W. G. Shellabear KamparChinese Church-Wong Ah Tso SungeiSiput Tamil do. Manikan
Tanjong Rombutan Chinese Church-
Chong Boon Kai
Telok Anson Tamil Church-P. Pooniah Ipoh Tamil Church J. Gnonasaba-
money
NEW CLUB-Taiping
President-E. W. Birch, C.M.G. Vice-President-A. B. Voules Hon. Secretary-W. H. Tatt
NICHOLAS WILLIAM, Contractor-Ipoh
NUTTER & PEARSE, Consulting Mining, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineers and Contractors0, Hugh Low Street, Ipoh; Tel. Ad: Nutter
Harry F. Nutter, partner
Cecil Pearse,
F. N. Pearse,
do.
do.
OGILVIE, C. G., Mine Proprietor and Plan-
ter--Ipoh
OLDFIELD'S DISPENSARY-Ipoh; Tel. Ad:
Chemist, Ipoh; Telph. 57
H. M. Hodges, M. P. S., proprietor
OSBORNE AND CHAPPEL, Mining and Con sulting Engineers-Ipoh; Cable Ad: Felspar, Ipoh
PERAK
T. D. Osborne, W. R. H. Chappel, H.
W. Metcalfe, partners H. D. Kiddle, A. Fleck, assistants R. Risk, engineer
E. D H. Thomson, H. R. Harrison, S. Kamplen Jones, mining assistants Gopeng Tin Mining Coy., Ltd.
J. H. Richards, manager
M. Green, A. M. Pilter, assistants New Gopeng, Limited
F. W. Darby, manager
Kinta Tin Mines, Limited
W. H. A. MacDonnell, manager H. Richards, J. Ward, assistants Tekka Limited
M. H. Thunder, manager
E. Edmonds, J. H. Fenner, H. G.
Harris, assistants
Rambutan, Limited
H. D. Day, manager H. F. Moraes, engineer
W. P. Murray, J. S. Harris, assistants Pengkalen, Limited
L. Vaughan, manager
W. J. Wayte, G. F. Dare, engineers
(Electrical)
F. Kinloch, D. H. Bannerman, H. Goodwyn, M. S. D. Day, assistants Rotan Dahan, Limited
G. M. P. Hornidge, manager Seremban Tin Mining Co., Ltd.
L. B. Betton, manager
PAYNE, W. C., Incorporated Account-Ipoh
PEARSON, V. H., Prospector and Miner-Ipoh
PENANG PERAK ÅERATED WATER CO.,
THE-Taiping
Burhan & Co., proprietors
PERAK GENERAL FARM, Chop" Ban Poh
Bee"-Tel. Ad: Spirits
PERAK PIONEER, Daily Newspaper pub-
lished at Taiping
S. A. H. Burhan, managing editor
W. H. Ryder Bailey, asst. Thomas Davidson, asst.
PERAK RIFLE ASSOCIATION-Ipoh Branch President Lt. Col.R.S.F.Walker C.M.G. Hon. Secy. Capt.B. W.E. Dunsford
PERAK SOUTH-CHURCH ENDOWMENT FUND Council-E. J. Brewster (president), H. P. Lawrence, F. Douglas Osborne, E. Spinks, W. R. H. Chappel, F. W. Darby, A. C. Valpy, Oliver Marks, F. J. Bryant, (hon. secy, and treas.) Trustees F. J. Bryant, W. R. H. Chap-
pel, H. P. Lawrence
Hon. Secy, and Treasurer F. J. Bryant Chaplain-Rev. J. P. Parry
1405
PERAK SUGAR CULTIVATION Co., Ld.-Gula Estates, Krian; 6,013 acres sugar cane and rubber; Tel. Ad: Gula
V. Drummond, chairman (S'hai.) Leonard Kerr, secretary (Shanghai)
Thos. Boyd, general manager A. Macdonald, engineer A. Lawrence, accountant Dr. A B. Jesser Coope, M.B., C.M. Assistants J.W.Kennedy, J. Wilson.
A. Sim, D. S. Yuel, A. Wilson Mohamed Joonoos, chief clerk Kennedy & Co., agents in Penang Head Office: Shanghai
PERAK TURF CLUB
President-E. W. Birch, c.M.O. Hon. Secretary-Walter H. Tate Committee-A. B. Voules, W. B. Stephens, G. Moir, Chung Ah Yong Representative Member on S. R. A.-
E. W. Birch, C.M.G.
Clerk of Course P. Moss
PHILLIPS, JOHN, I., Mining Expert, Surve-
yor etc.--Ipoh
PUSING LAMA TIN MINES, LTD. THE PAPAN
General Manager-W.M.Currie Local Secretary-E. A. Roadnight Manager-F. Symonds Engineer--A. Gee
Asst. Secretary-H. S. Blacklin
RAGALLA RUBBER ESTATE-Taiping
C. L. Gibson, proprietor and manager
RAILWAY BILLIARD ROOM
Che Teh, proprietor
RAMANATHEN, S., Planter, Contractor and
Lime Manufacturer
RAMBUTAN LTD., Rubber Estate-Taiping
T. R. Toby, manager
RICHARDS & COCKRAM
RILEY, HARGREAVES & Co., LD., Engineers Contractors, Boilermakers, Iron and Brass Founders Kinta Foundry, Ipoh; Head Office: Singapore
H. Paterson, manager C. Henderson, assistant G. P. Parsons, works foreman E. G. Leyne, motor foreman
J. J. Minjoot, accountant collector
SAW AH CHOY, Registered Medical Prac-
titioner
Taiping Medical Hall
SCHEUER, A., Chemist, Prop.-Oldfield's Dispensary, Ipoh-Tel.Ad: Chemist,Ipoh
1406
PERAK
SEPARATORS, LD., OreBuyers and Dressers -Ipoh, and 2, Great Marlborough Street London, W.
R. L. Corbett, manager F. Upton Corbett
SIPUTEH TIN MINES LD., THE-Papan
W. M. Currie, general manager C. Todd, manager
E. A. Roadnight, local secretary
SOCIÉTE DES ETAINS DE KINTA-Kampar, Kinta; Head Office: 62, Rue St. Lazare, Paris
J. P. Charra managing engineer
G. Crepy, accountant
A. L. Loquet, engineer
M. Cazin,
E. Blanchard,
A. D. Castel.
J. Villar
do.
do.
do.
A. E. C. McDonald
H. Hervon
A. Pivert
J. Descraques
G. Bonnet
E. Vasseur
STRAITS TRADING Co., LD. (Perak Branch)
-Kinta; Tel, Ad: Straits
R. Connell, acting manager
TAIPING MEDICAL HALL Licensed Chemists and Druggists' Shop-77, Kota Road, Taiping, Perak
TAIPING RECREATION CLUB
President Chung Ah Yong Vice-President-Ě. E. Lessler Hon. Secretary-W. E, Siddons
TATE & Co., W. H., Engineers and Contrac-
tors Head Office: Taiping
Walter H. Tate, A.M.I.C.E.
J. C. Collard, assistant
M. Sakwoo, asst. and cashier
D T. Pereira, chief clerk
M. Paul, bookkeeper
TATE & CUMMING, Miners-Head Office:
Taiping
W. H. Tate, A.M.I.C.E.
C. E. Cumming
J. W. Minington, manager
TIMES OF MALAYA PRESS, LTD.-Ipoh,
Perak, F. M. S.
(A daily newspaper, with a weekly edition)
Managing Director-Jolin I. Philips
Directors-W. R. H. Chappel, R. Con nell, Fred. Wickett
Managing editor J. Jennings Reporter John A. Brown
Chief clerk and cashier--Khoo Kim
Khuan
Store-keeper Tan Hun Eng Clerk-Lim Teng Toe
News foreman-S. A. Anando Works foreman- Naidu
TRONOH MINES, LIMITED, THE
E. G. Edgar, managing director A. Grant Mackie, director H. D. Griffiths, general manager Offices, Ipoh, Perak, F. M. S.
Head Office, London: 22, Budge Row,
Cannon Street, E.C.
WATERLOO ESTATE-Padang Rengas
Executors of late David Reid, Executors of the late Sir Græme H. D. Elphin- stone, Bart., proprietors
WELLINGTON ESTATE--Padang Rengas
Wellington Estates Co., Ld.
G. H. Cater, manager
WHITEAWAY, LAIDLAW & Co., LD., General Dealers, Footwear and Hardware Im- porters-14 and 16, Station Road, Ipoh
J. A. Goetzee, manager S. Fowler, asst. do.
Lim Teng Toe, cashier
Yeo Lung Chuan, Khoo Ghee Loon, T. Sammy, Mrs. Jumeaux, Mrs. Jones, assistants
WHITESIDE, H.S., Accountant and General Secretary; Business Address: 25, Chung Thye Phin's Balgs.
DRAPER
&
STEADMAN,
Architects, Engineers and Surveyors,
WILLIAMS,
Ipoh,
Partner Vincent Steadman, A.B.I.B.A. Draughtsman-Cheah Keng Cheen
--Lim Chak Sem
Do.
WREFORD & THORNTON, Advocates and Solicitors -23, Station Road, Ipoh; also Practising at Penang and Kuala Lum- pur; Tel. Ad Thornton, Ipoh J. Dunford-Wood, assistant Yeap Seng Hin, chief clerk Khong Choon Tok, Chin Yit Choy,
assistant clerk
T. M. Daliels, tamil clerk Bailla, Mehbin Brahain, orderly
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
SITUATION, AREA AND POPULATION
The Dutch possessions in Asia are situated in the Indian Archipelago, between 6° N. and 11° S. latitude and 95° 40', and about 141° E. longitude. They comprise Sumatra with adjacent islands, the archipelago of Bintang or Riouw, the archipelago of Lingga, the Karimon, Tambelan, Anambas, and Natoena islands, the Islands Banka and Billiton, Java and Madoera, the southern part of Borneo, Celebes, and all the other islands eastward of Borneo and Java to 141° E. longitude, with the exception of the eastern part of Timor (Timor Deli). Java and Madoera extend over 2,3884, the other islands together over 32,3975 geographical square miles.
With regard to the legal position, the population is divided into Europeans, with those who are considered equal to them (half-castes, Armenians, Japanese), and natives, with those who are considered equal to them (Chinese, Klings, Arabs, &c.) On the 31st December, 1905, the total number of Europeans and of those who are considered to be equal to them was 80,910, not including 12,595 in the Army and 2,112 in the Navy. They are of different nationalities. On the 31st December, 1905, there were 9,480 Dutchmen, born in Europe, 1,406 Germans, 315 Belgians, 312 Englishmen, 184 French- men, 197 Swiss, a few from different countries in Europe, America, &c., and 64,314 descendants of Europeans and half-castes born in Netherlands India. The number of Chinese in Netherlands-India on the 31st December, 1905, was 563,449, of whom 296,193 were in Java and Madoera. The natives on the same date numbered 29,716,908 in Java and Madoera, and the total number of natives on all the other islands together was then calculated at 7,304,552. The number of Arabs was 29,588, of whom 19,148 were in Java and Madoera, and that of other foreign Orientals (Moors Bengalese, Klings, Malays, and African negroes) 22,970, of whom 2,842 were in Java and Madoera. The increase of the population from 1890 to 1900 was for the Europeans 30.9 per cent., Chinese 16.5 per cent., and Arabs 26.6 per cent.
A great part of the Europeans are employed in or retired from the Government service; next in number are the planters, traders and industrials. The Arabs, Chinese, and other Orientals are almost all tradesmen, but it must be mentioned that some Chinese are in possession of or employed on plantations in Java, and that upwards of 54,000 Chinese are working as labourers on the tobacco estates on the East Coast of Sumatra, and that thousands of Chinese labourers are employed under European superintendence in the exploitation of the tin mines of Banka and Billiton. The natives are cultivating the soil; in the larger places they also are mechanics, but the practice of the handicrafts is for the greater part in the hands of Chinese.
HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT
When the Dutch in the last years of the sixteenth century established themselves in the Archipelago they found the Portuguese there. In order to be strong against other European rivals the Dutch East Indian Company was established in 1602 by charter of the General States of the United Netherlands, granting a monopoly for the trade in all the countries east of the Cape of Good Hope to the Strait of Magellan and the right to make treaties with Indian princes, to make war, build fortifications, and give commissions to civil and military officers, etc. The East Indian Company was nearly independent and disposed of large capital. The first proceedings were commercial, but soon the Company extended its power and conquered territory in Java and the Moluccos. The first "loge" was established at Bantam, then at Jakatra, where the Governor-General, J. P. Coen, made a fortress which he called Batavia (1619), After a long period of great prosperity the Company fell into decay, the difficulties increased under a heavy burden of debts, and in 1800 the States General cancelled the charter and took the administration of the possessions into their own hands. At the same time the British, during the war with France and the Netherlands, conquered the greater part of the Dutch colonies. In 1802, by the treaty of peace concluded at Amiens, the colonies, with the exception of Ceylon, were restored to the Batavian Republic, as the Netherlands were then called, but during the war with England that was soon afterwards declared the Dutch again lost all their possessions. After the fall of Napoleon, in 1816, the greater part of the colonies were restored to the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and by the London treaty of 17th March, 1824, Malacca and the establishments on the continent of India were exchanged for Benkoelen.
Netherlands-India is now governed in the name of the Queen of the Netherlands by a Governor-General, who is obliged to ask in some cases the advice of the Council of India, consisting of a Vice-President, four members, and a secretary.
He is
1408
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, and is seconded by a Lieutenant General, Commandant of the Army and Chief of the War Departcient and a Vice. Admiral or Rear-Admiral, Commandant of the Navy and Chief of the Marine Depart ment, and further by the seven Directors of the Departments: of the Home Government Finance; Justice; Education, Public Worship and Industry; Agriculture; Government monoplies and industrial enterprises; and Public Works. The Department Agriculture, established on 1st January, 1905, is a combination of the gardens (botanical and experimental), laboratories, museu, etc., known until that date as "Land Plantentuin," with the Bureau of Forestry, the Veterinary Service and the Govern ment Coffee and Cinchona plantations.
of
**Landy
Netherlands-India is divided into provinces, under the administration of Governors or Residents and their Assistant Residents, and "Controleurs". The direct government of the population is entrusted to natives with the titles of Regent, Wislong, an Assistant Wedono in Java and other titles in the other islands. In appointing the native officials it is considered a rule that the people in the different islands Residencies or districts must be governed if possible by their own chieftains In Soerakarta and Djogjakarta (in Java) and in a great many residencies of other islands the native princes have still to a certain degree the rule of the country in their hands, but in fact their power is only nominal and they are dependent on the Government of Netherlands India.
The Supreme Court is located at Batavia, and Courts of Justice are established at Batavia, Samarang, Soerabaia, Padang, Medan, and Macasser; there are also Residential Courts in all the Residencies, except at Macasser. The Courts of Justice for the natives are in the capitals of Residencies and districts; they have different names, as landraad, rapat, proatin, regentschapsgerecht, districtsgerecht.
CLIMATE
The climate in general is very damp. Under, the equator and at the sea level the maximum temperature may reach upward of 35° Celsius At a distance from the equator the temperature is but little lower; however, not so high and on some mountains it fall to freezing point At Bataira the mean daily temperature is 26° Celsius. In the plains and on the lower mountains the monsoons have a great influence on the climate. Tothe south of the equator from April to October the south-east monsoon and from October to April the north-west monsoon is blowing, while to the north of the equator the west monsoon blows from April to October and the east monsoon from October to April. The changes of the monsoons are marked by periods of three to four weeks, during which the wind blows from different directions and thunderstorms and calms prevail these periods are considered to be dangerous to health. The heat is greatest during the south-east monsoon and is nly occasionally tempered by thunderstorms, but the nights are then pretty cool. The west monsoon is accompanied by heavy rains continuing for days and sometimes for weeks, swelling the rivers so that the low countries ar often inundated. The influence of the monsoons is in many cases modified by high mountains and other local conditions, so that, for instance. it rains nearly every day at Buitenzorg and in some parts of Borneo and in the highlands of Sumatra. The winds are rather weak.
PRODUCTS
The islands of the Indian Archipelago have generally a very fertile soil and are rich in useful products. The most important products of Java are: Rice (in 19 85,000,000 piculs), principally for local consumption; sugar (18,000,000 picuis), come (228,000 piculs), tea (1,500,000 kg), tobacco (40,000,000 kg), Cinchona bark (9,000,000 kg), nutmeg, cocoa, pepper, copra, ground nuts, indigo, kapok, tapioca meal, w timber; of Sumatra: tobacco (23,000,000 kg), coffee (42,000 piculs), pepper, caoutchout, gums, rattans; of Borneo and Celebes: copra, caoutchouc, gums, rattans.
The export of the principal articles in 1908 amounted to:- Arachides, cleaned
in husk
Arrack...
Bark (Bakau and Tengar wood)
Benzine
Birls' nests
Caoutchouc Cassia vera.... Cassia fistula
Cattle
Cinchona Bark
+
i
value Fl. 1,300,097 13,000,968 kilo 11,041,003
**
"
1,104,100
4,171,048 litre 8,754,970 kilo
+1
D
814,809
+4
11
1,313,246
3 9,719,678 litre
*
++
9,291,509
11
3,048,095
kilo
**
678,077 746,281
TH
T
"
**
7,183,700
"}
11
+1
606,751 6,096,190 271,200
44,776
485,097 5,746,967
Baroc
Kali mati
Djants
Pedjagatin
Tred
Lékodjan
Stads Button gracht
awak
praga
Brendang
ma
Chizkeris
+
Luropeesch
kerkhor
+
Hajjub
fisdienst-
Keroket
Gen van, K. en W.
Klantang
pan, dan Sour. Ge neraal
Koningsplein
Bark
Hacetencem
Station Walter
NIS
Dep
Bertaa
ning s
Pěs
Kota
Kripitthago
Fasarpisang
(NIS) Bandan
**D* Mocka
BATAVIA
Boeroeng Borg
T
T
Bocrveng Besar
Stad forband 1
Djakatra
EFELDEL
regen
yong
Jiglie Sawni
Gang
да
besar
Τ
T
anggul doew
个
ng, baloe!
Thi
Djeroch
ΠΕΠ
Hambatan
Vaterlooplah
Draw and Engraved for the Directory & Chronicle
Mosare Antial
apverañ
Pedemangan
Kampoeng djawa).
-
LEGENDA
Erven met steenen gebouwen
Kampoenga
Klappertuin
Grasland
Moeras
Kreupelhout
Beach
Alang alang
A Chineesche graven
Inlandsche graven
Artesische put
Openbare gebouwan
Waterleiding
ma Lovende heg
Doode heg
Балашиха пожа
Banzoodg
Telegrauflin
Stoomtramoweg
Pp.
Petroleumpakhuis
Schaul 1. 20000
1
1. "
;
SCM.
DITH.
Cloves Cocoa
Cocoanuts
Coffee (diff sorts)
Copra
Cotton (picked)..
Cotton (raw)
Cubebs
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
++
91,550 kilo value Fl.
2,359,044
263,006 ps. 24,310,722 kilo
229,491,081
1409
H
>>
45,775 1,415,427
J+
**
7,910
3)
+1
14,012,520
}}
34,423,660
1,1 7,365 9,643,210
553,682
21
}}
ני
964,320
151,267 52,681 3,255,329
++
17
H
226,900
13
]]
52,681
「:
}}
J
97,660
**
72,979
7,316,952
>>
>>
**
365,848
128,436
20. 47
H
**
})
7,511,760
+
}}
13
118,596 1,877,940
1,404,952
*
3)
13
1,404,952
10,628,994
}}
>>
2,657,249
7,156,99 L
**
++
**
2,862,797
6,965,207
J]
391,991
1+
>>
})
A
6,951,430
**
17
6,965,207 783,982 4,170,858 533,478 534,243
Dragon's blood
Ebony...
Fish (diff. sorts)....
Fish (dried and salted)
Flour, not specially mentioned
Furniture (diff. sorts)
Gambier
Gum Benjamin (benzion)
Gun Copal...
Gum damar
Gutta (diff. sorts)
Gutta percha
Hides (diff sorts)
Hides (birds)
Indigo...
Ivory
Kapok...
Kapok Seeds
Maco
Maize
Mats
+
Nutmegs
Oil, not specially mentioned...
Oil (ground nuts)
Oil (coconut)
Oil (Kajaput)
Petroleum (kerosene)
Pepper (black
Pepper (white)
Pinang nuts
Quinine
Rattans Residium
Rice (bras)...
Rice (paddy) Ricini seeds Sago all kinds Seeds (sesame)... Seeds, other kinds
Shells, other kinds
Shells (pcar!)
Shells (tortoise)
Sugar, white
Sugar, Crown
Sugar, molasses
Sugar, Javanese
Tapioca (flour) Tapioca (root)
Tea Tin
H
Tin ore Tobacco (diff. sorts). Tripang Victuals (diff sorts) Wood (sandal)
Wood (timber)
184,093 1.3 1
A
>>
11
1)
RARA
7,583, 05 13,611,098
>
33
13,910 2,275,082
>>
509,706
*
12
25,590,887
>>
408,332 764,560 2,55,089
17
**
2,669,613
*
**
245,390 2,669,613
ラウ
3
262,569
980,013 litre 1,935,700
**
147,003
1+
387,139
+
17
>>
83,828
581,097,877
1
*
23,243,917
24,867,185 kilo
**
11
9,946,873
4,334,236
++
17
11
22,050,603
U
•
**
29,863
**
7
34 630,442
1
13
++
*
+
++
**
2,167,118 3,397,591
597,260 5.194,566 993,980
5,055 900
552 959
369,956 1,211,565 341,756
38 476 350,961
1
1,452, 87
640,320 169,517,826
2,471,600 4,768,619
294,800 3,157,156
50,559,004 11,059,174
5,285 094
16,921,946 3,030,282
うき
**
11
**
H
1
>>
+
32,016
11
...1,130,118,842
49,431,987 95,372,390
5,896,000 39,464.456
ל
>>
*
}}
*
}
11
11
י
JJ
27,134 942
}}
"
1 356,747
ני
+3
11
9,450,304
2 913 224
77
16 750,507
2 240,942 2,858 808 80,674,908
**
J
14
**
1
356 462
**
M
11
1,153,856 kilo
7
11
1.429,404
03,94,143
356,462 1,667,195 230,772 2,643,045
1410
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
Diamonds are found in Borneo; gold in Sumatra, Celebes, and Borneo: silver in Sumatra, Celebes and Borneo, copper in Java, Celebes and Borneo, iron in Celebes, Sumatra, Borneo, and Jaya; tin of excellent quality and in large quantities in Banka, Billiton, and Singkep, and in small quantities in Sumatra and some other islands, lead in Sumatra and Borneo, zinc in small quantities in Java and Sumatra, coal in Borneo, Sumatra, and Java, manganese in Java, jodium in Jaya, saltpetre in Java, marble in Java and in Sumatra. Salt of excellent quality is produced in Madoera and also in the other islands, by evaporation of the sea water, Kerosene oil is produced in abundance in Java, Sumatra, and Borneo, and gives enormous profits.
The possession of the soil by the natives is strongly protected by law. As a gene- ral rule the ground cannot be sold to foreigners, not even to Dutchmen, nor to their descendants who are born in India. The Government is authorized to dispose of un- cultivated grounds and grant parts of them for a certain period to foreigners (erfpacht). On the 31st December, 1905, the stock of cattle in Java and Madoera consisted of 2,186,993 buffaloes, 2,654,461 other horned cattle, and 363,974 horses (ponies).
REVENUE AND FINANCE
The revenue of the colony is derived from different taxes, viz., export and import duties, excise, ground tax, licences, poll tax, succession duties and stamp duties, the rent of farms (opium, gambling-houses, pawnbrokers' shops, etc., etc.), monopolies (opium, salt, pawnshops), tin mines, forests, railways, mining, and agricultural concessions, the cultivation of coffee, and sundry petty articles. In former years the cultivation of coffee was the principal source of revenue, but of late years there has been a constant decrease. In the Residencies in Java (except Batavia, Bantam, Cheribon, Rembang, Soerabaja, Banjoemas, Soerakarta and Djokjakarta), where the ground is suitable for the cultivation of coffee, a certain number of natives are obliged to plant every year a number of coffee trees, to take care of the plantations to dry the fruit, and to deliver it into the Government godowns. They are therefore free of ground tax and receive a renumeration at the fixed rate of fifteen guilders per picul.
In Java and Madoera (except Soerakarta, Djokjakarta and the district of Grobogan, residency Semarang), in
in the Government Sumatra's Westkust, the Residencies Tapanoeli, Benkoelen, Lampongsche Districten, Palembang, Djambi, Oostkust van Sumatra, Banka en Onderhooringheden, and the Assistant-Residency Billiton, and in the residencies Zuider-en Oosterafdeeling van Borneo, and Westerafileeling van Borneo private persons are not allowed to make salt.
In all those districts the import of salt is forbidden, except of fine table salt, salt for medical use, mineral salt and salt for packing preserves, the import of which salt is allowed on payment of a duty. Rough salt may be imported in the ports of Sibolga and Baros (Tapanoeli), Djambi, Tandjoeng Pandan (Billiton), and in the Residency Oostkust van Sumatra, also on payment of a duty,
The salt required for the Government monopoly is made in Madoera, where the people are obliged to deliver it into the Government godowns at a fixed rate per kojang
1680 kilogrammes).
In the Government manufacturies of Kalianget and Krampon part of this salt is pressed into briquettes of constant weight and dimensions, which are delivered to the consumers in some Residencies at fixed prices.
LC
After a trial in Madoera (since September 1st, 1894), Lombok and in four Residencies of Java in 1898, the Government resolved upon taking the management of the opium monopoly into its own hands and to sell the drug on the system of a
régie" to the population without the intermediation of farmers. The "régie" has since been in force in Java, Madoera, and in the residencies Lampongsche Districten, Benkoelen, Ternate en Onderhoorigheden, Banka en Onderhoorigheden, Palembang Menado, Bali en Lombok, Tapanoeli, Zuider-en Oosterafdeeling van Borneo Westerafdeeling van Bornes, Djambi, the Assistant-Residency Billiton, the Govern- ment Sumatra's Westkust and the Government Celebes en Onder-hoorigheden. In Bantam and the Preanger Regencies, the sale of "regie" opium is, however, only allowed in some places. In regions where the régie is introduced the sale of opium otherwise than by "régie" is prohibited. The Resident grants to certain persons a permit to open certain houses where opium can be smoked. It is for- bidden to keep a stock of opium not derived from the "régie," and the monopoly of the Government is strongly protected by penalties. The revenue of the opium monopoly, was calculated for 1903 at 18,969,564 (net), of which 15,276,360 are from the "régie."
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
1411
After having given the matter a trial at Soekaboemi (since April 1st, 1901) and at several other places in Java the Government resolved to take in hand the management of the pawnshops, with the intention of protecting the native population from the evils they suffer from the present system of farming out those places. In the course of 1908 the total number of pledges delivered at the 88 existing Government pawn- shops was 7,761,794; the aggregate amount of money borrowed being 12,977,880.98 guilders. At the end of 1909 the number of Government pawnshops will be 127, whilst the presumptive future yearly increase will be 39.
The tin mines of Banka are exclusively worked by Government; the management of the exploration, the melting of the ore, and the transport of the tin to the godowns being in the hands of Chinese mining corporations (kongsi's) or of private contractors and their labourers. Of late a beginning has been made with working some of the valleys in "regie." Two private companies hold concessions for tin mines, one in Billiton and the other in Singkep; the first (Billiton) pays a duty for the farming of the mines. The total quantity produced in 1908 by the Government nines in Banka was 12,598,432 kilogrammes, valued at 19,030,227 guilders.
The monetary system of Netherlands-India consists of gold coins of the value of ten guilders, silver coins of two guilders and a half, of one guilder, and of half a guilder (these coins are the same as those in the Netherlands); besides silver coins of f.025, of £010, and £.005 bearing Malay and Javanese inscriptions, and copper coins of f.0·025, (2) cent), f.001 (one cent), and f.0'005 (3 cent). The issue of Bank notes is a monopoly of the Java Bank. These Bank notes are of the value of f.1,000, f.500, £.300, £.200, £100, f.50, f.25, £.10, and f.5, and payable to bearer on demand. The head office of the Java Bank is at Batavia, and there are agencies at Cheribon, Samarang, Soerabaia, Soera- karta, Djogjakarta, Pandoeng, Padang, Medan, Pengkalis, Tandjongbalai, Tandjongpoera, Palembang, Pontianak, Bandjermasin and Makasser.
ARMY AND NAVY
The Army of Netherlands-India numbers 1,522 officers, 33,910 non-commissioned officers and men. It is separate from and independent of the Netherlands Army. The Commander is appointed by the Queen. Besides the Army there are different armed troops, viz.:-
a. The "Schuttery," being guards residing in some of the larger places designed to co-operate with the Army in maintaining peace. These guards number about 2,750 men, mostly Europeans, and a few natives and foreign Orientals. The officers get a commission from the Governor-General.
b-The Legion of the Native Prince Mangkoe Negoro, consisting of infantry and cavalry, numbering about 800 men.
c.-Barisan, being native infantry of Madoera, 1,400 men, designed to maintain peace in the island. In case of war in other islands they also participate in the campaigns.
d-Dragoon Guards of the Soesoehoenan of Soerakarta and the Sultan of Djog- jokarta.
e. Police soldiers.
The Netherlands Navy in these Colonies numbers 185 officers and 1,631 European and 1,049 native non-commissioned officers and sailors, and consists of 26 men-of-war. There is, besides, the Colonial Navy, consisting of 19 smaller ships with 116 Europeans and 638 natives, employed for civil service duties.
PUBLIC WORSHIP AND EDUCATION
The Protestant clergymen are appointed by the Queen; they are 41 in number. The Roman Catholic priests are appointed by the Pope and recognized by or in the pame of the Queen. The Jews have no rabbis and are so few that in no place have they a synagogue. The Government does not interfere with Mahommedan worship, but pilgrims to Mecca require to take out passports. Chinese religion is as free as all other kinds of public worship,
The Educational Department sustains a great many schools for Europeans and natives. At Batavia, Samarang, and Soerabaja are schools for higher education; Batavia and Soerabaja have also a school for mechanical engineers, etc.; and Batavia one for craftsmen. There are, further, 148 Government schools (among which are 3 newly- established Dutch-Chinese schools) and 38 private schools in Java, and 44 Government schools (Dutch-Chinese schools) and 2 private schools in the other islands, having on the 31st December, 1908, 26,790 pupils, among whom were 5,603 children of natives and 1,894 children of Eastern strangers. Five public and sixteen private colleges are levoted to the instruction of native schoolmasters, four to the instruction of sons of native officials, and one (at Batavia) to the education of native
1412
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
physicians, while 782 Government vernacular schools and 1,787 private vernacular schools give instruction to upwards of 258,000 pupils. The greater number of these private schools are managed by missionaries. In Soerabaja and Samarang are private schools for mechanical engineers and handicraft. In Buitenzorg there is an agricultural school for Europeans and natives.
In a great many places private persons can be admitted into the military hospitals, while in the large towns general hospitals are maintained for poor natives and Chinese, and other hospitals for infectious diseases. Asylums for the insane are maintained at Buitenzorg and Lawang.
TRADE AND NAVIGATION
Riouw, Bengkalis, and Sabang are free ports.
The other ports are open for either general trade or only for native coasting navigation.
Godowns where goods can be stored and sold, and from whence they can be exported without payment of import or export duties, are established at Batavia, Cheribon, Semarang, Soerabaja, Palang, Siboga, Baros, Singkel, Menado, Gorontalo, Ternate, Amboina Neira (Banda) and Macassar
P
The value of imports in 1908 was in Java and Madoera 165,994,065 guilders
In the other islands
Total...
77,278,042
243,272,107
**
The value of exports in 1908 was from Java and Madoera... 31,665,066 guilders
and from the other islands
Total...
135,456,737
446,121,803
+
H
The mercantile marine of Netherlands-India consisted in December, 1908, of 12,474 ships and vessels, of which 255 were steamers, with a total tonnage of 632,844 cubic
metres.
In 1908 there arrived from abroad :--
5,024 steamers
++
2,051 native sailing vessels
27 European sailing vessels...
Total... 7,102 vessels with a tonnage of and in the same year there departed
5,038 steamers
1,981 native sailing vessels
38 European sailing vessels...
7,057
tonnage
10,399,776 cubic metres
11
+1
283 531 44,149
>>
+1
+
tonnage
})
J
10,727,456
10,793,835 cubic metres
273,653
きか
ED
"
48,700 **
11,116,188
Import duties are imposed in Java and Madoera, the West and East coast of Sumatra, Acheen (except the Isle of Way), Bencoolen, Lampongs, Palembang, Banka and Dependencies, Billiton, S. E. Borneo, W. Borneo, Djambi, Indragiri, Bali and Lombok, Menado, the Residencies Amboina, Ternate and Dependencies and Timor and Dependencies and in the Government Celebes and Dependencies, but not in the islands of the Riouw Residency. The import duty is fixed ad valorem or according to the weight or the dimensions, most of the goods being separately mentioned in the tariff. Most of the metals, machinery, raw materials, as lime and wood, and articles of art and science are free of import duty. Export duty is only paid on a few articles according to value of quantity: for instance, hides 2 per cent., birds' nests 6 per cent., damar, benzoin, and rattan á per cent. (S. E. Borneo 8 per cent.) of the value, tin f.3.50 for 100 kilogrammes. Transit cargo is free.
An excise is charged on inland arrack (only in Java and Madoera), kerosene oil, gasoline and benzine (f.2.50 per hectolitre), on matches of all kinds when each stick has only one head f.0.70 per gross of boxes each box containing no more than seventy- nine sticks (f.005 per gross of boxes more for each additional number of five sticks or part thereof), when each stick has two heads f.1.40 per gross of boxes, each box containing no more than seventy-nine sticks (f.0.10 per gross of boxes more for each additional number of five sticks or part thereof) and on tobacco exported from Java to Borneo.
Commercial intercourse is much advanced by the Steam Navigation Company- "Koninklyke Paketvaart Maatschappij," possessing 42 occan-steamers plying across the whole Archipelago, and 4 wheelboats for the inland trade. These steamers have splendid accommodation for saloon passengers.
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
PUBLIC WORKS
1413
On the 1st Jan, 1909, there were 2,173 kilometres of railway in Java and 322 kilo- metres in Sumatra: 2,049 kilometres of tramway in Java and Madoera and 602 kilometres in Sumatra. The gross earnings during the year 1908 were: (in millions of guilders) Government railways 19.6, Government tramways 0.8, Private railways 6.6, Private tramways 9.8. The Government telegraphs extend over 9,305.23 kilometres, the Govern- ment telegraph cables over 5,213.99, together 14,519.22 kilometres. Government telephone systems were in operation on the 1st January, 1909, in the districts of Batavia, Semarang, Soerabaja, Pasoeroean, Probolinggo, Madioen and in the Preanger-Regent- schappen. The balance of revenue and expenditure of the Post and Telegraph services showed a deficit of f.480,489.27; of the Government telephony it showed a profit of f. 319,588.75. The number of stations was 478 for Java and Madoera and 202 for the other islands. The number of Government telephone-exchanges was 40, and that of the subscribers 3,889, with 4,306 telephones.
DIRECTORY
BESTUUR VAN NEDERLANDSCH-INDIE.
Gouverneur-Generaal-A. W. F. IDENBURG Adjudant van Z. E.-C. M. Kan, Majoor der Artillerie, tevens intendant der Gouvernements-hôtels
Do
Do.
-D. A. de Ronde, Luitenant-ter-Zee der 2 de klasse --A. W. A. de Kock van Leeuwen, Kapitein der Infanterie
RAAD VAN NEDERLANDSCH-INDIE Vice-President-D. F. W. van Rees Leden Mr. C. H. Nieuwenhuys, F. A. Liefrinck, Mr. J. G. Pott, R. H. Ébbink Secretaris--W. Brouwer
ALGEMEENE SECRETARIE Algemeene Secretaris-G. J. Staal Eerste Secretaris van het Gouvernement-
Jhr. A. C. D. de Graeff
Secretarissen van het Gouvernement-- A H. Rusman, G. J. Bisschop, W. V. Smeets (tijd. wd.)
van
ALGEMEENE REKENKAMER Voorzitter-H. M. la Chapelle Leden-W. A. P. F. L. Storm
's Gravesande, T. Rinses, F. A. Leclerq de Courcelles, A. Suermondt, C.F. Julius, H.W. Kloos
Secretaris B. Th. W. van Hasselt
DEPARTEMENT VAN JUSTITIE
Directeur-T. A. Nederburgh
Secretaris-W. Sonneveld
RECHTSWEZEN
HOOGGERECHTSHOF VAN NED. INDIE
President A. L. E. Gastmann Vice-President J. Reepmaker
Raadsheeren-Mrs. S. J. Hirsch, H. Schuijten, J. van Davelaar, E. Kruse- man, J. Barlagen Bussemaker, J. W. C. Cordes, A. J. A. Kollmann
Procureur Generaal-A. J. Andrée Wiltens Advocaat Generaal-A. Brouwer Grither H. Jelgerhuis Swildens
RADEN VAN JUSTITIE
Batavia
President-M. L. Andrée Wiltens Vice-President-H. Ch. van Meerten Leden-Mrs. G. André de la Porte, L. J. Dijkstra, W. Boekhoudt, H. G. Neder- burgh, A. W. de Paulij, C. Offerhaus Officier van Justitie-G. L. Meus Fiers Substituten do.
Smeding
-Mrs. S. L. J. van
Schaik, A. A. Strubij (tijd. buit.) Griffier J. F. A. M. Buffart
Semarang
President F. E. Couperus
Vice-President Jlir. A. W. van den
Brandeler
Leden-Mrs. A. H. Klein, H. V. Monsanto, H. G. van Velthuijsen, G. D. Willinck, M. C. Rogge
Officier van Justitie--J. Th. Stok Substituten do. -G. N. Bouma Griffier Ch. L. Brevet
1414
Soerabaja
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
President-W. L. Borel Vice-President J. L. F. Rhemvev Leden-J. Th. de Lussanet de la Sablonière J. M. Ch. E, le Rutte, R. H. Kleijn, E. Zorab, F. B. Simon van Leeuwen J. G.J. Oetgens van Waveren Pancras Clifford Officier van Justitie-Ch. Pl. du Cloux Substituten do. -O. E. G. Vosmaer
J. H. Guije (tijd buit) Griffier Ch. Heijman
Padang
President--B. Nijman
Leden J. C. Heyning, Ph. S. de Laat de Kanter. W. J. M. Plate, J. A. J. Jansen (Buit)
Officier van Justitie-A, H. Walkate
Griffier H. J. Boswijk
Makasser
President-A. J. Sloot
Leden--B. Heyman, H. G. J. Boekholdt,
A. E. van Arkel
Officier van Justitie-H. G. Derx
Grither P. J. L. Harting
Medan
President H. J. Matthes
Leden-P. II. Schneider, Ch. J. D. Hermun,
J. H. W. B. Visser
Officier van Justitie-H. Rahder Griffier E. Hesselink
HOOG MILITAIR GERECHTSHOP VAN
NEDERLANDSCH-INDIE President A. L. E. Gastmann, Vice-President J. Reepmaker Leden-W. A. A. Visser, gep. Kol. tit. der Infanterie, G. H. L. F. O. Ilgen, gep. Kol. tit. der Infanterie, W. P. Wetselaar, gop. Majoor der Infanterie, Mrs. S. J. Hirsch, H. Schuyten J. van Davelaar E. Kruseman, J. Larlagen Bus- semaker J. W. C. Cordes, A. J. A. Koll- mann,
Advocaat Fiscaal voor de Land-en Zee- macht in Nederlandsch-Indië-A. J. Andree Wiltens
Substituut Do--A. Brouwer Griffier-H. Jelgerhuis Swildens
LANDSADVOCATEN
Batavia-Mr. J. Schoutendorp
Semarang Mr. C. W. baron van Heeckeren Soerabaja-Mr. A. Paets tot Gansoyen
ARBEIDSINSPECTIE
Inspecteur D. G. Stibbe Adj. Inspecteurs E. J. van Lier, R. A. Moorrees, S. G. Knappert, J. A. van Hoogstraten, C. C. H. Krapels, A. M. C. J. van Exter
NOTARISSEN
Serang (Bantam)-S. P. de Bruin Batavia M. J. Smissaert, E. H.
Carpentier Alting, J. de Bruyn, J. C, van Es (tijd. verv.), G. H. Thomas Tangerang A. van der Leeuw Bandoong-P. Vellema (verlof), J, F.
H. Wilson (tijd verv.) Cheribon-J. A. Boulet
Pekalongan J. L. de Weijer Semarang--A. J. C. Hazenberg E. Ch. F. Bloch, J.H.A. van Barneveld (tijd. verv), J. G. L. Houthuijsen (verl.) Rembang J. W. H. Smissaert Soerabaja-Jhr. A. H. van der Does de Bye, A. W. Th. Th. Mens Fiers Smeding, B. ter Kuile (verl.), H. W. Hazenberg (tijy verv.)
Soemenep L. J. Versnel
Pasoeroean-Æ. Wigéri van Edema Bondowoso-A. J. N. Graafland Banjoemas-D. F. W. Boes Lutjens Magelang C. P. A. Boelen
Djokjakarta-J. C. van Waardenburg
(verlof), A. Th. F. Mente (tyd, verv.) Soerakarta--H. F. F. Hultman Madioen-Ch. L. Brautigam Kediri A. J. Wolvekamp Padang J. F. H. van Hemert Palembang-G. W. Posthuma Medan-G. M. Schuurman Koeta Radja--W. Lammers Tandjong Pinang-II. Loriaux Bandjermasin-H. J. E. van der Kop Monado--H. G. van Os van Delden Makasser-Y. Meeter
Amboina--M. M. Willemsz Geeroms
WEES-EN BOEDELKAMERS Batavia-President, N. B. H. F. Arriens
Secretaris, J. F. W. Mayer Semarang-President, M. J. Myer
Secretaris, J. Ruitenschild Soerabaja--President,C.J.Veenstra(tijywd)
Secretaris, P. L. Leidelmeyer Padang-President A. P. Kuipers von Lande; Secretaris, J. L. H. Hicks Makasser President, F. A. Reynhart
Secretaris, R. C. F. J. L. s. Holz-
schucher von Harlach Medan President, C. A. Schoggers Secretaris, Ch. J. Graaf van Ranzow
DEPARTEMENT VAN BINNENLANDSCH
BESTUUR
Directeur-S. de. Graaff*
Tijdelijk Secretaries-J. de Groot
Gewestelyk Besteuur
Bantam-Resident, F. Overduyn
Assistent-Resident-Secretaris, G.
C. D. Neumann
Batavia-Resident, E. Meertens
Secretaris, J. van Gigh
Preanger Regentschappen-Resident, W.
F. L. Boissevain
Secretaris, J. F. Hildering
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
Cheribon-Resident, G. J. Oudemang Secretaris, L. Thomas
Pekalongan-Resident, W. F. Engelbert
van Bevervoorde
Secretaris, M. G. J. Julsing Semarang Resident, H. C. A. G. de Vogel
Secretaris, E. A. G. J. van Delden Rembang-Resident, G. L. Gonggrijp
Assistent-Resident-Secretaris,
J. C. Meyer
Soerabaja-Resident, J. Einthoven
Secretaris-J. E. Barkmeyer (wd.) Madoera-Resident, H. J. Wijers
Assistent - Resident-Secretaris, J.
A. Pecqueur Pasoeroean-Resident, L. Kreischer
Secretaris, L. H. E. Schoonheyt Besoeki-Resident, J. Bosman
Assistent - Resident-Secretaris,
J. P. Dom
Banjoemas--Resident, H. G. Heyting
Assistent-Resident-Secretaris,
R. W. Heaviside Kedoe-Resident, P. Wijers
Secretaris, W. J. J. Veltman Djokjakarta--Resident, P. H. van Andel
Secretaris, J. E. van Gogh Soerakarta--Resident, G. F. van Wijk
Secretaris, W. M. Ingenluyff Madioen-Resident, J. Hofland
Assistent-Resident-Secretaris, J.
P. W. Houtman
Kediri Resident, O. E. V. Hermens
Assistent-Resident-Secretaris, A.
H. J. G. Walbeehm
Sumatra's Westkust-Gouverneur, F. A.
Heckler
Secretaris, W. J. Kroon (tyd) Padlangsche Bovenlanden-Resident, H. J. A. Raedt van Oldenbarnevelt (wd.)
Secretaris, T. M. Harthoorn (wd.) Tapanoeli-Resident, C. J. Westenberg Assistent Resident-Secretaris,
K. Lorch
-
Benkoclen-Resident, O. L. Helfrich
Secretaris, C. G. G. Vermeer (wd.. Lampongsche districten-Resident J. R.
Stuurman
Secretaris, P. S. J. Eman Palembang-Resident, C. van de Velde
Secretaris, J. W. J. Wellan Djambi-Resident, A. J. N. Engelenberg
tyd Secretaris, P. E. Moolenburgli Oostkust van Sumatra Resident, J. Ballot Secretaris--F. C. Vorstman
Atjeh en Onderhoorigheden-Civiel en
Militair Gouverneur Kolonel H. N. A. Swart Secretaris, L. M. F. Plate Kiouw en Onderhoorigheden-Resident,
W. J. Rahder
Secretaris, A. H. O. Prins Banka en Onderhoorigheden-Resident,
Billiton
W. J. Coenen
1415
Secretaris, G. F. E. Gonggrijp
Assistent-Resident, Th. J. van Marle, Secretaris F. A. Palmer van den Broek
Westerafdeeling van Borneo--Resident,
Th. J. H. van Driessche Secretaris, J. Breukink
Zuider-en Oosterafdeeling van Borneo-
Resident, J. van Weert Assistent-Resident-Secretaria, H.
Ris
Menado-Resident, J. van Hengel
Assistent-Resident-Secretaris, G.
J. Koopman
Celebes en Onderhoorigheden-Gouver
neur A. J. Baron Quarles de Quarles
Secretaris, P. J. Ketting Olivier Amboina-Resident, G. Sieburgh
Assistent-Resident-Secretaris, J.
W. van Hille
Ternate en O derhoorigheden-Resident,
E. J. Gerrits Secretaris, E. Dhomen
Timor en Onderhoorigheden-Resident, E.
F. J. Loriaux
Secretaris, J. C. van der Meulen
Bali en Lombok-Resident, H. W. Veen-
huijzen
Secretaris, F. H. W. J. R. Logeman Zuid-Nieuw-Guinea-Assistent-Resident, R. L. A. Hellwig
Inspecteur voor de landelijke inkomsten en verplichte diensten, F. P. Sollewyn. Gelpke
Inspecteur voor agrarische zaken, P. de
Roo de la Faille
Inspecteur van het Inlandsch Credietwe- zen H. Carpentier Alting
Adviseur voon de bestuurszaken der
Vuitenbezittingen-W. Frijling
Inlandsche Forsten
Soesoehoenan van Soerakarta-Pakoe Boe-
wono X
Sultan van Djokjakarta- Hamangkoe Boe-
wono VII
Sultan van Lingga-Riouw en Order- hoorigheden Abdoel Rach-man Maad- lam Sjah
Sultan van Siak Sri Indrapocra en Onder- hoorigheden ToengkoeSaidSjarif Kasin (Toengkoe Poetra) minor; during his minority Sjarif Sagof (Toengkoe Besar) and Datoe Lima Poeloeh are charged with the Government
Sultan van Deli --Ma'amoen al Rasjid
Perkasa Alam Sjah
Vorst van Serdang -- Sultan Soeleiman
Sarifoel Alam Sjah
Vorst van Langkat-Sultan Abdoel Aziz.
Abdoeldjalil Rachmat Sjah
1416
NETHERLANDS INDIA
Vorst van Asahan-Sultan Mohamad Hoe-
sin Sjah Vorstvan Kocalo en Ledoeng-Jang di
Pertoean hadji Modammad Sjah Sultan vanSambas-Mohammad Tsafioedin Sultan van Pontianak-Sultan Sjarif Mo-
hamad bin Sultan Sjarif Yoesoef Sultan van Koetei-Mohamad Alimoedin
Adil Chalifatoel Moeminin Sultan van Ternate-As-Soltan Tadjal- mahçoe! bi'inajat Allah al Hannan Siradjal - Molk Amirad-din Iskandar Monawwar aç-Cadiq Mohamad Hadji Oesman Wahowa min al-adilin Sjah Sultan van Tidore-
Kadaster
Ingenieur der 1ste klasse, chef van den dienst van het Kadaster-G. F. Wiemans
DEPARTEMENT VAN ONDERWYS,
EEREDIENST EN NYVERHEID
Directeur Mr. Dr. M. S. Koster Secretaris E. A. E. Kalshoven Gymnasium Willem III te Batavia-Di-
recteur, Mr J. Luijten
Koningin Wilhelmina School te Batavia-
Directeur, M. G. Hoekstra
Hoogere Burgerschool te Semarang
Di-
recteur, Dr. E. Bonebakker (v), Dr. H. D. Tjeenk Willink (wd.)
Hoogere Burgerschool te Soerabaja-Di-
recteur, Dr. A. J. A. Prange
President van het Bestuur over de Protes- tantsche Kerken in Nederlandsch-Indie
Mr. A. L. E. Gastmann
Titulair Bisschop van Orope, Apostolisch Vicaris en Pastoor van Batavia E. S. Luypen
Adviseur voor Inlandsche Zaken Dr.-
G. A. J Hazeu
BURGERLYKE GENEESKUNDIGE DIENST
Chef---Generaal Majoor Dr. R. F. J.
Wijckerheld Bisdom
Inspecteur Dr. C. Winkler (v.), Dr J.
Schülein (wd)
Krankzinnigengesticht te Buitenzorg
Geneesheer-Directeur Dr. J.H. Simon
Thomas
Krankzinnigengesticht te Lawang
Geneesheer-Directeur- D. J. Hulshoff
Pol
Geneeskundig Laboratorium te Weltevre-
den
Directeur-Dr. J. de Haan Onder-directeur-Dr. G. Gryns
Leeraar aan den cursus voor tropische ziekten G. W. Kiewiet de Jonge (v.) School tot opleiding van Inlandsche artsen
te Weltevreden
Directeur--H.F. Roll(v.) Dr. J. Noord- hoek Hegt (wd.)
Landskoepokinrichting en Instituut Pas-
teur te Weltevreden
Directeur A. H. Nyland Onderdirecteur-W. A. Borger (tijd.
wd.)
Ykwezen
Inspecteur-R. Zwier
Adj. Inspecteur-C. W. P. Brandenburg
DEPARTEMENT VAN LANDBOUW
Directeur--H. J. Lovink Secretaris A. A. Gobius Hoofdinspecteur, Chef van den dienst van
het Boschwezen-S. P. Ham (fd.) Inspecteur van den Inlandschen Landbouw
Dr. J. van Breda de Haan.
Inspecteur van de Gouvernements Koffe
cultuur-L. E. Dom
Chef der afdeeling Koffle-Dr. K. Gorter Inspecteur van den burgerlyken vee- artsenykundigen dienst-C. A. Penning Herbarium en museum voor systematische Botanie-Dr. Th. Valeton, (v.) J. J. Smitbjr (tijd wd.)
Museum tevens Informatiebureau voor Technische-en Handels botanie-K
Heyne
Botanische Laboratoria - Chef, Dr. P. J.
S. Cramer
Botanische tuin te Buitenzorg-Chef, H.
J. Wigman, hortulanus. Zoologisch Museum en werkplaats te Buitenzorg c.a.--Chef, Dr. J. C. Konings- berger
Agricultuur-Chemisch laboratorium ca. -Chef Dr. W. R. Tromp de Haas Pharmacologisch laboratorium-Chef Dr. W. G. Boorsma (verlof), Dr. J. C. Ritsema (tijd. wd.)
Geologische Waarnemingen-Chef Dr. E
C. J. Mohr
Microbiologische Waarnemingen-Chef
E. de Kruyff
Onderzoekingen over vezelstoffen chef-E
G. Havik
Landbouwschool en Cultuurtuin-Super- intendent over het onderwys aan voor- melde school W. J. Gallois (tijd) Administrateur-J. Pit (verlof) W. J.
Gallois (tijd wd.)
Veeartsenykundig laboratorium - Chef
Dr. L. de Blieck
Opleidingscursus van Inlandsche veeartsen
-Leeraar Dr. G. Leurink
Tyd Hoofdadministrateur van de Gouver nements Koffiebereidings - etablisse- menten in de Preanger--Regentschappen E. Nygh (wd.) Gouvernements Kina onderneming in de Preanger-Regentschappen Directeur?. van Leersum.
Adjunct-Directeur-H. Groothoff
I
NETHERLANDS INDIA
Gouvernements Gutta Percha onderne- ming Tipetir en Caoutchouc onder- neming Langsa-Leider Dr. W. R. Tromp de Hans
Bureau voor landbouw-en handelsana-
lijses Chef Dr. J. Dekker
Onderz Loekingen over Java-tabak (parti
culier)--Chef Dr. H. Jensen Proefstation voorthee cultuur (particulier)
Chef-Dr. Ch. Bernard
DEPARTEMENT DER BURGERLYKE ÕPENBARE
WERKEN
Directeur--W. B. van Goor Secretaris--J. H. Poelman
Stoomwezen
Hoofdingenieur--N. de Vicq
DEPARTEMENT VAN GOUVERNEMENTS-
BEDRYVEN
Directeur-H. J. E. Wenckebach Secretaris-E, W. L. von Faber
Mynwezen
Chef-A. H. van Lessen
Tinwinning op Banka
Beheerder W. J. Coenen
Exploitatie van het Ombi inkolenveld Chef-G. P. J. Caspersz
Zoutverpakking
Directeur-F. Nobel
Landsdrukkery
Directeur J. A. A. F. Quentin
Fabriek der Opiumregie
Directeur J. W. van Eek
Post-Telegraaf en Telefoondienst
Hoofdinspecteur, Chef van den dienst-
J. J. Stieltjes
Postspaarbank
Directeur-Mr. Dr. H. Zaalberg Spoor-en Tramwegdiensten Hoofdinspecteur-H. F. van Stipriaan.
Luicius
Staatsspoorwegen op Java Hoofdinspecteur, Chef van den dienst-
H. F. van Stipriaan Luicius
Chef der Exploitatie van de Oosterlynen-
G. A. Fokker
Chef der Exploitatie van de Westerlynen---
J. Radersma
Staatsspoorwegen Ter Sumatra's Westhust Chef der Exploitatie-G. P. J. Caspersz
DEPARTEMENT VAN FINANCIEN Directeur-F. A. Liefrinck Secretaris Mr. Dr. J. Paulus (wd.)
Opiumregie
Hoofdinspecteur, A. A. de Jongh Inspecteurs-E. F. Jochim, J. Dijkstra, J.
E. Meijboom (tijd. wd.)
Pandhuisdienst
Inspecteur-G. C. Ph. d'Arnaud Gerkens. In-en Uitvoerrechten en Accynzen Hoofdinspecteur, Chef van den dienst-N.
H. van Maren
1417
Inspecteurs-R. J. H. Neumann en N. J. Rolfsema (tijd.)
LECER
Commandant-Luitenant-Generaal P. C.
van der Willigen
Adjudant-Kapitein E. H. H. Pluim Ments Departement van Oorlog
Chef Luitenant-Generaal P. C. van der
Willigen
Generale Staf
Luitenant---Kolonel W. R. de Greve Chef van het Wapen der Infanterie-Ge-
neraal-Majoor--G. M. Bleckmann Chef van het Wapen der Artillerie- Generaal-Majoor H. W. A. S. Loke Chef van het Wapen der Genie--Kolonel
G. W. F. de Vos
Chef van het Wapen der Cavalerie
Luitenant-Kolonel C. G. Daniëls Hoofd-Intendant der Mil. Administratie
Kolonel J. C. Palm
Chef van den Mil. Geneesk. Dienst- Generaal Majoor Dr. R. F. J. Wijckerheld Bisdom
Chef van den Topographischen Dienst--
Kapitien C. C. Musch
Gewestelyke Staven
Commandant le Mil. Afd. op Java Ko-
lonel H. G. van Diermen
Commandant ze Mil. Afd. op Java-Gene-
raal-Majoor S. S. Drijber
Commandant 3c Mil. Afd. op Java-Luit.
Kolonel R. G. Doorman
Commandant de Mil. Afd.
Kolonel J. P. Michielsen
op
Java--
Civiel en Mil. Gouverneur van Atjeh en Onderhoorighe den--Kolonel II. N. A, Swart
Militaire Commandanten Sumatra's Westkust Kolonel K. van den
Maaten.
Benkoelen-Kapitein R. J. A. Raedt van
Oldenbarnevelt
Tapanscli--Kapitien J. W. Berenschot Lampongsche districten - Kapitein E. F.
A. Zeegers
Palembang Luit.-Kol. J. M. Tummers Riouw Kapitein R. de Bruijn
Oostkust van Sumatra Kapitein J. van
Goor
Westeraf leeling van Borneo-Luit. Kolonel
W. H. de Lussanet de la Sabloniére Zuider-en Oosterafdeeling van Borneo-
Luit.-Kolonel W. J. R. Lauzing
―
Celebes en Menado · Luit. Kolonel J.
Hildering
Timor en Onderhoorigheden--Majoor P. J.
Spruijt
Amboina en Ternate-Luit. Kol. J. L. A.
de Grave
Directeur Geweermakerschool te Meester Cornelis-Eerste-Luitenant-R. N. Hare-
maker
1418
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
Directeur van den Constructiewinkel te
Soerabaja-Majoor T. G. P. A. Boom Directeur der buskruitfabricage en pyro- technie te Soerabaja - Majoor J. U. van Loon
ZEEMACHT
Commandant Schout-by-nacht-A. H.
Hoek water Adjudant-Luitenant ter zee le klasse
A. W. Boeke
Departement der Marine Chef Schout-by-nacht-A. H. Hoekwater Secretaris G. A. N. Scheltema de Heere Directeur van het Kon. magnetisch en meteorologisch Observatorium-Dr. C.
Braak (wd.)
Chef van den Geneeskundigen Dienst
O. Engelken
Inspecteur van de Administratie
Lombaard
―
- T.
Directeur Marine-etablissement te Soera-
baja-D. A. P. Koning Hoofdinspecteur van Scheepvaart, Chef van den dienst-A.J. M. A. ridder van der Does de Bye
Inspecteur van Scheepvaart-M J. van
Alphen de Veer
CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE BATAVIA
President- Mr. H.'s Jacob
Vice-President J. Dinger
Members L. J. Lambach, J. P. Boissevain, H. Rosenthal, E. W. Scholten, Mr. J. Gerritzen
Secretary-E. H. Th. Quellhorst
MAKASSER
Members-Y. Meeter, J. J. H. Kater, H.
C. de Groot, H. Valk, C. Schmid Secretary J. A. van Ameyden van Duynı
PADANG
President-H. J. P. Haacke
-
Members L. Stibbe, J. C. Byleveld, W.
H. G. Herklots, H. Schiess Secretary Mr. J. J. Smits
SEMARANG
President-Mr. C. W. baron van Heeckeren Vice-President-
Members-J. Lloyd Evans, H. Hafter, Th.
W. L. Steinmetz, F. P. J. Vester, Secretary-G. A. Cox, J. Scheltema de
Heere Ch. P. van Wijngaarden
SOBRABAJA
President Mr A. Paets tot Gansoyen Members C. J. Textor, A. de Bruyn, S. J. Ramondt, A. G. van Vleuten, J. J. Ben- jamin, H. van Straaten, D. G. Cameron Rose, R. A. Borel
Secretary--Mr. H. J. de Bruvn
CONSULS AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
Consulat Batavia-E. H. Th. Quellhorst, Consul at Soerabaja-B. Wolf
BELGIUM
Consul at Batavia-N. Leijsbeth, vice
consul (acting consul) Consal at Semarang-G. A. Cox Consul at Soerabaja-E. Schnurrenberger Consul at Padang H. W. Schlüter (abs.),
H. Schiess (act.)
Consul at Makasser-F. Dillenius (abs.), F.
Scharpff (act.)
DENMARK
Consul at Bat.-L. M. J. van Sluyters
(abs.), Mr. C. A. Wiessing (act.) Vice-Consul at Semarang--K. F. Guykens
Do. at Soerabaja-P. C. ter Kuile Consul at Padang-H. D. Schlüter
Do. Menado C. H. F. Weber (abs.),
G. F. Hochner (act.) Vice-Consul at Makasser-F. Rubach (act.)
FRANCE
Vice-Consul at Batavia-J. Despréaux de
Saint Sauveur
Consular Agent, Semarang Jhr. L. G. de
Jonge
Consular Agent, Soerabaja---
Do., Tjilatjap--G.J.P.du Perron Do., Medan-C. G. van Houten
Makasser--
Do.,
GERMANY
Consul-General at Batavia-K. H. O. Anton Consul at Semarang The Consul-General
at Batavi (acting)
Do. Soerabaja G. Rademacher (abs.)
Th. Helfferich (act.)
Consul at Padang J. Schild Consul at Makasser-C. Becker
Do. Medan-C. Hick (abs.), ]). Sandel
(act.)
Vice-Consulat Menado-H. Steffens
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul at Batavia-J. W. Stewart Vice-Consul at Semarang-D. M. Campbell Vice-consul at Soerabaia-A. Ballingal Vice-Consul at Balik Papan-
Do. Makasser S. P. Stephens
ITALY
Consul at Batavia-F. L. Isasca (abs.) Vice-Consul at Batavia-W.
van Heusden
(acting consul)
Consulur Agent, Samarang-I. Schelteniu
de Heere
Consular Agent, Soerabaja-J. W. Verwey
(abs.), G. Romer (act.)
Consular Agent, Padang-Z. H Kamerling
JAPAN
Consul at Batavia-S. Someya
NORWAY
NETHERLANDS-INDIA
Consul-General at Batavia-Jhr. A. A. A. [Ploos van Amstel
at Padang-
Vice-Consul at Semarang-J. Scheltema
de Heere Consul at Soerabaja-K, A. Borel Vice-Consul at Makasser-W. P. de Jong
PORTUGAL
Consul at Batavia-H. J. A. Ryckmans
(abs.), G. Alting da Cloux (act.) Consul at Soerabaja-
Do. Makasser-G. A. P. Brender à
Brandis
RUSSIA
Consul at Batavia-Jhr, A. A. A. Ploos van
Amstel, H. J. Daum (act.)
SIAM
Consul at Batavia-W. B. Ramage Consul at Semarang J. L. Burt (abs.),
A. H. Young (act.)
Consul at Soerabaja-H. N. Loney (act.)
SPAIN Vice-Consul at Batavia-J. F. G. Külsen
(abs.), R. W. von Nordheim (act.)
SWEDEN
Vice-Consul at Batavia-Th. R. Haasman Consul at Soerabaja--A. Berg Vice-Consul Padang-W. H. G. Herklots
Do. Makasser -F. A. Scharpff (abs.)
SWITZERLAND
Consul at Batavia-A. E. I. Buss
TURKEY
Consul-General at Bat.-H. Racime Beij
(Rassim Ettendi) (abs.) Consul-W. H. Schulz (act.)
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Consul at Batavia-B. S. Rairden Vice-Consul do. -L. Th. Haasmann Consular Agent at Semarang-B. C. Stoker Consular Agent at Soerabaja-B. N. Powell
Padang J. Schild
Do. Do.
Makasser-W. P. de. Jong
MAATSCHAPPIJ TOT EXPLOITATIE VAN BOTERFABRIEKEN, TE BUITENZORG Directeuren J. C. Corneille Schut, A. A.
Landt
Commissarissen-J. Th. Bonnerman
ANGLO-JAVA RUBBER COMPANY, BATAVIA Hoofddirecteur-R. N. G. Bingley
Directeur -W. O. Burt
1419
NAAMLOOZE VENNOOTSCHAP NED. INDIE--- RAMEH CULTUUR MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeuren-Reynst en Vinju
Commissarissen J. Dinger, B. H. J.
Spanjaard, G. C. Kansman Jr.
NAAMLOOZE VENNOOTSCHAP KUNST- MESTFABRIEK, BATAVIA
Directeuren-H. Jenne en Co. Commissarissen-Maintz en Co.
TAPIOCA-MAATSCHAPPIJ TJI-MALAKA Directeur Indische Handels Compagnie Commissarissen-T. S. S. Ballot, E. H.
Winkelman
CULTUUR-MAATSCHAPPIJ TJIHARSEM Directeur--G. H. Mohr
NAAMLOOZE VENNOOTSCHAP INDUSTRIE MIJ. BIERBROUWERIJ MET IJSFABRIEK "WILHELMINA"
Directeur Indische Handels Compagnie
PARTICULIERE SPOOR-EN TRAMWEGEN
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE SPOORWEG
MAATSCHAPPIJ
Comité van bestuur
President-Th. W. L. Steinmetz Leden R. Birckenbauer, A. A.
Sangster en W. Corver
Secretaris Mr. J. Dirkzwager
Lijn Semarang-Vorstenlanden-Willem I Lijn Djokja-Brossot
Lijn Djokja-Magelang-Willem I-Parakan Lijn Goendil--Soerabaja-Grissee
Chief der exploitatie-Het Comité van
Bestuur
Lijn Batavia-Buitenzorg Chef der exploitatie-M. Middelberg
DELI SPOORWEG MAATSCHAPPIJ
Plaatselijk comité Medan
President J. van Vollenhoven
Leden-J. J. C. de Knokke van der Meulen Jr, en G. M. Schuurman Administrateur--W. H. M. Schadee Chef van Algemeenen dienst en
Contrôle J. F. van Gulik
Chef van Weg en Werken-L.Polis Adjunct Chef van Weg en Werken-J.
C. Smits
Chef van tractie rollend materieel en
werkplaats J. van Harlingen, Chef van beweging en handelszaken-
J. Negryn
Ingenieur alg: dienst-R. 1). Yspeert
BABAT-DJOMBANG STOOMTRAMMAAT-
SCHAPPIJ
Hoofdvertegenwoordiger H. Kepper Chef der exploitatie-L. Ohlenschlager
1420
NETHERLANDS INDIA
KEDIRI STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur-C. E. van Kesteren Hoofdvertegenwoorcliger L, M. Tijl. jr Chefder Exploitatil-W. Bossinga
MADOERA STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeuren M. Tromp en Ch. M. Her-
ckenrath
Chef der exploitatie-
MALANG STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur-C. E. van Kesteren Administrateur E. van Ysseldijk
MODJOKERTO STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ Hoofdvertegenwoodiger! H. Kepper Chef der exploitatie
OOST JAVA STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ Hoofdvertegenwoordiger
(Batavia)
H. 'sJacob,
Chef der exploitatie J. D. Ruys (act).
PASOEROEAN STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur A. E. Wyss
Hoofdvertegenwoordiger in N.-I-I E.
Jacobs
PROBOLINGO STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur A. E. Wijss
Hoofd vertegenwoordiger in N.-L.-L. E.
Jacobs
SAMARANG CHERIBON STOOMTRAM
MAATSCHAPPIJ
Hoofdvertegenwoordiger H. 'sJacob
(Batavia)
Administrateur J. James
SAMARANG JOANA STOOMTRAM MAAT-
SCHAPPIJ
Hoofdvertegenwoordiger H. 'sJacob
(Batavia)
Chef der exploitatie-W. Oltmans
SERAJOEDAL STOOMTRAM MAATSCHAPPIJ
Hoofdvertegenwoordiger
(Batavia)
wokerto)
H. 'sJacob
Chef der exploitatic-Hot Comité van
Bestuuder
Nederlandsch - Indische
Spoorweg Maatschappij
KABEL MAATSCHAPPIJEN
Eastern Extension Australasia and China
Telegraph Co., Ltd.
Vertegenwoordiger-G. G. Wren (absent)
W. R. Young (Batavia)
DEUTSCH-NIEDERLÄNDISCHE
Telegraphengesellschaft
Vertegenwoordiger A. C. Forbes Wels
Menado
TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPIJEN
ALGEMEENE TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur Mr. A. W. Hartman
BLITAR TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur H, Crietée
CHERIBONSCHE TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPH President A. A. Keuchenius
INTERCOMMUNALE TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPU Directeur S. W. Baints
KEDIRISCHE TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPI Directeur-L. M. Tijl Jr.
LANGKAT EN TAMIANG TELEFOON MAAT-
SCHAPPIJ TE TANDJONG POERA President-Bestuurder-G. D. Langereis
TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPIJ BUITENZORG Directeur, F. F. G. Muschter
PEKALONGANSCHE TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPIJ President II. A. Wolff
TECALSCHE TELEFOON MAATSCHAPIW President J. Th. Hesselberg
TELEFOON DER DELI SPOORWEG-
MAATSCHAPPIJ
Administrateur-W. H. M. Schadee
Chef der exploitatie--Th. Hillen (Poer- Inspecteur-V. Rensburg
BATAVIA-ELECTRISCHE TRAM MAAT-
SCHAPPIJ
Directeur J. D. Otten
Administrateur--S. R. J. Onnen
NEDERLANDSCII-INDISCHE TRAMWEG
MAATSCHAPPIJ.
Administrateur--R. H. Bloemendaal
SOLOSCHE TRAMWEG MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur A. E. Wijss
Hoofdvertegenwoordiger
Heeckeren
―
W. Baron v.
TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPIJ "INSULINDE" Gedelegeerde-J. van Hengst
Directeur W. D. J. van Meeteren Brouwer Administrateur A. van Ophuijsen
TELEFOON MAATSCHAPPIJ "Japaba" Directrice-Mevr. M. J. I. Muschter
STOOMVAARTMAATSCHAPPIJEN
BATAVIASCHE SCHEEPVAART MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur-P. A. de Nijs Bik Commissaris-Ang Soei Tiang
NETHERLANDS INDIA
CHINA NAVIGATION COMPANY, LIMITED Agenten. Batavia-Maclaine Watson & Co. Agenten, Semarang-McNeill & Co. Agenten, Soerabaja--Fraser, Eaton & Co. COMPAGNIE DES MESSAGERIES MARITIMES
DE FRANCE
Agent Batavia--Reynst en Vinju
Do. Semarang Anemaet & Co. Do. Soerabaia
Do. Medan
Kelding
1421
Agenten, Soerabaja-Aspin, Miller & Co.
Molukken-Daendels & Co.
Do.
Do. Makasser Gebroeders Veth
OOSTENRIJKSCHE LLOYD
Agenten, Batavia-Maintz & Co.
Do.
Do.
Handelsvereeniging F.
DEUTSCH-AUSTRALISCHE DAMFSCHIFFS
GESELLSCHAFT
Agenten, Batavia) Maintz & Co.
Do. Soerabaja j
Do. Semarang, Mainte & Co.
Do. Padang, Van Houten, Steffan & Co. Do. Cheribon, Tegal en Pekalongan, G.
A. van Putten & Co. Agenten, Makasser-J. Mohrmann & Co.
Do. Tjilatjap-Rouwenhorst, Mulder &Co
AKTIEN-GESELLSCHAFT (HAMBURG-
AMERIKA LINIE)
Semarang Maintz & Co. Soerabaja-Maintz & Co.
PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL STEAM NAVI- GATION COMPANY
Agenten, Batavia-Maclaine, Watson & Co
Do. Semarang- McNeill & Co.
Soerabaja-Fraser, Eaton & Co.
Do.
QUEENSLAND ROYAL MAIL LINE BRITISH INDIA STEAM NAVIGATION COM- PANY, LIMITED
Agenten, Batavia--The Borneo Co., Ld. Sub-Agenten, Semarang--Geo. Wehry& Co. Soerabaja-The Borneo Co., Ld.
Do.
ROTTERDAMSCHE LLOYD
HAMBURG-AMERIKANISCHE
PACKETFAHRT
Agent te Batavia
Do. Semarang
Agenten Batavia, Semarang, Soerabaja,
Behn Meyer & Co. Ltd.
Do.
Soerabaja
Do.
Cheribon
Do.
KONINKLIJKE PAKETVAART MAATSCHAPPIJ
Tegal
Do.
Hoofdagentschap te Batavia
Hoofdagent in Ned. Indië-L. J. Lambach
Do.
Do.
Do.
NEDERLANDSCHE StooмVAART MAATSCHAPPIJ "OCEAAN"
Agenten, Batavia-Maclaine Watson & Co
Do. Semarang-McNeill & Co. Agenten, Soerabaja
Pasoeroean Fraser, Eaton & Co. Probolingo
De Internationale Crediet en Handels Vereeniging Rot- terdam
1 G. A. van Putten
van
Pekalongan & Co. Tjilatjap Maatschappij
uitvoer en commissie handel Pasoeroean-Naaml. Vennoot- schap afscheep-en commis- siezaak voorheen J. F. Esser Probolingo-F. P. Thal Larssen Agent te Panaroekan-Maatschappij Pa
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Cheribon
Do.
Do.
Tegal
G. A. van Putten & Co
Do.
Do.
Pekalongan
Do.
Do. Gorontalo J. van Hartrop.
Do. Makasser Michael Stephens & Co.
Indramajoe-Rupe Colebrander Tjilatjap-Mac Neill & Co.
Do.
Do.
Do. Padang Haacke & Co.
NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD Agenten-Behn Meyer & Co., Ltd (Batavia, Samarang, en Soerabaia), Handels- vereeniging voorheen J. Mohrmann en Co. (Makasser), Güntzel & Schumacher (Medan)
OCCIDENTAL AND ORIENTAL S. S. Co. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY TOYO KISEN KABUSHIKI KAISHA (ORIENTAL S.S. COMPANY) Agenten, Batavia--Campbell, MacColl & Co.
Do.
Semarang G. J. H. Wagener
naroekan
Padang De Scheepsagentuur Sabang-
Do.
Medan-Van Nie & Co.
Oeléé-Lheue J. F. J. Fels
Makasser-Reiss & Co.
Agent te Singapore-De Scheepsagentuur
SCHEEPVAART MAATSCHAPPIJ "JAVA" Directeur-H. van Taalingen Commissarissen-J. Velthuijs, K. P. Stok-
huijzen
STOOMBOOT MAATSCHAPPIJ BILLITON President Commissaris-H. A. Begeman Directeur-N. van der Mey Commissaris-Phang Tjong Toen
―
STOOMVAART MAATSCHAPPIJ "NEDERLAND" Vertegenwoordiger Het Hoofdagent- schap der Nederlandsch-Indische Han- delsbank, Batavia
NETHERLANDS-INDIA-BATAVIA
1422
Agent te Batavia
Do. Weltereden
Do. Tandjoeng Priok
SoerabajaScheepsagentuur
Do.Tjilatjap-Rouwenhorst, Muller&Co.
Agent te Pekalongan-G.A. van Puttend
Probolingo-Larsen & Co. Sabang-De Scheepsagentuur Semarang-De Scheepsagentuur Soerabaja-De Scheepsagentuur
gentuur
Weltevreden De De
gentuur
Anping-Tait & Co.
Amoy Butterfield & Swire
Canton-Wendt & Co. Chefoo-Anz & Co.. Foochow--Bathgate & Co. Iloilo Figuras Hermanos. Keeling Samuel, Samuel & Co. Kobe--Ed. L. van Nierop & Co. Macao-Herbert Dent & Co. Hankow-Kolkmeijer & Rock
Do.
Do.
Do.
Semarang
Do.
De
Do.
Do.
Do.
Paclang
Do.
Tandjoengpriok-De` Scheeps-
Do.
Emmahaven
Do.
Sabang
Do.
Tegal-G. A. van Putten & Co.
Do.
Makasser
Do.
Scheeps.
Do.
Singapore
Do.
Do. Penang Huttenbach, Liebert & Co. Do. Oeléë-Lheue-J. F.J. Fels Do. Medan-Van Nie & Co
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do. Pekalongan Hana-Mullemeister en Co. Pasoeroea Afscheep.-en commissiezaak voorheen J. F. Esser
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Probolingo Larssen en Co.
Do.
Panaroekan Maatschappij "Pana-
roekan"
Agent to
Do.
THE EAST ASIATIC COMPANY, LIMITED
Do.
Agenten-Erdmann & Sielcken'
Do.
Do.
Do.
TRAVELLERS' & TOURISTS' OFFICE, LIMITED
Do.
W. H. J. Keuchenius, manager
Naamlooze Vennootschap Bureau VOOT
Do.
Handel-en Reisverkeer te Batavia
Director Dr. F. Schöppel
Do.
Singapore-De Scheepsagentuur
Do.
JAVA-BENGAL LINE
Do.
Takao-Tait & Co.
Agent De Scheepsagentuur
Do.
JAVA-CHINA-JAPAN LINE
Do.
Do.
zoff & Co.
Do.
(Batavia, Samarang, en Soerabaja)
Do.
Agent te Batavia-De Scheepsagentuur
Cheribon-G. A. van Putten & Co. Do. Emmahaven-De Scheepsagentuur
Agent te Makasser-De Scheepsagentuur
Muntok-A. W. van Andel
Padang De Scheepsagentuur
Do.
Do.
Do.
Panaroekan- Maatschappij
64
Panaroekan"
Do.
Pasoeroean Afscheep-en com-
stroh
Manila Meerkamp & Co. Moji-Ed. L. van Nierop & Co. Nagasaki-Holme, Ringer & Ca Newchwang-Bandinel & Co. Saigon Diethelm & Co. Shanghai Holland-China-Han
dels-Compagnie
Shimonoseki-Ed. L. van Nieron
& Co.
Swatow-Butterfield & Swire
Tientsin-Holland China Han-
delscompagnie
Tsintau-Antz & Co.
Vladivostok
Brijner, Kousnet
Yokohama Ed. L. van Nierop
& Co.
JAVA-BRITISH-INDIAN LINE
Agent-Maclaine, Watson & Co.
JAVA-AUSTRALIË LIJN
missiezaak voorheen J. F. Esser Agents :-De Scheepsagentuur
BATAVIA
Batavia, the residence of the Government of Netherlands India, is situated in 106 48 E. longitude and 6° 7′ S. latitude. The old city is built in the ancient Dutch style and was till the beginning of the 19th century surrounded by fortifications, which have since been demolished. It has always been unhealthy. In 1899 the unfavourable conditions were greatly increased by an eruption of Mount Salak, masses of mud and sand being washed up by the river Tjiliwong, so that drainage became very difficult On account of this unhealthy condition only very few Europeans remain day and night in the old city. The fine large houses are employed for offices and godowns, and in the afternoon, when business is finished, most of the Europeans retire to the new town, which is situated south of the old city and built in modern style. Broad roads and spacious squares and nice bungalows surrounded by gardens form there a healthy place It was Marshall Daendels who in the first years of this century began to buili
BATAVIA
1423
the new town with the construction of barracks and the palace that was designed to be the residence of the Governor-General, but has never been used as such. It is now utilised for Government offices. Ít contains the large assembly room for the Governor-General and the Council for India, which room contains the portraits of all the Governors-General of Netherlands-India. The palace is situated on the west side of the Waterloo Square, where are to be seen a monument of the battle of Waterloo, another monument to General Michiels, and a bronze statue of Jan Pieterszoon Coen, which was unveiled when the 250 years' existence of Batavia was celebrated. On the right and left of the palace are the Supreme Court and the Military Club Concordia. At a short distance from the Waterlooplein is another and larger square, the Koningsplein, each side of which is nearly one mile long. The square is surrounded by elegant comfortable houses, the residences of the higher officials and wealthy merchants. There is also a fine church, Willemskerk, near the railway station, and the museum of the Batavian Society of Arts and Sciences.
The old city and the new are connected by three railways, two tramways, and wide roads for carriages. Different Banks and Banking Corporations have agencies at Batavia, viz. :--The Netherlands Trading Society (Nederlandsche Handel Maatschappij), with a capital of £. 60,000,000 (of which £45,000,000 is paid up) and a reserve capital of £5,752,874, gave a dividend of 11 per cent. in 1904, 15 per cent. in 1905, 8 per cent, in 1906, 8 per cent, in 1907, and 8 per cent. in 1908. The Netherlands-India Mercantile Bank (Nederlandsch Indische Handelsbank), with a capital of £15,000,000 (of which f.12,378, 00 is paid up) and a reserve capital f. 2,754,338,00, promotes trade, industry, and agricul- ture in Netherlands-India, advances money to agricultural estates and stimulates agricultural enterprise. The Colonial Bank (capital f.10,000,000) also supplies capital to estates for the same purpose. The Netherlands-India Escompto Company, with a capital of £7,500,000 and a reserve capital of £778,500, does general banking business, advances money on shares, etc. The bank paid 8 per cent. to its shareholders in 1908. There are also agencies of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation and of the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China.
The port of Tandjong Priok is in communication with Batavia by railway and by a canal. The outer harbour is formed by two piers 1,850 metres long; the entrance is 125 metres wide, and the depth is 8 metres. The inner harbour has a quay 1,100 metres ong and 175 metres wide; the water has a depth of 7.50 metres. There is extensive accommodation for coaling, and in the docks and workshops all kinds of repairs to vessels can be made. The expenses for the construction of the harbour and annexed works amounted to 264 millions of guilders.
The population of Batavia consisted on the 31st December, 1905, of 8,777 Europeans 28,150 Chinese, 2,058 Arabs, 246 other foreign Orientals, and 99,320, natives; total 138,551.
BUITEN ZORG
The usual residence of the Governor-General is at Buitenzorg, at a distance of a little more than one hour by railway from Batavia. The population of Buitenzorg amounted in 1905 to 2,394 Europeans, 4,318 Chinese, 448 Arabs, 27 other foreign Orientals and 26,214 natives; total, 33,401. The botanical gardens near the palace of the Governor- General were made in 1817, and are well known not only for their beautiful arrange- ment, but especially for the great services rendered to science and agriculture under the management of the eminent directors, Teysmann, Dr. Scheffer, and Prof. Dr. Treub. All experiments for the introduction of exotic plants into Netherlands India are made here, with the result that many useful plants from foreign countries are reared and flourish in Java as in their native soil.
1424
BATAVIA
DIRECTORY
PUBLIC COMPANIES
JAVASCHE BANK
President Mr. G. Vissering
Directeuren Mr. J. Gerritzen, E. A.
Zeilinga Az
L. J.
Plaatsvervangende Directeuren
Ginjoolen, J. de Bruijn Mgz Pres. Commissaris-Mr. J. Schoutendorp Commissarissen--Jhr. A. Ploos van Amstel J. P. Jannette Walen, J. A. Schröder, Mr. H.'s Jacob Secretaris Mr. H.'s Jacob Gouvernements Commissaris-Mr. Th. A.
Ruys Agent te Cheribon-A. A. Keuchonius
Do.
Semarang--W. F. J. Keuchenius Do. Soerabaja-J. Kempen Do. Soerakarta-L. de Koning Do. Djokjakarta-F. N. Nieuwenhuyzen Agent te Padang--J. C. Byleveld
Do. Makasser-P.F. van den Berg(wd.) Do. Pontianak J. W. Kemper, Jr. Do. Bandjermasin-D. S. Schepper
Medan-L.W. van Suchtelen
te Bengkalis -C. Reygers Do. Tandjong Balei-J. A. Einthoven
(comm.)
Do.
Do.
Do. Tandjong Poera-F. H. R. Dela-
chaux (Tijdcorr.)
NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL MAATSCHAPPIJ FACTORIJ TE BATAVIA
President S. E. Toens
Leden van Bestuur A. F. Marmelstein
E. D. van Walree
Secretaris I. L. van Houten
Agent te Semarang F. P. J. Vester
Do. Soerabaja Th. J. van Rossum
Sub-agent Cheribon-H. F. V. Lesueur
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Tegal-Jhr. W. F. van
Does de Bije
der
Pekalongan-T.A. F. Marmelstein Weltevreden P.C.v. der Willigen Tijlatjap-D. Pos
Padang J. F. Lankamp Medan-M. J. Lutink Agent te Singapore-G. T. Houtsma Sub-agent Penang--W. van der Woude
Do. Rangoon-C. W. A. M. Groskamp Do. Palembang-W. H. Rethmeier Do. Kota Radja-J. J. Staargaard Do. Bandjermasin, J. H. H. Schuurman Agent Shanghai-W. La Gro
Do.
Hongkong-J. F. van Rees
HANDELSVEREENIGING BATAVIA President--A. E. J. Buss
Directeuren-C. R. Buss, S. E. Toeng
B. H. Wassinann
VEREENIGING VOOR DEN EFFECTENHANDEL IN NEDERLANDSCH-INDIE President J. Dinger Leden-Mr. H. Piño
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE HANDELSBANK Hoofdagent J. F. der Kinderen Agent te Batavia-H. E. Benker Gedelegeerde-L. J. Lambach Agent, Soerabaja-A. J. ( van Kerckhoff
Semarang J. Th. Lohmann Indramajoe-H. Hooijer
Singapore-B. Haga Bandoeng-E. Segboer
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Hongkong-C. Woldringh
Bijkantoor Weltevreden-A. J. Bakker
KOLONIALE BANK
Agent, Batavia---Tiedeman & van Kerchem Agent, Semarang-Ch. T. A. Harloff,
signs per pro.
NEDERLANSCH- -INDISCHE ESCOMPTO
MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeuren--J. Dinger, P. J. Stephan em
F. Meijes
Procuratiehouders-O. de Bordes en G. J.
Wiebenga
Commissarissen Mr. J. Gerritzen, H.
'sJacoben, J. G. H.de Voogt
Soerabaja-
Agenten
Semarang.-T. Stroobach Weltevreden--J. Schaepman
Cheribon--L. Zuur
Bandoeng-J. W. Mekern
Tandjong Priok--F. W. Benz Padang Th. C. Sandrock
Penang-G. R. van Kralingen Amsterdam-W. R. Esser
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA
Agent, Batavia-E. M. Janion Accountant, do. -L. R. Bremner (Europe) Sub-accountant, do. -S. S. Logan Agent, Soerabaja-P. A. Angier
Do. Semarang - Internat. Crediet en
Handelsvereenig, "Rotterdam." Do. Medan-W. M. Thomson Do. Macasser de Handelsvereeniging
voorheen, Reiss & Co.
11
Do. Cheribon-Geo. Wehry & Ca Do. Padang de Padangsche Handel
Maatschappij
BATAVIA
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA, LIMITED Agent te Batavia-Maclaine, Watson & Co. Correspdts. Soerabaja-Fraser, Eaton& Co.
Do. Semarang -McNeill &Co.
Pekalongan
Do.
Do.
Tegal
Do.
Cheribon
Do.
Padang
[G. A. van
Putten & Co.
Haacke & Co.
Do. Makasser de Handelsvereeni-
ging voorheen Reiss & Co.
INTERNATIONALE CREDIET-EN HANDELS-
VEREENIGING ROTTERDAM
17
Wd, Agent te Batavia--A. Tigler
Wijbrandi
Proc.-Tj. P. Baart de la Faille Agent to Semarang-W. C. Bloemen Agent te Soerabaja-R. A. Borel Sub-Agent te Cheribon-W. Seeuwen
HANDELSVEREENIGING "AMSTERDAM Procuratiehouder, Batavia--W. A. Salm, Procuratiehouder, Semarang-
Do.
Soerabaja A. Kwast H. N. Bosch (vertegenwoordiger) Directors-P. Reineke, ter Kuile (Amster-
dam), H. B. Defour
HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANKING
CORPORATION
Agent te Batavia--M. C. Kirkpatrick Agent, Semarang-MacNeill & Co.
Do. Soerabaja--W. Drysdale Do. Cheribon-Burt, Myrtle & Co.
፡፡
HANDELSVEREENIGING JAVA"
Hoofdagent te Batavia - Procuratiehouder-F. Frangenheim
Do. Semarang-C.A.E. Spelsberg Procuratiehouder Tegal-0. H. E. Jobst
Do.
Cheribon-D, Ardaseer
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE HYPOTHEEK-
BANK
Directeur-Van Buuren & Co. Commissarissen-Mr. Th. A. Ruys, Mr. T.
A. de Meyier
Gedelegeerde van aandeelhouders, Adviseur te Semarang, Soerabaja-Mr. J. W. Ramaer
ANGLO-JAVA TRADING COMPANY, VOORHEEN MYER & Co.
Directeur-J. K. N. Gronert
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE CREDIET-EN-
BANKVEREENIGING
Agent, Batavia-Van Buuren & Co.
Do. Soerabaja-Coster van Voorhout&Co. Commissaris Gedelegeerde-Mr. T. A.
de Meyier
HET INDISCHE VEEM
Directeur A. Ryks Commisaris-
1425
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK General-Attorney te Batavia-P. H. Davis Attorney te Samarang-C. Woldringh
Do. Soerabaja-F. A. Maingay Singapore-H. C. Ehrenfils Solo-W. J. van den Boogaart Djocja--W, C. v. d. Stadt Tjilatjap-Factory der Nederl :
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Handel Maatschappij
KANTOOR TOT ADMINISTRATIE VAN NEDERLANDSCHE EFFECTEN Directeur Tiedeman en van Kerchem Commissaris-Mr. J. Gerritzen
EFFECTEN KANTOREN
Van Buuren & Co.
Palm & van Amstel, Dunlop & Kolff,
H. Pino, van Heusden & Mees, Verbunt
en Co.
HET BATAVIAASCH ADMINISTRATIE-EN EFFECTEN KANTOOR Directeur--T. H. P. Wiechert
HET NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE KASSIERS-
KANTOOR
F. B. Smits & Co.
Chef F. B. Smits
AGENTUREN EN ADMINISTRATIE KANTOREN
Van
J. H. Kievits en Zoon, Tiedeman & Van
Kerchem, Van Buuren & Co., Heusden & Mees, Palm & Van Amstel Verbunt & Co., Reynst & Vinju, Derkin- deren & Zuur
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE GAS-MAAT-
SCHLAPPIJ
Gemachtigde--C. O. Heuvelink
BATAVIAASCH PRAUWENVEER
Directeuren W. B. Ramage, G. Külsen Administrateur-J. Velthuis
NIEUW PRAUWENVEER
Directeuren J. Dinger, B. H. Wassmann
J. M. H, van Oosterzee
Administrateur-G. L. Wijsman
TEGALSCH PRAUWENVEER
Directeuren Erdmann & Sielcken, B. J.
H. Frangenheim
DROOGDOK-MAATSCHAPPIJ, "TANDJONG
PRIOK
Vertegenwoordigster-Factorij der Neder- landsche Handel-Maatschappij (Batavia)
45
1426
BATAVIA
Administrateur-J. J. de Gast Gouvs.-Gecommitteerde--W.G..J.Vogelpoel
MAATSCHAPPIJ TOT EXPLOITATIE VAN DE WERF "DE INDUSTRIE"
Directeur Mr. J. A. van Dyk, Jr. Administrateur A. A. J. Garny
FABRIEK VAN STOOM-EN ANDERE
TUIGEN TAYLOR & LAWSON
Commissaris-J. C. MacColl
Directeur T. Shoolbred
WERK-
REUTER'S TELEGRAM COMPANY
Agent-A. C. Van der Hout
SURVEYOR TO LLOYD'S REGISTER OF BRITISH AND FOREIGN SHIPPING
H. van Taalingen
SURVEYOR TO THE BUREAU VERITAS, PARIS G. L. Wijsman
ZEEHAVEN EN KOLENSTATION
'Sabang"
44
Chef te Amsterdam-Jhr. G. C. Quarles
van Ufford
Vertegenwoordiger te Batavia-Factory
der Nederl. Handelmaatschappij. Administrateur te Sabang (Poeloe Weh)-
G. C. Vattier Kraane
Adviseur J. M. H. van Oosterzee (Batavia)
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE
LEVENSVERZE-
KERING-EN-LIJFRENTE-MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeuren L. van t'Sant, L. J. Harmsen,
(plaatsvervangend)
Commissarissen-
J. Ph. Ermeling
-J. P. Jannette Walen,
Agent Semarang J. Houthuysen.
Do. Soerabaja-Schiff & Co.
Agent Padang Van Houten, Steffan & Co.
Do. Deli-J. Obreen
Do. Atjeh-A. J. Knuttel
Do. Makasser-D. de Koning
ALGEMEENE MAATSCHAPPIJ VAN LEVENS-
VERZEKERING EN LIJFRENTE
Agent T. A. Maingay
SCHEEPSLEVERANTIE-MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeur P. A. de Nys Bik
Commissaris-W. van Heusden
MAATSCHAPPIJ "ONDERLINGE HULP" Directeur J. T. Vonck
Commissarissen-W.F.O.Hojel,P.Ledeboer
OOST-INDISCHE ZEE-EN-BRAND-ASSU- RANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeur-L. M. J. van Sluyters Proc. Mr. C. A. Wiessing
Commissarissen-J. Borel, Jhr. A. A. A.
Ploos van Amstel
WINKEL MAATSCHAPPIJ "EIGEN HULP" Directeur J. M. H. van Oosterzee Administrateur-W. Winter Commissarissen-W. van Heusden, J. P.
Boissevain, E. Buss
BATAVIASCHE ZEE-EN-BRAND-ASSU-
RANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeur L. M. J. van Sluyters Proc. Mr. C. A. Wiessing Commissaris--V. Zimmermann
NEDERLANDSCH INDISCHE ZEE-EN-BRAND
ASSURANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeuren J. P. Jannette Walen, S. W.
Zeveryn Commn-Mr. H.'s Jacob, E. A. Zeilinga
TWEEDE NEDERLANDSCH INDISCHE ZEE-EN-
BRAND-ASSURANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeuren-J. P. Jannette, Walen, S. W.
Zeveryn Commissaris-J. M. H. van Oosterzee,
KOLONIALE ZEE-EN-BRAND-ASSURANTIE
MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeur-Jhr. A. A. A. Ploos van Amstel Proc.-H. J. Daum Commissarissen-Mr. J. Schoutendorp, P.
Neumann
Genl. Agent te Amsterdam-J. E. de Jong
TWEEDE KOLONIALE ZEE-EN-BRAND-
ASSURANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ Directeur-Jhr, A, A. A. Ploos van Amstel Proc.-H. J. Daum
Commissarissen-S. W. 7everyn, L. J. van Sluyters, Mr. J. Gerritzen Gen. Agent te Amsterdam--J. E. de Jong
NEDERLANDSCHE LLOYD Directeur-L. M. J. van Sluyters Proc. Mr. C. A. Wiessing Commissaris S. W. Zeveryn
JAVASCHE ZEE-EN BRAND- ASSURANTIB
MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeur-L. M. J. van Sluyters Proc. Mr. C. A. Wiessing Commissarissen R. Borel
BRANDWAARBORG MAATSCHAPPIJ "NEDE
LANDSCH-INDIË" Directeuren L. H. van 't Sant, L. J
Harmsen
Commissarissen J. P. Jannette Wales
H. M. Ament, D. H. Tauber
BRANDVERZEKERING-MAATSCHAPPIJ
"MERCURIUS
Directeur Mr. H.'s Jacob Proc.-J van Stygeren
Commissarissen. P. Jannette Wale
F. Meijes, Jhr. A. A. A. Ploos van Amstei
BRAND-ASSURANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ
OOSTERLING
*
BATAVIA
DE
Directeur-Jhr. A. A. A. Ploos van Amstel Proc.-H. J. Daum
Commissarissen - J. Dinger, A. Tigler
Wijbrandi
Genl. Agent te Amsterdam-J. E. de Jong
NEDERLANDSCH-INDISCHE BRANDWAAR-
BORG MAATSCHAPPIJ
Directeuren-Van Buuren & Co.
Commissarissen Th. A. Kuys,
V.
Zimmermann en I. A. de Meijier
BRAND-ASSURANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ
** "INSULINDE
Directeur-Jhr. A. A. A. Ploos van Amstel Proc.-H. J. Daum
▬▬
Commissarissen H.'s Jacob, S. W.
Zeveryn
Genl. Agent te Amsterdam-J. E. de Jong
SHIPBROKERS
De Scheepsagentuur (Rotterdam) Hoofdagentschap-Batavia
Hoofdagent-L. A. Hissink, L. J.
Ginjolen
Proc.-F. A. de Vries Reilingh, chef
Kantoor Weltevreden,
Daum, Jr.
Agencies
P.
A.
De Stoomvaart Maatschappij " Neder-
land" Amsterdam
Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij
Amsterdam
Java-Bengal Line
Java-China-Japan Line
Java-Australia Line
Steenkolen Maatschappij
Borneo"--te Koetei (Borneo).
"Oost-
De Algemeene Verzekering Maat-
schappij "Providentia "
AMSTERDAMSCHE MAATSCHAPPIJ VAN LE-
VENSVERZEKERING
Agenten Van Buuren & Co. Agencies
Brand Assurantie Maatschappij "Hol-
land"
Verzekerings en Herverzekerings Bank
Nova"
C
LEVENSVERZEKERING MAATSCHAPPY
"DORDRECHT 1
Wd. Directeur-C. Verhoeve
MERCHANTS, ETC.
R. de BAS EN Co.
B. de Bas, chef
J. P. BOISSEVAIN
J. P. Boissevain, chef
1427
BEHN MEYER & Co., LTD., (Batavia and
Telok betong)
F. Katokamp (Batavia) G. Rademacher (Soerabaja) A. Paulmann (Telok betong) Agents
Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremen
BORNEO COMPANY, LIMITED
Ramage, manager
Proc.-J. C. Ferrier (Soerabaja)
Agencies
The National Bank of India Queensland Royal Mail Line Lloyd's, London
North British and Mercantile Ins. Co.
London
North China Insurance Co., Shanghai Casa Maritima, Genoa
Societá d'Assicurazioni
Napels
Marittima
Liverpool Underwriters Association London Assurance Corporation Triton Insurance Company
British India Steam Navigation Co.
BURT, MYRTLE & Co.
W. M. Killick, proc. (Batavia) Agencies
London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Guardian Fire Assurance Company Reliance Marine Insurance Company Union Insurance Society of Canton Northern Insurance Company
CAMPBELL, MACCOLL & Co. J. C. MacColl, chef
Agencies
Scottish Imperial Insurance Co. G. Chinies Ross, Keding Occidental & Oriental S. S. Co. Pacific Mail S. S. Co. Toyo Kisen Kaisha S. S. Co. The Island Line Steamers Imperial Insurance Co.
CHINA & JAVA EXPORT Co.
H. A. W. Juta, agent
DUNLOP & Co., E.
J. W. Tielenius Kruythoff, chef
J. R. Mikkers,
F. C. T. Adèr,
A. N. de Jong, proc.
ERDMANN & SIELCKEN
J. H. Schmiedell (Europe) C. W. Menke (Soerabaja)
do.
do.
F. A. Th. Warnecke (Semarang), chef,
C. A. Piper, proc. (Semarang) B. H. Wassmann (Batavia), chef Agencies
Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hamburg China Tracers' Insurance Co., Ld.
45*
1428
Norddeutsche Feuer Versich. Ges. Ostasiatische Kompagnie
BATAVIA
Oberrheinische Versicherungs Gesell-
schaft, Manuheim
Directeuren van de Goudmaatschappij
Redjang Lebong,
Lebong
Goud
Syndicaat
Ketahoen Simau & de Kina Kultuur
Maatschappij Preanger
EXPORTMAATSCHAPPIJ Voorheen, B. van
LEEUWEN & Co.
C. R. Buss (Batavia), agent
J. M. Rodenberg (Soerabaja) agent Agencies
Basler Transport Versicherungs Ges. Phoenix Fire Office, London
Kina Cultuur Maatschappij Cinchona Nederlandsche Assurantie Compagnie Basler Versicherungs Gesellschaft Royal Exchange Ass, Corptn., London Amsterdamsche Vereeniging v. Assur. Germania Transp. Vers. Ges., Berlin La asseguradora, Española Madrid Federal Marine Insurance Co., Zurich
GALESTIN, G.
G. Galestin, chef
J. N. Galestin, do.
GEBROEDERS SUTORIUS & Co.,
E. M. J. & H. L. M. Sutorius (Holland)
Ph. P. H. Sutorius (Batavia) W. F. A. Schräder, proc.
GUMPRICH & STRAUSS
O. E. G. Still
C. A. Rusch, signs per pro. Agenten Van de Preussische Nation:
Vers. Gesellschaft
HAAKMAN & VON NORDHEIM Haakman van den Berg R. W. von Nordheim
HARD & RAND
P. Ledeboer, manager
HERM. ROSENTHAL,
H. Rosenthal G. Lamberger, proc.
HILLS, MENKE & Co.
W. H. Schulz, agent
HOPPENSTEDT, G.
G. Hoppenstedt (Europe), G. C
Kuneman proc.
INDISCHE HANDELS COMPAGNIE
Th. R. Haasman (Europe), G. T. Tels
(Samarang), C. Croes (Cheribon) Proc.-L. Th. Haasman (Batavia)
JOAKIM, F. M.
F. M. Joakim, chief
KELLER & Co., A.
Palm, chef
LANDBERG & ZOON, P.
P. Landberg, Jr. J. H. Landberg (absent) F. L. Gollner, proc.
LANGE & Co., DE
J. M. H. van Oosterzee
T. A. F. de Bruine
Agencies
Société Belge Explosief Tavier Hamburg Nobel Dynamit Co. Mijnbouw Mij. Belang Algemeene Exploratie Mij. Expl. Mij. Riin Kanan
MAATSCHAPPIJ
MISSIEHANDEL
VOOR UITVOER-EN COM-
C. B. Brandligt, manager C. H. Cochius, sub-manager (act.) Agencies
Royal Insurance Company (Liverpool) Auchen and Munich Fire Insurance
Company, Aachen
MACLAINE, WATSON & Co. J. H. Loudon, chef
J. W. Stewart, signs per pro. Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Limited Royal Insurance Company Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co. Canton Insurance Office, Limited Imperial Insurance Company, Ld. Imperial Life Insurance Company Northern Assurance Company
London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Company Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Law Union and Crown Insurance Co. South British Fire & Marine Ins. Co. A. Currie & Co. Line of Steamers of
New Zealand
Java British India Line China Navigation Co. Ld.
Stoomboot Mij. Oceaan
New Zealand Insurance Co.
Ocean Steamship Co., Ltd.
West Australian Steam Navigation
Co., Ltd.
MAINTZ & Co.
S. Maintz (Europe)
E. Maintz, do.
Th. V. Zimmermann (Batavia) H. R. du Mosch (Europe), N. E. Schnurrenberger (S'baja) H. J. A. Rijckmans, proc. (Batavia)
H. Hafter (Semarang)
Agencies
BATAVIA
Oesterreichischer Lloyd St'm Nav Co. Deutsch-Australische Dampfschiff-
Gesellschaft
Société Le Carbonne, Paris
Comptoir des Monteurs Universels,
Paris
Allgemeine Elektricitats Gesellschaft,
Berlin
Aktien Gesellschaft Mix and Genest,
Berlin
Schuckardt and Schutte, Berlin
MIQUEL, CH.
Chef-Ch. Miquel Proc.-A. S. Miquel
NIEDERER & Co.
E. Th. C. Hagnauer H. Täuber
R. J. Broekhoff, proc. Agencies
"Frankfurter Transport Vers. A. Ges. · Nieuwe Zwitsersche Lloyd Neuchâteloise Transport Verz. Maats. Vaterländische Transport Vers. A. Ges. Swiss-German Marine Insce. Assoc. Transport Versich. Ges. "Schweiz"
OLIVER, & Co.
Chef-Courtois
PALM & VAN AMSTEL
Jhr. A. A. A. Ploos van Amstel, J. E.
de Jong, Europe
C. H. H. Gerritzen Plaggert, proc. Directeuren Van de Ned, Ind. Effecten
Bank
Cultuur Mij. Goenoeng Tjempaka Preanger Telefoon, Mij. Mijnbouw Mij. Monano Myn. Expl. Mij. Batavia
Vertegenwoordigers van de Batavia
Electrische Tramweg Mij.
Agencies
Verzekering Maatschappij "Veritas
Do.
Do.
do. Ardjoeno'
do.
LL
Merapi" Verzekering Maats. Vesta Amsterdam Deutsche Transport Versicherungs Ges. Fortuna Allgemeine Vers. Actien Ges. Badische Schiffahrts VersicherungsGes. Wurtemberg, Transport Vers. Ges.
PANDEL & STIEHAUS, Nachfolger W. T. C. Margadant, chef
Agencies
Verein Hamburger Assecuradeure Oesterreich. Versicherungs Gesellschaft
Donau, Munchen Rheinisch Westphälische Lloyd De Rhenania, Keulen
Aachen Leipziger Versich. Act. Ges.
1+29
Pester Versicherungs Anstalt Allgemeine Versicherungs Ges. Hel-
vetia, St. Gallen
Feuer Versicherungs Ges., Helvetia United Swiss Insce. Cos., Manchester Norddeutsche Vers. Ges., Hamburg "Allianz" Vers, A. Ges., Munchen Providentia Wien
Versicherungs Gesell. Salamandra,
Petersburg
PEET & Co., J.
J. Peet
(Europe)
do.
H. S. Howlett,
A. C. van der Hout, manager Th. D. Inklaar, signs per pro.
Agencies
British & Foreign Marine Insce. Co., Ld. Marine Insurance Company, Ld. Board of Underwriters of New York Directeuren van de Cultuur Maat- schappijen, Tjiogreg, Perwabatie, Assam Theeondernemingen, Gedeh, Wanasoeka Malabar, Singaparna, Pasir Taloen, Solam
PHILIP BELTON & Co.
Chef-C. Venning
PITCAIRN, SYME & Co.
Ker, Boulton & Co. (London & Glasgow) A. W. Mc.Neill (Singapore)
F. W. Allen, signs per pro. F. G. Loundes
R. W. Ross
Agencies
Royal Insurance Company, Liverpool Liverpool, London & Globe Insce. Co. Shell Transport Trading Co., Ld., L'don. The Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ltd.,
London
Asiatic Petroleum Co. London
Ned. Ind. Industrie & Handel Mij. te
Amsterdam
PLATON, L.
J. E. Lapadu J. P. G. Lapadu
PRYCE & Co., JOHN
D. T. M. Pryce
Proc.-J. M. Berkhoff Brans
REISS & Co., Handelsvereeniging,voorheen.
C. J. Textor, agent (Soerabaja) Agencies
Navigazione Generale Italiana Genua Hanseatische Feuer Versicherungs Ges Mannheimer Versicherungs Ges.
Magdeburger Fire Insurance Co.
British American
do.
London
Alliance Marine & General Assurance
Company, Loudon
1430
REYNST & VINJU
Mr. H.'s Jacob (Batavia)
J. van Stygeren, proc. (Batavia) J. M. Stok (Soerabaja)
BATAVIA
L. H. E. Coster v. Vryenlioevon(Saja) W.'s Jacob, signs per pro. (Soerabaja) Agencies
Nederlandsche Transport Verzekering-
Maatschappij
Messageries Maritimes
ROWLEY, DAVIES & Co., Tea Exporters
and Estate Agents
F. Worthington,
W. Hilliers,
chiefs
C. H Taverner, manager
E. J. Balliston,
Agency
do.
The Venesta Tea Chests Co.
"Solignum" Wood Preservative
SILAS COHEN & Co.
S. M. Cohen
SOCIETE COLONIALE INDO-BELGE, CI-DEVANT
FASTING
A. Sinnigsohn, chef
STEPHEN & Co.
J. A. Stephen
TAN, TH. A.
Th. Tan, Batavia
TOMLINSON & Co.
A. Tomlinson
TIEDEMAN & VAN KERCHEM
J. P. Jannette Walen
S. W. Zeveryn
R. von Hemert
W. C. Loudon
Agencies
Assurantie Compagnie Amst'dam 1771, Deli Batavia Maatschappij. Koloniale Bank te Amsterdam Semarangsche Assurantie Maats. Tweede Semarangsche Assurantie
Maats.
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld.
VAN BUUREN & Co.,
S. J. W. van Buuren, chef (Europe)
F. Neumann do.
R. Neumann, proc.
E. Lankhout, (absent)
do.
Directeuren van de Ned. Ind. Hypo- theekbank, Ned. Ind. Brandwaarborg Maatschappij
Orderneming-Djajawattee
-Pelaboean Ratoe
Do.
Do.
--Pasamat
Do.
-Tanah Datar
Maatschappij-Preanger
Agencies
Do.
--Selabatoo
Brand Assur. Maatschappij, "Merapi" "Equitable" Levensverzekering Maat-
schappij at New York
De Amsterdamsche Levensverzekering Mij.
Do. de Nova
VAN DIJK, J. A. Jr.
Vertegenwoordiger van de Hollandsche
Societeit van
Levensverzekering
opgericht in 1807.
VAN HEUSDEN & MEES
W.
van Heusden Agencies
Eerste Rotterdamsche Maatschappij
van Verzekering op het Leven enz. State Fire Insurance Co., Liverpool Goud Exploitatie Maatschappij
Batjan (in liq.)
VERBUNT & Co.
C. C. M. Verbunt, chef Agencies
Hoofdagenten van de Alg. Brandwaar-
borg Mij. te Amsterdam Levensverzekering Mij.ZonderGenees-
kundig onderzoek
Directeuren Van de Mijnbouw Mijs
Lapaka & Montrado L'Union," Paris
WEHRY & Co., Gɛo.
E. W. Scholten
G. H. Mohr (Europe) D. M. Kan (Europe)
Proe. W. F. Klusinan, Jr. (absent) Proc., R. Roser (Cheribon)
Do. J.E. Liese & J.Thole(Semarang) Do. Ter. Kuile (Soerabaja)
Agencies
La Foncière Paris
Hamburg - Bremer Feuer Versiche
rungs, Ges.
Sun Insurance Office
WELLENSTEIN, Krause & Co.
J. F. G. Külsen
A. Volz, signs per pro. Agencies
Agrippina Transport Ver. Ges., Keulen Deutsche Transport Ver. Ges., Berlin. Providentia Frankfort Versich. Ges
Frankfort a/M.
Verein Bremer See Vers. Ges. Bremen Wurtemberg Transport Versich Ges,
Heilbron
WIT & Co., DE
A. J. de Wit
BATAVIA
Vertegenwoordiger der Batavia Arak
Maatschappij
Charlotte Jacobs
Rathkamp & Co. Volksbelang
ARCHITECTS
Th. A. Gaston
M. J. Hulswit
Maatschappij "De Industrie"
B. Sibenius Trip
J. B. Lont
P. A. J. Mooijen
AUCTIONEERS AND FURNITURE STORES
Van Beem & Co.
F. Empting & Co.
John Pryce & Co. Van Slype & Co.
Winkel Maatschappij "Eigen Hulp"
BROKERS
A. Gyselman
A. J. W. van Exter
B. Vlielander Hein
C. H. E. Robertson C. Venning E. F. Buijn
E. Lankhout (absent) F. Neumann (absent) G. E. P. Giltay G. V. Herment H. C. F. Vermandel
H. E. Driessen
H. J. Joostensz
J. H. E. Wiechert (absent)
J. J. F. Pino
J. P. J.
van Maanen
L. H. van Nierop
L. de Bree
M. O. Poublon
D. Serrurier
W. W. Butin Bik
C. W. Dull
F. L. Göllner
H. L. F. Goelst J. C. van Rossem H. van der Linden
A. Schmid
J. H. F. Peter
J. A. Poublon
F. M. Cowan
A. F. E. Hélant
H. C. J. de Vaynesvan Brakellbuijs
F. M. Zuur
A. Warns
R. Th. F. van der Voort
A. W. Deeleman
CARRIAGE BUILDERS
Rijtuig Maatschappij Fuchs
C. Lerai
DISPENSARIES
Batavinsche Volks-en Stadsapotheek G. van den Berg
Handelsvereeniging voorheen C. Moll
HAIRDRESSERS
Boissard
F. Jullien
A. J. A. Mesters
HOTELS
Grand Hotel Java Hotel de France
Do. Weltevreden
Do. des Indes
Do.
Molenvliet
Do. der Nederlanden
Do. Ort
Do. Wisse
Do. Tramzicht
JEWELLERS AND WATCHMAKERS
Van Arcken & Co. J. C. Loriaux J. B. Loupias Mayr & Co.
V. Ölislaeger & Co. Geb. Steuerwald Van Slijpe & Co.
LADIES' DRESSMAKERS
Dames Bazaar
Mme. Buisson-Jaley Malle. A. Haag
Malles. Steenbergen Soeurs
Mdlle. B. van der Veen Mdlle. Starink ter Brugge Winkel Mij. Eigen Hulp
LAWYERS
Th. A. Ruys C. A. Henny J. Schoutendorp
A. Maclaine Pont
E. H. Winkelman (absent)
D. W. Stibbe
J. A. van Dijk Jr. P. R. Hoorweg C. G. J. B. Henny Th. ThomaS J. H. Ketjen F. H. Gerritzen
J. A. de Meyier
S. J. M. Wythoff L. Schoutendorp
K. van Hinloopen Labberton M. M. Meertens
MACHINERY MANUFACTURERS
Droogdok Mij "Tandjong Priok" Maatschappij "De Industrie" Taylor & Lawson
MUSIC STORES
Bekker-Lefèbre
1431
1432
Naessens & Co.
Edmund Salzmann W. H. v. d. Putten
OPTICIANS
W. F. Belle C. J. Loriaux G. F. Marsman R. J. Schock
FORWARDING AGENTS
Indische Veem
Java Veem
BATAVIA SOERABAJA
Maats. van Comm. en Expeditie Zaken
Scheepsleverantie Maatschappij J. W. Schallig
PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS
Albrecht & Co.
H. M. van Dorp & Co.
Javasche Boekhandel en Drukkerij
G. Kolff & Co.
Naamlooze Vennoots. Boekh. "Visser
& Co."
Drukkerij "Mercurius"
F. B. Smits
RESTAURANTS
Bataviasche Bierhal
Rikkers
Stam en Weijns
G. W. Versteeg
SHIP CHANDLERS
Batenburg & Co.
Scheepsleverantie Maatschappij
STOREKEEPERS
A. E. Albrecht
A. C. Buisson Bon Marché
E. Dunlop & Co. Handelsver (Leroux & Co.) Jennij & Co.
John Pryce & Co.
Maatschappij Onderlinge Hulp Winkel-Maats. "Eigen Hulp" Van der Plas & Co.
TAILORS
A. Herment
M. de Koning J. Laarboven Oger Frères
A. Savelkoul (Vaxelaire & Co.) A. Duran
G. Kerner & Co.
TIMBER MERCHANTS
Ned. Indische Houtaankap Maatsch. Javasche Rosch Exploit. voorheen P.
Buwalda Ph. Bangert, agent N. Palm
TOBACCONISTS
A. Justman
Ned. Ind. Sigarenfabriek "Het wapen
van Batavia"
Ned. Ind. Sigarenmagazijn "Rijswijk" Sigarenmagazijn "Insulinde"
Do. E. Dunlop & Co.
SOERABAJA
"De Tabaksplant"
Soerabaja, situated 112 44 E. longitude and 7° 14' S. latitude, had on the 31st Dec, 1905, 150,193 inhabitants, of whom 8,063 are Europeans, 14,843 Chinese, 2,482 Arabs, 337 other foreign Orientals, and 124,473 natives. The voyage from Batavia to Soerabaja can be done in two days by the railway, which extends to Panaroekan on the North coast and to Banjoewangi on the East coast. The old city is not like that of Batavia, deserted during the night, but is the most busy part of the place. The fortifications that were built at enormous expense are now partially demolished. The roadstead is very safe and pro- tected by the island of Madoera, and trade is in a flourishing condition, the godowns near the Oedjoeng being in direct communication by rail with the large railway that extends all over the island to Semarang and Batavia. "A steam tramway for passenger traffic ex- tends from south to north, also as far to the south-west as Krian. A second connection by rail to Samarang was opened on the 1st of February, 1903, this line being a narrow gauge so-called tramway of the usual width of 3 feet 63 inches (1.067 m.), having, however, the capacity of an ordinary railway with limited speed. Government workshops and private manufactories do very much to increase the welfare of the industrious popula tion, among whom are a great many Dutchmen employed by the artillery establish ments. Between the Kali Mas and the floating dock are the naval establishments for the construction and repairing of ships and vessels, machinery, boilers, etc., etc.
A great many Europeans are still residing in the old city, though the outer part is preferred and has the reputation of being healthier, while the houses are not buil close to each other, but are separated by gardens. The suburb Simpang is especially well known. Here is situated the house of the Resident and the well-known large hospital, Along the Genteng Road, which forms the communication with Soerabaja, several int houses are built in European style and surrounded by shady gardens.
PUBLIC COMPANIES
ANEMAET & Co.
H.'s Jacob (Batavia)
SOERABAJA
DIRECTORY
L. H. C. Coster van Vrijhoeven, signs
per pro.
Agencies
Brand Verzekering mij. "Mercurius" Assur. mij. teg. Brandschade "de
Nederlanden
Samarangsche Zee en Brand Ass. mij. Tweede Zee en Brand Assur. mij. Hollandsche Societeit van
verzekering
ASPIN, & Co., Ltd.
A. W. Aspin
BLAVET & Co., E.
P. F. E. Blavet
F. de Ryk, signs per pro,
Agencies
Levens-
Eerste Nederlandsche Verzekering mij. Air-motor Company, Chicago Verzekering mij. "Vesta"
Soc. van Assur., Santhagens, Bake & Co. Haagsche Ass. Co., voor Brand van 1805 Verzekering mij. Flevo
BEHN MEYER & Co, LTD.
G. Rademacher, agent
Agency
Norddeutsche Lloyd
BRANDON & Co., L. J.
W. F. H. Brandon
Agencies
Palatine Insurance Company (London) Eidgenössische Transport Vers, Ges.,
Zürich
"Schweiz," allgem. Versicherungs
Actien Gesellschaft, Zürich
BURT, MYRTLE & Co.
J. C. Sanders
Agencies
British & Foreign Marine Insce. Co. Reliance Insurance Company Union Insurance Soc. of Canton, Ld. London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Co. Northern Assurance Company Guardian Assurance Company Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA
AND CHINA
H. A. S. Thompson, agent
COSTER VAN VOORHOUT & Co.
H. L. Vinke
H. B. Hulswit
Agencies
1433
De Nieuwe Ned. Hypotheekbank Braunschweigische Machinenbau An-
stalt
Nationale Levensverzekering Bank Verzekerings en
Herverzekerings
Bank Nova"
Oberrheinische Versicherungs Ge-
sellschaft
De Nederlandsch Indische Crediet en
Bankvereeniging
DUNLOP & Co., E.
E. W. Dunlop
Agency
Levensverzekering, Mij. "Dordrecht "
ERDMANN AND SIELCKEN
H. Aschhoff (Europe)
F. A. Warnecke (Semarang) J. H. Schmiedell (Batavia) C. W. Menke (Soerabaja)
Agencies
Hamburg Amerikanische Packetfahrt
Act. Ges.
Norddeutsche Feuer Versicherungs
Ges.
EXPORT MAATSCHAPPIJ, VOORHEEN B, VAN
LEEUWEN & Co.
C. R. Buss (Batavia)
A. L. Palm, agent
Agencies
Basler Transport Versicherungs Ges. Phoenix Fire Office
K.K.Priv.Oesterreich Ver.Ges."Donau" Basler Ves. Ges. gegen Feuerschaden Royal Exchange Assurance Corpt. Nederl. Assurantie Company, van 1776. Vereeniging van Ass. te Amsterdam
FRASER, EATON & Co.
D. G. Cameron-Rose
A. C. Ballingal, signs per pro. Agencies
The Mercantile Bank of India, Limited International Banking Corporation Ocean Steamship Company Stoomvaart Mij. "Oceaan' Asiatic Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Arch. Currie & Co.'s Australian and
Indian Line of Steamships Indo-China Steam Nav. Co., Ld. China Mutual Steam Nav. Co., Ld China Navigation Company
West Australian Steam Nav. Co., Ld.
1434
SOERABAJA
Union Steamship Company, of New
Zealand Ld.
Peninsular & Oriental Steam Nav. Co. Canadian Pacific Railway Company Steenkolen Maatschappij "Poeloe
Laoet"
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Alliance Ass. Co., combined with the
Imperial Fire Office
Law Union and Crown Insurance Co. London and Lancashire Fire Ins. Co. North British and Mercantile Ins. Co. Northern Assurance Company Norwich Union Fire Ins. Society Royal Insurance Company
Ned Ind. Zee. & Brand Assurantie Mij. Nederlandsche Lloyd
Brand Assurantie Mij. "Insulinde" Brand Assurantie Mij. "de Merapi" China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office' Limited Triton Insurance Company, Limited Yangtsze Insurance Association South British Fire and Marine Insur-
ance Company of New Zealand New Zealand Insurance Company Tokio Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Aachen Leipziger Versich. Act. Ges. Rheinisch Westfalischer Lloyd Agrippina Versicherungs Gesellschaft
HANDELSVEREENIGING "AMSTERDAM" H. B. Defoer, representative H. M. Bosch, signs per pro. Agencies
Transatlantische Feuerversicher'g Ges.
HelvetiaSchweizerischeFeuervers.Ges.
HANDELSVEREENIGING TE SOERABAIA
J. M. Stok, president J. Lugt, secretaris
HANDELSVEREENIGING,
& Co.
C. J. Textor, agent
VOORHEEN REISS
H. C. Voorhoeve, signs per pro.
Agencies
Hanseatische Feuer Vers. Ges. Mannheimer Versicherungs Ges. Deutscher Lloyd
British America Assurance Co. Magdeburger Feuer Vers. Ges. Transatlantische Güter Vers. Ges.
HARMSEN VERWEIJ & Co.
G. de la Fontaine Verweij
H. Thorn, signs per pro.
HARTEN & Co., J. A.
J. A. Harten
C. H Staring
Agencies
Equitable Levensverz. Mij. New York Ned. Ind. Hypotheek Bank
Ned. Ind. Brandwaarborg Mij.
Bat. Zee and Brand Assurantie Mij Anglo-Continentale (late Ohlesdorf's
Guano Works, London
Ze. Semarangsche Zee. en Brand As-
surantie Maatschappij
"The Ocean" Accident & Guarantee Corporation, Limited, London, EC.
HINLOPEN & Co., K.
C. J. Rosemeier, signs per pro. Agency
Preussische National Versich. Ges.
H'KONG & SHANGHAI BANKING CORPORA TION-Tel. Ad: Nerbudda, Sourabaya
W. Drysdale, agent
E. W. Townend, acting accountant
A. M. Ross
INTERNATIONALE
CREDIET-EN HANDEIS-
VEREENIGING, "Rotterdam"
R. A. Borel, agent
Agencies
Javasche Zee-en Brand Ass. Mij. te
Batavia
Brandass. Mij. Unitas te Batavia Rotterdamsche Lloyd
JAVASCHE BANK
J. Kempen, agent
KOLONIALE BANK
J. J. Benjamin, hoofdagent W. C. Bonebakker, agent
W. Labohm, signs per pro.
KOOL & Co.'s Administratiekantoor
S. E. Ramondt
F. J. Gentis
MAATSCHAPPIJ VOOR UITVOER EN Co
MISSIEHANDEL
G. A. Van Vleuten, manager Ph. A. Holsboer, sub-manager Agencies
Lloyd's London
Royal Insurance Co., Ltd., Liverpool Aachen & Munich, FireIns. Co.,Aachen
MAINTZ & Co.
K. E. Schnurrenberger, agent Agencies
Deutsch Australische Dampsch. Ges
Hamburg
Oesterreichischer Lloyd, Triest
MESRITZ & Co., S. B.
W. J. Mesritz (Amsterdam)
S. Mesritz (Amsterdam)
MIRANDOLLE VOUTE & Co.
M. P. Voûte (Amsterdam) P. van Marken, do.
H. van Marken (Semarang)
J. W. Roosetoom (Soerabaja)
Agencies
SOERABAJA
Board of Underwriters of New York Allgemeine Vers. Ges. für Sec.
Fluss and Land transport in Dresden
MOORMANN, E., & Co. (in liquidation)
J. Ph. Levert, liquidator
MULDER, REDEKER & Co.
E. W. Redeker (Amsterdam) T. M. A. J. Mulder, do.
A. J. C. Wenniger, signs per pro.
NEDERLANDSCHE
HANDELMAATSCHAPPIJ
H. van Straaten, agent
T. J. van Rossum, Act. agent.
NEDERLANDSCH
MAATSCHAPPIJ
INDISCHE
G. J. Stephan, agent
ESCOMPTO
NEDERLANDSCH INDISCHE HANDELSBANK
A. J. C. van Kerkhoff, agent W. Beuker, act. agent
NIEROP, S. L. VAN, & Co.
J. Kruijs, signs per pro.
PITCAIRN, SYME & Co.
Ker, Bolton & Co., (London & Glasgow) H. M. March (Batavia)
A. M. McNeill, signs per pro.
T. Taylor,
J. J. Taylor
T. Hogg
D. Hathorn
H. Skinner
Agencies
do.
Royal Insurance Co., Liverpool
Shell Trans. & Trad. Co., Ld., London De Ned. Ind. Industrie en Handel- maatschappij Amsterdam London, Koetei
Scottish Imperial Ins. Co., Glasgow New Zealand Ins. Co., Fire & Marine,
Singapore
Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., London Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ld.
POLACK, H. F.
H F. Polack
G. C. A. de Graaff, signs per pro. Agencies
Brandassurantie Mij., Padang
Fire Insurance Co. of 1877, Hamburg
SARKIES, EDGAR & Co.
C. Edgar
A. C. Edgar, signs per pro.
SCHEEPSAGENTUUR DE I. Lebert, agent
P. Jeannette Walen, agent
Agencies
Maatschappij Nederland Koninklijke Pakketvaart Mij. Oost Borneo Mij, te Koetei Java-China-Japan Lijn Java Bengalen Lijn
SCHIFF & Co.
J. J. Snouck Hurgronje Agencies
1435
Brand Ass. Mij. Ardjoeno Soerabaja Brand Ass. Mij. Veritas Soerabaja Tweede Koloniale Zee. en Brand Ass.
Mij. Batavia
BrandAss.Mij. "De Merapi" Semarang Verzeker,Soc. "DeAmstel,"Amsterdam
Sun" Insurance Office, London Marine Insurance Co., Ld., London Deutsche Transport Vers. Ges., Berlin Deutsche Ruch & Mitvers. Ges., Berlin 'Fortuna" Algem. Vers. Act. Ges., Berlin Badische Schifft. Ass. Ges., Mannhein Würtembergische Transport Vers.
*
Ges. Heilbronn
SCHNITZLER & Co. H. Schnitzler
SMIDT & AMESZ
J. W. Amesz
Helman, signs per pro.
WEHRI & Co., GEO.
J. Liese
P. C. ter Kuile, signs per pro. Agencies
Hamburg Bremen Feuer Vers. Ges. Allg. Vers. Ges. für See-Fluss und
Land Transp.
WELLENSTEIN, KRAUSE & Co. K. Volz, signs per pro.
ZORAB, MESROPE & Co.
A. M. Zorab H. Hacobjan
ARCHITECTS
J. A. Molyn Ch. Swanevald M. W. Schell W. Westmaas L. Derx
ASSURANCE COMPANIES
Algemeene Maatschappij van Levens- verzekering en Lijfrente te Amsterdam
P. Th. vou Hemert, hoofdagent Amsterdamsche Maatschappij van Le
vensverzekering te Amsterdam
1436
SOERABAJA
Jhr. J. de Savornin Lohman, Jr.
(wd) directner te Soerabaja
Brand Assurantie Maatschappij Ardjoe-
no te Batavia
Agent Schiff & Co.
Brand Assurantie Maatschappij Veritas
te Batavia
Agent-Schiff & Co.
Eerste Nederlandsche
Verzekering
Maatschappij op het leven enz te's Gravenhage
P. F. E. Blavet, hoofdlagent Nationale Levensverzekering Bank te
Rotterdam
Coster van Voorhout & Co., direc-
teur te Soerabaja
Tweede Koloniale Zee on Brandass.Mij. Utrechtsche Levensverzekering Maat-
schappij
F.ˆÅ‚ ̈ ̃R. A. Baron van Ittersum Verzekering en Herverzekerings Bank
"Nova," te's-Gravenhage
BROKERS
Coster van Voorhout & Co., agenten
A. C. Edgar
Czernicki, E. L. von Felix, W. A.
Harten, J. A. (J. A. Harten & Co.) Jolly, J. P. A.
Koch, G. M.
Matzen, C. W.
Matzen, O.
Meyer, H. W.
Reints Bok, J.
Scheltema, E.
Snouck Hurgronje, J. J.
Staring, Ch. H. (J. A. Harten & Co.) Stibbe, Th. G. H.
T. Thepass
Th. de Munnick
Wolff van Wülfing, C. A.
Zilver Rupe, J.
Th. van Os
T. H. Goudsmith
G. J. Meyer
E. H. Soesman H. Rolf
J. Aussems A. J. Huber
J. A. Miller
H. L Everts
A. Bouman
Ch. G. E. du Cloux
A. Maillette de Buy Wenniger
F. A. A. Sesink Clee
G. E. P. Nieuwkamp
A. Berg
W. R. Fox
E. A. Henrard
H. O. Th. Kilsdonk
LAWYERS
Mr. J. B. van Houten
JJ
C. L. Rahder
17
A. Paets tot Gansoyen
C. H. van Delden
J. W. D. Francken
**
H. van der Goes
>>
H. J. de Bruyn
W. F. Schimmel
,
P. Feenstra
W. B. R. Olt
11
J. II. van Laer
11
Joh. Paulus
F. C. Th. Loeff
MANUFACTURERS
Machinefabriek, Amsterdam Naaml. venn, Fabriek "De Volharding* aaml. venn. Fabriek van Stoom en Nandere Werktuigen "Kalimaas"
voorheen Deacon & Co.
Naaml. venn. Maatschappij tot voort zetting der Zaken van Van der Linde & Teves
Naaml. venn. Machine fabriek
Dapoean voorheen Younge en Gill Naam. venn. Nederlandsch Indische
Industrie
Naaml. venn. "Soerabajasche Machine handel" voorheen Becker & Co. Dunkerbeck & Co.
Lidgerwood Manut. Co., Limited Ruhaak & Co.
Schlieper, C., & Co.
W. van, Someren Greven, & Co. C. van Vliet & Zonen
PUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS
E. Fuhri & Co. Gimberg & Co. H. van Ingen
Matzen Sand & Co.
N. V. v/h Thies en Umbgrove Van Dorp & Co.
SHIPCHANDLERS
M. van Someren Greve & Co. Ruhaak & Co.
STOREKEEPERS
Van Arcken & Co.
Handelmij Louvre Baume & Co.
Handelsvereeniging
Belang"
"Onderling
Handelmaatschappij "Au bon Marché" Henderson & Co.
Mevr. Riemens
Nash & Co.
Pröttel & Co.
TAILORS
De Brauwere & Geirnaert
A. Grünberg
Henderson & Co.
Lemmens en Steyaert
Prottel & Co. W. Savelkoul
J. van Soen
SEMARANG
Semarang is situated in 110° 25′ E. longitude and 6° 58′ S. latitude. The population amounted in 1905 to 5,126 Europeans, 13,636 Chinese, 698 Arabs, 787 other foreign Orientals, and 76,413 natives; total 696,660. The old city is small, with narrow streets and lanes. On the west side of the river are the residence of the Regent, the Mosque, the Post and Telegraph Office, the Hospital, the Government House containing the Offices of the Resident, the Court of Justice, and different other Government offices.
The railway extends to Batavia and Sourabaya. The roads of Semarang do not afford the same accommodation as the harbour of Tandjong Priok, but the view of the city and surroundings is very fine. So-called steam tramways, being in fact light milways with quite a considerable capacity, both for goods and passenger traffic, extend from Semarang westward along the coast as far as Cheribon, and further on up-country to a place called Kadipaten; and also to the eastern parts of the residency Semarang and the residency Rembang, also to Soerabaja, as mentioned above.
BANKS
DIRECTORY
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUST. & CHINA Internationale Crediet & Handels- vereeniging "Rotterdam," agents
CULUUR MIJ DER VORSTENLANDEN
M. C. Brandes, Hoofd agent H. P. Kloppenburg, signs per pro. J. van Burg, agent
HANDELSVEREENIGING **
AMSTERDAM
V. H. Reyding
כל
HONGKONG AND SHANHAI BANKING CORP.
MacNeill & Co., agents
INTERNATIONALE CREDIET EN HANDELS-
VEREENIGING "ROTTERDAM"
A. P. Nieuwkamp, agent
JAVASCHE BANK (Java-Bank)
W. F. J. Keuchenius
KOLONIALE BANK
C. Burghard, agent
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA
MacNeill & Co., agents
NED. IND. ESCOMPTO MIJ
J. Stroobach, agent
NED. IND. HANDELSBANK
J. Boetje
NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL MAATSCHAPPIJ
(Netherlands Trading Society)
F. P. J. Vester
L. Neumann, proc.
SPAAKBANK
Directeuren-C. Dekker en A. Wilkens
ASPIN, MILLER & Co.
R. Butterwortli
BURT, MYRTLE & Co.
B. C. Stoker, signs per pro.
CHINA AND JAVA EXPORT Co.,
Kirk, signs per pro.
DE SCHEEPSAGENUUR
J. Scheltema de Heere, proc. Agencies
Stoomvaart Mij "Nederland" Koninklyke Paketvaart Mij Java-China-Japan Lijn Java-Bengal Line
ERDMANN & SIELCKEN
F. A. Warnecke, G. A. Pieper Agencies
Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Ostasien Handelmaatschappij
GEBR. HIJMANS
J. A. Hijmans G. E. L. Hijmans Herman Hijmans
HANDELSVEREENIGING * JAVA
JJ
F J. Strach, signs per pro.
HARMSEN, VERWEY & Co.
N. Companjen
HOOGENHUYZEN ADMINISTRATIEKANTOOR
K. Guijkens, signs per pro.
HOPPENSTEDT, G.
1438
HORNEMANN & Co.
W. Hornemann
INDISCILE HANDELSCOMPAGNIE
G. F. Tels, signs per pro.
JACOBSON VAN DEN BERG & Co.
Edw. Jacobson
G. A. Sardeman
MAATSCHAPPIJ
MISSIEHANDEL
SEMARANG
VOOR UITVOER EN COM-
C. A. Cox, manager
K. A. H. Lich, sub-manager
Agencies
Lloyd's London
Royal Insurance Co., Ld. (Liverpool) Aachen & Munich Fire In, Co. (Aachen)
MACNEILL & Co.
K. W. E. Dalrymple, signs per pro, H. N. van der Wall Bake Agencies
Ocean Steamship Company, Limited British India Steamship Co. Indo-China Navigation Co. Asiatic Steam Navigation Co. Yangtsze Marine Insurance Co. New Zealand Insurance Company
MAINTZ & Co.
H. Rijckmans, signs per pro. Agency
Deutsch Australische Dampfseh. Ges.
MIJ. LINDE TEVES
F. Jäger-director
H. O. Brabander, signs per pro.
MIRANDOLLE, VOUTE & Co.
A. A. J. Krüsemann
H. E. Tancrelle, signs per pro.
PITCAIRN, SYME & Co.
Her Bolton & Co., (London, & Glasgow)
H. M. March (Batavia)
A. M. McNeill (Singapore)
T. J. Tayler, sigus per pro.
A. H. Young,
Agencies
do.
The Liverpool and London and Globe
Ins. Co.
The Royal Insurance Co., Ld.
RESINK & Co.
van Haften & Co., agents
Salomonson & Co., M.
M. Salomonson
SEMARANGSCHE ADMINISTRATIE MIJ
C. W. Baron van Heeckeren
G. B. T. van Heeckeren v, d. Schoot
SCHNITZLER & Co.
H. Schnitzler, signs per pro.
SOCIETA COMMISSIONARIA D'ESPORTZIONE
DI MILANO
F. J. A. van Beusekom
SOENDA IMPORT CO.
H. J. Valkenburg-director
SOESMAN OFFICE
C. Soesman, signs per pro. L. Krusemann,
SOETERS & Co., P. H.
H. J. Soeters
Agencies
do.
Mannheim Insurance Company General Marine Ins. Co., Berlin Hollandsche Societeit van Levensver-
zekering
Fire Insurance Co.
Do.
Securitas" Batavia
2e Koloniale" do. "Veritas" Soerabaya
Do.
K
Do.
Do.
CL
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Ardjoeno" do "de Nederlanden"
Hague
Marine Insurance Co. "Oost Indische"
14
Fortuna
*
Badische" "Würtembergische"
44
'Nederl, Indische"
Life Ins. Co. "Nationale" Rotterdam" Accidents Ins. Co. "Nova," The Hague Sun Insurance Office, London
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK
C. A. Edwards, attorney
Suermondt, A. H.
A. H. Suermondt, signs per pro.
TUPKER & Co.
A. L. Tupker
GEO. WEHRY & Co.
J. Thole, signs per pro, Agency
Queensland Royal Mail Line
VAN HAFTEN, & Co.
L. van Haften
G. F. van Maanen
H. Middelburg J. G. Kerle
BROKERS
A. Prins & Co. Guijkens & Co Monod & Co.
P. H. Soeters & Co. van Haften & Co.
LAWYERS
C. W. Baron van Heeckeren
C. L. Dankmeyer
L. J. P. J. Jeekel
J. H. L. Bergsma
C. J. H. Wagener S. J. Bergsma H. J. Boelen J. H. van Hasselt A. W. Hartman K. J. Bijl
J. S. Scheltema
A. J. Gazan de la Meuse Chr. P. van Wijngaarden
LIGHTER COMPANIES
SEMARANG
Semarangsch Stoomboot & Prauwen
J. van Rijn van Alkemade, director Nieuw Semarangsch Prauwen
P. Hoeksma, director
MANUFACTURERS
Manufactory Co.
"O'Herne"
Do.
"Djoernatan"
Chinese
Do.
Dordtsche Petroleum Maatschappij
Java Petroleum Maatschappij Cigar Manufactory, Glaser & Co.
Do.
Oey Kok Tjin
Mestfabriek "Java"
Oil Manufactory, Lie Soey Tjin Harris & Co., machiner
De Vlijt
do.
G. Barendse, carriage maker
Ong Tiong Ing,
C. Sallahn, farrier
do.
H. Buysman, cartwright works
H. F. Tillema, mineral water manu-
factory
RAILWAY COMPANIES
Nederl. Ind. Spoorweg Maatschappij
Th. Steinmetz
Semarang Joana Stoomtram Mij
A. Oltmans Tegal
Semarang-Cheribon Stoomtram Mij Solosche Tram Maatschappij
SHIP CHANDLERS
Klein The Pik To
SHOPS, ETC. Barbers
Pianelli Frères Mourgues
A. Michel Booksellers
G. C. T. van Dorp & Co. A. Bisschop
H. A. Benjamins
Masman and Stroink
Hiap Hien & Co
Akoewan & Co. Dispensaries
Klaassensz & Co. P. H. Meulemans Volksapotheek J. W. Vodegel
Handelsvereeniging "Moll'
Furniture
J. F. Dekker
David Cohen & Co. J. Andriesse
Jewellers
Maurice Wolff
F. M. Ohlenroth & Co. Ladies' Tailors
Meyer Hillerstrom A. Starink Patissiers
Smabers Co. Hoogvelt & Co. Photographers
Hisgen & Co. Charls & Co. R. Schutz N. van Wingen Pianos
H. W. Jonkhoff A. Biele Tailors
J. T. Ligthart M. van Rixtel Tobacco
W. Lampe & Co. Valkenburg & Co.
J. A. Vermeulen & Co. Trinket Shops
A. de Haas & Co. Jan't Sas H. Spiegel Eigen Hulp Zikel & Co.
Au Bon Marché
Tjandiram & Co.
Wassiamal Assomal & Co.
Wine
Garreau Frères
1439
PADANG
Padang, the capital of the West Coast of Sumatra, is situated 100° 20' E. longi- tude and 58′ S. latitude. The population amounted in 1905 to 91,440, of whom 1,789 are Europeans, 5,136 Chinese, 210 Arabs, 968 other foreign Orientals, and 83,337 natives. The abundant vegetation, the extensive cocoanut plantations, and pleasant lanes give the impression of a large park or an immense native village, in which a few European bungalows are built. The bungalows are constructed of wood and bamboo, the floor is raised some feet above the ground, and the roofs are covered with atap leaves. The mountain scenery in the background and the large plan on which the place is designed, make Padang one of the most pleasant towns of Netherlands India, though the public buildings and private residences do not have a grand appearance. Padang is one of the most healthy const places, land and sea winds contributing very much to lower the temperature.
To the south of Padang is the Emma Haven, a scaport in communication by rail with Padang and with the Ombilin coal-fields, and where steamers can always anchor in perfect safety. Excellent arrangements have been made for coaling, so that annually 300,000 tons of coal can be shipped.
DIRECTORY
HANDELSVEREENIGING TE PADANG
President-L. Stibbe
Commissarissen-J. C. Byleveld J. Schild Secretaris-J. C. Sandrock
BRAND ASSURANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ "PADANG"
Directeur H. D. Schlüter
Commissarissen---H. J. P. laacke, H. A.
Krijgsman
BRAND ASSURANTIE MAATSCHAPPIJ
"SUMATRA
>>
Directeur-H. Schiess
Commissarissen-Joh. Schild. G. W.
Ungerer
J. J. Smits
C. H. Gockinga
LAWYERS
MERCHANTS, &c.
FACTORIJ DER NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL-
MAATSCHAPPIJ
J. F. Lankamp, manager
GEBR. VETH
W. P. Broeder, signs per pro. J. Schild,
Agencies
do.
Magdeburger Feuerversicherungs Ge-
sollschaft
Amsterdamsche Maatschappij van Le-
vensverzekering
Javasche Zee-en Brandassuranti-
Maatschappij
HAACKE & Co.
H. J. P. Haacke Agencies
Mercantile Bank of India, Limited Manchester Fire Assurance Company
HANDELS COMPAGNIE PADANG
G. J. van der Straaten, Head agent
JAVASCHE BANK
J. C. Byleveld, manager
MAATSCHAPPIJ VAN HANDEL EN INDUSTRIE
Oci Kim Kin, directeur
NEDERL. IND. ESCOMPTO MAATSCHAPPIJ
J. C. Sandrock, man iger
NEDERL. IND. YSFABRIEK
W. Lehnhansen proc.
PADANGSCHE HANDEL-MAATSCHAPPIJ
Z. H. Kamerling
F. W. J. H. Tengbergen,
B. L. van der Veen, signs per pro. S. A. Tengbergen,
Agencies
do.
Chartered Bank of India Aus. & China London Assurance Corporaton Nederlandsche Lloyd
Brand-verzekering Maats. "Vesta Brand-assurantie Maats. "Insulinde" Brand-assurantie Maatschappij
"de Oosterling"
Brand-waarborg Societeit "Securitas" Koloniale Zee en Brand-assurantie My London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Brand-assurantie Maats. "de Merapi"
Union Internationale, d'Assurances Anvers
PADANG---MAKASSER
Compagnie
Frankfort Marine Insurance Company,
Frankfort
"Allianz" Versicherungs Actien-Gesell-
schaft in Berlin und München Vereeniging van Assuradeuren,
Amsterdam Basler Transport
Gesellschaft
Versicherungs-
Düsseldorfer Allgemeine Versicherungs-
Gesellschaft
Algemeene Maatschappij van Levens
verzekering en Lijfrente, Amsterdam
SCHEEPSAGENTUUR De
W. H. G. Herklots, agent Agencies
Stoom vaart-Maats. "Nederland' Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij Rotterdamsche Lloyd Assurantie Mants.
PHOTOGRAPHERS Ban Seck
Mew Fong
STOREKEEPERS
Firma Rosenberg Firma Zeilinger Insulinde Janssen Kranich
de Nederlanden"
Mevrouw Robinson A. H. Tuinenburg
1441
Winkel Maatschappij, voorheen P.
Bäumer & Co.
L. E. TELS & Co.
H. Goldschmidt (absent)
J. A. Kleimeg de Zwaan (absent) L. Stibbe, signs per pro. H.Salomonson, Fzn, signs per pro.
VAN HOUTEN, STEFFAN & Co.
H. Schiess
H. D. Schlüter
J. van Houten, signs per pro. J. A. Beer
Agencies
Mannheimer Versicherungs Ges. Hamburger-vereeniging van Assur. Royal Fire Insurance Co., Liverpool Neuer Schweizerischer Lloyd
Transatlantische Feuer Versch. Ges. Nord-Deutsche Feuer Versich. Ges. Oost-IndischeZee en Brand-assurantie Brand-verzekering Maats."Mercurius" Nederlandsch - Indische - Levensverze-
kering en Lijfrente Maatschappij Brand-waarborg Maats. "Ned. Indie" Brand-waarborg Maats."de Oosthoek" Brand-waarborg Maats."de Westhoek" Brand-waarborg Maats."de Noordhock" Brand-waarborg Maats." Kalimaas"
MAKASSER
Makasser, the capital of Celebes and Dependencies, is situated 119° 24' E longitude and 5°8′ S. latitude. The population amounted in 1905 to 20,145, of whom 1,069 are Europeans 4,672 Chinese, 141 Arabs, 95 other foreign Orientals and 20,178 natives. As the principal centre of the trade in the North-Eastern part of the Archipe- lago the place has great importance. There is a new quay, 500 metres long, with new custom-houses and godowns. Makasser has been closed as a free port since August, 1906. Fort Rotterdam commands the roadstead and the northern and southern entrances.
The place is nicely built, a fine lane, with tamarind trees forming the thoroughfare of the principal part, where the Government House and other public buildings are situated, and leading on both sides to large squares covered with grass, the Konings Plein and Prins Hendrik Plein. The busy part of the place is Passar Street, where houses with colonnades give the impression of a town of southern Europe. Near the European Settlement the natives have made their villages.
The surrounding country is low and marshy and covered with rice fields and kampongs. The mountains, with the Peak of Bonthain in the distance, afford a fine view, especially in the evening, when they are not covered by the fogs that rise from the plains.
1442
MAKASSER
DIRECTORY
APOTHECARY
Rathkamp & Co.
BANK AGENCIES
Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China De Nederlandsch-Indische Escompto Maat-
schappij
Javasche Bank Sub. Manager-P. van den
Berg Netherlands Trading Society, Represen-, tative-The Agent of the Javasche Bank
MERCHANTS, ETC.
Gebroeders Veth
Agencies
Pacific Mail Steamship Co.
Occidental & Oriental S.S. Co.
Toyo Kisen Kaisha
N.
ACCOUNTANT
Chas. F. Meyers
F. Vorstman Mr. F. Onnen
J. J. H. Kater
CL
LAWYERS
PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS V. Handelsdrukkery
"Celebes"
Brouwer & Co.
SHIPBROKERS
Scheepsagentuur, voorheen J. Daendels
& Co.
STOREKEEPERS
Handel Maatschappij "Louvre❞
Handelsvereeniging voorheen J. Mohr- N. V. Winkel My. v/h. R. Brings
mann & Co.
Agencies
Nord-Deutscher Lloyd
Dampfschiff
Gesellschaft
Deutsch Australische
F. Goldsmann
Y's en Mineralwaterfabrick
S. Kanner & Co.
MENADO
"Celebes"
IMPORT AND EXPORT FIRMS, STOREKEEPERS
Handelsvereeniging voorheen Reiss & Co. Correljé & Co.
Agencies
Rotterdamsche Lloyd
Dircks & Co. A. C. van Essen
Chartered Bank of India, Australia W. Hesterman
and China
W. B. Ledeboer & Co.
Michael Stephens & Co.
Agency
Nederlandsche Stoomvaart Maat
schappij "Oceaan
Moraux & Co.
Agency
**
Ned. Ind. Escompto Maatschappij
Scheepsagentuur voorheen J. Daendels &
Co.
Agencies
Koninkl Paketvaart Maatschappij Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland Java-China-Japan Line
A. Schmid
Herm Rosenthal
W. B. Ledeboer & Co.
Moluksche Handels-Vennootschap
J. Caffin
GORONTALO
Handelsvereeniging Gorontalo W B. Ledeboer & Co.
BANDA (MOLUKKEN)
Perkeniers-en-Handels
Bandasche
ver-
eeniging
Crediet & Handels vereeniging "Banda" Lützow & Co.
J. A. Sauerbier
TERNATE
STEAMSHIP COMPANIES
Nederl. Nieuw Guinea Handel-Maat-
schappij
Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij
THE EAST COAST OF SUMATRA
This part of the East-Coast of the Island of Sumatra is situated between the Government of Acheen and its Dependencies in the North, the Straits of Malacca in the East, Indragiri (a part of the Residency of Riouw and its Dependencies) in the South, and the Government of Sumatra's Westcoast and the Residency of Tapanoeli in the West. It includes a great number of States, each of which under control of the Resident is ruled by a native Prince or Chief, who, according to his rank and dependency, is styled Sultan, Yang di Pertuan, Kedjuruan, Radjah, Datu, etc. The country is administered by a Resident, 6 Assistant-Residents, 14 Controleurs, and three Assistant- Controleurs. Justice is dispensed by the Court of Justice at Medan, the Landraad of Medan and Bindjei, Tandjung Balei and Bengkalis, the Magistrates and by native courts or Karapattan. The staple industry of the country is agriculture, and this being dependent upon imported labour (Chinese and Javanese), the labour question is carefully guarded by a special coolie Ordinance. All coolies are indentured under advances. The employer must house his people properly, provide them with medical attendance and food when sick, and monthly payments are compulsory. 4 Special officials (Inspectors of Labour) look after this.
Land is leased from the ruling prince or chief of the district for a certain number of years, so much per bahu or per acre being paid down, and a minimum fl. per bahu or per acre per annum being paid as annual quittance.
The supremacy of the Dutch Government is based upon political treaties with each of the Princes, in whose hands is left the jurisdiction over their own subjects except so far as relates in the infliction of the death penalty and banishment and the disposal of land or landed property. Land contracts with Europeans, while made between the ruling prince and the concessionaire, are subject to the approval of the Resident. Mining contracts require the approval of the Governor-General of the Netherland-Indies In all the States the Dutch Government has bought the right to collect the customs duties and the ordinary revenues. Land revenue, collected by Government officials, is at the disposal of the native rulers and his chiefs. The principal State on the East-Coast of Sumatra, both from the rank of its ruler and historically, is Siak. The best known of the States, however, is Deli, where tobacco planting was first introduced, and by which name the whole of the East-Coast is sometimes designated. Deli, Langkat, Serdang Assahan, and other tobacco-growing districts, are celebrated throughout the world for their fine silky tobacco leaf, which is specially fitted for the outside wrappers of cigars, being at once light in weight and elastic and strong in texture. The leading tobacco company is the Deli Maatschappij, which for 26 years has paid a dividend averaging 75 per cent. per annum. The minor agricultural products are Liberian coffee, cocoa-nuts, pepper and rubber. Jungle produce, formerly exported considerably, is getting scarcer, by reason of the jungle being felled for the purpose of planting tobacco and rubber. Very important also is the export of fish from Bagan Si Api Api-the second fish export harbour of the world to Singapore and Java. In 1908 was exported from that place 23,000,000 K. G. fish, and 21,000,000 K. G. shrimps, trasi, etc. Considerable also is the export of timber from the islands near Bengkalis to Singapore. About 3,000 coolies are employed in this trade. The production of paddy, though considerable, falls short of the demand by many thousand bags, which are mostly imported from the Straits Settlements. Kerosene oil is exported from Langkat to the Straits Settlements, British India, Hongkong, Siam and China. This article is of importance for that district, and is still more promising for the future. Almost all necessaries of life have to be imported, and a brisk trade between Java, the Straits Settlements and the East Coast is the consequence.
Medan (Deli), the residence of the highest civil and military officials, is a pleasant little town, laid out in modern style, and the streets fitted up with electric light. A splendid architectural Government House has been built for the Resident in the new quarter of Folonia. Inthe town three banking corporations-the Javabank, the Nederlandsche Handel Maatschappij and the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China-have their branches. There are two very good Hotels, a Club, a Race-club, numerous houses of business, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Malay, Bombay and Kling shops, etc. The port of Belawan Deli, on the Belawan River, is in communication with Medan by railway, the lines of which extend a long distance up country and the North giving also communication via Tandjoeng Poera with Pangkalan Brandan. Other important ports are those of Pangkalan Brandan, Tandjong Balei, Bengkalis, Bagan Api Api and Siak. The population of this Residency amounted in 1905 to 2,667 Europeans, 99,236 Chinese, 89 Arabs, 15,487 other Orientals, and 450,940 natives; total 568,416.
1444
THE EAST COAST OF SUMATRA
DIRECTORY
BANKS
THE CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRA-
LIA AND CHINA
J. Argyle Robertson, sub-agent P. Ambler, accountant
W. J. Morrison, sub-accountant
NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL MAATSCHAPPIJ
M. J. Lusink, sub-agent
J. M. Socters, sub-accountant
WITTE SOCIETEIT
CLUB
W. H. M. Schadee, president J. Thooft, sec., penningmeester
PLANTERS COMITÉ
President - J. van Vollenhoven
Secretaris Mr. H. J. Bool
Leden J. J. C. de Knokke van der Meulen, Jr., R. MacLean, K. Kappelle, L. Weigand
PLANTERS BOND
President J. J. Wijtema
Vice-President V. Kis
Leden G. R. C. Jeppe, T. L. Klink, M.
Imhof
DELI SPOORWEG MAATSCHAPPIJ Adm, te Medan-W. H. M. Schadee
RATHKAMP & Co.
DISPENSARY
HOTELS
MEDAN HOTEL (A. J. H. van Laer)
HOTEL DE BOER (H. A. de Boer)
SUMATRA HOTEL (G. D. Colet)
MERCHANTS
HANDEL MIJ GUNTZEL AND SCHUMACHER
Partner-C. H. M. Hick (absent)
Do. E. Goldenberg
HANDEL MAATSCHAPPIJ DELI - ÁTJER
Managers-H. J. Nolte (abs.), J. H
Haas (abs.)
Proc H. S. Haas
J. L. Zeeuw van der Laan
HUTTENBACH & Co.
Partner-H. Hüttenbach (abs.)
A. A. F. Pedersen, proc.
HANDELS VEREENIGING-F. Kehding
Manager C. M. U. Siegmund
NAUDIN TEN CATE & Co.
Partners-
O. K. L. J. Magnée en D. A. den
Boesterd
SCHUMACHER, F. A.
J. E. Zurowetz, proc.
VAN NIE & Co.
Manager-C. G. van Houten Lzu.
W. CORNFIELD
STOREKEEPERS
GOLDENBERG & Co.
SENG HAP & Co.
SOEY TEK BIE & Co.
CHONG LEE & CO.
S. KATZ & Co.
PRINTERS AND BOOKSELLERS
NAAML V. DE DELI COURANT
J. A. HALLERMANN
D. RENS
COACH AND CARRIAGE BUILDER
AUTOMOBILE STORE
VERWEY & LUGARD, VAN MARLE & Co.
D. Rens
THE PHILIPPINES
The Philippines, discovered by the Portuguese Fernando de Magalhaes (Magellan) are a rich and beautiful group of islands, situate between lat. 5 and 22 deg. N., and long. 117 and 127 deg. E. They are surrounded on the north and west by the China Sea, on the east by the Pacific, and on the south by the Celebes Sea. The islands are over a thousand in number and contain an area of 114.000 English square miles, with a population of about eight million souls. The principal islands are divided into twenty-six provinces, thirteen of which are on the Isle of Luzon, four on the Isle of Negros, three 011 Panay, and three on the Isle of Mindanao. The islands were formally annexed to the Crown of Spain in 1565. The first Governor was Don Miguel Lopez de Legaspi.
The early history of the Philippines is a record of continual trouble. Conflicts between the civil and ecclesiastical authorities led to internal contentions, while both Portugal and the Netherlands coveted these rich possessions and harassed the Spaniards, In 1600 the Dutch blockaded the ports with five ships, which were, however, destroyed by the Spanish fleet. Attacks were also made at different points by powerful Chinese piratical fleets. The most celebrated of these was the invasion by Li Ma Hon, who with 2,000 men landed at Manila in 1572, but was defeated and driven out by the Spaniards and natives, under the leadership of Juan de Salcedo. In 1762 the capital was taken by the English, the private property of the inhabitants being saved from plunder on the condition of the payment of a ransom of £1,000,000 sterling, half of which was paid in money and the other half in bills upon the Spanish Treasury. In the meantime, however, peace had been concluded, and the islands were restored to Spain, payment of the balance of the indemnity not being insisted upon.
After the discovery of the islands, ecclesiastics flocked to them in large numbers and undisturbed by the attacks on Spanish authority, the work of converting the natives was carried on with great vigour. The religious orders in a short time acquired great power and became in effect the dominant authority. The clergy before the capture of Manila by the Americans (since when many have left) numbered about two thousand, and most of the natives brought under subjection profess the Roman Catholic religion. In the Philippines there has been little of that cruelty to the aboriginal population which so often characterises the process of colonization, and the natives appeared in general contented and well conducted, the priests exercising the almost unbounded influence they possessed with great effect in the preservation of order. There was, however, an undercurrent of seditious feeling, and after attempts made to throw off the Spanish yoke in 1822, 1841, 1842, 1872, and 1896, the Insurgents' opportunity came in 1898, when, upon the outbreak of hostilities between the United States and Spain, they offered to co-operate with the former. The offer was accepted, with the result that while Americans took and held the city of Manila the Insurgents overthrew Spanish authority throughout the remainder of the island of Luzon and established a Government of their own with General Aguinaldo as Dictator. By the Hispano-American treaty of peace the whole of the Philippine Archipelago was ceded to the United States, but this arrangement was not acquiesced in by the Insurgents, who claimed independence, and the United States had to carry on a war of subjugation. In the inaccessible mountainous parts of the islands there are still tribes of aboriginal savages, but their number is comparatively small. There is a considerable number of mestizos or half-castes, some of whom are the children of European fathers by native mothers and some the children of Chinese fathers.
The chief articles of produce are sugar, lemp, tobacco, and coffee. The foreign trade was confined to the ports of Manila, Iloilo, Cebu, and Zamboanga, but on January 1st, 1900, all the ports throughout Luzon were thrown open to trade.
The climate of the Philippines varies little from that of other places in the same latitude. The range of the thermometer during the year is from a little over sixty degrees to about ninety. The year may be divided into three seasons, the first, cold
1446
THE PHILIPPINES
LO
៥៥
and dry, commences in November; the second, warm but still dry, commences March, the greatest heat being experienced from April to the end of May and the third, which is excessively wet, continues from June to the middle of November. During the rainy season inundations of rivers are frequent and travelling in the interior almost impossible. Long-continued droughts, however, sometimes occur, when the ground becomes parched and the crops are utterly destroyed. Husbandry also suffers from the ravages of locusts, which will sometimes almost entirely denude à whole province of herbage. The principal part of the group comes within the range of the typhoons, and terrific storms are of frequent occurrence. The islands are also the centre of great volcanic action. The destructive ravages and changes produced by earthquakes," says Sir John Bowring, writing in 1859, are nowhere more remarkable than in the Philippines. They have overturned mountains, they have filled up valleys they have desolated extensive plains; they have opened passages from the sea to the interior, and from the lake into the sea. There are many traditional stories of these territorial revolutions, but of late disasters the records are trustworthy. That of 1796 was sadly calamitous. In 1824 many churches in Manila were destroyed, together with the principal bridge, the barracks, great numbers of private houses; and a chasm opened of nearly four miles in length. The inhabitants all fled into the fields, and six vessels in the port were wrecked. The number of victims was never ascertained. In 1828, during another earthquake, the vibration of the lamps was found to describe an are of four and a half feet; the huge corner stones of the principal gate of the city were displaced; the great bells were set ringing. It lasted between two and three minutes, rent the walls of several churches and other buildings, but was not accompanied by subterrancan noises, as is usually the case. In 1832, 1852, 1863, 1869, and 1880 there were terrible shocks of earthquake, and, in 1891, in the Province of Pangasinan, shocks were continually repeated during a month, shaking down buildings, crushing their inmates, and creating a panic among the inhabitants.
The local storms that come in the months of May and June, the period of the greatest heat, are at times very severe. On the 29th May, 1873, there was one of sufficient force to destroy within the walls of Manila alone forty-one dwellings. Typhoons also sweep over the islands in great fury and the one of the 20th October, 1882, left thousands without shelter, the wind in its fury tearing down many of the native huts as well as more solid structures in brick and stone; floods were caused by the heavy rain, and great loss of life and property resulted.
The Philippine Archipelago is divided into three great groups of islands called Luzon, Visayas or Bisayas, and Mindanao. Luzon includes the provinces of Manila, Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, Zambales, Batuan, New Ecija, Pangasinan, North Ilocos, Abra, Union, New Viscaya, Cagayan, Laguna, Batangas, Tayabas, Albay, North and South Camarines, Sorsogon, and the districts of Principe, Lepanto, Bontoc, Benguet, Morong, and Infanta, and the adjacent islands Babuyanes and Batanes on the North, Polillo, Alhabat, Catanduanes, and Marianas on the East, Mindoro, Burias, Masbate, and Marinduque on the South, and Calamianes, Paraguay, and Balabac, on the East. The second group, the Bisayas or Visayas, is made up of Cebu, Bohol, Samar, Leyte, and the island of Negros with its districts Capiz, Romblon, Iloilo, and Conception, and of the adjacent islands Sibuyan, Banton, Tablas, Luciara, Maestro de Campo, Bantayan, Dauis, and Camote to the North and N.E., and of the island of Fuego or Siquijor to the South. The third group, or sea of Mindanao, is divided into the dis- tricts of Zamboanga, Misamis, Suriago, New Guipuzgoa, Davao Bislig, and Basilan, with the adjacent islands Camiguin, Caburao, Duiagat Asgño, Oyarzal, and Vivero to the N.E.; Siluanga and General on the East; Buentua, Tengquil, Balanguingi, and Sulu with all the islands that make up the group of that name in the S.E.
Altogether there are estimated to be 1,200 islands in the Philippine Archipelago. Its wealth of timber is incalculable, yielding resins, guns, mastich-pastes, dye-products, fine-grained ornamental woods, also heavy timber suitable for building purposes. There are also mines in abundance in Mencayan and Lepanto. In Lupac and Agbas copper is found and copper and iron pyrites in Suyne. In Paracale and North Camarines there are veins of gold worked by the natives. In the rivers of Sapan, Casiguran, and New Ecija there are found gold pyrites of good quality, and in Mambulao and Camarines there are some gold mines in operation. A considerable amount of prospecting has been done in the islands, resulting in some small finds of gold. Two or three mines which are now being worked by Americans give promise of becoming paying concerns. Since the arrival of the Americans petroleum has been discovered and good success is reported to have attended the work of
some prospectors, There are many hot springs of iron and sulphur waters, all of excellent medicinal
THE PHILIPPINES
1447-
properties. The famous "Holy Waters" of Tuii and Sibu are visited every year in large numbers by the islanders seeking relief from their sufferings. The endemic complaints of the country are swamp fever, diarrhoea, beri-beri, and a few others.. Incurable leprosy is very limited among the natives. Cholera was very prevalent in 1908. The mortality is low considering the number of inhabitants.
Dr. Augustin de la Cavada, a Spanish historian,
historian, says of the natives, and he is generally confirmed by American writers, that they are of A mild, submissive, and respectful disposition, predisposed to religious observances, extremely superstitious, and very hospitable. Those of Batangas, Cagayan, and Southern Ilocos are better workers and more industrious than those of the other Provinces. During their youth they work with energy and a certain intellectual vigour, but on reaching a more advanced age they lose a large part of their disposition, for work and lapse into an indolence that is one of their greatest defects. The women are averse to idleness and have a spirit of enterprise, and they often engage in various trades with success.
The rivers and streams of the Philippines are countless and traverse the islands in all directions, the natural result of mountain peaks and ranges that extend over a large area.
The most noteworthy volcanoes are Buleyan in Mindanao, Taal in Batangas, and Bulusan and Mayon in Albay. The last is in continual eruption and at times creates terror in the surrounding country, on account of the quantity of boiling water, ashes, and lava it throws out. In 1872 an eruption of this volcano destroyed entirely the villages of Malinao, Camalig, Guinobatan, Ligao, Polangui, and Albay.
The Civil Commission, appointed in 1900, voted the same year $1,000,000 gold for the improvement of Manila Harbour, and a somewhat comprehensive educational scheme was introduced and perfected by this Commission. It was decided that the English language should form the basis of the instruction given, and a system of district superintendence was established. In the municipal civil governments provision was made for local boards to supervise the work of the schools. Over 500 skilled teachers from the United States arrived in 1901, followed by over 1,000 in 1902. A compulsory school attendance clause was incorporated in the bill. Money was appropriated not only for the building of more and necessary school buildings, but for the institution of normal schools for the training of native teachers.
Harbour works, including docks at the mouth of the river on the south side, and also for the increasing of wharf and warehouse accommodation, by the demolition of part of the old city walls along the river front, are in active progress. These works will enormously benefit the trade of Manila.
British interests in the Philippines are much larger than is currently supposed. There are about twenty British firms in Manila, many of them of long standing in the islands. Their importance will, perhaps, be best gauged by the fact that two out of the three banking establishments in the city are branches of well-known British corporations. They include the largest import and export firms, but engineering works, ship repairing, stevedoring, and many other in- dustries are also represented. The larger firms have branches in most of the provincial ports as well as rice and sugar mills up-country. The principal railway in the Philippines, that from Manila to Dagupan, the port of the rice-producing district of the island, is the property of a British company, and many undertakings with foreign names are carried on mainly by British energy and capital. Other railway schemes are being introduced under American control. Taking into account the numerous insurance, shipping, and other firms for which local firms are agents, it will be evident that British interests in the Philippines run into millions. Foreign carrying trade has been in the hands of British shipping, but an Act of Congress in 1909 providing for free trade between the United States and the Philippines designed to encourage American Shipping as well as commerce, since to secure the privileges allowed by the law there must be direct shipment of the goods between the ports of the two countries.
The naval authorities have undertaken a very necessary work, namely, that of surveying the local waters, and preparing new charts, the old existing charts being very inaccurate, As regards the trade of the islands there are still many serious difficulties to contend with; lack of capital and labour, to a large extent, handicaps agricultural and commercial development, capital from the United States not being attracted, and the admission of Chinese labour being prohibited. An enormous increase has been noticeable in the case of exports to the United States, while there is a decrease in the case of all other countries. This result was mainly due to the fact that by Act of Congress, March, 1902, all articles the growth and produce of the
1448
THE PHILIPTINES
Filipines aduitted into the Triin Slates free of duty, were eligible forentin of the export duty imposi in the Philippuses sa gas slipped to the Unites Stay direct, and proof be .buitted of Waris Importation and consumption Mere.
The offend report on the Commerce of the Zolunde for the Gacal year 1900 (olio Jung) shows a total value of foreign trade of nearly $51,895,00 (guli, neur? Hv millions lose then the previous year. The Grade is divided between Lapor mud export acont gronly, with a balance of trade in favour of the Islands of $2,000,000, Hong, the unjur prodass, is the main hope of these islands, and the is no use for ilisconnagement. Sugar is he wennd product in importance, 1% average exporte sing. 999 have been 004000 tons, globungi in 1908 and 1908 ss0000 US were exportaxi. The neomgy exports frian the Philipping Telunds for ton pairs hoge been less than 1 pun gent. of the forgiga sigur cocained in the Caitosx Stales, which makes We Can i thelon sugar growers of this auntry alsool. Copied wit meat), vox cil ani Tubing and the other bruling exquets, Condag to upor which via al 17,795,007 (explosive of suppliers Tor the Government, Lilian and feral forces, ele), pathou goods for the purilaiqal item in the disk
The Coke Kingdom supplies grew ball of the weten guais aul de repart of 1997 spoke of prosting in the local marker of Britial, cotton textiles" cao" "ube particular oftmalis deword by British mounfactores in this we well we other licee to the portació of quisies of goods best adapted to the vequirements The Gogroms Burean llega $9,000,000, which gore a long way toward apporting the henler Governsens bigly horrif is geriniņly a surcose de revenue producer. The islangs vive stopped de legal importation of optom, and choose in oxite is consicpable. The Swing anun recipes trong opium during the years of 1998- 007 inglosive was the bandora tum vf 5939,664.42 This offiging of the 1st mils certainly deserve credit for their skil: in adjusting ufu: Graners to meet this large shortage.
L.
H
The jokey of the Trical States towels the Philippines was defined by Presiden Rooseveli in his Message la Congress in December, 1984. "At present," he said, "* Philippine people are allerly incapable of existing in independence at all, or að beiskeg mp civilisation of air own. I firmly believe we can help thera va five liigher wi higher in the scale of civilisation and of cijevily for self-government, sad most rustly Jour that in the end they will be able to sol, if not entirely alone, yet in some ch velation to the United States sa Cuba now standa Under Section 7 of cho des vé Congress, approved July 1. 100%, all that part of the lands not inhahical gy Messag ather non-Christian tribes is vested in & Legislature consisting of Hess-de Philippine Commission and the Philippine Aspbly. The ist genere, ploction of delegales to the Philippine Assembly wing held on March 27th, 1002, and the Hon. W. E. Tallanes ant to Marilu on posside at the five geting. To a speech delivered be Mr. Taft al Buchen Junior las election to the Presideney ln cxpress the opinioak che Philippines werall not be til for self-goverripeit Sorace of two generationa.
The military forme malulained in this Telunis amounts La 13.030 Rhite wrouge në all Arms 3,000 native comuta alliexi to the white garrison, and 4,000 constabulny, when As a sort of semi-military police.
Hallway to Dagupan
DULUMB
PALUMPONG
REFERENCE.
STATION
BINONDO
1. Palace or City Hall.
2 University and College of St. Thomas.
3 General Revenue and Assessor's Office.
4 Kilitary Hospital.
I. Convent of St. Clara.
6. Ordnance Ofiles.
7. Fort Santiago.
Supreme Court.
Statue of Charles IV.
10. Palace of Captain General.
15. Auditor's Office.
it Palace of the Archbishop.
13. Tunteipal Athenaeum.
14. School of Arts and Professions.
L Seminary.
14 General Revenue
17. Church and Convent of St. Domingo.
1 College of Santa Catalina de Sena.
11 College of San Juan de Letran.
2. Provost Marshal Generals.
11. Hospital of San Juan de Dios.
22 Church and Convent of San Francisco
15 College of San José.
College of Santa Isabel.
25. Church and Convent of S. Augustin.
* Government Mint.
2. Church and Convent of Recoletos.
28. King's Barrack.
29. Congregation of Women of Jesuitical Society
30. 8. Diego Barrack.
31. Custom and Warehouses.
32. Captain of the Port.
35. Slaughter House.
34. Military Engineer's Barracks.
$5. Tondo Circus.
36. Calderon Theatre.
37. Nondment to Magallanes
EL. General Post Office.
3 Mount of Plet Savings Bank.
40. Penitentiary.
41. San Lazaro or Leper Hospital.
43 Church and Convent of & Sebastian.
45 Palace of Governor General.
44 Church and Convent of 8. Miguat.
45. Real Hospielo of San Jose
46. Museum and Library.
47. Military Hospital.
48. Statue of Vidal.
40. School of Arts and Professions.
50. College of Agriculture.
51. Observatory.
52 General Cemetery.
55 Statue of Isabella IL
64. Lighthouse.
SAMPALOC:
ERUZ
R
AIGUEI
PROJECTED
HARVE&
M
A
I
L A
N
Drawn and Engraved for the Directory & Chronicle
PANDAGAN
P
PEÑÁFRANCIA)
BANTIBANE
SANQUE"
B
A Y
PACO
BINGALONG
ERMITA
MALIAE
PLAN OF
MANILA
AND SUBURBS
Scale - 1 27340 Yards
100
400
600
100
MANILA
Manila, the capital of the Philippines, is situated on the western side of the island of Luzon, at the mouth of the river Pasig, which empties itself into the Bay of Manila, and the city is now held by the forces of the United States. War having been declared between the United States and Spain, the fleet of the former on the 1st May, 1898, sailed into Manila Bay and totally destroyed the Spanish fleet, practically with no loss to the attacking side. Thereafter the city was blockaded until the 13th August, when, a military force having arrived, the Americans took possession after an almost unresisted assault.
The city was founded in 1571. In 1645 it was almost entirely destroyed by an earthquake, in which upwards of three hundred lives were lost. In 1863 a great part of the city was again destroyed from the same cause, and in July, 1880, another terrible upheaval made wreck of a great portion of it. The dwelling-houses are built with especial reference to safety under such circumstances, and, although large, possess few pretensions to architectural beauty. The city is practically divided into two parts,. the official or walled city being built on the left bank of the Pasig river, while the commercial city is situated on the island of Binondo, which forms the right bank of the same river. The Escolta the main business street, traverses this suburb, and in it most of the European stores and bazaars are to be found. The Rosario, another broad thoroughfare in Binondo, is occupied chiefly by Chinese shops, and is a busy quarter. San Miguel, Ermita and Malate are the aristocratic suburbs, being the seat of the residences of the wealthy merchants and other residents. Around the walls and the edge of the bay is a fashionable drive lined with almond trees, where the well-to-do inhabitants walk, drive, and meet their friends. The architecture of Manila is not imposing, successive earthquakes having wrought much damage, and the city has an old-world aspect, tempered by its tropical surroundings. The streets present the greatest animation in the evening when the government offices, business houses and cigar factories are closed and the carriages of the upper classes are out for the customary promenade. There are several ancient churches which are worthy of notice. The Cathedral, founded originally in 1578, has been several times destroyed by earthquakes, and did not escape in 1863. It has been since rebuilt, but again sustained considerable damage in 1880, when the tower was so much shattered that it had to be pulled down. There are several theatres, but none worthy of the place. The opera is well supported in Manila. There are many statues and monuments erected in Manila. A statue of Charles IV. stands in the centre of the Palacio Square, one of Isabella II. in the Plaza of Isabella II., Malate, one to Legaspi and Urdaneta, the discoverers of Manila, on the Luneta, one to Magallanes (Magellan) the discoverer of the Islands, on Plaza de Magallanes. The Observatory, admirably managed by the Jesuit Fathers, is well worthy of a visit. There is a good English Club and several American Clubs. Of the hotels the Metropole is the principal, but there is a dearth of good hotels, though plans have been prepared for building a colossal hotel to take the place of the Hotel Oriente, which was sold in 1903 to the Philippine Government for offices. The city and its suburbs contain a population of 300,000 and are the seat of a con- siderable and yearly increasing commerce. The principal articles of export are hemp, sugar, tobacco, cigars, coffee, and indigo, while of the imports cotton goods form the chief item. The anchorage is distant some three miles from the shore. The river presents a scene of great animation, being crowded with native craft interspersed with vessels of foreign build. The hot season commences in March and continues until July. The rains
commence in August and continue to December, during which time the roads and streets get into a very bad condition. The maximum annual rainfall recorded is 114 inches and the minimum 84 inches. The maximum of the ther- mometer is about 92; a cool sea breeze sets in at night, reducing the heat to an endurable temperature for sleeping. Improvements effected in the sanitation of the city since the American occupation have had the satisfactory result of reducing the death rate from 61 per mille in 1902 to about 29 per mille for recent years.
1450
MANILA
In 1880 special dues were imposed on the trade of the port for the construction of a new harbour, namely, 2 per cent. on imports, 1 per cent. on exports, tonnage dues, and a tax on fishing boats. Up to the time of the American occupation a large sum had been collected, but comparatively little progress had been made with the works. In 1900 a sum of one million gold dollars was voted for the work.
Electric Tramways run in the principal streets of the city, and a railway to Dagupan was opened to traffic throughout its entire length, 123 miles, on the 23rd November, 1892. The same company has also opened and is now working several branch lines. Tenders for the construction of other lines have been invited by the US. Government. There is also an electric railroad to Malabon; and electric lights have been placed in the public squares and walks, in business houses, and in the principal streets. Under American control, the roads and the sanitation of the city have been vastly improved. There are a marine arsenal, a patent slip at Cavite, on the opposite side of the Bay, and a marine railway on the Manila side.
The city and its suburbs receive their drinking water by pipes leading from Santolan, on the river Pasig. The water is carried to fountains, distributed in con- venient places through the streets, and laid on to almost every house, both domestic and business. The telephone system extends throughout the city and out as far as Malabon. Manila possesses many educational and charitable institutions, among others the Royal and Pontifical University of St. Thomas, which is managed and maintained by the Dominican Fathers. In this there are schools of theology and church law, jurisprudence, notarial law, medicine, and pharmacy. The College of St. Thomas, which belongs to the Univer sity, maintains forty free scholarships for Spanish boys, who may pursue both primary and advanced studies. The College of San Juan de Latran, also under the Dominicans, devotes itself to the education of natives, and this college, as well as the other, is provided with an abundance of select scientific materials and with good physical and chemical outfits and exhibits and museums of natural history and fine arts. The College of San José (St. Joseph) gives instruction in medicine and pharmacy. The Orphan Asylum of Cambobong, founded by the Ladies' Union at Manila in 1882, is in charge of the Augustinians, and imparts elementary and advanced instruction and qualifies boys for clerical situations both in public and business offices. The Hospicio de San José, likewise under the care of the Augustinians and of the sisters of that Order, gives to its inmates elementary instruction and teaches them household duties and other accomplishments suited to their sex. The St. Joseph's Home, founded in 1810, gives shelter to poor and demented children. The Hospital of San Juan de Dios, founded by the Brotherhood of Misericordia in 1595, and the Government Civil Hospital cares for whatever invalids present themselves. Another hospital was opened in 1905 by the sisters of St Paul and is known as the Hospital of St. Paul. The Hospital of San Lazaro, founded in 1578 by the Franciscan Order, is for the care of leprous patients. The Manila Monte de Piedad and Savings Bank, organised in 1880, has several branches. There are four banks in Manila, the Bancu Español Filipino, the Chartered Bank of India, Australia, and China, the Hong; kong and Shanghai Bank, which has also a branch in Iloilo, and the International Banking Corporation of New York. There are numerous social societies, American and Spanish, and two theatres.
DIRECTORY
CIVIL GOVERNMENT
Governor-General-W. CAMERON FORBES
Secretary of Commerce and Police-W. CAMERON FORBES (acting)
Secretary of Interior-DEAN C. WORCESTER
Secretary of Finance and Justice-GREGORIO ARANETA
Secretary of Public Instruction-NEWTON W. GILBERT
Executive Secretary--FRANK W. CARPENTER
PHILIPPINE COMMISSION
President W. Cameron Forbes
Private Secretary-Edward Bowditch,Jr. Commissioner-Dean C. Worcester Private Secretary---A. O. Zinn Comr.-José R. de Luzuriaga
Private Secretary-Antonio Gimenez Commissioner-Gregorio Araneta
Private Secretary-Wendell McLaughlin Commissioner-Newton W. Gilbert
Private Secretary--M. S. Wightman Commissioner-Rafael Palma
Private Secretary-Leonardo Garduño Commissioner--Juan Sumulong
MANILA
Private Secretary-Bernardo del Mundo Commissioner Frank A. Branagan
Private Secretary- David W. Yancey Secretary-W. H. Donovan
EXECUTIVE
Governor-General-W. Cameron Forbes Lieut. Harry N. Cootes, U.S.A. aide-de-camp Private Secretary-Edw. Bowditch, Jr. Secretary of the Interior-D. C. Worcester
Private Secretary-A. O. Zinn
Secretary of Commerce and Police--W.
Cameron Forbes (acting) Secretary
of Finance and Justice-
Gregorio Araneta
Private Secretary---Wendell McLaughlin Secretary of Public Instruction-Newton
W. Gilbert
Private Secretary-M. S. Wightman
J
BUREAU OF SUPPLY Cable Ad: Ipa;
Teleph. 893
do.
Major E. G. Shields, purchasing agent Gus. Johnson, assistant Paul S. Carter, purchasing agent
(New York City)
WEATHER BUREAU Director-Rev. Father Algué
Assistant Directors-José Coronas, Juan
Comellas, Saderra Maso Secretary-George Zwack
BUREAU OF SCIENCE Director Dr. Paul C. Freer Chief, Biological Laboratory-Dr. Richard
P. Strong
Chief, Division of Mines-Warren D. Smith Chief, Division of Ethmology--Dr. Merton
L. Miller
Chief, Division of Chemistry- Dr. G. F.
Richmond
Chief, Division of Weights and Measures
-Dr. A. J. Cox
Chief, Serum Section--Dr. E. H. Ruediger Chief, Clerical Division--G. M. Nell
BUREAU OF LANDS
Director C. H. Sleeper
Asst. Director-J. R. Wilson
BUREAU OF HEALTH (Civil Hospital Division)
1451
Chief Division--Dr. H. E. Stafford House Surgeons-Dr. A. M. Saleeby, Dr.
B. J. Burdette
Superintendent M. E. McCalmont Chief Clerk and Cashier-M. D. Moody Chief Nurse and Matron-Ida R. Glemser
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND POLICE Secretary-W. Cameron Forbes, Philip-
pine Commissioner
Private Secretary-Conrad P. Hatheway
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION (Formerly Bureau of Coast Guard and Transportation)
do.
Director of Navigation-Frank P. Helm Asst.
--J. S. Reis (Supt. of Inter-Island Transportation) Asst. to the Director of Navgn.-F. Simcock (Act. supt of Inter-Island Transportation) Lighthouse Engr.-C. E. Platt Lighthouse Inspector- J. G. Fels Inspector of Machinery-E. G. Helvering Chief of Division of Port Works---H. Č.
De Lano
Chief Clerk of Lighthouse Division-F. A.
Wright
Chief Clerk of Port Works Division-M. W.
Lazansky
Chief Property Clerk-C. A. Neff Cashier S. H. Barlow
Record Clerk-G. D. Boone
BUREAU OF POSTS
Director of Posts-C. M. Cotterman Assistant do. -Wm. G. Masters
BUREAU OF PUBLIC WORKS Director J. F. Case (absent)
Asst. Director-C. G. Wrentmore (acting
director)
Div. Engineer-W. H. Robinson (acting
assistant director)
Asst. to Director-Warwick Green Chief Clerk-Claude Lindsey
BUREAU OF COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY (Intendencia Building) Director of Coast Surveys-Capt. E. F.
Dickens
Chief Computer-E. R. Frisby Asst. Computers-P. H. Wiliamson and F.
F. Pangan
Nautical Expert-J. C. Dow Chief Draughtsman-John Bach Cartographers- Arthur Dovale, R. J.
Christman, F. H. Jaeget, C. W. Phillips Chief Clerk-W. H. MacDonald Property Clerk-A. B. Gilman Clerk-R. A. Kelly
Do. John C. MacMahon
1452
MANILA
BUREAU OF PHILIPPINES CONSTABULARY Chief-General H. H. Bandholtz, U.S.A. Asst. Colonel W. C. Rivers, U.S.A. Colonel W. C. Taylor, P.C.
Do. J. G. Harbord, U.S.A. Do. -M. L. Hersey, U.S.A. Do. -H. Hall, U.S.A.
Do. P. Thomas Moir, P.C.
BUREAU OF AUDITS Auditor-W. H. Clarke Deputy Auditor--W. A. Randall Chief Clerk-C. A. Smith
BUREAU OF CUSTOMS AND IMMIGRATION H. B. McCoy, insular collector of Customs J. S. Stanley, insular deputy collector
of Customs
Clifford D. Ham, deputy insular surveyor
of Customs
Hartford Beaumont, special deputycollector M. Drew Carrel, chief clerk
E. B. Cook, casliier
BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE (147, Anloague)
Collector-J. S. Hord (absent) Acting Collector-Ellis Cromwell Deputy Collector-H. Steere Chief Clerk-Burt Edwards
Chiefs of Divisions.
Real Estate-A. B. Powell
Assessment and Returns-J. C. Ruymann Cash --C. B. Weltner
City Agent-William N. Bish Law-R. C. Round Licence-G. H. Tilbury Liquidation-Charles D. Gooch Property-Leander W. Strawn Record-E. W. Blair
Supt. of Markets-E. K. Harper Supt. of Matadero-Ben E. Lear Statistical H. L. Walter
BUREAU OF AGRICULTURE Director-G. E. Nesom
BUREAU OF FORESTRY
Director--Major G. P. Ahern Chief Clerk-A. G. Bellis
Forester-H. N. Whitford
-W. Klemme
Do.
-H. M. Curran
Do.
Do.
-W. D. Sterrett
Do. F. L. Pray
Do.
-T. C. Zschokke
Do.
-F. W. Darling
Do.
Do.
-R. F. Nash
-D. M. Matthews
Mgr. Timber Testing
Laboratory-E. E. Schneider
Forest Nurseryman-Robert Meyer Clerk-T. W. Parkin
Do.
J. R. Wagner
Do.
-W. J. Hood
BUREAU OF JUSTICE
(Office of the Attorney-General) Attorney-General-Ignacio Villamor Solicitor-General-Reuben D Blanchard Asst. Atty.-General--George R. Harvey
Supreme Court
Chief Justice-Cayetano S. Arellano Associate Justices - Florentino Torres, A. C. Carson, Victoriano Mapa, E. Finley Johnson, Sherman Moreland and C. B. Elliott
Clerk, Supreme Court--J. E. Blanco
Court of Land Registration Judge-Simplicio del Rosario Associate Judge- Clerk-A. K. Joues
Court of First Instance, Manila I. Hon. Manuel Araullo, judge II. Hon. A. S. Crossfield, do. III.-Hon. Chas S. Lobingier, do.
I-Felipe Canillaz, assistant clerk II.-José Casimiro, deputy clerk III-Enrique V. Filamor, do.
J. McMicking, clerk of court and er
officio sheriff of Manila
1st District (Isabella and Cagayan)-
Richard Campbell
2nd District (Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur,
and Abra)-Dionisio Chanco
Mountain District (La Union, Lepanto
Bontoc, Benguet and Nueva Vizcaya)- S. M. Moir
3rd District (Pangasinan and Zambales)
-James C. Jenkins
4th District (Tarlac, Pampanga and Nueva
Ecija) Julio Llorente
5th District (Bulacan and Rizal)-Estan-
islao Yusay
6th District (La Laguna, Cavite and Ba-
taan)-Vicente Jocson
7th District (Batangas, Tayabas and
Mindoro)-J. S. Powell
8th District (Albay and Ambos Camarines)
-Grant T. Trent
9th District (Iloilo)-James Ross 10th District (Occidental Negros and
Antique)-A. E. McCabe
11th District (Cebi, Oriental Negros and
Bohol)-Adolph Wislzenus
12th District (Samar and Leyte) -Mariano
Cui
13th District (Surigao, Agusan, Misamis, Dist. Lanao, Sub Dist Dapitan)-Ramon Avenceña
14th District (Surigao and Misamis, Moro Province, except dist. of Lanao and sub- dist. of Dapitan)-Herbert D. Gale 15th District (Capiz, Sorsogon, Romblon, Masbate and Paragua)-José C. Abreu Judges at Large-Chas. H. Smith, Isidro
Paredes and Vicente Nepomuceno
QUARANTINE SERVICE
MANILA
Chief Quarantine Officer-V. G. Heiser Passed Asst. Surgeons-F. H. McKeon Asst. Surgeon-Robert Olesen Pharmacist-N. C. Comfort
BUREAU OF PRINTING
John S. Leech,
director
J. A. Hoggsette, assistant do.
B. F. Durr, supt, of work
W. C. Boothby, supt. of purchase and
supplies
N. E. Gorton, accountant
John H. McQuerry, bookkeeper
E. E. Gessler, craftsman, instructor
S. H. Musick,
do.
H. F. Finkenhoofer, craftsman, instructor W. R. Johns, Jr.
Joseph U. Jackson,
J. F. McLennan, A. P. E. Doyle,
do.
do.
do.
do.
Walter W.Weber, foreman, composing room John J. Pleger, foreman, bindery James P. Richardson, foreman, electro-
typer and stereotyper
R. D. Boldt, foreman, photo engraving Patrick M. Coyle, foreman, press room Sam I. MacLauclilan, asst. foreman, press
room
W. F. Braney, foreman, power plant and
linotype machinist
Wm. R. Blanchard, electrician, Imperial
Hotel
Chas. E. Becker, foreman of laborers Christian M. Tagesen, watchman Frank C. Jones, watchman John W. Calloway, storekeeper
MUNICIPAL BOARD OF MANILA (City Hall, Paseo de Bagumbayan) President-Felix M. Roxas
Members-P.G. McDonnell, A. W Hastings, C. W. Hubbell, Timoteo Paez, Tomas Afonso
Secretary-H. L. Fischer
Chief Clerk-L. E. Perry Disbursing Officer-Robt. C. Baldwin
DEPT. OF ENGINEERING AND PUBLIC WORKS City Engineer-Clarence W. Hubbell First Asst. City Engr.-Wilson P. Wylie Supt. of Water Supply and Sewers-John
H. Ayres
Supt. Street Construction and Bridges-L.
1. Patstone
Chief Clerk--Chas. A. Bauer
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Chief-J. E. Harding
Assistant Chief John F. Green Chief Clerk-Ralph P. Cromer
LAW DEPARTMENT City Attorney-Modesto Reyes
1453
Asst. City Attorney-Manuel Camus Prosecuting Attorney-Jesse George 1st Asst. Prosecuting Attorney-L. M.
Southworth
Chief Clerk, Law Dept. - Maximo Salonga
DEPARTMENT OF SCHOOLS
(City Hill)
Miss F. McGee, supervising teacher
Miss E. M. Murdoch,
Mrs. A. J. Neal,
Miss J. L. Durham,
do.
do.
do.
Miss K. Black, supervisor of music
Santa IsabelConvent Mrs.M.DuH.Clagett Hospicio de San José-Miss D. P. Rubio
American School--417 Nozaleda, Paco: W. W. Coon, principal:-Clara R. Donaldson, N. H. Paddock, H. W. Hunter, Charlotte F. Baldwin, N. B. Sebrce, Katherine Williamson, H. D. Stewart, Nellie B. Lyle, Mary B. McClellan, Margaret Graff, Bertha Barin, teachers
Manila High School-172 Victoria, Intramuros: W.J. Colbert, principal:- S. E. Roberts, J. E. Kirtland, L. D. Wharton, T. Ó. Rinker, T. J. Freeman, R. H. Worsley, M. Gaytero, A. S. Kirtland, A. M. Miller, D. U. Vickers, R. F. Colton, F. E. Cooley, J. M. Tibbits, C. E. Neale, S. E. Garrett, Alice J. O'Malley, teachers
Paco Intermediate School-269 Herran, Ermita: Eina A. Brown, principal:- Mary T. Tormey, Ida M. Tormey, E. E. Weston, Adele C. Clagett, teachers Meisic Intermediate School-1, 2, Meisic, Binondo: M. H. O'Malley, principal:- A. J. Gough, Anna H. Carter, J. S. Partridge, Susan D. Ellison, Elva C. Roberts, May Faurote, J. S. Jackson, teachers
Sampaloc Intermediate School-4 Alejandro VI, Sampaloc: C. H. Storms, principals: Juliette C. Wood, Marion Healey, Phoebe Ellison, H. Hastings, Frances Henley, teachers
OFFICIAL Gazette
The Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court
of the Philippine Islands, editor
CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT (Central Office: City Hall, Calle) Bagumbayan
Chief of Police-J. E. Harding
Assistant Chief of Police-John F. Green Detective Department-C. R. Trowbridge Chief Clerk-R. P. Cromer
Court Officer-F. M. Drumm
Capts. Mark Scott, Alexander Harmon, George Seaver, José de Crame, Walter E. Wilson, Vicente Usac
1454
MANILA
POLICE STATIONS--MUNICIPAL BOARD
Luneta-Capt. Mark, Scott,
Precinct 1
commanding Precinct 2: Calle Felige-Capt. Walter E.
Wilson, commanding
Precinct 4: 13 Plaza Santa Ana-Capt. Geo.
Seaver, commanding
Precinct 5: Calle Solis, Tondo, Capt. V.
Usac, commanding
Precinct 6: (Paco) Paz-Capt. José Crame,
commanding
FIRE DEPARTMENT AND STATIONS Headquarters Office-City Hall
Chief Fire Dept.-L, H. Dingman, Hdqrs., Deputy Chief-Clarence F. Samuelson City Electrician-Harold E. Young Chief Clerk--William F. Smith San Nicolas Fire Station
Engine Co. No. 1
Hook and Ladder Co. No. 1. Chemical Engine Co. do. Santa Cruz Fire Station
Office City Electrician Engine Co. No. 2. Paco Fire Station
Engine Co. No. 3
Chemical Engine Co. No. 3 Manila Fire Station Engine Co. No. 4
Chemical Engine Co., No. 4 Tanduay Fire Station Engine Co. No. 5
do.
Chemical Engine Co. No. 2 Hook and Ladder Co. Tondo Fire Station Engine Co. No. 6
San Lazaro Fire Station
Engine Co. No. 7
MUNICIPAL COURT
Judge James M. Liddell
Clerk-A. B. Jones
Justices of the Peace-Pedro Ricafort, José
Martinez Quintero
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Secretary-Hon. Dean C. Worcester Private Secretary-A. O. Zinn
BUREAU OF HEALTH
Dr. Victor G. Heiser, director of health
Dr. A. J. McLaughlin, asst.
Statistical Division
Dr. Manuel Gomes, chief Sanitary Engineering Division
Geo. D. Guerdrum, chief Civil Hospital Division,
do.
Dr. H. Eugene Stafford, chief Benguet Sanitarium Division
Dr. F. W. Vincent, chief San Lazaro Hospital Division
Dr. A. P. Goff
Prison Sanitation Divison
E. C. Christensen, chief Culion Leper Colony Division. Dr. James L. Biggar Clerical Division
M. Chandler, chief Property Division
B. D. Burnham, chief
DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND JUSTICE
Secretary of Finance and Justice-
Gregorio Araneta
Private Sec. Wendell McLaughli Bureau of the Treasury
Insular Treasurer-John L. Burrett Asst. Treasurer --J, L. Manning Bureau of Audits
Auditor W. H. Clarke Bureau of Customs
Insular Collector of Customs-Henry
B. McCoy
Insular Deputy Collector of Customs
-John S. Stanley
Insular Surveyor of Customs-Frank
S. Cairns
Bureau of Internal Revenue
Collector of Internal Revenue John
S. Hord
Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue
Ellis Cromwell Bureau of Justice
Attorney-General-Ignacio Villamor Solicitor-General-Gen. R.
Harvey
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION-
Headquarters: Ayuntamiento
Secretary of Public Instruction-Hon.
Newton W. Gilbert
Private Secretary M. S. Wightman
(For Teachers See under Education)
ABRAHAM, JUAN, Casa Martillo Commission Exposition Permanente de Manufacturas Filipinas--San Jacinto, 47, bajos Hotel de France
AGENCIA EDITORIAL, V. Arias Fernandez,
propietario
ALHAMBER CIGAR & CIGARETTE FACTORY, LD., Novaliches-33, San Miguel; Kuenzle & Streiff, general agents
ALDECOA, J. M. I. de, Merchants
Comerciantes William Urquhart, Don José Ma. Ibanez de Aldecoa Dependientes-Timoteo Fernandez y Falcón, Gregorio San José y Pagtalo, Vicente Valeriano, Marcelino Gel- acio, Juan Marques y Fernandez, Quintin S. Barrandegui, Nicomedes Malacas
ALMACENES
MANILA
GENERALES DE DEPOSITO (Wharves and Godowns)-Murallon, 24 AMERICAN BAZAAR, General Merchandise Store-11 to 19, Escolta; Tel. Ad: Beck
I Beck, proprietor
AMERICAN CIRCULATING LIBRARY
Mrs. N. Y. Egbert, librarian and
superintendent Miss B. A. Dwyer Miss Syrena McKee Mrs. M. G. Whiston Mrs. A. D. E. Elmer Guillermo Restua Mariano Banting
AMERICAN SHOE STORE 30 and 32, Plaza
Goiti
R. A. McGrath, manager
J. L. Palma
Nicholas Solicio Simplicio Yumul
Louisa Buenaventura
Anderson & Co., Wm. H.-25, Plaza
Goiti
Wm. H. Anderson, proprietor Leon Rosenthal, manager Pedro Botelho, bookkeeper Agencies
"Green Island Cement Co., L., H'kong Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co.,Ld. Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago Swift & Company, Chicago
ANGELES, DR. CLARO, B.A., M.D., Medical Practitioner-23, Calle de Vergara, Tanduay, Quiapo
AREVALOY HIJO, B.-Elizondo, 4
ARMSTRONG & MACKAY, Exchange, Freight, Bill, Produce and General Brokers--39, Plaza Cervantes; Tel. Ad: Armstrong
George Armstrong, John A. Mackay
ARRIOLA SAMANILLO, JOSÉ MA., Merchant
-Anloague, 72 and 74
ASAY & Co., E. G., Catalogue House, Dealer in all Classes Merchandise, Whole- sale and Retail-42 Plaza Goiti; Tel. Ad: Asay; Teleph, 121
ATENEO DE MANILA
Rector P. J. Añón Secretario P. E. Marrugat Procurador-P. Rafael Mateu Prefecto del Convictorio-J. Brianso Profesores de 2a. Enseñanza-PP. J. Estrada, M. Guitart, J. Vilallonga, J. Solà, M. Peypoch, R. Benedet, J. Burniol T. Saus
1455
Profesores de la Enseñanza--PP. S.
Vives, M. Sauras, J. Rebull Profesores de Estudios de Aplicacion-
PP. J. P. Solà, F. X. Agreda, J. Alberich, F. Sánchez, J. Briansó, Profesores de Clases de Adorno-P. F. X. Agreda, A. Fuster, J. Massllovet, J. Rodriguez, II. Rivera, J. Buen- camino
ATLANTIC GULF AND PACIFIC COMPANY OF MANILA, Engineers and General Con- tractors; Tel. Ad: Dredging-1, Malecon Drive
Wickham Quinan, president H. P. Linnell, vice do.
AVERY, Dean A., Optician, Proprietor American Optical Co. of Manila-Paris Building, 34 Escolta; Tel. Ad: Amopico; Telephone No. 106
BAER, SENIOR & Co.'s SUCCESSORS, Mer- chants-Calle Novaliches, 13/29, San Miguel; Tel. Ad: Proteccion
Heirs S. Baer (and others)
A. Determann, manager (absent)
P. Meller, acting do.
A. Maack, signs per pro. Ed. Kruymel
E. Appel
O. Levy A. Delfino T. Pico
T. Romero
La Yebana, Cigar and Cigarette Factory Distillery of Essential Oils
Tobacco Plantations-Yeban, Maluno, Lucban Ballao y Sevillana (Ysabela province)
A. Mesa
M. Teves
Agencies
Austrian Lloyd's Steam Navign. Co. Norddeutsche Vers. Ges., Hamburg Bureau Veritas
BALUT ROPE FACTORY
Inchausti & Co., proprietors
BANCO ESPAÑOL FILIPINO
Presidente E. del Saz-Orozeo Vice do. -G. Marzano
Directores R. Mortera, J. Tuason, J. E. Calixto de Loyzaga, E. Briar, F. Roxas, M. Limjap, F. Hartigan, F. Lobel, M. Velaser
M. Rincon, secretario E. Sendres, cajero Pedro Casas, contador P. Reyes, oficial de secretaria D. Garcia, oficial de caja
H. L. Mouroy, oficial de contadoria
1456
MANILA
F. Comas, interventor de cuentas
comutes
BARRETTO & Co., Mchts.-Plaza Calderon
de la Barca, 20
R. E. Barretto
A. M. Barretto
L. Elzingre Dumas, signs per pro, J. Sopungeo
BAZAR FILIPINO, Warlomout Hermanos-
Escolta, 113: San Jacinto, 44 and 46; P. O. Box. 285; Telephone 86
P. Warlomont (Dresden) E. Warlomont (Paris)
H. George, manager, sigus per pro. G. O'Farrell
J. Berthoud
J. Potier
Bazar "Siglo XX."-2 to 16, Plaza del
Conde, Manila
BEAN, MEYER & Co., Ld., Merchants--Calle
Anloague, 107; Tel. Ad: Behin
Directors-Hans. Becker (chairman, Singapore), Ad. Asmus, A. Diehm (Singapore), F. Katenkamp(Batavia), A. G. Faber (Penang), J. M. Menzi, (Manila)
H. Wendt
C. L. Heinemann F. Bernhardt
E. Fahrlander
H. Jacobj
W. Kellinghusen
W. Thoel
J. Kern
C. H. Cateaux
T. Hoelener
J. Schultz
A. Kappeler
Agencies
Deutsch-Asiatische Bank
Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremen Hamburg-Amerika Linie
German Australian Steamship Line East Asiatic Company Russian East Asiatic Co., Ld. Robt. M. Sloman & Company Dampfschiffs Rhederei Union Navigazione Generale Italiana Nord. Vers. Ges., Hamburg
Samarangsche Zee-en-Brand Assu-
rantie Mij.
C
*
Hamburg" Assurance Co. (Sea) Duesseldorfer Algem. Vers. Ges. "Allianz" Vers. Ges.
Nordstern Life Insurance Co.
Albingia Fire Insurance Co. Western Assurance Co.
BIRKETT & HOLDEN, General Brokers,
Stock and Share Brokers
II. Birkett
L. E. Holden Agents in Hongkong
E. S. Kadoorie & Co. E. H. Ray
BREN, R. (Successors), Publishers' Library and Stationery-29 and 31, Magallanes St., Manila
BRITISH and FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY-117, Calle Real, Ermita; Tel. Ad: Testaments
T. Eldridge, sub-agent
BROCKMANN, G., General Commision Mer-
chant-95, Anloague; P. O. Box 385
BRODECK, HENRY, Physician and Surgeon, American Drug Store-107, Escolta
BRYAN, LANDON COMPANY, Mechanical and
Electrical Engineers, General Contrac tors-25 Plaza Goiti; Teleph. 648
ki
CABLENEWS AMERICAN, THE," Daily Newspaper-Cablenews Building
F. Booman, editor
CALIFORNIA-MANILA LUMBER COMMERCIAL Co., Lumber and Hardware, 293-295, Calle San Miguel, Manila
J. E. Norton, manager
CÁMARA DE COMERCIO ESPAÑOLA DE
FILIPINAS
Presidente-José Rosales
CAMPBELL, G. E., Attorney-at-law and
Notary Public-506, Calle Lemery
CASTLE BROTHERS, WOLF & SONS, Importers and Exporters, Shipping and Commis sion Merchants-31, Plaza del Padre Moraga; Tel. Ad : Wolfcastle
M. F. Loewenstein, manager Agencies
Pacific Mail Steamship Company Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Apcar & Co's., Steamers, Calcutta Gulf Line, Ltd., London Nautilus Steam Shipping Co., Ltd, L'Union Fire Insurance Co. of Paris Continental Marine Insurance Co., of
Mannheim, Germany
CAMARA, DE COMERCIO FILIPINA-Plaza
Cervantes, 39, Binondo
V. D. Fernandez, presidente. Rafael Reyes, vice-presidente R. Aguado, secretario-contador Vicente Reyes, do.
Angal José,
R. B. Genato,
do.
vocales
Tiburcio Medina Cué, do.
I
MANILA
Mannel Cuyugan, Manro Prieto,
vocales
do.
CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA,
AND CHINA-Plaza de Cervantes, 1
James Forbes, agent
W. L. Ramsay, accountant
R. Macpherson, sub-accountant
L. G. Jolly
do.
H. T. Stapleton
do.
K. R. Coullie,
do.
W. Cantlay,
do.
P. F. Reyes, chief clerk
V. Genato,
clerk
R. Gonzalez, do.
E. Gonzalez,
do.
C. Caballero, do.
R. Montes,
do.
G. Llamas,
do.
J. Genato,
do.
J. Garcia,
do.
CHANDLER & PITT, Real Estate and General Brokers-34, Escolta; Tel. Ad: Realty
Henry Chandler Harold M. Pitt
#
Tek Kee Hong
Choa Tek Hee, Importer, Exporter and General Merchant 107, 117, Calle San Vicente; P. O. Box. 766, Manila, P. I.; Tel. Ad: Choatekhee
Choa Tek Hee, manager
Choa Siew Taw, assistant manager Choa Kong Bee, custom agent
CHURCHES AND MISSIONS
AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY-14, 12, Isla
de Romero; Tel. Ad: Bibles
Rev. J. L. McLaughlin, agent
AMERICAN CHURCH (Methodist Episcpl.) Rev. Isaac B. Harper, pastor; church: cor. Nozaleda and San Luis; re- sidence: 120, Nozaleda
AMERICAN EPISCOPAL MISSIONARY DIS.
TRICT OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
Bishop-The Right Rev. Charles H. Brent, D.D.; Address: Bishop's House, 253, Calle Nazaledo, Manila; Tel. Ad: Bishopsted, Club Colum- bia; Telph. No. 919
CATHEDRAL OF ST. MARY AND ST. JOHN-
Ermita, Manila
Bishop-Rt. Rev. C. H. Brent, D.D.;
Tel. Ad: Bishopsted Dean and Reetor-Very Rev. Murray Bartlett, D.D.; Tel. Ad: Cathrec
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF MANILA (For English speaking people)-Calle
[457
Padre Faura and Dakota St., Ermita
Rev. S. B Rossiter, D.D., pastor
MISION DE LA COMPAÑIA DE JESUS
Superior de la Mision-R. P. Fidel
Mir
Secretario--P. M. Guitart
Procurador G'ral--P. M. Suarez Iglesia en Manila-La de S. Ignacio
Calle del Arzobispo
Establecimientos en Manila-Ateneo
de Manila, Seminario Central de S. Francisco Javier .
Observatorio de
Manila
Misiones en Mindanao
En Vigan: el Seminario
En Baguio: Observatorio "El Mirador" En Culion: La Leproseria
CLARK & Co., Scientific Opticians--76, Escolta; Cable Ad: Clerkhager; Tel. No. 1098.
COLBY & Co., Incorporated Importers and
Exporters-95, Anloague
Herbert Hellis, general manager
COLONIAL CLUB-365, Real, Paco
President--C. B. Shaw
COLONIAL HOTEL-219, Calle Real, Walled
City
COMPAÑIA GENERAL DE TABACOS DE FILI- PINAS (Philippine General Tobacco Com- pany)--Central Offices: Marques de Comillas; Telph. No.131; P.O. Box No.143
Antonio Correa, general manager
José Rosales, sub-manager
Carlos de Las Heras, C.E., p.p. the
general manager
Geo. E. Weber,
Louis Bardot,
do.
do.
Antonio Malvehy, secretary-general
Carlos Aparici, chief accountant
Arturo Iznart, asst, secretary
J. M. Aparici, cashier
A. V. Correa,
Manuel Gonzalez,
industrial dept.
do.
do.
J. Hernandez Sancho,
Luis Llanso, shipping dept.
Andrés Pageo,
Candido Diez,
Francisco Carol,
do.
do.
do.
Manuel B. Asensi, import'on dept. D. Urmeneta, cigar dept. Lorenzo Correa,
do.
Lorenzo Bello, insurance dept.
Felix Massana,
do.
José Espoy, Custom House broker. "La Flor de la Isabela" Cigar Factory,
Luis G. Espoy, manager
Fernando Montaño,
Emilio Maffei, accountant A. Martin
46
1458
J. Fernandez José Gonzalez
José Blanco
Tobacco Leaf Warehouse
Baldomero Fernandez
Machinery Works
R. Irureta-Goyena, c.E. Provincial Houses
MANILA
Tuguegarao Frederico Correa, re-
presentative of Cagayan Valley Cagayan Juan M. Perez (Tugue-
garao)
Cagayan-Miguel Macias (Lalloc) Isabela de Luzon-Rafael Rodriguez
(Ilagan)
Ilocos Norte-José Luengo (Laoag) Union-Luis Folch (Carlatan) Tarlac José Ramos, San Miguel
(Apartadero)
Tayabas-Luis Mendez, Lucena and
Atimonan
Panay y Negros-Carlos A. Fer-
nandiz (Iloilo)
Cebu-Cristobal Garcia (Cebu) Albay Francisco Balbas (Legaspi) Leyte Luis Castello (Tacloban) Samar-Jose Salvador (Borongan) Laguna--A. S. de Tejada, Santa
Cruz
Tobacco Plantations
Isabela de Luzon-A. Orros, adminis- trator, San Antonio Colony (Ilagan). Isabela de Luzon-Ignacio Valcarcle, admnr., Sta Isabela Colony (Ilagan) Isabela de Luzon-A. Perez, admnr.,
San Luis Colony (Ilagan)
COMPAÑIA MADERERA DE LUZON (Luzon
Lumber Co., Ld.)-Office: 61, Anloague
COMPAÑIA MARITIMA STEAMSHIP COMPANY
Smith, Bell & Co., Ld., general mngers. Steamers Bolinao, Brutus, Belgika, Francisco Reyes, N. S. del Carmen, Romulus, Neil Macleod, Steam Tender Carmen
COMPANIA MINERA DE COMPOSTELA (Com-
postela Coal Mine Company)
R. Reyes, director-administrador, con
residencia en Manila
Jaime Vañó, administrador de Cebú
COMPAÑIA TRASATLANTICA ESPAÑOLA
Compañia General de Tabacos de Filipinas, Calzada del Marques de Comillos, agents
CONNELL BROS. Co.-25 Plaza Goiti
CONSULATES
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY-21, Novalishes
BELGIUM (Consulate-General) - Calle Echague (Lock & Davis Building)
BRAZIL-97, Calle Marina (Ermita)
CHILE-Office: Compania Tabacalero:
Residence: San Marcelino, 64
CHINA 48 Plaza Calderon de la Barca, B
Consul General--Yang Shih-Chun Secretary-Tang Yu-nien.
DENMARK
Consul-R. H. Wood (absent) Acting Consul-C. Kingcome
FRANCE
Consul-G. Bertrand
Vice-Consul-Comte L. de Sieyes de
Veynes
GERMANY-346, Calle Real Malate; Tel Ad: Germania; P. O. Box 441; Telph. No. 499
Acting Consul-L. Heintze Secretary A. Raedler
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul General-R. de B. Layard Act. Vice-Consul-M. Paske-Smith
Pro-Consul--C. Kingcone Vice-Consul-E. St. Clair Purdon
(Iloilo)
Vice-Consul-J. T. Knowles (Cebu)
ITALY Noria, 59
Consul-Cav. F. Reyes
JAPAN-Calle Iris, No. 776
LIBERIA 733, Sta. Mesa
Consul-Ricardo Summers
MEXICO--Care of Comp. Genl. Tabacos
NETHERLANDS-277, Muelle de la Reina
Consul-P. K. A. Meerkamp va
Embden
NORWAY 319, Muelle del Rey Consul W. G. Stevenson
PORTUGAL Carenero
RUSSIA
Acting Vice-Consul-Comte Leo
de Sieyes de Veynes
SPAIN-Alix, 162
Consul General-Arturo Baldasano.
y Topete
Vice-Consul-Joaquim de Travesade Chancellor--C, Garcia Hidalgo
SWEDEN-319, Muelle del Rey
Actg. Consul-W. G. Stevenson
SWITZERLAND -28, David
Consul-E. Sprüngli
Vice-Consul--J. Preisig
URUGUAY-Calle Real Malate
―
MANILA
7,
COOPER & Co., H. R., Machinery Brokers and Commission Agents No. Plaza Moraga; Tel. Ad: Coopcoy
H. R. Cooper, manager
-
CORDOBA, LUCIANO, "Sombrereria Espa- ñola," Importador de Sombrerosy calza- do-Escolta, 28
COSMOPOLITAN FURNITURE Co., THE, Furniture Dealers and House Fur- nishers 125 Escolta; Tel. Ad: Emba; Telephone 8".
DE BERRI'S STUDIO-34 Escolta, Paris
Building
DEAN, H. Y., Importer and Commission
Agent-86, Calle Rosario
DENNISTON & STANFIELD, General Brokers -Room 15, Paris Building, 34, Escolta
M. C. Denniston
I. A. Stanfield
DIVISION COLD STORAGE, Bureau of Supply
Chief-Cliff C. Barton
Cold Storage, Manufacturers of Ice
and Distilled Water
Dos HERMANOS, Cigar Factory-Gaga- langin, No. 171; P.O. Box No. 259; Tel. Ad: Ethdor
Duck & Co., General Import and Export
Merchants-89, Anloague
EARNSHAW & Co., MANUEL, Marine En- gineers, Ship Repairers, and Founders- 15, Barcelona Street, Binondo; P. O. Box 282; Tel. Ad: Mearnshaw
M. Earnshaw
T. Earnshaw
J. Moreno Domenech
D. Earnshaw, Jr.
EDUCATIONAL
DEPARTMENT OF SCHOOLS
Superintendents
G. A. O'Reilly, Manila
G. W. Caulkins, Albay
L. B. Bewley, Ambos Camarines (actg.)
S. M. Graves, Antique
H. H. Buek, Batangas
do.
Guy, Clinton, Bataan (acting) W. B. Beard, Bohol H. A. Bordner, Bulacan Pius E. Burns, Cagayan
G. E. Walk, Capiz and Romblon E. H. Hammond, Cavite
J. J. Coleman, Cebu
P. S. O'Reilly, Ilocos Norte
H. Borgstadt, Ilocos Sur
C. H. Magee, Iloilo
1459
H. M. Wagenblass, Isabela R. G. McLeod, Leguna (acting) Wm. F. Montavon, La Union W. W. Marquardt, Leyte C. W. Franks, Mindoro (acting) C. N. Cameron, Moro Province C. R. Moss, Mountain Division W. K. Bachelder, Misamis, (acting) C. D. Chipple, Nueva Ecija E. J. Nurphy, Nueva Vizcaya W. A. Wedgworth, Occidental Negros C. E. Wright, Oriental Negros Geo. N. Anderson, Pampanga (acting) E. G. Turner, Pangasinan
G. H. Hall, Rizal
W. R. Rosenkrans, Samar
J. F. Connolly, Sorsogon and Masbate
(acting)
C. M. Moore. Surigao R. H. Necly, Tarlac
H. S. Townsend, Tayabas J. H. Jenkins, Zambales Howard Long, Palawan (acting)
T. W. Thomson, Philipine Normal
School (acting)
G. N. Briggs, Phil. School of Arts and R. H. Wardall, Phil. School of Com-
merce
Miss Delight Rice, School for Deaf
and Blind
Division of Property
J. L. Stewart, property officer S. W. Ford
C. Oasan
Mrs. M. L. Cromér J. Gonzalez M. Javier P. Natividad S. Sagayadan M. Javillonar Mrs. A. F. Everett
Mrs. A. R. Giovannini
A. Bautista
G. Palomo
S. Gallardo
C. Ramos
J. A. Erquiaga
O. C. Hansen
H. Valderas
Accounting
C. M. Colton, chief accountant
C. O. Hagen
F. E. Cofren
C. A. Skattebol
46*
1460
Mrs. L. S. Cass B. Roque V. Raon
Mrs. P. de Aspillera
L. Tuazon C. Vinson
G. Salvador
R. Encarnacion
R. Arriola
O. J. Nacionales
R. Serranzana
E. S. Emery B. Leuterio F. Hoffman
Records
W. Dubois, chief record
J. Reyes G. Dancel J. Gelisan V. Nolasco I. de Leon V. Calinog N. Paguinto T. Salazar
Mrs M. Arriola
Miss P. de Guia
Miss F. Marcelo
Miss M. Candolaria
Miss B. de les Santos
Z. Antonio
F. Oasan
G. N. Brink, acting director F. R. White, asst.
do.
F. L. Crone, chief clerk
E. E. Fisher, division supt. Mrs. A. B. Farrow
Mr. E. H. Weguer
Miss M. Stolder J. B. Shouldice
J. Burgosm
P. Avisado
M. Artigas
Philippine School of Commerce
H. W. Ralph, principal
J. M. Burke
P. Bagunu
J. A. Christensen
T. F. Cass
C. Derbyshire
T. Garcia
D. I. Huff
G. Leonard
H. H. Miller
L. McKee
E. G. O'Malley H. K. O'Malley J. H. E. Scott J. G. Garcia
Philippine Normal School George W. Beattie, superintendent
Miss J. P. Alfaro
Miss D. Asuncion
Miss N. C. Barrington
Miss J. Cauas
MANILA
G. Cordova Austin Craig
Miss Mary B. Crans Miss Martha C. Cretcher J. L. Dryden
Mrs. M. E. Gordon Dunster
Mrs. Frederica B. Davis Mrs. M. M. Dexter Dean S. Fansler
Mrs. Harriott Ely Fansler
Miss Mary H. Fee
Mrs. H. M. Freeman
Mrs. C. M. Graham
A. J. Granados
J. G. Garcia
Mrs. Mattie W. Harris Wm. S. Harris
P. C. Hays M. R. Holman P. F. Jernegan M. Kalaw S. C. Kelleher Miss Charlotte
W. de Leon
A. Livioko
Miss E. M. Lucas
G. A. Malcolm
C. Manalang
Mrs. B. J. Marshall
Miss A. Martinez
Mrs. E. F. Miller
P. Punzalan
J. T. Ramos Mrs. E. J. Rinker Miss M. L. Rivera R. A. Rowley Miss L. C. Rudberg Miss C. T, Robbins F. T. Rogers F. Segadoy Morales Dr. W. R. Shaw P. H. Stevens Miss F. A. Tirona S. Torralba
Miss S. A. Wygant V. Yamzon
Philippine School of Arts and Trades
B. N. George, superintendent Zacarias Castillo
Frank W. Cheney A. Espiritu Gonzalo Garcia Herman Gunther B. F. Hastings Harry Hewitt George Hofstetter Amado Ignacio Antonio Nera
H. Lawrence Noble Senicio Perlas J. G. Miller H. Pecson R. Ambrosio Casiano Romans
R. W. Taylor Charles Stewart B. M. Tibbits Amando Viola
Isabelo Tampinco M. Martinez G. L. Parks
MANILA
ELECTRICAL SUPPLY CO., INC.--16 and 28, Plaza Moraga, Manila: Cable Adi Merchman; Codes, A.B.C. 5th Ed., West- ern Union; Telph. 459; P. O. Box 761
EMPRESA DE POMPAS FUNEBRES-Calle de
Sta., No. 80, Plaza de Guiapo
ERLANGER & GALINGER, Importers-155,57, Escolta; Tel. Ad: Erlanger; Teleph. No. 438
S. Erlanger I. Erlanger
EXPORT AND IMPORT LUMBER Co., Manu- facturers of and Dealers in Native Lumber, Oregon Pine, Doors, Windows and Mouldings-51, Calle Tanduay;Cable Ad: Cahoy; Telephone 363; P. O. Box 433 Wm. W. Payne, president and manager
Far Eastern Review, The, Monthly Journal devoted to Engineering, Com- merce and Finance in the Far East; Publication Office: McCullough Building, Plaza de Goiti; Tel. Ad: Review; Telph. 554; New York Office: 91, Wall Street
Geo. Bronson Rea, M.E., publisher and
editor
FARMACIAIBANEZ-CalleGeneral Izquierdo, 401-403, corner de Diaz 160, Trozo
FARMACIA DE S. FERNANDO--111, Binondo
J. Jimenez, propietario
FELIX ULLMANN -Escolta, 71-75
FERNANDEZ HERMANOS, Merchants, Steam- ship Owners and Commission Agents, 39, Plaza Cervantes, P. O. 805, Tel Ad. Fernandez Manila
V. D. Fernandez J. F. Fernandez R. J. Fernandez Davao Branch
Feliciano Inigo José B. Pascual Jacobo Ponel Jose Fernandez Leoncio Benavent Eliseo de los Santos Antonio Panis
M. Rivera
M. Bautista
T. Virtusio
J. Memijie
T. San José J. Maten
G. Maten
1401
Owners of S. S. Fernandez Hermanos,
767 tons
Owners of S.S. Islas Filipinas, 935 tons Agencies
The Atlas Assurance Co., Ld.
The North British and Mercantile
Insurance Co.
Sociedad Anomina Cros
The British Dominions Marine Ins.
Co., Ltd.
The Ocean Marine Ins. Co., Ld.
FERNANDEZ, V. ARIAS, Importador y Exportador-Arias Building, Calle Car- riedo, No. 38
Findlay & Co., Merchants-2, Calle
Carenero, Binondo
W. Benson, manager
W. Swann, M.I.E.S., M.IN.A. A. W. Nicol B. Brown Jas. Hobbs E. Halden W. Scott
Iloilo Branch
Jas. Houston
Managers of
Findlay Millar Timber Co.
Agencies
"Northern Assurance Company
North British & Mercantile Insce. Co. Palatine Insurance Company, Ld. London Assurance Corporation
Millars' Karri and Jarrah Co. (1902), Ld. Milner's Safe Co., Ld. Thomas Perry & Son, L. Taikoo Sugar Refining Co.
Alsensche Portland Cement Fabriken New York Lubricating Oil Co. Hongkong & Whampon Dock Co., Lủ. Harvey Engineering Co., Ld. British Fibro-Cement Syndicate. Sanderson Bros. & Newbould, Ltd. D. H. & G. Haggie
Atlas Metal & Alloys Co., Ltd. Thos, Firth & Sons, Ld.
John Brown & Co., Ld.
FLEMING D. M., Public Accountant-95,
Anlongue
FORBES, MUNN & Co., Mchts.-Cle David, 42
D. M. Forbes (London)
D. Munn,
C. H. Hawkins
do.
W. M. Seaton (Iloilo)
וי
1462
MANILA
Agencies
Lancashire Insurance Company London andl Lancashire Fire Insce. Co.
FRESSEL & Co., C., Successors, Importers and Manufacturers of Cement Tiles, Pipes, &c.-Calle Nueva, 118 to 122, and Pasig River (Factory)
G. Ludewig
FROEHLICH & KUTTNER, Merchants-An- loague, 82; Tel. Ad: Kuttner: P. O. Box 452
(Berlin)
L. Kuttner Eduard Arnhold do.
E. Zuellig, signs per pro. P. Nagel, do. Alfred Mehlhose (Iloilo) W. Neumark (Cebu) J. Eberle
M. Protzen
E. Nievergelt
P. Schuppisser T. Waelchli
Hermann Ventzke
L. Feischhacker
Head Office-Berlin
Branch Houses Iloilo and Cebu Agencies
The Lancashire Insurance Co.
Merged in The Royal Insurance Co.,
of Liverpool
Sindicato Marselles de Seguros Mar. General Marine Insurce. Co., Dresden
GARCHITORENA, JOSÉ DE, Constructor de
Coches
GARCIA, ANTONIO, Grabador en Metales y
Sellos en Cautchouc, S. Agustin, 32
GARRY, CHAS F., Surveyor to the Record
of American and Foreign Shipping Agencies
U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey U. S. Hydrographic Office A. J. Morse & Sons' Diving Gear The Caslon Signal Co. of N. Y.
GERMANIA (Antes Chofré & Co.)-Alix, 246; Sampaloc Bodegas y Despacho: 121, Escolta
Prorietario-A. Chicote
GERMANN & CO., LD., Importers, Exporters and Engineers-Calle San Jacinto, 137; Engineering and Electric Shops, Pasaje de Perez No. 3; Tel. Ad: Federation
Otto Luyken (Hamburg)
R. M. Bergmann (do.)
R. Germann
(do.)
O. Ranft, manager
M. Hadenfeldt, signs per pro.
G. de Vivanco
J. Braun H. Beisner K. A. Strohm Walter Thiele
Henry G. Weston
Alb. Sidler, consulting engineer K. Leddies, engineer
J. Haas, assistant engineer H. Ruez
E. Mendez
Agencies
"Federal Marine Insurance Co., Zurich La Baloise Fire Insurance Co., Basel Aachen and Munich Fire Insurance
Co., Aachen
Managers of "Helios" Cigar Manu-
facturing Co.
"GERMINAL," Cigar, Cigarette and Cut
Tobacco Factory
Comlilas; P. O. Box 3
4, Marquez de
Dr. Ariston Bautista, presidente de
la Junta Directiva
Mauro Prieto, administrador gerente
GIBBS & KINCAID, Attorneys and Coun-
sellors-at-Law-26, Plaza de Cervantes
W. A. Kincaid Allison D. Gibbs
GILCHRIST, GEORGE, Surveyor to Bureau
Veritas and Local Insurance Offices
GONZALEZ, R. C., Pawnbroking Agency-
Calle Jolo, 269
R. C. Gonzalez M. Tenorio Angel P. Alhins
GRANT, & Co., LD., Consulting and Con- tracting Engineers-68, Dulumbayan; Tel. Ad: Louisgran; Western Union and A. B. C. Codes; Telep. 479
Louis T. Grant, president and general
manager
GROSSMANN & Co.-42 Escolta; Rubber Stamps, Seals, Dies, etc.; Telephone 2201; Cable Ad: Grossmann; P. O. Box 541
GSELL, CARLOS, Merchant-Calle Noria, 95; Proprietor of the Mariposa Felt and Straw Hat Factory, Luzon Umbrella Factory, Philippine Match Factory (Mandaloyon)
Carlos Gsell (Zurich), proprietor Henry Alfred Gsell (Paris), do. Charles Ott, general manager Hat Factory
Maria Geissmann Umbrella Factory
Hans Dietiker
Match Factory
Paul Viert
MANILA
GUTIERREZ HERMANOS, Comerciantes, Al- macienistas, Exportadores e Importa- dores-Beaterio, 116, 122
HARTIGAN, MARPLE & SOLIGNAC, At- torneys and Counsellors-at-Law-2, Calle Arzobispo; Teleph. 305
HASHIM & Co., N. T., Importers, Exporters General, Contractors and Commission Agents-Escolta 93 to 07: P. O. Box 120; Telephone 56; Tel. Ad: Hashim
HEACOCK CO., H. E., Wholesale and Retail Jewellers and Importers; Tel. Ad: Dial-Calle Echague
"HELIOS" CIGAR MANUFACTURING Co.-
Calle Lemery, 569
Germann & Co., Ltd., lessees
HERRMANN, M. & R., Consulting Mining. Engineers and General Agents-An- loague 95; Tel. Ad: Montañia; P. O. Box 196
Dr. Raf Herrmann
M. G. Herrmann
Managers of Herrmann & Co., Lumber
Merchants, San Miguel, 289
The California Bakery, 140, Leveriza Agency
Germanischer Lloyd
HIELO DE MANILA--Fabrica de S. Miguel,233 Junta Directiva J. T. Macleod (pres- idente), F. Reyes, R. Reyes, T. H. P. de Tavera, M. Earnshaw (suplentes), B. Baldwin (administrador general)
HIJOS DE J. S. TUASON, Merchants and Commission Agents-Calle Carriedo, 106
A Tuason
+
M. Tuason
José Leon E. Lara D. Adriano
D. de Leon
C. Valenzuela
S. Domingo
Aftencies
Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Ld. Netherlands Fire Insurance Co. Batavia Sea & Fire Insurance Co. General Accident Fire & Life Assce.
Corporation, Ld.
Palatine Insurance Co., Ld.
HIKE SHOE PALACE
W. D. Green, manager
J. F. Cabral, salesman
M. Silvyan,
L. A. Recci,
Paz Araulla,
do.
do.
do.
1463
HONGKONG AND SHANGHAI BANKING COR-
PORATION-29, Carenero
A. G. Stephen, manager J. Kennedy, accountant
A. W. J. Watt E. M. Knox R. P. Thursfield H. M. Morris G. A. Todrick J. A. Silva M. Gavito Y. Lerma R. Arellano F. M. Barros I. Franco F. V. Freire B. Paez V. Pacia
S. Deala
G. Tolentino
A. Reyes
C. Limjap
E. Pingol
INSULAR LUMBER Co.-3, Lack & Davis
Building
A. Burlingame Johnson, manager
Earl Johnson, supt. mills, Cadiz, P. I.
INSULAR, LA, Cigar and Cigarette Factory
-Binondo Square, No. 20
J. Sta. Marina, proprietor
Hon. A. M. Barretto, general manager R. E. Barretto,
do.
John D. McGavin, sub-manager
S. Mercado, accountant
V. Velez, asst, do.
L. Mercado, cashier Isabelo Pablo, asst. do. L. Massip, secretary
M. Moreno, booking order clerk M. Eceiza, export department G. Primelles (absent)
J. Alvarez
Sales Room
R. Sta. Maria
M. Pablo
S. Amedo
Ciyar Workshop
R. Pando, inspector
D. S. Eulalia
L. Camara
M. Mercado
A. Moreta
J. Valencia
I. Santos
C. Cruz
Cigarette and Cut Tobacco Workshop
Emilio Capulong, inspector
J. Salcedo
A. Baldonado
T. Karaig
1464
MANILA
Steam and Electric Machinery Department
B. Ariznavarreta, chief engineer T. Lincaco,
do.
Overseers-J. Gonzalez, A. Marquez, V. Parado, V. Limeaco, L. Agustin, C. Dizon, S. Cobus, T. Espiritu, C.Mo- desto, P Hilario, J. Teodorico, N. Escalona, D. Lafuente
Tobacco Leaf Warehouse
A. Pando
A. Gonzalez
V. Lopez
B. Reyes
A. Pando
Carpenter Department
B. Barahona
N. Raimundo
Branch Houses
F. Gonzalez, Ilagan, Isabela de Luzon
J. Perez Stella,
do.
M. Ventura Ayala,
do.
J. Las Heras,
do.
S. Tugas,
do.
V. Salinas,
do.
J. Garcia,
do.
R. Goffud,
do.
E. Ventura Osete
do.
A. Pavon
do.
J. Fábregas
do.
A. Herrero
do.
Sanen Palao, Tuguegaro
P. Caperas, Catagganman
J. Vicient, Baggao
C. Ebad, Iguig
N. Sanchez
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION--
15, 17, 19 and 21, Piaza Moraga
P. G. Eastwick, manager
T. B. Norrie, accountant
S. R. Brown, pro accountant
W. B. Webb,
do.
E. E. Wing,
do.
C. J. Donnell,
do.
R. G. Webber,
do.
R. E. Shaw,
do.
C. F. Drexel,
do.
Sub-agency, Cebu
S. Williams, sub-agent Iloilo--W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld.,
Agents
INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS -76, Escolta; Technical Training by Mail; Cable address: Intertext; Tele- phone No. 1098
A. R. Hager, general agent for Philip- pines, Japan, and China (Shanghai)
KELLER & Co., LD, ED. A., Merchants
Calle Anloague, 98; Tel. Ad: Edakeller; P.O.B. 313
Head Office at Zurich, Switzerland Wegelin, president (Zurich)
F. Schwarzenbach, manager F. E. Zuellig, signs per pro. Ed. Keller,
A. Ahr C. Abegg W. M. Keller A. Wueterich P. Gossweiler P. Tanner E. Amberg
Agencies
do.
Rheinish Westphal Lloyd
Schweiz Transport Versich. Ges. Rhenania Transport Vers. Ges., Colu Helvetia General Insurance Co. Vaterländische Transport Vers. Ges, Neuchâteloise, Soc. Suisse d'Asur. Providencia, Allgem Vers. Ges. Swiss Marine Ince. Companies Wilhelma in Magdeburg, Allgemaine,
Vers. Ges,
KER & Co., Merchants-- Callejon de $. Gabriel, 7; Ker, Bolton & Co. (Glasgow and London
J. M. Underwood
G. A. Main
R. R. Reid (Iloilo)
J. B. Reid (Cebu)
S. M. McCrea
H. B. Foster (absent) A. Yuill
J. W. Howells
J. Hair
W. C. Naismith N. M. Robertson Barnes
J. N. Reyes R. Beltran Branch Houses
Ker & Co., Iloilo
Ker & Co., Cebu
Syme & Co., Singapore
Pitcairn, Syme & Co., Batavia Pitcairn, Syme & Co., Soerabaya Pitcairn, Syme & Co., Samarang Agencies
Bank of New South Wales Shell Transport and Trading Co. Asiatic Petroleum & Co., Ld. Lloyd's
Italian Lloyd's
Liverpool Underwriters' Association Salvage Association, London Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Sun Insurance Office Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld. La Foncière Compagnie d'Assurances Guardian Insurance Co., Ld. British Imperial Oil Co., Ld. Comité de Assureurs Maritimes
Do. do. de Paris Clan Line of Steamers
KFEEDLER, DR. H. D.-Calle Carriedo
MANILA
KUENZLE & STREIFF, Importers, Exporters, Calle David, 43; Tel. Ad: Kuenzle; P. O. Box 301
A. Kuenzle (Zurich)
H. Streiff
P. Hube
do.
P. A. Meyer, signs per-pro. E. Steiger,
A. Krebs,
A. Stricker
do.
do.
J. J. Schlittler (Zamboanga)
A. Huber
H. Staub
W. Teucher
M. Guignard
R. Steinacher
E. Forter
R. Pfund
H. Gasser (Zamboanga)
E. Schneider
Head Office at Zurich, Switzerland
Branch Office, New York, U.S.A.
Branch Houses at Iloilo, Cebu and
Zamboanga Agency
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co.,
Hamburg
LA COMERCIAL, Fabrica de Tabacos y
Cigarrillos (See Philippine Co., Ld.)
LEVY HERMANOS, LA ESTRELLA DEL NORTE,
Jewellers, Watches, Fancy Goods, Motor cars, Gramophones, Pianos, and General Importers 46, 48 and 50, Escolta, Manila; Tel Ad: Evely; A.B.C. Code; Automobile Dept. and Garage: 160-62-64 Calle Gam- dara; Telph, 164
Raphael Levy, proprietor (Paris)
Leon Dreyfus, inanager
Leopold Kahn,
do.
Henry Levy, manager, manf. Dept. Engene Gerard, manager Auto.
Rep. Dept
Albert Meyer, head watchmaker Laureauo Mañalac, head bookkeeper Julien Blum Jules Dreyfus
Maurice Kabn
Isidore Lévy
Marcel Blum
Emanuel Strauss
Louis Cohn
Maximo E. Kleczewski
Felix Baer
Henry Nicot
"LA CONCHA" BOTTON FACTORY--P. O. Box
262, Manila; Tel. Ad: Schwinges; Telph. Office: 966; Factory: 967
General Manager-Cl. Schwinges
LA FAVORITA, Cigar Manufactory
(See Philippine Co., Ld.)
LA MINERVA, Cigar Factory
P. O. Box. 272; Tel. Ad: Minerva
C. D. Watt, manager
1465
LA CONFIANCE, Fire Insurance, Paris
The West of Scotland Insurance Office,
Ld., Glasgow
The Easex and Suffolk Fire and Accident
Offices, Colchester and London Russell & Co., Ld., London, Butterfly
Milk
LA PUERTA DEL SOL, Bazaar-Escolta, 49
J. F. Ramirez, proprietor
LA RIZAL CIGARETTE FACTORY---Sacristia No. 81, Binondo; de La Viuda da Tan Auco
LA YEBANA, Cigar and Cigarette Factory,
(Vide Baer, Senior & Co, Successors)
"LIBERTAS, "Evening Newspaper-90,
Aduana Street; P. O. Box 160
Angel de Goicouria, directory admr.
Aurelio Mendieta, reporter
Ramon L. Briones, assistant magr. Lorenzo Briones, clerk
LLOYD'S
Ker & Co., agents
LOYZAGA Y AGEO, JOSÉ DE, Printer and Pro- prietor of "Mercantile Review," and "El Comercio," Afternoon Paper-131, Calle de Anda (Intramuros)
Jose de Loyzaga y Ageo
P. B. Ibañez
J. Condle
J. Serna
LUKBAN, DR. JUSTO, B.A., M.D., Medical Practitioner-92, Dulumbayan Street, Sta. Cruz
LUTZ & Co., General Importers and Insce. Agents-P. O. Box 604; Tel. 702-Calle Fafard 7 (Binondo); Tel. Ad: Acelutz
Head Office, A. C. Lutz & Co., Zurich,
Switzerland
Alfred C. Lutz, partner (Zurich) Hans R. Lutz, partner
F. Mueller, signs per pro. A. Auer, assistant
G. Renz,
do.
H. Bolthauser, assistant M. Fasser,
Agency in Iloilo Findlay & Co.
do.
1466
Agents for:
MANILA
The State Fire Insurance Co., Ld.,
Liverpool
The Bombay Fire and Marine Insce. Co., Ld., merged in The General Accident Fire and Life Assce. Corp., Ld., London
The Netherlands Lloyd (Fire Ince.),
Batavia
LUZON SUGAR REFINING COMPANY, Ld.-
Refinery at Malabon
Smith, Bell & Co., agents
LUZON STEVEDORING Co.-P. O. Box 582; Tel. 3 2 S. & P. Bldg., near Captain of Port's Bldg., San Nicolás (See Simmie & Pierce)
LUZON UMBRELLA FACTORY-Calle Noria, 95,
Carlos Gsell, proprietor
MACKE & Co., Wholesale Wine and Spirit Merchants-62-72 Escolta, Binondo; Tel. 190; Cable Address: Mackeco
B. H. Macke, partner E. L. P. Macke, partner
D. Samson, manager M. S. Legaspi, order clerk Lusio A. Ciudad, clerk Jacinto Nicolas, stenographer Toribio Mariano, collector
MACLEOD, JOHN T., Merchant, Commission Agent and Share Broker-95, Anloague Street; Cable Ad: Macaulay
MACLEOD & Co., Exporters of Manila Hemp
-311, Muelle del Rey
W. S. Macleod
H. L. Daniels (Chicago)
C. Detzer
do.
J. W. Cairns, assistant manager
H. Forst,
do.
H. E. Price, signs per pro.
S. M. Jones
F. J. Compton
H. J. Jones
S. H. Cyler
B. Cogan (Cebu)
E. A. Kingcome
H. B. Walker
J. C. Palty
do.
F. C. Laing (London) L. L. Spellman (New York)
Agencies
Fall River Line of Steamers Underwriting and Agency Association Board of Underwriters of New York Union Assurance Society (Fire), London Imperial Marine Insce. Co. of Tokyo Central Insurance Co., Ld. (Fire) Great Northern Steamship Co. Bank Line of Steamers
Macondray & Co., Merchants--Plaz Cervantes-18, Barry Baldwin
Carlos Young, signs per pro. N. Baldwin J. H. Mader Chas. G. Saill R. D. Young José Purya F. Galian E. M. Wood
Agencies
Barber Line
Portland and Asiatic S. S. Co. Eastern & Australian S. S. Co., Ld. Dodwell and Co.'s New York Line Atlas Assurance Co., Ld.
World Marine Insurance Co.
MANILA BILLPOSTING & ADVERTISING CO.- 3-5, Isla Romero; Tel. Ad: Dow; P.0. Box 384
MANILA COPY COMPANY -65,
T. B. Tolman, proprietor
Nobiztondo
MANILA COUNTRY CLUB-Racceourse at
Pasig
MANILA ELECTRIC RAILROAD & LIGHT Co. Calles San Marcelino and Zobel, Tel. Ad: Meralco
Charles M. Swift, president (Detroit,
U.S.A.)
Frederic H. Reed, vice-president (New
York City)
T. F. Wickham, secretary and treasurer
(abt.)
Chas. B. Graves, second vice-presid-
ent and general manager (Manila) J. Beckett Russell, auditor, assistant secretary and assistant treasurer (Manila)
C. L. Stone, asst. general manager
MANILA JOCKEY CLUB--San Lazaro Track, Junta Directiva, 39, Plaza Cervantes,
MANILA
LAWN TENNIS ASSOCIATION (English) Courts at San Marcelino. (Amalgamated with Manila Club)
MANILA RAILWAY COMPANY-Office and Central Station: Tutuban, Calzada Iris; Tel. Ad: Bertie, Manila
H. L. Higgins, president, general
manager and chief engineer F. C. Wright, secretary
H. Morgan, office assistant J. Herriot Allan, chief accountant M. James, asst. accountant L. Moreno, chief
department
traffic audis
C. T. Broxup, locomotive supt.
MANILA
Geo. Moore, permanent ways engi-
neer
H. S. Hogge, storekeeper
H. Kulhewindt, asst. do. W. Wallace, asst. storekeeper
J. Macgregor, do. do.
E. C. Castellvi, assistant engineer P. A. Alexander,
do.
do.
C. W. Russell, traffic assistant L. de Castellvi, do.
do.
F. Snowden, asst. chief engineer
E. S. von Piontlowski, dist. eng. con-
struction
J. Harding, asst, eng. do. W. White,
do.
do.
MANILA STEAM LAUNDRY-182-184, Sal-
cerlo, Santa Cruz
"MANILA TIMES," Afternoon, Daily and Weekly Newspaper-Editorial Rooms and Printing Office: 32, 34, 36, Escolta, Paris Building; Tel. Ad: Times, Manila; Tele- phone 110
Times Publishing Co., proprietors Martin Egan, managing director E. M. Webster, business manager N. E. Bayless, secretary and treasurer Joseph Oberlin, city editor
A. S. Ward, reporter
H. E. Walker,
Paul Weems,
do.
do.
G. Sucgang, cashier
MARCAIDA & Co., Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents--Jaboneros, 36, Binondo
Elias de Marcaida
MARIA CRISTINA CIGAR AND CIGARETTE COMPANY, LD.-Muelle de la Reina, 277 Meerkamp & Co., managing directors
MARINES BASEBALL CLUB, CAVITE, U. S.--
Spanish Gymnasium, 160, Escolta
MARTILLO DE GENATO-Escolta, 150
M. Genato
MATTI,J. M.,Relojero del Bazar "La Puerta
del Sol"-Escolta 49
MAYE, DR. JNO., 209 Nozaleda--Office: 79 Escolta; Examiner for New York Life, Sun Life of Canada, Manufacturers' Life, China Mutual Life and Standard Insurance Companies
MCDILL, JOHN R., M.D.-392, Calle Real, Malate; Offices: 400, Calle Real Malate; Drs. McDill and Gilman; Telephone 144
1467
MCCULLOUGH & Co., E. C., Printers,
Stationers, Bookbinders, etc.-McCul lough Building, P. Goiti, Sta. Cruz
E. C. McCullough, presdt. and manager
E. E. Elser, asst. manager
J. C. Howe, superintendent
MCLAUGHLIN, W. F., Business Representa- tive and Broker T. Gribayedoff, agent and attorney-181, Calle Alix
MEERKAMP & Co. Merchants and Commis-
sion Agents-277, Muelle de la Reina P. K. A. Meerkamp van Embden F. E. de Tweenbrook Glazebrook
F. Bremer
E. A. Schoen G. P. Datema G. W. Brown
W. C. Van Steedon F. Duchattel C. Reselva M. Vera
F. Valente Agencies
Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij Steam Navigation Co., Nederland Java-China-Japan Line
Netherlands Fire Insurance Company Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. General Acci, Fire & Life Assce.Co., Ld. Accident Insurance Co., "Fatum National General Insurance Co. Managers
MariaCristina Cigar & CigaretteCo.,Ld.
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES, COMPAGNIE DES
-15, Plaza Moraga
M. Henry, agent
METHODIST PUBLISHING HOUSE, Printers, Publishers, Bookbinders and Photo En- gravers Teleph. 93; Cable Ad: Endure; 71-73-75 Real, Intramuros
Harry Farmer, acting agent Irving Hart, manager Francisco Malong, bookkeeper Pedro Castro, clerk
MILITARY
PHILIPPINES DIVISION Major General Willian P. Duvall, Com-
manding
Captain Roberts C. Foy, 1st Cavalry, Aid. Captain Edward T. Donnelly, 1st Field
Artillery, Aid.
2nd Dieutenant Robert M. Campbell,
12th Cavalry, Aid.
Division Staf
Chief of Staff -Lieutenant Colonel Wil-
liam P. Evans
―
Adjutant General Colonel James T.
Kerr
1468
―
MANILA
Inspector General Colonel John L.
Chamberlain
Judge Advocate-Major John B. Porter Chief Quartermaster-Lieutenant Col.
Frederick G. Hodgson
Chief Commissary-Lieutenant Colonel
David L. Brainard
Chief Surgeon-Col. Douis W. Crampton Chief Paymaster-Col. Harry L. Rogers Chief Engineer Officer- Major Charles
H. McKinstry
Chief Ordnance Officer - Major George
W. Burr
Chief Signal Officer-Lieutenant Colonel
George P. Scriven
Coast Defence Officer--Major Cornelis
De W. Willcox, General Staff
Assistants to Division Staff Lieutenant Colonel Francis H. French, Inspector General's Department, asst. to Inspector General
Major Joseph T. Dickman, Inspector General's Department, assistant to Inspector General, Zamboanga Major Ernest Hinds, Adjutant General's Department, asst. to Adjutant General Major Deane C. Howard, Medical Corps,
attending surgeon
Major William Lassiter, Inspector Gnl's. Department, asst. to Inspector General Captain Frank A. Cook, Commissary,
asst. to Chief Commissary Captain Leonard D. William, Signal
Corps, asst, to Chief Signal Officer Captain Daniel W. Arnold, Quarter master, Depot Quartermaster, Naga- saki, Japan
Captain Robert H. C. Kelton, Coast Artillery Corps, assistant to Chief Quartermaster
Captain Conrad H. Lanza, Quarter- master, asst. to Chief Quartermaster Captain Henry B. Clark, Quartermaster,
assistant to Chief Quartermaster Captain Michael J. McDonough, Corps
of Engrs., asst. to Chief Engr. Officer
Attached Staff
Lieutenant Colonel John B. Bellinger, Deputy Quartermaster General, in charge quartermaster construction work on Corregidor Island Major Samuel D. Rockenbach, Philippine Scouts, duty pertaining to Philippine Scouts, Inspector of Small Arms Practice Captain Philip W. Huntington, Medical
Corps, dispensary, Fort Santiago Military Information Division Major Cornelis De W. Willcox, General
Staff, in charge
Captain Samuel C. Vestal, General Staff,
asst. to Chief of Staff
1st Lieutenant Royden E. Beebe, 14th Infantry, attached in charge of map department
1st Lieutenant Kenyon A. Joyce, 6th
Cavalry, attached
2nd Lieutenant Henry J. Reilly, 13th
Cavalry, attached
2nd Lieutenant William T. MacMillan,
23rd Infantry, attached
Quartermaster's Depot Captain Joseph L. Knowlton, Quarter-
master, in charge
Captain Edward P.Nones. Quartermaster Land Transportation
Captain Joseph L. Knowlton, Quarter-
master, in charge
1st Lieutenant Bruno T. Scher, 3rd In-
fantry, assistant
Water Transportation
Captain William H. Bertsch, Quarter-
master, in charge
1st Lieutenant Elverton E. Fuller, 12th
Infantry, assistant
1st Lieutenant William H. Clopton, jr., 13th Cavalry Quartermaster and Com- missary, transport Wright
1st Lieutenant Wilson G. Heaton, 13th Cavalry, Quartermaster and Commis- sary, transport Liscum
1st Lieutenant Sylvester Bonnaffon, 3rd, 4th Infantry, Quartermaster and Com- missary, transport Warren
1st Lieutenant Fred T. Koyle, Medical
Reserve Corps, transport Seward 1st Lieutenant Oscar F. Davis, Medical
Reserve Corps, transport Liscum 1st Lieutenant Charles W.Cullen, Medical
Reserve Corps, transport Warren Commissary Depot
Major Charles R. Krauthoff, Commissary,
in charge
Sales and Issue Commissary Capt. Lutz Wahl, Commissary, in charge Medical Supply Depot Captain James D. Fife, Medical Corps,
in charge
Division Hospital
Major James D. Glennan, Medical Corps,
commanding
Capt. Henry H. Rutherford, Mdl. Corps Capt. Horace D. Bloombergh, do. do. Capt. Kent Nelson,
do. do.
do. do.
do. do.
do. do.
Capt. Charles A. Ragan, Capt. William L. Keller, Capt. Levy M. Hathaway, Examining and Supervising Dental Sur-
geon John S. Marshall Dental Surgeon Charles J. Long Dental Surgeon John D. Millikin Board for the Study of Tropical Diseases Major Weston P. Chamberlain, Mdl.Corps Captain James M. Phalen, Medical
Corps, president
Captain Edwin D. Kilbourne, Mdl. Corps
Defensive Works Major Charles H. McKinstry, Corps of
Engineers, in charge
MANILA
1st Lieutenant John J. Kingman,
Corps of Engineers, assistant 1st Lieutenant Thomas M. Robins, Corps
of Engineers, assistant
Ist Lieutenant Ernest Graves, Corps of
Engineers, assistant
Military Mapping
Captain Edwin R. Stuart, Corps of En
gineers, in charge
1st. Lieutenant De Witt C. Jones, Corps
of Engineers, assistant
1st Lieutenant Francis B. Wilby, Corps
of Engineers, assistant
1st Lieutenant Clarence S Ridley, Corps
of Engineers, assistant
Topographical Inspector
1st Lieutenant Roy C. Kirtland, 14th
Infantry
Topographers
2nd Lieut. George B. Hunter, 12th Cavalry 2nd Lieut. William R. Scott, 7th Infantry 2nd Lieut. Clifford C. Early, 20th Infantry 2nd Lieut. Alexander H. Jones, 13th
Cavalry
2nd Lieut. Eugene Bobinson, 7th Infantry 2nd Lieut. Augustine W. Robins, 13th
Cavalry
2nd Lieut. Richard D. Newman, 13th
Cavalry
Ordnance Depot
Major George W. Birr, Ordnance De-
partment, commanding
Major Thales L. Ames, Ordnance De-
partment, duty at depot
Capt. Richard C. Burleson, Ordnance
Department, duty at depot
DEPARTMENT OF LUZON Headquarters Estado Mayor, Calle
Arroceros, Manila, P. I.
Brigadier General Albert L. Mills, Com-
manding
1st Lieutenant Charles C. Allen, 30th Infantry, Aid-de-camp, Inspector Small Arms Practice.
Department Staff
Adjutant General Lieutenant Colonel
Eugene F. Ladd.
Judge Advocate
Major Henry M.
Morrow
Chief Quartermaster- Captain William
Brooke
Chief Commissary-Captain Thomas
Franklin
Chief Surgeon-Colonel Louis M. Maus Chief Paymaster-Lieutenant Colonel
Hamilton S. Wallace
Major Thomas C. Goodman, paymaster Major Becher B. Ray, paymaster Capt. Clude B. Sweezey, paymaster Capt. Charles W. Castle, paymaster Capt. George D. Arrowsmith, paymaster Capt. Ernest A. Greenough, paymaster
Attached Staf
1469
1st Lieutenant Frederick W. Benteen, 26th Infantry, Post Quartermaster, Estado Mayor
1st Lieutenant Thomas M. Knox, 1st
Cavalry, Intelligence officer
DEPARTMENT OF THE VISAYAS Headquarters: Iloilo, Panay Brigadier General Charles L. Hodges,
commanding
1st Lieutenant Walter S. Grant, 3rd
Cavalry, aide-de-camp
2nd Lieutenant Carroll B, Hodges, 12th
Infantry, aide-de-camp
Department Staff
Adjutant General-Major Ira A. Haynes Judge Advocate-Capt. Maar O'Connor Chief Quartermaster-Captain Jesse M.
Baker
Chief Commissary-Captain Salmon F.
Dutton
―
Chief Surgeon Lieutenant
William Gray
Colonel
Chief Paymaster-Major John R. Lynch
Attached Staff
Lieutenant Colonel Zerah W. Torrey,
18th Infantry, acting Inspector Genl. Captain Edwin M. Suplee, Paymaster
Tacloban, Leyte
1st Lieutenant George A. Herbst, 14th Infantry, asst. to Chief Quartermaster
DEPARTMENT OF MINDANAO Headquarters: Zamboanga, Mindanao Brigadier General John J. Pershing,
commanding
1st Lieutenant W. O. Boswell, 21st In-
fantry, aide-de-camp
Department Staff
Adjutant Gnl.-Major Frederick Perkins Judge Advocate 1.S.A.P., Ordanance and Engineer Officer-Capt. Allen J. Greer Chief Quartermaster-Major George H.
Penrose
Chief Commissary-Captain Frank H.
Lawton
Chief Surgeon-Colonel W. W. Gray Chief Paymaster-Major Charles E.
Stanton
Chief Signal Officer-First Lieutenant
William N. Hughes, jr.
Attached Staff
Major J. T. Dickman, Inspector General's
Department
Capt. Harold Hammond, Paymaster Captain Charles B. Hagedorn, 23rd In-
fantry, Intelligence Officer
Capt. William K. Sample, 3rd Infantry, Athletic Officer and Commanding Detachment enlisted men
1st Lieut. Gerrit Van S. Quackenbush, 23rd Infantry, assistant to Chief Quar termaster
1470
MANILA
MILLAR, PATRICK,
PATRICK, Marine Surveyor, | Surveyor to the British Corporation for the Survey and Registry of Shipping -53, Calle Soledad, Binondo; Tel. Ad: Seaworthy
MINER, DR. CLARENCE J., Eye, Ear, Nose Throat Specialist-Office: Constabulary Headquarters, Old Oriente Building, Plaza Binondo ; Cable Ad: Rexin
MITSUI BUSSAN KAISHA, LD., Merchants-
330, General Solano, San Miguel; Tel. Ad: Mitsui; P. O. Box 461; Teleph. 30
T. Okuma, manager
S. Takeshita
Y. Akiba
M. Koishikawa
MOLL, KUNZLI & Co., Merchants-Calle David, 70; Tel. Ad: Moll; Teleph. 292
A. E. Moll
J. J. Kunzli
E. Lutz
H. Hardmeyer
Arnold Gubbe, signs per pro.
O. Schmid
O. H. Kleinward
M. Lopez
A. Ortiz
M. Tenorio
Agency
"Globus" Insurance Co. of Hamburg
MONASTERIO, DR. A.-Office: Plaza Sta.
Ana (S. Sebastian)
MONTAGUE & DOMINGUEZ-Cor. Santo
Tomas and Cabildo
MORRIS E. B., Customs Broker and For- warding Agent; P. O. Box 976; Telph. 430; Tel. Ad: Carloris-Union Ticket Building (old Captain of the Ports. Building), San Nicolas
Phil. Sintzenich, clerk Hilarion Perez, clerk
NEW ORIENTE HOTEL-Calles Real and
Magallanes, Walled City.
Simon Schneer & Co., sole proprietors
NEWBERNE, R. E. L., M.D., Bureau of Health-Residence: 69, Calle Victoria
NOBBY, The Tailors' and Gentlemen's Furnishings; P. O. Box 544; Tel. 393- 137, Escolta
A. G. Cohn, proprietor
ORIENTE FABRICA DE TABACOS, EL.- Calle San Pedro, 214, Calzada de Iris, 66, y Calle Castillejos, 66
C. Ingenohl, proprietor
ORIOL, A., Marmolista-Carriedo, 64 PEABODY&Co., HENRY W., Export and Import and Commission Merchants In- dentors and Government Contractors- Plaza Moraga; Tel. Ad: Peamanbody
PEREZ SAMANILLO HERMANOS, Importers of Building Materials, Paints, &c.-72-74, Anloague Tel. Ad: Samanillo J. A. Samanillo, manager
Rafael Pérez
Luis Pérez
PETERSON, JAMES J., Attorney-at-Law-
Teleph. 478; 78, Escolta, Binondo
PHILIPPINE Co., LD., Cigar and Cigarette Factories, Owners of the La Comercial, La Competidora Gaditana, La Con- stancia, La Favorita, La Giralda, La Hensiana, La Mefistofeles Factories- Factory Building, No. 37, Calle Gaztan- bide, Sampaloc, Manila; Agent in Hong- kong, G. C. Moxon; at Shanghai, Lavers & Clark
R. E. Humphreys, managing director
M. N. de Lange
H. Loewinsohn
PHILIPPINE CANDY Co.-152, Dulumbayan,
Sta. Cruz
PHILIPPINE LITHOGRAPHING & PUBLISHING
Co.-6, P. Sta. Ana, Quiapo
W. Partier, proprietor
PHILIPPINE MATCH FACTORY
Carlos Gsell, proprietor
PHILIPPINE PRODUCTS Co., of New York, Importers and Exporters, Coco-nut Oil Manufacturers-Office: 95, Anloague; Factory: Pandacan, near Manila Branches at Laguna, Tayabas and Mindoro
PHILIPPINE RAILWAY Co.-Offices: 2, Isla
de Romero, Manila
W. B. Poland, vice-president and chief
Engineer
A. Stransz, Jr., auditor
Theobald Diehl, purchasing agent
PHILIPPINES MINERAL SYNDICATE, LTD.- Head Office: London; Mining Properties, Camarines Norte (Luzon)
PHOTO SUPPLY Co.- Photographic Sup
plies P. O. Box 408; Tel. 436;
Cable Ad: Phototype-145-147, Escolta, Binondo
F. O. Roberts, proprietor J. H. Mader, bookkeeper W. D. Edwards, shop foreman
MANILA
PICKETT HARNESS Co.-34-8, Echague,
Santa Cruz
John T. Pickett, proprietor
PoIZAT, J. M., Merchant--Tel. Ad: Poizat;
P. O. 203
Poizat's Public
General Bonded Warehouses-Calles Barraca, Urbiz- tondo and Elcano (Storing Capacity 30,000 cubic tons)
J. M. Poizat, proprietor
Smith, Bell & Co., general managers G. F. Reeves, customs storekeeper Ramon Fernandez, asst.
Jose Gonzalez,
Gregorio Flores,
Julian Sanchez,
do.
do.
do.
do.
POMBO & CABALLERO, Cascos, Lorchas and Launches for Hire; P. O. Box 633; Tel. 2071; Calle Ad: Paz-44-46, Soledad, Binondo
Carlos E. Pombo, manager Felipe R. Caballero, manager Pascual Casimiro, clerk Silvestre Zafra, clerk
PRAUTCH A. W.-62, Calle Noria
PUBLISHERS OF PHILIPPINE PUBLISHING CO
"Education" a monthly magazine devoted to Education-90, Escolta, Manila; Tel. Ad: Vernlu
Fraenk R. Lutz, in the U. S. Virne E. Miller
PUJALTE Y COMPAÑIA--General Merchants and Chocolate Manufacturers; P. O. Box 212; Tel. 366: Cable Ad: Pujalte Fac- tory: 104, Timbugan, Santa Cruz; office: 229, Muelle del Rey, Binondo
A. Robles, partner
A. Ruiz. partner M. Pujalte, partner
M. Lorenzo, manager, chocolate factory
(See Advertisement)
RAMA, FELIX DE LA, Armador y Propietario
-17, Plaza Goiti, Santa Cruz
M. Galan, accountant
RICHTER & Co., ADOLFO, Hat Store, Military Supply House-Escolta, 57; El Siglo XIX., Dry Goods Store, Escolta, 114,
Reinhold Richter (absent) Friedrich Richter ( do. ) Arthur Rüebe, inanager
Arthur Wagner, signs per pro. ROENSCH & Co., ALFREDO, Gent.'s Furnish- ing Goods, Military Effects, Musical In struments, Sporting Goods and Arms and Ammunition-Manila: Escolta, 65-67; Iloilo: Calle Real
Alfredo Roensch, manager Oscar Schüetze, do.
Wm. Ihm, signs per pro.
1471
ROSENSTOCK PUBLISHING CO., LTD., THE, Publishers of Rosenstock's Directory of China and Manila; P. O. Box 400; Tel. 1320; Cable Address: Rosenstock-5, Isla de Romero, Santa Cruz
C. W. Rosenstock, director and general
manager
Caron Taylor, signs per pro.
E. W. Bauckham, manager for China B. J. Mendez, superintendent
ROXAS, P. P., Merchant and Proprietor of the San Miguel Brewery-Malacanang, 154; P. O. B. 271; Teleph. 17
Pedro P. Roxas, proprietor Antonio R. Roxas, signs per pro. Enrique Brias,
do.
ROYAL AND PONTIFICIAL UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS, managed and maintained by the Dominican Fathers
Rector and Chancellor-Very Rev.
Dr. R. Velazquez
Vice-Rector-Rev. Dr. M. Alonso Genl. Secretary-Lic. B. C. Alcuaz Vice Secretary--Lic. R. Ampuero COLLEGE OF S. JUAN DE LATRAN (under Dominican Fathers) Beaterio Str., 200
Rector-Very Rev. J. M. Ruiz Vice-Rector-Rev. C. Martinez Secretary-Rev. J. R. Gonzalez
Inspector Rev. R. Guerra Professors of Second Instruction- Revs. C. Martinez, P. Calzada, J. L. Fortea, R. Guerra, R. Casado, A. Saez, R. Ruaño, J. Fernandos, V. Villaverde, D. Montesinos, J. Geanini, M. Andres, J. R. Gonzalez, A. Garcia
Professors of First Instruction-Revs. C. Maeztu, A. Martin, J. G. Alonso and several assistants
Professors of Studies of Application-- Revs. R. Casado, R. Ruaño, J. Villaverde, D. Montesinos, J. Geanini, P. Calzada, J. Lopez, V. Rivera, V. R. Onrubia, A. Reyes, Farinas, F. Navarro, and other assistants
COLLEGE OF B. ALBERTO M. (Dagupan)
under the Dominican Fathers
Rector-Rev. S. Tamays
Vice Rector-J. Pulido
10 Professors
COLLEGE OF S. JACINTO (Tugnegarao)
under the Dominican Fathers
Rector-Rev. J. Perez Vice-Rector-T. Verges 11 Pr. fessors
1472
MANILA
COLLEGE OE STA. CATARINA
(Under the Dominican Sisters)
Directress-Rev. Sor. Margarita Sub. Directress--Sor. Maria de la
Encarnacion
COLLEGE OF SMO. ROSARIO (Lingayen)
under the Dominican Sisters
Directress-Rev. Sor. Meriedes Sub-Directress-Sor. Angeles
6 Sisters
RUEDA HERMANOS, Y CA, "La Marina " Almacen Comisiones y Consignaciones, y Fabrica de Chocolates-Plaza del Padre Moraga, 25 á 29
S. Rueda E. Rueda
A. Campos
José Marin
José Campos Eduardo Donoso Salvador Campos Rafael Campos Leoncio Jaraiz José Rodriguez
RUSSELL & Co., General Brokers
J. J. Russell
J. L. Javier
A. Gutierrez
Groswin Dresbach S. Allen Presby Orestes Hermosa Elias H. Gomba Ponciano Medel
Agency
Mannheim Insurance Co., Mannheim
SCHWEIGER IMPORT & EXPORT CO.-120 Anloague; P. O. B. 616; Tel. Address: Schweiger: Telph. 421
SECKER'S STORE, Retail and Wholesale Im-
porter--Escolta, 131
J. Landahl, proprietor
August Kahse
Ant. Llanos, signs per pro.
SIEGERT SIBRAND, A.G., Wholesale Druggist and Distiller of Ylang Ylang-Echague, 93 (Quiapo)
A. Lolier, signs per pro.
W. Juffernbruch, do.
SLOAN & MITCHELL, Ship, Exchange, Share and Produce Brokers-23 P. Cer vantes; Tel. Ad: Sloan
James Sloan
James Mitchell
W. A. Sloan
SAN MIGUEL BREWERY-151, Malacau; Tel. SMITH & BLOSSOM, Plumbers and Metal
Ad: Roxas
Pedro P. Roxas, proprietor
SAN NICOLAS IRON WORKS LD.--17, Calle Penarubia, San Nicolas; P.O.B. 350; Tel. Ad: Sanicolas
Smith, Bell & Co., general managers
A. L. Sutton, manager
SANTA MESA ROPE WORKS-7, Plaza Moraga
H. R. Cooper & Co., sales agents
SANTOS & JAEHRLING, Botica de Santa Cruz
L. Santos, proprietor
L. Dr. C. Jaehrling, do.
Carl Müller, signs per pro.
SCHMIDT & ZIEGLER, Successors to Enrique Spitz, General Import and Export Mer- chants; Tel. Ad: Export - 64, Calle
David; Head-Office: Schmidt & Ziegler, Remscheid, Germany; Tel. Ad: Export; Remscheid Agencies: London, Madrid, Barcelona, Habana and Mexico
K. Ziegler, Sen.
Carl Gottlieb Schmidt
Rudolph Schmidt
Ewald Schmidt
Remscheid
Robert Grenling, manager
Karl Ziegler, Jr., do. (absent)
Ed. Schmidt, asst. do.
K. Kuhler
Workers; Tel. 259-10-20 Estero Segado
SMITH, BELL & Co., Merchants
F. Stuart Jones, president C. Kingcome, treasurer R. H. Wood (absent) J. N. Sidebottom (absent)
G. W. E. Allchin
J. B. Anderson
E. W. Brodrick (absent) J. Brown
D. M. Clark (absent) H. T. Crean (Calumpit) F. A. J. Davidson W. Easton (Legaspi) C. A. Fulcher
H. T. Fox
J. A. H. B. Hamilton (absent) N. Hayward
F. J. Higham
W. W. Johnston (Tobacco) H. S. King
W. Martin (Bautista) absent J. Miller
F. Morgan
H. F. Morriss
North
H. Y B. W. Nuttall
M. B. Owen
W. D. Pemberton (Bautista) G. M. Ritchie
G. F. Sinclair
MANILA
1473
Ꮀ
A. Mc.C. Stewart (Tacloban)
G. Walford (Cagayan)
C. W. Wall
T. Ward
D. R. V. Williams
Representatives of
Baring Bros. & Co., Ld.
American & Oriental Transport Line British India Steam Navigation Co., Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Company China Mutual Steam Navign. Co., Ld. China Navigation Company, Ld. Dominion Express Company Indo-China Portland Cement
Company, Limited Glen Line of Steamers
Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Gulf Line of Steamers
Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. Shire Line of Steamers Prince Line
Compañia Maritima
Manila Tug and Lighter Co., Ld. Waterboats Co., Ld.
Bonded Warehouse Co.
British & Foreign Marine Ince. Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Limited' China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Imperial Fire Office, united with
Alliance Assurance Co., Ltd.
South British Fire and Marine Insce. Triton Insurance Company, Limited Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada
E. E. White, manager San Nicolas Iron Works, Ld.
A. L. Sutton, manager
Luzon Rice Mill Co., Id.
D. M. Clark, manager (absent) Luzon Sugar Refining Co., Ld.
SPRUNGLI & Co., Merchants-Calle David,
28; Tel. Ad: Uranus
E. Sprungli
Otto Gmür
E. H. Leuthold
F. Blum
C. F. Arbenz
H. Würsch
F. Baur
L. J. Räeber
J. Ernst Forrer
Agencies
Magdeburg Fire Insce. Co., Magdeburg Patriotic Assurance Co., Dublin Fortuna Marine Insurance Co., Berlin The United Rhenish Marine Insce.
Cos. of Cologne
The Bernese Alps Milk Co., Stalden The Lenzburg Preserves Co., Lenzburg The Smith Premier Typewriter Co.,
Syracuse
The Rockwell Wabach Co., Muskegon The Java-China-Japan Lijn
Managers
"La Urania" Cigar Factory, Ltd.
Branch Office at Zamboanga (Min- danao)
SQUIRES, BINGHAM & Co., Photographers, Picture Framers, Photographic Supplies and Plate Glass Importers-4 P. Goiti, Santa Cruz
ST. DOMINIC'S CONVENT
Provincial Prior-Very Rev. M. Narro Provincial Vicar-Very Rev. S. Paya Sec. of the Province-Rev. G. Martin General Procurator-Rev. J. Gonzalez Prior of the Convent-Rev. P. Aguado Sub-Prior La Revuelta
Procurator of the Convent-Rev M.
Rodriguez
STAHL & RÜMCKER, Wholesale and Retail Chemists and Druggists, Distillers of Essential Oils and Manufacturers of Aerated Waters; Proprietors of the Ger- man Dispensary-81-87, Escolta
F. Stahi
P. Rümeker (Hamburg)
Ernst Israel, signs per pro.
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK
T. M. Devilbiss
B. G. Butler A. D. Gough
H. E. Culver
STEPHENS, T. H., Dentist-63, Escolta
STEVENSON & Co., LD., W. F., Merchants
-319, Muelle del Rey
W. G. Stevenson, manager R. Toovey, manager
J. G. Brown (Iloilo) J. C. Sloan (Cebu) W. A. Muir
H. P. Thomson
P. Colquhoun (absent)
V. C. Ressich
R. W. Barratt (Cebu)
N. R. Stewart
F. L. Laurence
F. B. Richards (Cebu) A. H. Clissold
J. Russell A. Inglis W. Greenley G. Allan C. F. Page S. F. Chorley G. A. Carter (Iloilo) P. L. Tuason C. Tuason J. L. Gaskell D. R. Moreno
1474
Agencies
MANILA
Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Company The Indra Line of Steamers "Ben Line" Steamers Osaka Shosen Kaisha
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Rly. Chicago, Milwaukee& Puget Sound Rly. Norwich Union Fire Insce. Society, Ld. Scottish Union & National Insce. Co. Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld. Marine Insurance Co., Id.
Standard Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Standard Life Assurance Co.
STRUCKMANN & Co., Mers., San--Vicente, 95
Wilhelm Waege (Hamburg)
C. T. Struckmann
G. Strebel
do.
C. Bickel, signs per pro.
W. Bull
A. Wegner
C. Kelling
Agencies
Nord-Deutsche Vers. Gesellschaft Preussische National Versicherungs
Ges.
Verein Hamburger Assecuradeure,
Hamburg
Verein Bremner See Vers. Gesls, Bremen Assicurazioni Generali, Triest
Badishe Assekuranz Gesellschaft,
Mannheim
SWANN, WILLIAM-Consulting Engineer and Marine Surveyor, Surveyor to Lloyd's Register of British and Foreign Shipping -2, Calle Carenero
TABAQUERIA DE LA COMPAÑIA GENERAL DE
TABACOS DE FILIPINAS-Escolta, 63
TANDUAY DISTILLERY
Incbausti & Co., proprietors
TAYLOR, THOMAS, Consulting Engineer; Tel. Ad: Ricemills, Manila-39, Plaza Cervantes, Binondo
Thomas Taylor,
John Y. H. Taylor,
David J. H. Taylor,
engineer
do.
do.
SULLIVAN & FRANCIS, Importers; P. O. Box 583; Tel. 145; Cable Ad: Vancis-2-8 Pasaje de Perez, Binondo
A.John Francis, manager
H. B. Sullivan,
do.
W. E. Francis, salesman
W. M. Taylor,
do.
G. J. Pereira, bookkeeper
D. P. Sullivan, salesman
TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH Co., PHILIPPINE
ISLANDS
A. E. Noble, manager
THEATRES
ANGEL THEATRE -Sanaudres, Singalong
MANILA GRAND OPERA HOUSE-Corner
Iris and Cervantes
MARINETHEATRE-Zacateros, Santa Cruz
ORPHEUM
Echague
VAUDEVILLE THEATRE-14,
TEATRO FILIPINO-51, Echague
TEATRO LIBERTAD-583, Calle Iris, and
Bilibid
TEATRO PAZ-Calle Poblete, Binondo
TEATRO ROYAL-Azcarraga Tondo
ZORRILLA THEATRE--626, Calzada de Bilibid; Cable Ad: Zorrilla, Manila; A. B. C. Code
E. H. Cole, agent and manager
TORNEL, M. G., Oculista-Iris, 7
UNION INSURANCE SOCIETY OF Canton, Lo.
E. E. Hill, agent (absent)
L. T. Easton, acting agent Agency
Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. Providence Washington Insce, Co. London & Provincial Mar. Ince. Co.
URANIA LA, CIGAR FACTORY, LIMITED
Sprüngli & Co., managers
H. Haerri, signs per pro. E. Sprungli
F. Muller
Agency
E. A. & Otto Weber, Tuguegarao Cagayan Province, Wholesale Leaf- Tobacco Merchants
UNITED STATES SHOE Co.--4, Calle Guna
Sinapo; P. O. Box 275
R. E. McGrath, president
H. D. Kneedler, vice-president R. E. McGrath, treasurer
R. H. McCrory, sec. and manager E. P. Fuller, superintendent
Office:
VACUUM OIL COMPANY--Head
Rochester, N.Y., U.S.A.; Manila Office: 95 Calle Anloague; Tel. Ad: Vacuum
G. L. Baldwin, manager H. F. Pritchard, salesman
J. Rojo, bookkeeper E. D. Hawkins, clerk M. Vallejo, assistant
MANILA
1475
VARADERO DE MANILA El (Manila Slip
Company, Limited)
Rafael Reyes, general agent
Alfonso Rocha
Julian Concepcion
C. H. Aitken,
do.
V. Kosca,
do.
Alex. Young, engineer (Canacao)
VIEGELMANN & Co., E., Merchants--Calle
Anloague, 114
E. Viegelmann, partner (Hamburg)
John Andrews, manager Kurt Hosaeus Wilhelm Jarck Werner Schroeder Otto Krolin Mariano Baltao Agency
General Mar. Ins. Co. of Dresden, Ld.
WAITE, FRED, GARFIELD, Attorney at-Law -13, Calle Cortada, Ermita; Teleph. 48; Tel. Ad: Garf
WARLOMONT HERMANOS-(Vide "Bazar
Filipino ")
WARNER, BARNES & Co., LD., Mer.-Muelle del Rey 7; P.O.Box 294; Cable Ad: Warner
C. I. Barnes, director (Manila)
H. K. Bibby, do.
A. W. Bibby,
(London) do. (Liverpool)
J. H. Gibson, sub-manager
E. C. Barnes,
do.
J. R. Calder-Smith, Imports
Jolm Grieve, accountant
W. L. Bramwell, manager, Shipping
Department
E. G. Tait, manager, Insurance De-
partment
A, C. Glinister
H. F. Fradley
A. L. Bindloss, Calbayog
G. E. Livermore, do.
R. Garcia
do.
J. T. Figueras, Iloilo (absent)
Frank Hodsoll,
do.
A. S. Guttridge, do.
G. M. Laing, Tabaco
R. M. Echevarria, Tabaco (absent)
F. A. da Silva, Legaspi
Pedro Castelo, Catbalogan R. H. Huntington, Carangian Carlos Sievert, Carigara José Slevert, Jaro
F. O. Baners (Pasay) Estate Co., Ltd. General Managers of the Pasig Steamer
and Lighter Co., Ltd. Iloilo Warehouse Co. Pasay Estate Co., Ltd. Steamers
San Juan and Carmen
Schooners
Perla del Oceano Aulestia Paquita
Conchita
Agencies
Shipping
Nippon Yusen Kaisha
China and Manila Steamship Co., Ld. Bibby Line
White Star Line
The Great Trans-Siberian Route The International Sleeping Car & Ex-
press Trains Co.
Bucknall Steamship Co. Atlantic Transport Co. American Asiatic S. S. Co. Johnston-Leyland London Lines
Insurance
China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Royal Exchange Assurance Corpora-
tion (Marine)
State Fire Insurance Company, Ld. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Maritime Insurance Company, Ld. Law Union and Crown Insurance Co. Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Tokio Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. Western Assurance Co. (Marine)
Express
G. W. Wheatley Express Co. China Express Co.
United States Express Co. Neale & Wilkinson Express Co.
WATSON & Co., LD., A. S., Chemists and Druggists, Perfumers, Aerated Waters Manufacturers, Wine, Spirit and Cigar Merchants, "Botica Inglesa Escolta,72,
74, 76; Tel. Ad: Dispensary
W. Morley, manager
P. W. Ruston F. Freemantle W. McJ. Nish A. E. Keen J. Prager
R. Thomson
WEBER, E. A. & OTTO, Tuguegarao, Caga
yan Province, Wholesale Leaf Tobacco Merchants
E. A. Weber
Otto Weber (absent)
Joh. Lohmann, signs per pro.
R. Kummerfeldt Herbert Weber
L. Serrano A. Angulo Juan Pares Juan Ballesteros
Nicolas Serra A. Trinidad
Proprietors "La Flor de Intal" Cigar
Factory
1476
MANILA
Managers--The Asinga Co., Ltd., Tobacco
Plantation "Intal"
Manila Agents-Sprüngli & Co. WILSON & CO., FRED., Consulting Engineers, Contractors and Engineering Agents- 41, Urbiztondo; P. O, Box 276
J. F. Loader, M.I.E.S., A.M.I. MECH, E.,
A.M.I.E.E.
C. A. Clear
"WINDSOR'S LADY" CIGAR FACTORY-See
Wm. Kennedy & Co.
Y.M.C.A.(Army and Navy)-Headquarters:
Fort McKinley, Rizal, P. I.
Z. C. Collins, general secretary
ZARATE JOSÉ SY CIP, & BROS., MANILA, Importers and Exporters, Gen. Mers., and Commsn. Agts.; Branch: Dumaguete Tel. Ad Sycip; P. O. Box No. 718
José S. Syua, signs per pro.
+
ZOBEL, Dispensary, Drug Store, Whole-
sale and Retail-Calle Real, 123
F. Zobel, manager, signs per pro.
PROVINCES
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENTS IN THE PHILIPPINES
AGUSAN
Capital-BUTUAN
Governor-Major Frederick Johnson, P.C.
Treasurer-Lot D. Lockwood Third Member-Andrés Atega Fiscal José de la Rama
ALBAY Capital-ALBAY
Governor-Domingo Samson Treasurer-John Q. A. Braden Third Member--Felipe Users
AMBOS CAMARINES Capital NUEVA CACERES Governor Mariano Abella Treasurer-W. C. Ogan (acting) Third Member-Silverio Cecilio
ANTIQUE
Capital SAN JOSÉ DE BUENAVISTA Goverior--Angel Salazar Treasurer-Sinforoso San Pedro Third Member-Bartolmé Gella Fiscal Vicente Cella
Delegate, Assembly-Pedro Jimenez
BATAAN Capital-BALANGA
Governor-Pedro J. Rich Treasurer-Marcelo Regner Third Member-Clero Pascual Fiscal-Francisco Santamaria
BATANGAS Capital-BATANGAS
Governor-Galicano Apacible Treasurer - George J. Muni
Third Member-Martin Marasigan
Recorder, Proboard-Maximo Sarmiento Fiscal- Sofio Alandy
BENGUET Capital BAGUIO
Lt. Governor-E. A. Ecknian
Dep. Provincial Treasurer-H. C. Page
BOHOL
Capital-TAGBILARAU
Governor-Macario Sarmiento Treasurer George E. Schilling Third Member-Manuel Minoza Fiscal-Andrés Borromeo
BULACAN
Capital-MALOLOS
Governor-Teodoro Sandiko Treasurer--Charles G. Stark Third Member-Pedro Morelos Fiscal Epifanio de los Santos
CAGAYAN
Capital-TUGUEGARAO
Governor-Crescencio Vicente Masigan Treasurer-William E. Cobey, (acting) Third Member-Vicente Perez Fiscal Vicente Nepomuceno
CAPIZ Capital-CAPIZ
Governor Antonio Habana Treasurer--Joseph W. Crow Third Member--Rafael Acuna Fiscal Marciano Borromeo Yusay
CAVITE
Capital-CAVITE
Governor-Leonardo Osorio
Treasurer-Clarence McDonald Third Member-Adriano Arcedera Fiscal Francisco Santamaria
I
I
ILOCOS NORTE Capital-LAOAG
Governor-Policarpo Soriano Treasurer-Frank B. Parsons
Third Member-Pancracio Adiarte Fiscal Pedro Valdez
ILOCOS SUR Capital-VIGAN
Governor-Estanislao Reyes Treasurer-Claude D. Upington Third Member-Julio Borbon Recorder, Proboard-José Lahoz Lt.-Gov., Abra-Joaquin Ortega
ISABELA Capital ILAGAN
Governor-Eliseo Claravall Treasurer Catalino Lavadia
Third Member Tomas Gollayan Fiscal Vicente Nepomuceno
LA LAGUNA Capital SANTA CRUZ
Governor Juan Cailles
Treasurer-Harry S. Hodgson
Third Member - German Magpili Fiscal Oscar Soriano
LA UNION
Capital SAN FERNANDO
Governor Sixto Zandueta
Treasurer-Peter J. Vanden Broeck Third Member-Pio Ancheta Fiscal-Joaquin Baltazar
LEYTE
Capital-TACLOBAN
Governor-Franciso Enage y Abella Treasurer-Frank Klar (acting) Third Member-Martin Casalla Fiscal-Norberto Romualdez
MINDORO.
Capital-CALAPAN
MANILA
Governor-Capt. Louis J. Van Schaick Secretary-José Poblete
Supervisor Treasurer-F. Goble (acting) Fiscal-Sofio Alandy
MISAMIS Capital-CAGAYAN
Governor-Apolinar Velez Treasurer-William N. Gracey Third Member-Pedro Roa Fiscal--José de la Rama
MORO
Capital-ZAMBOANGA
Governor-Maj. Gen. Tasker H. Bliss Secretary-Capt. Charles B. Hagadorn Treasurer-Fred. A. Thompson
1477
MOUNTAIN Capital-BONTOE Governor-Wm. F. Pack Secretary-Treasurer-C. W. Olson Lt. Gov., Apayao-Blas Villamor Lt.-Gov., Benguet-E. A. Eckman Lt. Gov., Bontoc-John H. Evans Lt.-Gov., Ifugao-Lt. Jeff D. Gallman, P.C. Lt.-Gov., Kalinga-Walter F. Hale Lt.-Gov., Lepanto-William A. Miller Lt. Gov., Amburayan--J. C. Early Fiscal-
NUEVA ECIJA Capital-SAN ISIDRO
Governor Manuel Tinio
Treasurer-Balbino Kabigting (acting) Third Member-Lucio Gonzalez Fiscal Santiago Lucero
NUEVA VIZCAYA
Capital--BAYOMBONG
Governor-William C. Bryant Secretary-Treasurer-W. C. Bryant
OCCIDENTAL NEGROS Capital BACOLOD
Governor Mariano Yulo Treasurer-Edward A. McCreary Third Member-Leandro L. y Rama Fiscal Manuel Blanco
ORIENTAL NEGROS
Capital-DUMAGUETE
Governor-Hermenegildo Villanueva Treasurer Carl T. Nygren
Third Member-Felix Montenegro Fiscal Conrado Barrios
PALAWAN
Capital l'UERTO PRINCESA Governor Lt. Edward Y. Miller
Secretary-Treasurer-John T. Clark
PAMPANGA
Capital SAN FERNANDO
Governor Macario Arendo Treasurer W. W. Barclay Third Member Ceferino Joven Fiscal Martiniano Veloso
PANGASINAN
Capital LINGAYEN
Governor Antonio Sison
Treasurer Walter E. Jones
Third Member-Nazario del Castillo Fiscal Roman Espiritu
RIZAL Capital-PASIG
Governor Jose Tupas
Treasurer-W. O. Kaminer
Third Member-Octovio Amado Fiscal Higinio Benitez
1478
MANILA
SAMAR
Capital CATBALOGAN
Governor--Maximo J. Cinco
Lt. Gov.--Juan Sulse
Treasurer-Leonard G. Dawson Third Member-Benito Azansa Fiscal Emilio Araneta
SORSOGON
Capital-SORSOGON
Governor-Mario Guariña
Treasurer-Robert S. Van Valkenburg
Third Member-Eugenio Obsum Fiscal-Patricio Bailon
SURIGAO Capital-SURIGAO
Governor-Pio G. Kauno
Treasurer J. H. Graves
Third Member--Emilio D. Sanluis Fiscal-José de la Rama
TARLAC Capital TARLAC
Governor José Espinosa Treasurer-Miguel Unson Third Member-Silvino Isla Fiscal Santiago Lucero
TAYABAS
Capital-LUCEN A
Governor-Domingo Lopez Lt.-Gov., Marinduque-Juan Nieva Treasurer-James B. Green Third Member-Filomon Perez Fiscal Cayo Alzona
ZAMBALES
Capital-IBA
Governor-Gabriel Alba Treasurer José Villegas Third Member-Juan G. Lesaca
PHILIPPINE ASSEMBLY
PRESIDENTE: HON. Sergio Osmeña. SECRETARIO: Mr. Gregorio Nieva.
ALBAY-Tomás Almonte, Carlos. A. Im-
perial, Angel Roco
AMBOS CAMARINES--Tomás Aréjola, Manuel
Rey Francisco Alvarez ANTIQUE Pedro V. Jiménez BATAAN -José M. a Lerma
-
BATANGAS Felipe Agoncillo, Orense, Gregorio Catigbac
Eusebio
BOHOL Candelario Borja, José A. Clarín,
Eutiquio Boylés
BULACAN-Aguedo Velarde, Leon Ma
Guerrero
CAGAYAN Pablo Guzman, Gabriel Lasam CAPIZ-Eugenio Picazo, José Altavás,
Simeón Mobo
CAVITE Emiliano Tria Tirona CEBU Celestino Rodríguez, Sergio Os- meña, Filemón Sotto, Alejandro Ruiz, Troadio Galicano, Casiano Causin, Pedro Rodríguez ILOCOS NORTE-Irineo Javier, Baldomero
Pobre ILOCOS SUR-Vicente Singson Encarnación,
Maximino Mina, Juan Villamor ILOILO-Amando Avanceña, Nicolás Ja- landoni, Salvador Laguda, Adriano Hernandez, Regino Durillo
ISABELA-
LA LAGUNA-Pedro A. Paterno, Crispín
Oben
LA UNION-Andrés Asprer, Francisco
Zandueta LEYTE-Quiremón Alk uino, Salvador K Demeerio, Florentino Peñaranda, Jaime C. de Veyra MANILA-Just
Guerrero
Lukbán Fernando
MINDORO Macario Adriático MISAMIS-Carlos Corrales, ManuelCorrales NUEVA ECIJA-Isauro Gabaldon OCCIDENTAL NEGROS Antonio Jayme
Dionisio Mapu, Agustín Montilla ORIENTAL NEGROS Leopoldo Rovira,
Vicente Jocsin PARAGUA. Santiago M. Patero. PAMPANGA.--Mónico R. Mercado, Mar
celino Aguas
J
PANGASINAN Nicanor Padilla, Deogracias
Reyes Juan Alvear, Lorenzo Feno Matías González
RIZAL Cayetano Lukbán, Bartolome
Revilla
SAMAR-Honorio Rosales, Luciano Sinke
Eugenio Daza
SORSOGON-Vicente de Vera, Pedro Chávez SURIGAO Francisco Soriano TARLAC-Melecio Cojuango, Aurelio Pineda TAYABAS-Manuel L. Quezon, Emiliano
A. Gala
ZAMBALES Alberto Barretto
OFFICES
MANILA
INSURANCE OFFICES
Aachen & Munich Fire Insurance Company.. Aachen Leipziger Vers. Actien Ges. Accident Insurance Company, Fatum Albingia Fire Insurance Company "Allianz" Versicherungs Geselschaft. Assicurazioni Generali.........
Atlas Assurance Company, Limited Baloise Fire Insurance Company, Basel Baloise Transport Insurance Company, Basel Batavia Sea and Fire Insurance Co. Batavia Sea & Fire Insurance Company Board of Underwriters of New York.. British and Foreign Marine Insurance Co., Ld. British American Assurance Company British Dominions Marine Insurance Company Canton Insurance Office, Limited Central Insurance Co., Ld. (Fire).
Chai On Marine Insurance Company, Limited China Fire Insurance Company, Limited.. China Mutual Life Insurance Company, Ld.. China Traders' Insurance Company Comite' de Assurenrs Maritimas de Paris Commercial Union Assurance Company, Limited Compagnie de Assurances Maritimes Agrippina Confiance Fire Insurance Company, Paris..
Continental Marine Ins. Co., of Mennheim, Germany Dueselderfer Algem. Vers. Geselschaft Fatum Accident Insurance Co.
Federal Marine Insurance Company, Zurich.
Fireman's Fund Insurance Company
Fireman's Fund Insurance Company
Foncière Insurance Company, in Budapest Fortuna Marine Insurance Company,
General Accident, Assurance Co., Ld. (Fire & Life) General Accident, Fire & Life Assurance Corpn., Ld. General Accident, Fire and Life Insurance Co., Ld. General Accident, Fire and Life Insurance Co., Ld.... General Accident, Fire & Life Insurance Corp., Ld. General Marine Insurance Company, Dresden..... German Lloyd, Berlin
"Globus" Insurance Company of Hamburg Guardian Assurance Company, Limited Guardian Insurance Company, Limited Hamburg Assurance Company (Sea)
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co., Hamburg. Hanseatischer Lloyd
Helvetia General Insurance Company Hongkong Fire Insurance Company, Limited
Imp. Fire Office, united with the Allee. Ins. Co., Ld.. Imperial Marine Insurance Company of Tokyo Insurance Co. of North America
Italian Lloyd's
Java Sea and Fire Insurance Company (Marine) La Foncière Compagnie d'Assurances. Lancashire Insurance Company
Law, Union and Crown Insurance Company, Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co. Liverpool Underwriters' Association Lloyd's
London and Provincial Marine Insurance Co.
AGENTS
Germann & Co., Ld. Ed. A. Keller & Co. Meerkamp & Co. Behn, Meyer & Co. Behn, Meyer & Co. Munoz & Co. Macondray & Co. Germann & Co. Germann & Co.
Hijos de J. S. Tuason Meerkamp & Co. Macleod & Co. Smith, Bell & Co.
W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld. Macondray & Co. Smith, Bell & Co. MacLeod & Co. Limjap & Co.
Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. Hijos de J. S. Tuason Smith, Bell & Co. Ker & Co. Smith, Bell & Co. Munoz & Co. Germann & Co., Ld. Castle Bros. Wolf & Sons Behn, Meyer & Co. Hijos de J. S. Tuason Germann & Co., Ld.
1479/
Castle Brothers, Wolf & Sons Union Ins. Society of Canton, Ld. Munoz & Co. Sprüngli & Co. Meerkamp & Co. Lutz & Co. Lutz & Co.
H. J. Audrews & Co. Hijos de J. S. Tuason Froehlich & Kuttner Munoz & Co. Moll, Kunzli & Co. Munoz & Co. Ker & Co.
Behn, Meyer & Co. Kuenzle & Streiff Munoz & Co.
Ed. A. Keller & Co. Holliday, Wise & Co. Smith, Bell & Co. Macleod & Co. Macondray & Co. Ker & Co.
Moll, Kunzli & Co. Ker & Co.
Forbes, Munn & Co. Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. Holliday, Wise & Co. Ker & Co.
Ker & Co.
Union Ins. Society of Canton
1480
OFFICES
MANILA
London and Lancashire Insurance Company London and Westminster Insurance Co. London Assurance Corporation
L'Union Fire Insurance Co., of Paris
Magdeburg Fire Insurance Company
Magdeburger Allgemeine Vers. Ges., Magdeburg
Man On Insurance Co.........
Manchester Fire Assurance Company
Mannheim Insurance Company, Mannheim Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co.
Marine Insurance Company
Maritime Insurance Company
Mercantile Fire Insurance Company of Canada
Münchener Ruckversicherungs Ges. National General Insurance Company National Assurance Company of Ireland Netherlands Fire Insurance Company Netherlands Fire Insurance Company
Netherlands India Sea and Fire Insurance Company Netherlands Lloyd (Fire Insurance) Batavia Neuchâteloise, Société Suisse d'Assurance New Zealand Insurance Company
Nord. Deutsche Versicherungs Gesellschaft Nord. Vers. Ges., Hamburg
Norddeutsche Versicherungs Gesellschaft
Nordstern Life Insurance Company
North British and Mercantile Insurance Company.
North China Insurance Company, Limited
Northern Assurance Company.
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society.
Palatine Insurance Company, Limited
Palatine Insurance Company, Limited
Patriotic Assurance Company, Dublin
AGENTS
Forbes, Munn & Co. Moll, Kunzli & Co. Findlay & Co.
Castle Bros., Wolf & Sons Sprüngli & Co.
Ed. A. Keller & Co. E. F. Ongcapin
Holliday, Wise & Co. Schmidt & Ziegler
Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld. Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. H. J. Andrews & Co. Munoz & Co. Meerkamp & Co.
W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld. Hijos de J. S. Tuason Meerkamp & Co. Smith, Bell & Co. Lutz & Co.
Ed. A. Keller & Co.
W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld. Struckmann & Co. Behn, Meyer & Co. Baer, Senior & Co. Behn, Meyer & Co. Findlay & Co. Holliday, Wise & Co. Findlay & Co.
W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld. Findlay & Co.
Hijos de J. S. Tuason Sprüngli & Co.
Penang Khean Guan Insurance Company, Limited... Limjap & Co.
Phenix Insurance Company
Phoenix Assurance Company, Limited Phoenix Assurance Company, Limited.
Po On Marine Insurance and Godown Company.
Po On Marine Insurance and Godown Company, Ld. Po On Marine Insurance and Godown Company, Ld. Preussische National Versicherungs Ges. Providence Washington Insurance Company Providencia Allgemeine Vers. Ges.
Reliance Marine Insurance Company, Limited Rheinish Westphäl. Lloyd
Rhenania Transport Versicherungs Ges., Coln.. Royal Exchange Assurance Corpn. (Fire and Marine) Royal Insurance Company (Fire and Life)
Russian Company for Sca, River and Land Insurances Salamander Fire Insurance Co.
Savage Association, London
Savoya Marine Insurance Company Schweiz Transport Versicherungs Ges.
Scottish Union and National Insurance Company.... Semarangrthe Zee-en Brand Assurantie Mij. Sindicato Marselles de Seguros Maritimos South British Fire and Marine Ins. Co. South British Insurance Company, Limited. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company Standard Life Assurance Company.. Standard Marine Insurance Company State Fire Insurance Company, Limited State Fire Insurance Company, Limited
Macondray & Co. Ker & Co. Munoz & Co. Viuda de Tan Auco E. F. Ongeapin Limjap & Co. Struckmann & Co. Union Ins. Society of Canton Ed. A. Keller & Co. Meerkamp & Co.
Ed. A. Keller & Co. Ed. A. Keller & Co. Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. Munoz & Co. Munoz & Co.
Moll, Kunzli & Co. Ker & Co. Munoz & Co.
Ed. A. Keller & Co. W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld. Behn, Meyer & Co. Froehlich & Kuttner Smith, Bell & Co. H. J. Andrews & Co. Union Ins. Society of Canton W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld. W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld.
Lutz & Co. Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld.
Sun Insurance Office
OFFICES
MANILA-ILOILO
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada Swiss Marine Insurance Companies, combined Thames & Mersey Marine Insurance Co. Tokyo Marine Insurance Company, Limited.. Triton Insurance Company, Limited
Underwriting and Agency Association (Lloyd's).. Union Assurance Society (Fire), London Union Insurance Society of Canton, Limited Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld
Unione Continentale Marine Insurance Company United Rhenish Marine Insurance Co., Cologue Upper Rhine Marine Insurance Company Vaterländische Transport Vers. Actien Ges..... Verein Bremer See Vers. Gesels., Bremen Verein Hamburger, Assecuradeure, Hamburg Western Assurance Company
Western Assurance Company (Marine) Wilchna in Magdeburg Allgemams Vers. Ges. World Marine Insurance Company
Württembergische Transport Versicherungs Ges. Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld. Yorkshire Fire Insurance Company Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ld.
нг
AGENTS
Ker & Co. Smith, Bell & Co.
Ed. A. Keller & Co. Holliday, Wise & Co. Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. Smith, Bell & Co. Macleod & Co. Macleod & Co. E. E. Hill Ker & Co. Munoz & Co. Sprungli & Co. Manoz & Co.
Ed. A. Keller & Co. Struckmann & Co. Struckmann & Co. Behn, Meyer & Co. Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. Ed. A. Keller & Co. Macondray & Co. Munoz & Co.
Warner, Barnes & Co., Ld. H. J. Andrews & Co. W. F. Stevenson & Co.
1481
ILOILO
This port, which is the chief town of the populous province of the same name in the island of Panay, is situated in lat. 10 deg. 48 min. W., near the south-eastern extremity of the island, close to the sea, on the border of the narrow channel formed by the opposite island of Guimaras. The town is built principally on low marshy ground, partly fronting the sea and partly along the left bank of a creek, or inlet, which runs towards Jaro, and after describing a semi-circle again meets the sea near Iloilo. Iloilo is the largest town on the Island of Panay. The harbour is well protected and the anchorage good, the island of Guimaras forming a sheltered passage. The depth of water on the bar at the entrance to the creek or river Iloilo is about five fathoms at low water, but at a short distance within it decreases to fifteen feet and then deepens again. The river badly needs dredging; at present no steamer drawing more than 143 ft. can enter with safety. At spring tiles the town is partially covered with water, but notwithstanding this, it is a very healthy place. The high ground of Guimaras forms a kind of funnel with the Panay shore, and the result is that a calm is of rare occurrence, there being almost always a breeze of some kind. The N.E. breeze blows very strongly. It is much cooler in Iloilo than in Manila. The better class of houses in Iloilo are built on strong wooden posts, two or three feet in diameter, that reach to the roof, stone walls to the first floor, with wooden windows above and an iron roof. The poorer class of dwellings are flimsy structures of nipa, built on four stout posts. The means of communication with the interior are still very inadequate and retard the development of the port. During the last two years a considerable number of good houses have been built, and the town is fast resuming the state it was in before the bombardment. The streets and
many private houses are now lit with electric light.
On the 23rd December, 1898, the Spanish Governor-General resident in Iloilo resigned, giving over the care of the town to the Mayor, or Alcalde, of Iloilo, preparing with his troops and Government officials, naval, military and civil, to evacuate the place, which on the 25th December was accomplished. On the 26th December, 1898, the town of Iloilo, which for over a month had been entirely surrounded on the land side by Revolutionary forces, was delivered over to them by the Spanish Alcalde. and the Philippine Republic flag was hoisted on all the public buildings. On the 28th December, 1898, the United States forces, composed of the U.S.S. Baltimore and three transports with 3,800 troops, under the command of Brigadier- General Miller, arrived in front of Iloilo, but did not land, as the Revolutionary forces
1482
ILOILO
declined to give up the town unless under orders from Aguinaldo, their chief. Affairs in Luzon having come to an open rupture between the United States and the Revolutionary forces, the General commanding, the United States expedition advised the foreign Consulates that hostilities would commence after 5 a.m. on the 12th February, and on the morning of the 11th February, about 8.45 a.m., the first shot was fired. The Revolu tionary forces set fire to the city, leaving it almost in ruins, and retired outside the city limits. Iloilo was immediately occupied by the Americans.
The principal manufacture in Iloilo for local consumption and export to Manila is that of pina, a cloth very finely made from the fibre of the pineapple leaf. Another cloth called jusi is woven from silk, and is made in white and colours. The country round Iloilo is very fertile and is extensively cultivated. The sugar industry is the largest, the export for the fiscal year ended June 1907 being valued at $3,931,460. Tobacco is also largely cultivated. Rice is grown on a considerable scale, but locusts are very plentiful in the island, and often do great damage to the cane and paddy. Earthquakes seldom occur, and nowadays typhoons are rare in the district of Iloilo. Iloilo is about 250 miles distant from Manila. The principal traders are Chinese mestizos, who are very numerous in the port.
The island of Negros is extremely fertile and contributes three-fourths of the sugar shipped from Iloilo, the quality of which is excellent. The cultivation of hemp on a larger scale has been commenced on this island.
PROVINCE OF ILOILO.
DIRECTORY
Governor R. Montinola Treasurer F. L. Wilson Third Member-C. Mapa Recorder, Proboard-J. E. Santiago District Health Officer--Dr. Hurley District Engineer-F. Johnston Div. Supt. of Schools-C. H. Magee Dictrict Auditor--
Judge 1st Inst.-James Ross Fiscal Juan de Leon
Delegates to the Philippine Assembly. C. Lederma, F. Villanueva, J. Lopez
Vito, E. Guangko
AMERICAN BAZAR, Watches, Jewellery, Gentlemen's Furnishing, Pina and Jusi
Cloth
Juan Ismael, proprietor
AVANCENA, Señoritas, Teachers--Molo
BANCO ESPAÑOL FILIPINO
Alfredo Rocha, director
M. Custodio, contador A. Velez, sub-contador V. Sotelo, cajero
E. Rocha sub-cajero
BEHN., MEYER & Co., LD., Merchants--Tel.
Ad: Behn
Directors-Hans Becker (Singapore), Ad. Asinus (Singapore), F. Diehn (Singapore), A. G. Faber (Penang), H. Riege (Singapore), F. Katenkamp (Batavia), J. M. Menzi (Manila) W. Gemperle, signs as representative
(absent)
J. Petrich, signs per pro. P. Knobelauch
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bremen Hamburg-Amerika Linie
Deutsch Australische Dampfschiffs-
Gesellschaft
Dampfschiffs-Rhederei (Union) United States, China and Japan Line
Insurance
Aachen and Munich Fire Insce. Co of
Aachen
Allianz Insurance Co. of Berlin Norddeutsche Vers. Ges. of Hamburg Western Assurance Co. of London
BISCHOFF, S., Merchant Samuel Bischoff
BORDMAN, JOHN, Attorney-at-law-Calle
Ortiz; Cable Ad: Bordman
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE & AGRICULTURE
THE ILOILO
President Raymundo Melliza Vice-President Gregorio Yulo Treasurers-Inchausti & Co. Secretary-José Reguera Vocal-Lizarraga Hermanos Asst. do.-Julio Salutregui
COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS-F. S. Cairn
Deputy do. -D. E. Foc Surveyor of Customs-G. Gomez
Chief Clerk---E. C. Crick Appraiser-S. A. Roberts Clerk-H, Carmichael
ILOILO
1483.
COMPAÑIA GENERAL DE TABACOS DE
FILIPINAS
Benito O. Carranceja, chief
Eleuterio Tormo Satorres, acct. Manuel Puerto
Lius Pijuan
Julian de los Rios Martin Arando Adriano Hernandez Pedro Pino
Santiago Fernandez Gregorio Tudanca Rogelio Pijuan Juan Larrabaste Antonio Gutierrez
CONSULATES
CHINA
Vice-Consul-J. M. Yap Seng Acting Vice-Con. --Yap Enchong (abt.) Secretary--King Siogue
GREAT BRITAIN
Vice-Con. --E. St. Clair Purdon
NORWAY
Vice-Consul-E. St. C. Purdon
PORTUGAL
Vice-Consul-
SPAIN
Consul-Juan Estrada
ESTRELLA DEL NORTE, LA, LEVYHERMANOS-
Calle Real
Raphael Levy (Paris)
Abraham Weill, manager
S. Kamiger
F. Levy
M. Levy
FIGUERAS, JOSE T., General Broker
Shipping, and Commission Agent Agencies
Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool Union Assurance Society of London General Accident Fire and Life Assur.
Corp., Ld.
Fatum Accident Insurance Coy. Imperial Marine Insurance Co. Java-China-Japan Lijn Compañia Transatlantica
FINDLAY & Co.
Jas, Houston, signs per pro.
FORBES, MUNN & Co., Merchants
D. M. Forbes (London) D. Munn,
do.
S. Murray (Iloilo)
R. N. Hatrick (Manila)
D. Brownhill
N, Zuleta
Agencies
Lancashire Insurance Company
London and Lancashire Insurance Co.
FROEHLICH AND KUTTNER · Merchants;
Tel. Ad: Kuttner
+
L. Kuttner (Berlin)
Eduard Arnhold do.
E. Zuellig, signs per pro. (Manila) P. Nagel,
do.
Alfredo Mellhose
Agency
do.
"Prussian National Ins. Co., Hamburg
HONGKONG
AND
CORPORATION
SHANGHAI
W. P. Craig, in charge
W. Ilay K. F. Ribeiro M. Hopun V. Maninang P. Campos A. Rictual E. Escay
НOSKYN & Co., Merchants G. Medhurst Saul
H. P. Hoskyn G. M. Loring
J. C. Hoskyn W. E. M. Saul
H. P. Hoskyn, Jr.
Agencies
BANKING
Netherlands Fire Insurance Co. Coast and Geodetic Survey Office
HOTEL ILOILO-Muelle Loney
KER & Co., Merchants
J. M. Underwood (Manila) G. A. Main (Manila)
Robert R. Reid (Iloilo) L. W. Bryce G. C. Hunter
J. de Castillo
Agencies
"Shell" Transport & Trading Co., Ld. Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld.
Sun Fire Office
Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
KUENZLE & STREIFF, Importers; Tel. Ad:
Kuenzle
A. Kuenzle (Zurich)
H. Streiff
(do.)
P. Hube (Manila)
A. Sticker, signs per pro.
H. Roelli
Agencies
"La Baloise" Fire Insurance Co.
"La Confiance" Fire Insurance Co. "West of Scotland" Fire Insce. Co.
1484
ILOILO
LEVY HERMANOS, vide "Estrella del Norte"
Tel. Ad: Evely
LIZARRAGA HERMANOS, Armadores, Expor- tadores, Comisionistas, Hacenderos
Agricola y Almacenistas-Muelle
Tirso Lizarraga, fundador
C. B. Huarte, signs per pro. (absent) R. Belzunce (absent)
F. Galatas, signs per pro, (Manila) V. Imaz (Tipacla, Panay) P. Galatas
C. Zunzarren
S. Lizarraga, signs per pro. T. Lizarraga
J. B. Huarte
A. B. Huarte
M. Perez
P. Auzmendi
A. Perez, signs per pro. (absent)
LUCHSINGER & Co., Merchants
S. E. Luchsinger (absent) W. Wailte, signs per pro.
C. Amunategui (Hacienda "Progress"
La Isabela, Negros Island)
R. Giner (Hacienda
Isabela, Negros Island)
Agencies
Adela" La
"London Assurance Corporation
North British and Mercantile Ins. Co. Magdeburg Fire Insurance Co.
MAPA, CORNELIO, Doctor Surgeon - 15,
Calle Marina, 3
MONTELIBANO, E., Tramway Owner-Silay
ORDAX, SABINO, Medical Practitioner
POST OFFICE
Postmaster
Thomas E. Bower
Asst. Postmaster-H. P. Willits Chief Operator-Carl J. Ereon Supervising Lineman-Louis C. Mur-
phy
Clerks P. Reyes, G. Tolentino, Rufino
Solivio, Castor Muol
Operators, Lauro Canas-P. Pantallon Carriers--M. Sionomio, B. Cortes, José
Flores, José Macasida
RAMA, HIJOS DE LA, General Merchants, Steamer Owners, Storekeepers, Impor- ters and Exporters, Commission Agents -Calle Real
ROENSCH & Co., ALFREDO, Hatmakers and
Gentlemen's Outfitters
Alfredo Roensch (Manila)
Oscar Schuetze,
do.
Wilhelm Ilm, signs per pro. (Manila)
Fabian Carmona do.
SMITH, BELL & Co., Merchants
E. St. C. Purdon, signs per pro. H. Walford
L. Maruri
C. Dahlen
V. Mercado
Agencies
Royal Mail Steamship Line American & Oriental Transport Line Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Ld Ocean Steamship Co., Ld. Chartered Bank of India, A. and China Banque de l'Indo-Chine Lloyd's
Glen Line of Steamers Canadian Pacific Railway Company China Mutual Steam Nvgtn. Co., Ld Pinillos Line of Spanish Steamers Netherlands India Sea and Fire Insce. British India Steam Navigation Co. China Navigation Co.
Imperial Insurance Company, Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., LL South British Fire and Marine Insce Assicurazioni Generali
Standard Oil Co. of New York
STEVENSON & Co., Ltd., W. F., Merchants
J. G. Brown, agent
G. A. Carter
M. Lezama
Agencies
Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. Ben Line of Steamers Indra Line, Ltd.
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Id Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Scottish Union and National Insce. Northern Assurance Company National Assurance Co., Ireland New York Board of Underwriters Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. International Banking Corporation Yorkshire Insurance Co. Nestle and Anglo-Swiss Condensed
Milk Co. Congo Rooping.
Osaka Kisen Kaisha Inver Steamship, Ld.
TALLER YNCHAUSTI
(Iloilo Engineering Works)
Ynchausti & Co., proprietors
W. A. Cleland, M.LE.S. A. Stevenson, engineer E. Ballesteros,
do. G. R. Saul
WARNER, BARNES & Co., LD.,
P. O. Box 125
Merchants-
J. T. Figueras (absent) F. Hodsoll, signs acting agent J. Gutteridge
S. Arregui
f
J. Ascencio Agencies
ILOILO CEBU
"Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. Royal Exchange Assur. Co. China Fire Insurance Co. Western Assurance Co.
Law Union and Crown Insurance Co. State Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Yangtsze Insurance Ass. Co., Ld. China and Manila Steamship Co. Maritime Insurance Co.
International Sleeping Car and Ex-
press Trains Co.
The Great Trans-Siberian Route Bucknall Steamship Lines, Ld. Nippon Yusen Kaisha White Star Line
American and Manchurian Line American Asiatic Steamship Co.
WISE & Co., LD., Merchants
J. R. Leask, signs per pro. A Ison
Agencies
Atlas Assce. Co. Ld., with which is incorporated the Manchester Assce. Company
Guardian Assurance Co., Ld.
Hongkong Fire Insurance Co., Ld.
1485
YAP TICO, FRANCISCO M., Merchant--10, Aldeguer Street, Tel. Ad: Yaptico, Iloilo; Code used, ABC 5th Edition
J. M Yap Seng, manager, signs p.p. Yap Eng Chong, sub. do. signs per pro. Chua Kong Kuan, cashier M. Siponco, clerk V. Yulo Suajico Ko Ankiong M. P. Tay Engco Ng Keling
Luis G. Reyes, clerk C. Hefti, interpreter S. Eugenio Lo, stevedore
YNCHAUSTI & Co., Imptrs., Sugar Dealers F. von Fauffmann, signs per pro.
E. Berruezo, M. Gilardon G. Conde Salutregui J. Meudiola T. Pasion F. Lopez T. Saeuz
do.
CEBU
This is the capital of the island of Cebu, and ranks with Iloilo among the ports of the Philippines. It was at one time the seat of the administration of revenue for the whole of the Bisayas, but this was removed to Manila in 1849. Cebu is a well-built town and possesses fine roads, but the people are devoid of commercial enterprise. The trade of Cebu consists principally of hemp, sugar, and copra. The neighbouring islands of Leyte, Mindanao and Camiguin possess extensive hemp plantations, a large proportion of the produce of which finds its way to Cebu for shipment. There are some very valuable and extensive coal deposits in the island of Cebu, but the mines have not as yet been worked with any enterprise.
Cebu is rapidly growing in importance as a trade centre. The new wharves have now been completed and vessels drawing up to 22 feet can load alongside with perfect safety. The annual total production of hemp in the Cebu district is between 25,000 and 40,000 tons. The sugar industry has suffered severely in recent years by drought as well as by the shortage of buffaloes to till the land.
1486
PROVINCE OF CEBU Capital--Cebu
CEBU
DIRECTORY
Governor-D. Jakosalem Treasurer-C. D. Uppington (acting) Third Member-Manuel Roa Recorder, Proboard- José Avila Dist. Health Officer A. Pond Dist. Engineer, Cebu 11th District-
H. F. Cameron (acting)
Asst. Engineer 11th District-Claude Russell, E. J. Halsema, E. A. Pratt, J. E. Graham
Chief Clerk--C. W. Healy Accountant--E. W. Compton
Div. Supt. of Schools-J. C. Coleman
(acting)
Dist. Auditor-James C. Lewis Judge 1st Inst.-A. Wislizenus Fiscal-Andrés Borromeo Delegates -C. Rodriguez, S. Osmeña, F. Sotto, A. Ruiz, T. Galicano, C. Eulalio, E. Causing, V. Lozada
COURT OF THE 1ST INSTANCE
Judge-Adoph Wizlisenus Attorney General-Andrés Borromeo
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE
Judge Juan Singson Asst. Judge José Vaño
PHILIPPINE CUSTOMS SERVICE
PORT OF CEBU-U. S. CUSTOM HOUSE Collector James J. Rafferty Deputy Coll.-H. M. McCabe Customs Surveyor-Harold Homan Chief Clerk--Edward Hilf Assistant--Linley E. Jacks
Immigration Officer S. C. Schwarz-
kopf
Appraiser-James W. Greer Quarantine Officer-Dr. H. G. Ebert Harbour Master-Robert H. Page
PHILIPPINE CUSTOMS SERVICE
Inspector-V.Aldanese, Harry L. Dyer
U. S. Post OFFCE
Postmaster-Tobias Eppstein
Supt. Registry division-F. P. Warren Mail Clerk-Andrés Campos Asst. Mail Clerk-Andrés Abella Stamp Clerk--José Joaquino Chief Operator-J. N. Weir Asst. Chief Operator-E. N. Welsh Telegraph Operators-J. Gerardo, C. Gerardo, M. Abella, Juan Aquino Telegraph Clerk--V. Misa, C. Rama
ASILO DE SAN VICENTE
Director-Pe. Jacinto Villalain Hermana Encargada-Sor. Dolores
Romeu, Vinas 50
BEIIN, MEYER & Co., LTD. Merchants
C. Janssen, manager
W. A, Sprick Conrad André P. Casuejo
Agencies:
Hamburg-America Linie Norddeutscher Lloyd German-Australian S.S. Co. South Philippine S.S. Co. Board of Underwriters, Bremen Hamburg Board of Underwriters Deutscher Lloyd, Berlin Upper Rhine Insurance Co. Aachen-Munich Fire Insurance Co. Sainarangsche Fire Insurance Co. Alliance Fire Insurance Co. Western Ass. Co. of Toronto London General Accident Fire & Life Ass. Ch. Batavia Sea & Fire Insurance Co. Nordeutsche Insurance Co. Hamburg Insurance Co. Lloyd of Cologne
BOADA, PEDRO, Los CATALANES, Marine
Shipchandlers
Claudio Boada Emilio Bonda
BOTICA ANTIGUA, German Dispensary Farmacia, Drogeria y Fabrica de Aguas Gaseosas-Calle P. Burgos
Dr. A. Krapfenbauer, proprietor Paul Krapfenbauer
BOTICA CABUANA, Drogeria y perfumeris
Propietario-N. T. Deen y Ca Farmaceutico-José P. Nolasco Ajudante-Juan Ruera
BOTICA INTERNATIONAL,
Druggists
Pedro Rivera y Mir
Chemists and
BOTICA "LA INDIANA," Drogeria, Perfu
meria
J. Sarthou y Obin
BOTICA DE SANTO NIÑO, Chemists and Drugs
Vito Borromeo
Ezekiel Borromeo (San Nicolas)
BUREAU OF EDUCATION-Division of Cebu
James J. Coleman, division supt. Mandane Lloyd E. Bement
CEBU
Opon-Harold. A. Spilman Tudela--F. J. Doherty Catmon-Charler M. Bond Bogo-William O. Beckner Bantayan (Vacant) Balamban-John C. Leonard Toledo-Walter J. Gibbert Barili-Claude C. McCallum Dumanjug-Raymond E. Terry Ginatilan--Arthur J. Mitchell Argao G. B. Schiller, Alkim E. Velim and Mrs. Lillian F. Velim Carcar-0. L. Bowersox Naga-Clarence W. Duppstald Talisay Frederick V. Doherty Forward Teachers Divisions of Cebu Is-
land and District
San Francisco Roy, W. Boughton,
Tabogon, Frank Smith Medellin Cecil D. Rainey, Tuburan, Walter A. Kerr, Malabuyue, Lewis B. Whittemore, O. Slob, Sampson B. Brashear
Dalaguste-Virgel Hlsregg Provincial High School-Cebu
Mrs. Mary R. Bryan Mrs. Emily Eppstein Miss Bessie Taylor Mrs. Lara E. Wright Mrs. Carrie M. Jacks Mrs. Jeanie Dougherty Miss Florence Grayum Mrs. Ethel C. Lewis Vivencio Murillo (Cogon) Miss Emilia Tecson (Cogon)
Mrs. Claudia A. Quijano (Mambaling)
Jacinto Salamanca (Mambaling) Mrs. Inocenta R. Penales Encarnacion B. Murillo Miss Leonedisa Burgos
Recoletos Central School-Cebu
Mrs. Consolacion A. Rodriguez
Miss Maria Selon
Mrs. Loodegaria B. Ufana Mr. Eulogio Abellaneda
Miss Susana Agustin
San Nicolas Central School--Cebú
Mr. Alberto Ilaya
Mrs. Felisa M. Abadia
Rufino Leauron, Furtunata Obias
Leoreta V. Villagonzalo, Maximina
Lawrence D. Hinman
I. Sinclair Stewart
Mrs. Edith B. Cameron
Lee E. Collier
L. M. L. Powers
CASA AGENCIA DE EMPEÑOS DE JAIME VAÑO
-Colon No. 4.
Seccion Monte de Piedad
Director-Jaime Vaño
Cajero, Tasador y Depositario- José
Vaño
1487
Sociedad Anónima Minas de Curbon de
Compostela, Cebú
Dir. General- Rafael Reyes (Manila) Secretario--Enrique de Marcaida Administrador Cébú-Jaime Vaño Ingeniero id -José Vaño
Encargado Compostela
Reynes
Marcelino
CANGSUCO & BRO., Importers and Exporters, Gen. Merchants; Cable Ad: Cangsuco
CASA Y COLEGIO DE LAS HERMANAS DE
CARIDAD
Superiora Sor. Teresa Miguel Directora del Colegio--Sor, Francisca
Deltoro
CASA Y COLEGIO DE LA IMMACULADA
CONCEPCION por las Hermanas de la
Caridad
Sor. Teresa Miguel, Superiora
Sor. Francissa Deltoro Directora Sor. Buenaventura Casanoves. Pro. Sor. Tomasa Moceras. id
id
Sor. Elisa Rubi
id
id
Sor. Fernanda Vano
id
id
Sor. Amelia Corrales
id
id
id
Sor. Bárbara Alcazar id
Ninās 100
Hermanas de la Caridad 24 Colegio del Nino Jesus Parvulos 50
CEBU CHAMBER OF COMMERCE President B. Cogan
Vice President-vacant Sec. & Treasr.-P. B. Sharpe
CEBU CLUB
President Dr. Arlington Pond Hon. Secretary--J. R. Morrison Hon. Treasurer-H. B. Walker
CEBU GOLF CLUB
President J. T. Knowles
Hon. Sec. and Treasr.-E B. Sharp.
Cebu Ice & Refrigerating Co., Ld.
G. Constantine, manager
CEBU TELEPHONE Co.-8, Calle Legaspi Martin M. Levering, managing director
CENTRAL SCHOOL OF CEBU
Miss Carmen Rallos
Miss Matilde Rallos
Miss Soledad Duterte (Parian) Eucarnacion Ruiz
Miss Beatriz Duterte (Parian) Mrs. Carmen V. Solon Paula Vidal
Miss Emilia Rosello (Parian)
1488
Mr. Juvenal Ruiz
Mr. Florencio Castro (Parian) Miss Socorro Rodriguez (Parian) Mabolo Central School-
Miss Maxima Masecampo Bernardino Ravina Moises Ynocian
Julian Alcantara
Pardo Central School-Cebú
Eleuterio Gabuya
Getrulio Cabarrubias
CEBU
Chartered Bank of India, AUS. & CHINA
W. P. G. Taggart sub-agent
J. R. Morrison, sub-accountant M. del Rosario, cashier
J. Perez Garcia, chief clerk C. Ogilvie, clerk
COMPAÑIA GENERAL DE TABACOS
FILIPINAS
Cristobal Garcia, manager
Daniel Diaz, accountant (absent) Genaro Membiela, cashier
J. Garcia, Andrés, assistant cashiers José Olaguivel, bookkeeper
DE
J. Lobregat, head warehouseman Pedro Morales, Pedro Tejedor,assts. do. J. Gutierrez, storekeeper
CONCEJO MUNICIPAL DE CEBU
Presidente Vicente Teves Vice. Prent.-Arsenio Climaco Tesorero-Eduardo Roda Concejales-Gregorio Aboudan, Tom- as Diores, José Perez, Juan Solon, Emilio Escalante, Isabelo Alburo, José Gomez, Zacarias Joaquino Médico
Séneca
Municipal - Dr. Enrique
Médico Provincial--Dr. Arlington Pond Médico Quarentenas-Dr. Ebersole
CONSULATES
CHINA
Vice Consul-L. Herrera
GERMANY
Vice-Consul-Carl Janssen
GREAT BRITAIN, Vice-Consulate
Vice-Consul-J. T. Knowles
NORWAY
Vice-Consul-J. T. Knowles
CONTINO DIAO, Merchant dealing in Hemp, Copra, and Piece-goods, Commission Agents; Cable Ad Contino
Agent for
S. S. Islas Filipinas "
S. S. "Isabela
S. S. "Dionisio
CC
>>
+1
S. S. Fernandez Hermanos "
EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA AND
CHINA TELEGRAPH COMPANY
D. de H.Farrant, superintendent
S. Misa, supervisor
A. Gonzalez, operator
S. Esguerra,
do.
P. M. Velez,
do.
C. Bernal,
do.
ESCUELA CATÓLICA
Directora Sor. Cirila Miranda Do. -Rita Fernandez
FORBES, MUNN & Co., Merchants-Ninas 10
D. M. Forbes (London) D. Munn (do.
S. Murray (Iloilo)
R. N. Hatrick (Manila) T. R. Selkirk, signs per pro.
Agencies
Lancashire Insurance Co.
London & Lancashire Fire Insce. Ca
FOTOGRAFIA, Modernista Galeria-Calle P. Burgos -2, Salustiano Puentevell
Pintor, Decorador
Francisco Aguilar, fotografo Eulalio Aguilar, retocador general
FROEHLICH & KUTTNER, Merchants-Calk Norte America, 31, Cable Ad: Kutt ner; P.O. Box 158
L. Kuttner (Berlin) E. Arnhold
do.
W. Neumark, agent Agencies
Prussian National Insce, Co. of Stetti Magdeburg Fire
Magdeburg
Insce, Co. d
Liverpool & London & Globe Insce, C Hongkong Fire Insce. Co., Ld. North China Insce. Co., Ld. Agrippina Marine Insce. Co. of Cologne General Marine Inace. Co. of Dresded
GOTIAOCO Y HERMANOS, Importers and E porters Calle Morga, 15; P. O. Ra 106; Tel. Ad: Gotiaoco; Owners of G
Hermanitos"
Go Tiaoco, signs the firm Go Quiaoco Gue Ytan M. Gotiaoca
A. Aniban J. G. Tiaochu
B. Protasio
T. Omandam
Agency
The Yeck Tong Lin Fire & Marke Insurance Loan Co., Ld., of Mand
HACIENDA CANLUMAMPAO (Toledo Sugar
Cane Estate)
C. R. Blair Pickford (absent) L. Alburo
CEBU
HEREDEROS DE S. PASTRANO-Calle P. Bur- gos, 26-28; P. O. Box 43; Tel. Ad: Pastrano
Basilio Uy Bundan, administrador. Benito Tan Unchuan, firma p.p.
Tan Unjiong
Tan Unjo Yap Kuibao Chua Chusiong Uy Juyco Yap Yco Consignaciones
33
Vapor "T. Lizarraga Do. "San Basilio Goleta "Prudencia "
HOSPITAL DE LAZARINOS
Transferred to Bulion
HOSPITAL DE SAN JOSÉ
Medico Arturo Pelayo Practicante-C. Nogra Jacinto--Villalain
Encargada--Sor. Concepcion Codinac
INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION-
Corner Calle Magallanes and Calle Los Martirez, Cebu; Tel. Ad: Statebank
S. Williams, sub. agent
E, del Rosario, chief clerk
JOAQUIN CASTRO & Co., Importers and Exporters, Merchants dealing in Hemp, Sugar, Copra and other Philippine products; Commission and Shipping Agents; Tel. Ad: Cosin; P. O. Box No. 109 Agency
S. 8. R. Melliza"
KER & Co., Merchants
J. M. Underwood (Manila)
G. A. Main
Robert R. Reid (Iloilo)
J. B. Reid, (Cebu)
T. C. Eaglesome
L. P. Mitchell
Agencies
)
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp.
Sun Insurance Office
Phoenix Assurance Co., Ld.
Union Marine Insurance Co., Ld.
Clan Line of Steamers
KUENZLE & STREIFF, Importers-Tel. Ad:
Kuenzle; P. O. Box. 135
H. Scaûb, agent
Agencies
West of Scotland Insurance Office, Ld. La Confiance Insurance Co.
1489
LEVERING, Martin M., Attorney-at-law--
8, Calle Legaspi
Martin M. Levering
MACLEOD & Co., Merchants B. Cogan, manager E. . Kingcome
J. C. Patty
H. B. Walker Agencies
Union Assurance Society of London Compañia Maritima de Manila Guardian Assurance Company
New York Board of Underwriters Imperial Marine Insurance Co., Tokyo American Record
Central Insurance Co., Ld. Messageries Maritimes Co. Great Northern Steamship Co. Great Northern Railway Co. Bank Line of Steamers
MELLADO, J. S., Medical Practitioner
OCEJO & GARRIDO, Storekeepers, Castilla
la Vieja
OQUINENA Y CIA., Shipchandlers and Com-
mission Agents
Sandalio Oquiñena, Jefe (Ausente) A. Y. de Aldecoa
J. Oquiñena
T. Gañi
J. Zubiri
José Oquiñena Z. Oquiñena
Domingo Resano Luis Garcia
do.
do. (do.)
do.
Agents for Ynchausti & Co.'s S. S.
Coastwise Navigation
Agents
Steamers
Compania
Trasatlantica
PILOTS OF THE HARBOUR OF CEBU
Placido Cepeda
Froilan Ferrer
Jacinto Macauili
Enrique Aguilar
ROMAN CATHOLIC BISHOPRIC OF CEBU
Diocesis de Cebu
Mons. Dr. Thomas A. Hendrick, Obispo
de Cebu
Curia Eclesiastica
Provisor y Vicario general-Mons. Pablo Singeon de la Anunciacion, Prelado Domestico de S. S.
Secretario y Notario mayor-El Illmo.
R. P. Emiliano Mercado
Promotor Fiscal El R. D. Eduardo
Alcorcon
Pro Notario Vice Secretario y Archi- vero-El R. D. Eleuterio Villamor
47
1400
Maestro de Ceremonias
CEBU
R. D. Emilia-
G. R. Rouse
no Mercado y 2.0 R. P. Gelasio
Ramirez
Capellanes de Solio
R. D. Eleuterio Villamor y R. D.
Gelasio Ramirez Consultores Eclesiasticos
Juxta Const-Quae Mari Sinico Illmo. Mgr. Juan P. Gorordo, Obispo Titular de Nitopolis-Auxiliar de Cebu
El Illmo. Mons, Pablo Singeon de la
Anunciacion
El R. P. D. Pedro Alburo, Cura de la
Catedral
El R. P. Rector del Seminario
El R. P. Prior del Sto. Niño El R. P. Prior de Recoletos
Rev. Francisco Nebot, s. J. Vico, foro.
y Cura parroco de Cagayan Rev. Dr. Matias Nilsters M. S. C. Vic.
for. y Cura parroco de Surigao Censores Eclesiasticos
R. P. Fr. Jacinto Albarrán y R. D.
Emiliano Mercado
Defensor de Matrimonios
El R. P. Rector del Seminario Examinadores Sinodales
Mons. Juan P. Gorordo Mons. Pablo Singeon Rev. Pantaleon de Veyra R. D. Pedro Alburo R. P. Jacinto Villalain R. P. Narciso Vilá
R. P. Fr. Valentin Utaude Rev. Francisco Nebot, s. J.
SEMINARIO DE SAN CARLOS
Rector
Vice-Rector-Rev. Narciso Vilá Procurador-Rev. F. Gonzales
Profesores -Rev.P.Angulo, F.Gonzales, E. Martinez, A. Fernandez, F. Solon, Bruno Saiz
Rev. Nicolas Yglesias
Rev. Nicomedeo Escribano Rev. Dr. Jacinto Villalain
Profesores de ingles-Alberto, Mansueto,
Fidel
Almodad-Paciente Villa-Juan Coreon,
Matildo Carcelar-Ramas Profesor de Musica-Juan Brull Profesor de Taquigrafia
Climaco
Arsenio
SMITH, BELL&Co.,LD., Merchants, Shipping and Insurance Agents--Tel. Ad: Bell.
J. T. Knowles
G. McPherson G. H. Rouse
P. B. Sharp
W. G. Coverley
T. Ward
F. Read (absent)
J. Vañó
A. Roa
J. Moreno
I. R. Llamoso F. de los Santos Agencies
China Navigation Company, Ld. Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Ocean Steamship Company, Ld. China Mutual S. N. Company, Ld. British India S. N. Company, Ld. Gulf Line
Shire Line
American & Oriental Transport Line Lloyd's
Glen Line of Steamers Netherlands India Sea and Fire Insce Imperial Fire Office
South British Fire & Marine Insce. Commercial Union Assurance Co. China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld. Sun Life Assurance Co., of Canada Mitsui Bussan Kaisha Ld.
SOMMER & Co., DAVID, "Bazar Cebuano'
David Sommer (absent)
Natalio Plattring, signs the firm Bernardo Sommer,
Antonio Mergalejo
do.
STANDARD OIL Co. OF NEW YORK-No. 1,
Magallanes
W. J. G. Whiley, attorney
STEVENSON & Co., Ld., W. F., Merchants, Shipping and Insurance Agents; Cable Address: Stevenson, Cebu - Head Office: Manila; Branch: Iloilo
J. C. Sloan, agent
R. W. Barratt F. B. Richards A. A. Arieta
Agencies
Peninsular and Oriental S. N. Co. P. & O. & Cunard Joint Service Indra Line of Steamers Ben Line of Steamers
Union Insurance Society of Canton, Id Norwich Union Fire Insurance Socie Scottish Union & National Insuran Yorkshire Fire & Life Insurance Co Standard Life Assurance Co.
SwITZER, JOHN M., GeneralMe rchandis and Shipping; Tel. Ad: Pacortrack: Telephone No. 1.
John M. Switzer James Geary Charles Schneider
Agencies
Sperry Flour Company
Green Island Cement Co., Ld.
CEBU BORNEO
Code Portwood Canning Co. S. F. Cal.,
"Tansan
Borden's Condensed Milk Co.
Owners
Steamer "Dalupaon"
U.S. POST OFFICE
Postmaster-Tobias Eppstein Clerk--F, P. Warren
Do. --Andrés Campos Chief Operator-J. Ñ. Weir Asst. Chief Operator-E. H. Welch Operators-J. Gerado, C. Gerado, M.
Abella, S. Cano
VIBAYAN ELECTRIC Co.
Martin M. Levering, president
W. O. Bingham, sec. general manager Alfonso Sy Cip, treasurer
Jos. J. J. Addenbrooke, supdt.
WARNER, BARNES & Co., Ld., Merchants; Telegraphic Ad: Warner. Branches in Iloilo, Samar, Leyte, Albay and Lagoney
A. C. Glinister
Agencies
Royal Excl. Ass. Corp.
Law, Union & Crown Insurance Co. State Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Maritime Insurance Co., Ld. Western Assurance Co.
Yangtsze Insurance Association, Ld.
Bureau of Navigation
1491
Tokyo Marine Insurance Co., Ld. Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. International Sleeping Car and Ex-
press Trains Company
The Great Trans-Siberian Route China & Manila Steamship Co., Ld. Bucknall S. S. Lines Ld.
Great Northern S. S. Co. Nippon Yusen Kaisha White Star Line
Bibby Line
American-Asiatic Steamship Company China Express Co.
Geo. W. Wheatley & Co's Express United States Express Co. Neale & Wilkinson Express Co.
YAP Tico, Imptrs. and Exptrs., Commission and Shipping Agts.; Branches: Manila and Iloilo; Tel. Ad: Yaptico; Telepli. No. 44; P. O. Box 48
Agencies
Yan On Marine & Fire Insce. Co., Ld. Fook On Assce. & Godown Co., Ld.
JJ
I On Marine & Fire Insurance Co., Ld. Yek Tong Lin Fire & Mar.Ins.Loan Co., S. S. "Manzano
[Ld. S. S. "Gonzales S. S. "Francisco" S. S. Bais
BORNEO
After Australia this island is the largest in the world. It extends from about 7 deg. N. to 4 deg. S. latitude, and from 109 deg. to 118 E. longitude. Its length is about 850 miles, its greatest breadth 600 miles, and its average breadth is estimated at 350, miles. Its vast interior consists of almost impenetrable forests, which teem with animal life, but are sparsely populated by man. The soil is fertile, and in some parts near the coast the land is marshy. It was discovered by the Portuguese in 1520 and they as well as the Spaniards, Dutch, and English formed settlements on different parts of the coast, but none of these were long maintained. The Dutch claim sovereignty over the greater part of the south and west of the island, along the coast of which they maintain establish- ments; the territories of the British North Borneo Company, the Rajah of Sarawak and the Sultanate of Brunei (now administered by the British Government) extend over and along the north and north-eastern coast. The Native States are insignificant and in a backward condition. The total population of Borneo is roughly estimated at 3,000,000. The productions are many and varied, and the mineral resources believed to be great.
Tho Chinese, who have been settled in most Bornean towns for generations, conduct all the trading operations. The country generally is in an undeveloped condition. The natives are of the Malayan type, and are, as a rule, indolent and wanting in enterprise. A British Protectorate exists over Sarawak and the territory of the British North Borneo Company.
47*
SARAWAK
The territory of Sarawak comprises an area of about 40,000 square miles, with a population of about 500,000, composed of various races. It is situated on the north-west coast of the island of Borneo, is intersected by many rivers navigable for a considerable distance inland, and commands about 400 miles of coast line. The sovereignty of the district from Tanjong Datu to the entrance of the Samaharan river was obtained from the Sultan of Brunei in the year 1842 by Sir James Brooke, who became well known as Rajah Brooke of Sarawak. In 1861 a second cession was obtained, from the Sultan of Brunei, of all the rivers and land from the Samarahan river to Kadurong Point; in 1882 a third cession was obtained of one hundred miles of coast line and all the country and rivers that lie between Kadurong Point and the Baram river, including about three miles of coast on the north-east side of the latter; and in 1885 another cession was obtained of the Trusan river, situated on the north of the mouth of the Brunei river. In 1888 a British Protectorate was established, and in 1890 the Rajah took possession of Limbang, which was approved of by H. M. Government in August, 1891. In 1905 the Lawas district was also added to the Sarawak territory. The present Rajah, H. H. Sir Charles Johnson Brooke, G.C.M.G., is a nephew of Sir James Brooke, and was born 3rd June, 1829, succeeded 1868, married in 1869 to Margaret de Windt. His heir the Rajah Mudah-Charles Vyner Brooke, was born 26th September, 1874.
The country produces diamonds, gold, silver, antimony, quicksilver, coal, gutta- percha, india-rubber, canes, rattans, camphor, beeswax, bird's nests, sago, pepper, and gambier. The principal towns are: Kuching, the capital of Sarawak, situated on the Sarawak river, about 23 miles from its mouth, in latitude 1 deg. 32 min. N., longitude 110 deg. 38 min. E. (approximate), Claude Town, the principal town and fort on the Baram river, is about 60 miles inland. Bintulu, situate at the mouth of the Bintulu river, is famous for its sago. Muka, a few miles up the river of that name, is also noted for its sago and bilian timber. Oya, which lies about 14 miles up the Oya river, and Matu about 5 miles up the Matu river, are both noted for their sago. Sibu is situated about 60 miles, Kanowit about 100 miles, and Kapit about 160 miles up the Rejang river, Rejang village, at the mouth of Rejang river, is noted for its Bilian (iron wood) works. Kabong is situated at the mouth of the Kalaka river. Saribas lies about 80 miles up the river of the same name which has a tidal wave or bore. Simang-gang is about 60 miles up the Batang Lupar river, which also has a bore. Simunjan is situated about 18 miles up the Sadong river, where the Government work a coal mine. Trusan is about 18 miles up the Trusan River and Limbang about 10 miles up the Limbang River, the latter place being noted for its sago. The country shows slow but steady progress. The revenue for 1900 was $915,966, against an expenditure of $901,172 (Mexican). The imports for 1908 were valued at $4,467,988 (Straits Currency), and the exports 5,732,733. The gold export in 1908 was $1,130,760. There is a military force which is armed, equipped and drilled after the English model, the interior economy in barracks of the English Army being closely, followed. The fort at Kuching is well armed with modern Armstrong B.L. guns, and provision is made for submarine mines. The force is recruited from Sepoys, Malays and Dyaks.
Harbour, buoy, and light dues: Three cents per ton, payable on arrival, and chargeable to all vessels of 5 tons and upwards.
SARAWAK
DIRECTORY
GOVERNMENT
1493
Rajah-HIS HIGHNESS SIR CHARLES BROOKE, G.C.M.G., Grand Officer of Crown of Italy. Rajah Muda, C. Vyner Brooke, Administering the Government
SUPREME COUNCIL
Sir Percy Cunnynghame, Bart., resident of
Sarawak Proper
Datu Hakim, Hon. F. H. Dallas, treasurer Datu Emaum, Datu Jemonggong
Datu Bandar
Inchi Mahomat Zin
Recorder to the Council --Hon, F. H. Dallas
COUNCIL NEGRI, or General COUNCIL
President-His Highness The Rajah The Divisional Residents The Treasurer
The Residents of Districts
RESIDENCIES
FIRST DIVISION, OR SARAWAK PROPER, (Comprising Kuching, Paku, Sadong, Lundu and Simatan)
Divisional Resident-Hon. H. R. A. Day Resident sec. class-Donald A. Owen Resident second class of Upper Sarawak-
H. B. Croker (Paku) E. R. Stilwell (Bau) Resident 2nd cl., Sarlong-F. F. Boult
Do. --Vacant (Lundu)
Do.
SUPREME COURT, KUCHING
Judge H.H. The Rajali Muda
Do. Hon. H. R. A. Day
Do.
Do.
Donald A. Owen
Hon. F. H. Dallas
Assistant Judge The Datu Bandar
Do.
Do.
Do.
-
The Datu Jemonggong
-The Datu Hakim
--The Datu Imaum
Do. -Abang Mahomat Zin Clerk-Ee Bong Chuan
Malay Writer and Interpreter-Inchi Alli
bin Inchi Bakar
GENERAL AND POLICE COURT, KUCHING Magistrate Hon. H. R. Day
-
Magistrate-Donald A. Owen
Asst. Magistrate-The Datu Bandar
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
.....
The Datu Jemonggong The Datu Hakim
-The Datu Imaum
Inchi Mahomat Zin
COURT OF REQUESTS, KUCHING Magistrate-F. G. Day
BANKRUPTCY COURTS
Established in Kuching, Muka, and Sibu Presidents Senior Officers of districts Assistant Judges Principal Magistrates of
districts and three delegated natives
The Principal Chiefs of each Residency Chaplain
Clerk to the Council-Donald A. Owen
THE DATU'S COURT, KUCHING Judges-Datu Bandar, Datu Hakim, Inchi Mahomet Zin, The Datu Imaun, Tuan Belal
TREASURY
Treasurer---Hon. F. H. Dallas Assistant- E. Parnell Accountant-Jos. P. Reutens Cashier-W. Hock Kee Asst. do. Tan Cheng Pun 1st. Clerk-C. Hoong Sze 2nd. do. -F. K. de Rozario 3rd. do. A. M. D. Dini
DEPT. OF PUBLIC WORKS AND SURVEYS Commissioner of Works and Surveys-
H. F. Carew-Gibson, A.M.I.C.E.
Special Works Eng.-E. L. Grove A.M.I.C.E. J. R. Barnes (usst, engineer) Inspector of Roads-S. S. Bell Assistant Surveyor A. Lange Draughtsman-P. Felsinger
Foreman of Works-J. W. Powell
Officer in charge of Municipal Branch of Public Works--M. G. Bradford, A.M.I.C.E.,
M.S.E.
Surveyor-J. Zehnder
LIGHTHOUSES
At Tanjong Po, Tanjong Sirik, Muka River, Oya River, Tanjong Kidurong, Brooke- ton, and Tanjong Baram
CUSTOMS
Superintendent-C. C. Robison
Assistants Sulong, Ali Bin Dollah, Mat
Bin Syed
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT Ppl. Medical Officer A. J. G. Barker, M.D. Medical Officer General Hospital -- C.
Bruce Low, M.R.C.G., L.R.C.P.
1494
SARAWAK
Asst. Medical Officer-J. H. Board, M.B.,
B.A., M.R.C.S., L. R.C.P.
Asst. Surgeons-W. Falkner, H. Sleman Govt. Nursing Sister-Miss A. Hastie
MILITARY DEPARTMENT "Sarawak Rangers'
Commandant Stuart Cunnynghame(local
rank Captain)
Instructor of Gunnery-H. W. Scott, R.N.
Active force of 480 men, Garrison and
Field Artillery and Infantry
NAVAL DEPARTMENT
Superindt. Engineer-W. Service
Asst.
Asst.
do.
do.
-P. Stewart
-George Banun
Engineer, workshops-
Screw yacht "Zahora," 2 guns Screw steamer "L'Aubaine" Screw steamer "Alice Loraine"
Screw strs. "Lucile," "La Fée," "Young
Harry" "Chamois," "Mermaid."
POST AND SHIPPING OFFICE
Postmaster-General and Harbour Master
-C. C. Robison
Clerks J. Gee Fook and others
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE Officer-in-charge-F. G. Day Printer-G. Hêng Soon
POLICE AND PRISON DEPARTMENT Superintendent-H. A. Adams Assistant-H. Prior
Clerk--Lim Kay Leong
Active Force, 1 sergt-major, 4 sergeants 4 lance-sergeants, 7 corporals, 13 lance- corporals and 155 men; I gaol sergeant and 7 warders
STORE DEPARTMENT
Storekeeper-J. Carvallio
Asst. do. -Udin
SECOND DIVISION,
comprising-Batang
Lupar, Saribas, and Kalaka
Resident, second class-A. B. Ward (Batang
Lupar)
Asst. do.-O. Lang
Cadet-H. D. Aptin
Clerks Ah Fook Cheyn and others
THIRD
DIVISION, comprising Rejang, Muka, Bintulu and Oya
Resident J. Baring Gould (Sibu) Resident, 2nd class-H.S. B. Johnson (Matu)
Do.
-F.A.W. Pago Turner(Kapit) Do. -H. L. Owen (Bintulu) Do. -A. E. A. Erman (Cadet)
Resident J. M. Shaw (Muka)
-A. E. Lawrence (Oya) -G. M. Gifford (Cadet)
Do.
Do.
Asst. Resident-J. J. Chynorwath Treasurer-Robert Kee Liang Clerks F. do Rozario, Yok Soon, J. de Rozario, S. F. Lees, Kit Liang, Usman Tan Kwee, D. Halay, B. Nibong, Chong Ah Sham, H. Seelong, Hh Koo FOURTH DIVISION, comprising BaramLin
bang and Trusan Districts Resident, sec. class-I. K. Caldecot (L'bang)
Do. -R. S. Douglas (Baram)
-F. H. Kortright (Cadet) -C. D. Adams (Cadet)
Do.
Do.
Do.
--W.R.T. Clement(in charge)
Cadet-W. F. de V. Skrine
AGENTS FOR GOVERNMENT
London-Borneo Company, Limited, 28,
Fenchurch Street
Singapore-Paterson, Simons & Co. Labuan--J. Hardie Manila--Findlay & Co.
BILLIAN TIMBER WORKS-Rajang Village
Wing Chong Seng
BORNEO Co., LD., GAMBER AND RUBBER
ESTATES AT POAK
Manager E. Hose
Assts.-J. S. W. Bean, H. E. Davidson
BORNEO CO., LIMITED, Merchants--Head Office: 28, Fenchurch Street, London
J. M. Bryan, manager
J. H. Brodie, assistant E. L. Slade,
do.
J. F. Fortescue, do.
Agencies
Sarawak and Singapore S. S. Co., Ld. Lloyd's
North British and Mercantile Insce. Commercial Union Assurance Co. Maritime Insurance Company Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ltd.
British American Tobacco Co., Ltd.
BORNEO CO., LTD., RUBBER ESTATES AT
SUNGEI TENGAH
E. Hose, manager
G. Dalton asst., manager
G. Patersson, assistant
BRICK, TILE, AND POTTERY WORKS
Swee Guan, proprietor
Seng Soon,
do.
Hong Heng, do.
Ngee Wat,
do.
BROOKETON COLLIERIES-Brooketon; Tel
Ad: May, Labuan
H. F. May, E.M., agent and gent, mgr. T. Lewis, asst. manager
J. W. Evans, second Assisant
S. W. Harris, merchanical engineer
CHINESE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Chairman-Ong Tiang Swee
SARAWAK
COAL DEPOT (Government), at Sadong
Resident second class Sadong District, J. O. Maddocks, manager of mines and in charge of wharves and sheds at Sabang
ECCLESIASTICAL
Bishop of Labuan, and Sarawak- Right Rev. W. Róbert Mounsey D.D.,
Kueling Missionaries (S.P.G.)
St. Thomas' Church, Kuching
Archdeacon A. F. Sharp, M.A., vicar Rev. J. A. Tounley, M.A. Christ Church, Lundu
Archdeacon A. F. Sharp St. Paul's Church, Banting
Rev. G. Dexter Allen, M.A. (absent)
St. James's Church, Quop
Rev. Chung Ah Luk
St. Augustin's Church, Sebetan
Rev. G. Dexter Allen St. Luke's Church, Undup
Rev. W. Howell
St. Peter's Church, Skerang
Rev. W. Howell
GOLD WORKS (The Borneo Co., Ld.) In Upper Sarawak, at Bau Bidi
In Batang Lupar, at Marup, worked by
Chinese
GOVERNMENT FARMERS, THE
Opium, Spirits, and Gambling Farms-
Chop, Guan Hock Hin
HeadOffice-Khoo Fun YeangSt.Kuching General Farmer-Kho Joo Cho
Do. Manager-Khoo Siew Jin Pawn Farms-Chop, Wo Sang Proprietor-Lim Tee Chew Manager in charge-Lim Tee Chew
KUCHING SOCIAL CLUB
H. H. the Rajah of Sarawak, patron Sir Percy Cunnynghame, Bart, pres. J. M.Bryan, vice-president Members of Committee-J. Zehnder, (Secty, and Treasurer) J. H. Currie, H. Bateman, T. Smith, J. Gebbie, H. W. Y. Scott, W. Service
LADIES' CLUB-Kuching
Hon. Seety. Lady Cunnynghame
LADING COLLIERIES, SARAWAK
General Manager of Collieries and
Wharves-H. F. May, M.E. Local Manager of Collieries
Wharves-no. Maddocks Acting Engineer R. Stewart
and
METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION
1495
Presiding Elder-Rev. W. J. Cherry
(Singapore)
MINES-Borneo Company, Ld., proprietors
Antimony Mines, Busau
J. H. Brodie, superintendent (Busan) Bau Cyanide Works
R. Pawle, A.R.S.M., M.L.M.M., manager H. S. Young, F.L.C., F.C.S., A.L.M.M., asst. Bidi Cyanide Works
R. Pawle, A.R.S.M., M.I.M.E., manager
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
do.
Vy.Rev.E.Dunn, prefectapos., Kuching Rev. A. Haidegger, Rev. H. Heyden
Rev. A. Reyffert, Singhi Rev. A. Hopfgartner, Sibu Rev. H. Jansen, Baram Rev. A. Stotter, Cut-Igan Rev. A. Mulder,
do.
Rev. B. Mulder, Mukah
Rev. A. Keizer, Kanowit Rejang Rev. A. Klerk, Kanowit Rev. V. Halder, Situ Ryang Rev. J. Oss, Mukah
Rev. Y. Unterberger, Baram St. Theresa's Convent, Kuching
Mother Helen and four Sisters St. Clare's Convent, Kanowit
Mother Mary and two Sisters St. Catherine's Convent, Singhi
Mother Clare and one Sister St. Mary's Convent, Cut Igan
Mother Baptista and one Sister
do.
SAGO FLOUR MANUFACTORIES-Kuching
Ông Ewe Hai Co., Tong Ngee Ann & Co., Soon Bee Ann & Co., Hap Ann & Co., Quee Ann & Co., Hap Hong & Co., BanSeng & Co., Chin Loon
SARAWAK CLUB
Trustees and ex-officio Members of Com- mittee Hon. H. R. A. Day, Hon. F. H. Dalas, J. M. Bryan
Hon. Secs. S. Cunnynghame, J. C.
Moulton
Elected Committee--E. L. Grove, H. A. Adams, 11. B. Crocker, (out_sta- tion), S. Cunnynghame and J. C. Moulton (er-officio)
"SARAWAK GAZETTE" AND GOVT. PRINTING
OFFICE
F. G. Day, editor and superintendent.
SARAWAK GOLF CLUB
President-H. H. The Rajah Muda Hon. Secretary-J. H. Brodie
1496
SARAWAK
SARAWAK LIBRARY AND READING ROOM
Hon. Secretary E. Parnell
Hon. Treasurer-Hon. F. H. Dallas Librarian J, Tambik
SARAWAK MUSEUM
Curator-John C. Moulton
SARAWAK SERVICE BANK-Kuching
Hon. F. H. Dallas, manager C. Hong Szee, cashier and clerk
SARAWAK & SINGAPORE STEAMSHIP CO., LD.
Agents-Borneo Company, Ld.
Agents in S'pore-Ong Ewe Hai & Co.
SCHOOLS
Mission Schools (S.P.G.), Kuching
Warden The Bishop
Sub-Warden The Vicar of Kuching H. W. Gregg, head master Kho. Guan Lim, assistant
Lee Keng Tye, do. Junit,
E. Than,
Phoa Hui Teng
do.
do.
MissC.Sharp, MissOlver, MissKendrick,
Girls' School
Merdang School
Buda
Quop School
Rev. Chong Ah Luk
Sabu School, Undup
Rev. W. Howell Banting School
Government Free School, Kuching
Malay-Smail
Government Chinese School, Bau Chinese Institute
President-Vicar of Kuching Hon. Sec.-Kong Kwee En Sarawak Union (old boys' S.P.G. Mission)
President-The Bishop
Vice President-Vicar of Kuching Secretary H. W. Gregg
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
This territory, formerly known as Sabah, situated at the northern end of the island of Borneo, has a coast line of about 500 miles. The population is made up of Malays Bajaus, Dusuns Sulus, Filipinos, and is estimated to number about 200,000, (see below) which includes about 12,000 Chinese. The chief geographical feature in the territory is the mountain of Kina Balu, about 13,700 feet high. The principal river on the West coast is the Padas; but the country possesses many considerable and valuable rivers. On the East there are the Kinabatangan, Labuk, Sugut, Segama, and many other, The best harbours are those of Jesselton on the West coast, Kudat on the North and Sandakan on the East.
The climate is particularly pleasant for the tropics; the days are rarely very hot, while a blanket is often required at night; and very little inconvenience is experienced from insect pests, such as mosquitoes and the like. Hurricanes, earthquakes, and other natural disturbances are unknown. The seas are teeming with fish, and the export trade in dried and salted fish is increasing. Trade with Hongkong, especially in timber, is well established, and steamers for Hongkong and Singapore, whence the majority of the trade supplies are obtained, are frequent. Amongst the zoological productions of North Borneo are to be noted elephants, rhinoceros, deer of three kinds, wild cattle, pigs, bears, and pythons. Of game birds there are a few-argus, fire back, and bulwer pheasants, wild duck, many varieties of wild pigeon and doves, nipe, and quail.
Sandakan has a magnificent harbour and is the chief place of trade. The imports include cloth, rice, hardware, manufactured goods of all kinds, opium, Chinese tobacco, Chinese coarse crockery, matches, biscuits, oil, sugar, &c. The chief exports are tobac timber, cutch and rattans, gutta-percha, india-rubber, birdsnests, seed pearls beche de mer, sharks' fins, camphor, tortoise-shell, beeswax, and other natural products, which are brought in from the interior, the neighbouring Sulu Archipelago, &
Coal fields are now being exploited, throughout the territary. The Cowie Harbour Coal mines at Silipopon have been worked with great success. For transporting con there are two lighters capable of carring 450 tons each, two of 100 tons each, and another building. About 3,000 tons of coal is stocked at mines and at Sebatik.
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
1497
The revenue of the territory inclusive of land sales for 1908 was £152,823 and the expenditure £98,925.
In 1900 the revenue was £63,660 and expenditure £49,513. It is anticipated that the net earnings this year will be double what they were in 1910. Tobacco- planting promises to become a great and profitable industry, and the tobacco already raised obtains a ready sale at very high prices. Cutch is extracted from mangrove bark and is being exported in increasing quantities. A great effort to introduce the cultivation of the Chinese poppy (opium) failed. Rubber is the latest and most popular industry, During the last few years twelve companies representing subscribed capital of some £850,000 have been formed for the purpose of turning jungles into rubber estates. Several other rubber companies are likely to be formed this year.
The company has guaranteed dividends during the non-productive period of the estates. The population of the town of Sandakan, the capital of the territory, was 9,541 in 1901, of whom 101 were Europeans and 3,878 Chinese. There are several sections of railway, totalling about 130 miles now open. The longest line runs from Jesselton to Tenom, 98 miles, which was built at a cost of $25,714 per mile. The railway is playing an important part in the development of the Company. Sandakan is distant 1,000 miles from Singapore, 1,200 miles from Hongkong and 660 miles from Manila. It became connected telegraphically with Labuan on the 7th May, 1897, and was thus placed in communication with Europe, etc.
The territory of British North Borneo was acquired from the Sultans of Brunei and Sulu by cession for a small annual payment in 1879-80, and the British North Borneo Company was incorporated by Royal Charter on the 1st November, 1881. The area of the Territory is 31,106 square miles, and the population is estimated at about 200,000, of whom about 200 are European. The Company's revenue, including receipts in London, has grown from £66,581 in 1901 to £152,823 in 1907, while the expenditure has increased from £52,384 to £98,925. The Company's authorised capital is £2,000,000, but the amount subscriber is so far less than £1,500,000. The Company has raised £500,000 in debentures and bonds at 5 per cent, but about one-fifth has already been paid off, and the remainder will be redeemed this year. In May, 1888, a British Protectorate was established. The following officers have administered the Government of the Territory since its acquisit- ion by the Company:-1881-1887, W. H. Treacher; 1887-1888, W. M. Crocker (acting); 1888-1891, C. V. Creagh, C.M.G.; 1891-1892, L. P. Beaufort (acting); 1892, C. V. Creagh, C.M.G; 1895, L. P. Beaufort; 1900, Hugh Clifford, c.M.G.; 1901, E. W. Birch, C.M.G.; 1901, E. P. Gueritz.
DIRECTORY
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO COMPANY
Incorporated by Royal Charter, 1st November, 1881 Governor and Commander-in-Chief-E. P. GUERITZ
Clerk-M. A. Cannu
Malay Writer and 2nd Clerk-Md. Ali Learner-Chan Leen Hoi
AUDIT OFFICE
Auditor-B. McEnroe Asst. do.-Vacant
Clerks-Ho Eng Seng, Md. Walli
MAGISTRATE'S COURT
District Magistrate-W. W. Smith Clerk of Court-Song Chong Foh Chinese Interpreter-Vacant
PROTECTORATE
Protector of Chinese and Supt. of Im-
migration--W. H. Penney
COURT OF DIRECTORS, LONDON
Sir Charles J. Jessel, Bart, Chairman Major Genl. Sir A. È. Turner, K.C.B. vice-
chairman
Vice-Admiral Sir B. F. Clark, K.C.B.
Sir Edward Dent
Hon. Mountstuart Elphinstone
J. A. Maitland
Sir J. West Ridegeway, G.C.M.G., K.C.B.,
K.C.S.I.
F. C. Stoop
Managing Director--William C. Cowie Secretary Harington G. Forbes
SANDAKAN
GOVERNMENT SECRETARY'S OFFICE
Governor A. C. Pearson
Acting Sec. to Governor-A. B. C. Francis Chief Clerk-S. A. Rahman
1498
TREASURY
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
Finance Commissioner-J. W. Wilson Senior Dis. Treas.-C. P. Vankinschot Cashier-M. Ponsonby
Clerks K. Kang Chin, Philippe B. Funk
Patrick S. Funk, S. Siew Boh
PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT
Superintendent Alex. Johnston, M.I.M.E. Finan of Works and Draughtsman-J. A.
Pinto
Clerk-L. Fok hoj
F. C. Stoof
Secretary-Harington G. Forbes
Offices-37, Threadneedle Street, London
LAND AND SURVEY DEPARTMENT Adg. Commr. of Lands--A. C. Pearson Chief Clerk-S. A. Pillay
Second do. -Ng Shew Shiong
Third do. --Ah Mat
Draughtsman-Pong Chu On
Town Surveyor and Second Draughtsman
-Lee Lum
Third Draughtsman--Pang Cheong Demarcator Haji Drahman
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Prin. Med. Officer-Dr. Macpherson, C.M.G, Apothecary and Clerk-Chow Ah Lim
District Surgeon, Kudat-
Do. Holmden, D.8.0. District Surgeon, Beaufort-Dr. F. A. A.
Holmden
Jesselton--Dr. F. A. A.
District Surgeon(Jesselton)-Dr.C.F.Giddy
CUSTOMS DEPARTMENT Superintendent of Customs-M. M. Clark Chief Clerk-P. Dominic Second do. N. Kang Kiew Third do. -A. Andrews
TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT Supt. of Telegraphs--R. Scott Atkinson,
M.I.E.E., F.R.S.A.
Asst. Supt. of Telegraphs G. C.Irving(abt.)| Supervisor R. M. Anthony Inspector, East Coast-R. K. Lall
Do. West Coast-M, C. Comfort Abstract-Clerk-Loo Fen Det
Chief Operator-Manison and 21 operators
POSTAL DEPARTMENT
Postmaster General--R. Scott Atkinson,
M.I.E.E., F.R.S.A.
Postmaster, Sandakan--G. C. Irving
Do.,
Do..
Do.,
Do.,
Kudat P. S. Reid
Laha Datu-A. R. Rivett Beaufort-H. L. Schooner Terani-L. Loregrove
HIGH COURT
Chief Judge-H. E. the Governor
Judges R. Bryett Turner, Barrister-at- law, Judicial Commr., A. C. Pearson, È H. Barrant
SESSIONS COURT
Judges R. Bryett Turner, Burrister-at- law, Judicial Commr., A. C. Pearson
Do.
-E. H. Barrant
Do.
-A. R. Dunlop
Do.
F. W. Fraser
Do.
A. C. Pearson
Do. J. W. Wilson
Registrar of High and Sessions Courts-
P. W. Van der Straaten
MAGISTRATES First Class
P. C. Brackenbury H. W. L. Bunbury A. B. C. Francis W. H. Hastings R. G. L. Horton
G. C. Irving
T. N. Kough
F. J. Moysey
J. M. Hall L. Lovegrove
H. Myddelton
W. H. Penuey J. T. Richardson A. W. Routledge W. W. Smith T. J. C. White L. H. Woods G. C. Woolley
Second Class
W. C. M. Weedon
D. R. Maxwell Dr. J. Macpherson,
C.M.G.
Third Class
R. K. Hardwick R. V. L. Pritchard P. S. Reid
J. H. Sharman
C. P. Vankinschot
E. W. Prevost W. B. Preston
C. F. Skinner H. A. W. Schoener A. R. Rivett
SANDAKAN EXCHANGE
Asst. Supt. in Charge-G. C. Irving Supervisor R. M. Anthony Asst. Mechanician-Yap Hen Yin
RAILWAY DEPARTMENT General Manager--A. J. West Bridge Engineer-W. J. Conn Assistant Engineers-C. F. Ashton-Pryke T. R. Allen, R. Broadhurst, Hill, A. Cooper Assistants-A. Cooper, L. H. Gomes Traffic Superintendent-A. Walter Accountant-J. G. Rowan
REGISTRATION DEPARTMENT
(Births and Deaths) Registrar-General-Dr. J. S. Macphers
C.M.G.
Registrar-Ah Lim
Registrar of Marriages-The District Mag
istrates for the several districts
PRINTING DEPARTMENT
Editor "B.N. Borneo Herald" W.W.Smiti Govt. Printer S. W. Russells
CONSTABULARY
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
Military Hearlquarters-Jesselton Commandant--Major C.H.Harington Adjutant-Capt. H. S. Bond
Supdt. of Police-Capt. A. Tucker Wardrop
Do. -E. W. Prevost
Asst. of Police-Lieut. F. M. Stokes
Do. -J. M. Reeves
Paymaster-B. Scott Keasberry Jemadar--Natha Singh
PRISON
Inspector-Major C. H. Harington Superintendent, Sandakan-F. M. Stokes
do.
Jesselton--Capt. H. S. Bond
Clerk--Y, Tiew Lock
OUT STATION OFFICERS
Resident, Sandakan-A. C. Pearson (act.) Kudat W. H. Hastings
Do.,
West Coast A. R. Dunlop Do., E. Coast-F. W. Fraser Do., Interior-E. H. Barrant
D. O. Tawao-F. J. Moysey
D. O. Beaufort-P. C. Brackenbury D. O. Labuk-J. N. Kough
D. O. Kotabelud--W. B. Preston
D. O. Tuaran H. W. L. Bunbury D. O. Kaningau-H. L. W. Stock
D. O. Tambunan-R. U. L. Pritchard, D.
O. Tamani, J. H. M. Hall
D. O. Province Clarke-G. C. Woolley D. O. Kinabatangan-J. T. Richardson D. O. Timbang Batu-L. H. Woods D. O. Menpakol-W. C. M. Weedon
D. O. Sugut-C. F. Skinner
D. O. Lahad Datu-E. W. D. T. Prevost
D. T. Lahad Datu-A. R. Rivell
D. T. Jesselton-T. J. C. White
D. T. Sandakan-C. P. Van Kinschot D. T. Kudat P. S. Reid
D. T. Tenom-L. Lovegrove
VESSELS
Engineer Governt. Vessels--A. Johnston M.I.M.E., Shipwright, and Govt. Survey-
or for Boilers
ADAMSAHIB, M. H. & Co., Merchants, Pro- fessions, &c. Sanakan, Jesselton, Beau- fort; Head Office: Sandakan
Director M. Haji Adamsahib General Manr.-Ahmat bin Sinagani Manager A. Abubakar
Chief Clerk and Accountant-M. Ab-
dul Hamid
Cashier-A. Hussain Supervisor T. M. Bakar Jesselton Branch,
Manager A. Nattarsah
Beaufort Branch,
Manager-Sinnatamby
1499
BAKAN Co., LD., THE, Manufactures of Tanning Extracts, Cutch, &c.-Head Office, 24, George Square, Glasgow
W. H. Malcolm, secretary Works: Sandakan, B. N. Borneo
Robt. W. Dale, manager
BEAUFORT BORNEO RUBBER COMPANY, LD., Planting Companies, &c., Woodford Estate, Beafort, via Jesselton; London Office: 37, Threadneedle St., London, E.C.
J. Hatton Hall, general manager I. W. Bogle, assistant
Geo. B. Mulligan, F.A.A., accountant Dr. Prilchard, medical officer A.V. Arulpillay, clerk and store keeper L. P. Shin Kong, apothecary
Behn, Meyer & Co., LTD., Merchants
J. H. Fincke, signs per pro.
E. O. Titzek
P. M. Cardoza Loo Fen Choung Lee Thien S
Kong Wah Shing Ong Cheng Chuan
Agencies
Chartered Bank of India, Australia.
and China
Norddeutscher Lloyd
Hamburg-America Linie
Pacific Mail s.s. Co. Occidental andOrien-
tal S.S. Co.
Toyo Kisen Kaisha
Joint Service
New Zealand Ins. Co. (Fire & Marine) China Mutual Life Insurance Co. Ld.,
Shanghai
Agrippinna Insurance Co. of Cologne
BRITISH BORNEO DEVELOPMENT Co., LTD. Merguan Estate, Tabanca Estate,
Tanjong Pisau Estate
W. W. Wells, estate manager (absent) C. P. A. Hoffman (acting),
Darby & Co., agents, Sandakan
BRITISH BORNEO EXPLORATION Co., LD.
-Tavitipan, Kudat
R. W. Clarke, AM. INST. C.E., manager R. R. Pitz, geologist
G. S. Plummer, accountant A. A. Varley, assistant
BRITISH BORNEO PARA RUBBER CO., LD. THE Beaufort Estate, via Jesselton: Tel. Ad: Bintang, Beaufort, Borneo; Head Office: 102, Hope Street, Glasgow
General Manager J. R. Watson Asst. Manager--D. G. Thomson Assistant-H. Frömbling
BROESE, VAN GROENOU, Import, Export
and Commission Agent
1500
Agencies
Norddeutscher Lloyd
Ocean Steamship Co.
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
Mannheim Insurance Co.
Eerste Rotterdamche Life Insurance
CHINA-BORNEO COMPANY, LTD, Sawmill Owners, Timber Merchants, Shipbuilders and Engineers; Tel. Ad: Billian W. G. Darby, general manager
W. H. Cope, outdoor superintendent R. S. Bevan, outdoor assistant S. Murray,
B. Snyder,
J. Thomas,
H. D. Holland,
do.
do.
do.
do.
W. Hutchison, engineer in charge of patent slipway and engineering works
H. Larard, engineer, saw mills
CHURCH OF ENGLAND
Rev W. H. Elton, chaplain, Sandakan
COMMERCIAL AGENTS, B. N. BORNEO Co. Adelaide Gibbs, Bright & Co. Bombay Ewart, Latham & Co. Calcutta Gillanders, Arbuthnot & Co. Colombo-J. M. Robertson & Co. Galle-Aitkin, Spence & Co. Hongkong-Gibb, Livingston & Co.
Kandy-W. D. Gibbon Madras-Arbuthnot & Co. Melbourne-Gibbs, Bright & Co. Port Darwin-Adcock Brothers Shanghai-Alfred Dent & Co. Singapore-Guthrie & Co. Sydney-Gibbs, Bright & Co.
CONSULATES
GERMANY
Acting Vice-Consul - J. H. Fincke
AMERICA
Consul-Orlando H. Baker
Vice-Consul-John Nimmo Wardrop
COWIE HARBOUR COAL CO., Ln.-Workings
Silimpopon River, Tawao
Manager R. Rees
Asst. do.-G. R. Oswald
Mec. Engr.-L. Browne
Accountant-T. W. Cond
Agents (Sandakan) Darby & Co.
DARBY & Co., Merchants; Tel. Ad: Darby
W. G. Darby
J. N. Wardrop, sigus per pro,
W. S. Cox
S. D. Holland
C. C. Newson
C. H. Boyer
Ah Lo, compradore
Mold. Tahar, godown keeper
Agencies
Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp Sabah Steamship Company, Ld. Indo-China Steam Navgn, Co., Ld. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. South Philippine Steamship Co., Inc. Lloyd's
China Traders' Insurance Co., Ld. Union Insurance Society of Canton, La. China Fire Insurance Company, Ld. London & Lancashire Fire Ins. Co., Ld. Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. Hongkong Land Invest. & Agency Co.,
Limited
British Borneo Development Co., Ld. British Borneo Exploration Co., Ld. Canton Insurance Office, Ld.
Sungei Batang Rubber Estate Borneo Coffee Co.
Sandakan Ice & Aerated Water Co., Ll.
FUNK & SONS, Photographers, Photogra phic Goods Dealers and Picture Post Cards, Publishers--Sandakan
HALL, J. HATTON, & Co., Merchants-
Jesselton
Proprietor-J. Hatton Hall Accountant-Geo. B. Mulligan, F.A.A. Clerk-Homed
Store-keeper-Boon Kay
Agencies
Beaufort Borneo Rubber Co., Ld. Norddeutscher Lloyd Str., Bremen Ocean Steamship Co., Ld., London China Mutual Steamship Co. Commercial Union Assurance Co.-
Fire, Life, Marine British-American Tobacco Co., Ltd. Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ltd. Sapong Rubber & Tobacco Co., Ltd. The Klias Rubber Estate
LABUAN & BORNEO UNITED OPIUM FARMS Managing director-Chee Swee Cheng General manager-Lim Swee Cheng Cashier -Lim Keat Hooi
LANGKON NORTH BORNEO RUBBER, LIMITED
--Langkon Estate
F. Van Houten, manager
II. W. Lunberg, accountant W. J. Rozario, assistant A. J. Rozario, overseer
G. J. Willemsen, medical officer Guthrie & Co., Ld., Singapore, agents Lo Tian Cheok, Kudat, agent
MAATSCHAPPIJ TOT EXPLOTIATIE VAN HET LAND BATU PUTCH, Tobacco Planters -Kinabatangan, Batu Putch Estate
Manager-I. Breitag
Assistant F. Meeter
Do. A. Meeter
Do.
-D. van Vliet
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
Do. --F. Parkinson Apothecary-H. G. Perkins Behn Meyer & Co., agents, Sandakan W. Mansfield & Co, agents, Singapore
MANCHESTER NORTH BORNEO Rubber Co.,
LTD.-The Melalap Estate, Tenon
General Manager-Wm. G. Hamilton Accountant-Marshall S. Guest Assistant-C. Thies, P. S. Guise, G.
A. Howson Resident Surgeon
M.B., CH.B. (EDIN.)
Agencies
W. L. Pritchard,
Guthrie & Co., Ltd., Singapore Kong Hiap Hin & Co., Jesselton
NEW DARVEL BAY (BORNEO) TOBACCO- PLANTATIONS LIMITED-Head Office: 23, Coleman St., London, E.C. Head Administration
General Manager-T. H. C. Arensma
NEW LONDON BORNEO TOBACCo Co., Ld.,
Tobacco Planters
Kudat
Head Manager-K. Dieudonné
Ranau Estate
Manager-K. Dieudonné
Bandan Estate
Manager-G. Hart de Ruyter
Bangon Estate
Manager-J. Volkers
Pitas Estate
Manager-J. E. Koning
H. Broese van Groenou. Kudat Agent W. Mansfield & Co., Ld, Singapore
Agents
Segama Estate
Manager D. ter Brugge Segama Hilir Estate
Manager--A. Zander
Lower Segama Estate
Manager-J. W. Stoffers Batu Tatak Estate
Acting Manager-T. Keetall Lahad Datu Estate
Maunger R. J. Graham
NORTH BORNEO Trading Co., LD., Timber Shippers, Sawmill Owners, Engineers and Shipbuilders, Planters-Sandakan and Tawao; Tel. Ad: Plantable
F. W. Aston, general manager (acting)
L. H. T. Apel, accountant J. R. Broadley, engineer
J. E. Prescott, magr., Tawas branch
1501
O. K. Nielsen, manager, Bode Rubber
Estate
H. J. Glyde, assistant manager London Office, 71, Bishopsgate St.
Within, E.C.
Agencies
McKie& Baxter, Shipbuilders,Glasgow British and Foreign Marine Ins. Co.
Sikong Rubber Co.
NORTH BORNEO TURF CLUB
President H. E. The Governor Chairman W. G. Darby Hon. Secretary--C. H. Boyer
SABAH STEAMSHIP Co., LTD. (Coasting
Services), Sandakan
"Labuan," 120 tons, W. L. G. Riley
engineer in charge
"Normanhurst," 56 tons, J. Boyd,
engineer-in-charge
KE
Borneo," 87 tons, C. W. B. Maddox,
master
"Sabah," 137 tons, H. Pfort, master Darby & Co., agents (Sandakan) South Philippines S. S. Co., Inc.
SANDAKAN BOOK CLUB
Libru. Chin Bitt Deh
Hon. Treasurer-M. M. Clark Hon. Secretary-H. A. Elton
SANDAKAN CLUB
Hon. President-H.E. The Governor Chairman of Committee-W.G. Darby Hon. Secretary--W. W. Smith
SANDAKAN ICE & AERATED WATER CO., LD.
Darby & Co., managers
W. Hutchison, supt. engineer
SANDAKAN RECREATION CLUB
Members General Committee 1909 J. N. Wardrop (chairman), M. W. Clark, J. A. Pilgrim, L. H. T. Apel, C. P. van Kinschot, B. McEnroe, M. Ponsonley (hon. treasurer), P. Do- minic (hon. secretary)
Sports Committee 1909
A. B. C. Francis (capt. cricket), J. M. Reculs (capt. football), J. S. Funk (secretary), H. Eng Seng, S. Ah Yin
SANDAKAN SCHOOLS
For Boys
H. A. Elton, headmaster Chin Bitt Teck, assistant
For Girls
Miss Butcher, head mistress
1502
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
SAPONG RUBBER & TOBACCO ESTATES, LD.
-Sapong Estate, Fort Birch
Frank E. Lease, administrator
Theodore A. Lind, assistant
G. J. Smith,
J. R. Bewsher,
do. do.
KUDAT
Resident, Prov. Alcock-W. H. Hasting Dist. Treas., Supervisor of Customs and
Postmaster P. S. Reid
District Officer and Magistrate-L.H.Woods Medical Officer-Major F. Holmden, D.8.0.
Dr. Lin Shin Thwin, medical officer Secy.Sanitary Board and C.C.-S. QuiBoon
S. J. Gooding, accountant
SUNGEI BATANG RUBBER ESTATE
C. P. A. Hoffman, acting supt. Darby & Co., agents, Sandakan
TARITIPAN RUBBER Co. - Borneo
J. Canarvon
TARITIPAN RUBBER ESTATE-Marudu Bay,
5,000 acres
J. Canarvon, manager
London Agents-Shand, Haldane&Co.,
24, Road Lane
KUDAT HOTEL
H. Broese van Groenou, proprietor
LAWN TENNIS CLUB, SANDAKAN
Committee-W. G. Darby (chairman)
J. W. Wilson, M. M. Clark Hon. Secretary-G. C. Irving
BRITISH BORNEO EXPLORATION CO., LTD.-
Taritipan, Kudat
R. W. Clarke, AM., INST.C.E., manager R. R. Pitz, geologist
G. S. Plummer, accountant A. A. Varley, assistant
1
•
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
PLANTING IN BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
1503
The subjoined table gives, in a concise form, the actual land being cultivated with the excep- tion of native holdings according to the official records.
Fame of Estate.
Owners.
Product.
Area planted.
Managers and Assistants,
Langkon
Langkon N. B. Rub-
ber Co., Ld
Rubber
500
Batu Putel Syndicate
Tobacco
215 fields
Laba Datu
New Darvel Bay Plan-
ting Co.
do.
250 fields
Segaina
do.
do.
800 fields
Laha Datu
T. A. Ball & J. B. Bell
Cocoanuts
100 acres
Do.
T. H. C. Arensma
do.
120
Banow
New London Borneo
Tobacco Co.
Tobacco
259 fields
New London Borneo
Tandek
Para Rubber
Tobacco Co.
Bandau
do.
Tobacco
5 acres
260 fields
Do.
do.
Cocoanuts
Pitas
do.
Tobacco
Bongan
do.
Tobacco
112 acres 200 290 fields
22
Tenom
Govmnt. Experimental
Gardens
+
Various { plantings
Klompong
New London Borneo Co.
Tobacco
250 fields
Malalap
Manchester N. B. Rub-
bạn Co, Ld
Rubber
500
+
Sapong
Sapong Rubber & To-1 bacco Estates, Ld....
Rubber Tobacco
Beaufort
B. R. Para Rubber Co.
Rubber
1230
Beaufort
Tenom Borneo Rubber
do.
550
Co., Ld.
J. Van Houten, Manager,
Lind, A.
Rozario, Visitor, Dr. Cunnynghame
P. Breitag, Manager, Tider- man, F. Meeter, E. Meeter, Behn Meyer & Co, Agents T. H. C. Arensma, Adminis- trator, T. A. Ball, Warner, D. Ter Brugge, A.Zander, T. Keetell, J. Graham,P. J. Stoffers, J. W. Stoffers, J. C. Stoffers, W. Schuck, W. Giltay, L. Eichter- sheimer, W. H. Warner, E. B. Kershaw, C. Mod- derman, H. G. Ool Gaarde, A. J. Hyekema, O. Kluge, O. Meyer, A. J. Felcheys, R. F. Lammert, Darby & Co., Agents
K. F. Dieudonné, General Acting Manager, J. Olree, W. Van den Bosch, D. Tours
G. Hart de Ruyter, Manager,
H. Van Houten
Dr. H. F. Cunnynghame J. Volkers
C. L. P. Metelerkamp, Acting Manoger, H. S. Evans, C. P. Brook, Th. Doesburgb
F. W. Fraser
J. Koning, H. W. Crouch, Manager, T. Denklau, A. Kloss, O. Meyer Nicholas, Apothecary
J. H. Berkhusden, Adminis- trator, H. Schuck, J. N. VanSchermbeck, H.S.Slyde F. E. Lease, Administrator, T. Lind, W, Schuck Lind, Dr. S. Macpherson, M. O. R. Watson, General Manager
J.
Anderson, Manager, Bost
1504
Name of Estate,
Owners.
BRITISH NORTH BORNEO
Product,
Area planted.
Managers and Assistants,
Para Rubber
Klompong
New London Borneo
Co....
Ficus Elastica Teak Wood
Cocoanuts
1,000 trees
J
100 1,000 " 1,000 **
J. Koning, H. W. Crouch
Castilloa
Elastica
}
100
Mergoan
B. B. Development
Co., Limited...
Cocoanuts
Pepper
JJ
350 acres
120
W. W. Wells, Manager,
Darby & Co, Agents
Byte
Chinese
Cocoanuts
30
JJ
Loong
Piasow
1 Kim Ching Watt
Gambier &
50
Pepper
Bokara
A. Cook
Cocoanuts
100
T
Do.
Ponsonby & Fook Hee
do.
100
EF
Tanjong Aru E. A Pavitt...
do.
35
F
Do.
H. R. Wolfe...
do.
22
Do.
Lee Chin Chuan
do.
4
+
Do.
Mrs. Beeston
do.
20
Do
P. F. J. Marcus...
do.
25
12
15
F
Do.
Chinese
do.
10
J
Pulo Daat
W. Bray
do.
200
37
Kabeli
Kabun China
Kim Eng Watt...
Do.
North Borneo T. Co....
Kim Ho Soon
Coffee
20
};
Gambier &
+
400
Pepper
JJ
do.
100
J
Segaliud
North Borneo T. Co....
Coffee
80
Teritipan
Borneo Coffee Co.
Cocoanuts
30
Tobacco
Rubber
80 fields
J. Canarvon, Manager, B. V. Klambery, Hoffman
Mempakad
E. Walker
20,000 trees
Coffee and 1 Cocoanuts Cocoanuts & Z
40 acres
E. Walker
70
do.
Arecanuts
15
Spices and
10
do.
Castor Oil j
"J
50
S. Murray
Valley Cof-
fee Estate i
Rosob
Syndicate
++
Victoria
Sebuga
F. M. Hamilton
Bokara
N. Borneo T. Co.
Coffee H. B. Van Groenoe
Coffee
Coffee and} Cocoanuts
Coffee
Coffee Cocoanuts
150
Sekong
do.
Para Rubber] 500
Bole
do.
do.
Sebuga
do.
Coffee
Trusan
do.
Duyong
Bell Estate
J B. Bell
Elton Estate' Rev. W. H. Elton
Cocoanuts & }
Pepper
Cocoanuts
9 888 8 8
40
>
60
J
J
**
Kudat
Do.
! Chinese
do.
S'dakan Bay Natives
Beaufort
Beaufort B. Rubber Co. Rubber
do.
Coffee
Cocoanuts
do.
200 13 130 1,600
13
}
500
中央
43
140
**
E. Walker
H. B. Groenoe
Wong Wing
G.J. Altman, Bewsher, W 'De Liew
do.
do.
J. Hatton Hall
LABUAN
This, the smallest British Colony in Asia, was ceded to Great Britain by the Sultan of Brunei in 1846, and taken possession of in 1848. It is situated on the north-west coast of Borneo in latitude 5 deg. 16 min. N., and longitude 115 deg. 15 min. E. It has an area of 30 square miles, and is about six miles from the Borneo coast. Although Labuan possesses a fine port, has extensive coal deposits, and by situation seemed likely to become a depôt for the trade of the north coast of Borneo, it has only partially fulfilled the expectations formed of it. The produce of Brunei finds a market in Labuan, but the volume of the trade is small. There are sago mills on the island, where the raw material is converted into flour, for export chiefly to Singapore. These mills were erected by influential Chinese introduced by the Governor from Singapore; they have also put up tapioca mills and have arranged to plant 500 acres a year until 5,000 acres have been planted. Cocoanuts are being planted on the same fand. There is regular steamship commuunication with Singapore, Sandakan and Manila as well as with the local ports. The Government was administered by the British North Borneo Company from 1890 until January 1st, 1906, when the Colonial Office again resumed direct control. The population in 1901 was 8,411, of whom 51 were Europeans and 17 Eurasians, the remainder being chiefly Chinese and Malays. The Chinese, who number over a thousand, are the chief traders, and most of the industries of the island are in their hands. There are about forty Europeans now, including Government officials, the staff of the Eastern Extension Telegraph Company, the Coal Point mines and traders. The Labuan Coalfields Company, Limited, are lessees of the coal mines in the island, and are developing a considerable trade in the coal, which is largely supplied to H.M.'s ships. The present output is about 14,000 tons a year. The revenue is chiefly derived from the farming out of licences to sell tobacco spirits, opium, and fish,
GOVERNMENT OF LABUAN
DIRECTORY
Governor and Commander-in-chief-Sir. J.
Anderson, K.C.M.G.
Private Secretary-Claud Severn(Resident
at Singapore) Acting do.-
High Commissioner for Brunei and the Federated Malay States, and British Agent for B. N. Borneo and Sarawak-Sir John Anderson, R.G.M.G.
RESIDENT'S OFFICE Resident--Harvey Chevallier Chief Clerk-Christopher G. Boyd Second-Fong Chung Foug
TREASURY & DISTRICT OFFICE Treasurer District Officer and Collector of Land Revenue Stanley E. Dennys
POST OFFICE
HARBOUR OFFICE
Pilot and Harbourmaster-Capt. J. K.
Webster
DISTRICT AND POLICE COURTS District Judge--M. S. H. McArthur Acting Do.-Harvey Chevallier Asst. District Judge Magistrate of Police-
Stanley E. Dennys
Acting District Judge-William Bartley Clerk of Courts, and Chinese Interpreter
-Chan Wai Sik
COLONIAL MEDICAL DEPARTMENT Surgeon Dr. R. E. Adamson, M.D,
PUBLIC WORKS & SURVEY DEPARTMENT Supt. Edmund Roberts, M.I. MECH. E.
-
Post Master-Stanley E Dennys (on leave) BROOKETON COLLIERIES -Brooketon, Brunei
Acting do. M. E. Sherwood
Asst. do.
-
-G. A. Phillips
Clerk-Awang Besar bin Ong Keat
Do.-Ahmat bin Usop
H. F. May, M.B., manager and agent T. Lewis, assistant manager J. W. Evans, second assistant E. N. Harris, mech. engineer
1500
POLICE
LABUAN
In charge of Police Inspector H. G.
Crummey
Sergeant Major-Iara Singh
Sergeant Dallibin Gulah mydin
Clerk--Mohamed Tamimih
PRISONS
Victoria Goal
Superintendent The District Officer
Warder Sergt. Major Tara Singh
CHURCH OF ENGLAND-Church of Our
Holy Saviour
John Hardie, warden
AND
EASTERN EXTENSION, AUSTRALASIA
CHINA TELEGRAPH Co., LD.-Labuan
W. R. Young, superintendent
R. A. Oddie, clerk-in-charge C. P. Templeton, supervisor
ENG WATT & Co., Morchants-57, Beach
Street
Koh Eng Watt, managing owner
Quek Kuan Liang, signs per pro. Goh Lian Poh, bookkeeper Chua Choo Ling, bill collector Koh Eue Keng, salesman
GOVT. REST HOUSE--High Street, Victoria,
managed by Government
Lessee-W. W. Trading Co.
Boyd of Victoria
HARDIE, JOHN, Merchant and Comsu. Agt. J. A. Henderson Hardie, assistant Gwee Tong Watt, clerk and storekeeper Agencies
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld. British North Borneo Railways New Zealand Insurance Company British Borneo Rubber Co., Ld. Bell's Asbestos Company, Ĺd. Borneo Company, Ld. Island Trading Syndicate, Ltd. Malayan Ramic Co., Ltd. North Borneo Trading Co., Ltd.
HONG HIN & Co., Opium, Spirit and Tobacco Farmer (Labuan and Borneo)-Beach St; Lim Swee Cheng, general manager
(Labuan and Borneo)
ISLAND TRADING SYNDICATE, LD., Cutch and Tannin Factory, Extract Man'ftrs.
F. N. Butterworth, manager
G. Wood, assistant manager T. A. Robarts, engineer W. Doughty, pansman
J. F. Bose,
do.
KEASBERRY, J. P., Agent, Builder, and Con-
tractor and Shipchandler-2, Parit St; I
LABUAN COALFIELDS Co.,LD.-Labuan; Tel. Ad: Central; Head Office: 28, Fenchurch St., London
John Bownian, general manager
Andrew Jamieson, mine manager A. G. Vanscolina, manager Victoria
Harbour
LABUAN GOLF CLUB
President The British President Hon. Secy, and Treas.-J. A. H. Hardie
LABUAN RECREATION CLUB
President Harvey Chevallier Vice do.-M. E. Sherwood, R. E. Adam- son, M.D., E. Roberts, A. G. Vans- colira, C. G. Boyd, G. A. Phillips, (Hon. Sec. and Treas.)
LABUAN WATER COMPANY, LD.---Labuan
J. Hardie, managing director W. W. Boyd, secretary
LAWAS (Sarawak Territory), in Brunei
Bay
Officer-in-charge-I. Kirkpatrick
Caldecot
PILOT LICENSED-Labuan
J. K. Webster
PULO DAAT COMPANY
Planting, Cocoanuts, Rubber, Ylang Ylang: Tel. Ad: Daat A. Kuken Duken
and manager
part proprietor
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH-St. Ann
Rev. N. Smeele
ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSION
Very Rev. E. Dunn, prefect apostolie,
superior, Kuching, Sarawak Very Rev. A. Haidegger, procurator Rev. A. Gossens, Papar
Rev. Keizer, Kanowit, Sarawak Rev. Reyffert,
do.
Rev. Tl. Duxneuner, Penampang Rev. A. Stotter, The Cut, Sarawak Rev. A. Klerk, Bawan, Sarawak Rev. A. Willems, Kanuta, Papar Rev. W. v. Mens, Jesselton Rev. N. Smeele, Labuan Rev. A. IIopfgartner, Sandakan Rev. B. Mulder, The Cut, Sarawak Rev. H. v.d. Heyden, Kuching Sarawak Rev. V. Halder, Sibu, Sarawak Rev. V. Weber, Jesselton Rev. A. Wachter, Penampang Rev. A. Mulder, Pelbukak, Sarawak Rev. A. Oss, Sibu, Sarawak Rev. A. Unterberger, Baram Sarawak Rev. A. Luppes, Sandakan Rev. Dines, The Cut, Sarawak
LABUAN
Brother Theodore, Kanowit, Surawak Brother Simon, The Cut, do. St. Joseph's Convent, Kuching, do. Rev. Mother Helene and 5 Sisters Rev. C. Keet, Mukak, Sarawak Rev. H. Jansen, Sarawak, Baram St. Mary's Convent, Sandakan S. M. Teresa and 3 Sisters
St. Francis Convent, Kanowit, Sarn-
wak, 3 Sisters
Singhi Convent, Sarawak, 3 Sisters Papar Convent, 3 Sisters
SARAWAK GOVT. AGENCY, H. F. May M.E. Agent (Jno. Hardie resigned), also Brooketon Collieries, Brooketon, Brunei |
1507
H. F. May, M.E. genl. mngr. and agent Thos. Lewis, assistant manager
J. W. Evans, second assistant
S. W. Harris, mechanical engineer
SARAWAK GOVERNMENT MINES; Agent (Labuan) H.F. May, Buang Tawar Coal and Oil Mines, Coal Depôt and Wharves (Govt.) Sadong, under the management of Mines
H. F. May, M.E. general manager J. O. Maddocks, local manager Peter. Stewart, acting engineer
VICTORIA TRADING CO.
W. W. Boyd, manager and attorney
H.B.M. SQUADRON IN CHINA AND JAPAN
Commander-in-Chief Vice-Admiral Hon. Sir HEDWORTH LAMBTON, K.C.V.O., K.C.B.
ALACRITY, Twin Screw Despatch Vessel
1,700 Tons
I.H.P. 2,000 N.D. (3,000 F.D.)
CHINA
Do.
Com.-George Trewby......25 Mar. 09 Lieut. (N) Albert E. Dixie .25 Mar, 109 (T) Eric L. Wharton ...25 Mar. '09 (G) David W. S. Douglas 25 Mar. 09 Walter C. Lucas .25 Mar. '09 Philip W. S. King .25 Mar, '09 Cosmio A. O. Douglas...25 Mar. '09 Andrew Johnstone. .26 Mar, '09
Do.
Do.
Do.
28 July '08
Do.
Do.
Comdr.-Cyril T. M. Fuller ...25 Feb. 208
Lieut.-Niel O. Neill..
Do.-(N) R. H. C. Hallifax... 3 Sept. 208 7 Mar, 08
Do. D. Maxwell
(In lieu of a Sub-Lieut.) Eng. Lieut.-J. T. C. Butland...16 July '09 Staff Surgeon-Samuel Conner,
M.B.
Assist. Paym. in charge-Arthur
C. Roe
Gunner-Wm. H. Patchen
....28 Sept. 208
28 Sept. '08
3 Mar. '08
Art. Engr.-Wm. S. L. Collins...27 Nov. '08 (Re-commissioned at Shanghai, 28th September, 1905) (Attached to Portsmouth.)
ASTRÆA, 10. Twin Screw Protected
Cruiser, Second Class
4,360 Tons. I.H.P. 7,000 N.D. (9,000 F.D.) CHINA
Capt. Frank E. C. Ryan Lieut.-(1)(c) Morris E. Coch-
rane
1 Jan. '08
..8 Sept. '08 Do.-F. A. Sommerville 8 Sept. '08 Do. (N) Wm. R. S. Harman 8 Sept. '08 Do. Alastair R. F. Spottis-
-
wood.
8 Sept. '08 Eng. Com. Ch. T. D. Greetham 9 Nov. '07 Eng. Lieut. Robert D. Nelson & Sept. '08 Chaplain-Rev. Alfred R. W.
Peek, MA..
8 Sept. 708 Staff Surg. (1)J.A. Forrest, MB. 8 Sept. '08 Staff Paym.-John T. Wright,8 Sept. '05 Surgeon Guy L. Buckeridge... 8 Sept. 08 Sub-Lieut. Henry Forrester.. 8 Sept. '08 Asst. Paymt.Alfred H. S.
Steele Perkins
―
8 Sept. 208
2 June '08
Gunner-Solomon Ousley
Do. (T) Walter T. Silk (act) 8 Sept. 203 Do. Thomas Donnelly (act) 8 Sept. '08
(For Q. D. Duties). Carpenter David Mackay 8 Sept. '08 Art. Engr. Frederick Ellis 8 Sept. '08 (Re-commissioned at Colombo, 8 Sept. '08) (Attached to Chatham.)
BEDFORD, 14. Twin Screw Armoured Cruiser 9,800 Tons I.H.P. 22,000 N.D. CHINA
Capt.-Edward S. Fitzherbert 21 Dec. '08
Eng. Com.-F. C. Williams.. .24 Aug. '09 Eng. Lieut. Walter C. Heppel 25 Mar. 09 --James D. Niven 5 Feb. '07
Archibald S. De
Do.
Do.
St. Legier.....
Capt. R.M.-C. L. Mayhew
...25 Mar '09
25 Mar, 09 Į (22 Feb. '09)
Chaplain-Rev. Lewis G. Jones,
M.A.
Jan. 108
Fleet Surg.--George A. S. Bell 25 Mar. 09 Fleet Paym. Harry G. Wilson 25 Mar. 09 Surgeon-Robert M. Riggall ...25 Mar. '09 Sub-Lieut.-F. P. O. Bridge-
inan
27 July '09 Do. -John N. Pelly .25 Mar. '09 Do. -Donald F. O'C.
Brodie Eng. Sub-Lieut. Arther E.
Lane
Assist. Paymn.--James A. B.
Robertson..
25 Mar. 09
.25 Mar. '09
.25 Mar, '09
Gunner-Arther F. Donovan ...25 Mar. 09 Do. Joseph Young .25 Mar. '09
(For Instructional Duties.) Boatswain-Patrick Cashman...25 Mar. 09 Sig. Boatswain-John Bagget...25 Mar. 00 Carpenter Roger Cadogan ...25 Mar, 09 Artif. Eng. Robert Driscoll 25 Mar. '09 Do. -Alfred J.J. Roberts 25 Mar. 09 Clerk Cecil K. Lloyd
.25 Mar. '09 Re-commissional at Hongkong. 25th March, 1909. (Attached to Chatham.)
BRAMBLE. 2. Twin Screw
Gun-Boat. 1st Class. 710 Tons. I.H.P. 900 N.D. (1,300 F.D.)
CHINA
Lieut. and Com.-Hon. Richard
L
O. B. Bridgeman.. .11 Mar. 08 Lieut. (N) Henry R. Moore ...27 July 19
Do.
.11 Mar. 08 Staff Surg-Walter P. Dyer...11 Mar. 06 Ch. Artif. Eng.-J. Hindmarch 11 Mar. Gunner Frederick Isaac
.11 Mar. us Re-commissioned at Woosung, 11 Mar. U
(Attached to Portsmouth.)
H.B.M. SQUADRON IN CHINA AND JAPAN
BRITOMART, 2.
Twin Screw
Gun-Boat, 1st Class.
710 Tons, I.H.P. 900 N.D. (1,300 F.D.)
CHINA
..11 Mar. 208
Lieut. & Com.-F. B. Noble Lieut-(N) Marshal L. Clarke...27 July '09 Surgeon-Charles H. Dawe ...11 Mar. '08 Sub-Lt.-Edward M. Gibbings 11 Mar. '08 Ch. Artif. Eng. Win. J. Morrell 9 Nov. '07 Gunner-William Donovan ...11 Mar. '08
Re-commissioned at Woosung, 11th March, 1908.
(Attached to Portsmouth.)
CADMUS, 6. Screw Sloop. 1,070 Tons. I.H.P. (1,400 F.D.) CHINA
Comdr. Hugh L. P. Heard...11 July '08 Lieut. Basil L. Wymer
..24 Sep. 08 Do. Frederick C. Lucas...24 Sept. '08 ...24 Sept. '08 Do. (N) David R. Ritchie ...27 July '09 Surgeon-Harry M. Langdale ..28 July '08 Assist Paym. in Charge-(1)
Edward P. Jones ...24 Sept. '08 Ch. Artif.Eng.-Edwin G.Hoskin 16 July '08 Gunner-F. C. Russell
.22 July '08
Re-commissioned at Hongkong, 24th September, 1908.
(Attached to Chatham.)
CLIO, 6. Screw Sloop.
1,070 Tons. I.H.P. (1,400 F.D.)
CHINA
Comdr-C. T. Borrett
Lieut.-V. R. N. Porter
Do.
Do.
24 Sep. 08 .24 Sep. '08
(N) Charles H Fforde...24 July '08 Henry R. James, .24 Sept. '08
(In lieu of a Sub-Lieut.) Surgeon F. J. Gowans
Assist. Paymt, in Charge-B. E.
Porter
.24 Sep. 08
18 Jan. '08 08
Ch. Artif. Eng. Frank Mills ...24 Sep.
Gunner J. L. Browne.
.24 Sep. '08
Re-commissioned at Hongkong, 24th September, 1908.
(Attached to Chatham.)
FAME. Twin Screw Torpedo-Boat Destroyer. 340 Tons. I.H.P. (5,700 F.D.) CHINA
Tender to "Tamar,"
Lieut & Com.-Charles E. Lloyd
Thomas
.26 Feb. '09 Eng. Sieut-F. W. Bromley... 9 Nov. 07 Sub-Lieut-Edward C. Denison 26 Feb. '09 Gunner-Ernest S. Stone .22 July '08
(Borne in Tamar.")
FLORA, 10. Twin Screw.
Protected Cruiser, 2nd Class. 4,360 Tons. I.H.P. 7,000 N.D. (9,000 F.D.)
CHINA
Capt.-John Nicholas
7 Sept. '09
Jukes-Hughes....
1509
Lieut. (G) Edward G. de S.
7 Sep. '09
Lieut. (N) George F. B. Edward
7 Sep. '09
Do.
7 Sep. '09
Collins
Arthur J. Landon Do. Eric V. Grey Eng. Lieut-C. E. Hammond Eng. Lieut. Charles E. Sutton Ch. Rev. Percy Rowlands, MA. Staff Surg-Arthur F. Fraser,
MB.
Fleet Paym.-F. W. F. Vining... Surgeon-Guy T. Verry Sub-Lieut. Irving M. Palmer... Assist. Paym.-C. H. A. Crouch Gunner-Robert J. Sweet
7 Sep. '09 23 Aug. 09 7 Sep. 209 7 Sep. 09
7 Sep. '09 7 Sep. 09
7
Sep. '09
7 Sep. 09 7 Sep. 09 7 Sep. '09 7 Sep. 09
Do. (T) Alexander G. Stock Boatswain-Joel E. Blamey.... 7 Sep. '09 (For Q. D. Duties.)
Carpenter--Herbert R. Lillicrap 7 Sep. 09 Artif. Eng. - Edwin Dawson 16 July '08 Re-commissioned at Colombo, 7th September, 1909.
HANDY. Twin Screw
Torpedo Boat Destroyer. 295 Tons
I.H.P (4,000 F.D.)
HONGKONG
(Tender to "Tamar.")
Lieut. Com.-B. T. D. Guy, V.C. Sub Lieut. Francis W. Craven Gunner-Henry W. McClelland Artif. Eng.-F. H. Williams
(Borne in " Tamar.")
HART. Twin Screw Torpedo Boat Destroyer. 295 Tons.
I.H.P. (4,000 F.D.)
CHINA
L
Tender to Tamar."
Lt. & Com.-Hubert S. Monroe 26 Feb. '09 Sub-Lt. Donald P. MacGregor 26 Aug. '08 (In lieu of a Sub-Lieut.) Ch. Art. Eng. Henry B. Beer16 July '08 Gunner-Albert W. Miller.. ..22 July '08
*(Borne in "Tamar")
JANUS. Twin Screw Torpedo Boat Destroyer. 320 Tons. I.H.P. (3,900 F.D.)
HONGKONG
Tender to "Tamar,"
Lieut. & Com.-Gilbert C. Heathcote Sub-Liet.-N. R. Peploe
Gunner Wm. J. Newton
Artif Eng.-Edward Richards (Borne in "Tamar.")
KENT, 14. Twin Screw Armoured Cruiser
9,800 Tons. I.H.P. 22,000 N.D. CHINA
Capt. S. St. J. Farquhar Conidr.-E. N. Rymer
1510
H.B.M. SQUADRON IN CHINA AND JAPAN
Lieut.-J. C. Davis
Do. -(T) R. Sneyd Do.-(N) J. B. Murray Do. -R. J. Buchanan
Do. R. E. Lubbock
Eng. Comdr.-E. J. Campbell
Eng. Lieuts.-A. E. Murray, H. G. Moon,
B. C. Bowler
Fleet. Surg.-G. Ley
Staff Paym.-O. R. Mathews
Capt. R.M. L. 1.-- Ï. B. A. Lawrie Surg. J. Glaister
Sub-Lieut.-M. N. Williamson Napier
Do. V. Hammersley-Heenan Asst. Paym.--B. A. Stinton Clerk-L. R. Tippen
KINSHA. P. River Steamer for service on the Yangtsze.
616 Tons. I.H.P. (1,200 N.D.) CHINA
Lt. & Com.-Thomas J. S. Lyne Lieut. Cecil E. Wilkins..
'08
6 Mar. '08
Do. Victor J. Bowden-Smith
(In lieu of a Sub-Lieut.)
'08
Staff Surgeon John Verdon... 4 Mar. '09 Artif. Eng.-G. Eustace
5 Jan. '09 Re-commissioned at Shanghai, 19 July, '06 (Attached to Devonport.)
Do.
MINOTAUR, 14. Twin Screw Armoured Cruiser. 14,600 Tons. I.H.P. 27,000 N.D. CHINA
MERLIN. Twin Screw Sloop. 1,070 Tous. I.H.P. 1,400 N.D. Surveying Service.
Comdr.-F. C. Learmonth 24 Apr. 209 Lieut. Frederick A. Reyne ...24 Apr. 09
Do. (N) James R. Harvey.......
'06 -Donald M. Davies......28 Aug. 208 -Alan C. H. Duke .28 Aug. '08 Geo. St. J. Llewellyn...24 Apr. 09 Surgeon Edgar S. Wilkinson,
Do. Do.
M.B...
24 Apr. 09 Sub-Lieut.-Victor I. Griffith...24 Apr. 09 Assist. Paym. in charge--(1)
Herbert A. Michell...24 Apr. 209 Ch. Artif. Eng.--J. R. Drake... 1 Jan. '09 Boatswain-Frederick C. Monk 24 Apr. '09 Re-commissioned at Hongkong, 24th April, 1909. (Attached to Chatham.)
MONMOUTH, 14. Twin Screw Armoured Cruiser
9,800 Tons. I.H.P. 22,000 N.D. CHINA
Captain-George W. Smith......22 Feb. '08 Commander-Gerald T. F. Pike 22 Feb. '08 Lieut. Ronald E. Chilcott .22 Feb. '08
Do.
Do.
(N) H. B. Bedwell.
John W. Pugh ........
.22 Feb. '08 .22 Feb. '08
Do.
Do.
Do. Do.
(1) F. V. Williamson.....22 Feb. '08 (G) D. W. O'B. Forsyth 21 May 07 -Walter A. Selby 22 Feb. 'us Godfrey Herbert...... 22 Feb. 'ng Do. -Cecil R. H. Harvey...30 Aug. '08
(In lieu of a Sub-Lieut.)
Eng. Com.-George W. Murray12 Feb. '08 Eng. Lt. Frederick C. Fisher...31 Oct. 208 -James W. Alexander 22 Feb. 'OR
-Thomas H. F. Dam-
Do.
Do.
Do.
pier-Child..
-Edward C. Warden..22 Feb. 08
Capt. R.M.Ed. K. Fletcher..22 Feb. 08
.22 Feb. '08
((14 Jan.'08)
22 Feb. 08 (14Jan. '08)
Lieut. R.M. (1) Aidan I. Bell Chaplain-Rev. William H.
Maundrell, M.A. ..22 Feb. '08 Staff Surg-C. H. J. Robinson.22 Feb. '08 Paymaster Win. R. Hodder ...22 Feb. 08 Surgeon-George D. Walsh......22 Feb. '08 Sub-Lieut.-Douglas A. Oliver 16 Apr. 08 Assist Paym.-N. Cunningham 22 Feb. '08 Do. C. T. Phillips ...22 Feb. '08 Gunner-John Leaman
Do. -Wm. H. Inghamn
22 Feb. '08 .22 Feb. 108
(For Instructional Duties.) Boatswain-George F. Vosper..22 Feb. '08 Sig. Bos'n-Henry J. Wayling...28 May '08 Carpenter-William C. Geaton 22 Feb. '08 Artif.Eng. -Andrew W. P. Boss 16 July '08 Do. -Fred Bloor .22 Feb. '08
(Re-commissioned at Colombo, 22nd February, 1908.) (Attached to Devonport.)
MOORHEN. Twin Screw Shallow Draught Steamer, for River Service
180 Tons. I.H.P. (800 N.D.) CHINA
+
Lt. & Com.-George P. Leith ...19 Apr. 09 Surg. John M. Gordon, M.B 6 Mar, '08
Re-commissioned at Hongkong, 6th March, 1908.
(Attached to Chatham.)
NIGHTINGALE. Twin Screw Shallow
Draught Steamer for River Service.
85 Tons. I.H.P. 240 N.D.
CHINA
Lieut. & Com.-C. H. Woodward 8 July '09 Surgeon -Gilbert B. Scott
.22 Dec. 08
Re-commissioned at Woosung, 11 Mar. '08.
(Attached to Devonport.)
OTTER. Torpedo Boat Destroyer. 350 Tons. I.H.I'. (6,300 F.D.)
CHINA
Tender to "Tamar,"
Commander E. Stevenson
Lient.-A. E. P. Lyons
Eng. Lieut.-Alfred E. Everitt Gunner-Federick Hills
(Borne in "Tamar.")
H.B.M. SQUADRON IN CHINA AND JAFAN
ROBIN. Twin Screw Shallow Draught Steamer for River Service. 8 Tons. 1.H.P. (240 N.D.)
CHINA
Lt. & Com.-John White........ 3 Mar. '08 Surgeon--Leonard Warren, M.B.14 Jan. '08 (Re-commissioned at Hongkong, 13th March, 1907.) (Attached to Chatham.)
SANDPIPER. Twin Screw Shallow Draught Steamer for River Service 85 Tons. I.H.P. (240 N.D.)
CHINA
Lt. & Comdr.-H. R. Tickell
5 Feb. '07
Surgeon Sheldon F. Dudley...21 Sep. 09 (Re-commissioned at Hongkong,
13th March, 1907.) (Attached to Chatham.)
SNIPE. Twin Screw Shallow Draught Steamer for River Service 85 Tons. I.H.P. (240 N.D.)
CHINA
Lt. & Com. Alan Dixon....
16 Oct.
07 Surgeon James L. Barford ...21 Oct. 207
(Re-commissioned at Shanghai, 10th May, 1904.)
New books opened 1st October, 1906. (Attached to Devonport.)
TAKU, Twin Screw Torpedo Bout Destroyer.
305 Tons. I.II.P. (6,000 F.D.) HONGKONG
Gunner in Command--(T) Win.
Barlow ...20 July '08 Chief Artif. Eng.-M. J. Specr21 May '08
(Borne in "Tamar.")
TAMAR. Receiving Ship.
4,650 Tons HONGKONG
Captain-Herbert Lyou, Ad. C. 18 Aug. '08
(Commodore of the 2nd class.) Secretary-E. C. Blanchflower 5 Mar. '07 Clerk to Sec.-E. C. Oliver ...18 Aug. 08 Com-(1) Fitzmaurice Acton...22 May '09 Lieut. (N) Henry Butterworth 1 May '06 Do. Arthur A. Mellin...... 2 Aug. '07 Lieut. R.M.-EI. P. H. Parloe 17 Mar '09 (6 Jan. '09) (And for duty as Musketry Instructor) Fleet Surg. Ernest A. Shaw,
M.B., B.A.................
.26 Dec. '06
Staff Payın.-R. P. Walker 14 May '08 Surgeon-Percy F. Minett .22 Dec. '08 Asst.Paym.-N.D'A. Thompson 1 Oct. 07
Do. -Lionel D. McKean- Gunner-Charles Pallot Boatswain E. J. Marshall...... .18 Feb. '08
'08
.26 Mar. '08
(For Mail Duties.)
1511
The following Officers are borne for various services:
For longkong Yard.
Commander (N) M. II. Penfold 2 Apr. 07 Lieut. (T) Lionel E. II. Royle...20 Oct. 08 Eng. Com. Francis W. Highton 8 July '09 (Chief Engineer of Yard.)
Eng. Com. Mark Rundle .27 Aug. '09 (First Assistant to the Chief Engineer.) Eng. Lieut. Wm. M.McDonald16 Nov. '07 (For Hongkong Yard.)
Do. -Charles Main......17 May '07 (And for service with Gun mountings
of the Fleet.)
Chap. Rev. Octavins R. F
Hughes, M.A.
.10 Feb. '09
(And for Hongkong Hospital.) Surgeon Archibald D, Spalding 25 Feb. '09 Boatswain--William Booley ...12 Mar. '09 Carpenter C. T. Ridgway...24 Aug. '09 For service at Wei-hai-wei.
Comdr. (Retired)-E. J. Yorke.20 Aug. '02 (King's Harbour Master, Wei-hai-wer.) Eng. Com. Wm. R. Parker 5 Mar. '08
Lieut. R.M.-R. G. Burton...{
'09
(27 July '09) 8 May '07
Fleet Surg.-F. D. Lumley Asst. Paymaster in Charge-
L. J. P. G. McSheehy-
'08
'09 J 5 June '08 (28 Mar. '08) '09
For Miscellaneous Service. Lieut.--(c) Robert R. Rusoman Maj. R.M.-Horace C. Evans... Licut. R.M. (1) Gerald H. FJ
Abraham (19 June '09) Eng. Com. Wm. W. Hardwick 10 Nov. '08 (For charge of machinery of "Wivern," and for Fleet Duties at Hongkong.) (For charge of Stores and duty with T. B.'s and to assist. Eng. Com.)
₤17 Mar. '07 Lient. R.M.-C. F'. Jervam.....((10 Jan. '07)
(For service in Senior Officer's Ship
Yangtze River.)
Gunner-Georg J. L. Stroud ...12 May '09 (For "Wivern.")
Do.
(r) Henry Gibson...... 9 July '09
(For charge of T. stores at Hongkong.) (Commissioned at Hongkong, 1st October, 1897) TENDERS. Handy, Janus, Virago, Hart, Otter, Fame, and Whiting.
TEAL Twin Screw Shallow Draught Steamer for River Service 180 Tons. 1.H.P. (800 N.D.) CHINA
Lt. & Com.-H. B. Godfrey...
5 Feb. '07
Surgeon Wm. W. D. Chilcott 27 Mar, 08-
1512
H.B.M. SQUADRON IN CHINA AND JAPAN
(Re-commissioned at Shanghai,
10th May, 1904.)
New books opened 1st October, 1906. (Attached to Chatham.)
THISTLE, 2. Twin Screw Gunboat, 1st Class
710 Tons. I.H.P. 900 N.D. (1,300 F.D.) CHINA
―
Lt. & Com.-Harold T. Atlay...11 Mar. '08 Lieut. (N) Francis G. Stewart 10 Dec. '08 Do. Wm. R. J. White...... .11 Mar. '08
(In lieu of a Sub-Lieut.) Surgeon Walter P. Yetts... 11 Mar. 08 Chf. Art. Eng.-Wm. C. Oliver 9 July '09 Gunner-Albert Whiting. 21 July '08 Re-commissioned at Woosung, 11 Mar. 208.) (Attached to Devonport.)
VIRAGO. Twin Screw Torpedo Boat Destroyer. 395 Tons. I.H.P. (6,300 F.D.) CHINA
Tender to Tamar,"
Lt. & Com.-C. A. Fremantle
Eng, Lieut-George J. Sisley
(Borne in "Tamar.")
WATERWITCH (late Lancashire Witch). Surveying Vessel
620 Tons. I.H.P. 450 N.D. Surveying Service on China Station.
Lt. & Com. Henry P. Douglas 6 Mar. 08 Lieut. John S. Harris
Do. (N) John S. Schäfer. Do. F. E. B. Haselfoot Do.
C. H. Knowles......
Surgeon-A. O. Hooper, M.B....
Assist. Paym.E. P. Rickcord....
in charge... [
Boatswain Wm A. Collins
-
6 Mar, '08
6 Mar. '08
6 Mar. '08
6 Mar. '08 6 Mar. '08
Dec. '07
6 Mar, '08
(Recommissioned at Hongkong, 6th March, 1908)
(Attached to Portsmouth.)
WHITING. Twin Screw Torpedo Boat Destroyer. 360 Tons. I.H.P. (5,900 F.D.)
CHINA
Tender to "Tamar."
Lt. & Com.-C. A. Fremantle...26 Feb. '09 Eng. Lt. Arthur E. Drought...19 Mar. 08
(Borne in Tamar.")
**
WIDGEON Shallow Draught Steamer. 195 Tons. I.H.P. (800 F.D.)
CHINA
Lt. & Com.-John F. Knox......20 June 107 Lieut.-H. W. K. Young .30 Aug, 08
(In lieu of a Sub-Lieut.)
Eng. Lieut.-John F. Bell
9 Nov. '07
Surgeon Alfred B. Cox, M.B....14 Jan. '08 (Commissioned at Shanghai, 28th
Nov., 1904.)
(Attached to Devonport.)
WOODCOCK. Twin Screw Shallow Draught Steamer for River Service.
150 Tons. I.H.P. (550 N.D.) CHINA
Lt. & Com.--Michael H. Wilding 2 July '09 Surgeon-N. B. V. Jacob.........14 Jan. '08 (New books opened, 1st July, 1906.)
(Attached to Chatham.)
WOODLARK. Twin Screw Shallow
Draught Steamer for River Service 150 Tons. I.H.P. (550 N.D.) CHINA
Lt. & Com.-G. F. A. Mulock... 8 July '09 Surgeon Campbell Ross, M.B....22 Dec. '08 (Re-commissioned at Hongkong, 15th
May, 1903)
New books opened 1st July, 1906. (Attached to Devonport.)
DIVISION NAVALE FRANÇAISE DE L'EXTRÊME ORIENT
}
(FRENCH FAR-EASTERN NAVAL DIVISION).
Commander in Chief-Rear-Admiral de la Croix de Castries (flagship "Montcalme")
"MONTCALME," Armoured Cruiser
(flagship)
"ALGER" (protected cruiser)
"DUPLEIX" (protected cruiser) "DESAIX'
DÉCIDÉE (gunboat)
id.
RIVER GUNBOATS
"ARGUS"
"VIGILANTE"
"OLRY, TAKIANG"
"PEI-HO"
DIV. NAVALE DE L'INDO-CHINE (NAVAL DEFENCE OF INDO-CHINA) Commodore-Capt. Jan-Kerguistel (flag-
ship "Redoutable")
ACHERON (armoured gunboat)
ALOUETTE (depot), Colonial torpedo-boat
and sub-marine
CARONADE (river gunboat) Estoc (river gunboat), Tonkin ESTURGEON (sub-marine)
HENRI RIVIERE (river gunboat), Tonkin LYNX (sub-marine) PERLE (sub-marine) PROTÉE (Sub-marine) REDOUTABLE (battleship) STYX (armoured gunboat) BATONNETTE (gunboat) CIMETERRE do. FRONDE (destroyer)
TAKOU
do.
VAUBAN (torpedo-depot)
VÉTÉRAN
D'THERVILLE
do.
MANCHE (aviso-transport) PISTOLET (destroyer) MOUQUET (destroyer)
FORZE ITALIANE IN CINA
Comandante Superiore
Capitano di Fregata, Mario Casanuova di Jerserich
R. Nave "CALABRIA
}}
Comandante Capitano di Fregata, Mario
Casanuova di Jerserich
Comandante in 2" Capitano di Corvetta,
Giovanni Giovannini
Tenente di Vascello-Alberto Bottini
id. EttoreSommatidi Monbello
-Enrico Bella
---Ugo Perricone -G. Batta Carniglia
Sotto Tenente di Vascello-Enrico Tur
id.
id.
id.
id.
id.
id. id.
id.
id.
icl.
id
-ManlioTarantini
Guardiamarina-Corradino Corradini
-Aldo Bechis -Carlo Trucco
Capit. Macchinista Eugenio Verzegnassi Sotto Tenente id. -Domenico Civile Capitano Medico--Salvatore Quattrocchi Capitano Commissario-Adolfo Pasqualucci
R. Nave" PUGLIA" Comandante Capitano di Fregata,
Gusani Viyconti Marchese Lorenzo Comandante in 20. Capitano di Corvetta,
Brandis Augusta
Tenente di Vascello-Culiolo Euclide Tenente di Vascello-Bernaroli Massimo
id.
id.
Giavotto Giuseppe -Ratti Gabriele
id.
-Puccio Eugenio
SottoTenente di Vascello-Galdini Gustavo
Capitano Macchinista-Casola Italo
Sotto Tenente id.
id.
id.
Caldelli Federico
Ceceri Vincenzo
Capitano Medico-Farese Adolfo
Capitano Commissario-Dionisi Arturo
DISTACCAMENTO R. MARINA IN CINA
Guardia della Legazione di Pekino Comandante Capitano di Corvetta, Carlo
Spagna
Comandante la Compagnia Tenente di Vas-
cello-Guidobaldo Manzoni
Sotto Tenente di Vascello-Luigi Ciani
id. id. id.
id.-Carlo Alberto Coraggio id.-Vianello Vianelli id.-Alfredo Crespi
Guardiamarina-Riccardo Grazioli Lante Capitano Medico-Lodovico Di Giura Tenente Medico-Gustavo Cantamessa Tenente Commissario-Alberto Paulillo
U. S. A. NAVAL SQUADRON, ASIATIC STATION
Commander of Third Squadron-Rear Admiral G. B. HARBER, U.S. Navy
Personal Staff:
Chief of Staff--Commander, John H. Gibbons Flag Secretary-Lieut. Commander, J. V. Chase Flag Engineer Lieut. Commander, Gatewood S. Lincoln Flag Lieutenant-Lieutenant, Lamar R. Leahy
Aid Lieutenant, Donald B. Craig
Fleet Staff:
Fleet Surgeon-Medical Inspector, Oliver Diell Fleet Paymaster-Pay Inspector, Martin M. Ramsay Fleet Marine Officer-Captain, Ernest E. West, U.S.M.C.
THIRD SQUADRON
(First Division)
CHARLESTON (Flagship)
Commander-John H. Gibbons
-
Lieut. Commander-John H. Dayton
Do.
Charles M. Tozer Lieutenant-Edward H. Campbell Ensign Robert L. Ghormley
Do. Edwin B. Woodworth Do. Hollis M. Cooley
Do.
Do.
Do.
Claude A. Bonvillian Joseph S. Evans
Charles A. Dunn
Ensign-Elmer W."Tod
Midshipman-James Mc. C. Murray Do. -Francis Cogswell
Do.
Do.
-John C. Cunningham
-Martin J. Peterson
Medical Inspector--O. Diehl
P. A. Surgeon-Henry A. May
Asst. Do. Montgomery E. Higgins Pay Inspector--Martin M. Ramsay P. A. Paymaster- Wm. G. Neill Captain-Ernest E. West, U.S.M.C. 2nd Lieut. Franklin H. Drees, U.S.M.C. Boatswain--Francis A. Pippo Gunner-John J. Clausey Do. Arthur Rogier Chief Carpenter-Thomas J, Logan Carpenter-Frank Weber
Chief Machinist-Charles E. Rowe Machinist Otto T. Purcell
Do.
Do.
Do.
-Wm. R. Gardner -Paul B. Cozine
Pay Clerk-Frank Hunt
-Alvah B. Canham
CLEVELAND
Commander-Hugh Rodman Lieutenant-Austin S. Kibbee Ensign John B. Rhodes
Do. -Weyman P. Bleehler Do. John M. Schelling Do. Harry J. Abbett
Ensign-George H. Laird
Do. Grattan C. Dichman P. A. Surgeon-Harry L. Brown P. A. Paymr. John H. Gunnell Boatswain-G. Knott Gunner-Henry Rieck Carpenter-Tony L. Hannah Machinist-Martin Huber
Do. -Robert E. Rucker Pay Clerk-Ross B. Deming
DENVER
Commander-Edward E. Capehart Lieutenant-Henry G. S. Wallace Do. - Roscoe F. Dillen Do. -Walter A. Smead Ensign Anthony J. James
John M. Smeallie Andrew S. Hickey
Do.
Do.
Do. Allan S. Farquhar
P. A. Surgeon-Wallace B. Smith Asst. Paymr.-Patrick T. M. Lathrop Chief Carpenter-Frederick W. Witte Machinist-George S. Bingham
Do. --Charles Allen Pay Clerk-John H. Seifert
GALVESTON Commander John A. Hoogewerff Lieut. Comm.-David W. Todd
Do.
Do,
Do. -Stanton L. H. Hazard Ensign-Edward L. McSheehy
Louis P. Davis Thomas Withers, Jr. Do. Charles C. Slayton Do. Harold M. Bemis Asst. Surgeon-Elmer E. Curtis
Do. Paymaster-Henry L. Beach Carpenter James P. Shovlin Machinist-John L. McAlonan
Do. -Friedrich G. Sprengel Pay Clerk-E. E. Artois
U.S.A. NAVAL SQUADRON, ASIATIC STATION
THIRD SQUADRON
(Second Division)
1515
ARAYAT
Lieut. Commander Matt H. Signor
Ensign - Harry A, McClure
CALLAO
Ensign--Joe R. Morrison
Do. Emory F. Clement
CHATTANOOGA Commander--John D. McDonald Lieutenant-Chandler K. Jones
Ensign Arthur C. Stott, Jr.
Do. John J. London'
Do.
George A. Alexander
Do. -George H. Bowdey Do. -Alfred W. Brown, Jr.
Do. Roy L. Stover
P. A. Surgeon-Francis M. Munson Do. Paymr.-Robert B. Lupton Boatswain-Wm. E. O'Connell Gunner-Charles H. Foster Carpenter --Robert E. Wilkinson Machinist Francis P. Mugan Do. -Harry Champeno Pay Clerk-E. J. Hoffman
HELENA
Commander-Reuben O. Bitler Lieutenant-John S. Arwine Ensign Ed. S. Robinson Do. -Wm. L. Friedell
Richard T. Keiran
Do.
Do. Arie A. Corwin
P. A. Surgeon-Paul T. Dessez P. A. Paymr.-G. A. Helmicks
2nd Lieutenant-C. H. Wells, U.S.M.C. Pay Clerk-O. F. Cato
MINDORO Lieutenant-(J. G.) George M. Bauin Ensign-Emil A. Lichtenstein.
PARAGUA
Ensign-Roy L. Lowman Midshipinan-James C. Van de Carr
RAINBOW
Ensign--Nelson H. Goss
Do.
Benjamin H. Steele
Do.
Robert W. Cabaniss
Do.
Herndon B. Kelly
Midshipman Earl W. Jukes
Do. --Dennis E. Kemp
Asst. Surgeon-Reginald B. Henry Asst. Paymaster-Russell V. Bleecker Gunner-George D. Samonski Machinist Wm. H. Lenz Pay Clerk-W. A. Settle
SAMAR Ensign Wm. C. I. Stiles Do. Roy P. Emrich
VILLALOBOS Ensign-Roy C. Smith
Do. Raleigh E. Hughes Ensign Jefferson B. Goldman Asst. Surgeon-Earle P. Huff
WILMINGTON Commander-Edward Lloyd, Jr. Lieutenant-B. K. Johnson Ensign Stuart W. Cake
Do. Lesley B. Anderson Do. George W. Kenyon Do.-C. C. Baughman
Asst. Surgeon-Spencer L. Higgins Asst. Paymr.- Elwood A. Cobey 2nd Lieut.-N. A. Eastman, U.S.M.C. Pay Clerk-E. B. Grooms
FIRST TORPEDO FLOTILLA
BAINBRIDGE
Ensigu-Lloyd W. Townsend
Do. Carroll S, Graves Midshipman-Mark L. Hersey
BARRY
Ensign-Edmund S. Root Do. Albert C. Read Do. -Robert T. S. Lowell Asst. Surgeon-Tharos Harlan
CHAUNCEY
Ensign L. N. McNair
Do. -F. J. Fletcher Midshipman-C. E. Pugh P. A. Paymr.-R. V. Bleecker Gunner G. D. Samonski
DALE
Lieutenant-Herbert H. Michael
(Acting Flotilla Comdr)
Ensign-L. M. Stevens Midshipman-James E. Oswald
1516
U.S.A. NAVAL SQUADRON, ASIATIC STATION
SUBMARINE FLOTILLA
Lieutenant-Oscar F. Cooper, In charge of fitting out ADDER and MOCASSIN
ADDER
Ensign-James B. Howell
MOCCASIN
PORPOISE (Ordered) Ensign -Kenneth Whiting
SHARK
Ensign Ernest D. McWhorter (Ordered) Ensign-Theodore G. Ellyson
VESSELS IN RESERVE
MONTEREY (In First Reserve)
Commander-George R. Salisbury Lieutenant-Wm. H. Toaz Ensign Halford R. Greenlee
Do.
Henry M. Jensen
Do. Bort B. Taylor
PISCATAQUA
Do. Harlow T. Kays Midshipman-Stuart O. Greig Asst. Surgeon-Donald H. Noble P. A. Paymr-James A. Bull Gunner-Torgr Nylund Carpenter-Wm. L. Wall Machinist George. L. Russell
TUGS
WOMPATUCK
Boatswain Wm. Fremgen
Boatswain-Thomas L. McKeena
FLEET AUXILIARIES
ALEXANDER
Master-E. W. Henricks
POMPEY
NANSHAN
Master-I. Carver
MOHICAN
Comdr.-G. R. Salisbury
Conidg.
Chief Gunner-F. C. Messenger
Alava
Olongapo
Comdg.
NAVAL HOSPITAL (Canacao)
Ensign--A. W. Sears
Do. J. H, Collins
P. A. Paymır.--J. A. Bull
Machinist A. A. Smith
Pay Clerk-C. S. Fowler
Surgeon--Ed. R. Stitt
Do. --H. C. Curl
P. A. Surgeon-J. A. Randall
Do.
--D. G. Allen
Do.
-H. L. Dollard
NAVAL STATION (Cavite)
Rear-Admiral--A. P. Nazro
Comdt.
Asst. Surgeon-H. L. Kelley
Commander-H. P. Jones Jr.
Lieut. Comdr.-J. H. Rowen
Lieutenant-F. J. Horne Ensign C. R. P. Rodgers Surgeon-R. E. Ledbetter
Asst. Surgeon--F. X. Koltes. Paymr.-J. J. Cheatham
Do.
G. S. K.
Master-J. D. Smith
P. A. Paymr.--E. H. Cope
Do. -W. D. Sharp Chaplain-L. P. Rennolds Naval Cons'r.-L. Bankson
P. G. B Asst.G.S.K
Asst. Naval Cons'r.-E. C. Hamner, Jr. Civil Engineer -E. H. Brownell
Chief Boatswain-J. J. Rochfort Boatswain--T. M. Cassidy
Do.
Do.
-Wm. Fremgen
Piscataqua
-T. L. McKenna Wompatick
Chief Gunner-F. T. Applegate
Do. --O. E. Keh
Gunner- Wm. O. King
Chief Carpenter-M. B. Pollock Carpenter R. Morgan
Do. -E. P. Schilling Machinist Wm. Keller Mate M. F. Bathke Pay Clerk-C. R. Seis
Do.
-J. J. Lynch
NAVAL STATION (Olongapo) Rear Admiral-A. P. Nazro
Coudt.
Comdr.-L.S.Van Duzer, Capt. of Y.Comdg.
Lieut.Comdr.-R. Earle, Insp. Ord.& Powder P. A. Surgeon-C. F. Ely
D. V. Chadwick (Paymr. of Yd.). Asst. Surgeon-H. L. Smith
U.S.A. NAVAL SQUADRON, ASIATIC STATION
SHORE STATIONS
1517
P.A. Paymr.-W. C. Fite G.S.K. & Paym. Yd.
Do.
-C. E. Dibble
Do. -J. A. Bull
V. In R. & Y. C.
Do.
Naval Cons'r.-L. S. Adams
Civil Engineer-R. E. Bakenhus Chief Gunner- C. E. Jaffe Gunner-U. G. Chipman
Do. C. S. Schepke
―
Do. J. E. Orton
Chief Carpenter- F. J. Harte
Chief Machinist--E. Evans Machinist A. A. Smith Pay Clerk-F. Lewis
|
-C..V McCarty
RELIEF (Hospital Ship, Olongapo) Surgeon-A. W. Dunbar
P. A. Surgeon-H. F. Strine Asst. do. -G. B. Trible
P. A. Paymr.-J. A, Bull
Commanding
NAV. MED. SUPPLY DEPOT (Canacao) Surgeon -Ed. R. Stitt
Pharmacist-R. F. S. Puck
in charge
FIRST BRIGADE, U. S. MARINES
(Headquarters, Manila, P. 1.)
Colonel L. Karmany On leave in U.S. Lieut.Colonel J.H.Pendleton, Comdg.Br. Major A.S.McLemore On Sick List C.H. Captain P. F. Archer B. Q. & A. B. A. & I. Do. R. B. Putnamı Brigade Paymr, 1st Lieut.-J. R. Horton In Ch'g. Dt. Cte.
MARINE BARRACKS (Naval Station, Cavite)
Major Wm. M. McKelvey Captain-H. W. Carpenter 1st Lieut.-H. H. Kipp, Captain-Ec. B. Manwaring 1st Lieut.--Ed. B. Cole
Do.
-John Potts
Comdg. Post Adj.
Post Q'm'r. Co. Comdr. do.
MARINE BARRACKS
Co. Officer
1st REGIMENT (Naval Station, O'apo)
Captain-R. C. Berkeley
1st Lieut.-A. B. Drum
Captain A. S. Williams
Do.-S. A. W. Petterson Do.-S. A. W. Brewster
Do. C. T. Westcott, Jr. 1st Lieut.-P. A. Capron
Captain-E. H. Ellis
Do.
Do.
Post Adj Post Q'm'r
--C. R. Sanderson -B. W. Sibley In Chg. of Con. & Exec. Officer, M. R. R.
Intell. Officer
1st. Lient.-M. E. Shearer Captain H. C. Snyder
Co. Comdr.
Do.
-Lee B. Purcell
do.
Do.
--Giles Bishop, Jr.
do.
Do.
Wm. L. Redles
do.
Co. Officer
1st Lieut.-H. C. Judson
U. S. LEGATION GUARD (Peking, China)
Lieut.-C. G. Barnett Captain-T. Holcomb, Jr. 1st Lieut.-F. C. McConnell 2nd do. L. W. T. Waller, Jr. P. A. Surgeon-Wm. D. Owens
Comdg.
U.S. N.
NAVY PAY OFFICE (Manila) Paymaster - J. Brooks
NAVAL HOSPITAL (Yokohama) Surgeon J. C. Pryor,
Comdg. Adjutant.
Co. Comdg.
do.
do.
Comdg.
do.
Co. Officer
P. A. Paymaster-F. W. Holt
U. S. EMBASSY (Tokyo, Japan)
Captain- J. II. Sears
2nd REGIMENT (Olongapo)
Major-T. C. Treedwell
Comdg, and Post Comdr.
Pharmacist-Hubert Henry
GERMAN NAVAL VESSELS IN CHINA AND JAPAN
S.M.S. "SCHARNHORST" Kommandant Kapitän zur See Maass Erster Offizier Korvetten Kapitän Graf
v. Zeppelin Kapitan Leutnant
Lorey
Moller, Schrader,
Ober Leutnant zur See--Trenk, Suchodo- letz, Hoyermann, Wollanke, Aschenborn, v. Ahlefeld
Leutnant zur See -Dehn, v. Schütz, Adjt. Georg, Moller, Graf v. Montgelas, Hüb- sch, Telge, Sellschopp, Mensing Fähnrich zur See-v. Tripitz, Amberger (Gustav), Schmidt (Herwart), Bücker, Pasedag, Bodenberg
Mar. Stabs Ingenieur-Büsing
Mar. Ober Ingenieur-Gronemann
Mar. Ingenieur-Schroeder, Prigge, Buch-
wald
Mar. Stabsarzt-Praefke
Mar. Ob. Ass. Arzt-Dr. Valentin Mar. Oberzahlmeister-Beilker
S.M.S. "LEIPZIG" Kommandant Fregatten Kapt.-Heuser Erster Offizier-Kapitan leut. Lassen, Bade Ober Leutnant zur See Hermann, Willy, Steiner, v. Zastrow, Kersten, Schimmel- pfennig
Leutnant zur See-Tornow, v. Kries (He-
inrich)
Fähnrich zur See-Klewitz, Keil Mar. Ober Ingenieur-Berndt
Mar. Ingenieur-Kribben
Mar. Stabsarzt-Dr. Nobe
Mar. Ober Zahlmeister-Zollner
S.M.S. "ARCONA"
Kommandant Korvetten Kap.-Schröder Erster Offizier Kapitan Leut. Connemann,
Albrecht
Ober Leutnant zur See-Bahrfeldt, Schul-
ten, v. Bomhard, Konig
Leutnant zur See-Schmolling, v. Zitzew-
itz, v. Fischel
Fahnrich zur See-v. Mellenthin, Graf v.
Schmettow
Mar. Ober Ingenieur-Haase Mar. Ingenieur Zürn
Mar. Stabsarzt-Dr. Krause
Mar. Ober Zahlmeister-Krause
S.M.S. "ILTIS"
Kommandant Korv. Kapitän Mersmann Erster Offizier Kapitän Leut. Strauch Ober Leut. zur See-Kunau, Blanquet, v.
Trotha, Hempel
Fähnrich zur See-
-v. Müller
Mar. Ingenieur-Hilbig
Mar. Stabsarzt-Dr. Söhngen
Mar. Ineober Zahlmeister-Metsch
S.M.S. "JAGUAR "
Kommandant-Korv. Kapitan Mysing Erster Offizier-Kapitan Leut Samuelsen Ober Leutnant zur See-Hanne, Hean-
marck, v. Bredow
Fahnrich zur See-Bachmann Mar. Ingenieur-Günther
Mar. Ob. Ass. Arzt-Dr. Schmidt (Fried-
rich)
Mar. Über Zahlmeister-Stange
S.M.S.TIGER"
Kommandant Korv.-Kapt. Ackermann Erster Offizier-Kapitän Leut. Dolberg Ober Leut, zur See-Köhler (Hane), v.
Muller (Bernhard)
Leutnant zur See-v. Unruh, Christian, Ludwig Friedrich Adolf Alexis Wilhelm Ferdinand Prinz von Hessen-Philippsth- al-Barchfeld. Hoheit
Fahnrich zur See-Tonndorf Marine-Ingenieur-Zerndt Mar. Stabsarzt-Wollermann Mar. Ober Zahlmeister-Reichmann
S.M.S. "LUCHS"
Kommandant Korv. Kapt.-v. Hornhardt Erster Offizier--Kapitan Leut. Witte Ober Leut. zur See-Bredschneider, Clau
son, v. Kaas, Klein (Kudolf) Leutnant zur See-Overhus Mar. Ingenieur-Brinker Mar. Stabsarzt Dr. Ahrens Mar. Ober Zahlmeister-Kozlowski
S.M.S. "TSINGTAU" Kommandant-Kapitän Leutnant Burg
graf und Graf zu Dohna-Schlodien Ober Leut. zur See-Koslick Mar. Ob. Ass. Arzt.-Dr. Zschechi
S.M.S. "VATERLAND" Kommandant--Kapitän Leut. Jantzen Ober Leut, zur See-Marcard Kommandant Ober Leut. zur See-Kaut-
ter, Kolbe (Constantin)
Mar. Ob. Ass. Arzt-Willutzki
S.M. Tpbt. "TAKU"
Kommandant Ober. Leut. zur See-Kolbe
(Hans), Bertram
Leut. zur See-v, Reiche
Fähnrich zur See-Neureuther
S. M. Tpbt. "S. 90"
Kommandant-Kapitän Leut. Heyden
Ober Leut. zur See Weineck, "Hoefer,
Haushalter
Fähnrich zur See-Sahl
Mar. Ober Zahlmeister-Kruse
AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN NAVAL VESSELS.
S.M.S. "KAISERIN ELISABETH
Protected Cruiser, Second Class. 4,000 Tons. I.H.P. (8,000) Fregattenkapitän-Oskar Hansa Korvettenkapitän-Egon Klein
Linienschiffs Lt.-W.Freih.von Marschall
-Richard Schonthaler
Fregattenleutnant-Edgar Wassich
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
-Gustav Sattler
N. Petris Edl. von
Plauno -Josef Millonig
-Zdenko Hudecek -Otto Kasseroller --Georg Medveczky
Linienschiffs Arzt-Dr. Quido Faidiga
-Dr.Kornelius Iwanowicz
Do.
Do.
Maschinenbetriebsleiter -Leopold Slezak
-Karl Krombholz
-Franz Urban
Do.
Marine Kommissär--Reinhold Rauskolb
S.M.S. "PANTHER"
Cruiser Third Class. 1,530 Tons I.H.P. (6,000) Fregattenkapitan-Theodor Skerl Edl. von
Schmidtheim
Linienschiffs Lt.-Anton Dolenc
Do.
Do.
-Ernst Edl. von Racic -Olaf Richard Wulff
Fregattenleutnant-Franz Dyrna
Do.
Do.
Do.
-R. Freih, von Call zu Rosenburg u. Kulmbach -Karl Froschl
-H. Fleck v. Falkhausen
Linienschiffs Arzt-Dr. A. V. Wittemberski Maschinenbetriebsleiter--Karl Schlitter-
mann
Marinekommissär--Lothar Held
K. UND K. MARINE DETACHMENT IN PEKING.
Korvettenkapitan-Eugen Mallinarich v. Silbergrund u. Kolinensieg Linienschiffs Lt.--F. Freih, von Leonhardi Fregattenleutnant - Hugo Ockermüller
-Moritz Vecchiatto Linienschiffs Arzt-Dr. Karl Suda Marinekommissär-Viktor Hartlieb
Do.
K. UND K. MARINE DETACHMENT IN TIENTSIN.
Linienschiffs Lt. Anton Baller Linienschiffs Arzt-Dr. Josef Kraus
JAPANESE NAVY
FIRST SQUADRON
Commander in chief-Vice-Admiral BARON G. IJUIN Commander--Vice-Admiral H. YAMADA
SECOND SQUADRON
Commander in chief-Vice-Admiral BARON S. DEWA
THIRD SQUADRON Commander-Rear-Admiral I. TERAGAKI
TRAINING SQUADRON
Commander-Rear-Admiral H. JICHI
Vessels
*Aki *Satsuma
Kashima
*Tsukuba
Katori
Asahi
Mikasa
Shikishima.
*Ikoma
Iwami (Orel)..
13516 16500 56
}
The ships in commission or launched consist of 13 battleships; 13 1st class cruisers 9 2nd class cruisers; 8 3rd class cruisers; 2 1st class coast defence ships; 2 2nd class coast defence ships; 7 3rd class coast defence ships; 4 2nd class gun boats; 8 despatch boats; 2 torpedo depot ships; 55 destroyers; 77 torpedo-boats and 7 submarines. The following is a list of the larger vessels of the Fleet:
*Ibuki
Tong Displace- mient
19800 24000 28 19350 17300 28
Indicated Number H. P. of Guns
Vessels
Kasuga Nisshin
16400 15600 41 13750 20500 34 15950 16000 39 14765 15207 50 15362 15207 58 14580 14700 58 14600 24000 31 13750 20500 34
Anegawa (Angara)... Tsugaru (Pallada).
Soya (Varyag)..
Mishima (Seniavin) Kasagi Chitose
Tons Displace- ment
Indicated Number H. P. of Guns
7700
| 4696
35
7700
14696
36
11700
12500
6630
11600 34
6500
20000 30
4960 6000 22
5503
17235
IR IZANAÁZZA
30
4992 15714 30
4278 5400 34 4278 5400
Itsukushima
*Hashidate............
Hizen (Retvizan)
OkinoshimaApraxine
4126
6000
12700 16000
36
Naniwa..
3709
7604 20
Sagani (Peresviet)
12674 14500
58
Takachiho
3709 7604
20
Suo (Pobieda)
Fuji
Tango (Poltava)
12674 14500 58 12649 13687 38 10960 11000 56
Niitaka
3420 9400
20
*Tsushima
3420 $400
20
*Akitsushima
3172 8516
20
Iwate
9826
14700 38
Suzuya (Nomic)
3000
6000
19
Idzumo
9826
14700 38
*Otowa
3000
10000
14
Asama.
9885
18248 38
Idzumi
2967
5576
16
Tokiwa
9885
18248 38
*Akashi
2800 8000
24
Iki (Nicolai)
9594
8000 34
*Suma
2700 8500
20
Yakumo
9735
15500 36
Adzuma
9426 16600
Chiyoda 36 *Nogami.
2439 5678
27
1350
8000
Aso (Bayan)
Chinyen
7800 17000 34 7335 6000 20
*Yayeyama
1609
5400
The ships with names in italics against them are ships captured from the Russians. An asterisk indicates that the ships were built in Japanese yards,
THE SIAMESE NAVY
Commander-in-Chief-Rear Admiral PHYA RAJAVANGSAN
H. M. S. "BALI" Commander-E. Dery Engr. Lieut.-H. M. Solling Engr. Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Plang
H. M. S. "BANCHU" Sub-Lieut.-Nai Thong
Engr. Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Huay
H. M. S. "DEVA" Warrant Officer-Nai San Engr. Warrant Officer-Nai Yen
H. M. Y. "MAHACHAKRI" Capt.-K. Schoning Lieut.-Comdr.-R. Kjeldahl Junr. Sub-Lieut. Núi Saeng
-Nai Maen
Do.
Do.
Do.
-Nai Yom
-Nai Sop
Engr. Comdr.-J. Boeck
Engr. Lieut.-Comdr.-V. Hendriksen Engr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Fai
Engr. Junr. Sub-Licut.-Nai Phirm
-Nai Poh
Do. Do.
Nai Phayorm
H. M. S. "MAKUT RAJAKUMARN" Lieut. Comdr. Luang Precha
Junr. Sub-Lieut.--Nai Krut
Do.
--Nai Teb
Engr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Chorm
*
H. M. S. MURATHA" Commander--F. Haurowitz Sub-Lieut.-Nai Pow Engr. Lieut.-Comdr.-K. Brehm Engr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Soot Engr. Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai An
H. M. S. "OCTHAI" Warrant Officer-Nai Ka Engr. Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Chai
H. M. S. "PRAB"
Sub-Lieut.-Nai Nak
Engr. Lieut. Nai Phirm
H. M. S. "SATHIT"
Warrant Officer-Nai Loh Engr. Warrant Officer-Nai Lee
H. M. T. B. D. "SUA TAYARN CHOL Sub-Lieut. Nai Boonmee
Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Pui Engr. Lieut. Khun Chamnan Navakol
Do. -Nai Khum Engr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Cheeb
H. M. S. "SUGRIB" Commander-F. G. A. Richel Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Thongde
Do.
Do.
Do.
-Nai Thieb
-Nai Nuh -Nai Chalom
Engr. Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Bang
Lieut.
נ
H. M. DESPATCH VESSEL "SURIYA MONTON' Khun Rorn
Engr. Lieut. Khun Chakrmai
H. M. "TRANSPORT BUK" Sub-Lieut.-Nai Thomya
Junr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Som Engr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Toh
H. M. T. B. "No. I"
Junr. Sub Lieut.-Nai Krasac Engr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Chom Engr. Junr. Sub-Lieut. Nai Pom
H. M. T. B. "No. JI" June. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Pluang Engr. Lieut. Khun Nithet
H. M. T. B. "No. III" Junr. Sub-Lieut.- Nai Nael Engr. do. -Nai Chai
TUG AND STEAMBOAT DEPARTMENT
Inspector Lieut.-Comdr.-Luang Sakon Asst. do. Lieut.-Nai Aire
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Lieut. Khun Kamheng Saradej Sub-Lient-Nai Lob
Junr. Sub-Lient.-Nai Laor
Engr. Sub-Lieut.-Nai Krut
Do. Engr. Junr.Sub-Lieut.-Nai Lau
48
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
APCAR & CO.'S CALCUTTA-JAPAN
LINE
David Sassoon & Co., Ld., Agents,
Hongkong and China
Paterson, Simons & Co., Agents, S'pore
ARRATOON APCAR, Brit. Str., 2,931 tons. 加押端剌亞
Captain-A. Stewart
Chief Officer-W. Jones
Second do.
A. Campion
Third do. J. Peterson
Purser -G. B. Martin
Chief Engineer J. Barrie
Second do.
-J. Young
Third do. -A. Alexander
Fourth do. -F. Gerard
CATHERINE APCAR, Brit. Str., 1,733 tons
家鴨連打吉
Captain--W. D. A. Thomas
Chief Officer-P. W. Williams
Second do. -A. E. Ure
Third do. J. McLaughlin
Purser E. Partridge
Chief Engineer J. Rutter
Second do. -L. F. Ballantine
Third do. -A. Alexander
Fourth do.
-G. Cowels
GREGORY APCAR, Brit. Str., 2,961 tons
家鴨利哥厘忌
Captain-S. H. Belson
Chief Officer R. Mortimer
Second do. -E. H. Edwards
Third do. H. W. Millard
Purser E. Vaughan
Chief Engineer-D. McCaig Second do. S. E. Staines Third do. -F. Roberts Fourth do. -W. Russell
JAPAN, BRIT. STR., 3,806 tons
Captain--J. G. Olifent
Chief Officer-L. C. Townesend
Second do. --C. S. Davis
Third do. -I. Cruke
Purser J. Arnfield
Chief Engineer-J. McL. Murchie
Second do. -A. Aimshaw
Third do. -A. Barrie
Fourth do.
--W. Gow
LIGHTNING, Brit. Str., 2,124 tons
宾禮
Captain-A. E. Gentles
Chief Officer-E. P. Smith
Second do. R. F. Kernan Third do. W. W. Jenkins Purser-F. Jewell
-Page
Chief Engineer-W. J. Best Second do. Third do. Fourth do.
-Martin
-Pairs
Doctor S. B. Pal
CHINA AND MANILA STEAMSHIP
COMPANY, LIMITED
Shewan, Tomes & Co., General Managers,
Hongkong and Canton
Warner, Barnes & Co., Agents, Manila
RUBI, Brit. Str., 1,611 tons
比魯
Captain R. W. Almond
Chief Officer-W. G. Lawson
Second do. -G. A. Chambers
Chief Engineer-C. B. Nelson Second do. -Cromwell Third do. -Black
Fourth do. --Nicholl
Stewardess-Mrs. Spenser
ZAFIRO, Brit. Str., 1,618 tons
路非沙
Captain R. Rodger
Chief Officer--A. Fraser
Second do. W. McEwen
Third do. -O. Huglies
Chief Engineer A. K. Henderson
Second do.
Third do.
-W. P. Hyland
-W. Debron
Fourth do. -H. G. Davis
Stewardess-Mrs. D. Bamsey
Do. -T. Irving
CHINA MERCHANTS' S. N, CO
平安
ANPING-Captain Paul Klopfer
遠致
CHI-YUEN-Captain Charles Stewart
鯨飛
FEICHING Captain Joseph Howie
順豐
FUNG-SHUN-Captain Allan Malcolm
晏海
HAE-AN-Captain Fred. Wallace
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
昌新
HSIN CHANG-Captain J. Whitelaw
濟新
HSIN-CHI-Captain Robt. Stephen
豐新
HSIN-FUNG-Captain H. MacKinnon
江新
HSIN-KONG-Captain F. H. Hamblin
明新
HSIN-MING Captain G. C. Blethen
裕新
HSIN-YO-Captain L. H. Richards
仁愛
IRENE-Captain Thos. Spedding
李江
KIANG-FOO-Captain F. Carlson
寬江
KIANG-KWAN-Captain C. V. Frigast
新江
KIANG-HSIN-Captain E. O. Lindstrom
天江
KIANGTEEN Captain Thos. Gillespie
通江
KIANG-TUN Captain John Halkett
裕江
KIANG-YU-Captain John Wade
永江
KIANG-YUNG-Captain J. R. Milligan
陳固
KU-LING-Captain Arthur Baines
21 A
KUNG-PING-Captain Wm. Ross
濟廣
KWANG-CHI-Captain Stroak
利廣
KWANG-LEE-Captain R. L. Lincoln
大廣
KWANG-TAH-Captain. Froberg
利快
KWEI-LEE-Captain M. Chill
富美
MEI-FOO-Captain John Mc Arthur
濟普
Poo-CHI-Captain H. W. Chandler
順泰
TAISHUN-Captain Robt. Paramore
南圆
Too-NAN-Captain A. A. Crawford
順遇
1523
YU-SHUN--Captain Carl A. Westerlund
CHINA NAVIGATION CO., LIMITED Butterfield & Swire, Agents,
Hongkong Fleet
CHANGSHA
沙長
Master-Edward Finlayson
Chief Officer-R. F. Mitchell
Second do. -W. H. Smithers
Third do. -T. Goad
Chief Engineer--Peter McPherson
Second do.
Third
Fourth
do.
-A. A. Sinclair
-J. Cullen-Ward
do. -L. R. Nowland
Refrigerating Eng.-J. Dawson
FATSHAN
山佛
Master-Alex. McD. Somerville
Chief Officer-J. Legge
Second do. -Ed, J. Hales
Chief Engineer-J. D. Christie
Second do. -R. A. Ramsay
HUICHOW
H
Master-Ed. Forsyth
Chief Officer-D. Sutherland
Second do. -C. F. Evans Chief Engineer-C. Chambers Second do. -A. Struthers Third do. -W. O. Lambert
KAIFONG Bj the
Master-C. P. Cole
Chief Officer-T. R. Nicol
Second do. G. Harris-Walker
Chief Engineer-Duncan Macdonald
Second do.
-G. Buchanan
Third do. -D. Mc Laren
KUEICHOW
州惠
Master W. B. Brown
Chief Officer-J. McKechnie
48*
1524
Second do.
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
Chief Engineer-H. G. Ellis Second do. -A. Gatherer
Third do. -A. F. Lawlor
SHANTUNG
東山
Master--John Robinson
Chief Officer-D. H. Martin
Second do. -F. V. Benz
Third do. -W. Marsh
Chief Engineer A. Buchanan
Second
Third
do.
do.
-W. Gordon
-C. Tory
SUNGKIANG
江松
Chief Officer-J. A. Campbell
Master W. Shane
Second do. -C. H. Comrie
Chief Engineer-D. J. Finlayson
Second do. -W. J. Mc Pherson
Third do. -W. Stephen
TAIYUAN
原太
Master-Lancelot Dawson
Chief Officer-Clarence Priest
Second do. -A. Auland Third do. W. H. Reece Chief Engineer-J. Runcie Second do. -F. Walker
Third do. -J. Chew
Fourth do.
Refrig, do.
-P. J. Kiely
TAMING
名大
Master-Geo. Pennefather
Chief Officer-J. Anderson
Second do. Alex. Smith
Chief Engineer--A. H. Beale Second do. -J. Robson
Third do. -R. E. Bissett
TE-AN
安德
Master-Arthur Outerbridge
Chief Officer-Jas. Peacock
Second do. C. Roberts
Chief Engineer-W. F. Cowen Second do.
Third do. -D. Austin
CIE. DE NAVIGATION TONKINOISE
A. R. Marty, Agent, H'phong and H'kong
HAILAN, FRENCH STR., 377 tons
瀾海
Capitaine-O. A. Hoeg
Second do.-M. E. Gran,
Lieutenant-J. Engelbretsen
Premier Mécanicien-E. Haderup Second do. -Ab. del Murat
HANOI, FRENCH STR., 742 tons
內河
Capitaine J. Pannier
Second do.-A. Pedersen Lieutenant-H. Henik
Premier Mécanicien-A. Peytavin
Second do. -P. Sirven Troisième do.
-H. Guilhot
HONGKONG, FRENCH STR., 738 tons 港香
Capitaine-Cornelussen
Second do.-C. Hansen Lieutenant Thompson Premier Mécanicien-Reitan Second do. -Khans Troisième
-Bonacina
do.
HUE, FRENCH STR., 703 tons
Capitaine-Foym
愛干
Second do. A. Pedersen
Lieutenant-T. Fovn
Premier Mécanicien-J. MacDonald
Second do.-O. C. Collins
Troisième do.-A. Lacombe
COMPAGNIE FRANÇAISE DES INDES
ET DE L'EXTREME ORIENT Hongkong, Canton & Wuchow
Office 3, Queen's Building, Tel. No. 457 Capt. P. A. Lapicque, superintendent Barretto & Co., general agents E. Pasquet & Co., agents, Shameen
French Concession, Canton
CHARLES HARDOUIN Captain E. Bienaimė
Chief Officer-A. Abrahamsen Chief Engineer-E. Reversat
PAUL BEAU
Captain-E. Marabal Chief Officer-F. Hells Chief Engineer-F. Bourven
TUNG HONG
Captain-Bazin
COMPAGNIE FRANÇAISE DES
MERS DE CHINE, SAIGON V. Ascoli, Managing Agent, Saigon
Bradley & Co. Agents, China
BINH THUAN, French Str., 1,799 tous
耘邊
Captain-Ribault
PHU YEN, French Str., 2,181 tons
i
1525
Captain-Bouissou
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
源富
DOUGLAS STEAMSHIP CO., LD.
Douglas Lapraik & Co., General Managers
HAICHING, BRIT. STR., 1,267 tons
澄海
Captain-W. C. Passmore
First Officer--C. H. Wood
Second do. H. Murphy
Third do. H. Cornwell
Chief Engineer A. F. Ramsay Second do. -A. C. Morgan Third do. -J. Allan
HAIMUN, BRIT. STR., 036 tons Fg the Captain J. W. Evans
Chief Officer--T. P. Finchett Second officer-G. W. Wright Third do. -W. O. Hanlon Chief Engineer-J. Miller Second do. -R. J. Young Third do. -T. Nesbitt
HAITAN, BRIT. STR., 1,183 tons
松海
Captain-J. S. Roach
Chief Officer-J. Thomson
Second Officer-J. Farrow
Third do. D. Mills
Chief Engineer A. McIntyre
Second do. W. Robertson Third do. N. Lang
HAIYANG, BRITISH STEAMER 1,362 tons
Captain-A. E. Hodgins Chief Officer-J. Monteith
Second do. -E. Walker
Third do. - Holmes
HOANGHO, GER. STE, 1,120 tons
Captain--Frankl
Chief Officer-Duelke Second do. Andersen Chief Engineer-Parpart Second do. -Jaschko Asst. do.
-Meine
ITHAKA, GER. STR., 2,270 tons
Captain Vogeler
Chief Officer-Klages
Second do. -Edler
Chief Engineer Fuchs
Second
do. -Fey
Third
do. -Hay
Asst. do. Lorenzen
KOWLOON, GER. STR., 2,325 tons
Captain-Enigk
Chief Officer--Schulz Second do. -Thomsen Chief Engineer Soerensen Second do. -Dittmar Third do. Schlapkohl Asst. do. -Reinholz
LOONGMOON, GER. STR., 1,971 tons Captain-Vogt
Chief Officer--Bierwirth Second do.
-Cornelsen
Chief Engineer-Wiedmann Second do. -Reuter
Asst. do. -Meerkamp
LYEEMOON, GER. STR., 1,925 tons
Captain-von Pilgrim
Chief Officer-Pape
Second do. -Schladebach
Chief Engineer-Mueller
Second do.
-Hellwig
Asst. do.
Seifert
Chief Engineer-W. F. Mc Intoshi Second do. A. E. Chunnett
Third do. R. C. Anderson
HAMBURG-AMERIKA LINIE
Coast Service
ÅDM. V. TIRPITZ, GER. STR., 2,006 tons Captain Artelt
Chief Officer-Hausbrand
Second do. Lieber
Chief Engineer-Burmeister Second do. ---Friederici Third do. --Albrecht Assistant do, -Hoffler
GOUV. JAESCHKE, GER, STR., 1,738 tons Captain-Sach
Chief Officer-Fielson Second do.
Harmening
Chief Engineer-Nieber
Second do. -Behrens
Third do. - Fuss
PEIRO, GER. STR., 756 tons
Captain-Vahsel
Chief Officer-Lorenzen Second do. -Gollert Chief Engineer-Hansen Second do. -Forchert Third do. -Ernst Fourth do, Asst. do.
Warnck
Kropp
Šikiang, Ger. Str., 1,800 tons
Captain-Helfer
Chief Officer-Bargholz
Second do. -Schlueter
Chief Engineer-Westphalen
Second do. -Jungnickel Asst. do. -Kruse
STAATSS, KRAETKE, GER. STR., 2,009 tons Captain-Lauterbach
Chief Officer-Abshagen
Second do.
-Moll
J
1526
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
Third Officer-Ullrich Chief Engineer-Dierks Second do. -Gerhold Third do. -Wengler Asst. do.
Sommer
SUI Mow, GER. STR., 1,157 tons
Captain-Anders
Chief Officer-von Elpons Second do. -Hansi Chief Engineer--Schulz Second do. -Stueckrat Third do. -Kuehhn
TSINTAU, GER, STR., 1,590 tons
Captain Stehr
Chief Officer-Holdinghausen Second do. -Kruells Chief Engineer-Dahl
Second do. --Forchert
Third do. -Steinfeld Asst.
do. -Wittenberg
HONGKONG, CANTON AND MACAO STEAMBOAT COMPANY, LD.
W. E. Clarke, Secretary Deacon & Co., Agents, Canton
A. A. de Mello, Agent, Macao
Hongkong-Canton Line
HEUNGSHAN, BRIT. STR., 1,055 tons 山香
Captain-R. D. Thomas
Chief Officer-C. Stancliffe
Chief Engineer-G. W. Kew
Second do. -W. S. Cullen
Purser A. S. Souza
HONAM, BRIT. STR., 1,377 tons
To to
Captain-H. D. Jones
Chief Officer-J. Beltison
Chief Engineer-J. N. MacDougall Second do. -T. S. Morrison Purser-P. O. Mattos
KINSHAN, BRIT. STR., 1,818 tons.
山金
Captain-W. A. Valentine
Chief Officer-W. R. Jeffcott
Second do. Jones
Chief Engineer-H. Smythe
Second do. J. B. Holloway
Purser J. Figueiredo
Hongkong-Macao Líne
安瑞
SUI-AN, BRIT. STR., 1,818 tons
Captain-R. A. Birss
Chief Officer-J. S. Swannie
Chief Engineer-J. Johnson
Second Engineer-J. Cobb
Purser C. P. Archer
SUI-TAI, BRIT. STR., 1,651 tons 泰瑞
Captain A. Mckinnon
Chief Officer-J. Woollacott
Chief Engineer--A. C. Millar
Second do. -J. Wilson Purser-F. d' Eça
Canton-Macao Line
HOI SANG BRIT. STR., 141 tons 山龍
Captain-T. J. Chrispin
Chief Engineer-E. M. Rodrigues
Canton-Wuchow Line
NANNING, BRIT. STR., 349 tons 獰南
Captain-R. Ramsay
Chief Engineer-H. C. Smith
SAINAM, BRIT. STR., 349 tons 南西
Captain-S. Bell Smith
Chief Engineer J. McFarlane
INDO-CHINA STEAM NAVIGATION
COMPANY, LIMITED
Jardine, Matheson & Co., Gen. Managers A. Sinclair, Marine Superintendent
AMARA, BRIT. STR., 2,454 tons 刺孖亞
Captain-C. J. Mattock
Chief Officer-R. A. Matthews
Second do. -J. Nesbitt
Third do. J. T. Naylor
-J.
Chief Engineer-T. T. Wright
Second do. D. R. McKenzie
Third do.
Fourth do.
John Leach
Alfred Malain
CHANGWO, BRIT. STR., 1,065 tons
和昌
Captain J. Laverie
Chief Officer A. Attwood
Chief Engineer-F. Lancaster
Second do. -W. Douglas
昇昌
CHEONGSHING, 1,989 tons
Captain-V. McC. Liddell
First Officer-E. W. Buchanan
Second do. R. G. Marquis
First Enginesr--J. D. Carnie
Second do. --W. B. Simpson
Third do. -James Smith
陞積
CHIPSHING, 1,924 tons
Captain-F. Mooney
First Officer--W. G. Messenger Second do. -A. R. D. S. Smith
r
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
Chief Engineer J. H. Ware
Second do.
-J. G. Cheyne
Third do. -H. G. Davis
CHOYSANG, BRIT. STR., 2,284 tons 生財
Captain-M. Courtney
Chief Officer-J. McGuffoq
Second do.
-James Sangster
Third do.
Chief Engineer-H. Wiseman Second do. -D. Anderson
Third do. -A. G. Henderson
CHUNSANG, Brit.Str., 2,251 tons 生春
Captain-W. E. Sawer
Chief Officer--G. H. Alcock
Second do. -W. Heckford
Third do. -F. J. Smith Chief Engineer R. Johnson. Second do. -H. E. Lotley Third
do. -J. Y. H. Taylor
ESANG, Brit. Str., 1,783 tons
生怡
Captain T. M. Meyrick
Chief Officer A. C. A. Corneck
Second do. G. F. James
Chief Engineer-C. Maxwell
Second do. -J. Marshall
Third do. -J. N. Brown
FAUSANG, Brit. Str., 2,251 tons 生學
Captain-H. S. Malkin'
Chief Officer A. H. Weare
Second do. F. C. Purkins
Chief Engineer-W. C. Tillery
Second do. -T. G. Sinclair
Third do. -H. W. Lochead
生福
FOOKSANG, 3,100 tons
Captain-T. A. Mitchell
First Officer-R. D. Morrison
Second do. Thomas Grant
Donald Skinner
Third do.
First EngineerWm. Gow
Seconl to.
A. Macdonald
Third do.
-J. B. Thomson
Fourth do.
-Robt. Thomson
陞富
FooSHING, 2,284 tons
Captain-T. H. Lishman
First Officer S. Findeisen Second do. -J. R. Evans
Supry. 2nd Officer-S. O. Mitford First Engineer J. J. McKimm Second do. J. B. Rickie Third do. Geo. J. Park
HANGSANG, Brit. Str., 2,143 tons 生恒
Captain--S. Wilde
Chief Officer A. S. Woodget
Second do. S. Polkinghorn Chief Engineer-T. Keer Second do.
-T. McCreath
Third do. -Campbell Davie
HINSANG, Brit. Str., 2,412 tons
生
Captain-A. G. Smith
Chief Officer-Colin Campbell Second do. -W. F. Laing Third do. -J. H. Ferguson Chief Engineer J. G. Thorburn Second do. -W. R. Thomson Third dlo. H. H. Chapman
HOPSANG, Brit. Str., 2,149 tons 生合
Captain-J. M. Hay
Chief Officer--J. Coyle
Second Officer-H. Spencer
Chief Engineer --B. A. Ballantine
Second do. -Wm. Tough Third do. -B. Parker
KIANGWO, Brit. Str., 2,174 tons 和江
Captain E. M. Reynolds
Chief Officer-C. H. Parber
Second do. -E. W. Lindall
Chief Engineer-W. M. Mackinnon
Second do. ---J. McGown
Third do. -R. A. W. Dandie
KINGSING, Brit. Str., 1,983 tons
星景
Captain J. M. Wright
Chief Officer--E. Gostling
Second do. Theodore Ogier
Chief Engineer--R. Wilson
Second do. A. J. Patterson Third do. -E. Aitkin
PTT
KOONSHING, 2,130 tons 陞官
Captain--W. G. G. Leask
Chief Officer-J. W. Carle
Second do.-L. Muston
First Engineer-J. H. Stewart
Second do. -Thomas Wilson
Third do. -John Fitzpatrick
KUMSANG, Brit. Str., 3,237 tons
生金
Captain E. J. Buller
Chief Officer
A. Bramwell
Second do. -Robt. Brown
Chief Engineer S. Baker
Second Engineer-J. J. Brown
1527
1528
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
Third Engineer -J. P. L. Beal
Fourth do. -Joseph Thomson
KUTSANG, 4,895 tons
生吉
Captain-R. C. D. Bradley
First Officer-C. B. Tweedy
Second do. -P. R. Cuming
-E. B. Smith
First Engineer-R. Pithie
Third do.
Second do.
Third do.
--J. C. Dallas
-C. H. Thomson
Fourth do. -J. H. F. Farquharson
KUTWO, Brit. Str., 2,265 tons
和吉
Captain-G. S. Hohnwood
Chief Officer-O. C. Blown
Second do. J. J. Hudson
Third do.
-W. Ellison
Chief Engineer-E. D. Forrester Second do. -Walter Crosbie Third do. -D. B. Ritchie
-
KWONGSANG, Brit. Str., 2,286 tons 生廣
Captain-W. P. Baker
Chief Officer-E. W. Scheuk
Second do. -Rowland Harris
Chief Engineer-E. Munsie
Second do. -D. B. Mauchau
Third do. F. O. Collins
LAISANG, Brit. Str., 3,460 tons 麗生
Captain E. J. Tadd
Chief Officer-C. D. Nicoll
Second Officer-J. A. L. Taylor
Third do, C. H. Spittle Chief Engineer-J. McCracken Second do. -H. Watson Third do. -M. Hull
Fourth do. -E. St. C. Dunn
LIENSHING, Brit. Str., 1,659 tons 星連
Captain H. G. N. Walker
Chief Officer-H. Simpson
Second do. -J. H. Davey
Chief Engineer-T. J. Smithers
Second do. -T. W. Pollock
Third cla. -A. S. Allan
LOKSANG, BRIT. STR., 1,559 tons
生樂
Captain--G. H. Bowker
Chief Officer-A. A. Campbell
Second do. -F. B. Shea-Lawlor
Chief Engineer-J. M. Dawson Second do. -G. W. Russell Third do. R. S. Matthews
LOONGSANG, Brit. Str., 1,738 tons
生隆
Captain F. Wheeler
Chief Officer-A. C. Kennedy
Second do. -W. D. McArthur Third do. -O. D. Mertens Chief Engineer W. Edwards Second do.
Third do.
-J. G. Yuill
Thos. Blair
LOONGWO, 3,923 tons
和隆
Captain-D. Christie
First Officer J. Jackson
Second do. -E. H. Suttis First Engineer-A. McEwan Second do. -A. T. Perry Third do. -A. H. Green Fourth do. -C. L. Sharpe
MAUSANG, Brit, Str., 2,161 tons
生茂
Captain-G. S. Weigall
Chief Officer T. Cremin
Second Officer L. M. Goddard Chief Engineer-W. Graham Second do. -A. Stevenson Third do. -J. J. Fay
NAMSANG, Brit. Str., 4,034 tons. 生南
Captain--P. M. B, Lake
Chief Officer-P. G. Ashton
Second do. -F. J. Gill Third do. -F. P. Perkins Chief Engineer-T. P. Murdoch Second do. -M. T. Kerr Third do. Fourth do.
-A. Annetts -A. C. Cruickshank
ONSANG, Brit. Str., 2,802 tons
生安
Captain E. S. Woolley
Chief Officer-J. Campbell
Second do. -F. J Burton
Third do. Lawrence Brown
Chief Engineer C. E. Holmes
Second do.
Third do.
Fourth do.
-M. Friedmann
J. S. Whittaker -Frank Kennedy
SUISANO, Brit. Str., 2,790 tons
生瑞
Captain W. D. Welsh
Chief Officer-G. T. Tough
Second do. H. Macgregor Third do. -T. Chermside Chief Engineer-D. McMurray Second do. -C. J. Tacchi Third do. --J. McCallum Fourth do. -H. Lothian
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
1529
Surwo, Brit. Str., 2,265 tons 和瑞
Captain-T. H. Sellar
Chief Officer-Wm. Gibb
Second do. -Arthur Evans
Third
do. -W. D. Rogers
Chief Engineer-H. Good
Second do. A. Buntain
Third do. -A. Turnbull
TAKSANG, Brit. Str., 1,559 tons 生德
Captain W. McClure"
Chief Officer P. Martin
Second do. D. Armour
Chief Engineer A. E. Roberts
Second do.
-A. Tough
Third do. J. D. Isbester
TAISANG, BRIT. STR., 2,326 tons
生太
Captain-W. J. Davies
Chief Officer-G. F. Matthews
Second do. -E. M. Evans
Chief Engineer -J. McKinnon
Second do. -H. W. Hutcheson Third do. E. O. Birch Fourth do. -L. MeWilliam
TINGSANG, Brit. Str., 1,650 tons
生定
Captain-R. Y. Anderson
Chief Officer-J. Tate
Second do. D. J. McCulloch
Chief Engineer-W. Macfarlane
Second do. --A. L. Miller
Third do. V. J. Byrne
Tuckwo, 3770 tons
和德
Captain A. E. Sandbach
First Officer-F. Scurr
Second do. M. D. Varalda
Third do. -R. M. C. Wallace First Engineer W. Thomson Second do. -F. St. G. Lewis Third do. -Hugh B. Duff
Fourth do. -A. Livingston
TUNGSHING, Brit, Str.
星東
Captain W. S. Stalker
Chief Officer-J. J. Blake
Second do. I. Crake
Chief Engineer-W. Murdoch
Second do. -W. Jackson
Third do. -E. B. Ackerman
WAISHING, Brit. Str.
星慧
Captain-F. W. Bichard
Chief Officer W. M. Mesney
Second do. B. C. Marsh
Chief Engineer-D. Smith
Second do. -D, S. Coupland
Third do. -G. B. O. Miller
WINGSANG, Brit. Str., 2,339 tons
生永
Captain-J. M. Smith
Chief Officer-H. Rance
Second do. -T. R. Sayle
Chief Engineer A. Spiers Second do.
Third do.
-J. B. Thistle
-H. Barbour
WOSANG, Brit. Str., 1,783 tons 生和
Captain-D. W. Ritchie
Chief Officer-E. G. Wrightson Second do. -A. Hall
Chief Engineer T. MacCormack
Second do. -A. McC. Hood
do. G. D. Grant
Third
YATSHING, 2,284 tons
陞日
Captain R. Houghton
First Officer-F. E. Jarrett
Second do. -J. R. Parkinson
First Engineer A. J. Begley Second do. -I. S. Holmes Third do. --A. M. Scott
Supry. Third do. -Geo. A. Fowle
YUENSANG, Brit. Str., 1,784 tons 生源
Captain-P. H. Rolfe
Chief Officer-C. A. Robertson Second do. -W. E. Jenkins
Third do. -J. W. Wilson
Chief Engineer-M. Risk Second do. D. Ellis
Third do. J. L. Sherriff
PILOTS
T. H. Christic, E. L. Grey, H. Markham, H. C. Taylor, H. J. West, P. V. Jackson
NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD Melchers & Co., Agents
Yungtsze-Line
MEIDAH, German Str., 1,151 tons
大美
Captain G. Mülleitner
Chief Officer-F. Misch
Second do. -G. Kohl
Chief Engineer-O. Kilian
Second do. -H. Schonemann
MEILEE, German Str., 1,151 tons 利美
Captain--M. Engelhart
Chief Officer-F. Wellmann
|
1530
Second do.
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
-H. Witzler Chief Engineer-F. Pust Second do. -E. Ziem
MEISHUN, German Str., 1,151 tons
順美
Captain E. Minning
Chief Officer-H. Lehmann
Second do. W. Rehberg
Chief Engineer--F. Stegmann
Second do. --P. Weidenhammer
MEIYU, German Str., 1,001 tons
裕美
Captain A. Finger
Chief Officer--E. Fedeler
Second do. -G. Siemers
Chief Engineer-P. Konnowski
Second do. -H. Werner
Tender Bremen
Captain-L. Boyken
NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD ORIENT
LINIE
Butterfield & Swire, Agents, Hongkong
Yuen Fat Hong, Sub-agents, Hongkong
Windsor & Co., Agents, Bangkok
ANG HIN, German Str., 1,001 tons
顯安
Captain-Chr. Kümpel
Chief Officer-F. Schilling
Second do. -C. Barlein
Chief Engineer-H. Jennert
Second do.
-S. Alex
Third do. -O. Knoke
BANGPAKONG, Steam Lighter 江北濱
Captain J. Meyer
Borneo-Line
BORNEO, German Str., 1,344 tons
鳥般
Captain-F. Sembill
Chief Officer-D. Braue
Second do. -H. Streitz
Chief Engineer-D. Wessels
Second do. -H. Vichhäuser
Third do. --H. Ritter
CHOISING, Ger. Str., 1,021 tons
土麻力蓮地为
Captain J. Bruhu
Chief Officer-O. Damköhler
Second do. C. Hilburg
Chief Engineer-L. Brandt
Second do. -V. Knaack
Third do. -A. Discher
CHOWFA, German Str., 1,055 tons
師馬司
Captain-F. Schmetz
Chief Officer-E. Mirwald
Second do. -H. Garde
Chief Engineer-O. Ranck Second do. W. Meyer
CHOW TAI, German Str., 1,115 tons
泰周
Captain W. Möllermann
Chief Officer-B. Muntzen
Second do.
-H. Bohm
Chief Engineer-H. Nommensen Second do. -W. Giertz
J
Third do. -K. Thater
DEVAWONGSE, German Str., 1,057 tons
馬司
Captain F. Rehwoldt
Chief Officer -A. Oelrichs Second do. --P. Wieters Chief Engineer J. Schmidt Second do. -F. Kindler
KEONG WAI, German Str., 1,511 tons
維姜
Captain-J. Koehler
Chief Officer-L. Windhorst
Second do. --H. Geyer
Chief Engineer R. Krohn
Second do. -E. Schwaneberger
KOHSICHANG, German Str., 1,292 tons 炎馬司
Captain O. Scheidling
Chief Officer-H. Hankes
Second do. -H. Schumacher
Chief Engineer-H. Böhm
Second do. -H. Aldag
Third do. -H. Schmidt
LOCKSUN, Ger, Str., 1,020 tons
士麻力利地晏
Captain W. Taeubert
Chief Officer-C. Duffner
Second do. --Chr. Hartig
Chief Engineer F. Heiden Second do. -Drefken Third
do. -H. Luhrssen
Loo Sok, German Str., 1,020 tons 虛魯
Captain-P. Wittstock
Chief Officer-G. Meyer
Second do. -G. Warlich
Chief Engineer-W. Stilke Second do. -W. Löwenstein
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
MACHEW, German Str., 995 tons
超馬
Captain-K. Zoellner
Chief Officer-E. Schumitz
Second do. -E. Liegeitun
Chief Engineer-W. Kaufhold Second do. -G. Galle
Third do. -W. Forster
MEKLONG, Steam Lighter 郎麥
Captain-E. Schumacher
PAKLAT, German Str., 1,019 tons 律北
Captain J. Wenzel
Chief Officer-U. Walter
Second do. W. Pröhl
Chief Engineer--O. Bachmann
Second do. -O. Wagner
Third do. -P. Bagat
PATRIU, Steam Lighter 連地不
Captain-N. Siemen
PETCHABURI, German Str., 1,137 tons
廿
Captain--C. Goservisch
Chief Officer-L. Bargholz
Second do. W. Strauss
Chief Engineer-W. Scheneider
Second do. E. Dittelbach
ww
PITSANULOK, German Str., 1,189 tons
TE
Captain D. Reimers Chief Officer-F. Krahe Second do. A. Götting Chief Engineer A. Warnke Second Engineer-J. Reutzel Third do. -P. Kähl
PARA NANG, German Str., 1,021 tons
權孫
Captain-J. Heyenga
Chief Officer-H, Korkhof
Second do. -G, Prass
Chief Engineer-C. Prüfer
Second do. -O. Rottke
Third do. -W. Marwan
PONGTONG, German Str., 997 tons
士蔴力沙里找
Captain-H. Oldoen
Chief Officer-F. Krone
Second do. W. Gey
Chief Engineer-R. Schnevoigt
Second do. -W. Rost
Third do. -P. Schäffer
RAJABURI, German Str., 1,189 tons
昭馬司
Captain H. Bremer
Chief Officer-J. Gobbels
Second do. -W. Osswald
Chief Engineer-H. Tomalla Second do. -R. Thieme
Third do. -N. Wegner
RAJAH, German Str.,
揸刺
Captain-N. Reher
Chief Officer A. Kutzur
Second do. --F. Noack
Chief Engineer-E. Blanke
Second do. -G. Paradies
tons
SAMSEN, German Str., 998 tons 臣三
Captain R. Petersen
Chief Officer-M. Schneider
Second do. -K. v. Wicht
Chief Engineer-H. Claudius
Second do. E. Petersen
―
干打
1531
TACHEEN, Steam Lighter-Capt. A. Surhoff
TSINTAU, German Str., 1,002 tons
島青
Captain-F. Bucking
Chief Officer-F. Prohl
Second do. -H. Hoy
Chief Engineer-W. Metzke
Second do. -J. Gätjen
大仁
UNDINE, Steam Tug-Capt. F. Vogtland
VULCAN, Steam Tug
Captain-C. Theiss
竹蘭
WONG KOL, German Str., 1,115 tons
盖黃
Captain-W. Rehers
Chief Officer-G. Johannassen
Second do. -J. Narder
Chief Engineer-H. Schill
Second do. -W. Dorbrandt
Third do. -W. Jentsch
OSAKA SHOSEN KAISHA
Hongkong-Tamsui Line
DAIJIN MARU, Japanese Str., 900 tons 丸仁大
Captain-I. Sakurai
Chief Officer-T. Miyata
Second do. -I. Shirai
Third do. -T. Uchida
1532
COASTING AND RIVER STEAMERS
Chief Engineer-K. Iwasa
First do. -S. Mikami
Second do. -S. Sakakihara
Doctor T. Ogasawara
Hongkong-Tamsui Line
JOSHIN MARU, Japanese Str., 702 tons 九津城
Captain-Y. Kaburaki
Chief Officer-K. Kaneko
Second Officer-H. Ohuchi
Third do.
T. Watanabe
Chief Engineer-S. Suzuki
First do.
-S. Ito
Second do. -H. Fujita
Doctor-K. Kobayashi
Hongkong-Shanghai Line
BAJUN MARU, Jap. Str., 300 tons
丸順撫
Captain-Y. Fuseno
Chief Officer-K. Sakurai
Second do. --Y. Fujita
Third do. -T. Yamamoto
Chief Engineer-K. Takigawa First do. -N. Asaki
Second do. --J. Kaiyade
Hongkong-Shanghai Line
CHOSHU MARU, Japanese Str., 1034 tons
丸春長
Captain T. Suruga
Chief Officer-K. Tashiro
Second do. -K. Hattori
Third do. K. Imagawa
Chief Engineer -H. Wakiyama
First do.
-Y. Hirayanagi
Second do. J. Nakashima
Hongkong-Takao Line
SHOSHU MARU, Japanese Str., 999 tons
丸州漳
Captain-I. Ijichi
Chief Officer--M. Nagano
Second do. -T. Suda
Third do. -T. Narushima
Chief Engineer T. Suzumura First do. -W. Goshi Second do. -S. Mori
Doctor-S. Ida
SHAN STEAMERS
Bradley & Co., Managing Agents Swatow,
Hongkong and Shanghai
NANSHAN, Brit. Str., 2,069 tons 山南
Captain-A. Jones
Chief Officer-W. C. Sell
Second do. -H. Berguitz Chief Engineer -J. Stewart
Second do.
Third do.
-N. Davis
-J. Furniss
TAISHAN, Brit. Str., 1,805 tons
山泰
Captain J. T. Laing
Chief Officer-C. Wawn
Second do. -St. J. Curtis
Chief Engineer J. Brown Second do. -G. McCallum Third
do. -J. S. Sinclair
WEST RIVER BRITISH S. S. CO., LD.
Butterfield & Swire, Agents
LINTAN
灘 連
Master J. Donaldson
Chief Officer-P. Tall
Chief Engineer-J. Gibbinson
Master W. Tutt
SAN-UI
會新
Chief Officer-John Jones
Chief Engineer-J. Forrest
MISCELLANEOUS COAST STEAMERS
KWONG TUNG, Brit. Str., 823 tons
東廣
Yuan On Steamship Co., Ld., Owners
Captain-H. W. Walker
Chief Engineer-T. A. Cordeiro
TAI On, Brit. Str., 438 tons
安泰
Yik On Steamship Co., Ld., Owners
No. 240, Des Voeux Road, Central, Tel. 508
Captain J. Lawrence
Chief Officer John Acock
Chief Engineer-T. D. McCartney
STANDARD'S
HONGKONG
AGENT'S
Messrs. Dodwell & Co., £td.
ADVERTISEMENT
1533
STANDARD'S
THE
SINGAPORE
AGENT'S
Messrs. A. Gilfillan & Co., £d.
STANDARD LIFE OFFICE
(ESTABLISHED
***
1825)
Revenue
Bonus Declared
Accumulated Funds
Claims Paid
++
---
---
TIE
£ 1,500,000
£ 7,000,000
£12,250,000
£26,800,000
The Standard
is the only British Life Office having a Local Board of Directors in the Far East with full powers to accept Proposals, issue Policies, pay Claims and Surrenders, and advance. Loans
ON THE SPOT
without reference home.
For full particulars
and a copy of the
Company's Prospectus
Or to any of the Company's Agents in the East.
Apply to
F. Loch Trevor,
Secretary
STANDARD LIFE OFFICE
SHANGHAI.
WIRE ROPE MANUFACTURERS
George Cradock & Co., Ld.
TRADE
WIRE ROPE MANUFACTURERS,
TRADE
MARK.
TELEPHONE:
No. 26.
WAKEFIELD,
ENGLAND.
MARK,
TELEGRAMS:
Cradock, Wakefield,
LANG'S PATENT ROPE FOR ALL PURPOSES WHERE
THERE IS EXCESSIVE WEAR AND FRICTION
NUFLEX ROPE FOR CRANES, HOISTS, SINKING AND
BALANCE ROPES. THIS KOPE IS ABSOLUTELY
NON-ROTATING.
All classes of Wire Rope made entirely in our own Works from the
Pig Iron to the finished Rope.
ALSO
MANUFACTURERS OF
HIGH-CLASS MINING STEEL FOR ALL MINING PURPOSES.
SPECIAL ALLOY STEELS FOR HIGH CLASS
ENGINEERING WORK.
BRANCHES :
LONDON-7, EAST INDIA AVENUE, E. C.
AUSTRALIA--UNION BANK CHAMBERS, 68 PITT STREET, SYDNEY, N. S. W. SOUTH AFRICA-THIE CORNER HOUSE, JOHANNESBERG, TRANSVAAL. INDIA--1, MISSION ROW, CALCUTTA.
LIST OF FOREIGN RESIDENTS
IN CHINA, JAPAN, COREA, VLADIVOSTOCK, HONGKONG, MACAO, THE
PHILIPPINES, BORNEO, TONKIN, ANNAM, COCHIN-CHINA, SIAM,
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS, MALAY STATES, &c., FOR 1910
Aagaard, Bjarne, steamship agent, Aagaard, Thoresen & Co., Hongkong
Aall, Cato Ñ. B, Aall & Co., Yokohama
Aalst, J. A. van, commissioner, Maritime Customs, Wuchowfu
Aaron, J., clerk, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Abbas, Y., clerk, Public Works Department, Hongkong
Abbass, O., clerk, Moorhead & Halse, Shanghai
Abbey, C. H., assistant, Geo. J. Penney, Kobe
Abbey, D., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Newchwang
Abbey, F. H., assistant, F. W. Horne, Yokohama
Abbey, J., assistant, Derrick Brothers, Yokohama
Abbot, F., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Abbott, F. J., agent, Peninsular & Oriental S. Nav. Co., Yokohama Abdulbasien, A. M., manager, A. M. Essabhoy, Shanghai
Abed, J., cashier, E. Meyer & Co., Singapore
Abegg, C., assistant, E. A. Keller & Co., Manila
Abegg, H., merchant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Yokohama
Abeille, chancelier, Niah-Biah, Tonkin.
Abel, A. H., assistant, Imperial Chinese Maritime Customs, Peking
Abell, J. D., assistant, Far Eastern Advertising Agency, Kobe
Abeloos, Roman Catholic Missionary, Kewkiang
Abenheim, F. B., merchant, Abenheim Bros., Yokohama
Abily, G., agent, Messageries Maritimes Co., Kobe
Abraham, A., clerk, Hongkong & China Gas Co., Hongkong
Abraham, A. W., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Abraham, E., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong Abraham, E. S., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong
Abraham, G., apothecary, Batu-Gajah, Perak
Abraham, L. D., merchant, L. D. Abraham & Co., Kobe
Abraham, R., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Hongkong
Abraham, R. D., merchant, Shanghai
Abrams, C. W., veterinary surgeon, Horse Repository, Singapore
Abrams, E. A., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Abrams, H., proprietor, Horse Repository, Singapore and Penang
Abreu, J. C, judge, Court of First Instance, Province of Capiz, Philippines
Abron, A., postal-officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Abshagen, chief officer, S. S. "Straatss, Kraetke," Coast service
Accurti, Gino, general manager, Ho Tung Bau Gesellschaft, Tientsin
Acevedo, L. T., consul-general for Spain, Manila
Acheson, G. F. H., acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Chungking
Acheson, J., acting commissioner of Customs, Pakhoi
Ackerman, G. O., assistant, British Cigarette Co.. Shanghai
Ackermann, captain, Commander, S. M. S. "Tiger," German Squadron, China
Ackermann, E. assistant, Winckler & Co., Kiaochau
Ackermann, G., merchant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Ackland, R. J., manager, Vacuum Oil Co. of Rochester and New Orleans, Yokohama Ackling, J. W., engineer, Royal Mint, Bangkok
Acock, John, chief officer, steamer "Tai On," Hongkong-Canton
Acosta, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Acton, Fitzmaurice, Commander, H. M. S. "Tamar," Hongkong Acton, R. L., assistant, Bruseh Hydraulic Tin Mining Co., Perak Acton, W. W., executive engineer, Public Works, Batu Gajah, Perak Adna, A., assistant, Wilson & Co., Tientsin
NIPPONOPHONE
"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1536
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Adair, D., assistant-manager, Straits Sugar Co., Gedong, Penang
Adam, F., electrical-engineer, German Post Office and Telephone Stations, Hankow Adam, F., inspector of branches, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Adam,, Geo. Oriental Hotel, Kobe
Adam, H., assistant, China Export-Import-and-Bank Cie, Kobe
Adam, L. D., editor, "Japan Gazette," Yokohama
Adam, M. C., engineer, Pulo Sambo Tank Installation, Singapore
Adam, M. S., proprietor, Kinta Aerated Water Factory & Bakery, Perak
Adams, A., assistant, Evans & Co., Shanghai
Adams, A., chargeman, H.M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Adams, Arthur R., advocate and solicitor, Adams & Allan, Penang
Adams, E. G. architect, Adams & Knowles, Tientsin
Adams, H. A., superintendent, Police and Prison, Sarawak
Adams, James, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Adams, M. C., assistant manager, China and Japan Trading Co., Nagasaki Adams, P. R., senior writer, H. M. Victualling Yard, Hongkong Adams, R. S., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Adams, S., light-keeper, Marine department, Malacca
Adams, S. G. H., surveyor, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Adamsen, H. A., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kowloon Adamson, G. B., manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Hongkong
Adamson, H., joint manager, Travers, Joseph & Sons, Singapore
Addenbrooke, Jos. J. J., superintendent, Visayan Electric Co., Cebu Addie, R. J., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Addison, G. H., captain, Royal Engineers, Hongkong Addison, J., second secretary, British Legation, Peking
Adeney, G. B., assistant manager, Siamese Tin Syndicate Ltd., Bangkok Adis, N. N., proprietor, Grand Hotel, Singapore
Adler, E., assistant, Giesel & Co., Shangliai
Adler, L., assistant, Andrews, von Fischerz & George Ltd., Shanghai
Adnams, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Adolf, C., foreman shipwright, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock & Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Adons, H., Roman Catholic missionary. Ichang
Adons, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Adons, Marinus, Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Aeria, F., financial assistant, Police department, Penang Aeria, Z. C, el rk, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Penang Affonso, S., enfermeiro, Seminario de S. José, Macau Affreixo, J., capitao-tenente, Canhoneira "Patria," Macau Aftalion, A., assistant, Sennet Freres, Shanghai
Agle, W. B., clerk of works, Public Works and Survey department, Penang Aglen, F. A., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Agnew, A., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Agostini, P. D', writer, H.M. Naval Store Office, and professor of French, Hongkong
Aguiar, J. T., tenente, Companhia de Infanteria, Macau
Aguirre, R. P. F., Roman Catholic missionary, Foochow
Ahern, G. P., major, director, Bureau of Forestry, Manila
Ahlberg, C., examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Ahmed, S. A., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Hongkong
Abrends, W., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Ahrendt, C., assistaut, Melchers & Co., Canton
Ahrendts, F., postal-officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Ahrens, Dr., S. M. S. "Tiger," German Navy, China Station Alirens, H., Bangeschaft und Fischlerei, Kiaochau
Ahrens, R., pilot, Shanghai
Aiers. A. H., inspector of police, in charge Yangtszepoo station, Shanghai Ailion, Ferd., assistant, Japan Import and Export Commission Co., Kobe Ailion, J. A,, auctioneer, Whymark & Ailion, Kobe
Ainscough, T. M, assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Shanghai Ainslie, D. H., surgeon in charge, Anioy Chinese Hospital, Amoy Aird, Robert, medical practitioner, Thomson & Aird, Hankow
Aird, W., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Aitchison, A., assistant, Taikoo Dock Yard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Aitchison, J., superintendent engineer, Bangkok Dock Co., Ld., Bangkok
.
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Aitken, G. D., surveyor, Lloyd's Register of Shipping, Nagasaki Aitken, R., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Company, Hongkong Aitken, S. R., asst, manager, Holt's Wharf, Kowloon, Hongkong Aitkin, C. H., engineer, Manila Slip Co., Manila
Alabaster. Chaloner Grenville, barrister-at-law, Hongkong Alabaster, E., deputy commissioner, Kiangsu Likin Collectorate Albers, A., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock Al ers, C., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai Albers, F., secretary, German Consulate, Canton Albert, L., silk inspector, Siemssen & Co., Canton Albert, Michael, merchant, Shanghai
Albertsen, M. O, tidewaiter, Maritimne Customs, Shanghai Albrecht, lieut., S. M. S. "Arcona," German Squadron, China Albright, H. B., deputy consul general U.S.A., Yokohama Alcantara, D., clerk, Government Printing Office, Singapore Alcock, G. H., chief officer, steamer Chun Sang," China coast
Aldanese, V., inspector, U. S. Philippine Customs, Cebu
Alderton, P., assistant, Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai Aldridge, T. H. U., electrical engineer, Electricity department, Shanghai Aldworth, J. R. O., commissioner, Trade and Customs, Federated Malay States Alemann, O. von, assistant, Keichner & Boger, Shanghai
Alerini, percepteur, Residence, Quangtri, Annam
Alexander, C.S., acting treasurer, Taiping, Perak
Alexander, C. W., assistant, Bumann & Berblinger, Ho_gkong Alexander, Frank, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Alexander, James W., eng.-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Alexander, J. C. D., assistant, Blackmore & Co., Kobe
Alexander, L. B., district auditor, Agusan Province, Philippines Alexander, P. A., assistant engineer, Railway Company, Manila Alexander, R. Bangkok Dock Co., Bangkok
Alexandroff, A. M., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Alexandrow, B.. assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Alexius, brother, St. Louis College, Tientsin
Alfonso, foreman-plumber, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Algar, A. E., architect and surveyor, Shanghai
Algie, A. F., secretary, Fire Insurance Association, Tientsin
Algué, Rev. Father, director, Weather Bureau, Manila
Alkin, R. L., engineer, L. J. Healing & Co., Kobe
Allain, H., director, Aurora University, Shanghai
Allan, A. D., director, McAllister & Co., Penang
Allan, G., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Ld., Manila
Allan, H. T., accountant, Shanghai Electric and Asbestos Co., Shanghai Allan, J., engineer, The Oriental Ice Co., Shanghai
Allan, J. Herriot, chief accountant, Railway Co., Manila
Allan, J., outdoor-foreman, Riley Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Allan, J., superintendent-engineer, Municipality, Penang Allan, M., advocate and solicitor, Adams & Allan, Penang Allan, V., tirlewaiter, Maritime Customs, Whampoa Allanson, W., merchant, Shanghai
Allard, médecin résident, Hôpital d'Haiphong, Haiphong Allaud, A., brigadier de police. Haiphong
Allegra, R., assistant, Royal Hair Dressing Saloon, Singapore Allen, F. G., managing-clerk, Drew & Napier Singapore Allen, G. L., assistant, Barlow & Co., Shanghai
Allen, G. R., merchant, Yokohama
Allen, H. G., assistant, Westphal, King, and Ramsay, Shanghai Allen, R. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Tientsin Allchin, G. W. E., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Allchin, Rev. Geo., Osaka
Allcock, G. C., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Yokohama
Allcock, H. E, assistant, China & Japan Trading Co., Kobe
Allemão, R. R., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Allen, A. J. E., first assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Allen, A. W., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Foochow
<<
1537
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1538
FOREIGN KESIDENTS
Allen, E. L., assistant overseer of taxes, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai Allen, E. P., attorney and counsellor-at-law, Tientsin
Allen, F., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
Allen, F. D., employe, Broadway Drapery and Outfitting, Shanghai
Allen, F. E., clerk in charge, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Saigon
Allen, F. G., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Hongkong Allen, F. J., assistant, Alfred Herbert Ld., Yokohama
Allen, G, Dexter, teacher, Banting School, Sarawak
Allen, G. E., accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong Allen, H. A., clerk, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong
Allen, H. C. W., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Allen, M. A. V., assistant, Warden of Mines, Perak
Allen, R., barrister-at-law, Allen & Gledhill, Singapore
Allen, W., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Allen, W. A., chief clerk to Ordnance Officer, Hongkong
Allen, W. E., assistant, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tientsin
Allen, W. S., resident manager, Sperry Flour Company, Hongkong
Allin, C. H., director of Posts and Telegraphs, Federated Malay States Allison, J. H., assistant, American Trading Co., Yokohama Alliston, Mrs., proprietress, Bridge House Hotel, Nanking
Alliston, S., cattle exporter and merchant, Chinkiang
Allshorn, F. J., harbour master, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon
Almada e Castro, F. X. d', solicitor, D'Almada & Smith Hongkong Almada e Castro, J. T. d', clerk, International Bank, Hongkong
Almada e Castro, L. G. d', accountant, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Hongkong Almada e Castro, Leo. d', solicitor, Goldring, Barlow & Morrell, Hongkong Almario, C. A., clerk, Wilkinson & Grist, Hongkong
Almberg, E. M., assistant surveyor, Maritime Customs, Canton Almeida, A. A. F., escrivão, Procuratura Administrativa, Macau Almeida, A. J., clerk, Waterworks & Co., Shanghai
Almeida, E. d', clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Almeida, E. da E. P. d', chefe do serviço de Saude, Macao
Almeida, E. F., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Foochow
Almeida, F. A. M., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Almeida, F. D., manager, The Cargo Boat Co., Foochow
Almeida, F. J. d', assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Almeida, Geo., civil engineer, Almeida & Co., Singapore
Almeida, J. D', wharfinger, Hongkong, Canton and Macao Steamboat Co., Hongkong Almeida, J. A., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Almeida, J. M. d', clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Almeida, J. M. E. d', amanuense, Camara Municipal, Macao
Almeida, S. d', negociante, Macao
Almond, H. E., inspector of police, Municipal Council, Tientsin.
Almond, R. W., captain, steamer "Rubi," Hongkong and Manila
Alonço, D. A., clerk, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Canton
Alonço L., clerk, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Alongo, T. F. S., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Alsberg, M., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Tientsin
Alston, J., agent, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Kobe
Alston, W. G., chief draughtsman, Imperial Railway, Tongchau, North China
Altmann, E., section engineer, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Altschuler, A., assistant, J. R. Simon & Co., Yokohama
Alvares, A. A., clerk, L. J. Healing & Co., Kobe
Alvares, C. R., conego da Sé de Macao, Macao
Alvares, E. F., director, Empreza Economica, Macau
Alvares, E. M., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Lappa
Alvares, F., clerk, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong
Alvarez, J., assistant, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila
Alves, A., assistant timekeeper, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Macau
Alves, A. A., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Alves A. A. clerk Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
Alves, A. E., clerk, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong
Alves, A. L., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong Alves, C. M. S., clerk, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Alves, E. L. S., clerk, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong Alves, F. X., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Alves, G. F., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong
Alves, H. J., clerk, Banque de l' Indo-Chine, Hongkong Alves, J. A. S., manager, Fung Tang, Hongkong
Alves, J. M., merchant. J. M. Alves & Co., Hongkong Alves, M. J. D., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Alway, W. T., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Dairen
Aly, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
Amado, S., assistant, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila Ambanopulo, G., vice-consul for Greece, Vladivostock
Amberg, E., assistant, E. A. Keller & Co., Manila
Ambler, P., sub-acct. Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Penang Ambroise, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon Ambrose, J., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai Ambrose, S. C., solicitor, Presgrave & Matthews, Penang
Ambrosoli, C., assistant, Schweiger Import and Export Co., Singaporo Ames, Thales L., major, Ordnance department, Manila
Amirtham, A., head-teacher, Anglo-Tamil School for Boys, Penang Amorosy, Rev., Russian Greek Church, Peking
Ananin, S. N., assistant, Choorin Co., Vladivostock Ancilotto, Count, councillor, Italian Legation, Tokyo
Andel, A. W. van, assistant, Holland-China Trading Co., Hongkong Anders, Captain, S. S. "Suimow," Coast service
Andersen, H. A., asst. examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow Andersen, H. C., manager, Meklong Railway Co., Tachin, Bangkok Andersen, H. S., captain, tug "Victoria," Shanghai
Andersen, I., accountant, The Shanghai Horse Bazaar Co., Shanghai Andersen, K. L., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Kobe
Anderson, A. E., assistant, Dickeson, Jones & Co., Shanghai
Anderson, A. F. G., broker, Anthony & Anderson, Penang
Anderson, A. H., assistant, Syme & Co., Singapore
Anderson, A. L., broker, Shanghai
Anderson, A. W., boarding officer, Harbour Office, Penang
Anderson, B. A., mate, Lightship "Taku," Taku
Anderson, B. W., engineer, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama
Anderson, D. L., president, Soochow, University, Soochow
Anderson, E. A., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Anderson, E., manager, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Anderson, F., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Anderson, F, merchant, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
Anderson, G. A., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Anderson, G. W., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama
1539
Anderson, G. W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Company, Hongkong Anderson, H., assistant, W. R. Loxley & Co., Hongkong
Anderson, H. A., assistant, Police department, Penang
Anderson, Hon. John, managing director, Guthrie & Co., consul for Siam, Singapore (abt.) Anderson, I., medical-officer, Malacca Rubber Plantation Ld., Singapore
ני
Anderson, J., chief officer, steamer "Taming," Hongkong-Manila
Anderson, J. A. C., assistant, L. Leocoroeus, Ld., Bangkok
Anderson, J. B., assistant, Smith Bell & Company, Manila
Anderson, J. C., asst. locomotive superintendent, finperial Railways, Kaopautze, Tientsin Anderson, J. O., translator, "Shanghai Times," Shanghai
Anderson, L. A., agent, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Chungking
Anderson, L. J. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Anderson, Lt. Col., commander of Guard, British Embassy, Peking
Anderson, M. G., Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College, Tientsin
Anderson, N. A., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tientsin
Anderson, O. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Anderson, P., physician in charge, Manson Memorial Hospital, Takow
Anderson, R. N., assistant, New Zealand Insurance Co., Shanghai
Anderson, R. O. N., state engineer, Public Works, Perak
Anderson, R. S., professor, Soochow University, Soochow
Anderson, R. W., Staff Qr. Mr. Sergt., clerk, Army Pay Department, Hongkong
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NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1540
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Anderson, R. Y., captain, steamer "Tingsang," China coast
Anderson, Sir John, governor of Straits Settlements, Singapore and Labuan Anderson, T. F., assistant examiner, Customs, Kewkiang Anderson, W., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong Anderson, W., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Anderson, W., officer-in-charge, Revenue Launch "Kwanfung," Kowloon Anderson, W. M., manager, International Bank, Hongkong
Anderson, W. R. W., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Tientsin Andes, K. J., deputy commissioner, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Anding, J. R., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Andrae, H., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
André, Conrad, assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Cebu
André, R., interpreter, French Legation, Tokyo
Andrew, E., assistant, Ditmer Brunner Brothers Lil., Shanghai
Andrew, J. I., general manager, Geo. Fenwick & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Andrew, W. M., assistant, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Andrews, A., clerk, Customs, Sandakan, British North Borneo
Andrews, B. V., professor of English, Chinese Imperial University, Peking Andrews, H. J., assistant, Waterworks Co., Shanghai
Andrews, H. W., merchant, Andrews & George, Yokohama Andrews, John, manager, E. Viegelmann & Co., Manila Andrews, J. T., clerk, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Andrews, W. B., boat officer, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Andrews, W. S., storekeeper, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Anethan, Baron Albert, d,' Belgian minister, Tokyo
Angelbeck, E., assistant, H. and Reis Robitsck, Hongkong
Angellier, R. C. L., assistant, A damson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore.
Angelo, P. P., runner, Oriental Hotel, Macau
Angier, A. P., acting agent, Chartered Bank of India, Aust. and China, Hankow Angles, J. B., missionary, Roman Catholic Mission, Osaka
Angus, E. S., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Angus, H. N., chief clerk, Army Service Corps, Singapore
Angus, T. A., clerk, Medical department, Penang
Angus, T. R., minister of the Gospel, Chinese Gospel Hall, Selangor
Anjon, C. R. L., assistant, Maritime Customs, Szemao
Anón, P. J., rector, Ateneo de Manila, Manila
Anon, P. M., assistant, C. F. Urso, Nagasaki
Antholz, R., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Anthonisz, Hon. J. O., treasurer, Colonial Treasury, Singapore
Anthony, A. S., merchant, A. A. Anthony & Co., Penang
Anthony, J. G., assistant, Anthony & Anderson, Penang
Anthony, Joseph M., merchant, A. A. Anthony & Co., vice-consul for Portugal, Penang Anton, C. E., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Antoncich, L., berthing officer, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Antonio, E., clerk, Mercantile Bank, Hongkong
Antonio, F. F. X., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Hongkong
Antonio, J. F., enfermeiro, Hospital de S. Raphael, Macau,
Antony, A., capitao-commandante, 2a. Companhia, Corpo de Policia, Macau
Antoonieff, J. J., assistant, The Trading Co., Hanków
Antunes, J., alferes d'artilheria, Macau
Anz, O., merchant and consul for Belgium, Chefoo
Aparici, Carlos, chief accountant, Philippine General Tobacco Co., Manila
Aparici, J. M., cashier, Philippine General Tobacco Co., Manila
Apcar, Mrs. A. M., merchant, A. M. Apcar & Co., Yokohama
Apcar, Michael, assistant, A. M. Apcar & Co., Yokohama
Apel, L. H. T., accountant, North Borneo Trading Co., B. N. Borneo
Appel, A., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Appel, E., assistant, Baer, Meyer & Co., Manila
Appen, Henry von, assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hankow
Appleby, G. W., first engineer, revenue cruiser "Chuentiao," Customs, Shanghai Appleton, E., draughtsman, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Apps, F., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Aquino, A. M., Shanghai Mercury Ld., Shanghai
Aquino, E. G., clerk, Netherlands India Cominercial Bank, Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Aquino, E. H. d', clerk, American Trading Company, Shanghai Aquino, E. H. d,' first clerk, Stamp Revenue Office, Hongkong Aquino, I. T. d', clerk, Schiller & Co., Shanghai
Aquino, J. C. d', clerk, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Aquino, J. D., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Aquino, J. G. d,' clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Aquino, J. T. d', clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Aquino, Julius C., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Aquino, L. G., d', assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong Araneta, Gregorio, secretary of Finance and Justice, Manila Arapoff, M. A, agent, Jaroslawsko-Kostromskoi Bank, Vladivostock Arathoon, A. C., assistant, Stephens, Paul & Co., Singapore Arathoon, H. S., merchant, Stephens, Paul & Co., Singapore Arathoon, L. S., assistant, Stephens, Paul & Co., Singapore Araujo, Dr. J. M., Quadro de Sande, Timor
Araujo, J. d', clerk, High Commissioner's Secretary, F.M.S, Araullo, M., judge, Court of First Instance, Manila
Arbenz, C. F., assistant, Sprungli & Co., Manlia
Arbenz, E., clerk, Behn, Meyer & Co. & acting vice consul for Germany, B. N. Borneo Archard, A. H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Archbold, J. F., director, International Oil Co. Yokohama
Archbutt, G. S., assistant, China Fire Insurance Co., Hongkong
Archdeacon, S. B., manager, Smelting Works Straits Trading Co., Pulo Brani
Archer, R. J., assistant, American Trading Co., Amoy
Archer, R. W., asst. representative, Thos. Firth and Sons, Shanghai
Archer, W.. accountant, Straits Trading Co., Sungei-Besi, Selangor
Archer, W. J., councillor, British Legation, Bangkok
Arculli, A. F., Army and Navy contractor, Hongkong
Arculli, O. el, merchant, Arculli Brothers, Hongkong
Ardain, L., directeur, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Ardron, G. H., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Nagasaki Arellano, C. S., chief justice, Supreme Court, Manila
Arellano, R., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila Arend, M. von, assistant, Schwarz, Gaumer & Co., Hankow Arenzwary, A. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Arestoff, D. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Arestowa, O. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Argent, W. A., assistant, Mackenzie & Co., Tientsin
Ariznavarreta, B., chief engineer, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila Arkwright, W., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macau
Arlette, A. M., assistant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama
Arlington, J. C., deputy postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Nanking
Arlt, Hermann, assistant, Wilhelm Klose, Shanghai
Armauet, Joseph. J., precepteur, Résidence Hai Ninh, Tonkin
Armistead, F. C., pilot, Shanghai
Armour, R. A. V., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Armour, W., chief examiner, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Armstrong, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Armstrong, C., storehouseman, Royal Naval Ordnance Depot, Hongkong
Armstrong, F. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shasi
Armstrong, F. H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Armstrong, George, broker, Armstrong & Mackey, Manila
Armstrong, G., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Armstrong, H, employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Armstrong, J. M., foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Armstrong, J. W., wardmaster, Civil Hospital, Hongkong
Armstrong, T., 4th Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Armstrong, W., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Armstrong, W., chief detective police inspector, Shanghai Armstrong, W. R., barrister-at-law, Logan & Ross, Penang Arnauld-Coste, A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai Arndt, B., acting deputy postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Canton Arndt, E., manager, Arndt & Co., Hongkong
Arnesen, J. G., tidewaiter, Maritime Custoins, Shanghai
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:
1542
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Arnhold, C. E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Haukow Arnhold, H., assistant, Arnbold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Arnhold, H. E., merchant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Arnhold-Zedelius, W., assistant, Arnbold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Arnold, Capt. Daniel W., quartermaster, U. S. Army Depot, Nagasaki
Arnold, E., assistant, Boustead & Co., Penang
Arnold, E. L., assistant, Commercial Union Assurance Company, Hongkong
Arnold, J., assistant, Schwarz, Gaumer & Co,
Arnold, John, accountant, Hongkong, Canton and Macao Steamboat Co., Hongkong Arnott, T., engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Hok-ün Works, Hongkong
Arnould, lieutenant, Delegation de Dong Van, Tonkin
Arnould, H. M., merchant, Smith, Baker & Co., Yokohama
Arnoux, assistant, Denis Frères, Haiphong
Arnstedt, A., assistant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock Aroud, C., missionaire catholique, Wenchow Arp, H, pilot, Pagoda Anchorage, Foochow
Arranz, C., Roman Catholic mission, Amoy
Arriaga, A. F., conego, capellao, S. Domingo, Macao
Arroyo, A., Augustinian missionary, Shanghai
Artberg, J. G., assistant, Schuchardt & Schutte, Tokyo
Artelt, Captain, Ger. steamer "Adm. v. Tirpitz," Coast service
Artemjeff, J. J., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Arthur, H. W., merchant, Bain & Co., and pro. British Consul, Tainanfu
Arthur, J. S. W., assistant colonial treasurer, Singapore
Arthur, Capt. Thomas, surveyor, Goddard & Douglas, Hongkong Artindale, T., assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Shanghai
Artindale, T., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Arvat, D., missionary, Roman Catholic Cathedral, Hongkong
Asger, A. E., assistant, Land Investment and Agency Co., La., Hongkong Ashcroft, L., secretary, Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada, Singapore
Ashley, C. J., sailmaker, Shanghai
Ashness, J., senior surveyor, Public Works & Survey Department, Penang Ashton, L., assistant, Richard Haworth & Co., Shanghai
Ashton, P. G., chief officer, steamer "Namsang," China coast
Asinelli, A., R. C. missionary, Kashing, Ningpo
Askber, S., writer, H. M. Naval Store Office, Hongkong
Asker, C. A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Peking
Aslet, A., employé, Peak Tramway Co., Hongkong
Aspinali, H. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Assшy, Dr., army surgeon, German Govt. Hospital, Chungking
Assum, E. van, engineer, Shanghai Machine Co., Peking
Assumpção, C. A. R. d', chefe da repartição do expediente Sinico, Macao
Assumpção, H. d', clerk, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Shanghai
Assumpção, J. C. P. d', clerk, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Aston, Lieut. C. J., staff officer, Royal Engineers, Hongkong,
Aston, F. W., acting-manager, North Borneo Trading Co., Sandakan, B. N. Borneo Athayde, I., inspector, Repartição de Fazenda, Macau
Atienza, Vicente,, agent for the Germinal Tobacco Factory, Hongkong
Atkinson, A. K., assistant-manager, Byrain Sugar Estate, Penang
Atkinson, C. B., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation Ld., Bangkok
Atkinson, C. W., manager, Standard Oil Company of New York, Kobe
Atkinson, J., D., assistant, Townsend & Co., Chemulpo, Corea
Atkinson, J. Mitford, principal civil medical officer, Hongkong
Atkinson, R. Scott, superintendent, Telegraphs & Telephone Exchange, B. N. Borneo Atkinson, R. T., assistant, Brewer & Co., Shanghai
Atkinson, W. L., Atkinson & Dallas, Nanking
Atlay, Harold T., lieut. and comdr., H. M. gunboat "Thistle," China
Attwood, A., chief officer, steamer "Changwo," China coast
Atwell, W. E., C.A., Pearson, Mackie & Deinpster, Yokohama
Atwill, E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiukiang
Auber, procurer de la republique, Parguet de Saigon, Saigon
i.
Aubert, J., adjoint, Administration Francaise des Postes, Amoy
Aubrey, G. E., medical practitioner, Jordan, Forsyth & Gröne, Hongkong Aucott, E. F., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Audap, R. J., cashier, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong Audefray, chef de la voie et batiments, Annam
Auer, A., assistant, Lutz & Co., Manila
August, S., assistant, Vehling & Co., Yokohama
Augustesen, H. C., manager, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau Augustine, S., Anglo-Chinese Methodist School, Penang Auld, J. D., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Austen, A. W. S., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Yokohama Austen, Rev. W. T., Yokohama Seamen's mission, Yokoliama Austin, A. R., architect, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Austin, F., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Austin, J., assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Ld., Hankow
1543
Austin, N. J. sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Ipoh, Perak Austin, R. Mc P., student interpreter, British Embassy, Tokyo
Austin, W. H., assistant, Harry A. Badman & Co., Bangkok
Authier, pharmacien, Hôpital d'Haiphong, Haiphong
Avedillo, V., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Averill, C. S., assistant, The A. Colburn Co., Tamsui
Avetoom, T. C., medical practitioner, George Town Dispensary, Perang
Aveyard, Geo. S., assistant, Telge and Schroeter, Shanghai
Aviles, L., assistant, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong
Axten, E. H., assistant, Sir John Jackson Ld., Singapore
Ayers, T. W., M.D., Peking University, Peking
Ayre, C. F. C., master, Raffles Institution, Singapore
Ayres, John H., supt., Water Supply and Sewers, Manila
Ayris, E., chief clerk, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong Ayscough, F., merchant, Scott, Harding & Co., Shanghai Azedo, C. M. D. d', tenente coronel reformado, Macao Azedo, G., clerk, Reuter Bröckelmann & Co., Canton Azedo, J. J., amanuense, Camara Municipal, Macao
Azerio, J. S., accountant, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Hongkong Azevedo, A. d', godown keeper, Barretto & Co., Hongkong Azevedo, J. F., clerk, Melchers & Co., Canton
Azevedo, J. J. Braga, clerk, E. Pasquet & Co., Canton
Azevedo, L. G. d', clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Babaeff, M. F., assistant, Bryner, Kousuetzoff & Co., Vladivostock Babbitt, E. G., vice and deputy consul general, U.S.A., Yokohama.
Babick, W., assistant, Thomas & Co., Kobe
Babin, D., assistant, Heitmann and Aurnhammer, Charbin, Vladivostock Babintzeff, A. W., merchant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Babintzeff, W. P., merchant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Babo, Baron von, manager, Chang Yü & Co., & vice-consul for Austria-Hungary, Chefoo Bach, John, chief draughtsman, Bureau of Coast and Geodetic Survey, Manila
Bachelder, W. K., acting div. Supt of Schools, Misamis, Philippines
Bachelor, W. clerk to Private Secretary to the Governor, Singapore
Bachmann, O., chief engineer, steamer "Paklat," China Coast Backhouse, J. H., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong
Bacon, E., chief clerk, Post office, l'enang
Bacon, G., warehouseman, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Baddeley, A. E., assistant, Guthrie & Co., acting consul for Siam, Singapore Baddeley, S., pilot, Shanghai
Bade, L., assistant, A. Meier & Co., Yokohama and Kobe
Bade, lieut., S. M. S. "Leipsig," German Squadron, China
Badeley, F. J., captain superintendent of Police, Hongkong
Badenhop, K., assistant, El Oriente Fabrica de Tabacos, Manila
Bader, H., engineer, Rizerie Union, Cholon
Badin, commandant, Flotille de Torpilleurs des Mers de Chine, Saigon.
Badolo, G., merchant, Italian Far East Trading Co., Hongkong
Baerold, E., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Baerwald, G., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Bafcop, G., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Bagg, L. C., staff sergt, major, chief clerk, Army Service Corps, Hongkong Baggallay, M., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Yokohama
Bagge, R., consul-general for Sweden, Shanghai
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NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
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FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Bagger, S., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Shanghai Bagley, H. P., mercliant, Fraser & Cumming, Singapore Bagnall, A. L., engineer, Bagnall & Hilles, Yokohania Bahlmann, R., assistant, Telge & Schroeter, Shanghai Bahr, A. W., assistant, Hopkins, Dunn & Co., Shanghai Bahr, L. J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang, Bahr, M., secrétaire de Chancelerie, Legation d'Allemagne, Peking Babre, R., asst., Otto, Reimers & Co., Yokohama
Bahrfeldt, lieut., S. M. S. "Arcona," German Squadron, China Bailey, A. E., agent, Straits Trading Co., Rawang, Selangor Bailey, A. S., assistant, Donaldson & Burkinshaw, Singapore Bailey, A. W., acting assistant Protector of Chinese, Singapore Bailey, H., chargeman of fitters, H. M. Naval yard, Hongkong Bailey, H., inspector of police, Ipoh, Perak
Bailey, J., student-interpreter, British Consulate, Bangkok Bailey, W. S., consulting engineer, Bailey & Murphy, Hongkong Baillie, A. H., assistant, Howell & Co., Hakodate
Baillie, J., assistant, Luzon Sugar Refinery, Hongkong
Baillod, A. A., Tokyo
Baily, G. L., civil engineer, Aylesbury & Garland, Perak
Bain, A., assistant, East Point Refinery, Hongkong
Bain, A., manager, Bain's Press, Selangor
Bain, C. M., assistant, Maitland & Co., Shanghai
Bain, F. D., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Kobe
Bain, Horace, director and printing manager "China Mail," Hongkong Bain, N. K., acting district officer, Jasin, Malacca
Baines, Arthur, Captain, S. S. "Kuling," China const
Bains, J. W., sub-editor, "Shanghai Times," Shanghai
Baird, D., boilermaker, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Baiss, L. A., staff surgeon, Royal Naval Hospital, Hongkong Bajusheff, P. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Bakels, P., merchant, Bakels & Co., Shanghai
Baker, Capt. A., dep, commissary of ordnance, Army Ord. dept., Hongkong
Baker, A. assistant, Wreford & Thornton, Penang
Baker, A. C., deputy-collector, Land Revenue, Malacca
Baker, A. D., employé. Robinson & Co., Singapore
Baker, C., assistant, Fraser & Co., Singapore
Baker, C. J., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Baker, F. W., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Ld., Shanghai Baker, H., agent, Butterfield & Swire, Foochow
Baker, H. E., civil engineer, Hankow
Baker, H. F., assistant, Deacon & Co., Canton
Baker, H. G., chief inspector of police, Hongkong
Baker, Hugh B., assistant, Rodyk & Davidson, Singapore
Baker, Rev. J. A. A. chaplain, Naval Church, Hongkong
Baker, J. R., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hankow
Baker, R., district engineer, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Kowloon, Hongkong
Baker, S., chief engineer, steamer "Kumsang", China coast
Baker, T. S., manager, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Baker, W. P., captain, steamer "Kwongsang," China coast
Bakowa, A., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock.
Baldovino, N., clerk, Registration dept., Post Office, Hongkong
Baldwin, Barry, Merchant, Macondray & Co., Manila
Baldwin, Robert C., disbursing officer, Municipal Board, Manila
Baldwin, G. L., manager, Vacuum Oil Co., Manila
Baldwin J. H., private secretary to Chief Justice, Singapore
Baldwin, N., assistant, Macondray & Co., Manila
Balean, A., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Balean, H., medical practitioner, Goode & Balean, Shanghai
Balfour, C. H., agent, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Foochow Ball, H. G., manager, "Japan Daily Herald," Yokohama Ballagh, J. C., professor, Meiji Gakuin, Tokyo
Ballantine, B. A., chief engineer, steamer "Hopsang," China coast Ballauf, H., broker, Smith & Ballauf, Tientsin
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Balloch, G., merchant, Gilman & Co., Foochow and Hongkong (absent) Balser, M., elève-interprete, German Legation, Peking
Banbury, J. W., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of N.Y., Chinkiang
Banchi, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Kwai Shin
Band, J., silk inspector, Boyer, Mazet, Guilliée & Co., Canton Bande, F., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochan
Bandelow, K., assistant, Becker & Co., Kobe
Bander, S. M., travelling ticket examiner, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Bandet, commission merchant, Canton
Bandholtz, H. H., general, chief, Bureau of Philippines Constabulary, Manila Bandinel, B., cashier, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin
Bandinel, J. M. assistant, J. M. Customs, Chefoo
Bandoin, résident de Kompong-cham, Cambodge
1545
Bandow, John W., merchant, Melchers & Co., and acting consul for Denmark, Hongkong Baner, Chas. A., chief clerk, Engineering and Public Works Department, Manila
Banks, C. W., director, Little & Co., Singapore
Bannerman, D. H., assistant, Pengkalen L., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Bannerman, G. H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Bannon, Raymond B., solicitor, Gibb & Hope, Perak
Banteguie, T., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Baptist, H. S., chief clerk, Audit Office, Perak
Baptist, J., cashier, Whiteaway & Laidlaw, Penang
Baptista, A., clerk, Holland-China Trading Co., Hongkong
Baptista, A., clerk, Vieira & Co., Hongkong
Baptista, A F., clerk, Vieira & Co., Hongkong
Baptista, F., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, & China, Shanghai
Baptista, J., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong
Baptista, J. M., clerk, China and Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Baptista, M., clerk, Vieira & Co., Hongkong
Baptista, M. A., clerk, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong
Baptista, O., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Baptista, T. P., clerk, China Import & Export Lumber Co., Shanghai
Barba, I., Roman Catholic missionary, Niatare, Fokien
Barbé J. D. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuchow
Barber, C. H., chief, officer, steamer "Kiangwo," China coast
Barber, J. W manager and traffic superintendent, Peking Syndicate, Tientsin
Barber, J. W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Barbey, H., assistant, A. R. Marty, Hongkong
Barbier, R., manager, Chinese Eastern Railway, Peking
Barbosa, Dr. A., professor de historia, Escola Commercial, Macao
Barclay, J. B., foreman of machine shops, Butterfield & Swire, Tongku, Taku
Barclay, J. G., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Singapore Barclay, T., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainanfu
Bardens, F. J., assistant, Bush Brothers, Dairen
Bardens, G. R., assistant, Bush Brothers, Dairen
Bardot, Louis, p.p. to General Manager, Philippines General Tobacco Co., Manila Barendrecht, J., consul for Japan & Korea, Netherlands, Kobe Barentzen, P. G. S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Pakhoi Baret, L., assistant, Pila & Co., Yokohama
Barff F. W., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Barford, James L., surgeon, H. B. M.. Steamer "Snipe," China Bargholz, chief officer, S.S. "Sikiang," Coast service Bargholz, L., chief officer, Steamer "Petchaburi" China coast Barham. W. H., assistant, Samuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai Barillon, Dr. E., Roman Catholic bishop, Singapore
Baring, A. F. C., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Barker, A., merchant, Barker's Keng Chuen, Singapore
Barker, A. J. G., principal medical officer, Sarawak
Barker, E., stenographer, Peking Syndicate, Tientsin.
Barker, E. J., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Singapore
Barker, S., assistant, Bradley & Co., Swatow
Barkhus, W. I., wharfinger, Watung & Pootung, China Nav. Co., Shanghai Barley, W. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Barlow, C. C., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Tientsin
NIPPONOPHONE
J BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1546
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Barlow, E., assistant, Perhentian Tinggi Estate, Negri Sembilan Barlow, F. C., solicitor, Goldring, Barlow & Morrell, Hongkong Barlow, H., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Shanghai Barlow, R. C., assistant master, Saiyingpun School, Hongkong Barlow, S. W., cashier, Bureau of Navigation, Manila
Barlow, Wm., gunner in command, Torpedo-boat destroyer "Taku," Hongkong Barnard, B. H. F., deputy conservator, Forest dept., Perak
Barnard, H. C., divisional engr. North Federated Malay States Railways, Taiping, Perak Barnby, E. M., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Tokyo
Barnes, A. A. S., Lieut-col, commandant, Volunteer Corps, Shanghai Barnes, C. I., director, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila
Barnes, E. C., sub-manager, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila.
Barnes, F. H., assistant, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Yokohama
Barnes, M., manager, Sun Life Assurance Co., of Canada, Shanghai
Barnes, O. J., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Barnes, W. D., secretary for Chinese Affairs S. S. and Federated Malay States Barnett, E. H., usher, H. B. M.'s Supreme Court, Shanghai
Barnett, G., lieut-colonel, United States Marine Corps, Peking
Barnett, T., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Barnett, W., A. storehouseman, H. M. Naval Store dept., Hongkong Barns, W. F., manager, McAlister & Co., Ipoh, Perak
Baron, E., assistant, Boyer, Mazet, Guilliée, Yokohama
Baron, E., silk-inspector, Boyer, Mazet, Guilliée & Cie, Yokohama.
Baron, Henri, conducteur ingenieur à Quinhone, Travaux Publics, Haiphong Baron, J. V., assistant, Charriere & Co., Haiphong
Barr, J. H., assistant engineer, Hongkong & China Gas Co., Ld., Hongkong Barr, L. H. R., acting Consul for Great Britain, Ningpo & Wenchow Barradas, A. F. de L, assistant, P. E, Lintilhac & Co., Shanghai Barradas, A. M., clerk, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Hongkong Barradas, A. O., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Barradas, C. M., clerk, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Barradas, D. J., clerk, Lodwell & Co., Hongkong
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Barradas, F. A., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong Barradas, J. A., clerk, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Hongkong Barradas, T. A., clerk, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Barrault, H., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Barratt, H. J., lieut-colonel, Army Medical Corps, Singapore
Barratt, R. W., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Cebu
Barraut, E. H., judge, Sessions Court, resident, Interior, B. N. Borneo
Barreira, M. J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon
Barrera, A. L., clerk, Craig & Co., Shanghai
Barrett, E. G., manager, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Barrett, E. I, M., first assistant superintendent of Police for Indians, Shanghai Barrett, J. W., Macbeth & Barrett, Penang
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Barrett, W. C., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Barrett, W. S., assistant accountant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Barretto, A., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macau
Barretto, A. D., merchant, Cruz, Basto & Co., Hongkong
Barretto, A. M., merchant, Barretto & Co., Manila
Barretto, F. J., clerk, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Barretto, F. D., merchant, Barretto & Co., and consul for Mexico, Hongkong Barretto-Gutierrez, J. M., clerk, Walter Nutter & Co., Shanghai
Barretto, J. C., clerk, Cruz, Basto & Co., Canton.
Barretto, L., assistant, Cecil Holliday, Shanghai
Barretto, L. H., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Barretto, O. D., clerk, Barretto & Co., Hongkong
Barretto, R. E., gen. man,, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila
Barretto, R. E, merchant, Barretto & Co., Manila
Barrière, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Nanning, Lungchow
Barrière, J., ingénieur directeur, Soc. des Ciments Port. Art. de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong Barrington Brider, E. H., Transvaal Government Agency, Chefoo
Barrington, J. H., overseer. Public Works department, Hongkong
Barros, A. A., clerk, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Company, Hongkong
Barros, A. V., clerk China Export-Import-and-Bank Co., Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Barros, F. de, clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Barros, F. J., clerk, Green Island Cement Works, Hok-ün, Hongkong Barros, F. M., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Manila
Barros, J. A., clerk, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong
Barros, J. C., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Barros, J. D., purser, steamer "Honam," Hongkong,
Barrue, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Barry, G. K., fur inspector, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Canton
Barstow, E. S. Captain, agent, Oriental Consolidated Mining Co., Chinnampo, Corea Bartels, K., assistant, Buchheister & Co., Tientsin
Barthelemy, A., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Yokohama
Barthélemy, H., assistant, Meisei Gakko, Osaka
Barthlomenz, F. A., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Bartholo, J. A. A., chantre, Cabido, Macau
Bartlett, Murray, dean & rector, Cathedral of St. Mary & St. John, Manila
Bartlett, R. J., acting-headmaster, High School, Malacca
Bartley, F. P., surveying assistant, Public Works Department, Shanghai
Bartley, W., acting district judge, Labuan
Bartley, W., deputy registrar of deeds, Singapore
Bartolini, J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Szemao
Barton, Cliff C., chief, Bureau of Cold Storage, Manila
1547
Barton, G. W., secretary, Chamber of Commerce, and asst., Douglas Lapraik & Co., Amoy
Barton, J. H., tidesurveyor, I. M. Customs, Nanking
Barton, John, assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong
Barton, S., British vice-consul and mixed court assessor, Shanghai
Bartz, E., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Basa, R., merchant, Hongkong
Basilio, Ch., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Bass, H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Bassett, A., attorney, United States Court for China, Shanghai
Bassett, R., assistant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
Bassford, W., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Bassity, M. A., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tientsin Basso, Rev. C., French missionary, Kashing, Ningpo
Bassoff, F., assistant, Waldecker &Poeppel, Vladivostock
Bastien, A., clerk, British Post Office, Shanghai
Bastien, E., accountant, Messageries Maritimes, Shanghai
Bastien, L. E., clerk, British Post Office, Shanghai
Bastin, C., consul-general for Belgium, Yokohama
Basto, A. A. da S., professor, Escola Pública da lingua Portugueza, Macao
Basto, A. J., advocate, Macao
Basto, A. J., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Basto, A. J. da S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Basto, A. J. S., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Basto, B. S. F., clerk, Noronha & Co., Hongkong
Basto, H. M., property and general broker, Hongkong
Basto, J. A., clerk, Noronha & Co., Hongkong
Basto, J. M. de Castro, printer and publisher, Noronha & Co., Hongkong Basto, J. M. F., merchant, Cruz, Basto & Co., Hongkong
Bastos, A. L., escripturario, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
Batalha, A. F., alumno-interprete, Repartiçao de Expediente Sinico, Macau
Batcock, A. L., assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong Bategay, M., assistant, Olivier & Co., Tientsin
Bateman, A. E., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama
Bateman, E. F., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Shanghai
Bateman, F., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore Bateman, J. W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Kiaochau Bateman, L. C., interpreter, British Legation, Bangkok Bateman, M. J., assistant, Mansfield & Co., Singapore,
Bateman, R., assistant engineer, Electric Tramways, Singapore
Bates, F. L., assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong Bath, W. M., manager, Belat Tin Mining Co., Pahang
Bathurst, H., pilot and surveyor, Amoy
Bâtie, M. Dejean de la, consul for France, Yokohama
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1548
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Batjer, G., assistant, Max. Nössler & Co., Shanghai Batki, B. M., assistant, Tata Sons & Co., Kobe
Battegay, J., manager, Ullmann & Co., Tientsin
Batujew, F. A., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Bauckham, E. W., manager for Hongkong & China, Rosenstock's Directory Baude, R. L. P., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Bauer, F., assistant, Sprungli & Co., Manila
Bauer, M., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
Bauer, P., chief accountant, Inspectorate of Chinese Posts, Tientsin
Baugh, Herbert G., vice consul general in charge, U. S. A., Kewkiang and Ichang
Baum, J. J., postmaster, Russian Post Office, Hankow
Baumann, P., merchant, Carl Wolter & Co., Chemulpo
Baumann, T., assistant, Bergmann & Co., Kobe and Yokohama
Baumgartner, E., assistant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Kobe
Baur, W., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Shanghai Baurmeister, J., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Baxter, A. L., M.B., C.H.B., Peking University, Peking Bay, B., manager, Palace Hotel, Shanghai
Bayle, adm nistrateur adjoint, Residence Quang Yen, Tonkin Bayless, N. E., secretary and treasurer, "Manila Times" Manila Bayley, L. M., sub-accountant, International Bank, Hongkong Bazaroff, P., teacher, Russo-Chinese School, Peking
Bazin, A., directeur, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Beadsworth, H., clerk in charge, House and Land Assessment, Singapore Beale, A. H., chief-engineer, steamer "Taming," Hongkong and Manila
Beale, C. J., clerk, Waterworks Co., Shanghai
Beale, N. Y., electrical-engineer, Shanghai Electric and Asbestos Co., Shanghai Beale, J. E., secretary, Yokohama Foreign Board of Trade, Yokohama
Bean, A. W., draper, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Beardon, J. L., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Beasley, captain J. H. M., Hongkong-Singapore Battalion, R. A., Hongkong Bearn, O. de, secretary, French Legation, Peking
Beart, Edward, Yokohama
Beart, M., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Chefoo
Bearwolf, Chas. G., assistant, King Edward Hotel, Hongkong Beath, C. T., sub-agent, Mercantile Bank of India, Shanghai Beathy, D., acting-official-assiguer, Bankruptcy Office, Singapore Beaton, M. C., shop-foreman, Bangkok Dock Co., Bangkok
Beattie, G. W., superintendent, Philippine Normal School, Manila
Beattie, M. P., assistant, W. R. Loxley & Co., Hongkong
Beattie, R. B., accountant, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong Beatty, F. G., foreman, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works Ld., Yokohama Beatty, J. C. G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Beatty, J. C. P., medical-officer, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Beaubis, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Beauchamp, R. H., assistant, North China Insurance Company, Shanghai Beaumont, A. G., second master, Ellis Kadoorie College, Canton
Beaurepaire, H. N., manager, Macau Hotel, Macau
Beavis, A. E., employé, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Singapore
Beazley, R. H., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, A. & C., Hongkong Bec, architecte, Services des Bâtiments Communaux, Saigon
Beck, C., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Beck, D. G., managing partner, Hammer & Co., Singapore
Beck, G., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Beck, H., merchant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
Beck, J. M., superintendent, E. Extension Telegraph Co., Hongkong
Beck, M. G., assistant, Craig & Co., Shanghai
Beck, V. van der, employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Becke, F. G., tidesurveyor and harbour-master, Maritime Customs, Chungking Beckell, H. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Samshui Becker, A., merchant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong Becker, C., accountant, Horse Repository, Singapore Becker, E., merchant, Becker & Co., Yokohama
Becker, J., manager, M. J. Brandenstein & Co. Yokohama
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1549
Becker, Otto, merchant, Canton
Beckett, W. R. D., British Consul, Bangkok
Beckhoff, J. C., surveying assistant, Public Works Department, Shanghai Beckles, J. G., inspector of Police, Perak
Beckmann, C., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Beckner, W. O., teacher, Boy's School, Division of Cebu, Philippines. Becknungsrat Nitschke, gouvernment sekretar, Kiaochau
Beckwith, Lieut. C. W., assistant harbourmaster, Hongkong Becmeur, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Bedellain, E., assistant Nickel & Co., Kobe
Bedford, G. foreman, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Bedford, W. G. A., colonel, Principal Medical Officer, Hongkong
Bedoire, C. de. tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Bedoni, C., sub-manager, Jardine, Matheson & Co.'s Silk Filature, Shanghai Bedwell, H. B., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China
Beebe, Dr. Robt. C., superintendent, Methodist Hospital, Nanking Beebe, G. S., Macy & Co., Tamsui
Beebe, Royden E., lieut., 14th Infantry, in charge of maps department, Manila Beek, J. N. van der, financial assistant, police dept.. Singapore
Beele, Dr. R. C., dean of Medical School, Nanking University, Nanking
Beer, A. W., assistant station inspector, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Beer, H. L., headmaster, Weihaiwei School, Weihaiwei
Beeston, P. E., accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai Begassat, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Begelman, S., assistant, Harry Fuchs, Newchwang
Begley, A. J., chief engineer, steamer Yatshing," China coast
Begley, H. J., supervisor, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Saigon
Begley, R. B., assistant, Bathgate & Co., Foochow
Begue, H., merchant, Tientsin
Begue, W., assistant, H. Begue, Tientsin
Behaghel, F., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
Behaghel, G., professor of German, Chinese Imperial University, Peking
Behaghel, H., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Kiaochau
Rehean, J., main foreman, electricity department, Shanghai
Behn, R., Schwarzkopf & Co., Tsinanfu
Behnem, K., station master, royal railway department, Bangkok Behr, E., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Kobe
Behr, W. S., assistant, Behr & Co., Singapore
Behrend, A., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Warschau, Vladivostock Belirend, G., engineer, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Behrend, K., consulting architect, Shanghai
Behrens, C, assistant, Sietas, Plaubeck & Co., Kiaochau
Behrens, rechmingsrat, Marine Garrison Verwaltung, Kiaochau
Behuke, K., assistant, Japan Export Co., Kobe
Beilmaun, I., assistant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock
Beins, A. H. D., sanitary-inspector, Singapore
Beins, F. M., second clerk, District Office, Malacca
Beins, J., chief clerk, Land Office, Malacca
Beins, W. M., chief-clerk, Supreme Court, Singapore
Beisner, H., assistant, Germann & Co., Manila
Beith, B. D. F., assistant. Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Belaeff, S. E., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff, & Co., Vladivostock
Belbin, A. B., third-officer, Customs Revenue cruiser "Pingching," Shanghai
Belbin, E. A., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Belbin, E. C., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Belding, A. G., instructor, Higher Commercial School, Kobe
Belfield, F., legal adviser, Federated Malay States
Belfield, H. Conway, British Resident, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor Belilios, R. A., medical practitioner, Hongkong
Belin, J., consul general for France, Seoul, Corea
Bellan, résident de Takoo, Cambodge
Bellinger, John B., lieut.-colonel, deputy quartermaster, Manila Bellingham, A. W. H., engineer, Municipal Council, Tientsin
Bell, A. D., assistant, Barlow & Co., Shanghai
" NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1550
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Bell, Aidan I., lieut. R.M., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Bell, Cecil J., assistant, Westphal, King, & Ramsay. Shanghai Bell, E. superintendent, Veterinary department, Penang
Bell, F. H., assistant, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Bell, G. E., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton
Bell, George A. S., Surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China and Japan
Bell, H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Chinkiang
Bell, H. D., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Newchwang
Bell, H. L., Captain, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Bell, H. R., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Penang
Bell, H. T. Montague, editor, "North China Daily News and Herald," Shanghai
Bell, John F., eng. lieut., H. M. S. "Widgeon," China
Bell, J. R., assistant, Drafting Branch, Survey department, Bangkok
Rell, J. superintendent, Government Civil Hospital, Hongkong
Bell, L. M., engineer, Municipality, Penang
Bell, M. R., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Bell, P., assistant engineer, Tientsin Iron Works, Ld., Tientsin
Bell, R. G., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Moji
Bell, R. L., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Bell, R. T., secretary, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Yokohama
Bell, S. S., inspector of roads, Public Works department, Sarawak
Bell, W. D., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Bell, W. G., postmaster general, Singapore
Bell, W. H., director, Westphal, King & Ramsay,
Bella, Enrico, lieutenant, R. N. "Calabria," China
Bellamy, A. L., manager, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai
Belland, A., commissaire, Central Police department, Saigon Bellemin, H., professor, Saigon Seminary, Saigon
Belli, P., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Bellis, A. G., chief clerk, Bureau of Forestry, Manila
Bellmann, C., clerk, German Consulate, Shanghai
Below, Major V., Kommandeur, Subataillon, Kiaochau
Beltchenko, A., Russian Consul, act. consul for Denmark, Newchwang
Beltison, J., chief officer, steamer "Honam," Hongkong, Canton
Beltran, N. A., clerk, Hongkong & Kowloon Wharf & Godown Co., Ld., Hongkong
Beltran, R., clerk, Ker & Co., Manila
Belyea, Alex. H., assistant, Dunning & Co., Shanghai
Bement, Lloyd E., teacher, Bureau of Education, Cebu
Ben, C. P. W., shipchandler, Ben & Co., Swatow
Ben, C. U. S., shipchandler, Ben & Co., Swatow
Bénard, F., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Bénaveng, F., assistant, Bonnefoy et Cie., Saigon
Benavitch, J. V., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Benck, E., assistant, H. Schlichting, Hankow
Benecke, D. W., assistant, Winckler & Co., Yokohama
Benedict, C. E., assistant, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Yokohama Bengen, M. J., merchant, Bergmann & Co., Yokohama
Bengoa, Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Benicke, F., engineer, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama and Kobe Bening, R., assistant, Waldecken & Poeppel, Vladivostock
Benjañeld, E. N., assistant, Little & Co., Singapore
Benjafield, F. J., financial assistant, Municipality, Singapore
Benjamin, A., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Benjamin, H., assistant, The Olivier Import & Export Co., Shanghai
Benjamin, J., assistant, E. D., Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Benjamin, Maurice, importer, The Olivier Import & Export Co., Shanghai Benjamin, S. S., broker, Benjamin & Potts, Shanghai
Bennecke, M., manager, Rizerie Union, Cholon
Bennet, G. W., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw Co., Shanghai
Bennett, C. R., sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Kobe
Bennett, E. L., executive engineer, Public Works, Pahang
Bennett, G., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Bennett, H. L., assistant engineer, Public Works, Pahang
Bennett, J., assistant, E. D., Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Bennett, L. J., coal inspector, U. S. Army, Nagasaki
Bennett, W. G., director, Anglo-Japanese Trading Co., Chemulpo Bennett, W. H., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Benrath, C. F., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Yokohama
Bensa, Cav. M., second secretary and interpreter, Italian Legation, Peking Bense, H. Z., military attaché, Netherlands Legation, Tokyo
Benson, F., tidesurveyor and harbour master, Customs, Hoihow
Benson, G. S., assistant sanitary inspector, Health dept., Shanghai
Benson, W., manager, Findlay & Co., Manila
Benton, S. O., secretary, Peking University, Peking Bent, H., merchant, T. E. Griffith, Canton
Bent, P. S., merchant, Jewett & Bent, Yokohama Bentley, J., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Bentley, J. D., wharfinger, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Benzeman, C. M., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff, & Co., Hankow Beovide J, Roman Catholic missionary, Harbin, China
Berblinger, A., merchant, Bumann & Berblinger, Hongkong
Rerchnoi, assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Chabarowsk, Vladivostock Berends, W. F. H., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Tsinanfu
Beretta, D., manager, Jardine, Matheson & Co's Silk Filature, Shanghai Berg, Arnold, merchant, Telge & Schroeter, Shanghai
Berghaeger, H., assistant, H. M. Schultz & Co., Shanghai
Berghi, E. W. van, assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Bergholz, Leo Allen, consul-general, American Consulate, Canton
Bergier, M., assistant, Descours, Cabaud et Cie., Saigon
Bergin, W. M., asst, engineer, Imperial Railways, Newchwang
Berglof, C. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuchowfu
Bergman, R., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock Bergmann, F., assistant, Telge & Schroeter, Shanghai
Bergot, mécanicien de Division Navale de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon Berigny, C. W. de, assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Berigny, Th. de, merchant, Berigny & Co., Yokohama
Berindoague, L., manager, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong
Berjoan, M., conducteur, Travaux Public, Hadong, Tonkin
Berkans, J., divisional-engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Berkeley, H., district officer, Upper Perak, Perak
Berkhuysen, J. G., manager, W. Mansfield & Co., Penang & Singapore
Berkin, J., manager, Kuling Estate, Kewkiang
Berlioz, A., bishop, Societé des Missions Etrangères, Hakodate
Bernadsky, E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Peking
Bernard, captaine-adjoint, Cao-Bang, Tonkin
Bernard, C. B., merchant, Bernard & Co., Yokohama
Bernard, E., examiner, Customs, Shanghai
Bernard, F., administrateur délégué Messageries Fluviales de Cochin-Chine, Saigon
Bernard, P., secrétaire, Societé Cotonniére L'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Bernard, pharmacien, Pharmacie Centrale de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Bernardo, F., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Berndt, W. J., foreman, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Bernedo, J. G. G. de, consul for Chili, Hongkong
Bernauer, Dr. Karl, acting consul-general for Austria-Hungary, Shanghai
Bernasconi, R., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Benche, avocat général, Parquet Général, Saigon
Berndes, F., assistant, Siemssen & Co.. Shanghai
Berndt, marine engineer, S. M. S. "Leipsig," German Squadron, China
Bernewitz, Kauptmann Freikerr von, military attaché, German Legation, Tokyo
Bernhardt, A., engineer, Siemens Schuckert Werke, Hankow
Bernhardt, F., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
Bernheim, E., jeweller, J. Ullmann & Co., Hongkong
Bernheim, M., jeweller, J. Ullmann & Co., Shanghai
Bernis, J., accountant, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Bangkok
Bernstein, S., assistant, Waldecker and Poeppel, Vladivostock
Berny, lieutenant de port, Haiphong
Berruchon, E., Astor House Hotel, Chefoo
Berruyer, J. H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Amoy
t
1551
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1662
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Berry, A., light-keeper, Marine department, Malacca
Berry, B., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan Berry, J., assistant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Perak
Berry, S., assistant, John D. Hutchison & Co., Shanghai Bersing, L., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Berteaux, F., vice-consul for France, Newchwang and Mukden Bertenshaw, W. S., clerk, Electricity department, Shanghai Bertet, percepteur, Résidence Hanam, Tonkin
Berthe, chef de la brigade active, Douanes et Regies, Annam Berthel, E. M., merchant, Berthel & Burkhandt, Shanghai Berthelot, C., assistant, A. R. Marty, Hoihow Berthelot, J., clerk, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Berthet, Á., first assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Berthet, A. J., assistant, Koyal Insurance Co., Shanghai Berthet, J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Ningpo Berthoud, J., assistant, Bazar Filipino, Manila Berthoud, L., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Bertin, Capitaine Ch., attaché militaire, Legation de France, Tokyo Bertram, E., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Bertrand, G., consul for France, Manila
Bertsch, William H. Captain in charge Water Transportation, Manila Berzendahl, J. C., manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Besse, G., directeur, Godelu et Cie., Hanoi
Bessell, F. L., assistant, I. M. Customs, Ichang
Bessell, K. E., traffic inspector, Imperial Railways, Tientsin
Best, A. H., pilot, Shanghai
Best, C. H., engineer, Hozan Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu Beswick, C. W., assistant, Jardline, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Bethell, H., merchant, Bethell Bros., Kobe and Yokohama Bethke, Dr., acting vice-consul for Germany, Chungking Betteridge, T. D., employé, Howarth Erskine, Singapore
Bettines, S. J., merchant, Tientsin
Betton, L. B., manager, Seremban Tin Mining Co., Osborne and Chappel, Perak Betts, B. H., manager for Manchuria & Korea, Bush Brothers, Newchwang Betz, Dr., consul for Germany, Tsinanfu
Beuf, J. B., sous-directeur, Ecole de l'Etoile du Matin, Tokyo
Beus, W. L., accountant, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore
Beutel, G., postmaster, Chefoo
Bevan, H. S., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Bevan, L. R. O., professor of history and law, Shansi Govt. University, Peking Bevan, R. S., outdoor-assistant, China Borneo Co., British North Borneo
Bevington, F., assistant, Bradley & Co., Hongkong
Bewer, F., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Bewsher, J. R., assistant, Sapong Rubber & Tobacco Estates, Sandakan Beyer, A., assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Saigon
Beyer, H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Beytagh, G. J., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Mukden
Beytagh, L. M., assistant, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
Bézard, assistant, Jules Berthet, Saigon
Bezold, O., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Bhunji, H. M., manager. Ebrahimbhoy Pabaney, Kobe
Bianchi, A., assistant, Dell Oro & Co., Yokohama
Bianchi, A., assistant, Schweiger Import & Export Co, Singapore
Bibé, traffic-inspecteur, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Bichard, F. W., captain, steamer "Waishing," China coast
Bickart, I., assistant, I. Oppenheimer & Cie., Yokohama
Bickel, C., assistant, Struckmann & Co., Manila
Bickerton, T. L., merchant, T. L Bickerton & Co., Shanghai Bickle, J., storehouseman, Naval Establishment, Wei-hai-wei
Bickie, L. B., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Yokohama Bicknell, W. A., government auditor, Penang
Biddulph, B. A., assistant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore
Biden, F. A., assistant engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong Bidgood, W. J., asst. building inspector, Public Works, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Bidwell, G. A. F., assistant, Gande & Co., Shanghai Bidwell, G. B. D., assistant, W. Forbes & Co., Tientsin Bidwell, G. S. V., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Bidwell, R. A. J., civil engineer, Swan & Maclaren, Singapore
1553
Bie, P., assistant, Compagnie Française des Indes et de l'Extreme Orient, Chungking Bieber, M., merchant, Yokohama
Biedermann, E., merchant, E. Biedermann & Co., Saigon Biedermann, M., assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Saigon Biehayn, P., merchant, Locksmith & Co., Shanghai Biehl, H., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau Bielby, C. V.. Straits Trading Co., Singapore Bielfeld, K., engineer, Bielfeld & Sun, Tientsin Bielfeld, L., merchant, Bielfeld & Sun, Tientsin
Bienvenu, receveur, Postes et Télégraphes, Quang-yen, Tonkin Bierling, F., assistant, Ferd, Bornemann & Co., Hongkong Biermann, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ningpo Biermann, tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon Bierstedt, U., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock Bierwirth, chief officer, S. S. "Loongmoon," Coast service Bierwirth, F., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Biesterfeld, A. C., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Bigel, E., assistant, Compagnie Asiatique de Navigation, Shanghai Bigel, J., assistant, L. Waunieck, Peking
Bigel, P. G., assistant station inspector, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Biggar, Dr. James L., chief, Culion Leper Colony, Manila
Biggs, L. A. C., secretary, Municipality, Penang
Bigg-Wither, H. G., surveyor, Customs, Bangkok
Bignell, C. S., assistant, Collins & Co., Shanghai
Bignon, archives et cartes, Division Navale de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon Bilbrough, C. F. S., Estate proprietor, Hongkong
Biles, F. C., inspector of Police, Negri Sembilan
Bilger, A., Bilger & Gallusser, Tientsin
Bilib, W., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Billier, R. M., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Billinghurst, W. B., medical practitioner, Shanghai
Billings, G. M., headmaster, Shanghai Public School, Shanghai
Billioque, J., assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Binder, E., assistant, Olivier & Co., Shanghai
Binder, G., merchant, Ferd. Bornemann & Co., Hongkong
Bindioss, A. L., assistant, Warner, Barnes & Co., Cabayog, Philippines
Bingham, F. H., engineer, Bombay-Burma Trading Corporation, Bangkok
Bingham, H. T., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Bingham, J. E., accountant and auditor, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Hongkong
Bingham, W. O., secretary and general manager Visayas Electric Co., Cebu Binnie, R. F., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Birbeck, R. J., senior assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong
Birch, E. Woodford, c.M.G., Resident, Larut, Perak
Birchal, W. A., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Birchenough, W. H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Birchley, W. F., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Bird, C. F., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Bird, G., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Bird, H. W., architect, Palmer & Turner, Hongkong
Bird, L. G., architect, Palmer & Turner Hongkong
Bird, L. T., assistant, MeAlister & Co., Singapore
Bird, R. E. O., senior assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong
Birkett, H., general broker, Birkett & Holden, Manila
Birnie, C. M., merchant, Browne & Co., Kobe
Birnie, L., assistant, Browne & Co., Moji
Biron, C., assistant, Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co., Singapore
Birss, R. A., captain, steamer "Sui-an," Hongkong-Macao
Bischof, F., pilot, Kobe
Bischoff, E., merchant, Peking
Bishop, A. J., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
NIPPONOPHONE"--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1551
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Bishop, A. S. A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama. Bishop, D. A., acting inspector of Schools, Selangor
Bishop, E. M., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Bishop, J. E., act. district officer, Jelebu District, Negri Sembilan Bishop, M. W., writer, Royal Naval Ordnance Depot, Hongkong Bisschop, P. J. R., head agent, Java-China-Japan Lijn, Hongkong Bisset, W., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Blaaun, D., asssistant, Holland Trading Co., Singapore Blacher, E., representative, Russo-Chinese Bank, Chefoo
Black, J. K., assistant manager, American Tobacco Co., Ld., Singapore Black, J. R., manager, Samuel Samuel & Co., Kobe
Black, J. Stewart, judicial adviser, Ministry of Justice, Bangkok Black, R. W., manager, New Amoy Dock Co., Amoy
Black, T., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Blackburn, A. D., student-interpreter, British Embassy, Peking
Blackburn, H., ward-inspector, Suppression of Rabies department, Singapore
Blackburn, L. J., manager, Hongkong and China Gas Co., Ld., Kowloon, Hongkong Blackett, W. L., attorney, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Bangkok
Blackstone, A. W., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Blad, V., bullion broker, Blad & McClure, Yokohama (absent)
Blagden, A. H., asst, electrical engineer, Electricity department, Shanghai Blainville, Céloron de, résident de Prey-Veng, Cambodge
Blair, D. K., assistant, MacEwen, Frickel & Co., Shanghai
Blair, F. Y., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Blair, T., assistant, Bowrington Refinery, Hongkong
Blair, T. L., secretary, Sanuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Blake, Chas. H., manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Blake, D. H., general agent for China & Japan, American Trading Co., Yokohama Blake, F. J., assistant, American Trading Co., Yokohama
Blake, G. C, clerk, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Blake, J. J., accountant, Army Service Corps, Hongkong
Blake, J. J., chief officer, Steamer "Tungshing", China coast
Blake, W. M., draughtsman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Shanghai Blamey, R., mine foreman, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul
Blanc, A., comptable, Pharmacie Blanc, Hanoi
Blanc, E., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Dairen.
Blanc, H., assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Blanc, J., pharmacien, de Pharmacie Blanc, Hanoi
Blanch, N. F., Far Eastern general agent, Thomas Cook & Sons, Hongkong Blanchard, Reuben, D., solicitor-general, Bureau of Justice, Manila
Blanchard, Wm. R., electrician, Bureau of Printing, Manila
Blanchet, first interpreter, French Legation. Peking
Blanchflower, E. C., naval secretary, H.M.S. "Tamar," Hongkong
Blanckensee, A., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Blanco, A. E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz
Blauco, J. E., clerk, Supreme Court, Manila
Bland, H., sanitary inspector, Health Department, Shanghai
Bland, H. E., assistant, A. H. Jaques & Co., Tientsin
Bland, R. N., resident councillor, Penang
Blank, H. de, manager, Pulo Sambae Tank Installation, Singapore
Blanke, E., chief engineer, Steamer "Rajah," China coast
Blasco, J., vicar provincial, Chiang-Chiu, Amoy
Blason, C. H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Blech, Louis, managing director, Siam Forest Co., Ltd. Bangkok
Blechynden, A. L., assistant, New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai
Bleifus, F., jr., assistant, F. R. Bleifus, Yokohama
Bleifus, F. R., merchant, Yokohama
Blethen, G. C., captain, "Hsin-Ming," China coast
Bleton, Alb., clerk, A. Bleton, Haiphong
Bleton, Alcide, merchant, Mengtsz
Bleton, C., assistant, A. Bleton, Mengtsze, Tonkin
Bletzacker, A., professor, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki
Blickle, K., assistant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
Blinowa, M., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
T
.
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Blix, N. J., acting deputy postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Kaifeng Block, Louis, assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Blockhuys, Ed. J., instructor, Tokyo Higher Commercial School, Tokyo Bloom, G., traffic inspector, Imperial Railways, Tougshan, N. China Bloom, J. W. R., deputy registrar of births and deaths, Singapore Bloombergh, Horace D., captain, Medical Corps, Manila
Blowey, A., leading man of stores, H. M. Victualling Yard, Hongkong Blowey, T. H., acting boat officer, Maritime Customs, Amoy Blown, O. C., chief officer, Steamer "Kutwo", China coast Bloy, F., postmaster, French Post Office, Canton Blum, A., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai Blum, F., assistant, I. Oppenheimer & Cie., Yokohama Blum, F., assistant, Sprungli & Co., Manila Blum, G., assistant, J. Ullmann & Co., Shangbai Blum, Henri, importer, J. Witkowski & Co., Yokohama Blum, Julien, assistant, Levy Hermanos, Manila Blum, L., assistant, J. Ullmann & Co., Shanghai
Blumenfeld, Jacques, importer, Shanghai
Blumenthal, N., manager, Astor House Hotel, Hongkong
Blümer, M., merchant, Otto Reimers & Co., Kobe and Yokohama
Blundell, G., commission merchant, and agent Reuter's Telegram Co., Yokohama Blunn, W., director, John Little & Co., Singapore
Blunt, H. E., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Peking
Blyth, F. G., manager, machinery dept., Adamson Gilfillan & Co., Singapore Blyth, F. J., assistant manager, Fraser & Chalmers, Singapore
Boanas, W., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Board, J. H, assistant medical officer, General Hospital, Sarawak
Bobard, C., assistant, Chargeurs Reunis, Haiphong
Bobsein, L., merchant, A. Õestmann & Co., Kobe
Boch, J., manager, Ditmer Brunner Brothers Ld., Shanghai
Bocher, G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Bock, E., managing-director, Siam Store Works Co., Bangkok
Bock, Pierre, Exploitations Forestières, Saigon
Bockum-Dolffs, E., superintendent, Singapore Para Rubber Estates L‹l., F.M,S. Bodard, A., acting vice-consul for France, Chungking
Bode, K. W. H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Boden, G., acting manager, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Kobe
Bodensbedt, H., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Bodestyne, H. S., clerk, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
1555
Bodin, dir, des travaux, Societé de Construction de Chemins de fer Indo Chinois, Mengtsz Bondsinsky, I. A., assistant, Bryner Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock Boeddinghaus, E., electrical engineer, Siemens-Schuckert, Osaka
Boeddinghaus, M., assistant, Meyer & Co., Tientsin
Boehme, P., assistant, German Legation, Tientsin, Boehmer, H., teacher, Deutsche Schule, Shanghai Boerma, B. F., director, Sapis Sin Mining Co., Penang
Boers, G. M., assistant, Holland Trading Co., Singapore Boersma, H. L., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Boetel, H., assistant, China Export-Import-and-Bank Cie., Kobe Boettger, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow Boezi, G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton
Bogaert, president Chambre de Commerce et d'Agriculture, Tourane Boger, Lt. Col. R. W., military attaché, British Embassy, Tokyo
Bogle, J. W., assistant, Beaufort Borneo Rubber Co., Ld., B. N. Borneo
Boher, J., proprietor and manager, Sontag Hotel, Seoul, Corea
Bobil, C., accountant, C. & N. C. Godown & Press Packing Co., Carlowitz & Co., S'hai Bohlke, R., assistant, Carl Rhode & Co., Yokohama
Bohm, Fr., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Bohm, H., chief engineer, Steamer "Kohsichang", Hongkong-Bangkok
Bohme, P., postmaster, German Post Office, Ainoy
Bohn, Otto, assistant, Kumpers & Co., Singapore
Bobuszewiez, A. v., merchant, Carlowitz & Co. & Consul for Russia, Canton
Bois, J. D., consul-general for United States of America, Singapore
Boisadain, de, premier ajoint, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
NIPPONOPHONE"--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1556
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Boissezon, C., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Boissonas, first Secretary, French Legation, Peking
Bojesen, C. O., accountant, Shanghai Pulp and Paper Co., Shanghai Bojko, M. D., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock Bokemann, hafenbandirektor, Banverwaltung, Kiaochau
Boland, C. S. J., secretary, Shanghai & Soochow Trading Co., Shanghai Bolden, S. G., assistant, Standard Oil Co., New York, Hongkong Bolitho, Ernest, superintendent, British Cigarette Co., Moukden
Bollenhagen, J. W., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Kobe
Bolles, J. W., general manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Bollweg, Georg, merchant, Eberhardt, Bollweg & Co., Kiaochau
Bologowskey, C. de, consul general for Russia, Dairen
Bolthauser, H., assistant, Lutz & Co., Manila
Bolton, E. J., divisional-engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan Bolton, H. W., overseer, P. W. Department, Hongkong
Bonanate, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Bonar, H., consul for Great Britain and Austria-Hungary, Seoul, Corea
Bond, H. H., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Foochow
Bond, H. S, captain adjutant, Constabulary, Jesselton, British North Borneo Bond, P., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hankow
Bond, T., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Tientsin
Bondarenko, J. P., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Bondy-Riario, comte R. de, consul for France, Singapore
Bone, C., superintendent, Wesleyan Mission Schools, Hongkong
Bone, E., captain, Royal Engineers, Singapore
Bone, H., acting boat officer, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Bone, T., traffic inspector, Imperial Railways, Shanhaikwan, North China Bong, assistant, Kloss & Co., Saigon
Bonheure, A., lieut.-gouverneur de Cochin-Chine
Bonhof, Th., assistant, Speidel & Co., Cambodge
Bonhomme, secrétaire de Police, Saigon
Bonhoure, A., lieut-gouverneur des Colonies, Cochin-Chine
Boniface, M., clerk, Mackenzie & Co., Tientsin
Bonmarchand, G., student interpreter, French Legation, Tokyo
Bonn, O., assistant, Kolkmeijer & Rockstroh, Hankow
Bonnaffon, Sylvester, lieutenant, 3rd-4th Infantry, Manila
Bonnar, J. W. C., merchant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong Bonnast, L., contre maitre, L. Flambeau & Cie., Haiphong Bonnault, représentant de Denis Frères, Hanoi
Bonneaux, garde-civile, Ouang Yen, Tonkin
Bonnefoy, merchant, Bonnefoy et Cie., Saigon Bonnefoy, L., merchant, Saigon.
Bonnet, Pasteur des Cultes, Annan
Bonnet, A., assistant, Descours, Cabaud et Cie., Haiphong
Bono, E. V., examiner, I. M. Customs, Chefoo
Bono, J. D., assistant, Compagnie Francaise de Tramways
Bonte, Dr., geschwaderarzt, German Naval Squadron, China
Bontkes, J. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Shanghai
Bonus, Chr., clerk, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Shanghai
Booker, H. W., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Booley, W., boatswain, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Boomer, F., editor, "The Cablenews American," Manila
Boomkamp, D. C. van Leeuwen, manager, Handelsvereeniging Holland, Singapore Boomsma, D., assistant engineer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Boone, C. D., record clerk, Bureau of Navigation, Manila
Boone, Herbert S., manager, New York Export & Import Co., Shanghai
Boone, H. W., surgeon, St. Luke's Hospital, and medical practitioner, Shanghai Booth, E. S., Meiji Gakuin, Shiba, Tokyo
Booth, F. S., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Tokyo
Booth, J. V., merchant, Booth & Co., Selangor
Booth, R., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Booth, W. M., assistant, Dick, Kerr & Co., Tokyo
Boothby, B. T. B., district engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton Boothby, W. C., supt. of purchase, Bureau of Printing, Manila"
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Booty, R. C. S., grade-surveyor, Revenue Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan Bopp, F., chemist, B. Grimm & Co., Bangkok
Borch, Dr. von, acting German consul, Swatow
Borck, H. E. K., postal officer, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Shanghai Bord, A. A. du, examiner, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
1557
Bordman, J., attorney at law, Iloilo
Bordner, H. A., div. supt. of Schools, Province of Bulacan, Philippines
Bordunal, T. clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Yokohama Borello, L., assistant, V. P. Musso & Co., Hongkong Borgeest, L. J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ningpo Borges, A., amanuense, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau Borges, C. J., segundo official da Secretaria, Macau Borges, P. A., acting-consul for Netherlands, Penang Rorges, R. G., clerk, Java-China Japan Lijn, Hongkong Borgia, R., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai Borgstadt, Harry, div. supt. of schools, Ilocos, Philippines. Borioni, F. R., examimer, Maritime Customs, Newchwang Borkowsky, G., Kobe
Borkowsky, P., merchant, A. Ehlers & Co., Shanghai Borné, H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Bornhold, M., assistant, Helm Bros., Ld., Yokohama
Bornhorst, W., clerk, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Shanghai
Borumann, O., assistant, F. H., Schmidt, Kiaochau
ני
Borows, W. S., superintendent, Taku Tug and Lighter Co., Taku
Borowski, E. H., assistant, I. M. Customs, Nanning,
Borrett, C. T., Comdr. H. B. M. S. "Clio," China and Japan
Borries, Th. von. assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tsinanfu
Borysewicz, administrateur, Messagerics Fluviales de Cochin Chine, Saigon. Bos, C., assistant, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Bos, M., manager, Oriental Press, Shanghai
Bose, résident de France, Hadong, Tonkin
Bosch, A. van, Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Bosch, H., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Koke
Bosredon, A., manager, Boyer, Mazet & Guilliée, Yokohama
Boss, F., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
Bosselman, A., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Shanghai
Bosshart, E., merchant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Yokohama
Bosustow, J. C., Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Boswell, W. O., aide-de camp to Brigadier General, Mindanao, Philippines
Butcher, H., assistant, A. Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Botelho, A. C., Jr., assistant, Fumigating and Disinfecting Bureau, Hongkong
Botelho, B. J. H., clerk, Barretto & Co. and acting consul for Nicaragua, Hongkong Botelho, E. F., clerk, A. A, Vantine & Co., Kobe
Botelho, E. P., clerk, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Botelho, F. X., clerk, Schuldt & Co., Hongkong
Botelho, F. B. M., clerk, Wm. Holst & Co., Yokohama
Botelho, F. X., clerk, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Shanghai
Botelho, J. A. H., clerk, Barretto & Co., Hongkong
Botelho, J. C., clerk, Hugo, Gyzeman, Shanghai
Botelho, J. M., assistant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
Botelho, J. M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Botelho, J. V., assistant, Far Eastern Advertisting Agency, Kobe
Botelho, R., clerk, British Dominions Marine Insurance Co., Shanghai
Bothe, H., assistant, L. Leybold Shokwan, Osaka
Bothe, K., assistant, Nickel & Co., Shinzaike Yard, Kobe
Botreen-Roussel, médecin, Hôpital Colonial et Militaire, Saigon
Bottenheim, A. H., general manager, Vacuum Oil Co. Shanghai
Bottini, Alberto, lieuteneut, R. N. "Calabria," China
Botton, brigardier, Police Municipale, Saigon
Bottu, A., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Canton
Boucher, payeur de 1st classe, Paieries, Bacninh, Tonkin
Boucher, trésorier, Résidence Bac Ninh, Tonkin
Boucher, A., R. C. missionary, Kiashing, North China
Boucherie, Rev. N., French missionary, Hangchow
NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1558
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Boudenny, J. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Boudville, C. J., dispenser, The Pharinacy, Penang Boudineau, L., administrateur-adjoint, Thua-Shien, Annam Bouffier, A. L., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama Bouinais, A. P. A., assistant, Customs, Swatow
Bouissou, captain, steamer "Phu Yen", China coast
Boulatoff, M. T., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Boult, F. F., resident of Sarawak proper, Sarawak
Boulter, L. A., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Boulter, R., assistant, British Consulate, Yokohama
Boulton, A. A., engineer, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Boulton, J. F., second asst. director, Public Works department, Hongkong Boulton, S., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Bourayne, juge président, Tribunal de Bentré, Cochin-Chine Bourcier, receiveur, Postes et Télégraphes, Binh Dinh, Annam Bourdeaud, ingénieur, Travaux Publics, Binh Thuan, Annam Bourdin, missionary, French Mission, Shameen, Canton Bourdon, Dr. C. A., Roman Catholic bishop, Singapore Bourke, J., inspector in charge, Hongkew Police Station, Shanghai Bourke, R., sub-inspector, Sinza Police Station, Shanghai Bourne, E. J., assistant, Telge & Schroeter, Tientsin
Bourne, F. S. A., assistant judge, H.B.M. Supreme Court, Shanghai Bourrat, J., assistant, Descours Cabaud et Cie., Saigon
Bousfield, P. C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama
Boussac, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Bout, P. van den, overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy oflice, Shanghai
Boutant, chef de service, Enregistrement des Domaines et du Timbre, Saigon Bouteneff, A., second secretary, Russian Embassy, Tokyo
Bousshineff, S. A., assistant, Commercial Bank of Siberia, Vladivostock
Boutin, A. C., assistant, Houglandt & Co., Singapore
Boutyrskoff, K., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Bowden, R. C., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Bowden, V. G., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Bowden, V. R., managing director, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Bowden-Smith, Victor J., lieut., H. B. M. River str. "Kinsha," Yangtsze Bowditch, E., private secretary to Commissioner Forbes, Manila
Bowditch, Edward, Jr., private secretary to the Governor General, Manila Bowen, A. J., president, Nanking University, Nanking Bowen, C. D., district officer, Kuala Kubu, Selangor
Bowen, H. E, assistant, Civil Engineer, Admiralty Works, Hongkong Bowen, P. H., New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai Bowen, W. T., manager, W. T. Garnett & Co., Shanghai
Bower, E. B., auditor, A. Cameron & Co., Kobe
Bower, E. B., inspector and auditor, Cameron & Co., Ld., Kobe
Bower, Thomas E., postmaster, Post Office, Iloilo
Bower, Capt. W. L. M., usst. supt. of Police, Province Wellesley, Penang Bowerman, H. H., assistant, Lane Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Bowerman, R I., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Bowes, J., surveyor, Kinta Batu Gajah, Perak
Bowie, R. I., surgeon, United States Consulate, Nagasaki
Bowker, G. H., captain, steamer "Loksang," China coast
Bowker, G. H., jun., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong
Bowler, B. C., eng. lieut., H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station
Bowley, F. B. L., crown solicitor, Dennys & Bowley, Hongkong Bowman, A. G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Canton
Bowness, S., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Bowra, C. A. V., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Mukden
Bowring, C. T., acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Wenchow Box, R. H., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Boyack, Laurence B., dealer in musical instruments, Hankow
Boyaval, L., ingenieur chef, Société Française des Distilleries, Hanoi Boyce, W. B., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Boyce, W. Steele, manager, Vacuum Oil Co., Saigon
Boyce-Kup, J., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Boyd, A., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore Boyd, A. C., assistant manager, Tali Ayer Sugar Estate, Perak Boyd, C. A. S., accountant, American Trading Co., Yokohama Boyd, D. T., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore Boyd, H. R., broker, H. R. Boyd & Co., Shanghai
Boyd, J., chief engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Macau Boyd, S. R., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong Boyd, Thos., general manager, Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Boyd, W., pilot, Shanghai
Boyer, directeur, Prison Centrale, Saigon
Boyer, A., assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Saigon
Boyer, A. G., broker and surveyor, Kobe
Boyer, C. H., assistant, Darby & Co., British North Borneo Boyers, Geo. B., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Soochow Boyes, F. S., assistant, Samuel Samuel & Co., Kobe
Boyes, G. M., assistant, Kuhn & Co., Shanghai
Perak
Boyes, J. R., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Boyken, captain, tender "Bremen," Shanghai
Boyland, W., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Boyol, J. M., assistant, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Tamsui
Brace, F. J., inspector of Police, Malacca
Brackenberg, P. C., second magistrate, Beaufort, British North Borneo Brackstone. H. F., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Nanking Braddell, Roland St. J., barrister-at-law, Braddell Brothers, Singapore
Braddell, T. de M., puisne judge, Penang
Braden, John Q. A., treasurer, Province of Albay, Philippines
Bradford, B. Reif, Koerting, Bume & Reif, Yokohama
Bradgate, W. K., store superintendent, Imperial Railways, Hsinho, Tientsin Bradier, Eug, acting-consul for France, Mengtsz
Bradley, E. M., assistant, Anderson, Meyer & Co., Shanghai
Bradley, I., merchant, Bangkok
Bradley, R. C. D., captain, steamer "Kutsang" China coast
Brady, A. A., assistant, Noel, Murray & Co., Shanghai
Brady, G. G., broker, Engert de Cuers & Brady, Yokohama Braems, W., assistant, German Post Office, Hankow Braess, W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Kobe
Braga, F. X., clerk, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Braga, J. M., professer de musica & organista da Sé. Macao Braga, P., manager, "Hongkong Telegraph," Hongkong Braga, J. V. R., fiel, Matadouro Municipal, Macao
Bragard, H., assistant, German Consulate, Tientsin
Bragard, M., elève-interprète, German Legation, Peking
Bragg, C. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of N. Y., Yokohama
Bragg, T., L.R.C.F. & S., Peking University, Peking
Brainard, David L., lieut col., commissary, Div. Staff, Manila Braklo, Dr., interpreter, German Consulate, Shanghai
Bralier, interprète, French Legation, Peking
Bramall, E., manager, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Brambilla, Cav. G., first secretary, Italian Legation, Peking Bramel, résident de Kratié, Cambodge
Brameld, T., assistant, Swan & Maclaren, Singapore Bramley, A., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong Bramley, A, P., manager, Robinson Piano Co., Tientsin
Brammer, A., boat officer, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Bramwell, A., chief officer, steamer "Kumsang," China coast
Bramwell, W. L., manager, shipping dept., Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila
Branagan, F. A., commissioner, Philippines Commission, Manila
Brand, A., engineer, Shanghai Machine Co., Hankow
Brand, D., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Brand, D., assistant engineer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai Brand, H., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance, Shanghai
Brand, H. G., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Brand, H. S., tea inspector, H. S. Brand & Co., Fouchow Brand, J. A., assistant, Brand Brothers & Co., Shanghai
1559
NIPPONOPHONE
BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1560
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1
Brand, J. K,, assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Brand, W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Brandão, F. X., escrivão, Administração de Conselho da Taipa, Macao Brandeis, F., assistant, Árnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Brandela, J., commis, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Brandenburg, O., assistant, Falck & Beidek, Bangkok Brandenburger, E., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore Brandenburger, J., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Brandes, A., hide inspector, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow Brandes, K., merchant, Hongkong
Brandt, A., merchant, A. Brandt & Co., and vice consul for Denmark, Hankow Brandt, C. T., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chungking
Brandt, D., assistant, D. Brandt & Co., Singapore
Brandt, J., teacher, Russo-Chinese School, Peking
Brandt, L., chief engineer, steamer "Choising." Hongkong-Borneo
Brandt, R. J. S., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Brandt, W., secretary, Shanghai Electric Co., Shanghai
Brandtmar, A. W., supervisor, Great Northern Telegraph Co. Hongkong
Brankston, A. W., New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai Branscheid, R., assistant, Pratu Saueyot Store, Bangkok
Branson, G. W., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Branson, H., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Brard, brigadier de Commissaire de Police, Kouang Tcheou Wan Brashear, S. B., teacher, Oslob, Division of Cebu, Philippines
Bratzow, W., vice-consul for Russia, Shanghai
Braue, D., chief officer, steamer "Borneo," Hongkong-Borneo
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Brauer, O., assistant chief engineer, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Braun. G., accountant, Siemens-Schuckertwerkt, Osaka
Braun, J., assistant, Germann & Co., Manila
Braunger, J. S., chief, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Brawn, A. O., junior, assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong Brawn, T. assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong
Bray, E., assistant sanitary inspector, Health Department, Shanghai
Bray, H. W., St. James, Singapore
Brayfield, T. H. G., assistant engineer, Carmichael & Clarke, Hongkong Brayn, R. F., acting auditor, Audit Office, Hongkong
Brazier, J. R., general agent, Peking Syndicate Ld., Tientsin
Breandat, L., pharmacist chimiste, Institut Pasteur, Saigon
Brearley, A., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Penang
Brebner, A. W., editor, "Hongkong Telegraph," Hongkong
Brederode, M. de, chargé d'affaires, Portuguese Legation, Peking
Bredon, A. S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Peking
Bredon, Sir Robert E., K.C.M.G., acting inspector general, Maritime Customs, Peking. Bredschneider, lieut., S. M. S. "Luchs", German Squadron, China
Bredvad, A., assistant, Bumann & Berblinger Hongkong
Breen, J. W., assistant, Geddes & Co., Hankow
Bregendahl, P., merchant, A. Brandt, & Co., Hankow
Brelimer, W., merchant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Breitag, P., manager, Batu Puteh Estate, British North Borneo
Breitung, F., assistant, Otto Kleemann & Co., Tientsin
Bremen, A. G., merchant, J. J. Riechmann & Co., Bangkok
Bremer, F., assistant, Meerkamp & Co., Manila
Bremer, F., pilot, Shanghai
Bremer, H., captain, steamer "Rajaburi," China coast.
Bremer, O., assistant, H. M. Schultz & Co., Shanghai
Brenner, A. S., broker, Shanghai
Bremner, L. R., accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Yokobaina Brenan, J. F., assistant, British Embassy, Peking
Brener, H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Brenier, commis-comptable, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
Brenier, H., sous directeur, Direction d'Agriculture et du Commerce, Hanoi
Brennecke, A., vice consul for Germany, Penang
Breuner, W. H., manager, Zemma Works, Ll., Tokyo
Brensto, K., assistant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Brent, A. D., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Brent, Charles H., bishop, American Episcopal Missionary District, Philippines Bretenil, D. de, avocat-défenseur, Tourane, Annam
Breton, A. Le, assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Shanghai
Breton, L. Le, clerk, Alex. Ross & Co., Hongkong
Bretschneider, C., merchant, Bretschneider & Co., Yokohama
Bretschneider, H. assistant, Helm Bros, & Co., Yokohama
Brett, C. W., inspector of markets, Sanitary department, Hongkong Brett H. C., sanitary-inspector, Singapore
Brett, H. J, British vice consul, Shanghai
Brett, H., manager, Bruseh Hydraulic Tin Mining Co., Bidor, Perak
Brett, J. H., sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation Shanghai Brett, L. E., revenue officer, Import & Export Office, Hongkong
Brewer, B. C., teacher, Dumanjug, Division of Cebu, Philippines
Brewer, H. E., employé, Brewer & Co., Shanghai
Brewer, Jas., printing overseer, "North China Daily News and Herald," Shanghai Brewer, J. F., reporter, "South China Morning Post", Hongkong
Brewer, W. F., manager, Brewer & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Brewin, A. W., registrar-general, Hongkong
Brewster, E. J., district officer and superintendent of prisons, Kinta District, Perak Breymann, marine-maschinenbaumeister, Marine Baurat, Kiaochau
Brezet, P., assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Brezet, R., assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Briand, electrician, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai
Brianso, J., prefecto del convictorio, Ateneo de Manila, Manila
Briant, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Briault, S. L., accountant, Kierulff & Co., Tientsin
Bribosia, J., consul for Belgium, Seoul
Bricteux, F., mining department, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tongshan
Bride, administrateur-adjoint, Hadong, Tonkin
Bridel, Louis, French Law, Tokyo Imperial University, Tokyo
Bridgeman, F. P. O., sub-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China & Japan
1661
Bridgeman, Hon. Richard O. B., lieut. and com., H.B.M. gunboat "Bramble," China Station.
Bridger, H. B., electrical engineer, Electric Company, Hongkong
Bridger, R. L, employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Bridges, D., district surgeon, Kuala Kangsar, Perak
Bridges, H., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Yokohama.
Brien, chef de service des Postes, Tonkin
Brigel, J., assistant, Nabholz & Co., Yokohama
Briggs, G. N., superintendent, Philippine School of Arts and Trades, Manila
Brigham, E. L. sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Yokohama Bright, W. H., medical-practitioner, T. C. Avetoon, Penang
Bright, W., head reader, Maritime Customs Printing Office, Shanghai
Brighten, E. R., managing director, Brighten, Malcolm & Co., Shanghai Brihaye, C., magasinier, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong
Brill, R., assistant, A. Ehlers & Co., Shanghai
Brill, W. G. E., acting consul for Netherlands, Tientsin
Brimble, A. G., superintendent of Police, Municipality, Shameen, Canton Brimer, Robt. T., secretary, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Brinckmeier, R., kanslist, German Consulate General, Seoul
Brinker, marine engineer, S. M. S. "Luchs", German Squadron, China,
Brinkley, F., Captain, R.A., proprietor and editor, "Japan Mail," Yokohama Brinkworth, George, director, Kelly & Walsh, Shanghai
Brison, C. P, clerk, Derrick & Co., Singapore
Brister, J. H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Bristow, H. H., British vice-consul, Shanghai
Britten, C. W., assistant, Wm. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Britto, A. O., assistant, Boa Vista Hotel, Macau
Britto, F. X, clerk, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
Britto, J. clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Britto, J. M., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai
Britto, J. M., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Britto, J. M., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Britto, J. N., clerk, Bume & Reif, Shanghai
<<
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1562
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Britto, V. M., clerk, W. Hewett & Co., Shanghai
Britton, F. G., acting-manager, Zemma Works, Ld., Tokyo
Bro, commissaire de Division Navale de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Broad, Ch. F., assistant, Japan Import & Export Commission Co., Kobe
Broad, Wallace, consulting mining engineer, Shanghai
Broadley, J. B., engineer, North Borneo Trading Co., B. N. Borneo
Broadrich, E. G., judge and first magistrate, District and Police Courts, Singapore Broadrick, E. B., mill assistant, Ewo Cotton Spinning and Weaving Co., Shanghai Broadwood, R. G., major general, commanding H.M. Forces in South China, Hongkong Broc, A. R. de, assistant, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Brochard, L., lieutenant, French Legation, Peking Brock, B., assistant, Brunner, Mond & Co., Shanghai Broek, W. G., agent, Dutch Postal Agency, Singapore
Brockhurst, N., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Yokohama
Brocking, T., assistant, Sietas Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau Brockman, E. L., Acting Resident, Larut, Perak
Brockmann, G., general merchant, Manila
Brockmann, C., merchant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Brockstedt, W., assistant, Schuldt & Co. Canton
Brodbecken, M., assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Shanghai
Brodersen, H., manager, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Hongkong
Brodiansky, L., vice-consul for Russia, Harbin
Brodie, Donald F. O'C., sub-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station Brodie, J. H., superintendent, Mines Borneo Co., Sarawak
Brodie, N.C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Brodrick, E. W., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Brogniez, J., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Brombilla, A., loco. foreman, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Bromfield, B., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Singapore
Bromley, F. W., eng.-lieut., H. B. M. Torpedo-boat destroyer, "Fame", Hongkong Bronder, caissier, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Battambang
Bronevsky, A., conseiller, Russian Embassy, Tokyo
Brook, E., merchant, Lutzen Brook & Co., Shanghai
Brooke, C. B., assistant general manager, Vacuum Oil Co., Hongkong
Brooke, Sir Charles, G.C.M.G., Rajah of Sarawak
Brooke, G. E., port health officer, Singapore
Brooke, G. H., assistant, L. Tallieu & Co., Tientsin
Brooke, J. T. W., Davies & Thomas, Shanghai
Brooke-Smith, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Brooks, A. H., secretary, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Brooks, F. M., attorney-at-law, Hankow
Brooks, I. L., assistant, Methodist Publishing House, Shanghai
Brooksbank, F. H., wharf superintendent, Tanjong Pagar Dock Co., Singapore Brooy, H. A., assayer, Straits Trading Co., Judu, Selangor
Brooy, P. La, dresser, General Pauper Hospital, Negri Sembilan
Broquet, Dr. Ch., sous directeur, Institut Pasteur, Saigon
Brosse, Blanchard de la, agent commercial, Hanoi
Brosse, P. de la, secrétaire-adjoint, La Revue Indo-Chinoise, Hanoi
Brousmiche, Ed., directeur, Pharmacie Centrale de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Browett, Harold, solicitor and advocate, Shanghai
Blowett, O., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Brown, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Brown, A., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
Brown, A. A., manager, Brocket & Co., Foochow
Brown, A. B., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld, Tientsin Brown, A. B., editor and director, "China Mail," Ld., Hongkong Brown, A. D., assistant, Pritchard & Co. Penang
Brown, A. G., merchant, Blackmore & Co., Kobe
Brown, A. H., ticket clerk, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Kobe
Brown, A. J., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Brown, A. K., assistant, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
Brown, A. M., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai Brown, A. V., acting asst. district Judge, Penang Brown, B., assistant, Findlay & Co., Manila
ו
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Brown, D., medical practitioner, Irwin & Brown, Tientsin
Brown, D., merchant, Penang
Brown, D., overseer, Shanghai Land Investment Co., Ld., Shanghai Brown, D. A. M., general manager, "Pinang Gazette," Penang Brown, D. A. M., public accountant, Brown & Phillips, Penang Brown, E, overseer, Public Works Department, Shanghai Brown, E. A., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Brown, E. J., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Brown, F., electrical fitter, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Brown, F. C., mill foreman, Seoul Mining Company, Seoul Brown, F. J., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Hongkong Brown, G., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Brown, G. H. W. L., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Brown, G. W., assistant, Meerkamp & Co., Manila
Brown, H. H., agent, Butterfield & Swire, Tongku, Taku
Brown, James G., manager, Schuchardt & Schutte, Tokyo
Brown, J., assistant, David Brown & Co., Penang
Brown, J., assistant printer, Government Printing Office, Selangor
Brown, J., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., British vice consui, Iloilo, and Manila
Brown, J., chief engineer, steamer "Taishan," Swatow and Hongkong
Brown, J. A., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Mukden
Brown, J. A., reporter, "Times of Malaya Press, Ld.," Perak
Brown, J. G., agent, Stevenson & Co., Iloilo
Brown, J. G., inerchant, Schuchardt & Schutte, Shanghai
Brown, J. L., merchant, Blackmore & Co., Kobe
Brown, J. R., assistant, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Brown, J. R., secretary, George Town Dispensary, Penang
Brown, N. S., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Brown, O., captain, inspector of ordnance machinery, Hongkong
Brown, R. H., works manager, Howarth, Erskine, Ltd., Bangkok
Brown, R. L., wharfinger, Holt's Wharf, Kowloon, Hongkong
Brown, S. E., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Company, Hongkong Brown, S. R., accountant, International Banking Corporation, Manila
Brown, T., assistant, S. Zimmerman & Co., Shanghai
Brown, W., assistant, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Brown, W., assistant, Martin & Co., Yokohama
Brown, W., assistant superintendent, Taku Tug & Lighter Co., Taku
Brown, W. B., captain, steamer "Kueichow," China Coast
Brown, W. G., traffic sub-inspector, Hongkew Station, Shanghai
Brown, W. J., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Brown, W. N., clerk, Dutch Postal Agency, Singapore
Brown, W. P., proof reader, Customs Printing Office, Shanghai
Brown, W. R, assistant-in-charge, United States Consular Agency, Pakhoi
Brown, W. S., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Hongkong Browne, F., analyst, Government Civil Hospital, Hongkong
Browne, F. G., examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Browne, H. G., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Browne, L., engineer, Cowie Harbour Coal Co., British North Borneo Browne, W. B., postal officer, Chinese Postal Office, Canton Brownhill, D., assistant, Forbes, Munn & Co., Manila
Brownrigg, F. K., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Company, Hongkong
Broxup, C. T., locomotive superintendent, Railway Co., Manila Bruce, B. D., acting postmaster, Maritime Customs, Tengyueh
Bruce, C. D. Colonel, captain superintendent of police, Shanghai Bruce, D. M., employé, J. L. Thompson & Co., Kobe
Bruce, F. J., inspector, Police Department, Penang
Bruce, G. J., general manager, Siam Observer, Bangkok
Bruce, J. B., superintendent, Leper Hospital, Penang
Bruchollerie, J. Yver de la, sous-directeur, Banque de PIndo-Chine, Saigon
Brück, K., telegraph inspector, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Bruders, I., assistant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock
Brue, Urbain, commissaire-priseur, Saigon
Bruecher, Dr. Max., Schantung Bergbau Gesels., Kiaochau
Bruell, O., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Kobe
1563
' NIPPONOPHONE"--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1564
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Bruggeman, B. G., assistant, Singkep Tin Mines, Singapore Bruhl, P., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Ld., Tokyo
Bruhn, F., assistant, Schuldt & Co., Canton
Bruhn, J., captain, steamer "Choising," Hongkong and Borneo Bruins, J., engineer, Dutch Engineering Works, Hankow
Brun, foreman plumber, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Brunger, J. J., assistant, Holland-China Trading Co., Tientsin Brunn, J., manager, Menam Motor Boat Co., Lɗ., Bangkok Brunner, assistant, Ogliastro Fréres et Cie., Saigon
Brunner, E., assistant, F. Engler & Co., Saigon
Brunnert, L. H. S., student-interpreter, Russian Legation, Peking
Brunst, assistant, Cie. des Chargeurs Réunis, Saigon
Bruschweiler A., assistant, Bilger & Gallusser, Tientsin
Bruse, O., district manager, Manufacturers Life Insurance Company, Singapore
Brusewitz, L., merchant, J. A. Kjellberg & Sons Ld., Yokohama
Brutton, G. K. Hall, solicitor, Brutton & Hett, Hongkong
Brutwell, J. W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hankow
Bruyeres, G. H., chemist, Smelting Work, Straits Trading Co., Pulo Brani Bruyn, C. B. de., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Bryan, J. J., drainage surveyor, Public Works departinent, Hongkong
Bryan, J. M., manager, Borneo Company, Sarawak
Bryan, M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Bryans, R., proprietor, Horse Repository Ld., Selangor Bryant, A. T., auditor general, S. S., Singapore
Bryant, F. J., barrister-at-law, Bryant & Taylor, Perak
ני
Bryant, N. E, chief assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Bryant, R. E., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, L., Bangkok Bryant, S. O., student interpreter, British Embassy, Peking Bryce, L. W., assistant, Ker & Co., Iloilo
Bryden, H., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Kobe
Bryer, A., civil engineer, Leigh & Orange, Hongkong
Bryer, A. C., manager, Smith, Baker & Co., Ld., Tamsui
Bryner, Jules J., mer., Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co. and Consul for Holland, Vladivostock Bryner, L. J., cashier, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Bryson, Alex., secretary, "China Mail," Ld., Hongkong
Bryson, T. L., broker, Doney & Co., Tientsin
Buchan, R. G., assistant, Wilson & Co., Tientsin
Buchanan, A., chief engineer, "Shantung," China coast
Buchanan, E. W., first officer, s.s. "Choong Shing," China Coast
Buchanan, G., pilot, Shanghai
Buchanan, R. J., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Kent," China and Japan
Büchele, H., assistant. Siemens and Schuebert, Tokyo
Buchholz, E., assistant, Cariowitz & Co., Hankow
Buck, H. H., div. supt. of Schools, Province of Batangas, Philippines
Buckell, C. P., superintendent, Government Telephone, Penang
Buckeridge, Guy L., surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Astraea," China and Japan Bucking, F., captain, steamer "Tsintau," China coast
Buckland, H. W., agent, Peninsular and Oriental S. Nav. Co., Singapore
Buckland, P. J., Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Buckland, R. G. S., supt., Eastern Extension, A. & China Telegraph Co., Penang
Buckle, N., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Buckle, P., gunner, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Hongkong.
Buckley, J. M., D.D., L.L.D., Peking University, Peking
Buckley, T., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Swatow Buckmaster, W. N., solicitor, Bryant & Taylor, Perak Buckwell, R. L., surveyor, Kinta Batu Gajah, Perak Bucquet, receveur secondaire, Douanes et Régies, Annam Budd, W. J. C., chief clerk, Electricity department, Shanghai Budde, C., mining engineer, Tayeh Iron Ore Mine, Hankow Buddeberg, H., assistant, German Post Office Shanghai Budden, F. E., writer, Naval Establishment, Hongkong Budge, C., assistant, F. H. Hunt, Nagasaki
Budge, J., assistant, J. Curnow & Co., Yokohama Budgen, A. B., clerk, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Buechnan, H., superintendent, Railway department, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow
Buechner, C., Railway engineer, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow
Buechsel, J., engineer, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld., Longshan
Buesching, W., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Buese, W., assistant, Anz & Co., Chefoo
Bugbird, F. H., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama Buhlmann, P., assistant, F. H. Schemdt, Kiaochau
Buission, A., administrateur, Comptoirs Soies, Yokohama
Buisson, J., assistant, E. L. Mondon, Ld., Shanghai
Buist, H., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama
Bulany, N. Senko, interpreter, Russian Consulate-General, Seoul Bulbrook, B. W., tidewaiter, Imperial Maritime Customs, Ningpo Bulgakoff, assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Iman, Vladivostock Bulgheroni, C., assistant, Calcareous Sandstone Brick Factory, Tientsin Bull, M., pilot, Shanghai
Bull, W., assistant. Struckmann & Co., Manila
Bulldeath, R., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Ichiang Bullen, J., foreman, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang Bullen, M., foreman, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang Buller, E. J., captain, steamer "Kumsang," China coast
Bullermann, H., assistant, A. Markwald & Co., Ld., Bangkok
Bullin, J. A., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Department, Hongkong
Bullmore, R. R., superintendent of mails, General Post Office, Singapore Bullock, J. A. E., clerk, Colonial Secretariat, Hongkong
Bulmer, J. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Bulow-Ravens, T. H., assistant surveyor, Customs, Shanghai
Bumann, J., merchant, Bumann & Berblinger, Hongkong
Bume, Th., manager, Bume & Reif, Shanghai
Bunbury, L. H., district officer, Tuaran, B. N. Borneo
Bune, A., general broker, Hongkong
Bunge, E. assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Bunge, Th., merchant, Becker & Co., Kobe
Bunje, E. T. H., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Bunsen, M., prokurist, F. Schwarzkoff & Co., Kiaochau
Bunt, Geo., teacher of English, Kobe
Bunting, A., assistant, China Import & Export Lumber Co., Tsingtau Bunting, S., surveyor, Survey department, Pahang
Burda, Hans, assistant, C., Berthel, Shanghai
Burdett, C. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Burdette, Dr. B. J., house surgeon, Civil Hospital, Manila
Burdin, médecin, Hópital Colonial et Militaire, Saigon
Bureau, chef d'ateliers, Daydé et Pill, Hanoi
Burgess, J. C., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Burgess, J. E, assistant, Shewan Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Burgess, J. S., associate secretary, Young Men's Christian Association, Peking
Burgess, R. C., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Canton
1565
Burggrafund Grafzu Dohna-Schlodien, Commdr. S. M.S. "Tsingtau," Ger. Squadron,China Burghoffer, L., vicar church of Our Lady of Lourdes, Singapore
Burgis, E. S., assistant, Electrical Department, Howarth Erskine Ld., Bangkok
Burgoyne, A. E. L., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Mukden
Burgoyne, G. E., assistant, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Burhan, S. A. H., managing editor, "Perak Pioneer," Perak Rurke, J., gaoler, Penang
Burkhardt, H. silk inspector, Craig & Co., Shanghai Burkhart, E., assistant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Yokohama
Burkill, A. W., silk inspector, A. R. Burkill & Sons, Shanghai Burkill, C. R., silk inspector, A. R. Burkill & Sons, Shanghai Burleson, Richard, C., captain, Ordnance department, Manila
Burling, J. assistant-manager, Tali Ayer Estate, Perak
Burmeister, chief engineer, Ger. steamer" Adm. v. Tirpty", Coast service Burmeister, L., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
Burn, A., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong
Burn, A. C., assistant, Samuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Burn, J. M. S., manager, Yangtsze Pilots' Association, Shanghai
*
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1560
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Burn, W., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai Burne, Rev. A. E., St. Jolin's Church, Port Edward, Weihaiwei Burnell, W., station inspector, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Burnett, A., supt., Works dept., Municipal Police, Hankow Burnett, B. B., assistant, Alex. Ross & Co, Shanghai Burnett, B. C. G., assistant, Denham & Rose, Shanghai Burnett, G. G., senior clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Burnham, B. D., chief, Property Division, Bureau of Health, Manila Burns, C., assistant Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Burns, Pius E., div. supt of Schools, Cagayan, Philippines
Burns, W. S., sub-manager, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Burnside, E., collector of Land Revenue, Selangor
Burnside, J., sub-inspector, Police Department, Shanghai
Burr, George W., Major, chief ord, officer, Division Staff, Manila Burrett, F. B. S., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai Burrett, F. J., broker, Shanghai
Burrett, John L., treasurer, Treasury department, Manila
Burrows, E., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Bursley, H. A., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hongkong Burt, C. J. W., senior warder, Prison, Singapore Burtenshaw, A. R., manager, Vacuum Oil Co, Hankow Burton, F. D., clerk, Gas Company, Shanghai
Burton, H. G., assistant-examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Burton, J., assistant, Imperial Railways, Tientsin
Burton, R. E. G., lieutenant, officer commanding Island Guard, Weihaiwei Burton, S., examiner, Maritime Customs, Hanków
Burton, W. assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Burtwell, J. W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Busch, E., architect, Lothar, Marcks & Busch, Hankow Busch, E., assistant, Garrels, Börner & Co., Hankow
Busch, J. F. M, tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Bush, A. G., joint manager, Travers, Joseph & Sons, Singapore
Bush, W. D., clerk, U. S. Consulate, Hongkong
Büsing, H., Dr. Jur., Vorwerk, Zimmermaun & Büsing, Kiaochau
Büsing, Mar. engineer, S. M. S, "Scharnhorst," Ger, Squadron, China.
Bussche, Carl F. von, der, lieut., gr. mr. & commissary, transport Warren, Manila Bussière, chancelier de Kandal, Cambodge
Butchart, W. M., assistant manager, Printing Dept., Fraser & Neave, Singapore Butcher, C., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Butcher, F. C., assistant, Bradley & Co., Swatow
Butland, J. T. C., eng-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Alacrity", China and Japan.
Butland, W. A., assistant, Davies & Thomes, Shanghai
Butler, B. G., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Manila
Butler, C. H., assistant, Bisset & Co., Shanghai
Butler, Hamilton, interpreter and Mixed Court Assessor, U. S. Consulate, Tientsin
Butler, H., assistant, Richard Haworth & Co., Shanghai
Butler, P. D., assistant, British Consulate, Seoul
Butler, P D., student interpreter, British Embassy, Tokyo
Butler, R., assistant master, Free School, Penang
Butsch, C. J., assistant, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Shanghai
Butt, J. P., clerk, The Shanghai Horse Bazaar Co., Shanghai
Butte, H. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Buttenhoff, Á., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Butterworth, F. N., manager, Island Trading Syndicate, Labuan
Butterworth, Lieut. H., King's harbour master, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Bux, S. A., second clerk, Magistrates' Courts, Hongkong
Buxton, G. S., accountant, Gapis Tin Mining Co., Penang
Buxton, G. T., accountant, Batang Bras Syndicate, Pahang
Buy, C., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Buyers, C. B., superintendent, Peak Tramways Co., Hongkong
Buzio, B., Ronan Catholic missionary, Hankow
Byles, R. B., managing director, Tansan Mineral Water Co., Kobe Byrne, E. G., merchant, Schille & Byrne, Hankow and Chinkiang Byrne, G. P., student interpreter, British Embassy, Peking
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Byrne, H. E., ex. engineer, Public Works Department, Klang, Selangor Byrne, J. D., asst. supt., Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Byrne, P. L., sub-agent, American Trading Co., Shanghai
Byth, G., superintendent, Municipal Police, Hankow
1567
Byu, W. W., clerk, Eastern Extension, Australasia and China Telegraph Co., Foochow Byworth, L. A., chief tidesurveyor and harbourmaster, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang Caballero, Felipe R., manager, Pombo Caballero, Manila Cabeklu, H., assistant, C. Thwaites & Co., Yokohama Cabeldu, P. S., draper, P. S. Cabeldu & Co., Kobe
Cable, C. A., assistant, Sheldon, Bakels & Co., Shanghai
Cabos, C., assistant, Java China-Japan Lijn, Hongkong
Cabouret, A., assistant, Olivier & Co., Shanghai
Cabral, C. A. R., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Cachin, médecin chef, Tuyên Quang, Tonkin
Caddger, J. G., chief clerk, Bangkok Tock Co., Ld., Bangkok
Carlel, L. M., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Ld., Bangkok
Cadro, F., inspecteur de Police, Haiphong
Cady, C. M., instructor, Higher School, Kyoto and Tokyo
Caines, C., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow
Cairncross, J., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Bangkok
Cairns, Frank S., surveyor, Customs, Manila
Cairns, J. W., assistant manager, Macleod & Co., Manila
Caissial, G., munager, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Hankow
Caldeira, J., enfermeiro, Hospital de S. Raphael, Macau
Calder, J., resident secretary, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Singapore
Calder, S. J., assistant accountant, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Shanghai Calder-Smith, J. R., Imports, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila
Caldicott, H. M., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Caldwell, G. A., asst. secretary, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Hongkong Caldwell, J. K., vice and deputy consul-general, U. S. A., Yokohama
Califano, E., asst., Compagnie de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Saigon Callebaut, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Callon, H. I., assistant, Lutz & Co., Manila
Callow, G. D., assistant surveyor, Admiralty Works, Hongkong
Callsen, F. W., commander, revenue cruiser "Chuantiao," Customs, Shanghai
Call zu, Rosenburg und Culmbach, Baron Austro-Hungarian Ambassador, Tokyo
Camara, capt., F. F. de, admtdr., Administraçao do Concelho da Taipa & Coloane, Macau Cambier, résident de France, Yenbay, Tonkin
Camera, L., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Cameron, A. P., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co, Singapore
Cameron, B. E., passenger agent, Oriental Hotel, Kobe
Cameron, Charles, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Cameron, C. N., div. supt. of Schools, Moro Province, Philippines
Cameron, D. H., attorney, Standard Oil Co. of N. Y., Canton
Cameron, E., manager, Straits Trading Company, Negri Sembilan Cameron, H. F., district engineer, Province of Cebu, Philippines Cameron, J. D. M., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai Cameron, J. E., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Ld., Shanghai Cameron, J. M., storekeeper, Municipal Store & Workshop, Singaporc Cameron, W., inspector of Police, Hongkong
Cameron, W. D., assistant, Sun Life Insurance Co., Yokohama Cameron, W. H., chief engineer, Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu Cameron, W. M., assistant agent, American Bible Society's Agency, Bangkok Camiade, E., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Hoihow
Camp, Charles Lange de la, Delacamp & Co., Kobe
Camp, Herbert de la, assistant, Delacamp & Co., Kobe
Campbell, A., acting district officer, Kuala Kangsar. Perak
Campbell, A. A., chief officer, steamer "Loksang," China coast
Campbell, A. A., land surveyor, Lower Perak,
Campbell, A. S., assistant, Alex. Campbell & Co., Hankow
Campbell, A. S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Campbell, Alex., merchant, Alex. Campbell & Co., Shanghai, Hankow and Kewkiang Campbell, B., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Canton
Campbell, C., assistant, Wm. Holst & Co., Yokohama
NIPPONOPHONE
" BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1568
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Campbell, C. D., director, International Oil Co., Yokohama Campbell, C. K., professor, Soochow University, Soochow Campbell, C. W., C.M.G., Chinese secretary, British Embassy, Peking Campbell, Charles, Jr. third secretary U. S. Legation, Tokyo Campbell, Colin, chief officer, Steamer "Hinsang", China Coast Campbell, D., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai Campbell, D., manager, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai Campbell, D. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ningpo Campbell, F., tidewaiter, Martime Customs, Shanghai Campbell, G. E., atorney-at-law, Manila
Campbell, G. L., astsistant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai Campbell, H. E., merchant, Ilbert & Co., Shangliai
Campbell, E. J., eng. comdr., H. B. M. S. "Kent", China & Japan Campbell, J. A., chief officer, steamer "Sungkiang", China Coast Campbell, J. L., merchant, Singapore
Campbell, J. W., superintendent, Public gardens, Selangor
Campbell, Jas., chief officer, steamer "Onsang," China coast
Campbell, Jolin G., advocate and solicitor, Braddell Bros., Singapore Campbell, K. W., clerk, Mackenzie & Co., Shanghai
Campbell, R. A., assistant, heneth officer, Singapore
Campbell, R. S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Peking
Campbell, Richard, judge of first instance, Cagayan, Philippines
Campbell, Robert M., lieut., aide-de-camp to Major General Commanding, Manila Campbell, Smollett, commissioner, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Campbell, W., assistant-examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Campbell, W., missionary, English Presbyterian Mission, Tsinanfu
Campbell, W. B., master, Malacca High School, Malacca
Campbell, W. S., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Campbell, W. W., agent, Pacific Mail S. S. Co., and Portland & Asiatic S. S. Co., Kobe Campbell, William, manager, Bowden Brothers & Co., and vice consul for Sweden, Kobe Campen, F., manager, Hai Kee Sugar Estate, Perak
Campos, A., Empreza Economica, Macau
Campos, A., propietario, Rueda Hermanos y Co., Manila
Campos, A. E., accountant, Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Campos, A. P., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Campos, Andrés, clerk, U. S. Post Office, Cebu
Campos, E. P., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bauk, Shanghai
Campos, H., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Hongkong
Campos, J., assistant, Rueda Hermanos y Co., Manila
Campos, J. M., clerk, G. P. Lammert, Hongkong
Campos, P., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Iloilo
Campos, R., assistant, Rueda Hermanos y Co., Manila
Campos, S., assistant, Rueda Hermanos y Co., Manila
Campredon, M., merchant, Adet, Campredon & Co., Yokohama
Camu, engineer, Water Works, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai
Camus, M., asst. city attorney, Law department, Manila
Canaroon, J., Tarilipan Co., B. N. Borneo
Canarvon, Borneo Coffee Co., B. N. Borneo
Canavaro, J. C., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Candlin, G. A., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin
Cannan, A. M., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Cannavarro, J. S., cupitão, Companhia de Infanteria, Macao
Canning, L. E., assistant, Scott, Harding & Co., Shanghai
Canning, S. T., assistant, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
Canning, T. D., assistant, Howarth, Erskine Ld., Singapore
Cantlay, W., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Manila
Cantrell. H. M., broker, Lyall & Evatt, Singapore
Capell, J. R., managing chemist, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Capozzi, A., manager, Campbell, Moore Co., Hongkong
Cappelen, D., assistant, L. H. Smith & Co., Chefoo
Capper, J. C., engine-driver, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
Captain, D. R., manager, D. R., Captain & Co., Hongkong
Capulong, Emilio, inspector, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila
Capus, G., chef, direction de l'Agriculture et du Commerce, Hanoi
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Capy, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking Carabelli, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Hongkong Carapiet, J., proprietor, Adelphi Hotel, Singapore
Carapiet, J. J., assistant, Adelphi Hotel, Singapore
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Cardi, chef de 2e bureau, Secretariat, Etat Civil, Saigon
Cardoso, A. A., correspondent, Portuguese Mission School, Singapore Cardoso, Antonio Augusto, vicar general, Portuguese Mission, Singapore Cardoso, M. A., missionary, Portuguese Mission, Singapore Carduner, E. Le, accountant, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong Cardwell, J, E., editor, "Chinese Illustrated News," Shanghai Carew, H., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Yokohama and Kobe Carey, F. W., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Tengyuch
Cargill, K. W., assistant, Alex. Campbell & Co., Shanghai and Hankow Carion, B. M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Carion, E. M., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Carion, J. S., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bunk, Shanghai Carion, L., purser, British ship "Ariel," Shanghai
Carion, U. M., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hankow Cariss, J., clerk, Walter Nutter & Co., Shanghai Carl, B., assistant, Berthel & Burkhardt, Shanghai Carl, F. A., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Newchwang Carl, T., sub-manager, Tientsin Building Co., Tientsin Carl, Th., assistant, Telge & Schroeter, Tientsin
Carle, J. W., chief officer, steamer "Koonshing," China coast Carlill, A. J. H., merchant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai Carlill, S. R., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong Carlos, conseiller, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
Carlos, A. H., book-keeper, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore Carlos, B., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Newchwang Carlos, E. B., clerk, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore Carlos, M., aspirante, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
Carlsen, G., superintendent, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Amoy Carlson, F., captain, "Kiang-Foo," China coast
Carlson, N., asst. examiner, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Carlson, W. A. harbourmaster, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Carme, juge président, Tribunal Cochin-Chine, Hanoi
Carmen, B., almoxarife, Almoxarifado, Macao
Carmichael, A., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Carmichael, D., storekeeper, Bangkok Dock Co., Bangkok
Carmichael, H. C., assistant, Luzon Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong Carmichael, H. F., consulting engineer, Carmichael & Clarke, Hongkong Carmichael, W. V., pilot, Shanghai
Carmona, Fabian, assistant, Alfredo Roensch & Co., Iloilo
Carnduff, Alex, assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Carneiro, B., clerk, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Carneiro, C. E., clerk, Walter Nutter & Co., Shanghai
Carneiro, E., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai
Carneiro, J. L., clerk, Noël, Murray & Co., Shanghai
Carneiro, J. S., clerk, Chartered Bank of I. A. & China, Yokohama
Carneiro, P., clerk, Chartered Bank of Judia, Australia and China, Shanghai
Carneiro, R. P., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Carnelley, S. N., advocate and solicitor, Selangor
Carney, W. L., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Tientsin
Carnie, J. D., chief engineer, steamer "Cheong Shing," China coast
Carniglia, G. Batta, lieut., R. Nave "Calabria," China.
Caron, procureur, Vicariat Apostolique du Su'tchuen, Chungking
Carpenter, E. W., assistant engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Carpenter, E. W. H., assistant, P. and O. Steam Navigation Co., Singapore Carpenter, F. W., executive secretary, Executive, Manila
Carpшael, E., cadet, Weihaiwei
Carpmael, H., managing assistant, H. L. Coghlan & Co., Singapore
Carranceja, Benito Ŏ., chief, Compañia General de Tabacos de Filipinas, Iloilo Carrée, C. H., assistant, Barlow & Co., Shanghai
Carrel, L. R., officer, Customs revenue cruiser "Linhsing," Shanghai
4.
NIPPONOPHONE
1569
-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1570
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Carrel, M. D., chief clerk, Bureau of Customs and Immigration, Manila Carrillon, J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Yokohama,
Carrington, J., agent, American Bible Society's Agency, Bangkok Carritt, H. W., Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College, Tientsin
Carroll, A. H., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Carroll, F. G., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Carroll, H. K., LL.D., Peking University, Peking
Carrot, J., brigadier de police, Haiphong
Carruter, H. G., overseer, Municipality, Penang
Carruthers, A. G. H., sec. and accountant, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Carruthers, R., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Singapore
Carruthers, R., boilermaker, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Carson, A., assistant, Bangkok Dock Co., Ld., Bangkok
Carst, J. J. M., assistant, Mollison & Co., Yokohoma
Carst, W. M., assistant, Mollison & Co., Kobe
Carsten, H., assistant, Schwarz, Gaumer & Co., Shanghai
Carstensen, A., supervisor, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Amoy
Carter, A., sanitary surveyor, Sanitary department, Hongkong
Carter, A. C., head-master, High Schools, Bangkok
Carter, A. J., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Ld., Hongkong
Carter, E., senior writer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Carter, E. W., merchant, Hateh, Carter & Co., Tientsin
Carter, G. A., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Iloilo
Carter, J. C., manager, A. S. Watson & Co., Tientsin
Carter, P. R. F., assistant, Herbert Dent & Co., Canton
Carter, R. P., assistant, Naval Store Officer, Naval Establishment, Hongkong Carter, W., merchant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Carter, W. Langham, second magistrate, District and Police Courts, Penang Cartier, L. P. G., de, assistant, Maritime Customs, Wuhu Cartman, F. A., examiner, Maritime Customs, Swatow Carton, ingénieur adjoint, Travaux Publics, Annam
Cartwright, E. H., languages and literature, Shansi Govt. University, Peking Cartwright, J. S., managing director, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ld, Kobe Carugo, C., assistant, Schweiger & Co., Ld., Hankow
Carvalho, A. A., clerk, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Shanghai
Carvalho, B. L. de, clerk, North China Insurance Co., Hongkong
Carvalho, C. C., accountant, New Amoy Dock Co., Ainoy
Carvalho, C. C., jr., clerk, New Amoy Dock Co., Amoy
Carvalho, C. F., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Carvalho, E. A. de, cashier, Treasury, Hongkong
Carvallio, F. E., clerk, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Hongkong Carvalho, H. J. M. de, clerk, Union Insurance Society, Hongkong Carvallio, J., storekeeper, Store Department, Sarawak
Carvalho, J. A. de, clerk, Union Insurance Society, Hongkong Carvalho, J. H., clerk, Linstead & Davis, Hongkong
Carvalho, J, M., alumno-interprete, Repartiçao de Expediente Sinico, Macau Carvalho, J. M. de., mestre, Capitania do Porto, Macau
Carvalho, V. de, clerk, Holland-China Trading Co., Shanghai
Carver, Cecil I., barrister-at-law, Donaldson & Burkinshaw, Singapore
Carver, Gilbert S., assistant, Donaldson & Burkinshaw, Singapore
Cary, W., overseer, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Macau
Casagrande, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Casas, Pedro, contador, Banco Espanol Filipino, Manila Casati, A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Antung
Casati, Cav. L., Italian Consul, Seoul, Corea
Casati, F., assistant, Dell' Oro & Co., Yokohama
Case, J. F., chief engineer director, Bureau of Public Works, Manila Cass, T. F., teacher, School of commerce, Manila
Casta-Lumio, chef du service du Pilotage, Saigon
Castel, payeur, Tuyen Quang, Tonkin
Castellvi, E. C., assistant engineer, Railway Co., Manila
Castellvi, L. de, traffic assistant, Railway Co., Manila
Castilho, A. B., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Castilho, A. F., assistant accountant, Post Office, Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Castilho, S. P., storekeeper and commission agent, Castilho & Co., Shanghai
Castillo, J. C., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Castillo, J. de, clerk, Ker & Co., Iloilo
Castle, T. A. M., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Castrillo, Fr. G., procurator, Augustinian Mission, Shanghai
Castro, A., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macau
Castro, C. M., clerk, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Castro, D. João Paulino d'Azevedo e, bishop of Macao, Macao Castro, F. H., clerk, Walter Schärff & Co., Shanghai Castro, H. A., clerk, Bradley & Co., Hongkong Castro, J. M., clerk, Kelly & Walsh, Shanghai Castro, L., bookkeeper, Central Store, Shanghai Castro, T. F. clerk. Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hongkong
Catchick, G. G., assistant, E. D., Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Cateaux, C. H., assistant, Belu, Meyer & Co., Manila
Cathaloa, J., assistant, Societé Bordelaise Indo-Chinoise, Haiphong
Cator, Lieut. B. A., deputy master attendant, Marine Department, Singapore Catto, A. R., assistant, Hutchison & Co., Yokohama
Catto, James, assistant, South Manchurian Railway Co., Dairen
Cauac, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Caudron, R. M., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Caulfield, St. R. S., major, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Caulkins, G. W. div. supt. of Schools, Province of Albay, Philippines Cavalier, A. R., assistant master, Public School, Shanghai
Cavaliere, A., asst. officer, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Newchwang Cavallini, V., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Caverhill, W. B., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Selangor
Caviglia, major, military attaché, Italian Legation, Peking
Cazes, M. De, greffier, Résidence, Hatinh, Annam
Celestine, brother director, St Louis College, Tientsin
Cellarius, Otto, kaufmann, Paul Friedr. Richter, Tsinanfu, Kiaochau Ceny, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Cerezal, P., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Chabanieux, J., professor, Medical College, Tientsin Chadwick, G. A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Tientsin
Chagas, J. F., Mixed Court assessor, Portuguese Consulate, Shanghai Chalamel, secretaire particulier du gouverneur géneral, Hanoi Chalhoub, A. J., commission agent, Chalhoub Freres, Yokohama Chalhoub, T. A., commission agent, Chalhoub Freres, Yokohama Challbert, médecin major des Torpilleurs, Mers de Chine, Saigon Chalmers, A. H., boarding-officer, "Marine clepartment, Singapore Chalmers, A. M., consul for Spain, Tamsui
Chalmers, A. M., H. B. M. consul, Nagasaki,
Chalmers, J. L., acting statistical secretary, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Chalmers, J. Macrae, manager, The Dispensary, Penang
Chaltourine, K. N., assistant, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock Chamberlain, A. B., chief officer, Colonial steamer "Sea Mew," Singapore Chamberlain, John L., colonel, inspector-general, Division Staff, Manila Chamberlain, Wester P., major, Medical Corps. Manila.
Chamberlin, George E., vice and deputy consul-general, for U.S., Singapore Chambers, C., chief engineer, steamer "Huichow", China coast
Chambers, J. G., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Chambers, P. A., local manager, Pootung and Tungkadoo Wharves, Shanghai Chambert, résident de Kompong-Thom, Cambodge
Chambon, missionary. French Mission, Hakodate
Chamier, G. D., lieut.-colonel, commanding Royal Artillery, Hongkong Champion, C., assistant inspector, Health Department, Shanghai Champmorin, P. de, agent, Messageries Maritimes, Yokohama
Champs, C. L. de, commander, Naval attaché, Swedish Legation, Tokyo Chanceanlme, M., caissier, Société Foncière de L'Indo-chine, Hanoi
Chancellor, Captain A, R., superintendent, Police department, Singapore Chand, Nichol, medical officer, Maritime ('ustoms, Tengyueh Chandler, E. K., bookkeeper, Palace Hotel, Shanghai
Chandler, H. W., captain, "Poo-Chi," China coast
"
1571
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1572
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Chandler, Henry, general broker, Chandler and Pitt, Manila Chandler, M., chief, Clerical Division, Bureau of Health, Manila Chané, M., ingénieur-directeur, Filature de Coton Hanoi, Hanoi Chaney, G. A., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Chang, E. D., agent, Melchers & Co., Ichang Changeux, commandant, Défense Fixe, Saigon
Changeux, G.C.C., manager, Comp. Française des Indes et de l'Extreme Orient, Chungking Chanings, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon Chanson, L., clerk, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong
Chapeaux, G., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Chapeaux, M., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Chapelain, A. M., acting-accountant, Chinese Post Office, Tsinanfu
Chapman, A., assessor of rates, Treasury, Hongkong
Chapman, B. F., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Chapman, E. A., foreman, H. M., Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Chapman, E. J., assistant, Linstead & Davis, Hongkong
Chapman, G., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Chapman, J. B., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Chapman, P. P., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Chapman, R., accountant and storekeeper, Government Civil Hospital, Hongkong Chapman, T. I, assistant, Standard Oil Company of New York, Yokohama Chapman, W. works manager, Haiho Conservancy Commission, Tientsin Chapman, W. T., district officer, Jelebu District Office, Negri Sembilan Chappel, W. R. H., merchant, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Chapple, F., assistant, Wm. Powell, Hongkong
Charbounelle, garde-indigène, Hadong, Tonkin
Chard, H. F., assistant, Wilkinson, Heywood & Clark, Hongkong
Chard, R. J. examiner, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Chardin, G., assistant, L'Union, Haiphong
Charignon, A. P., civil engineer, EC.P., Peking
Charles, B., merchant, Shanghai
Charles, L., shipchandlers & Co., Hongkong
Charlot, E., assistant, Olivier & Co., Tientsin
Charlton, A. D., professor of English, Gakushuin, Tokyo
Charlton, G. H., assistant, Davies & Thomas, Shanghai
Charpentier, receveur, Postes et Télégraphes, Ha Tinh, Annam
Charpentier, M., vice-consul for France, Kobe
Charra, S. P., managing engineer, Société des Etains de Kinta, Perak Charrington, E. C., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Nanking Charter, R., clerk of works, Public Works department, Selangor
Charton, commis de Comptabilité,Chemins de Fer, Hanoi
Charuley, L. E., assistant, Olmsted & Co., Kobe
Chase, C. F., assayer, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul, Corea
Chasle, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Chatburn, E. J., general manager, J. Llewellyn & Co., Shanghai
Chateau, P., sub-manager, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Chater, R. W., assistant, printing office, Kelly & Walsh, Singapore Chatham, W., C.M.G., director, Public Works department, Hongkong Chatron, J. A., Roman Catholic bishop of Osaka, Japan
Chaudoin, E. A. L., postal-officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Chaumont, M., clerk, Engineers' Office, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Chauvin, chef du Secrétariat, Douanes et Régies, Arnam
Chaytor, C., manager, Kowloon Hotel, Hongkong
Chee, T., merchant, Dang Chee Son & Co., Hongkong
Cheeseman, H. A. R., master, Free School, Penang
Cheetham, H. C., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Shanghai Cheliagin, N. P., assistant, Molchanoft, Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow
Chenard, J., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai and Hankow Cherry, W. T. superintendent, Methodist Publishing House, Singapore
Chesneau, L., commissaire-chef-service, Commissariat de Police, Haiphong Chester, Richard, advertising agent, Shanghai
Chevalier, S., director of Zó-Sé Observatory, Shanghai
Chevallier, H., acting district judge, Labuan
Chevretton, L, caissier, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Saigon
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Chicken, C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Kobe Chient, P. P., manager, Chint & Co., Negri Sembilan Chieri, V., postal assistant, Maritime Customs, Chefoo Chilcott, Ronald E., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Chilcott, Wm. W.D., surgeon, H. M. steamer "Teal," China Child, C., manager, Universal Trading Co., Shanghai
Childs, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Chill, L. A., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Chill, M., captain, "Kwei-Lee," China coast
Chilver, S., inspector of police, West Hongkew Station, Shanghai
1573
Chimenz, Sre. Fioravanti, commission agent and vice consul for Argentine, Yokohama Chinchen, S. J., assistant, North China Insurance Co., Ld., Hongkong
Ching, H. B., financial-assistant, Weihaiwei
Chirouze, M., inspecteur de Police, Haiphong
Chishohn, J. S., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Canton
Chizallet, P., professor, College of Ryongsan, Seoul
Chocqueel, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Chodzko, capitaine de port, Haiphong
Cholerton, T. E., assistant sanitary inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Chollot, J. J., architect, Shanghai"
Cholmondeley, Rev. L., chaplain, British Embassy, Tokyo
Chopard, W. F, chief clerk, Mercantile Bank of India, Singapore
Chopard, W. W., second clerk, Police Courts, Singapore
Chorley, S. F., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Chouvellon, évêque, Vicariat Apostolique du Su'tchuen, Chungkiang Chrispin, T. J., captain, steamer "Hoi Sang," Canton-Macao
Christ, O., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Christensen, A., assistant, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Vladivostock Christensen, C., burner, Green Island Cement Co., Hongkong
Christensen, E. C., chief, Prison Sanitation, Manila
Christensen, H. C., assistant, T. A. Christensen & Co., Kobe
Christensen, J. P., burner, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong
Christensen, John A., teacher, School of Commerce, Manila
Christensen, N., burner, Green Island Cement Co., Hongkong
Christensen, O. C., assistant, Saw Mills, East Asiatic Co., Bangkok Christensen, T. A., shipping agent, Kobo
Christiani, Th., broker, Hongkong
Christians, J., clerk, German Consulate, Kobe
Christiansen, B, inspector of works, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Christiansen, J. P., assistant, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Vladivostock Christie, D., captain, steamer "Loongwo," Hongkong and Shanghai
Christie, D., F.R.C.P., and L.R.C.S. Peking University, Peking
Christie, Dr. D., medical officer, Railways, Mukden
Christie, J., architect, Scott, Christie & Johnson, Shanghai
Christie, J. D., chief engineer, S. S. "Fatshan," Hongkong-Canton
Christie, T. H., pilot, Indo-China S. N. Co., China coast
Christman, R. J., cartographer, Bureau of Coast & Geodetic Survey, Manila Christmas P., assistant, Badwan & Co., Bangkok
ני
Christofari, inspecteur, chef du service des Moeurs, Saigon
Christoph, J., accountant, F. W. Rosenbaum, Shanghai
Christophe, L., cassier, Messageries Fluviales, Saigon
Christophersen, H. J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Wenchow
Chubb, J. S., tidle waiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon
Chuk, M. A., merchant, Singapore
Chunnutt, F. G., clerk, W. R. Loxley & Co., Hongkong Chunnutt, J., assistant, W. R. Loxley & Co., Hongkong Chunnutt. O. R., clerk, W. R. Loxley & Co., Hongkong Church, V., merchant, Church & Co., Yokohama Church, W., assistant, Alfred Herbert, L., Yokohama Churchill, H. W., assistant, A. H. Jaques & Co., Tientsin Chute, L. V., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chungking Ciceri, Rt. Rev. Bishop, vicar apostolic, Kewkiang Civilini, G. P., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Clabault, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
<[
NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1574
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Clair, capt., C. H. D. St., officer in charge of supplies, Army Service Corps, Hongkong Clair, W. G., proprietor and editor, "Singapore Free Press," Singapore Clare, E. E. P., district surveyor, Revenue Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan Clare, H., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Clark, A. J., assistant, Robert Dallas & Co., Shanghai
Clark, C. B., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hankow
Clark, D., British postal agent, and proprietor Clarke's Hotel, Weihaiwei
Clark, D. B., sub accountant, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai Clark, D. M., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Clark, Duncan, merchant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Clark, E. B., teacher, Higher School, Hongo, Tokyo
Clark, E. E., agent, Router's Telegram Co., Ld., Weihaiwei
Clark, E. E., merchant, Lavers & Clark, Shanghai
Clark, F. W., medical officer of health, Sanitary department, Hongkong Clark, G. C., assistant, MacEwen, Frickel & Co., Hongkong
Clark, H. J., assistant, Benjamin & Potts, Shanghai
Clark, H. T., head, Malay Training College, Malacca
Clark, Henry B., Captain, assistant to Quartermaster, Manila
Clark, J., assistant tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Clark, J. merchant, Shanghai
Clark, J. C., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Clark, J. D., managing director and editor in chief, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai Clark, J. H., assistant, McMullan & Co., Chefoo
Clark, Jasper, chief of Thompson and Bedford department, Standard Oil Co., Hongkong Clark, John T., sec.-treasurer, Palawan, Philippines
Clark, M. M., superintendent of Customs, Sandakan, British North Borneo
Clark, M. O., statistician, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Clark, T. A., assistant, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai
Clark, W. E, acting boat officer, Maritime Customs, Canton
Clark, W. W., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Clarke, A. H., assistant and shipping clerk, British Consulate, Moji and Shimonoseki Clarke, B. A., auctioneer, Hopkins, Dunn & Co., Shanghai
Clarke, B. F., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Bangkok
Clarke, C. A., secretary, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang
Clarke, C. G. C., assayer, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang
Clarke, G., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tientsin
Clarke, G. D., manager, Singleton, Benda & Co., Kobe
Clarke, H. W., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Clarke, H. W., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Clarke, J. T., medical officer, Ipoh, Perak
Clarke, Marshall L., lieut., H. B. M. gunboat "Britomart," China Station Clarke, R. H., lieutenant, 80th Company Royal Artillery, Singapore
Clarke, R. W., manager, British Borneo Exploration Co., B. N. Borneo
Clarke, W., chief clerk, Treasury, Singapore
Clarke, W. E., secretary, Hongkong, Canton & Macao Steamboat Co., Hongkong Clarke, W. F., chemist, George Town Dispensary, Penang
Clarke, W. G., assistant, MacEwen, Frickel & Co., Shanghai
Clarke, W. H., auditor, Dept. of Finance and Justice, Manila
Clarkson, C., tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Canton
Clatworthy, E. A., mechanic, Engineer Office, Customs, Shanghai
Claudel, P., consul for France, Tientsin
Claudius, H., chief engineer, steamer "Samsen," China coast
Clausen, C. B., contractor and proprietor, Phoenix Hotel, Yokohama Clausen, S., assistant, Walte & Co., Tientsin
Clauson, v. Kaas, lieut., S. M. S. "Luchs," German Squadron, China Claussen, C., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Claussen, C. B., assistant, Oriental Store, East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Claussen, H. B., assistant at Tringganu, East Asiatic Co., Straits Settlements
Clauzet, R. F. Á., head master and general supt., Sacred Heart College, Canton Claxton, A. A., assistant, J. D. Hutchison & Co., Hongkong
Clay, S. D., assistant, Abenheim Brothers, Kobe
Clay, W. S., clerk, Electricity department, Shanghai
Clayson, F., acting deputy commissioner, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Clayton, L. H., superintendent of Immigrants, Penang
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Clayton, R. J. B., acting district officer, Kuala Kangsa, Perak Clayton, T. W., assistant collector of Land Revenue, Selangor Clayton, W. B., Wattie & Co., Shanghai
Clear, A. C., engineer-in-charge, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Clear, C. A., assistant, Fred. Wilson & Co., Manila
Cleaver, E. A., accountant, Perhentian Tinggi Estate, Negri Sembilan Cleaver, W. E., barrister-at-law, Presgrave & Matthews, Penang Clegg, J. H., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hankow Clemann, E., assistant, Ullmann & Co., Tientsin
Clement, traffic-manager, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Clement, Columbanus, Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Clément, L., assistant, P. Roque, Haiphong
Clément, Max., Briquetterie-Tuilerie Mécaniques, Hanoi
Clement, S. P., employé, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
Clemente, I., vicar apostolic, Roman Catholic Mission, Amoy
Clementi, C., assistant Colonial Secretary, Hongkong
Clements, A. J., Customs, revenue cruiser "Linhsing," Shanghai
Clerici, A., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., L., Shanghai
Cleveland, B., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Clewent, conseiller, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
Clifford, W. C.. assistant, China Printing Co., Shanghai
Clift, H. L., medical officer, I. M. Customs, Nanning
Clifton, C. W., manager, Formosa Mercantile Co., Tunsui
Climo, Captain P. H., Hongkong-Singapore R. G. A., Hongkong Clindening, F. T. D., medical practitioner, Kewkiang
Cline, J. W., professor, Anglo Chinese College, Shanghai
Clissold, A. H., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Clissold, G. W., armourer staff sergeant, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong
Clive, H., acting tidesurveyor and harbour master, Maritime Customs, Wuchowfu Clodd, H. P., manager, Planters' Stores and Agency Co., Selangor
Clopton, William H., Jr., 13th Cavalry, Manila
Close, G. D., lieut. col., commanding Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Clothier, H. W., expense accounts officer, H.M. Naval department, Hongkong Cloud, Frederick D., consul for U. S. A., Antung
Clouett, A., managing partner, A. Frankel & Co., Singapore
Clouett, A., merchant, A. Clouett & Co., Singapore
Clouett, F., assistant, Frankel & Co., Singapore
Clonett, H. C., assistant, A. Clouett & Co., Singapore
Clough, F. B., travelling ticket examiner, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Clouth, W. R., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Clowe, Clarence, assistant, Standard Oil Co., Tientsin
Clumeck, V., merchant, A Clouett & Co., Singapore
Coates, C. F., Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation Ld., Bangkok
Coates, F. W., assistant engineer, Installation Engineering department, Singapore
Coates, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shasi
Coates, J. W., assistant, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Coates, P. T., tidliwaiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Coates, R. A., professor, English High Schools, Macao
Cobb, G. C., manager, Methodist Publishing House, Singapore
Cobden, A. S., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Cochran, R. W. B., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Cochrane, A., surveyor, Survey departmant, Perak Cochrane, C. W. H., acting second magistrate, Selangor
Cochrane, H. R., assistant accountant, Mercantile Bank of India, Singapore Cochrane, J, assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Cochrane, J. T., manager, Pulo Bukom Tank Installation, Singapore Cochrane, Morris E., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Astrueu," China and Japan Cochrane, R. D., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Yokoliama Cochrane. T., Union Medical College, Peking University, l'eking Cock, E. A. L., inspector of Mines, Gopeng and Kampar, Perak Cock, H., mine agent, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Palang Cockburn, G. W., The Yangtse Engineering Works, Hankow Cockburn, S., chief assistant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Cockell, A., assistant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
1575-
NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1576
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Cockell, E. L., merchant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
Cocker, T. E., deputy commissioner, Maritime Customs, Kashing Cocker, T. E., Jun., assistant, Maritime Customs, Swatow Cocks, T. J., assistant, Phoenix Assurance Co., Shanghai Codrington, S., acting district officer, Butterworth, Penang Coelho, J. J., secretary, Club Lusitano, Hongkong Cogan, B., manager, Macleod & Co., Cebu
Coghill, A., marine surveyor, British Consulate, Amoy
Coghlan, H. L., partner and licensed surveyor, H. L. Coghlan & Co., Singapore Cogolin, J. de C. de, Engert de Cuers & Brady, Yokohama
Cohen, J. P., assistant naval store officer, Naval Establishment, Hongkong Cohen, W., assistant, S. Zimmerman, & Co., Vladivostock
Cohn, A. G., proprietor, The Nobby, Manila
Coispellier, H., Williams, Le, chief assistant, Vessageries Maritimes Co., Kobe Coit, A. S., chief clerk, Land Office Tampin, Negri Sembilan
Coke B. E., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Colas, assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Colbest, W. J., principal, Manila High School, Manila
Colburn, C. R., teacher, Higher School, Okayama, Tokyo
Colchester, F. E., manager, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld., Yokohama
Cole, C. P., master, steamer" Kaifong," China coast
Cole, E. H, agent and manager, Zorrilla Theatre, Manila
Cole, H. E., managing director, International Oil Co., Yokohama
Cole, J. C., assistant, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Cole, W. A., inspector of works, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Coleman, A., harbour master, Malacca
Coleman, A. G., battery manager, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang Coleman, D., Union Estate and Investment Co, Yokohama
Coleman, D. W., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Coleman, F. A., lightkeeper, Green Island, Hongkong
Coleman, J. J., div. supt. of Schools, Province of Cebu, Philippines
Cole-Watson, A. H., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama
Colin, assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Colin, E., receveur, French consulate, Chungking
Colinet, G., agent, Establissement de Tongku, Newchwang
Collaço, A., clerk, International Cotton Manufacturing Co., Shanghai
Collaço, A. M., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Collaço, C. F., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai
Collaço, J., clerk, Carl Rohde & Co., Kobe
Collaço, J., A., clerk, China and Japan Trading Co., Ld., Shanghai
Collaço, J. F., surveyor, Customs, Bangkok
Collaço, J. P. P., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aust. and China, Tientsin
Collaço, J. R., assistant, Sweetmeat Castle, Shanghai
Collaço, M. A., clerk, C. J. Gaupp & Co., Hongkong
Collaço, M. C., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Collaço, R., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Collaço, R. J., Sweetmeat Castle, Shanghai
Collaço, T. A., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Tientsin
Collaço, V. A. P., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Collard, J. C., assistant, Tate & Co., Perak
Collbran, A. H., general manager, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul, Corea
Collbran, J. S., auditor, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul
Colledge, A., manager, Machinery dept., Adamson, Gilfillan, & Co., Singapore Collet, administrateur adjoint, Résident de France, Yen-Bay, Tonkin
Collet, comptablité, Charbounages du Tonkin, Haiphong
Collett, A., inspector of police, Hongkong
Collette, Villeneuve de là, attaché, Bureau des Affaires Politiques, Hanoi
Collier, J. D., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Yokohama
Collier, L. E., teacher, Province of Cebu, Philippines
Collins, A. E., assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Foochow
Collins, A. E., writer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Collins, F. W., general-manager, Malacca Rubber Plantations Ld., Singapore
Collins, George F. B. E., lieut., II. B. M. S. "Flora," China and Japan
Collins, H. B., reporter, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Collins, H. E., assistant, American Trading Company, Shanghai Collins-Paton, S., secretary, Singapore Foundry, Singapore Collins, W. M., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co, Singapore
Collinwood, Geo., general manager, "Peking and Tientsin Times," Tientsin Collis, C. G., permanent way inspector, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai Collisen, B. M., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Collton, R. F., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Collum, J. M., merchant, Cornes & Co., Yokohana and Kobe
Collyer, Geo. F., assistant, Standard Life Assurance Co., Shanghai
Colman, E. E., acting-magistrate, District of Police Courts, Singapore
Colman, H. C., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Colman, H. C., representative Indo-Chine, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Saigon
Colomb, A., assistant, Compagnie Commerciale d'Extreme Orient, Shanghai
Columb, J., merchant, J. Colomb & Co, Yokoliama
Colomb, Paul, merchant, J. Colomb & Co., Yokohama.
Colquhoun, P., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Colson, C., lieutenant, Royal Artillery, Singapore
Colson, C. B., assistant, A. K. E. Hampshire & Co., Selangor
Colson, G. B., electrical engineer, Electric Co., Ld., Hongkong
Coltman, Ch. L., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Tientsin
Coltman, Robt., jr., attorney, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Tientsin Coiton, C. M., chief accountant, Bureau of Education, Manila
Colton, G. W., assistant, Andrews & George, Yokohama Combe, G. A., assistant, British Consulate, Tientsin Combean, lieut., officier-chancelier, Cao-Bang, Tonkin
Combes, A. E., writer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Comencini, M., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Hankow
Comley, W. G., sub, storekeeper, Cauton-Kowloon Railway, Canton Comming, F., assistant proof reader, Customs Printing Office, Shanghai Commjs, A. J., assistant private secretary, Maritime Customs, Peking Compton, J., assistant, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Compton, J., assistant engineer, Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu Comrie, A. F., broker, F. G. Somerville & Co., Singapore
Comte, A., employé, C. Tourmen, Saigon
Conacher, John, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering, Co., Shanghai Conceição, A. J. D., chief-clerk, Police department, Singapore
Conceição, F. X., clerk, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Conceição, J. M., assistant, Oriental Press, Shanghai
Cond, T. W., accountant, Cowie Harbour Coal Co., B. N. Borneo
Conder, J., architect, Tokyo,
Condict, P. K., secretary and director, Nippon Electric Co., Tokyo
Condon, W. L., assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong
Coningham, C. G., instructor in English, Tokyo
Connandy, resident de France, Quang-yen, Tonkin
Connell, C. C., assistant accountant, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Connell, J. O., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Connemann, lient., S. M. S. "Arcona," German Squadron, China
Conner, Samuel, staff surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Alacrity," China and Japan
Connor, C. A., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shangliai
Connor, T., inspector, Police department, Penang.
Connor, Wm. M. Jr., attorney, Province of Moro, Philippines
Conradi, Heinrich, assistant, China Export-Import-and-Bank Co., Shanghai Consigliere, P., merchant, Gaggino & Co., Singapore
Conway, H., inspector of police, Tapah, Perak
Cook, E, architect, Adams & Knowles, Tientsin
Cook, E. A. traffic-manager, Federated Malay States Railways, Perak
Cook, E. R., cashier, Bureau of Customs & Immigration, Manila
Cook, Frank A., captain, commissary, asst. to chief Commissary, Manila
Cook, J. constable, British Consulate, Newchwang
Cook, J. A. B., missionary, Singapore
Cook, W., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Cook, W. P. assistant, Woollen Vosy & Co., Tientsin
Cook, W. W., managing director. Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Coke, C. A., Peking Tobacco Co., Peking
1577
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1578
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Cooke, C. J. asst, draughtsman, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, H'kong Cooke, D. H., assistant, Harvie & Cooke, Shanghai
Cooke, E. H., assistant, A. H. Jaques & Co., Tientsin Cooke, H. E., employe, Skipworth, Hammond & Co., Kobe Cooke, H. S., merchant, Harvie & Cooke, Shanghai Cooke, J. E., clerk, Home & Douglas, Shanghai
Cooke, J. R., commander, British ship "Ariel," Shanghai
Cooke, L. F., coal merchant, Hongkong
Cooke-Yarborough, H. C., solicitor, Allen & Gledhill, Singapore Cookes, C. L., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Cooley, F. E., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Coombs, H., sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong Coomns, G. H., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Coon, W. W., principal, American School, Manila
Coope, A. B. Jesser, physician, Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Krian, Perak Cooper, A. E., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Kobe
Cooper, A. J., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Cooper, A. S. P. W., solicitor, Shanghai
Cooper, B., surveyor, Survey department, Perak
Cooper, C. R. S., assistant, Brand Brothers & Co., Shanghai
Cooper, C. W., secretary, The Tor Hotel, Kobe
Cooper, D., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Cooper, E. Q., broker, L. Moore & Co., Shanghai
Cooper, Mrs. F. Perrin, merchant, Perrin, Cooper & Co., Tientsin,
Cooper, G. W., assistant, China Land & Finance Co., Shanghai
Cooper, G. W., assistant, Shanghai Building and Investment Co., Shanghai
Cooper, H. R., manager, H. R. Cooper & Co., Manila
Cooper, J. A. V., assistant, Denbigh & Co., Hakodate
Cooper, J. K., loco. storekeeper, Railways, Tongshan, North China
Cooper, P. N., milliner, Cooper & Co., Hongkong
Cooper, T. G. D., medical officer, General Hospital, Selangor
Cope, W. H., outdoor supt., China Borneo Co., British North Borneo Copeland, A. D., examiner, Maritime Customs, Santuao Copley, G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hoihow Coppin, A. G., assistant, Bradley & Co., Hongkong Coppin, A. M., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore
Corbac, G. van, engineer, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin Corbach, T. van, assistant, A. E. Algar, Shanghai Corbett, F. U., inanager, Separators Ld., Perak
Corbett, R. L., manager, Separators Ld., Ipoh, Perak
Corbin, P. F. J., assistant examiner, Native Customs, Tientsin Corbisier, F. X., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Cordeiro, D. A., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Cordeiro, E., Pharmacia & Drogaria, Macau
Cordeiro, F. A., clerk, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore
Cordeiro, H. S., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Barik, Singapore Cordeiro, J. M., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore Cordeiro, L., clerk, W. Shewan & Co., Hongkong
Cordeiro, L. J., tenente d'artilleria, Macau
Cordeiro, L. M., bookkeeper, Rodyk and Davidson, Singapore
Cordeiro, P. A., clerk, Palmer & Turner, Hongkong
Cordeiro, T. A., engineer, Heuser Eberins & Co., Hongkong
Cordes, H., manager, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Peking
Cordonnier, conductear, Travaux Publics, Tonkin
Cornaby, H. A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Corneck, A. C. A. chief officer, steamer "Esang," China coast
Corneck, W. H., captain, tug "Siu Fuyun," Shanghai Tug & Lighter Co., Shanghai.
Cornells, Ed., merchant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Cornelius, T. S., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Corner, G. R., assistant, Smith, Baker & Co., Ld., Tamsui
Cornes, A. J., merchant, Cornes & Co., and acting consul for Greece, Yokohama
Cornillon, sous directeur de la Cochin-chine Douanes et Régies, Saigon
Cornish, N. E., act. superint., Engineering & Steel Works, Kiangnan Arsenal, Shang Cornu, receveur, Postes et Télégraphes, Haiphong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Cornwell, J., inspector of ways and works, Ipoh, Perak Coroado, A. M., capellão, Hospital de S. Raphael, Macao
Corp, Francis, cork manufacturer, Corp, Ferriol, & Co., Yokohama Corradini, C., guardimarina, R. Nave Calabria," China
Corre, J. A., French missionary, Nagasaki
1579
Correa, Antonio, general manager, Compañia General de Tabacos de Filipinas, Manila Correa, Chas., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Yokohama Corsane, W. H., Hankow Ice Works, Hankow
Corset, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Corte-Real, A. S., escrivão, Repartiçao Judicial, Macau
Corte-Real, D. M. F., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Corveth, C. C., clerk, Compagnie des Messageries Maritimes, Hongkong
Cosgrave, W. N., executive engineer, Public Works, Lower Perak, Perak Cossanteli, J., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Cie., Hankow
Cosser, A. W., assistant, Dowell & Co., Kobe
Costa, A. F., da, clerk, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Costa, A. G. da, clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai
Costa, A. M., chief telegraphist, Harbour Office, Hongkong
Costa, C. A., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld., Singapore Costa, F. C. da, clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Costa, F. G. da, clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Costa, F. G. Meira da, clerk, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Costa, F. M. A., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Hongkong
Costa, F. M., da, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Costa, F. S. G. da, compositor, Shanghai Mercury Ld., Shanghai
Costa, G. da, sub-inspector, Policia Municipal, Macau
Costa, G. G. da, clerk, Sulzer, Rudolph & Co., Shanghai
Costa, G. H. M. da, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Kobe Costa, H. F. da, clerk, Paul & Co., Kobe
Costa, J., assistant, Pharmacic Central de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Costa, J. A., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai.
Costa, J. C. de, clerk, Mendelson and Frank, Yokohama
Costa, J. F. da, clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai
Costa, J. G., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai
Costa, J. G., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Costa, J. H., clerk, Phoenix Assurance Co., Shanghai
Costa, J. P. da, clerk, Japan Import & Export Commission Co., Yokohama
Costa, I. P. da, Jr., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Yokohama Costa, L. G., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai
Costa, R. A. da, clerk, Hongkong, Canton and Macao Steamboat Co., Hongkong Costa, R. da, clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Costa, R. C., clerk, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Costa, T. Meira da, clerk, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Coste, H. J., Roman Catholic missionary, Tai-ping, Lungehow Costenoble, H., Roman Catholic missionary, Lungchow
Cotta, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Cotter, A., agent, Reuter's News Agency, Peking
Cotterinan, C. M., director-general of Posts, Manila
Cottez, administrateur, Résidence de France, Phu Yen, Annam
Cottin, A., R. C. missionary, Chuchow
Cottinghain, F. Hill, assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Cotton, J. T., inspector of depots and slaughter houses, Hongkong
Cotton, V. W. S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Couderc, M., precepteur, Résidence, Hatinh, Annam
Couget, F., councillor, French Legation, Tokyo
Coulcher, A., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Coullie, K. R., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Manila
Coulson, J. B., director, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokobama
Counsel, J. M., assistant, Nova Scotia Sugar Estate, Perak
Coupard, V., Pharmacie Parisienne, Haiphong
Couper, A., Lloyd's Register of British and Foreign Shipping, Singapore
Courandy, L., résident de France, Thai Nguyen, Tonkin
Course, A., traffic superintendent, The Electric Traction Co. of Hongkong, Hongkong
Coursier, M., general manager, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1580
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Courtney, D. G., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Courtney, F. McD., sub-accountant, International Bank, Hongkong Courtney, G. N., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Yokohama
Courtney, H. A., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Singapom Courtney, M., captain, steamer "Choysang" China coast
Courtois, Rev. F., curator, Zikawei Museum, Shanghai
Courtois, T. A., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Courtot, caissier, Graf Jacque & Cie, Saigon
Courty, M., receveur, Administration des Douanes, Hanoi
Cousin, J., Roman Catholic bishop, Nagasaki
Cousins, G. A. T., electrical fitter, H.M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Cousins, R. H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Cousland, A. S. D., manager, Alex. Ross & Co., Hongkong
Coutillac, chef-des-ateliers, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong
Couto, P. V., jun., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Couto, U. F. A., assistant, Post Office, Macao
Coutret, C., professor, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki Coutts, E., assistant, Bennett, Daniel & Co., Yokohama
Coutts, G. D., bill and bullion broker, Shanghai
Couturiau R., assistant, Compagnie de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Heiga Couvreur, N. J., procurator, Missions Etrangères, Singapore
Couy, commandt. des Torpilleurs, Mers de Chine, Saigon
Covi, R., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Covil, R. A., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Covil, T. H., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Covington, J. G., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Mukden
Coverley, W. G., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Cebu
Cow, Alfred B., surgeon, H. B. M. steamer "Widgeon," China Cowan, B., assistant, W. Mansfield & Co., Ld., Singapore Cowan, E. J., clerk, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Yokohama
Cowan, W., acting protector of Chinese, Selangor
Cowasjee, E., manager, Patel & Co., Canton
Cowburn, A., assistant-manager, Caledonia Sugar Estate, Penang Cowdy, H. L., barrister-at-law, Logan & Ross, Penang
Cowell, E. A., assistant, William Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Cowen, J. L., superintendent, Methodist Publishing House, Shanghai
Cowen, W. C. B., editor and general manager, "China Times," Tientsin Cowen, W. F., chief engineer, steamer "Tean," Hongkong-Manila
Cowie, W. C., managing-director, British North Borneo Co., B. N. Borneo Cowper, P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Cox, A. D., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Cox, A. G., chief assistant engineer, Imperial Railways of North China, Tientsin Cox, A. H., traffic superintendent, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Cox, A. J., chief, Division of Weights & Measures, Manila
Cox, D., assistant, Strome & Co., Kobe
Cox, Douglas, assistant, Strome & Co., Kobe
Cox, E. P., assistant, Edgar Allen & Co., Tokyo
Cox, F. B. S., collector, Land Revenue dept., Negri Sembilan
Cox, J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Chefoo
Cox, R., assistant, C. F. Heinlein, Yokohama
Cox, R. H., health officer, Shanghai
Cox, W. S., assistant, Darby & Co., Sandakan, British North Borneo
Cox, W. W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Coxon, M. S., inspector of Mines, Gopong & Kampar, Perak
Coye, A., assistant, Pila & Co., Yokohama
Coyle, J., chief officer, steamer "Hopsang," China Coast
Coyne, A. J., assistant, Samuel Samuel & Co., Yokohama
Coysh, G. W., sanitary inspector, Hongkong
Crabb Watt, L. J., assistant, Donaldson & Burkinshaw, Singapore
Craddock, A. K., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Craddock, D. W., general traffic agent, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Hongkong
Craddock, H. E., assistant, King Edward Hotel, Hongkong
Cradock, F. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Craggs, A. B., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Amoy
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Crago, J. M., dental surgeon, Doctor Joseph W. Noble, Singapore and Hongkong Craig, A. H., tirewaiter, Maritime Customs. Kongmoon Craig, Austin, teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila Craig, E. T., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Tengyueh Craig, G. D., assistant, Craig, Marshall & Co., Shanghai Craig, H. J., managing director, Craig & Co., Shanghai Craig, P. L., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Canton
Craig, R. H. A., dep. superintendent, Mercantile Marine Office, Hongkong Craig, W., superintendent, Savings Bank, Singapore
Craig, W. P., in charge, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Iloilo
Craigie, J., manager, Seremban Engineering Co., Negri Sembilan Craik, J., secretary, Hongkong Club, Hongkong
Crake, W. A., assistant Government Marine Surveyor, Hongkong Crame, José de, captain, Police Precinct, 6, Manila Cramer, A., assistant, Otto, Reimers & Co., Kobe
Cramer, P., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Crampton, Louis W., colonel, chief surgeon, Division Staff, Manila Crane, A., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong Crane, A. E., assistant, Bowden Brothers & Co., Kobe
Crane, A. G., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Crane, C. S., secretary, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Crane, F. W., licensed auctioneer, Crane & Co., Singapore
Crane, J. E., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Kobe
Crane, J. G., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Yokohama
Crane, R. G., assistant, E. H. Hunter & Co., Kobe
Crane, W. T., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Kobe Crane-Williams, G. H., assistant, Thos. Kershaw, Kobe
Crank, Goo., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai Crasemann, O., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Craven, Francis W., sub-lieut., Torpedo-boat destroyer, "Handy", Hongkong Craven, J. H., tea merchant, Shanghai and Hankow
Crawford, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ld., Hongkong Crawford, A. A., captain, "Too-Nan," China coast
Crawford, A. C., engineer, Taku Tug and Lighter Co., Taku
Crawford, C. R., assistant-accountant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Crawford, D. W., managing director, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Crawford, F. M. L., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Crawford, Geo, W., manager, The Pharmacy, Singapore
Crawford, J. R., managing-director, Ipoli Foundry Co., Perak
Crawford, R. A., surveyor, Survey department, Selangor
1581
Crawford, R. D., capt., adjutant, H'kong-S'pore Battalion, R.G.A., Kowloon, Hongkong Crawford, W. J., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Crean, H. S, assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Calmupit, Manila
Creasy, E. C., cadet, Police department, Shanghai
Creery, A., lieutenant, Hongkong-Singapore Battalion, R.G.A., Kowloon, Hongkong Creese, J., senior writer, Naval Civil Establishment, Hongkong
Cremin, T, chief officer, Steamer "Mausang" China coast
Crenault, J., partner, Bazar Saigonnais, Saigon
Crepy, G., accountant, Société des Etains de Kinta, Perak
Cresson, M., water superintendent, Tanjong Pagar Dock, Singapore
Crevatin, E., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Kobe
Crichton, J., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai
Crighton, A. C., merchant, Alex. Ross & Co., Shanghai
Crighton, P., assistant, Noel, Murray & Co., Shanghai
Crispin, C., employé, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Criswick, B. C., assistant, Kennedy & Co., Penang
Critchley, P. B., foreman mechanic, Electricity Department, Shanghai Crowell, C. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
Crockatt, J. L.. accountant, Chartered Bank of I. A. and China, Kobe
Crocker, II. B., resident, of Sarawak Proper, Sarawak
Crockford, T. S., assistant, Howarth, Erskine Ld., Singapore
Crofton, R. H., chief clerk, Colonial Secretariat, Hongkong
Crofts, A. J., chief draughtsman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Crofts, G., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1582
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Croix, F. A. de St., assistant, Alfred Dent & Co., Shanghai Crokam, W. G., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama Crombie, A. D., assistant, Lanadron Rubber Estates Ld., Johore Crombie, H., manager, Phoenix Assurance Co., Shanghai Cromer, R. P., chief clerk, Police department, Manila Cromwell, Ellis, acting collector of internal revenue, Manila Crone, F. L., chief clerk, Education department, Manila Cronholm, Folke, secretary, Swedish Legation, Tokyo Cronin, Jeremiah, Constable, British Consulate, Kewkiang Crook, A. H., senior assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong Crosbie, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Relining Co., Hongkong Crosby, J., Britishi vice consul, Bangkok
Cross, A. W., acting commissioner, I. M. Customs, Hoihow
Cross, Ambrose, B., advocate and solicitor, Negri Sembilan
Cross, G. E., in charge, Revenue Launch "Kwantin," Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong. Cross, P., assistant, Bilger & Galluser, Tientsin
Crosse, C. N., barrister-at-law, Crosse & Yamashita, Kobe, Yokohama
Crossfield, A. S., judge, Court of First Instance, Manila
Crossley, F. H., merchant, Bisset & Co., Shanghai
Crosthwaite, P. A., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Crotte, capitaine, Infanterie coloniale, Saigon
Crouch, C. H. A.. assistant paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Flora", China and Japan
Croucher, B., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong,
Croucher, F. B., colonial surgeon, registrar of births and deaths, Penang
Croucher, T. H., assistant, Geddes & Co., Hankow
Crowe, E. F., commercial attaché, British Embassy, Tokyo
Crowther, C., merchant, C. Crowther & Co., Kobe'
Crubellier, L., percepteur, Hong Yen, Tonkin
Crudge, F., inspector, Police department, Weihaiwei
Crull, Dr., vice-consul for Germany, Shanghai
Cruickshank, G. S., engineer, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong Cruickshank, H. J., captain, 78, Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Cruickshank, J., assistant, Geo. Falconer & Co., Hongkong
Crum, W. M., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Crummey, H. G., inspector in charge, Police, Labuan
Crusemann, W., superintendent, Perhentian Tinggi Estate, Negri Sembilan Crusen, Dr., oberrichter, Justizverwaltung, Kiaochau
Cruttenden, F. P., assistant, South British Fire & Marine Insurance Co., Singapore Cruttwell, C. C., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Cruz, A. M., merchant, Cruz, Basto, & Co., Hongkong
Cruz, B. A., clerk, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Cruz, E. J. D., apothecary, Ipoh, Perak
Cruz, F. da, clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Cruz, F. L., clerk, Giesel & Co., Shangliai
Cruz, F. M. da, clerk, Cruz, Basto & Co., Hongkong
Cruz, F. R. G. da, assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Cruz, H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Cruz, J. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Cruz, J. D., lightkeeper, Penang
Cruz, J. M., clerk, Bradley & Co., Swatow
Cruz, J. M. da, clerk, Cruz, Basto & Co., Hongkong
Cruz, O. A. da, general manager, W. F. Prew & Co., Shanghai
Cruz, R. de, clerk, C. A. Ribeiro & Co., Singapore
Cruz, S. M. da, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Cruz, T., superintendent, Money Order Branch, Post Office, Penang
Cruz, T. M. G. da, silk-inspector, Boyer, Mazet & Guilliée, Yokohama
Cruze, Jas., assistant, Townsend & Co., Chemulpo, Corea
Crymble, N. G., employé, P. O'Brien Twigg, Shanghai
Cubbon, J. H., postal accountant, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Cubeñas, Rev. Fr. A., socius, Spanish Procuration, Hongkong
Cubey, E. B., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ld., Hongkong
Cubitt, L. J., merchant, Scott, Harding & Co., Shanghai
Cuckney, U. J., inspector of Markets, Singapore
Cullen, Charles, W., lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps, Manila
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Cullen, J., inspector of Police, Perak
Calliéret, résident de France, Hong-Yen, Tonkin Culpin, Millais, medical practitioner, Shanghai Culty, T., merchant, Th. Culty & Co., Tientsin
Culver, H. E., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Manila Cumming, Alex., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Yokohama
Cumming, C. E., merchant, Tate and Cumming, Perak
Cummins, F., assistant, Mollison & Co., Yokohama
Cumming, F. A., assistant, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai Cumming, W. M., manager, Alfred Herbert Ld., Yokohama
Cummings, W., superintendent engineer, Straits Ice Co., Singapore Cunha, B. C. da, clerk, Union Insurance Society of Carton, Hongkong Cunha, Ernesto da, lieut., naval attaché, Brazilian Legation, Tokyo Cunha, J. C. da, clerk, Treasury, Hongkong
Cunha, J. de, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Cunha, J. I., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton Cumbac, chef du poste administratif, Djiring, Annam
Cunliffe, P., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Cunningham, C. W., godown keeper, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Cunningham, H., foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Cunningharn, N., assistant paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Cunningham, T., assistant, North China Daily News and Herald, Shanghai Cunnynghame, Stuart, captain commandant, Military. Sarawak
Cunrie, R. C., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Canton Curely, M. J., secretary, French Legation, Peking.
Currie, A. M., assistant, Inniss & Riddle, Shanghai
Currie, A. M., shipbroker, G. M. Currie & Co., Shanghai
Currie, A. S., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Currie, M. D., accountant, International Banking Corporation, Yokohama. Currie, W. M., general manager, Pusing Lama Tin Mines L., Perak Curry, E. G., dental surgeon, Dr. Joseph W. Noble, Singapore
Curry, Geo., local secretary, Hongkong & China Gas Co., Hongkong Curtis, A. W., editor and proprietor "Kobe Herald," Kobe
Curtis, C., storekeeper, Federated Malay States Railway, Perak Curtis, E. S., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Chefoo
Curtis, F. J., commission agent, Curtis Brothers, and Lloyd's agent, Chefoo Curtis, F. J. park keeper, Public Works, Shuanghai
Curtis, G. H., track inspector, Imperial Railway, Kaopangtzu, Tientsin Curtis, H. assistant, British-American Tobacco Co, Chemulpo
Curtis, J. S., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Yokohama
Curwen, W., head master, Yaumati School, Hongkong
Cuscaden, G. P., asst. commissioner of Police, Negri Sembilan
Cuscaden, W. A. inspector general, Police Department, Singapore Custodio, M., contador, Banco Español-Filipino, Iloilo
Cutforth, E., assistant, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Cuthbert, R. V., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore,
Cutting, C. E, manager, Electrical department, Travers, Joseph & Sons, Singapore Cuvillier, L., ingenieur en chef, Coal Mines, Chinnampo, Corea
Dabelstein, Arthur, merchant. H.M. Schultz & Co., Shanghai
Dalil, A., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Dahl, chief engineer, S. S. Tsintau", Coast service
Dahlen, C., assistant, Smith Bell & Co., Iloilo
Dains, G. L., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Daking, J., assistant, Little & Co., Singapore
Dalban, manager, Hotel Selce, Mengtsz
Dally, H. W., assistant, Wm. Little & Co., Shanghai
Daleggio, E., assistant, A. R., Marty, Haiphong
Dalgarno, W. A., assistant, postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Chinkiang
Dalgety, G. M., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Dalgliesh, R. McEwen, assistant, Wm. Little & Co., Shanghai
Daliot, médecin chef, Hôpital d'Haiphong, Haiphong
Dallas, Arthur, architect, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
Dallas, F. H., treasurer and manager, Service Bank, Sarawak
Dallas, Frederick, managing director, Dallas Horse Repository Co., Shanghai.
Γ
1583
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1584
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Dallas, R., merchant, Dallas & Co., Shanghai
Dallas, Richard, merchant, Dallas & Co., Tientsin
Dalldorff, H., assistant, Wilhelm Kleeschulte, Tientsin
Dalmeyen, N. J., assistant superintendent, Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Singapore Dalrymple, Norman, forwarding and general agent, Dalrymple & Co., Selangor
Dalton, G. H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Dalton, J., tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Daly, C. C. de Burgh, medical officer, Railways, Yingkow, Tientsin
Daly, F. P., assistant, A. A. Vantine & Co., Yokohama
Dalziel, D. A., sub-agent, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Selangor Dalziel, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong
Damazio, J. S., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Damiao, P., profesor, Seminario de S. José, Macau
Damkohler, O., chief officer, steamer "Choising", Hongkong-Borneo
Dammers, G. J., asst. manager, Gaddins & Co., Singapore
Dampier-Child, Thomas H. F., eng.-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth", China
Danais, adjoint a l'agent principal, Compagnie Française des Chemins de Fer, Mengtsz Danby, C. G., assistant, Win. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Danby, J. D., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Dando, J. W., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore Dandolo, M., directeur particulier, L'Union, Haiphong
Dane, R., colonial surgeon, senior medical officer, Singapore Danenberg, A. C., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Danenberg, C., clerk, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Danenberg, F, clerk, Reiss & Co., Canton
Danenberg, F. E, clerk, Hugo Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Danenberg, F. P., manager, The Royal Aerated Waters Manufactory Co., Hongkong
Danenberg, M. J., clerk, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Danforth, A. W., consulting and mill engineer, Shanghai
Dangu, H., assistant, Meurer Fils & Co., Cantón
Daniel, F. R., broker, Bennett, Daniel & Co., Yokohama
Daniel, T. C., assistant, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Daniels, G., supt. engineer, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai
Daniels, W. C., engineer, von During, Wibel & Co., Kiaochau Daniels, W. P., mechanical and electrical engineer, Tientsin Danielsen, F., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong Danielsen, J., assistant, F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong Danjou, A., vice-consul, chancelier, Consulat de France, Shanghai Dannenberg, H., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Ld. Mukden Dante Capanelli, Ph. Dr., Secretary, Bohler Bros. & Co., Tokyo Darbishire, C. W., Eastern manager, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore Darby, A. J., land surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong Darby, F. W., manager, New Gopeng Ed., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Darby, W. G., general manager, China Borneo Co., Hongkong Dare, A. H, bill broker, Bennett, Daniel & Co., Yokohama
Dare, G. F., engineer, Pengkalen Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Darey, T., inspector of Police, Perak
Darie, C. J. F., bishop, Singapore
Darke, A. G., assistant, Singapore and Johore Rubber Co., Johore Darke, F H., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Darke, R. W. B., surveyor, Survey department, Selangor
Darke, W. A., assistant, Borneo Co., Singapore
Darles, résident de France, Tuyen-Quang, Tonkin
Darley, A. La T. surgeon, Royal Naval Hospital, Hongkong
Darling, J. A., assistant, Samuel Samuel & Co., Ld., Yokohania
Darlington, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Darnell, H. B., general agent, International Sleeping Car & Express Trains Co., Tokyo Darrah, John M., postal agent, United States Post Office, Shanghai
Darrock, J., translator, Peking University, Peking
D'Ars, G. Des Garets, assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Canton Dartiguenave, juge président, Tribunal de Pnompenh, Cochin-chine Darton, T. H., assistant, Butterfiell & Swire, Yokohama
Dashwood, A. P., engineer, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Dastur, R. A., general broker, Hongkong
I
Dason, W., pilot, Singapore
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Datema, G. P., assistant, Meerkamp & Co., Manila
Dattan, Arl., merchant, Kunst & Albers and consul for Germany, Vladivostock Daunt, H. E., general manager for Japan, Vacuum Oil Co., Yokohama
Dauphin, assistant, Denis Frères, Haiphong
1585
Dauphinot, G., attaché commercial, Direction de l'Agriculture et du Commerce, Hanoi
Daurelle, F., négociant, Hanoi
Daurelle, P., assistant, F. Daurelle, Hanoi
Daurelle, R., assistant, F. Daurelle, Hanoi
Danter, E., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Canton
Dauverchain, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Davey, A. E., boarding officer, Harbour Office, Hongkong David, A., dresser, Belat Tin Mining Co., Pahang David, A. J., merchant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong David, Archibald, assistant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong David, D. M., merchant, David & Co., Shanghai and Chinkiang David, Evelyn, merchant, S. J. David & Co., Shanghai
David, F. B., assistant, E. Moyer & Co., Singapore David, F. D., draftsman, Survey department, Pahang
David, John, clerk, Ambrose B. Cross, Seremban, Negri Sembilan David, J. A., merchant, J. A. David & Co., Shanghai David, P. A. F., assistant official assignee, Penang David, R., assistant, King Edward Hotel, Hongkong David, S., clerk, Federated Malay States Hotel, Selangor David, S., merchant, J. A. David & Co., Shanghai
David, S. S., commander, receiving hulk" Corea," Shanghai
Davidge, C. W., master, Higher Commercial School, Kobe
Davidson, A., engineer, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Davidson, C. J., assistant Japanese secy,, British Embassy, Tokyo
Davidson, E., solicitor, Hastings & Hastings, Hongkong
Davidson, F. A. J., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Davidson, F., Naval Establishment, Weihaiwei
Davidson, H., clerk, Hongkong Ice Co., Hongkong
Davidson, H. B., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Hongkong
Davidson, H. W., secretary in charge, Customs, Seoul
Davidson, J., coppersmith, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Davidson, J. M., asst. architect and surveyor, H.B.M. Office of Works, Shanghai
Davidson, N. K., manager, Soda Water Factory, A. S. Watson & Co.. Hongkong Davidson, Peter, accountant, National Bank of China, Hongkong
Davidson, T., manager, Dalrymple & Co., Selangor
Davidson, T. A., assistant, The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Singapore
Davidson, W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai
Davidson, W. S., secretary, The Shanghai Building and Investinent Co., Shanghai
Davies, A. F., manager, Hongkong Hotel, Hongkong
Davies, A, F., 2nd assistant superintendent of Immigrants, Penang
Davies, A. K. wharfinger, Butterfield & Swire, Canton
Davies, C. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Davies, C. S. C., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Davies, Donald M., lieut., H. B. M. S. " Merlin," China and Japan
Davies, D. P., licensed surveyor, Perak
Davies, D. S., assistant, Herbert Hutchison & Co., Shanghai
Davies, G. W., custodian of Town Hall, Municipal Council, Shanghai
Davies, J., wharfinger, French Bund, China Nav. Co., Shanghai
Davies, J. O., assistant accountant, Tajong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Davies, R., employé, Dunning & Co., Hanoi
Davies, R. D., sub-editor, "Singapore Free Press," Singapore
Davies, W., manager, A. S. Watson & Co., Amoy
Davies, W. J., captain, steamer "Taisang," China coast
Davies, W. Rees, attorney-general, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Davis, C. G., assistant, Hatch, Carter & Co., Tientsin
Davis, C. H., master, Free School, Penang
Davis, C. N., second assistant, Health Officer, Shanghai
Davis, C. Noel, asst. health officer, Health department, Shanghai
Davis, E. C., managing director, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Yokohama & Tokyo
"NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1580
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Davis, G. H., assistant, Kelly Walsh, Yokohama Davis, H. C., clerk, A. R. Burkill & Sons, Shanghai Davis, J. C., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Kent," China and Japan Davis, J. L., merchant, Lack & Davis, Hongkong
Davis, J. N., commander, Naval Attache, Tokyo
Davis, J. V. C., assistant, A. R. Burkill & Sons, Shanghai Davis, Oscar F., lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps, Manila
Davis. R., assistant, Perrin, Cooper & Co., Tientsin
Davis, R. W., printing manager, "North China Daily News & Herald," Shanghai
Davis, W. A. seaty, and general manager, Imperial Hotel, Tientsin
Davis, W. N. T., manager, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld., Shanghai
Davis, W. W., B.A., professor of Physics, Peking University, Peking
Davison, W., foreman shipwright, H'kong, and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon and H'kong. Davoine, administrateur de Centre, Cochin-chine
Davy, S. Bayes, marine and cargo surveyor, Shanghai
Dawbarn, O., S., manager, The Lahat Mines, Ld., Perak
Dawe, Charles H., surgeon, H. B. M. gunboat "Britomart," China Station
Dawe, J. J., merchant, Locksmith & Co., Shanghai
Dawes, S. H., assistant, Imp. Har. Timber Concession, Oriental Timber Corpn., Vladivostock Dawson, A. L., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Dawson, C. P., chief tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Dawson, E. W., revenue officer, Import and Export Office, Hongkong
Dawson, J. A., assistant, The Shanghai Dork anil Engineering Co., Ld., Shanghai
Dawson, J. F., refrig. engineer, steamer "Changsha," China coast
Dawson, J. L., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Dawson, J. M., chief engineer, steamer "Loksang," China const
Dawson, L., captain, "Taiyuan," China coast
Day, Eli, house surgeon, St. Luke's Hospital, Shanghai
Day, F. G., editor and superintendent, Government Printing Office, Sarawak
Day, F. O., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ltd., Hongkong Day, H. D., manager, Rambutan Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Day, H. R. A., resident of Sarawak proper, Sarawak
Day, M. S, D., assistant, Pengkalen, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
De Becker, J. E., solicitor and conveyancer, Yokohama
De Courcy, J. E. B,, asst. accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama De Haney, C. D., wardmaster, Infectious Diseases Hospitals, Hongkong
De Macar, assistant, Gysin Frères, Kobe
Deacon, E. E., sub-accountant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Deacon, Frank B., solicitor, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong
Deala, S., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila
Dealy, T. K., head master, Queen's College, Hongkong
Dean, H. Y., importer and commission agent, Manila
Dean, W. J., assistant sanitary inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Dean, W. W., assistant, Batu Kawan Rubber and Cocoanut Plantation Co., Penang
Deane, A. Sharp, acting commissioner, I. M. Customs and postmaster, Shasi
Dearn, F., meter-inspector, Electricity department, Shanghai
Debeaux, P., Compagnie Générale du Tonkin, Hanoi
Debeaux, R., directeur, Compagnie Générale du Tonkin, Hanoi
Decarti, F. Schmidt, manager, Asiatische Bank, Kiaochau
Deck, H. C., clerk, Nabholz & Co., Yokohama
Deeks, S. J., district-manager, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Swatow-Amoy
Defontaine, lieutenant, French Legation, Peking
Dehn, K., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Yokohama
Dehonek, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Delove, commandant chief de Bataillon, Cae-Bang, Tonkin
Débus, E., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Deiber, A., assistant, Meisei Gakka, Osaka
Deichen, É. C. A., examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton
Deichman, C. F., consul for United States of America, Nagasaki
Deighton, J., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shangha
Deitz, G., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Dejeanne, chancelier gréffier, Binh Thuan, Annam Dejiovanni, receveur des Douanes, Phauri, Annam Delagnes, A., professor, Saigon Seminary, Saigon
t
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Delaigue, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Delano, H. C., chief, Division of Port Works, Bureau of Navigation, Manila Delannoy, foreman-plumber, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Delastre, R. assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Delaville, G., surveillant, Filature de Coton, Hanoi
Delay, James Arthur, solicitor, Sisson & Delay, Singapore
Delblanco, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Delbourgo, I., merchant, J. Delbourgo, Shanghai
Delbourgo, J., secretary and general manager, China Printing Co., Shanghai
Delden, C. J. H. von, accountant, Netherlands India Commercial Bank, Hongkong Delestrie, F., avocat-général, Parquet Général, Hanoi
Delfino, A., employé, Felix Ullmann, Manila
Delgado, A., boarding officer, Post Office, Hongkong
Delignon, A., provicaire général, Mission de Cochin-Chine, Saigon
Dell, D. H., assistant, Taikoo Deokyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Dellieux, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Dello, O., assistant, Telge & Schroeter, Tientsin
Delorme, conseiller, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
Delost, F. A., assistant, Graf Jacque & Cie., Saigon
Deloustal, E., géomètre, Hanoi
Deloustal, J., avocat défenseur, Hanoi
Deloustal, R., interprète, J. Deloustal, Hanoi
Delpech, G. Taupin et Cie, Hanoi
Demange, négociant, Boulevard Henri d'Orleans, Hanoi
Demaret, L., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Demay, J., caissier, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Demets, M., assistant, Banque Sino-Belge, Shanghai
Demolle, G., assistant, Denis Frères, Haiphong
Dempster, W., assistant, Pearson, Mackie & Dempster, Yokohama
Dempster, W. M., C.A., Pearson, Mackie & Dempster, Yokohama
Denain, A., trésorieur en chef, Service du Contrôle du Chemins de Fer, Mengtze
Denain, M., engénieur en chef, Chemins de Fer, Mongtseu, Hanoi
Denbigh, G. G., merchant, Denbigh & Co., Hakodate
Denby, S. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz
Denegri, M., silk merchant, Shanghai
Denguine, G., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Denham, J. E., architect, Denhum & Rose, Shanghai
Denier, Dr. A., bactériologiste, Institut Pasteur, Saigon
Denis, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Denison, A., architect and civil engineer, Denison, Ram & Gibbs, Hongkong
Denisson, M. G., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Denissow, assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Iman, Vladivostock
Denk, F., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Denkhauss, F., steiger, Shantung Bergbau Gess., Kiaochau
Denniston, J., assistant, Borneo Company, Singapore
Denniston, R., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
1587
Denison, Edward C., sub-lieut., H. B. M. torpedo-boat destroyer "Fame," Hongkong Denison, R., engineer, Scott, Harding & Co., Shanghai
Dennay, Julius, assistant, Carl Scriba & Co., Nagasaki
Denning, W., instructor, Higher School, Sendai, Tokyo Dennis, B. R., captain, Army Medical Corps, Singapore Dennys, A., partner, Allen, Dennys & Co., Penang
Dennys, A. J., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Tientsin
Dennys, F. O. B., deputy conservator of Forests, Negri Sembilan
Dennys, F., assistant, McAlister & Co., Engineering department, Singapore
Dennys, H. L., solicitor, Dennys & Bowley, Hongkong
Dennys, H. L., Jr., solicitor, Dennys & Bowley, Hongkong
Dennys, Stanley E., treasurer and district officer, Labuan
Dent, F., government analyst, medical dept., Singapore
Dent, R. V., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Dent, V. E. J., acting deputy Commissioner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Dentici, E., baker, M. Dentici & Co., Yokohama
Dentici, M., baker, M. Deatici & Co., Yokohama
Derbyshire, Charles, teacher, School of Commerce, Manila
NIPPONOPHONE
-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1588
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Derobert, representant, Chargeurs Réunis, Tourane, Annam Deronzier, A., assistant, Racine, Ackernann & Co., Shanghai Derrick, G. A., accountant, Derrick & Co., Singapore Derrick, G. A., director, McAlister & Co., Singapore Derry R., curator, Botanical Gardens, Singapore Desains, M., répresentant, Daydi et Pelle, Hanoi Deschamps, J., clerk, Olivier & Co., Shanghai Descourtier, payeur, Quang-Yen, Tonkin
Desebrock, P., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Penang
Desebroock, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Deseille, chef du trafic et mouvement, Travaux Publics, Annam
Desker, A. S., assistant, Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co., Singapore
Desker, C. N., clerk, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Desker, E. H., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Desmots, M., chef de depot, Société Foncière de L'Indo-Chine, Hanoi
Desormeaux, inspecteur, chef du service, Postes et Télégraphes, Cochin-Chine Despax, attaché, Bureaux du Gouvernement General, Hanoi
Desrumaux, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Dessale, commis. principal, Trésorerie Générale, Hanoi
Dessel, M., assistant, Thos. Kershaw, Kobe
Dessoliers, L. F., directeur general, Societé Française Industrielle, Haiphong Destelan, M. P.. assistant in charge, Maritime Customs, Samshui
Destenay, administrateur, résident, Nghean, Annam
Dosvaux, comptable, Charbonnages de Toukin, Haiphong
Desvaux, L., manager, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Tientsin
Detjens, H., assistant, Thomas & Co., Kobe
Detmers, K., assistant, Radecker & Co., Hongkong
Detouillon, J., comptable, Ch. Boillot & Co., Hanoi
Détric, Georges, directeur de l'Ecole Franco-Chinoise, Consulat de France, Mengtze Dettinger, H., engineer, Rizerie Orient, Cholon
Dettmar, H. F. O., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Deuber, E., assistant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Kobe
Deuter, H., assistant, Shangtung Berbau Gess., Kiaochau
Devals, A., missionary, Catholic Church of the Visitation, Negri Sembilan
Deveney, J., spinning master, Hongkong Cotton Spinning Co., Hongkong Devereux, H. S., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Devéria, J., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Deveson, B., assistant, Abenheim Brothers, Yokohama
Devilbiss, T. M., manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Manila
Deville, administrateur adjoint, résident de France, Ninh Binh, Tonkin, Devineau, M., chef mécanicien, Societé Foncière de L'Indo-Chine, Hanoi Devitt, H., manager, Planters Stores and Agency Co., Selangor Devlin, Charles A., dentist, Shanghai
De Vos, E. R., consul for Belgium, Kobe
Devred, T. E., professer, College of Ryongsan, Seoul
Dew, E. C., grade surveyor, Revenue Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan Dew, G. C., assistant, Craig & Co., Shanghai
Dewall, W. von, assistant, Inspectorate of Chinese Posts, Tientsin Dewar, A. R. J., assistant superintendent of Police, Singapore
Dewar, T., surveyor, Survey department, Pahang
Dewette, A. L. J., managing partner, Dewette & Co., Yokohama
Dewing, C., storekeeper and drill instructor, Police Department, Shanghai
Dewor, J., chief engineer, Colonial Steamer "Sea Mew, Singapore Dezaunay, X., cashier, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hankow
Dezes, H., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Kobe
Dhabbar, H. K., merchant, Canton
Dharamsey, J. M., assistant, Ebrahimbhoy Pabaney, Kobe
Dhoste, docteur, médecin en second, Hôpital Municipal de Cholon
Diana, A., managing partner, A. Diana & Co., Bangkok
Dibb, W. R., Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Dick, J., storekeeper, Dick, Bruhn & Co., Kobe
Dick, J. A., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Dickie, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Dickins, Capt. E. F., director, Bureau of Coast and Geodetic Survey, Manila
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Dickinson, Horace J., marshal, American Consulate, Canton Dickinson, J. M., merchant, William Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Dickman, Joseph T., major, asst. to Inspector Genl., Zamboanga, Philippines Dickman, Major J. T., Inspector Genl's. dept., Mindanao, Manila
Dickson, A. J. C., manager, Denny, Mott & Dickson, Bangkok
Dickson, E. A., acting district officer, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan Dickson, F. K., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore Dickson, J., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Dickson, J. G., assistant, Abenheim Bros., Kobe
Dickson, R., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Dickson, Wm., manager, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong Diedericksen, H., merchant, Dalmann & Co., Singapore
Diedering, proprietor, Astor House Hotel, Mukden
Diega, A., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Diehl, Carl, assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai Diehl, R., assistant, Descours Cabaud et Cie., Saigon
Diehl, Theobald, purchasing agent, Philippine Railway Co., Manila
Diener, C., assistant, F. Strähler & Co., Yokohama
Diercking, A., chief clerk, Public Works department, Shanghai Dierks, chief engineer, S. S. "Strants, Kractke," coast service Dierks, H., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock Diesing, A., manager, A. Diesing & Co.'s Hotel, Nanking Diestel, G., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai Diethelm, W. R., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Singapore Dietmayr, L., architect, Lothar, Marcks & Busch, Hankow Dietrich, E., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Dietrich, G., secretary, Meklong Railway Co., Ld., Bangkok Dietrich, M., merchant, Shanghai
Dietrick, C., Hafenrestaurant, Kiaochau
Dietrich, O., lehrling, Kiaocháu
Diez, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Diggins, W. S., foreman, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Dighan, N., assistant, W., Tallers, Kobe
Diguet, colonel, commandant d'Infanterie Coloniale, Saigon
Dillon, F. H., land bailiff, Public Works department, Hongkong
Dingman, L. H., chief of Fire department, Mauila
Diniz, A., chief clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai
Diniz, A. F., jun., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Shanghai Diniz, A. M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shangha
Diniz, C. M., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Diniz, F., clerk, C. A Ribeiro & Co., Singapore
Diniz, J. M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Dinkelmann, commandant, German Legation, Peking Dinnen, H., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Dinsdale, E., merchant, Yokohama
Dinsdale, F. A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Yokohama
Dinsdale. J. H., assistant, Hunt & Co., Yokohama
Dinsmore, W. H., assistant district officer, Kuala Kubu, Selangor
Dipper, Dr. E., medical officer, Chinese Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Direng, W., assistant, Blackhead & Co., Hongkong
Dishman, A. J., inspector of mines, Ipoh, Perak
Disiere, A., consul for Belgium, Tientsin
Diss, A. C., tailor, Diss Brothers, Hongkong Diss, G. A., tailor, Diss Brothers, Hongkong
Disselduff, J. T., assistant, China & Japan Trading Co., Shanghai Dittmann, G. R. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Canton Divens, W., clerk, Shanghai & Hongkew Wharf Co., Honkgong Dixie, Albert E., lieut., H. B. M. S. Bedford," China Station Dixou, A. W., wharf manager, Holt's Wharf, Kowloon, Hongkong Dixon, Alan, lieut. and comdr, H. B. M. "Snipe," China Station Dixon, B., assistant inspector, Health department, Shanghai Dixon, C. D., clerk, Mackenzie & Co., Shanghai
Dixon, F., assistant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
Dixon, F., manager, Branch Factory, Fraser & Neave, Ld., Penang
1589
"NIPPONOPHONE ". -BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1590
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Dixon, H., superintendent, Money Order Office, Post Office, Hongkong Dixon, J. B., assistant, Garner, Quelch & Co., Shanghai Dixon, P. Sydenham, solicitor, R. A. Harding, Hongkong Dobbie, J. A., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Dobbie, J. T., sub-editor, "Penang Gazette" Press, Ld., Penang
Dobbs, W., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Dobbs, G. E. B., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Singapore
Doberck, A., assistant meteorologist, Observatory, Kowloon, Hongkong
Dobrikow, M., chancelier de la Legation Allemagne, Peking
Dobrjitsky, K.F., asst., Imp. Har. Timber Concession, Oriental Timber Corpn., Vladivostock
Dobson, G. F. C., Anglo-Chinese School, Shanghai
Docquier, A., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Doering, J. G., Piano manufacturer, Yokohama
Dodd, C. H., manager, Ramsey & Co., Hongkong
Dodd, J. V., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Canton
Doddo, W. M., assistant engineer, Penang Sugar Estates Co., Penang
Dodici, E., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Dodman, J. F., manager, Weeks & Co., Shanghai and Hankow
Doerflinger, E. F., clerk, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Doerger, K. H., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Doering, V., section engineer, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Doern, J. S., assistant, Japan Gazette," Yokohama
Dolierty, F. V, teacher, Talisay Division of Cebu, Philippines
Döhn, A., assistant, A. Walte & Co., Tientsin
Doig, D., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co, Singapore
Dolberg, lieut., S. M. S. "Tiger," German Squadron, China Dollar, J. H., The Robert Dollar Co., Shanghai
Dolff, W., assistant, G. Landmann, Tsingtau
Domenech, J. M., assistant, Manuel Earnshaw & Co., Manila
Domicille, inspecteur, Garde Indigene, Phanthiet, Annam
Dominic, brother-director, St. Lewis School, Chefoo
Dominé, capitaine, Infanterie Coloniale, Saigon
Dominic, P., chief clerk, Customs, Sandakan, British North Borneo
Domon, O. F., engineer, Selangor
Don, G. E., examiner, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz
Donald, J., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Kobe
Donald, W. H., representative, "New York Herald," Hongkong
Donaldson, C. E., acting magistrate, Selangor
Donaldson, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Donaldson, J., master, steamer "Lintau," West River
Donaldson, W. A., acting editor, "Peking & Tientsin Times," Tientsin. Doncet, F., pro. vicar, Church of St. Joseph, Seoul
Donjacour, comptable du fond, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong
Donjoux, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Donnart, foreman plumber, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai
Donne, D. J., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong
Donnediew, directeur, Ecole Normale de Giadinh
Donnell, C. J., pro. accountant, International Banking Corpn., Manila Donnelly, A. R., merchant, A. Ehlers & Co., Ningpo
Donnelly, D. E., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Donnelly, Edward T., Capt. aide to Major-General Commanding, Manila Donnelly, T., lieutenant, Royal Artillery, Singapore
Donovan, J. P., acting postal commissioner, Chinese Post Office, Tsinanfu Dooly, John S., managing director and secretary, Dunning & Co., Shanghai Doong, P. A. P., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
Dopfeld, H., receveur principal, French Post Office, Shanghai
Dorabjee, D., merchant, Dorabjee & Son, Hongkong
Dorabji, A., storekeeper, R. V. Solina & Co., Hankow
Doral, A.B.C., inspector of markets, Municipality, Penang
Dorey, H. V., assistant, H. Blow & Co., Tientsin]
Dorey, S. H., clerk, Taku Tug & Lighter Co., Taku
Dorow, E., section engineer, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Dorrity, G. O., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Dorsey, W. Roderick, vice and deputy consul-genl. U.S. Consulate, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Dorward, D., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Dossen, J. D., assistant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Bangkok Dossett, J. W., assistant, Kelly & Walsh, Singapore
Dostal, F., assistant, Buchheister & Co., Shanghai
Doucy, F., engineer, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan Dougal, R. S., assistant, Andrews, von Fischerz & George, Shanghai Dougherty, H. B., secretary, The Grand Hotel, Yokohama
Doughton, C. W., chargeman H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Doughty, H., engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Hongkong Douglas, Cosmo A. O., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station Douglas, D., field manager, Caledonia Estate, Penang
Douglas, David W. S., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station
Douglas, Henry P., lieut., and comdr., H. B. M. S. "Waterwitch," China Station
Douglas, J. B., resident manager, Anglo-Malay Rubber Co., Negri Sembilan
Douglas, J. C. E., solicitor, Shanghai
Douglas, J. P., engineer, Green Island Cement Co, Ld., Hongkong
Douglas, Capt. J. T., marine surveyor, Goddard & Douglas, Hongkong Douglas-Jones, P., assistant, Geddes & Co., Hankow
Douglas, K., assistant, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Douglas, R. K., assistant, Wilson & Co., Tientsin
Douglas, W. W., deputy commissioner of Police, Perak
Douillet, E., assistant, Charrière & Co., Haiphong
Dourille, E., silk inspector, P. Dourille, Yokohama Dourille, P., silk merchant, Yokohama'
Dousmanis, N., merchant, Shanghai
Douspis, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Dovale, Arthur, cartographer, Bureau of Coast and Geodetic Survey, Manila Dove, J. A., chargeman H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Dovemühle, J., assistant, Behm, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Dow, J. C., nautical expert, Bureau of Coast and Geodetic Survey, Manila Dowbiggin, H. B. L., asst. accountant, Mercantile Bank, Hongkong
Dowdall, L. P. de C., assistant, W. M Dowdall, Shanghai
Dowdall, W. M., architect, Shanghai
Dower, J. A., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Kobe Dowler, R. A., merchant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton Dowley, W. A., general manager, Vacuum Oil Co., Hongkong Dowling, J. C., inspector of police, Tampin, Negri Sembilan Down, St. V. B., assistant, Borneo Company, Singapore
Downing, T. C., acting agent, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Saigon Doye, L., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Drake, E. O., British-American Tobacco Co., Mukden
Drakeford, F. J., manager, Hamburg Institute and Sailors' Home, Shanghai
Drakeford, S. F., secretary, Dallas Horse Repository Co., Shanghai
Drakeford, T. G., assistant, Bradley & Co., Shanghai
Dransfield, A., employe, Taikoo Sugar Retining Co., Hongkong
Draper, W. B. Y., architect, Williams, Draper & Steadman, Singapore, Perak Drenckhahn, H., elec, engineer, Siemens & Schuckart, Osaka
Dresbach, Groswin, assistant, Schmidt & Ziegler, Manila
Dresser, C., assistant, China & Japan Trading Co., Kobe Drew, A. A., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Drew, Alfred, H., director, Paterson, Simons & Co., Penang
Drew, J. S., assistant engineer, Public Works, Penang
Drewell, A., broker and commission agent, A. Drewell & Co., Kobe
Drexel, C. F., pro. accountant, International Banking Corporation, Manila
Dreyer, A., assistant, A. Oestmann & Co., Yokohama
Dreyfus, F., general-agent, Cinematograph Pathé, Singapore
Dreyfus, Jules, assistant, J. Ullmann & Co., Shanghai
Dreyfus, Jules, assistant, Levy Hermanos, Manila
Dreyfus, Leon, manager, La Estrella del Norte, Manila
Dreyfuss, A., assistant, A. R. Marty, Hongkong
Dreyfuss, E., assistant, J. Ullmann & Co., Tientsin Dreysse, R., silk-inspector, Olivier & Co., Shanghai
Dricks, E., magasinien, Société des Cinents Portland Artificiels, Haiphong Driesen, W., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
1591
" NIPPONOPHONE "--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1592
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Drink, Gilbert N., acting director, Bureau of Education, Manila Drion, F., consul for Belgium, Hankow
Drollett, G. W., agent, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Shanghai Drouet, comptable, Compagnie Général du Tonkin, Hanoi
Drought, Arthur E., eng. lieut., H. B. M. torpedo-boat destroyer "Whiting," Hongkong Drouhet, M., maire de ville de Cholon, Cochin-chine
Drubble, H. M., assistant, Lanadron Rubber Estates, Ld., Johore
Drude, R., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Ld., Hongkong Drude, W., assistant, W. R. Loxley & Co., Hongkong
Drummond, C., assistant-manager, Straits Sugar Co., Gedong, Penang Drummond, D., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Drummond, J. E., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Yokohama
Drummond, J. F., assistant, Hutchison & Co., Yokohama
Drummond, J. I. M., acting dep. commissioner, Customs, Canton
Drummond, P., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Canton
Drummond, W. V., barrister-at-law, Drummond, White-Cooper & Phillips, Shanghai Dryden, James L., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila
Drysdale, J. H., Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Dryson, A. B., assistant, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong Dsenis, P. S., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Dubber, W. F., assistant, Lothar, Marcks & Busch, Hankow
Dubois, sub-chef de comptabilité, Trésorerie, Hanoi
Dubois, William, chief, Records Div., Bureau of Education, Manila Du Bourg, officier adjoint des Torpilleurs des mers de Chine, Saigon Dubourg, A., assistant, Colomb & Co., Yokohama
Dubuis, chef de Bureaux, Compagnie Générale du Tonkin, Hanoi Ducarnic, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Ducas, chef de la statistique, Douanes et Régies, Annain
Duchamp, D., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz Duchateau, René, assistant, Cie. des Chargeurs Reunis, Saigon Duchattel, F., assistant, Meerkamp & Co., Manila
Duchscher, B., engineer, Hanyang Iron and Steel Works, Hankow Ducloux, F., pro-vicaire, Missions Etrangères de Paris, Mengtsz Ducoulembier, A., French missionary, Peking
ני
Ducroiset, L., asst., Compagnie de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme Orient, Saigon Dudley, H. P., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Shanghai Dudley, Sheldon F., surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Sandpiper," China Station
Due, L., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Duelke, chief officer, S.S. "Hoangho," Coast Service
Duering, H. von, von Duering, Wibel & Co., Shanghai
Dufaure de la Prade, G., vice cousul for France, Seoul
Duff, C. M., merchant, Yokohama
Duff, H. D., merchant, Shanghai
Durf, J. L., merchant, J. L. Duff & Co., Kewkiang
Duff, J. S., merchant, Shanghai
Duff, John F., merchant, Kobe
Duffner, C., chief officer, steamer "Locksun," China coast
Dufrenil, Paul, administrateur en chef, Administration Supérieure, Kouangtcheouwan Du Haut-Cilly, G., assistant, Jules Berthet, Saigon
Duhoux, sous directeur de Douanes et Régies, Annam
Duke, Alan C. H., lieut, H. B. M. S. "Merlin," China Station
Duke, V. G., 2nd lieutenant, 78 Company, R. G. A., Singapore Dukes, Dr. O. A., teacher of English, Kobe
Dulberg, F. W. E., clerk, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Dulling, H. H., sub-manager, Dodwell & Co., Foochow
Dumas, comptabilité, Societé de Construction de Chemins de fer Indo-Chinois, Mengte Dumas, J. A., supérieur, Séminaire de Saigon, Saigon
Dumas, L. Elzingre, assistant, Barretto & Co., Manila
Dumas, Raoul, médecin-chef, Hôpital Colonial et Militaire, Saigon
Dumetier, E., assistant, L. Wannieck, Peking
Dumond, P., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Dumont, chef de Comptabilité, Travaux Publics, Annam
Dumortier, E., Roman Catholic missionary, Chusan
Duncan, A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Duncan, A. D., assistant, Prye Rubber and Coconut Plantations, Penang Duncan, A. R., Samuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Duncan, A. T., assistant, Watkins, Ld., Hongkong
Duncan, D., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Penang
1593
Duncan, G., foreman plumber, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Duncan, G. W., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Kuala Lumpur, Selangor
Duncan, Geo, L., manager, McEwen, Frickel & Co., Hongkong
Duncan, J. F., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, & China, Medan
Duncan, R.. assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Duncan, R., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
Duncan, W., examiner, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Duncan, W., manager, Rebana Estates, Straits Sugar Co., Penang
Duncan, W. A., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Shanghai
Dundas, Captain, C., R.N., naval attaché, British Embassy, Tokyo
Dundas, F. C., capt., D. A. A. and Q. M. G., Military Staff, Singapore Dunford-Wood, J., assistant, Wreford & Thornton, Perak
Dunipace, H. E., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Dunlop, A. R., judge, Sessions Court and Resident West Coast, B. N. Borneo Dunman, C. C., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Tientsin
Dunn, A., assistant storekeeper, Imperial Railways, Hsinho, Tientsin Dunn, E., prefect apostolic, R. C. Mission, Kuching, Sarawak
Dunn, E. C. A., engineer to Kwau Cheng Tze & Kirin Provincial Govts., Mukden Dunn, J., accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation, Hongkong Dunn, J. C., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co. of Rochester, New York, Yokohama
Dunn, S., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Dunn, S. T., superintendent, Botanical and Forestry Department, Hongkong Dunn, T. E., shipping clerk, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Shanghai Dunn, W., storekeeper, Shanghai
Dunn, W. N., British vice-consul, Bangkok
Dunn, W. S., chief-assistant, Municipality, Penang
Dunn, Y. N., manager, Ching Chong & Co., Chefoo
Dunne, J., inspector, Police department, Penang
Dunne, J. J., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Haukow
Duguesne, L., Roman Catholic missionary, Tientsin
Dunrich, A. E., bookkeeper, Hongkong & China Gas Co., Hongkong
Duns, J. H., engineer, Thos. Kershaw, Kobe
Dunstan, E. J., loco, supt., Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Dunster, E., inspector of police, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan
Duperret, agent, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Duperron, médecin de la Legation, French Legation, Peking
Duplessis, G. manager, E. L. Mondon, Shanghai
Dupont, Ch., gérant dú Vice Consulat de France, Hokow
Dupoug, controleur des mines, Laboratoire, Haiphong
Duppstadt, C. W., teacher, Naga Division of Cebu, Philippines.
Duprat, H., assistant, Oliver & Co., Hankow
Dupre, I. W., professor of Chemistry, Military Engineering College, Shanghai
Dupuis, H., assistant, Dubuffet & Co., Kobe
Dupuy, H., médecin attaché, Consulat de France, Canton
Dupuy, J. C., assistant, Markt & Co., Shanghai
Dupuy, L., fondé de pouvoir, P. Briffaud, Haiphong
Dupuy, M., adjoint, Administrateur Résident de France, Tonkin
Dupuy, M., commerçant, Cambodge
Dupuy-Volny, administrateur adjoint, Quengnain, Annam
Duque, J. M., Roman Catholic missionary, Chian-an, Fokien.
Duran, chef de la comptabilité, Douanes et Régies, Annam
Dureteste, A., avocat-défenseur, 43, Boulevard Carreau, Hanoi
Durham, H. L., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Singapore During, G., clerk, German Consulate, Shanghai
During, H. von, Duering von Wibel & Co., Tientsin Durlach, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai Durler, A., assistant, Schaefer & Co., Singapore
Durr, B. F., supt. of works, Bureau of Printing, Manila Dussaix, ingénieur principal, Chemins dle Fer, Annam Dusseldorp, O., manager, Karel Jan Hora, Tokyo
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1594
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Dusseldorp, O., assistant, Oppenheimer & Co., Yokohama Dussol, E., assistant, Ogliastro, Frères & Co. Saigon
Dutton, S. H., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Hongkong Dutton, W., sub-manager, W. T. Garnett & Co., Shanghai
Duvall, William P., major-general, commanding Philippine Division, Manila
Duvalr, A. professor, Medical College, Tientsin
Duxbury, F., asst., Huttenbach, Liebert & Co., and act. vice-consul for Sweden, Penang Dyer, Harry L., inspector, U. S. Philippine Customs, Cebu
Dyer, J. D., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Dyer, R. M., chief manager, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Dyer, Walter, P., staff surgeon, H. B. M. gunboat "Bramble," China Station
Dyer, W. J. N., auctioneer, Wheelock & Co., Shanghai
Dykes, F. J. B., senior warden, Mines Department, Selangor and Negri Sembilan Dymond, A. G, inspector of police, Hongkong
Dyson, C. V., district judge, District Court, Malacca
Dyson, H. R., supt. godowns, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Amoy Eager, O., clerk, Shewan, Tomnes & Co., Canton
Eaglesome, T. C., assistant, Ker & Co., Cebu
Eagling, E. T., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Earle, Alan F., engineer, The Electric Traction Co., Hongkong
Earley, W. H., locomotive inspector Railways, Kaopangtze, Tientsin Early, Clifford C., lieut., 20th Infantry, topographer, Manila Early, J. C., lieut.-governor, Amburayan, Philippines Earnshaw, D. Jr., engineer, Manuel Earnshaw & Co, Manila Earnshaw, M., engineer, Manuel Earnshaw & Co., Manila, Earnshaw, T., engineer, Manuel Earnshaw & Co., Manila East, E. C. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Bangkok Eastes, S. B., adjunct manager, Singkep Tin Mines, Singapore Eastlake, Dr. D., sub-editor, Advertiser l'ublishing Co., Yokohama Easton, A. J., agent, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Yokohama Easton, L. T., acting agent, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Manila Easton, W., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Legaspi, Manila
Eastwick, P. G., manager, International Banking Corporation, Manila Ebbeke, C., merchant, Ebbeke & Co., Shanghai
Ebbels, J. C., manager, Batu Kawan Rubber and Cocoanut Plantations Co., Penang Ebel, F., assistant engineer, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Eber, F. W., chief clerk, Stump Office, Treasury, Singapore
Eber, H. S., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Eber, T., clerk, Marine department, Singapore
Eberius, G. F., merchant, Heuser, Eberius & Co., Hongkong
Eberle, J., assistant, Froehlich & Kuttner, Manila
Ebert, Dr. H. G., quarantine officer, U. S. Customs, Cebu Ebert, M., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Harbin, Vladivostock Ebert, T., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Eça, A. A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Lappa
Eca, A. M., clerk, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong Eça, A. M. d', clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Eca, A. J., clerk, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong Eça, J. M. E. d', clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Eckersall, J. W., Anglo-Chinese Methodist School, Penang Eckert, E. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Eckert, résident de France, Bac-Kan, Tonkin
Eckford, R. H., merchant, Cornabé, Eckford & Co., Chefoo
Eckhardt, C., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Eckhardt, H. C, acting asst. district officer, Kuala Kubu, Selangor
Eckhardt, Reinhold, manager, Café Weismann, Hongkong
Eckman, E. A., governor, Province of Benguet, Philippines
Edblad, H., bill and bullion broker, Shanghai
Eddis, B. L., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Singapore
Eddison, E., electrical-engineer, Healing & Co., Yokohama
Ede, C. Montague, secretary, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong Edgar, C. A., assistant, Stephens, Paul & Co., Bangkok
Edgar, E., assistant, J. Edgar, Newchwang
Edgar, E. G., managing director, The Lahat Mines, Peruk
+
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Edgar, J., merchant, Newchwang
Edgar, M. A., assistant, Stephens, Paul & Co., Bangkok Edgar, S. A., assistant, Stephens, Paul & Co., Singapore Edgecumbe, C., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Newchwang Edgren, H., captain, "Kiang-Tung," China coast Edie, J. W., manager, Borneo Co., Ld., Bangkok Edkins, G. T., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Edlin, E. F. H., solicitor, Drew & Napier, Singapore Edmonds, A., first clerk, Municipality, Negri Sembilan
Edmonds, E., assistant, Tekka, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Edmonds, R. C., assistant registrar, Supreme Court, Penang
Edmondson, E. H. P., assistant, Tanjong Olak Rubber Plantations, Ld., Johore Edser, G., armament staff sergeant,Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong Edulji, K., bookkeeper "Hongkong Daily Press" Office, Hongkong
Edwardes, A., assistant supt., Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Edwardes, A. H. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Edwards, Burt, chief clerk, Bureau of Internal Revenue, Manila Edwards, C. C., commission agent, Edwards & Co., Amoy
Edwards, C. G., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Edwards, D. W., associate secretary, Young Men's Christian Association, Peking Edwards, E., senior boarding officer, Marine department, Singapore
Edwards, E. B. S., acting agent, American Trading Co., Yokohama
Edwards, E. J., schoolmaster, Military School, Hongkong
Edwards, G. R., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Edwards, G. R., secretary, United Asbestos Oriental Agency Ld., Hongkong Edwards, H. V., chartered accountant, Evatt & Co., Penang
Edwards, J. D., manager, Amoy Slipway and Engineering Co., Amoy
Fdwards, J. F. Cox, chief accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Edwards, R. C., accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Singapore Edwards, T. J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Edwards, W., accountant, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Shanghai Edwards, W., chief engineer, steamer "Loongsang," China Coast Edwards, W. D. S., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Yokohama Edwards, W. T. overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong Edwards, W. W., assistant, Thos. Cook & Son, Hongkong Eerens, C. de, assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Kobe
Egan, J. J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Egan, Martin, managing director, "Manila Times", Manila
Egerton, T. S., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Eggebrecht, gouvernement stierarzt, Schlachthof, Kiaochau
Eggeling, A. J., agent, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Peking
Eggers, Franz, assistant, Markt & Co., Shanghai
Eggers, H., assistant, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Eggert, F., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Ehlers, A., assistant, Nickel & Co., Eastern Customs Office, Kobe
Ehlers, C., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Ehrhardt, F., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tientsin
1595
Ehrhardt, M., assistant, Compagnie de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Saigon
Ehrhardt, W., pilot, Shanghai
Ehrismann, F., merchant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Kobe
Ehtman, T. A., diver, Harbour department, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Ehu, G., engineer, Gadelius & Co., Singapore
Eichelberg, E., chief brewer, Kirin Brewery Co., Yokohama
Eichenberg, P., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Penang
Eichner, S., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Tientsin
Eilts, J., ingénieur, Paul Friedr. Richter, Tsinanfu
Eisenhofer, E., section engineer, Royal Railway Departinent, Bangkok
Eisenhofer, K., assistant, Falck & Beidek, Bangkok
Eisenring, M., assistant, Jaeger & Co., Singapore
Eisner, L. F., mech. engineer, assistant manager, Bohler Bros. & Co., Tokyo
Eitter, J., clerk of works, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Eitzen, Jorgen, vice consul for Norway, Hongkong
Ekborough, A. C. E., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Eke, C. B., sanitary inspector, Singapore
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1596
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Eleum, J. B., director of education, S. S. and Federated Malay States, Singapore Elder, A. G., acting chief examiner, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Elder, H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Tangku
Elder, H., traffic inspector, Railways, Tangku, Tientsin
Elder, W. A., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Ld., Bangkok
Eldridge, G. B., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Eldridge, G. T. B. J., deputy coast inspector, Customs, Shanghai
Eldridge, T., sub agent, British and Foreign Bible Society, Manila
Eldridge, W. J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ld., Hongkong Elias, J. R., broker, Shanghai
Elias, R. H., assistant, Alex. Bielfeld & Co., Shanghai
Elinske, M., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Yokohama. Elked, A., sub-manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Yokohama
Ellerton, H. B., acting district officer (coast), Negri Sembilan Ellerton, M., assistant, Birch, Kirby & Co., Kobe
Elliot, Frederick M., solicitor, Rodyk & Davidson, Singapore
Elliott, F. L., managing director, North & Rae, Medical Hall, Yokohama
Elliott, G. H., assistant, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Singapore
Elliott, G. H., storehouseman, H.M. Naval Store dept., Hongkong
Elliott, J., asst. supt. eng., Hongkong & Kowloon Wharf & Godown Co., Hongkong Elliott, William, instructor in English, Hiroshima Higher Normal School, Tokyo Ellis, Albert, assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Ellis, A. R., clerk, "Hongkong Telegraph," Hongkong
Ellis, B. W., second assistant district officer, Krian, Perak Ellis, C. E., assistant, Benjamin & Potts, Shanghai
Ellis, E. E., assistant, E. S. Kadoorie & Co., Hongkong Ellis, E. I, assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co. Hongkong Ellis, E. M., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore Ellis, G. W., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Ellis, H. G., chief engineer, "Kueichow," China coast
Ellis, H. H., cashier, The Westminster Construction Co., Ld., Singapore
Ellis, H. L., secretary to Commissioner in the East for Govt. of New South Wales, Kobe Ellis, J. E., merchant, W., Shewan & Co., Shanghai
Ellis, O. I., assistant, E. D., Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Ellis, R. H., assistant electrician, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Singapore Ellis, W., captain, tug "Rocket", Shanghai Tug & Lighter Co., Shanghai
Ellis, W. G., medical superintendent, Lunatic Asylum, Singapore
Ellison, I., merchant, Singapore
Elliston, É. S., assistant, J. Hutchison & Co., Shanghai
Elmenhorst, O., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Elmore, John, assistant, Geo. McBain, Shanghai
Elms, F., overseer, Land Investment and Agency Co., Ld., Hongkong Elmslie, W. S., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Elphick, H., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Elphinstone, D., Tait & Co., Auping, agent, Tainanfu
Elphinstone, F., accountant, "Hongkong Daily Press," Office Hongkong Elphinstone, S., merchant, S. Elphinstone & Co., Yokohama
Elpons, von, chief officer, S. S. "Suimow," Coast service
Elson, W. T., assistant, Wm. Powell, Ld., Hongkong
Elton, A. B., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., L., Kobe
Elton, H. A., headmaster, Sandakan School, Sandakan
Elton, W. H., chaplain, Church of England, Sandakan
Elvy, J., assistant, Imperial Hotel, Tientsin
Elwes, G. F. W., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Elzelingen, H. W. van, overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Elzelingen, L. van, overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Emamodeen, C., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Emamoodeen, S., merchant, Shanghai
Emanuel, A., clerk, Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co., Tientsin
Emanuel, E. A., pilot, Shanghai
Embden, P. K. A. M. van, merchant., Meerkamp & Co., and consul for Netherlands, Manila Emberley, Mrs. W. H., proprietress "Waverley," Hongkong
Emens, Frederick, assistant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
Emens, J. S., assistant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Emens, W. S., merchant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai Emerson, Charles, solicitor, Sisson & Delay, Singapore Emery, J., assistant, Berthel and Burkhardt, Shanghai
Emery, J., chief permanent way inspector, Royal Railway, Bangkok Emmett, E. C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Encarnação, A., clerk, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Shanghai
Encarnaçao, A., clerk, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
1597
Encarnação, C. d', assistant accountant, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Encarnacao, E., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Peking
Encarnaçao, H., clerk, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld., Shanghai
Encarnação, L., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Encarnação, L. C. d', clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Encarnação, S. J. d', primeiro official da Secretaria, Macao
Endrass, I., dreher, Kiaochau
Engberg, H., assistant, Mount Austin Rubber Estates, Ld., Singapore Engel, E., assistant, Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau
Engel, F., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Engel, Gustav, merchant, W. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Engelhart, M., captain, steamer "Mei Lee," Yangtsze River
Engelhardt, W., assistant superintendent, traffic service, Railway, Bangkok
Engels, F., assistant, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Shanghai
England, F. H., merchant, Frank H. England & Co., Foochow
England, G., inanager, Royal Naval Canteen, Praya East, Hongkong
Engstromn, C. V., locomotive inspector, Imperial Railways, Shanhaikwan, Tientsin
Enigk, A., captain, steamer "Kowloon," China coast
Ennis, A. D. L., chaplain to the Forces, Hongkong
Euright, J. A., assistant, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co, Chinwangtao
Ensworth, H. A., assistant general manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama Eppstein, T., postmaster, U. S. Post Office, Cebu
Erdinger, médecin, Hôpital Colonial et Militaire, Saigon
Erich, G., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Erlanger, E. H., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Erlanger, I., importer, Erlanger & Galinger, Manila
Erlanger, S., importer, Erlanger & Galinger, Manila
Ermiloff, P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Ermolaieff, S., sub-manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Erskine, C. H., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Chefoo Escande, directeur des Postes, chef du service, Annam
Escande, G., sub-accountant, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong Escay, E., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Iloilo Esche, E., assistant, W. Menke & Co., Singapore
Esdale, J. E., assistant, Mendelson & Frank, Yokohama
Esdale, J. T., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Yokohama
Especkerman, F. A., chief clerk, Survey branch, Negri Sembilan Espelage, S., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Esrom, F., assistant, Schuldt & Co., Hongkong
Ess, A. van, merchant, Newchwang
Esserteau, Dr. J., médecin, Consulate de France, Chentu, Chungking
Eter, F., Voelkel & Schroeder, Ld., Shangliai
Etheridge, D. H., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Eustace, B., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Evans, A. F., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Evans, A. M. A., merchant, Evans & Co., Shanghai
Evans, C. A., solicitor, Evans & Kitovitz, Singapore
Evans, D., manager, "Japan Chronicle," Kobe
Evans, E. H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Evans, E. J., assistant, engineer, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Kowloon, Hongkong
Evans, Edward, Missionary Home and Agency, Shanghai
Evans, F. C., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Shanghai
Evans, F. S., manager, Manufacturers Life Insurance Co., Singapore
Evans, H. G., employé, Weeks & Co.. Shanghai
Evans, J., gunner, Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai Evans, J. W., assistant, Sarawak Government Agency, Sarawak
Evans, J. W., captain, steamer "Haimun," Coast ports
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1598
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
3
T
Evans, John H., lieut, governor, Bontoe, Philippines
Evans, L., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Evans, R., chief inspector of Police, Penang
Evans, Th, assistant, Oppenheimer & Co., Yokohama Evans, W., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Evans, W., resident councillor, Malacca
Evans, William P., lieut.-col., chief of Division Staff, Manila Evatt, P. T., incorporated accountant, Evatt & Co., Singapore Eveleigh, Arthur, assistant, Andersen, Meyer & Co., Shanghai Evensen, Einar, assistant, Aagaard, Thoresen & Co., Hongkong Everaerts, Modestus, vicar apostolic of S. Hupeh, Ichang Everall, H. J., attorney, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hankow Everall, H. R., manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Kewkiang Everest, E, assistant, A. K. E. Hampshire & Co., Selangor Everest, R. J., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong Everett, C., solicitor, Sisson & Delay, Singapore
Everitt, Alfred E., eng-lieut., torpedo-boat destroyer "Otter," Hongkong Evers, A. K., accountant, Commercial Bank of Siberia, Vladivostock Eving, J. J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Evrard, Felix, vicar general, Roman Catholic Mission, Tokyo' Ewald, W., merchant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore Ewart, C. B., assistant, James Morrison & Co., Ld., Tokyo Ewart, G., assistant electrical engineer, Municipality, Shanghai Ewens, C., solicitor, Ewens & Harston, Hongkong Ewfitzenko, N., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Eyde, A., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Haukow
Eyler, S. H., assistant, Macleod & Co., Manila
Eymar, J., assistant, Boyer, Mazet, Guilliée & Co., Canton Eymard, C. L., silk exporter, Yokohama
Eyme, P., engineer, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Shangliai
Eynard, L., French Consulate, Hankow
Eyre, Harry, manager, Wm. Powell, Ltd., Hongkong
Eysbrock, J. R. H., engineer, Pulo Sambar Tank Installation, Singapore
Eyton, J., Jr., commission agent, Eyton & Pratt, Yokohama
Eyton, J. L. D., commisson agent, Eyton & Pratt, Yokohama
Eyton, Leonard W., commission agent, Eyton & Pratt, Yokohama Ezra, E., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Ezra, E. J., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Kobe
Ezra, E. M., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai Ezra, F., assistant, Jones Brothers, Ld., Shanghai Ezra, J., assistant, Robert Weber, Shanghai
Ezra, N. E. B., clerk, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai Faber, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Fabian, S. P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Fabig, H., assistant, Schuchardt & Schutte, Shanghai
Fabre, A., merchant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Fabre, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Fabrigues, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Fabris, C., engineer, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan
Fabry, A. chef d'atelier, Messageries Fluviales de Cochin-Chine, Saigon
Fachtmann, F., merchant, Winckler & Co., Yokohama
Fachtmann, R., merchant, Carl Rhode & Co., and act. vice-consul for Peru, Yokohama
Faciolle, A., administrateur-directeur, Societé Immobilière de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon Fader, O., assistant, F. Engler & Co., Saigon
Fage, L'abbé, missionary, French Mission, Kobe
Fahrländer, E., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
Fains, M., court milliner, Kowloon, Hongkong
Fairgrieve, A., mechanic, Engineers' Office, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Fairley, V. L. A., British American Tobacco Co., manager, Hankow
Falconer, P. J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Falk, N. J., assistant, Trading Co., Hankow
Falkenbach, Dr., S. M. S. "Vaterland," German Squadron, China
Falls, B. G., settlement officer, Kinta, Perak
Falls, N., settlement officer, Land Revenue, Negri Sembilan
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Falshaw, P. S., Government veterinary surgeon, Singapore Fambon, H., comptable, Graf Jacque & Cie, Saigon
Fame, F. H., assistant, China Fire Insurance Co, Hongkong Fansler, Dean S., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila Faraut, F., laiterie, Vandlelet & Faraut, Cambodge
Fargeas, Guillaume, almr. résident, Hai Ninh, Tonkin
Farges, aumônier de l'Hopital, Chungking
Faria, Chev. F. A. L. de, secretary, Italian Consulate, Singapore
Faria, S. A. L. de, escripturario, Administração dos Bens das Missões, Macau Farias, J. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Kobe Farler, G. C., general, United States Legation, Bangkok
Farmer, F. D., merchant, Bandinel & Co., Newchwang
Farmer, G., assistant, Bandinel & Co., Newchwang
Farmer, Harry, acting agent, Methodist Publishing House, Manila Farmer, W., proprietor, Victoria Hotel, Canton, and Macao Hotel, Macao Farn, P. L., assistant, Thurier & Kohr, Hankow
Farnham, J. M. W., editor, "Chinese Illustrated News," Shanghai
Farnsworth, S. T., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama Farquhar, S. St. J., captain, H. B. M. S. "Kent." China Station Farr, G., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Farr, Geo. asst. electrical engineer, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Farrant, G. U., assistant, Fraser & Co., Singapore
Farrant, H., asst. engineer, Imperial Railway, Mingyuauchow, Tientsin Farrell, H. A., examiner, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Farrell, J. E., pilot, Singapore
Farrell, P. T., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Farrell, U. A., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Farrer, B., assistant, North & Rae, Yokohama
Farrer, R., acting registrar of Deeds, Singapore
Farrer, R. J., collector, Land Office, Singapore
Farron, M. A., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Fasser, M., assistant, Lutz & Co., Manila
Fasting, E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
Fathergill, A., installation supt., Standard Oil Co, of New York, Swatow Faulk, L. C., supt., Transport, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul
Faulkner, J. H., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai
Faulkner, M. G., marshal, American Consulate General, Mukden Fauque, A. J. M., receveur principal, Postes Françaises, Amoy Faure, conducteur des Travaux Publics, Annam
Faure, Felix, agent, Union Commerciales Indo-Chinoise, Mengtsz Faurie, U., missionary, French Mission, Hakodate
Faust, J., merchant, Faust & Co., Tientsin
Fauvel, V., assistant, Societé Bordelaise Indo-Chinois, Haiphong
Favacho, E. C., shipping clerk, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Bangkok Favacho, F. X. accountant, Bangkok Manufacturing Co., Ld., Bangkok
Favell, J. M., surveyor, Survey department, Selangor
Favey, administrateur adjoint, résident de France, Kien An, Tonkin
Faveyrial, Jean, assistant, Gysin Frères, Kobe
Favillos, G. A., Italian Consulate, Shanghai
Favorke, G., rechnungsfuerer, Schantung Bergbau Gesellschaft, Kiaochau
Favre-Brandt, C., acting consul for Belgium, assistant, C. & J. Favre-Brandt, Osaka Favre-Brandt, F., assistant, C. & J. Favre-Brandt, Osaka
Favre Brandt, H.. assistant, C. & J. Favre-Brandt, Osaka
Favre, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Fawcett, L. D., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Newchwang
Fearon, C. H., exchange and general broker, Yokohama
Fearon, F., merchant, Fearon, Daniel & Co., Shanghai
Fearon, J. S., merchant, Fearon, Daniel & Co., Shanghai
Fearon, L., assistant, W. L. Strachan & Co., Kobe
Fearon, R. I., bullion-broker, Maitland & Fearon, Shanghai
Feast, W. G., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Kobe
Featherstonhaugh, W. S., secretary, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Fedeler, E., chief officer, Steamer Meiyu," Yangtsze river
Feeney, J., inspector of Police, Perak
1
1599
NIPPONOPHONE "-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1600
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Feer, H., vice consul, Consulat de France, Swatow Fegan, F. P., assistant, Edward Wheen, Shanghai Fegen, W. W., assistant-editor, "Siam Observer," Bangkok Fehlmann, Ch., assistant, Siemens & Schuckert, Tokyo Feicke, J., share and general broker, J. Feicke & Co., Kobe Feimann, H., assistant, Bume & Reif, Shanghai
Feit, P., head clerk, Royal Railway Departinent, Bangkok Feldman, G., assistant, Geo. Whymark & Co., Kobe Fell, W., assistant, Cornabe, Eckford & Co,, Chefoo Fell, W. A., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Fellenberg, P., assistant telegraph inspector, Royal Railway, Bangkok Fellhauer, G., assistant, Adolphe Gorsjean & Co., Hankow
Fellows Lukis, W. R., engineer, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama Fels, J. G., lighthouse inspector, Bureau of Navigation, Manila Fennell, R. C. B., assistant, Vulcan Iron Works, Shanghai Fenner, J. H., assistant, Tekka, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Fennessy, M. C., assistant, L. Boehmer & Co., Yokohama Fentiman, H. E., inspector, H. M., Naval Stores dept., Hongkong Fenton, A. E., assistant, Hanson, McNeill & Jones, Shanghai Fenton, A. H., second asst, superintendent of Police, Shanghai Fenton, C. B., chief draughtsman, Royal Engineers, Hongkong Fenton, G., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
Fenton, J. W., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Tientsin Fenton, R., inspector of police, Hongkong
Fenton, S. G., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Fenwick, J. S., assistant, Boyd & Co., Amoy
Fenwick, P., pilot, Shanghai
Ferandy, E., directeur, Grand Hotel Continental, Saigon
Ferdinands, C. E., engine-driver, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
Fergnani, Pe. G., professor, Salesianos, Macao
Ferguson, D., Presbyterian missionary, Tainunfu
Ferguson, F., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Ferguson, F., examiner, Imperial Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Ferguson, J. C., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Ferguson, John C., proprietor, "The Shanghai Times," Shanghai
Ferguson, R. A., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Ferguson, W. H., chief architectural assistant, Municipality, Singapore Fernald, F. E., merchant, Geo, H. Macy & Co., Yokohama
Fernandes, Conde de Senna, proprietario e consul de Siam, Macao
Fernandes, D., clerk, registration branch, Post Office, Hongkong Fernandes, F. X., conego da Sé de Macau, Macau
Fernandes, H., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Fernandes, J., clerk, Hongkong Printing Press, Hongkong
Fernandes, J. C., manager and proprietor, Typographia Mercantil, Macao
Fernandes, J. V. P., proprietor, Typographia Mercantil, Macao
Fernandes, Jorge C., proprietor, Bay View House, Macau
Fernandes, M., clerk, Kelly & Walsh, Ld., Hongkong
Fernandes, V. J., proprietor, Typographia Mercantil, Macao
Fernandez, A., clerk, Colonial Treasary, Singapore
Fernandez, C., Roman Catholic missionary, Twatutia
Fernandez, D., clerk, General Post Office, Hongkong
Fernandez, G. A., government surveyor, G. A. Fernandez & Co., Singapore
Fernandez, J., clerk, Supreme Court, Singapore
Fernandez, J. F., merchant, Fernandez Hermanos, Manila
Fernandez, L., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Fernandez, M., assistaut surveyor, Revenue Survey branch, Negri Sembilan Fernandez, M., merchant, Fernandez & Co., Hongkong
Fernandez, P. D., clerk, Brutton & Hett, Hongkong
Fernandez, R. J., merchant, Fernandez Hermanos, Manila Fernandez, V., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow Fernandez, V. A., propietario, Agencia Editorial, Manila, Fernandez, V. D., merchant, Fernandez Hermanos, Manila
Fernando, G. C., financial clerk, Lower Perak district, Perak
Fernando, W. A., overseer, Public Works and Survey Department, Penang
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Fernihough, S., assistant, W. Hewett & Co., Shanghai
Ferrand, chargé du Bureau du Chiffre, Gouvernment Général, Hanoi Ferrandini, Dr., directeur, Hôpital de Choguan (Indigène) Saigon
Ferrant, R., administrateur délégué, Societé Française des Charbonnages du Tonkin Ferrario, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Sai-kung
Ferras, A. M., clerk, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Ferras, J. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Ferreira, A. M., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Ferreira, F. M. S., proprietor, Portuguese Wines and Provision Store, Macau
Ferrero, P., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Ferreux, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Ferrier, C. A. W., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Ferriol, Francis, cork manufacturer, Corp, Ferriol & Co., Yokohama
Ferry, W. T. B., officer, Customs revenue cruiser "Limhsing," Shanghai
Fesch, G., assistant, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Feslau, S., chemist, Woollen, Vosy & Co., Tientsin
Feslier, A, employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Fessenden, S., attorney and counsellor-at-law, Jernigan & Fessenden, Shanghai Festa, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Feuer, E., employé, S. D. Lessner, & Co., Kobe Feuerbach, G., assistant, Olivier & Co., Hankow
Fewkes, G. H. S., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Tientsin Fezay, O., assistant, Boyer, Mazet, Guillice & Co., Shanghai Fforde, Charles H., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Clio," China Station Fiard, representant, Chargeurs Réunis, Tourane, Annam Fidalgo, M. N., tenente, Companhia de Infanteria, Macau. Fiebig, C., assistant, Garrels, Börner & Co., Shanghai Fiek, O., maschinen-techniker, Kiaochau
Field, C. D., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg, & Co., Shanghai Fielder, B. E., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Fielsen, chief officer, S. S. "Gouv. Jaeselike," Coast service Fiévet, capitaine, Officier d'Ordondance, Hanoi
Fife, James D., captain, in charge of Medical Supply Depot, Manila Figg, F. G., director, Observatory, Kowloon, Hongkong Figge, H., manager, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Shanghai Figourowsky, Rev. Paul, Russian Greek Church, Peking Figueiredo, E. J. de, clerk, Hughes & Hough, Hongkong Figueiredo, F M. X., clerk, Vernon & Smyth, Hongkong Figueiredo, H. A. de, clerk, Fearon, Daniel & Co., Shanghai Figueiredo, H. J. M. de, clerk, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Figueiredo, J. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Figueiredo, J. M., do, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Yokohama
Figueiredo, J., purser, steamer "Kinshan," Hongkong and Canton
Figueiredo, L. J. de, clerk, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Canton
Figueiredo, M. J., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Yokohama Figueiredo, V., Conego da Sé de Macao, Macau
Filhol, F., manager, Descours, Cabaud et Cie, Saigon
Filipeck, C., assistant, Joh. H. Langeliitje & Co., Vladivostock
Filipovich, W.. tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Filippoff, F. W., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostosk
Finbow, A., engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Hongkong
Finch, F. G., asst. engineer, Public Works, Krian, Perak
Finch, G. F. C., captain, H. K. & S. Battn., R. G. A., Kowloon, Hongkong Finch, G. T., electrical engineer, Shanghai Electric & Asbestos Co., Shanghai Fincher, W., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
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Finck, N. S., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Findeisen, S., chief officer, steamer "Fookshing," China coast Findlay, John, assistant, Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow Finger, A., captain, steamer "Meiyu," Yangtsze river
Finger, Ed., assistant, H. Schlichting, Hankow
Fingernt, P., assistant, S. Zimmerman & Co., Chinwangtao
Fink, C., managing editor, "Ostasiatische Lloyd," Shanghai Finke, H., assistant, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Finkleston, V., general-manager, The Temanoh Tin Syndicate, Ld., Johore
1601
"NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1602
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Finlay, W. R., assistant examiner, I. M. Customs, Antung Finlayson, D. J., chief engineer, steamer "Sungkiang," China coast Finlayson, E., master, steamer "Changsha", China coast Finnie, T., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore Finnie, W. E., employé Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore Finscher, H., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Newchwang Fippard, A. J., manager, Light & Power Co., Hankow Firmstone, H. W., collector of Land Revenue, Malacca Firth, B., assistant, Shanghai Tug & Lighter Co., Shanghai Firth, C. E., sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong Fischer, receveur, Douanes et Régies, Ha-Tinh, Annam Fischer, sekretar der Landesverwaltung, Kiaochau Fischer, E., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Shimonoseki Fisher, E. E., div. superintendent of Education, Manila
Fischer, Emil S., importer and exporter, Fischer & Co., Tientsin Fischer, F., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Fischer, F., chief storekeeper, Store Department, Railways, Canton Fischer, G. R., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Kobe
Fischer, H. L., secretary, Municipal Board, Manila Fischer, K., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Yokohama
Fischer, M., elève-interprète, German Legation, Chengtu
Fischer, R., assistant, German, Consulate, Singapore
Fischer, W. G., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Kiaochau
Fischerz, B., von, manager, Andrews, von Fischerz, & George, Shanghai Finchett, T. P., chief officer, S. S. "Haimun ", Coast ports Fischinger, A., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Kobe
Fisher, A., pilot, Kobe
Fisher, C. T., merchant, Fisher & Co., Canton
Fisher, F., senior sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong Fisher, F. D., consul for United States of America, Newchwang
Fisher, Frederick C., eng-lieut, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Fisher, Major H. F. T., officer commanding Army Service Corps, Hongkong
Fishier, H. G. C., executive engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Fisher J., assistant-examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Fisher, J., foreman engineer, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Fisher, J., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai
Fisher, P. G., foreman-sawyer, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Fisher, T., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Fisher, T. G., manager and secretary, "China Times," Tientsin
Fisher, W. D., civil engineer, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Fitte, résident de France, Quang Yen, Tonkin
Fittock, C. Jr., supt. Aberdeen establishment, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Hongkong Fitz Gibbon, J. B., first assistant, Maritime Customs, Ilankow
Fitz, J. B., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Fitzgerald, P. J., employé, Arts & Crafts Furnishing Co., Shanghai
Fitzgerald, R., assistant, A. Cameron & Co., Kobe
Fitzgibbon, M., detective sub-inspector, Hongkew Police Station, Shanghai
Fitzgibbon, W. G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Fitzherbert, Edward S., captain, H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station Fitzmaurice, V., student-interpreter, British Embassy, Peking
Flak, E. B., manager, Scandinavian Department, Gaggino & Co., Singapore
Flambeau, L., gérant, Huillerie et Savonnerie, Haiphong
Flament, P., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Flanagan, D. F., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Flandin, médecin, chargé du Dispensaire Municipal, Saigon
Flandir, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Flandrios, médecin en chef, Hópital Municipal de Cholon
Flayelle, L., consul for France, Mengtsze
Fleck, A., assistant, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Fleischer, C., postrat, Kaiserlich Deutsche Postdirektion, Shanghai
Fleischhacker, L., assistant, Froehlick & Kuttner, Manila
Fleisher, B. W., Advertiser Publishing Co., Yokohama and Tokyo
Fleming, A., assistant engineer, manager, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Fleming, Douglas, assistant, Rodewald & Heath, Haukow and Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Fleming, D. M., public accountant, Manila
Fleming, T. C., district officer, Lower Perak district, Perak Fleming, W. N., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong Fleming, Wm. S., attorney and counsellor-at-law, Shanghai Flemming, H., draughtsman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Flemons, J. C., assistant, Brett & Co., Yokohama
Flemyn, G. M., first-officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Pingching," Shanghai Flers, de, chef du bureau de l'ingénieur en chef, Annam
Fletcher, A. G. M., deputy official receiver, Land Office, Hongkong
Fletcher, Ed. K., captain, R. M., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Fletcher, H. L., consulting engineer, Carmichael & Clarke, Hongkong
Fletcher, H. P., first secretary, U. S. Legation, Peking
Flett, W., assistant accountant, Penang Sugar Estate Co., Penang Fleureau, Rev. M. M. Sorin, French Mission, Canton
Fleury, Roman Cathoic missionary, Peking
Flinders, S. G., tide waiter, Imperial Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Floch, M., French Post Office, Postmaster, Foochow
Floeck, K., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Flood, E. P., writer, H.M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Flood, P., inspector of police, Lower Perak district, Perak
Florenz, Karl, professor, Imperial University, Tokyo and Yokohama
Flores, A. J., student, interpector Portuguese Consulate, Bangkok Flores, L. C. M., vice-consul for Portugal, Bangkok
Flores, L. L., consul general for Portugal, Bangkok
Florio, E., dep. comp. general, Account & Audit Office Bangkok
Flower, V. A., architect, Swan & Maclaren, Singapore & Tokyo
Flynn, V. C., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Ld., Yokohama
Fock, P., assistant, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Shanghai
Focke, A., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Kobe
Focke, J., merchant, Lauts & Haesloop, Swatow
Focken, F. U., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Focken, F. C., superintendent, United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld., Shanghai
Foegal, Wm., assistant, China Export, Import and Bank Co., Shanghai
Foglia, Th., assistant, Bielfeld & Sun, Tientsin
Fobse, W., assistant, German School, Shanghai
Fokkes, H., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Yokohama
Folcher, conducteur, Travaux Publics, Nghean, Annam
Foley, C. H., chief writer, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Foley, J. E., traffic manager, Imperial Railways of North China, Tientsin
Follett, C. H., chief accountant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Fond, F., Howard, architect and surveyor, Russian Consulate, Mukden Fonseca, A. H., assistant superintendent of Immigrants, Penang Fonseca, J. M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Fonseca, L., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Fontaine, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Lungchow
Fontaine, L., administrateur-délégué, Societé Française des Distilleries, Hanoi Fontaines, G., procureur de la république, Parquet Général, Hanoi
Fonvillars, Louis, dir., rédacteur en chef," Courrier d'Haiphong," Haiphong
Foord-Kelcey, R., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Foot, E. H., manager, Eastern dept., Underwood & Underwood, Singapore
1603
Foox, H., spinning master, Laou Kung Mow Cotton Spinning & Weaving Co., Shanghai Forbes, A., H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Forbes, A., merchant, Bradley & Co., Hongkong
Forbes, A., assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Forbes, U. A., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Tientsin
Forbes, Harington G., secretary, Public Works dept. Sandakan, B. N. Borneo
Forbes, H. W., engineer, Whangpoo Conservancy office, Shanghai
Forbes, J., agent, Chartered Bank of India, A. & Co., Manila
Forbes, J., agent, Pahang Consolidated Co., Kuala-Kuantan, Malay States
Forbes, J., assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Forbes, J. McG, agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Swatow
Forbes, J. W., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Hongkong
Forbes, W. A., merchant, Wm. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Forbes, W. Cameron, governor general, Philippine Islands, Manila
NIPPONOPHONE"--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1604
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Forcey, F., inspector, Police-department, Weihaiwei
Ford, C. H., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Ford, D., assistant, Berthel & Burkhardt, Shanghai
Ford, E., manager, "Times of Malaya" Press, L., Perak
Ford, E. S., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Ld., Hongkong Ford, F. H., architect, Ford & Shaw, Tientsin
Ford, J. C. C., medical officer, General Hospital, Penang
Ford, S. R., assistant, Bernard & Co., Yokohama
Ford, William S., assistant Soy Chee Cotton Spinning Co., Shanghai
Ford, W. R. C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd.. Newchwang
Ford, W. F., foreman engineer, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Forde, F. H., sub-accountant, International Bank, Shanghai
Foreman, W. M., manager, Fraser & Neave, Aerated Water Dept., Bangkok
Forest, L. A., medecin, Haiphong
Fornizetti, R., acting district Inspector, Chinese Post Office, Mukden
Forrer, J. Ernst, assistant, Sprungli & Co., Manila
Forrest, A. O. M., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aust. and China, Shanghai Forrest, C. M., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Forrest, John, accountant, Fraser & Neave, Singapore
K
Forrest, J., chief engineer, San-ui," West River
Forrest, J., A., staff surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Astraea," China & Japan Forrest, T. S., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong Forrester, E. D., chief engineer, steamer "Kutwo," China coast Forrester, Henry, sub-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Astraea," China Station Forrester, H., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai Forrester, J., sub-accountant, International Bank, Hongkong Forsaith, G. A., tidesurveyor and harbourmaster, Customs, Pakhoi Forst, H., assistant, manager, Macleod & Co., Manila Forster, G. P., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Forstmann, lieut., Admiral's staff officer, German Squadron. China
Forsyth, assistant, Batu Kawan Rubber & Cocoanuts Plantation Co., Penang
Forsyth, Charles, medical practitioner, Jordan, Forsyth, & Gröne, Hongkong Forsyth, D. W. O'B., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Forsyth, Ed., captain, steamer "Huichow", China coast
Forsyth, W., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Kobe
Forsyth, W. J. E., godown superintendent, China Nav. Co., Shanghai
Fort, G., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan
Forter, E., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Fortesquieu, H. W., accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Tientsin Fortich, M., asst. governor, Western Bukidnon, Philippines
Fortnum, E., armament staff sergeant, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong Forum, P. N., agent, East Asiatic Co., Shanghai
Foster, B. C., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Yokolama
Foster, Capt. W., asst. manager, Dubash dept., McAlister & Co., Singapore Foster, Dr. A. D., vice and deputy consul, American Consulate, Amoy
Foster, H. B., assistant, Ker & Co., Manila
Foster, H. E., accountant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Bangkok
Foster, S., storehouseman, Royal Naval Ordnance Depot, Hongkong Fougner, A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Foullien, J., assistant, P. Roque, Haiphong
Fouque, Bershé, professor of French, Nobles College, Tokyo
Fourgs, S., missionary, Catholic Church of the Visitation, Negri Sembilan
Fournel, R. de, accountant, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Tientsin
Fourquet, curé, French Mission, Canton
Fournier, secrétaire général, Secretariat Général, Saigon
Fours-Walderode, Count K. Des, Secretary, Austro-Hungarian Embassy, Tokyo
Fowler, F. W., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Amoy
Fowler, H. H., assistant, Walter Nutter & Co., Shanghai
Fowler, John, consul general for United States of America, Chefoo
Fowler, M., assistant, Rosenstock Publishing Co., Ld., Shanghai
Fowler, P., assistant, Brunner, Mond & Co., Shanghai
Fowler, S., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Ipoh
Fowlie, Dr., surgeon, Medical Department, Singapore
Fox, A., auctioneer, Selangor
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Fox, C. J., sub-postmaster, Penang
Fox, F., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore Fox, H. H., British Consul Kewkiang
Fox, H. T., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Fox, S. C. G., senior medical-officer, Medical department, Palang Fox, W., superintendent, Forests Department, Penang
Fox, W. G. assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Kobe
Foy, Robert C., captain, aide to Major General Commanding, Manila Foyn, M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Foyn, O. assistant-examiner, Maritime Customs, Chefoo Fradgley, E. G., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama Fradgley, H. F., assistant, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila
Frahm, W., superintendent, Hevea Rubber Planting Co., Ld., Johore Fraineau, Th., French missionary, Nagasaki
Frampton, G. Russell, head master, English Govt. School, Seoul
France, R. G., assistant, Wise & Co. Manila
Franceschetti, juge de paix, Tribunal de Rachgia, Cochinchine
Francillon, F. J., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Ld., Bangkok
Francis, A. B. C., acting secretary to the Goveruor, British North Borneo Francis, A. Jolin, manager, Sullivan & Francis, Manila
Francis, Dr. C., assistant registrar of deaths, Penang
Francis, F., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Francis, M. A., mine captain, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang
Francis, S. R., inspector, Hackney Carriage Department, Municipality, Singapore Francke, A., assistant, E. Gipperich & Co., Tientsin
Francke, K., assistant, F. Engler & Co., Saigon
Franco, C. F., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Franco, F. M., officer in charge, Gunpowder Depót, Green Island, Hongkong Franco, F. X., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Franco, I., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila Franco, J. M., lightkeeper, Green Island, Hongkong Franco, L. A. G., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Franco, Dr. L. L., director, Pharmacia & Drogaria, Macao Franco, V., clerk, Kelly & Walsh, Ld., Hongkong
François, electrician, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai
Francois, J., missionary, Catholic Church of the Visitation, Nigri Sembilan. Francs, F., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Frank, G. I., manager, Frank & Co., Manila
Frank, J., assistant, Robert Weber, Shanghai
Frank, J. S. H., merchant, Mendelson & Frank, Yokohama
Frankel, D., assistant, A. Frankel & Co., Singapore
Frankel, P., assistant, larry A. Badman & Co., Bangkok
Frankel, T., assistant, Harry A. Badman & Co., Bangkok
Frankl, Captain, S.S." Hoangho," Coast Service
Franklin, A. C., apothecary and assistant analyst, Civil Hospital, Hongkong Franklin, A. E. C., acting assistant district officer, Hatang Padang, Perak
Franklin, C. B., supervisor, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong
Franklin, G. G., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Yokohama Franklin, J. W., chemist, J. L. Thompson & Co., Kobe
Franks. C. W., div. supt. of schools, Province Mindoro, Philippines
Franzen, A., merchant, Franzen & Co., Singapore
Fraser, A., chief officer, steamer "Zafiro," Hongkong and Manila Fraser, Arthur F., staff surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station Fraser, C. I., assistant, Howell & Co., Hakodate
Fraser, Chas. A., clerk, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama Fraser, D., locomotive-superintendent, Peking Syndicate, Tientsin
Fraser, D. M., district engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Fraser, E. H., British consul general, Hankow
Fraser, F. W., judge, Sessions Court and resident, E, coast, B. N. Borneo
Fraser, J., asst. manager, Caledonia Sugar Estate, Penang
Fraser, M. W., asst. examiner, Maritime Customs, Chungking
Fraser, Peter, sub-agent, W. & J. Sloane, Kobe
Fraser, R. F., assistant, Arracan & Co., Ld., Bangkok
1605
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1606
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Fraser, T. H., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Singapore Fraser, W. D., first officer, Revenue Cruiser "Kaipan," Kowloon
Frayne, J., inspector of Police, Singapore
Frazar, E. W., director Sale & Frazar, Ld., Yokohama and Tokyo Frederick, W., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Amoy Fredericks, H. A., master, Malacca High School, Malacca Frederking, secretary, German Consulate, Hankow and Ichang Freeman, C. W., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Chungking Freeman, David, asst. solicitor, Wreford & Thornton, Penang
Freeman, E. T., assistant, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tientsin Freeman, G. W., sanitary inspector, Butterworth, Penang Freeman, H., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore Freeman, T. J., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Freemann, C. W., superintendent, Chungking Hospital, Chungking Freemantle, F., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Manila
Freen, G. D., senior medical officer, Selangor
Freer, Paul C., director, Bureau of Science, Manila Freese, R., supt., Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bangkok
Fregi, A., merchant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Freire, F. V., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila
Freitas, L., clerk, Harvie & Cooke, Shanghai
Fremantle, C. A., lieut. and comdr., H. M. torpedo-boat destroyer "Whiting," Hongkong French, Francis H., lieut.-col., assistant to inspector general, Div. Staff, Manila French, P., waiter, Naval Establishment, Weihaiwei
Frericks, C. O., manager, China and Java Export Co., Hankow
Fresson, H., French Municipal Health officer, Shanghai
Fretscher, H., assistant, Ferd, Bornemann & Co., Shanghai
Frewin, J. C., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Amoy
Frey, C., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Saigon
Frey, H. L., assistant manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Kobe Freze, J., assistant, C. Tournier, Saigon
Frias, Dr. Vicente, medico, Manila
Frickhoffer, H., accountant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Tientsin
Fried, A., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Tokyo
Friedberger, M. B., manager, Westminster Construction Co., Singapore
Friedhoff, assistant, Shantung Bergbau Gass., Kiaochan
Friedrich, E., assistant, A. Grosjean & Co., Hankow
Friedrichs, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Friedrichs, G., assistant, Schuldt & Co., Shanghai
Friedrichs, M., manager, China and Java Export Co., Tientsin
Friedrichsen, C., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Kobe
Friedrichsen, E. A. C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Newchwang Friedrickson, Chas., employé, Dunning & Co., Shanghai
Fries, R., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
Friesland, G., merchant, Melchers & Co., and Danish Consul, Hongkong
Frigast, C. V., captain, "Kiang-Kwan," China coast
Frings, E., assistant, Bangkok Outfitting Co., Bangkok
Frisby, E. R., chief computer, Bureau of Coast and Geodetic Survey, Manila
Frischling, F. C., marine and wharf supt., Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Shanghai
Fritz, M., manager, Bohler Brothers & Co., Shanghai
Fritz, P., assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Shanghai'
Fritz, S., assistant, Vehling & Co., Yokohama
Fritze, O., assistant, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Hankow
Fritze, O., assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Hankow
Fritzsche, C., silk inspector, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Froberg, G., captain, "Kwanglee," China coast
Froc, L., director of Sicawei Observatory, Shanghai
Frodsham, G. W., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
Froese, B. J., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Frohlich, Ch., assistant Bernick & Potter, Kiaochau
Frohlich, E., watchmaker, Chs. J. Gaupp & Co., Hongkong
Frohlich, G., assistant, H. Bernick & Potter, Kiaochau
Frohlich, R., assistant, Behn Meyer & Co., Penang Frois, A., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Frollick, L. D., army secretary, Young Men's Christian Association, Peking Fromage, interprete, French Legation, Peking
Fromm, C. A., assistant, Vulcan Ironworks, Shanghai
Frommiling, H., superintendent, Margat Estate, Negri Sembilan
Frost, A., assistant, Nickel Co., Shinzaike Yard, Kobe
Frost, B. L., mechanician, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongko
Frost, J. assistant, Chinese Post Office, Mukden
Frost, J., manager, Shanghai Electric and Asbestos Co., Shanghai
Frost, J. D., assistant, Robinson Piano Co., Singapore
Frost, R. A., attorney and counsellor-at-law, Hankow
Frost, R. R., in-charge, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Ld., Shanghai
Fry, C. G., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Canton Fry, R. S., deputy registrar of shipping, Singapore Fryer, G. B., professor, Anglo-Chinese College, Shanghai Fryer, R., assistant, L. Tallieu & Co., Tientsin Frys, Ricardo, assistant, Purnell & Paget, Canton Fuchr, Dr., second interpreter, German Legation, Tokyo Fuchs, chief engineer, S.S. "Ithaka," Coast service Fuchs, Harry, storekeeper, Mukden
Fuchs, Max. assistant, Harry Fuchs, Mukden
Fugleson, O. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow Fuhrhop, W., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Fuhrmann, R., merchant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Hongkong Fujise, M., manager, Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, Shanghai
Fulcher, Ú, A., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Fulford, H. E, acting consul-general for Great Britain, Tientsin
Fuller, Cyril T. M., commander, H. B. M. S. "Alacrity," China Station
Fuller, Elverton E., lieut., 12th. Infantry, asst. Water Transportation, Manila
Fuller, E. P., superintendent, U. S. Shoe Co., Manila
Fuller, Stuart J., vice and deputy consul general U.S.A., Hongkong Fuller, T., clerk, Ewens & Harston, Hongkong
Fullert, P. C., pilot, Kobe
Fullerton, A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Fulton, C. J., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, 1poh, Perak
Fulton, Mary H., physician & surgeon, David Gregg Hospital, Canton
Fulton, Robert, exporter, L., Boehmer & Co., Yokohama
Funatsu, T., acting consul general, Japanese Consulate, Hongkong
Funk, Fr., merchant, F. Engler & Co., and acting consul for Austria, Saigon Furness, G. E., auditor, Sale & Frazer, Yokohama and Tokyo
Furness, W. J., assistant, Electricity department, Shanghai Fyfe, captain, A. A., superintendent, Sailors' Home, Singapore Gaan, M. A., assistant, Max Mittag, Shanghai
Gaan, M. J., clerk, Noël, Murray & Co., Shanghai
Gabardi, P., rector, Roman Catholic Cathedral, Hongkong
Gabb, L. H., agent, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Chungking
Gac, R. L., assistant, "Courrier d'Haiphong," Haiphong
Gace, F. A., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Tientsin
Gachet, J., professor of French, Chinese Imperial University, Peking
Gachet, M., chancelier, French Legation, Peking
Gad, Svend, manager, East Asiatic Co., and consul for Denmark, Singapore
Gaddie, F. W. inspector, H. M., Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Gadelius, C. E., partner and manager, Gadelius & Co., Singapore
Gadelius, K., partner, Gadelius & Co., Singapore,
Gaenzer, H. F, attorney, Russo-Chinese Bank, Vladivostock
Gaeta, V., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton
1607
Gage, L., merchant, Denis Frères, acting Spanish Consul and Consul for Siam, Saigon
Gaggino, C., assistant, Gaggino & Co., Singapore
Gaggino, E. F., merchant, Gaggino & Co., Singapore
Gaggino, G., merchant, Gaggino & Co., Singapore
Gaillard, admr. adjoint, Résidence, Sontay, Tonkin
Gaily, R. R., general secretary, Young Men's Christian Association, Peking
Gairdner, K. C., asst. supt., Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Gaiser, E., manager, Dos Hermanos, Cigar Factory, Manila
Galan, M., accountant, Felix de la Rama, Manila
*
NIPPONOPHONE ". -BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
3608
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Galbraith, J., manager, Luzon Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Gale, B. W., assistant, Wesphal, King and Ramsay Ld., Hankow
Gale, C. H., executive engineer, Public Works Department, Hongkong Gale, Herbert D., judge, Court of First Instance, Moro Province, Philippines Galiacy, commis de 2e classe, Trésorerie Générale, Hanoi
Galian, traffic inspector, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Galignani, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Galistan, Edgar, engineer, Marine Department, Singapore
Galistan, V., asst. engineer, Singapore Electric Tramways, Singapore Gallagher, M., mine supt., Seoul Mining Co., Seoul
Gallet, assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Galletly, J. M. C., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Kobe
Gallimore, F. E., assistant, Derrick & Co., Singapore Gallman, Lt. Jeff D., lieut.-governor, Ifugas, Philippines
Gallo, A. V., Augustinian missionary, Shanghai
Gallo, E. M. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Gallois, E., interpreter, French Legation, Tokyo
Gallois, L., administrateur délégué directeur, Imprimerie de l'Extreme Orient, Hanoi Gallon, W., merchant, Swatow
Galloway, A. D., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Galloway, D. J., medical practitioner, Singapore
Galloway, R. D., assistant, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Galloway, W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Kobe
Gallusser, A., merchant, Bilger & Gallusser, Tientsin
Galton, C. N., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Galuzzi, R., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Galuzzi, U. C., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Gamburg, E., assistant, L. Soyka, Shanghai
Gamburg, F. H., merchant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Gameau, L., proprietor, Astor House Hotel, Hongkong
Gammell, A. P., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Gammie, A., Voelkel & Schroeder, Ld., Shanghai
Gammon, H. W., student-interpreter, British Embassy, Peking
Gande, J. W., merchant, Shanghai
Gande, W. J., merchant, Shanghai
Gandy, J. P., merchant, Badman & Co., Bangkok Gandy, L. S., merchant, Badman & Co., Bangkok Gannay, caissier, Banque de l'Indo Chine, Pompenh Gantois, G. L., Roman Catholic missionary, Tientsin Gans, G., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Garaud, M., sous directeur, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong
Garcia, A. J., general reformado, Macao
Garcia, E. A. de, clerk, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Garcia, F. M., clerk, Public Works department, Hongkong
Garcia, J. P., chief clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus., and China, Cebu
Garcia, M. Q., amanuense, Capitania do Porto, Macau
Garcia, W. J., music dealer, 219 Orchard Road, Singapore
Gardinar, E. A., second supt., Police department, Singapore
Gardiner, H. G., acting sub-manager, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Gardiner, John Henry, solicitor, Hongkong
Gardiner, R., assistant, Cornabé, Eckford & Co., Kiaochau
Gardner, H., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Ld., Bangkok
Gardner, J., clerk, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong
Gardner, J., interpreter, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Gardiner, J., proprietor, Tin-Mine, Negri Seinbilan
Gardner, W., engineer, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Hongkong Gardner, Wm., jun, clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Garibaldi, M., assistant engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Garland, L. A., employé, Skipworth, Hammond & Co., Kobe
Garland, F., assistant, Aylesbury & Garland, Perak
Garland, T. C., civil engineer, Aylesbury & Garland, Perak
Garner Chas, E., travelling representative, Garner, Quelch & Co., Shanghai Garnett, E., treasurer, provincial government, Cebu
Garnier, G., distillateur, F. Maron, Hanoi
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1609
Garnier, J. S. D., assistant, Batu Kawan Rubber and Cocoanut Plantation Co., Penang Garnier, Koman Catholic missionary, Peking
Garrard, E. E., assistant, Ta Ching Kwang Tung Electric Supply Co., Canton Garratt, J. H., general manager and chief engineer, Electric Tramways, Singapore Garrett, S. E., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Garraway, J. J., engineer, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Garrett, H. L., junior assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong
Garriguene, B., assistant, Jules Berthet, Saigon
Garriock, A. B., commission agent, Pearce & Garriock, Hankow Gartzke, lieut., Admiral's staff officer, German Squadron, China Garwood, W. H., assistant, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
Gaschy, J. B., director, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki Gasco, Chev. A., interpreter, Italian Legation, Tokyo Gasille, P., architect, Swan & Maclaren, Singapore Gaskell, J. L., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila Gaskell, Wm. H., manager, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Tamsui Gaskin, R. H., assistant, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Gasper, C. B., assistant, Eastern & Oriental Hotel, Penang
Gassett, Walter, vice and deputy Consul and interpreter, American Consulate, Kobe
Gaste, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Gaster, E., assistant, China Fire Insurance Co., Ld., Hongkong
Gaston, A. B., superintendent engineer, Taku Tug & Lighter Co., Taku
Gaszner, A. von, elect, & mec, engineer, Siemens & Schuckert, Tokyo
Gatenby, L. T., assistant, "Bangkok Times," Bangkok
Gates, P., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Gatjen, Herm, secretary, German Consulate, Shanghai
Gatrell, T. J. M., M.D., F.R.G.S., Tientsin
Gattey, Edward, asst. incorporated accountant, Evatt & Co., Singapore
Gauchet, Rev. L., Roman Catholic missionary, Nanking,
Gauder, S. D., cashier and bookkeeper, Lambert & Co., Singapore
Gaudet, A., assistant, Messageries Maritimes Co., Hongkong
Gaudin, juge de paix, Namdinh, Cochin-Chine
Gaudiot, Ch., chef de la comptabilité, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Gaumer, O., merchant, Schwarz, Gaumer & Co., Hankow
Gaunt, L. E., barrister-at-law, Allen & Gledhill, Singapore
Gauntlett, Edward, instructor in English, Higher School, Kanagawa, Tokyo
Gausden, G. J. S., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Gaussen, P., asst., travelling inspector of accounts, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai Gautherin, L., accountant, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Shanghai
Gauthier, H., assistant, Observatory, Sicawei, Shanghai
Gautier, J., merchant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Hankow
Gavalda, Réne, professor of French, Nobles' College, Tokyo Gavelle, G., comptable, L. Godeln & Cie., Haiphong Gavito, M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila Gawler, J. S., assistant, Purnell, & Paget, Canton
Gawler, W. N., manager, Adda Rubber Estates, Ld., Johore Gawthorne, Jos., managing clerk, Presgrave & Matthews, Penang Gay, C. H., lieutenant, 78th Company, R. G. A., Singapore Gayot, Ch., élève vice consul, Consulat de France, Shanghai Gaytero, M., teacher, Manila High School, Manila.
Gazenu, V., vicar, St. Peter and St. Paul's Church, Singapore Geary, James, assistant, John M. Switzer, Cebu Gebaner, M., assistant, Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Gerlde, O. C. K., sub-accountant, Electricity Co., Ld., Bangkok Gedde. V., accountant, Siam Electricity Co., L., Bangkok Geddes, C. E., merchant, Geddes & Co., Hankow and Shanghai Geddes, F., stenographer, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong Gedge, Herbert J., solicitor, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong Ciee, A. D., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong Gee, F. A., tidewaiter, Native Customs, Newchwang
Gee, N. G., professor, Soochow University, Soochow
Gegg, G. W., manager, Horse Repository, Causeway Bay, Hongkong Legg, H., assistant, China & Java Export Co., Hankow
Gehin, commis de 2e. classe, Trésorerie Générale, Hanoi
#
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1610
Geiger, C., silk inspector, Canton
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Geil, commandant, Quartier Général à Hanoi, Hanoi Geiser, E., merchant, Geiser & Gilbert, Yokohama Gelewsky, A., secretary, German Consulate, Chefoo Gelinsky, Dr., Peking
Gellion, F. J., engineer, William C. Jack & Co., Hongkong Gemperle, W., manager, Behn, Meyer & Co., Iloilo
Genato, V., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Manila
Gendrier, assistant, C. Tournier, Saigon.
Genet, E., professor, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki Gennaro, Fr. G., bishop coadjutor, Eastern Hupeh, Hankow Gensburger, H., importer, Gensburger & Juolah, Shanghai Gensen, F., merchant, Winckler & Co., Kobe
Gentle, Alex., accountant, auditor and commission agent, Singapore George, A. H., student interpreter, British Embassy, Peking
George, A. W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong George, E. A, assistant examiner, Native Customs, Tientsin
George, E. W., merchant, Andrews & George, Yokohama
George, F., tux collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
George, F. F. tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
George, H., manager, Bazar Filipino, Manila
George, H. G., engineer, International Cotton Manufacturing Co., Shanghai George, Jesse, prosecuting attorney, Law dept., Manila
George, S. G., inspector of mines, Pahang
Gerald, G. A. V., student interpreter, British Consulate, Bangkok
Gerald, H., 34, Peking Road, Shanghai
Gérard, capitaine, Artillerie Coloniale, Saigon.
Gerard, Eugene, manager, Auto Repairing Dept., La Estrella del Norte, Manila Gerard, S. E. A., ambassador, French Legation, Tokyo
Géraud, A., director, School of French Language, Pakhoi
Géraud, L., professor, School of French Language, Pakhoi
Gerbant, Dr., medecin major, Tuyên Quang, Tonkin
Gerdts, A., merchant, A. Meier & Co., vice consul for Sweden, Yokohama
Gerecke, E., bill broker, Route Pichon, Shanghai
Gerin, A., silk inspector, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Yokohama
Gernot, C., pro-vicaire-général, Mission de Cochin-Chine, Saigon
Gernoth, E., assistant, Melchers & Co., Tientsin
Gerrard, P. N., district surgeon, Selangor
Gerrard, W. L., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Gerulat, H. R., assistant examiner, Chinese Customs, Newchwang
Gerz, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Gese, A., assistant, H. Ahrens & Co., and hon. vice consul for Spain, Nagasaki Geslien, H., merchant, A. Meier & Co., Kobe
Gessler, J., assistant, Meisei Cakka, Osaka
Getley, A., pilot, Shanghai
Gex, G., missionary, Procure des Missions Etrangères, Singapore
Geyer, E. W, surveyor, Survey branch, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan Giaconé, F. J., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Giannotte, C., assistant, Schweiger & Co., Import & Export, Hankow
Giass, Duncan, superintendent, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai
Gibb, Alex. W. V., merchant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Foochow
Gibb, J., B.A., professor of chemistry, Peking University, Peking
Gibb, Jas., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai Gibb, Wm., chief officer, steamer "Suiwo," China coast
Gibbings, Eward M., sub-lieut., H. B. M. gunboat "Britomart," China Station. Gibbinson, J., chief engineer, steamer "Lintau," West River
Gibbons, R. J., assistant chief inspector, Spirit Farmer, Bangkok
Gibbons, V., assistant, Boustead & Co., Penang
Gibbs, C., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Gibbs, G. M., meter reader, Public Works department, Hongkong Gibbs, H. J., resident surgeon, Pauper Hospital, Singapore
Gibbs, J. B. J., manager, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama Gibbs, L., civil engineer, Denison, Ram & Gibbs, Hongkong Gibert, G., Roman Catholic missionary, Nanking
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Giblin, R. W., director, Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Gibson, A. Macdougall, proprietor, Hôtel de la Paix, Singapore
Gibson, J. P., third-officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Linhsing," Shanghai
Gibson, W. S., assistant officer, Klang, Selangor
Gibson, A., veterinary surgeon, Sanitary department, Hongkong
1611
Gibson, Dr. R., MacLean, medical superintendent and secretary Alice Hospital, Hongkong
Gibson, H., gunner, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Gibson, H. F. C., commissioner of Works, Public Works department, Sarawak
Gibson, John G., merchant, A. S. Rosenthal & Co., Yokohama
Gibson, J. H., sub-manager, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila
Gibson, J. L. M. assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Singapore
Gibson, J. R., assistant, Pacific Mail S. S. Co., Kobe
Gibson, R. G., resident engineer, Imperial Railways, Lanchow, Tientsin
Gibson, W., draughtsman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Giertsen, G. T., acting Commander, R. S. "Feihoo," Custoins, Canton
Giertz, P., chief mechanical engineer, Royal Railway dept., Bangkok Giese, E., assistant, Medical Hall, Singapore
Giesel A., merchant, Giesel & Co., Shanghai
Giesen, E., Roman Catholic bishop, Tsinanfu
Gifford, E. K., instructor in English, Nanking University, Nanking
Gifford, W. T., travelling ticket examiner, Shanghai Nankin Railway, Shanghai Gigon-Papin, maire, Conseil Municipal, ville de Saigon, Saigon
Gil, J. S., clerk in charge, Kowloon Branch Post Office, Hongkong
Gil-Pereira, J. L., accountant, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Gil-Pereira, J. L., accountant, Hozan Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu Gilbert, A. W., clerk, American Consulate, Chefoo
Gilbert, B., merchant, Yokohama
Gilbert, F, merchant, Geiser & Gilbert, Yokohama
Gilbert, G., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama
Gilbert, J. M., master, Messageries Maritimes tender "Whangpoo," Shanghai
Gilbert, Newton W., chief, Department of Public Instruction, Manila
Gilbert, W. I., teacher, Toledo Division of Cebu, Philippines
Gilby, H. H., asst. supt., Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong Gilchrist, Edward, commissioner, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Gilchrist, George, surveyor to Bureau Veritas, Manila
Gilchrist, J. R. engineer manager, Water Works Co., Ld., Tientsin Giles, A. B., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Canton Giles, B., vice consul and registrar, British Consulate, Hankow Giles, J., assistant superintendent of Parks & Open Spaces, Shanghai Giles, J., manager, Singapore and Johore Rubber Co., Ld., Johore Giles, L., vice consul, British Consulate, Canton
Gilham, E., assistant, Perhentian Tinggi Estate, Negri Sembilan
Gill, E., storekeeper, Riley Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Gill, E. J., asst. victualling store officer, H. J. Naval dept., Hongkong
Gill, Harold, assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Nagasaki
Gill, James, asst, master, Public School for Chinese, Shanghai
Gill, R. E., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Yokohama
Gillard, G, assistant, H. Blow & Co., Tientsin
Gillbard, P. J., assistant, Bethell Bros., Kobe
Giller, Henry L., general manager, "North China Daily News," Shanghai Gillespie, Thos., captain, "Kiangteen," China coast
Gillett, R., chief draftsman, Survey Office, Batu Gajah, Perak
Gillingham, A. H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Gillingham, A. W., accountant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Tamsui
Gillon, chancelier, Tuyen-Quang, Tonkin
Gillon, D. T., representative of Firms, Gillon & Co., Yokohama
Gillum, S. F., assistant, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Gilman, A. B., property clerk, Bureau of Coast & Geodetic Survey, Manila
Gilman, L. H., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Canton
Gilmore, J. J., assistant, Denniston & Sullivan, Shanghai
Gilmore, S., broker, Doney & Co., Tientsin
Gilmour, D. W., manager, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Penang Gilpin, Á., asst. civil engineer, Admiralty Works, Hongkong
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1612
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Gilroy, P., inspector, Police department, Penang
Gilson, E. H., assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Shanghai Gimborn, B. von, assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hankow Giner, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Takao
Ginhel, A. von. assistant, Holland, China Trading Co., Hongkong Ginister, A. C., assistant, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila Ginsbel, G. W., engineer, Arnhold-Karberg & Co., Peking Giorgi, D., assistant, Ogliastro, Freres & Co., Saigon Giovannini, G., second commander, R. N. "Calabria," China Gipperich, E., merchant, Gipperich & Co., Tientsin Gipperich, H., assistant, E. Gipperich & Co., Tientsin Giralt, John, Roman Catholic missionary, Tang-oa, Fokien Girardi, G., assistant, F., Daurelle, Hanoi'
Girard, J. J. J., director, College of the Missions Etrangères, Penang Girardet, H. H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Giraud, C., teacher, Higher School, Hongo, Tokyo
Gires, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Giroday, de la, controleur du Service de l'Eclairage, Saigon
Girollet, assistant, Denis Frères, Saigon
Gittins, H., accountant, Hongkong Cotton Spinning Weaving & Dyeing Co., Hongkong Gittius, Thos., merchant, John Gittins & Co., Foochow
Gjern, J. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Yochow
Glaeser, A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Glaeser, H., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co, Shanghai
Glaiserrean, J., chief clerk, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Hongkong
Glaister, J., surgeon, H. B. M. S. " Kent," China & Japan
Glass, T. R., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Glathe, A., assistaut, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
Glazebrook, F. E. de T., merchant, Meerkamp & Co., Manila
Glemster, A. C., Warner, Barnes & Co., Cebu
Glendenning, J., travelling ticket examiner, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Glendenning, R., traffic inspector, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Glendinning, F., executive engineer, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan
Glendinning, W., chief inspector, The Electric Traction Co., Hongkong Glennan, James D., major, commanding Medical Corps, Manila
Glennie, J. A. S., assistant health officer, Singapore
Glover, accountant, Malacca Rubber Plantations Ld., Singapore Glover, A. E., assistant, Kelly & Walsh, Ld., Shanghai
Glover, A, S., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Bangkok
Glover, J. S., assistant district officer, Matang sub-district, Perak
Glover, T. A., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Gloyn, J., assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Glmür, Ch., assistant, Otto Streuli, Yokohama
Glmür, Otto, merchant, Sprungli & Co., Manila
Gobert, F,, interpreter, Belgium Legation, Peking
Goble, Frederick, acting sup. treasurer, Province of Mindoro, Philippines Goethals, Carolus, Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Godat, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Godby, A. C., wharfinger, Butterfield & Swire, Tientsin Goddard, C. S., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Goddard, Dr. John, 36, Nanking Road, Shanghai
Goddard, H. S. assistant, Samuel, McGregor & Co., Dairen
Godelu, L, directeur, L. Godelu et Cie., Haiphong
Godfrey, C. H., assistant engineer, Public Works, Shanghai
Godfrey, H. B., lieut. and comdr, H. M. S. "Teal," China Station
Godoy, J. M., de, consul for Brazil, Yokohama
Goebel, L., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Kobe
Goebel, Leon P., mec. engineer, general manager, Bohler Bros. & Co., Tokyo
Goecke, H., assistant, Rohde & Co., Shanghai
Goedecke, oberlandmesser, Landamt, Kiaochau
Goehring, A., Voelkel & Schroeder, Id., Shanghai
Goennert, J., editor and manager, "Ostasiatische Nachrichten," Tientsin
Goettscho, W., engineer, Meklong Railway Co., Tachin, Bangkok Goetz, W., assistant, Arndt & Co., Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Goetze, H. F. H., examiner, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Goetzee, J. A., manager, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Ipoh Goff, Dr. A. P., San Lazaro Hospital, Manila
Goger, H., treasurer, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki Goggin, S., inspector of Police, Negri Sembilan
Goggin, W. G., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong Goguet, adjoint à l'ingenieur en chef, Chemins de Fer, Hanoi Goicouria, A. de, director, "Libertas," Manila
Gok, C. G., manager, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hongkong Gold, P., assistant chartered accountant, Evatt & Co., Singapore Gold, P., secretary, The Temanoh Tin Syndicate Ld., Johore Goldau, G. K., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Goldenberg, H., assistant. Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong Goldenberg, I. I., assistant, Palmer & Turner, Hongkong Goldenberg, M., assistant, Weill & Zerner, Singapore Goldfinger, L., assistant, Helm Bros., Ld., Yokohama
Goldie, R. M., managing director, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Goldie, W. S., assistant, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Golding, A. E., clerk, Schwarz, Gaumer & Co., Shanghai
Golding, C. B. V., boat officer, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Golding, C. G. clerk, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Goldman, B., merchant, Shanghai
Goldman, D., merchant, Shanghai
Goldman, I., assistant, Gimmerman & Co., Vladivostock
Goldman, J., assistant, L. Moore & Co., Shanghai
Goldring, P. W., solicitor, Goldring, Barlow & Morrell, Shanghai
Goldschmidt, S., assistant, J. Ullmann & Co., Hongkong
Goldsmith, H. E., assistant engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Goldstein, M., assistant, Sennet Frères, Hongkong
Goldthorp, J. W., acting district officer, Nibong Tebal, Penang
Golikoff, W. P., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow
1613
Gollion, J., directeur general, Société Française des Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong Golodajeff, A., assistant, Joh. H. Langelütje & Co., Vladivostock
Golovin, M. N., assistant, Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow
Goltlieb, F. H. V., registrar, Supreme Court, Singapore
Gomes, A. clerk, Boustead & Co., Shanghai
Gomes, A. J. M., assistant, Otto Kong Sing, Hongkong
Gomes, A. L., assistant, Post Office, Macao
Gomes, A. S., medical practitioner, 9, Lena Cottage, Seymour Road, Hongkong
Gomes, C., clerk, Herbert Dent & Co., Canton
Gomes, C. F., assistant engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Macao
Gomes, Dr. J., vigario, Egreja de Sto. Antonio, Macau
Gomes, E. J. F., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Gomes, Francis, clerk, Nippon Yusen Kaisha, Hongkong
Gomes, F., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Gomes, F. A., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Foochow
Gomes, H. O., clerk, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong
Gomes, José, clerk, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Hongkong
Gomes, J., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Gomes, J., clerk, Wm. Powell, L., Hongkong
Gomes, J., clerk, Exchange Market, Yokohama
Gomes, J. B., clerk, Bowden Brothers & Co., Kobe
Gomes, J. E., clerk, Douglas Lapraik & Co., Hongkong
Gomes, J. F. X., director, Escola Central do sexo masculino, Macao
Gomes, J. J., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Kobe
Gomes, L. H., assistant. Railway Department, B. N. Borneo
Gomes, Manuel, chief, Statistical Division, Bureau of Health, Manila
Gomes, M., assistant master, High School, Malacca
Gomes, M. A., chief clerk, Green Island Cement Co., Macao
Gomes, M. H., clerk, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Gomes, P. J., chief clerk, Singapore and Kranji Railway, Singapore
Gompertz, Henry H. D., puisne judge, Hongkong
Gonah, H., assistant superintendent of Police, Singapore
Gonçalves, J., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macau
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1614
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Gonçalves, V. A., advocate, Macao
Goncharoff, W., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Gonon, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Gonsalves, F. S., clerk, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Shanghai Gonsalves, T. R., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Gonsalves, V., clerk, David Sassoon Co., Ld., Hongkong Gonzalez, A. F., Spanish missionary, Shanghai Gonzalez, B., Spanish missionary, Shanghai Gonzalez, F., clerk, Sale & Frazar, Ld., Tokyo Gonsalves, J. M., clerk, Ebbeke & Co., Shanghai
Gooch, H. E., asst. master, Public School for Chinese, Shanghai Gooch, W. E., representative of firms, Gillon & Co., Yokohama Good, H., chief engineer, steamer "Suiwo," China coast Goodale, E. F., accountant, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai Goodban J. H. C., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama Goode, G. E., medical practitioner, Goode & Balean, Shanghai Goodeno, J. M., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Amoy Goodfellow, H. S., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai Goodheart, C. F., boat officer, Customs, Shanghai
Gooding, S. J., accountant, Sapong Rubber and Tobacco Estates, Sandakan Goodland, E. S., deputy-registrar, Hackney Carriage Dept., Municipality, Shanghai Goodman, W. E., manager, Byram Estate, Penang
Goodridge, H., assistant, Japan Chronicle, Kobe
Goodsell, D. A., D.D., L.L.D., Peking University, Peking
Goodwin, H., assistant, Tengkalen Ld., Osborne and Chappel, Perak
Goodyear, C. M., superintendent of Revenue, Negri Sembilan
Goold, J. C., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Kobe
Goolsby, W. E., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Canton Goonting, R., chief clerk, State Surgeon's Office, Selangor Goos, F., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Goose, K., assistant, Grossen & Co., Yokohama
Gore-Booth, R. H., broker, Shanghai
Gordaliza, B., Roman Catholic missionary, Po-kin-lun
Gordo, F. A. F., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama
Gordo, G. F., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama
Gordon, A. G., engineer and contractor, Gordon & Co., Hongkong Iron Works, H'kong Gorlon, A. W., assistant, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Gordon, E. H., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Penang
Gordon, E. L. S., acting vice consul for Great Britain, Dairan
Gordon, J. D., plumber, Gordon & Co., Shanghai
Gordon, J. M., assistant, Sheman, Tomes & Co., Kobe
Gordon, John M., surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Moorhen," Chinn Station
Gordou, J. R., assistant, Prye Rubber and Coconut Plantations, Penang
Gordon, M., Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College, Tientsin
Gordon, R. H., assistant, Edgar Allen & Co., Osaka and Tokyo
Gore, F. J., surveyor, Survey department, Selangor
Gorham, C. L., general manager, Fumigating and Disinfecting Bureau, Hongkong Gorman, A., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Yokohama
Gorman, J. J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Gorman, John, clerk, Japan Cold Storage & Ice Co., Yokohama
Gorman, P. A., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama
Gorotzarzu, Charles de, vicaire apostolique, Mission Etrangères de Paris, Mengtsz
Gorris. L. H., assistant, Nederlandsche Handel Maatschappij, Penang
Gorsin, F., assistant, Richard Neumann, Shanghai
Gorton, F. G., assistant, British Consulate, Bangkok
Gorton, H. M., assistant, Sun Insurance Office, Shanghai
Gorton, N. E., accountant, Bureau of Printing, Manila
Gory, H. A., third assistant, Maritime Customs, Lungehow
Gory, J., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Gosano, J. J. P., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Goseon, R., proprietor, Rice Plantation Canal, Bangkok
Gosewisch, C., captain, steamer "Petchaburi," China coast
Gosewisch, W., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Kiaochau
Gosling, C. L., assistant, T. L. Gosling & Co., Singapore
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Gosling, G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuchow Gosling, T. L., merchant, T. L. Gosling & Co., Singapore Gostling, E., chief officer, steamer "Kingsing," China coast Gostelon, G. W., chief-clerk, Bankruptcy Office, Singapore
Gostwyck, H., assistant engineer, Municipal Water Works, Singapore Goteh, F. W. assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Yokohama
Gotla, H. C., manager, P. D. Gotla & Co., Hongkong
Gotte, R., assistant engineer of works, Royal Railways Northern Line, Bangkok Götte, R., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Gottlinger, N., assistant, L. Meier & Co., Kobe
Gottschalk, K., assistant, H. Schaefer & Co., Singapore
Gottsche, S. A., manager and secretary, Paknam Railway Co., Bangkok
Gottwaldt, H., secretary, German Consulate, Amoy
Gotz, J., electrician, Raub Australian Gold Mining Company, Pahang Goubault, elève interprète, Consul de France, Shanghai
Goucher, J. F., D.D. Peking University, Peking
Gough, A. D., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Manila
Goulborn, V., assistant, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Hongkong Goulbourn, W., assistant, Brand Brothers & Co., Shanghai
Gould, C., assistant, Sailors' Home, Hongkong
Gould, J., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Gould, Ozro, C., vice consul in charge, American Consulate, Seoul, Corea Goulding, R. R., surveyor, Survey department, Perak
Goulding, W. H., foreman, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong Gourbeil, lieut.-gouverneur de Cochin-Chine, Saigon
Gourdiat, Rev. F. D., teacher, Fong In Chinese Official College, Canton Gourgey, I., assistant, E. S. Kadoorie & Co., Hongkong
Gourgey, M., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Gourlay, D., inspector of police, Hongkong
Gourmont, E., assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Haiphong
Gourpy, Charles, admr. adjoint, Résidence Hai Ninh, Tonkin
Gow, D., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Gow, W., chief engineer, steamer "Fooksung," China coast
Gowan, G. D. O., assistant engineer, Yahang Consolidated Co., Yahang
Gowans, F. J., surgeon, H.B.M.S. "Clio," China Station
Goway, Frank, M., clerk, American Consulate General, Scoul
Gowland, G. H., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India A. & U., Shanghai Gowland, H. J., inspector of Police, Perak
Goyet, E., silk inspector, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Graburn, H. L. K., agent, Straits Trading Co., Serendah, Selangor
Graça, F. M. P. de, clerk, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Graça, J. M., clerk, Herbert Dent & Co., Canton
Graça, J. M., clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Graça, P. M. A. de, solicitor and public accountant, Shanghai Gracey, Samuel L., consul for United States, Foochow
Gracias, J. M., advogado e administrador do Concelho, Macao
Gracias, M. Q., informador, Repartiao de Fazenda, Macau Gracias, S., aide en pharmacie, Pharmacie Blanc, Hanoi
Graca, J., clerk, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Graeber, T. A., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Chefoo
Graff, R. C., assistant, Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co., Hongkong Graf v. Zeppelin, captain, S.M.S. "Scharnhorst," Ger. Squadron, China
Graham, A., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Graham, C. R., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Graham, Douglas, commission agent, Hongkong
Graham, D., second officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Chuentiao," Shangha
Graham, D. M., assistant, Alex. Ross & Co., Shanghai
Graham, E. N., medical officer, Teluk Anson, Perak
Graham, F., electrical engineer, Electric Company, Hongkong
Graham, F. A., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Yokohama
Graham, G. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Graham, H. R., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Yokohama
Graham, I., assistant, Bradley & Co., Shanghai
Graham, J., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Moji and Shimonoseki
"NIPPONOPHONE
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JJ BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1616
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Graham, J., superintendent shipwright, Graving Dock, Singapore
Graham, J. L., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Yokohama
Graham, J. W., works manager, H'kong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, H'kong Graham, R. C., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Shimonoseki, Japan
Graham, T. E., assistant, Denny, Mott & Dickson, Ld., Bangkok
Graham, T. J., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tongshan Graham, W., assistant, J. R. Simons & Co., Yokohama
Graham, W., assistant, North & Rae, Yokohama
Graham, W., chief engineer, steamer "Mausang," China coast
Graham, W. Drummond, manager, Sun Insurance Office, Shanghai
Graham, W. D., manager, Wilkinson, Heywood, & Clark, Shanghai
Graham, W. E., assistant, Jaques & Co., Tientsin
Graham, W. H., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Graham, W. H., Union Medical College, Peking University, Peking Grainger, S. J., chief-examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Grallert, H., clerk, Bodiker Carl & Co., Tsingtau
Gram, C. P., assistant, Jardine Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Gram, T. D., employé, Shanghai Tug and Lighter Co., Shanghai Grammond, assistant, Ogliastro, Frères et Cie., Saigon
Grandon, J. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wulu
Grant, Andrew, district surgeon, Muar, Johore
Grant, A. J., assistant, Wijk & Co., Shanghai
Grant, A. W., senior assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong Geark, J. R., Yokohama
Gray, J. E., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Gray, R., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering & Co., Hongkong Gray, Wm. assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama Grant, F., inspector of Police, Perak
Grant, E., draughtsman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Grant, J., first engineer, Customs revenue cruiser "Kaipan," Kowloon Grant, J., land-surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong Grant, J. K., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Peking Grant, J., wardinaster, Infectious Diseases' Hospitals, Hongkong Grantz, H., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kalochau Grantz, W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hankow Granzow, O., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Green, F, assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Green, Warwick, asst. to director, Bureau of Public Works, Manila Green, W. D., manager, Hike Shoe Palace, Manila
Granval, A., Fondé-de-pouvoirs, Societé Bordelaise Indo-Chinoise, Haiphong Grapow, C., superintendent, German Police, Hankow
Grasshoff, captain, Chief of German Naval Staff, China Station
Gratawa, D. M. G., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore
Graves, A. E., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Selangor
Graves, Chas. B., general manager, Manila Electric Railroad & Light Co., Manila
Graves, C. A., secretary, Royal Insurance Co., Shanghai
Graves, Ernest, lieut., engineer, asst., Defensive Works, Manila
Graves, S. M., div. supt. of school Antique, Philippines
Gravesen, A., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Singapore
Grawitz, C., assistant, Denis Frères, Haiphong
Gray, A., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Taiping, Perak
Gray, A. T., asst. building inspector, Public Works, Shanghai
Gray, J. A., clergyman, Presbyterian Church, Singapore
Gray, G. B. W., acting-manager, Labu Rubber Co., Ld., Singapore
Gray, G. D., physician, British Embassy, Peking
Gray, Harry de, manager, China & Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Gray, Jas., Upper Yangtse pilot, Shanghai
Gray, John A., minister, Presbyterian Church, Singapore
Gray, J., pilot, Singapore
Gray, J., supernumerary medical officer, Singapore
Gray, J. G., shipping agent, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Chinwangtao Gray, M. F., assistant master, Shanghai Public School, Shanghai
Gray, N. T., state engineer, Public Works department, Pahang
Gray, S., engineer, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Gray, William W., colonel, chief surgeon, Mindanao, Manila Gray, W. F., acting agent, North China Insurance Co., Hongkong Gray, W. R. C., assistant, Rabana Sugar Estate, Penang
Grayburn, V. M., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Grayrigge, G., assistant, W. Hewett & Co., Shanghai
Greathurst, T., foreman, Westininster Construction Co., Singapore Greatnex, F. C., student interpreter, British Embassy, Kobe
Greatrex, F. C., assistant, British Consulate
Greaves, G. A., manager, Dallas's Australian Horse Repository, Singapore Greaves, J. R., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Canton
Greeh, M., assistant, Gopeng Tin Mining Co., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Green, C. F. J., district officer, Jasin, Malacca
Green, C. H., manager, The Publicity Co., Shanghai
Green, H. E., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Kobe
Green, J. F., assistant chief, Police department, Manila
Green, J. H., Thos. Cook, & Son, Yokohama
Green, P. H., assistant, Sale & Frazar Ld., Tokyo
Green, O. M., assistant editor, "North China Daily News and Herald," Shanghai Green, S. E., Banker & Co., Hongkong
Greene, J. M. B., foreman, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
Greenfield, J. A., postal asst., Chinese Post Office, Chengtu
Greenfield, T. J. M., barrister-at-law, assistant, Braddell Bros., Singapore
Greenhalgh, J. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Greenhill, L. S., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Swatow
Greenland, W., assistant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
Greenley, W. A., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Greens, S. R., engine-driver, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Greenwood, C. F., tailor and outfitter, Shanghai
Greer, Allen J., captain, Judge advocate, Mindanao, Manila
Greer, James W., appraiser, U. S. Customs, Cebu
Greetham, Ch. T. D., eng. com., H. B. M. S. "Astraea," China and Japan
Gregg, H. W., headmaster, Mission Schools, Kuching, Sarawak
Gregory, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Gregory, E. A., forest ranger, Tampin, Negri Sembilan
Gregory, E. B., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow and Shanghai
Gregory, E. assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Gregory, H. C., assistant, Jardine Matheson & Co., Yokohama
Gregory, R. H., manager, Leaf dept., British-Cigarette Co., Hankow
Gregory, T. M., assistant, A. V. Apcar & Co., Hongkong
Gregson, F. C., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Gregson, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Gregson, Richard E. S., barrister-at-law, Stokes, Platt and Teesdale, Shanghai
Greig, Geo. L., merchant, M. W. Greig & Co., Foochow
Greig, Hope, assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
1617
Greig, K. E., asst. engine works manager, Taikoo Dockyard and Engy. Co., Hongkong Greig, R., merchant, Turner & Co., Foochow
Greig, Walter, asst. accountant, International Banking Corporation, Kobe
Gregoire, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Gregory, A., fitter, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang
Gregory, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Canton
Gregory, G. A., clerk, District Court, Penang
Gregory, M., fitter, Municipality, Penang
Gregory, N. A. R., clerk, District Court, Penang
Gregory, N. B., assistant sanitary inspector, Health Department, Shanghai
Gregory, J., clerk, Municipality, Penang
Gregory, R. V., sanitary inspector, Penang
Greiner, G., superintendent, Cement Tile Works Ld., Shanghai
Grenard, J., Chef de la correspondance, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Grenard, L., chemist, L. Grenard & Co., Shanghai
Grenier, Baron A., Minister, Belgian Legation, Peking
Grenier, L., traffic inspector, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Grenling, Robert, manager, Schmidt & Ziegler, Manila
Greppi, A., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Kobe
Gresson, J. E., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
NIPPONOPHONE
J BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
51
1618
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Gresson, W. J., managing director, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai Grevedon, P. J., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz Grey, B. W., land surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong Grey, C. F., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Grey, Eric V., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Flora," China and Japan Grey, E. L., pilot, Indo-China Steam Nav. Co., China coast
Grey, J., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton Ld., Manila Grey, M. J., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Chinkiang Grey, R. C., acting British Resident, Negri Sembilan Grey, R. F., merchant, A. C. Harper & Co., Selangor
Grey, W. J., electrical engineer, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Griebel, Paul, assistant, Bergmann & Co., Yokohama
Griese, C. W. G., examiner, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Grieve, Jas., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Grieve, John, accountant, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila
Griffin, A. E., civil engineer, Leigh and Orange, Hongkong Griffin, Clarence, assistant, Scheuer & Co., Yokohama Griffin, H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Griffin, H., local manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hankow
Griffin, J. P. D., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai Griffin, T., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Griffith, Rev. J. S., pastor, Union Church, Tientsin
Griffith, T. E., silk merchant, Canton
Griffith, Victor I., sub-lieut., H. B. M. S., "Merlin," China and Japan Griffiths, E. A., consul for Great Britain, Moji and Shimonoseki Griffiths, Horace W., manager, Reuter's Telegram Co., Shanghai Griffiths, H. J., employé, J. L. Thompson & Co., Kobe
Griffiths, J., grade surveyor, Revenue Survey branch, Negri Sembilan. Grigoolwsy, A. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock"
Grigorieff, W. E., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Grigorieff, W. J., assistant, Trading Company, Hankow and Shanghai Grillo, Ph., missionary, St. Francis Xavier's Church, Shanghai
Grimble, F. W., assistant, Butterfield and Swire, Kóbe
Grimble, G., ship and freight broker, Hongkong
Grimble, H., assistant, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Yokohama
Grimmesey, L., manager, Bagnall & Hilles, Yokohama
Grimshaw, T., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ld., Hongkong
Grineff, Z. P., agent for Companies, Songchin
Grist, Edward J., solicitor, Wilkinson & Grist, Hongkong
Grodetzky, S. L., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Grodtmann, J., assistant, China Export Import and Bank Cie., Shanghai
Groenon, B. van, merchant, British North Borneo
Grof, J., foreman, Hanyang Iron & Steel Works, Hankow
Grof, M., foreman, Hanyang Iron & Steel Works, Hankow
Groleau, M., résident supérieur, Residence Supérieure de l'Annam, Hué
Gröne, F., deputy health officer of port, Hongkong
Gronemann, O., assistant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Groote, E., proprietor, Lenz & Co., Bangkok
Gros, chef du Contentieux, Douanes et Régies, Annam
Gros, H., assistant, C. Tournier, Saigon
Grosbie, A., assistant, Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow
Grosfilaz, médecin, Hôpital Colonial et Militaire, Saigon
Grosjean, A., merchant, A. Grosjean & Co., Hankow
Groskamp, C. W. A. M., acting sub-agent, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore
Gross, M. F., section-engineer, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Gross, O., assistant. J. Trost & Co., Tientsin
Grosse, dolmetscher, Besirksamt Litsun, Kiaochau
Grosse, H. J., inspector of Burial Grounds, Singapore
Grosser, H., farmar, Kinochau
Grosset, G., station supervisor, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Grossin, chancelier-notaire, Thua-Thien, Annam
Grosskop, O. E., first assistant, Russian Post Office, Shanghai
Grossmann, F. N., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Grossmann, O., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Yokohama
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Groth, K., assistant, Behu, Meyer & Co., Penang
Grothe, A., assistant, Deutsche-Asiatische Bank, Singapore Grouchetsky, A. N., consul-general for Russia, Mukden
Grout, P., foreman electrician, Railways, Tongshan, North China Grove, E. L., engineer Public Works department, Sarawak Grove, F., engineer in chief, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton Groves, R. C., clerk of works, H.M.B. Office of Works, Shanghai Groves, T., executive engineer, Public Works department, Selangor Gruenwald, Fr., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Gruieff, G. P., merchant, Song Chin
Grumyald, assistant-manager, Hotel Prinz Heinrich, Kiaochau Grundmann, H. M. W., first assistant, Maritime Customs, Hoihow Grundmann, O., postinspektor, German Post Office, Shanghai Grunstein, H. S., accountant, Belat Tin Mining Co., Pabang Grut W. L., vice-manager, Siam Electricity Co., Ld., Bangkok Gsell, H., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Kobe Guaita, F., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Tientsin Gubbay, A. S., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai Gubbay, Ch. S., merchant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Hongkong Gubbay, D. M., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai Gubbay, D. S., assistant, E. D., Sassoon & Co., Hongkong Gabbay, R. A., bill and bullion broker, Hongkong Gubbe, Arnhold, assistant, Moll, Kunzli & Co., Manila Gubbels, N., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Gué, E., directeur, Descours, Cabaud et Cie., Haiphong
Guedes, A. P. de M., director d'Obras Publicas, Macao
Guedes, F. D., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Guedes, F. M., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Guerault, G., missionary, Aurora University, Shanghai
Guerdrum, Geo. D., chief sanitary engineer, Bureau of Health, Manila Guerin, A., consul for France, Chefoo
Guerin, L'abbé J. N., Roman Catholic missionary, Yokohama
Guériteau, E., assistant, Royal Brush Goshi Kaisha, Osaka
Gueritz, E. P., governor and commander-in-chief, B. N. Borneo
Guernier, R. C., acting, deputy Commissioner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
1619
Guerriez, G., attaché commercial, Direction de l' Agriculture et du Commerce, Hawai Guest, M. S., accountant, Manchester North Borneo Rubber Co., B. N. Borneo
Guffay, J. S., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Guggenheim, J., manager, Japan Import and Export Commission Co., Kobe Guiccioli, M., ambassador, Italian Legation, Tokio
Guignard, M., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Guilbot, Dr. Médecin, directeur, French Hospital, Cholon
Guiley, H. A., assistant, American Trading Co., Kobe
Guillaume, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Guillemet, directeur, Ecole Normale de Giadinh, Cochin-Chine Guillemet, Dr., médecin de l'Hopital, Chungking
Guillon, M., assistant, P. Roque, Haiphong
Guillon, R., assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Haiphong
Guilloux, C. M., procure des Lazaristes, Shanghai
Guimaraes, L., chargé d'affaires, Brazilian Legation, Tokyo
Guinand, P., superior, College of Ryong San, Seoul
Guinness, Cecil, agent, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Penang Guira, L. L. di,, doctor, Italian Legation, Peking
Quirant, J., assistant, Societé Bordelaise Indo Chinoise, Haiphong Guiraud, chef de la voirie, Municipale, Annam
Guis, directeur général des Finances et de la Comptabilité, Indo-Chine Guitart, P. M. secretario, Mision de la Compañia de Jesus, Manila Gulabshah, S., proprietor and manager, Colonial Press, Singapore Gulamali, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai Gulamali, R., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Ld., Shanghai Gulbrandsen, K., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Guldner, W., assistant, Jaeger & Co.. Singapore
Gulland, H. C., manager, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Gulowsen, O., medical practitioner, and vice-consul for Sweden and Norway, Chefoo
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NIPPONOPHONE "--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
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FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Gumpert, E., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Tientsin
Gundlach, K., techniken, Kiaochau
Gundry, G., pilot, Shanghai
Gunn, A. J., secretary, Chamber of Commerce, and Singapore Exchange, Singapore Gunu, C. G., assistant, A. van Ess Co., Newchwang
Gunn, H. merchant, Bush Brothers, Moukden
Gunnell, J. A., inspector H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Gunson, R. W., surveying assistant, Public Works Dept., Shanghai
Guntert, W. teacher, Higher School, Hongo, Tokyo
Gunthen, P., clerk, German Consulate, Shanghai
Günther, marine ergineer, S. M. S. "Jaguar," Ger. Squadron, China. Gunther, R. zwilkommissar, Kiaoch au
Guston, M., broker, N. Reuben, Singapore
Gut, F., assistant, Deutsche Asiatische Bank, Tsinanfu
Guterres A. A., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Hongkong Guterres, A. F., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Kobe'
Guterres, A. M., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Guterres, D. M. G., clerk, Fearon, Daniel & Co., Shanghai Guterres, F. M. G., clerk, British Post Office, Shanghai
Guterres, J. A. M. P., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Guterres, J. E. N., clerk, Cruz Basto & Co., Hongkong
Guterres, T. C., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Tamsui Guterres, J. F. M., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai Guterres, J. M. A., clerk, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Kobe
Guterres, M. S., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Guterrez, J. B., clerk, Shewan Tomies & Co., Shanghai'
Gutierrez, A. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Gutierrez, A. H., clerk, International Bank, Yokohama
Gutierrez, G. M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Gutierrez, J., clerk, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong Gutierrez, J. B., clerk, Wendt & Co., Hongkong
Gutierrez, J. J., clerk, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Gutierrez, J. P., clerk, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Gutierrez, Q. J., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Gutierrez, R., acting senior clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Gutierrez, R. M. O., clerk, Wendt & Co., Hongkong
Gutt, C. J,, assistant, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Gutter, J. L., assistant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
Gutterres, F. X., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Guttridge, G. W., assistant, Holme. Ringer & Co., Chemulpo
Gutwald, C., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Guy, B. T. D., lieut. and comdr. H. B. M. Torpedo-boat destroyer "Handy," Hongkong
Guy, F. V., manager and secretary, Federal Dispensary, Selangor
Guy, J., engineer, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Guy, L., assistant, Victoria Dispensary, Hongkong
Guyer, E., assistant, F. Biedermann & Co., Saigon
Guyett, W. W., manager, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Tientsin
Gwynne, T. H., acting tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Yochow
Gyzeman, Hugo, certified accountant, Shanghai
Haabekost, A., clerk, Wheelock & Co., Shanghai
Haarst, A. van der, assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Haas, A., cutter, Bangkok Outfitting Co., Bangkok
Haas, J., assistant engineer, Germann & Co., Manila
Haas, L., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Haase, marine engineer, S. M. S. "Arcona," German Squadron, China
Haasemann, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Habekost, H. J. W., car-shed supt., Electric Tramways, Singapore Hach, F. assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Hachette, Rená, assistant, Cie, des Chargeurs Réunis, Yokohama
Hack, F. C., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Hacking, J. E., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Hackmack, A., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Tsingtau, Kiaochau
Hackman, A. J., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Hackman, A. T., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
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FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hadden, C. B., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore Hadden, G. C., assistant, Andrews & George, Yokohama
Haddon, J. W., government analyst, medical department, Singapore Hadenfeldt, M, assistant, Germann & Co., Manila Haderup, J. assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore Haderup, J. E., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore Hadley, A. J., assistant, Maritime Customis, Shanghai Hadley, N., clerk, Shanghai Horse Bazaar Co., Shanghai Hadley, T. H., assistant, L. Moore & Co., Shanghai Haerri, H., assistant, La Urania Cigar Factory, Manila
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Haesendouck, H., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., La., Tongshan Hassler, H., assistant, Jaeger & Co., Singapore
Haessler, K., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Hafen, E., secretary, German Consulate, Kobe
Haffenden, W., assistant, Syme & Co., Singapore
Hafner, U., merchant, Dalmann & Co., Singapore
Hagadorn, Charles B., captain, secretary Province Moro, Philippines
Hagan, Chris. D., employé, Bureau of Education, Manila
Hagedorn, A., assistant, Hammer & Co., Singapore
Hagelstrom, B., student interpreter, Russian Legation, Peking
Hagen, E. C., assistant, Butterfield and Swire, Hongkong
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Hager, A. R., general agent, for China & P. I., Interal. Correspondence Schools, Shanghai Hahn, B. von, vice-consul for Germany, Shanghai
Hahn, Kommandeur, Matrosenartillerie-Abteilung,
Hahn, O. H., manager, G. Strauss & Co., Kobe
Kiaochau
Haidegger, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Kuching, Sarawak
Haigh, F. D., assistant, Kelly & Walsh, Ld., Hongkong
Haigh, W. N., commercial master, Raffles Institution School, Singapore
Haine, Albert D., merchant, Alb. Haine & Co., Yokohama
Haines, Frank W., colonial chaplain, Church of England, Penang
Haines, H., employé, Peak Tramways Co., Ld., Hongkong
Hair, J., assistant, Ker & Co., Manila
Hake, L. F. H., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hankow
Halalan, Thos. D., surgeon in charge, H. B. M. Royal Naval Hospital, Yokohama
Halben, O., assistant, Max. Mittag, Shanghai
Halberg, H. H. C., examiner, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang
Halbritter, R., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Halbronn, L. assistant, Sennet Frères, Shanghai
Halden, E., assistant, Findlay & Co., Manila
Hale, A., assistant surgeon, Prison Hospital. Pearl's Hill, Singapore
Hale, B. A., managing editor, "Hongkong Daily Press," Hongkong
Hale, W. A., private secretary to Puisne Judge, Singapore
Hale, W. P., clerk, Colonial Government, Singapore
Hale, Walter F., lieut.-governor, Kalinga, Philippines
Hales, C. E. M., manager, Shanghai Book Store, Shanghai
Hales, G. L., resident engineer, China Light and Power Co., Ld., Kowloon, Hongkong Hall, A. R., assistant, Birch, Kirby & Co., Kobe
Hall, A. S., draftsman, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Penang
Hall, C. E., assistant, New Engineering & Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai
Hall, Ch. master spinner, International Cotton Mill, Pootung, Shanghai
Hall, E. asst. accountant, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Hall, E. S., interpreter, China Import & Export Lumber Co., Shanghai
Hall, F. H., Union Medical College, Peking University, Peking
Hall, F. C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., L., Shanghai
Hall, F. J., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Hall, G. A., Judge, District Court, Penang
Hall, G. L., div. supt. of schools, Province of Rizal, Philippines
Hall, H., Colonel, (captain 21st infantry), asst. director, Constabulary, Manila Hall, H. W., assistant, Sriracha Co., Ld., Bangkok
Hall, I. K., assistant, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Tamsui
Hall, J., assistant, A. Cameron & Co., Kohe
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Hall, J., assistant, A. De Ath & Co., Kobe
Hall, J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong,
Hall, J. Carey, British consul and vice president, Asiatic Society of Japan, Yokohama
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NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1622
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hall, J. H., merchant, British North Borneo
Hall, J. M., second magistrate, British North Borneo Hall, P. R., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Hall, Robert, engineer, Holt's Wharf, Kowloon, Hongkong Hall, Thomas P., marine surveyor, Hongkong
Hall, W. O., assistant, Pacific Mail S. S. Co., Kobe
Hallam, Fr. W., St. Joseph's Catholic Mission, Weihaiwei
Hallaway, J. P., gas engineer, Municipal Gas Department, Singapore Hallgreen, A. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Hallifax, E. R., acting second magistrate, Hongkong. Hallifax, F. J., registrar of Deeds, Singapore (absent) Hallifax, J. W., commissioner, Municipality, Penang
Hallifax, R. H. C., lieut., H. B. M. S. Alacrity," China Station Halkett, John, captain, s.s. "Kiangtun," China coast Halpern, D., accountant, Kelly & Walsh, Ld., Singapore Halse, S. J., architect, Moorhead & Halse, Shanghai
Halton, Fred, J., agent, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong Halvorsen, H. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Ham, Clifford D., surveyor of Customs, Manila
Ham, G. D., assistant district officer, District Office, Coast, Negri Sembilan Ham, W. J., coke dealer, W. J. Ham & Co., Yokohama
Hamada, M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Hamann, A., assistant, Kolkmeijer & Rockstrol, Hankow
Hamann, Gust H., assistant, C. Weinberger & Co., Yokohama
Hamann, K., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Hamblin, F. H., captain, "Hsin-Kong," China coast
Hamel, H. Barry de, major, superintendent of Police, Penang,
Hamilton, A., civilian artificer, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong Hamilton, A. B., superintendent, Fire Department, Penang
Hamilton, A. S., British Cigarette Co., Chemulpo
Hamilton, A. S., manager, British Cigarette Co., Chemulpo
Hamilton, A. W., Municipality, Penang,
Hamilton, Alexander, assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Hamilton, Allan, assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Hamilton, G. W., M.A., M.D. Peking University, Peking
Hamilton, H., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Bangkok Hamilton, H. J., forwarding agent, Lower Perak, Perak Hamilton, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Hamilton, J. A., manager, Central Engine Works, Singapore
Hamilton, J. T., genl. mgr., Equitable Life Assurance Socty, of U.S., Shanghai and Japan Hamilton, N., asst. engineer, China Light & Power Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Hamilton, R. K., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Hamilton, W., asst. master, Free School, Penang
Hamilton, W. G., general manager, Manchester North Borneo Rubber Co., B. N. Borneo Hamlyn, H. L., inspector, Waterworks & Co., Shanghai
Hammel, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Hammink, J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Hammond, C. E., eng-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station
Hammond, E. H., div. supt. of schools, Cavite, Philippines
Hammond, Gladstone, accountant, Planters' Store & Agency Co., Selangor
Hammond, Harold, captain, paymaster, Mindanao, Manila
Hammond, J., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Penang
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Hammond, S., reporter, Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai
Hampe, A., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Hampshire, A. K. E., merchant, A. K. E. Hampshire & Co., Selangor
Hampshire, D. H., merchant, A. K. E. Hampshire, & Co., Selangor
Hanson, L, second-secretary, United States Legation, Peking
Hanbury, Horace, assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai Hance, C. E. A., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow Hance, J. H. R., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Swatow Hancock, A. T., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore
Hancock, G. A., senior resident master, St. Stephen's College, Hongkong Hancock, H. E. D., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Hancock, H. T., assistant manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1623
Hand, J., sup.t, shipwright dpt., Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Hand, Robert F.. assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Singapore
Handro, C., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Hane, L. Le, assistant, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Hanhart, H. C., merchant, A. Berli & Co., Bangkok
Hanisch, F. A., act. chief accountant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tientsin
Hanitsch, R., PH.D., director, Raffles Museum & Library, Singapore
Hankes, H., chief officer, steamier "Kohsichang, Hongkong-Bangkok
Hannan, C. G., manager, Libby, McNeill & Libby, Shanghai
Hannan, C. G., Swift & Co., of Chicago, Shanghai
Hannam, C. H. G., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Tamsui Hanne, lieut., S. M. S. "Jaguar," German Squadron, China Hannesen, P., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Hanning, J. C., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Hansell, Alex. N., architect, Kobe
Hansen, chief engineer, s.s. "Peiho," Coast service Hansen, A. H., acting consul for Denmark, Kobe
Hansen, A. H., assistant, Simon, Evers & Co., Kobe
Hansen, B., diver, Harbour dept., Customs, Shanghai
Hansen, C., wharfinger, Pootung Wharf, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Hansen, C. P. R., acting assistant tidesurveyor, Customs, Shanghai Hansen, C. R., assistant, Hamburg-America Linie, Hongkong
Hausen, Constantin, merchant, H. Sietus & Co., Chefoo
Hansen, G. V., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Hansen, E. F,, manager, Box of Curios Printing and Publishing Co., Yokohama Hansen, H., engineer, Siam Electricity Co., Ll., Bangkok
Hansen, H., assistant, Illies & Co., Yokohama
Hansen, J. E., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Hansen, N., assistant, China & Japan Trading Co., Kobe
Hansen, O. A., assistant, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Vladivostock Hansen, R., assistant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Hansen, R. P., examiner, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Hansen, T., assistant, F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong
Hansen, Thos. G., assistant, King Edward Hotel, Hongkong
Hansen, Wallace, assistant, H. Skott & Co., Hongkong
Hanson, E. H. C., student interpreter, United States Legation, Peking Hanson, J. W., chief detective inspector of police, Hongkong
Hanson, W. H., chief draftsman, Survey branch, Negri Sembilan Happel, P., manager, M. Raspe & Co., Shimonoseki
Happel, R., assistant, Ehlers & Co., Shanghai
Harber, C. E., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Harbord, J. G., colonel, Bureau of Philippines, Constabulary, Manila Harcks, F, assistant, Hamburg Amerika Linie, Shanghai
Hare, A. J., instructor, Tokyo Higher Commercial School, Tokyo Hare, C. F., assistant, High Schools, Bangkok
Hardel, H., assistant, H. Bernick & Potter, Kiaochau
Harding, J., assistant engineer construction, Railway Co., Manila
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Harding, J. E., chief of police, Manila
Harding, R. A., solicitor, Hongkong
Harding, W. A., assistant, United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Singapore Hardmeyer, H., merchant, Moll, Kunzli & Co., Manila
Hardoon, R. J., broker, Shanghai
Hardoon, S. A., merchant, E. D..Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Hardt, John, assistant, China Import and Export Bank Cie., Yokohama
Hardwick, W., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong
Hardwicke, W., district officer, Labuk Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Hardy, C. J., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Singapore
Harger, A. J., assistant, T. L. Bickerton & Co., Shanghai
Hargreaves, I. E., accountant, Babcock & Wilcox, Ld., Yokohama
Hargreaves, J. R., acting manager, Sperry Flour Co., Singapore
Hargreaves, R., assistant, Standard Oil Company of New York, Kobe
Harker, Brotherton B., architect, civil engineer and surveyor, Hongkong
Harland, H. P., asst. agent and general manager, Chi. Eng. & Mining Co., Ld., Tientsin Harley, G. B., assistant manager, Central Engine Works, Singapore
NIPPONOPHONE" BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1624
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Harman, Alexander, capt., City Police department, Manila
Harman, F. E., assistant superintendent of Police, Singapore
Harman, G. J., inspecting engineer, Customs, Kowloon
Harman, T. O. B., chief engineer, Customs revenue cruiser "Pingching," Kowloon
Harman, Wm. R. S., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Astraca," China Station
Harmand, J. F., missionary, French Mission, Nagasaki
Harmen, H. G., architect, China Import & Export Lumber Co., Shanghai
Harmssen, J. A., merchant, H. N. Alirens & Co., Yokohama
Harnisch, E., lohnschreiber, Kiaochau
Harper, A. F., district surveyor, Matang sub-district, Perak
Harper, G. assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Harper, H. J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Pagoda, Foochow
Harpur, C., chief engineering assistant, Public Works department, Shanghai Harpur, J., engineering, assistant, Public Works, Shanghai
Harr, A. Theo., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Harries, A. W., solicitor, Drew & Napier, Singapore
Harrington, A. G., analyst, Municipality, Singapore
Harrington, C. R., inspector of Prisons, British North Borneo
Harrington, E., chargeman, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Harrington, J. J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Harrington, T., British Vice Consul, Yokohama
Harrington, T. J., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore Harris, A. B, B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Harris, A. H., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Harris, C. F., assistant, Samuel, McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Harris, F., acting deputy coast inspector and harbour master, Customs, Canton
Harris, F. A., chief loco. works accountant, Imperial Railways, Tongshan, N. China Harris, F. P., asst. electrical engineer, Riley, Hargreaves & Co, Singapore
Harris, G. A., trade commissioner, Canadian Trade Commissioners Service, Yokohama Harris, H., assistant, James Motion & Co., Singapore
Harris, H. G., assistant, Tekka, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Harris, H. P., travelling inspector of accounts, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Harris, John S., lieut., H. M. S. "Waterwitch," China Station
Harris, J. E., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Harris, J. E. R., assistant, Samuel, McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Harris, J. S., assistant, Rambutan Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Harris, J. W., assistant, Scott, Christie and Johnson, Shanghai
Harris, Montgomery R., solicitor, Wilkinson & Grist, Hongkong
Harris, S. W., mechanical-engineer, Sarawak Government Agency, Sarawak
Harris, William, mgr. for Japan and Korea, Manufacturers Life Insurance Co., Tokyo Harris. Wm., S., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila
Harrison, foreman fitter, Compagnie Française Tramways, Shanghai
Harrison, A., manager, British-American Tobacco Co., Hongkong
Harrison, B. H., assistant manager, Selaba Estate, Teluh Anson, Penang
Harrison, C. W., district officer, Ulu-Langat, Selangor
Harrison, F. C., assistant, Lanadron Rubber Estates, Ld., Johore
Harrison, H. M., district surgeon, Kuala Kubu, Selangor
Harrison, H. R., mining-assistant, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Harrison, J. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Harrison, R. W., manager, Whittall & Co., Klang, Selangor
Harrison, T. L, assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Harrison, W. J., first engineer, Customs revenue cruiser "Linhsing," Shanghai
Harrold, F., manager, Priest, Marians & Co., Kobe
Harron, H. L., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Harrop, C. E. V., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Harrop, J.. assistant, Ewo Cotton Spinning & Weaving Co., Shanghai
Harrs, E. J., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hankow
Harston, G. M., medical practitioner, Hongkong
Harston, J. Scott, solicitor, Ewens, & Harston, Hongkong Harston, W. E., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki Hart A. J. C., manager, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore Hart, Edgerton H., superintendent, General Hospital, Wuhu Hart, H., inspector of Police, Singapore
Hart, Irving, manager, Methodist Publishing House, Manila
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FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1625
Hart, Sir Robert Bart., G.c.M.G., inspector-general, Maritime Customs, Peking (absent)
Hart, S. L., principal, Tientsin Anglo Chinese College, Tientsin
Hart, Thomas, Jr., chartered accountant, Gunn & Co., Singapore
Harteam, M. H., clerk, International Bank, Hongkong
Harth-Olsen, V. R. E., agent, Nordisk Fjerfabrik, Canton Hartig, G., assistant, Kruse & Co., Hongkong
Hartley, D., assistant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
Hartley, E. A., asst, supt. Municipal Police Force, Kulangsu, Amoy
Hartley, J. H., medical officer, Kowloon and Canton Railway, Hongkong Hartley, R. R., assistant, Bruseh Hydraulic Tin Mining Co., Perak Hartmann, A., merchant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Shanghai Hartnell, É. G. H. F., assistant, Borneo Company, Singapore Hartshorn, J. E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon Hart-Synnot, A. H. S., major, General Staff Officer, Hongkong
Harvey, A. E., lightkeeper, Gap Rock, Hongkong
Harvey, Cecil R. H., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Harvey, D., assistant superintendent, United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Hongkong Harvey, D., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Harvey, George R., assistant attorney general, Bureau of Justice, Manila
Harvey, H. W., engineer, Municipal Council, Tientsin
Harvey, James R., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Merlin," China and Japan
Harvey, R. D., manager, British-American Tobacco Co., Hongkong
Harvey, W. R., assistant, Holme Ringer & Co., Chemulpo
Harvie, James Alex., merchant, The Neuk, Rifle Butts Station, Shanghai Harvie, Jas., merchant, Harvie & Cooke, Shanghai
Hasche, Alf, merchant, Grosser & Co., and consul for Norway, Kobe Hasche, E., Schramm, & Co., Kobe
Hasche, Ernst, Paul Schramm & Co., Kobe
Hasche, M., assistant, Rautenberg, Schmidt & Co., Singapore
Hasche, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co.. Hankow
Haselfoot, F. E. B. lieut., H. M. S. "Waterwitch," China Station
Hashagen, H. O., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Haskell, D., merchant, Hongkong
Haskell, E. D., broker, E. S. Kadoorie & Co., Hongkong
Haskell, H. B., business-manager, General Hospital, Yokohama
Haslam, G. F., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Amoy
Haslund, A., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Tientsin
Haslam, E. S., chief assistant, Municipal Electric Tramways, Penang
Hass, Gouvernmentsoberforster, Forstamt, Kiaochau
Hassam, K., merchant, Kobe
Hassan, A. R., manager, Connell Bros. & Co., Hongkong
Hassoppe, J., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan Hassum, R. J., shopkeeper, C. Abdoola & Co., Kobe
Hast, W. F., lightkeeper, Waglan Island, Hongkong
Hastedt, W., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kobe and Yokohama
Hastie, A., assistant, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang
Hastie, W. O., assistant, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang
Hastings, C. E., assistant, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Hastings, G. A., solicitor, Hastings & Hastings, Hongkong
Hastings, H., manager, South Formosa Trading Co., Ld., Takow
Hastings, H., merchant, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Hastings, John, solicitor, Hastings & Hastings, Hongkong
Hastings, R. J., Jr., assistant, Wright & Co., Anping
Hastings, W. H., residont and harbour-master, Provinces Alcock, Kudat, British N. B.
Haszard, N. F. J., surveyor, Survey department, Penang
Hatch, E. C., inspector of mines, Perak
Hatch, J. N., merchant, Hatch Carter & Co., Tientsin
Hatchell, H. M., acting deputy commissioner of Police, Perak
Hatelie,
W., mine agent, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang
Hathaway, Levy M., captain, Medical Corps, Manila
Hathéway, C. P., secretary to Commissioner Forbes, Manila Hatherly, A. H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Hatrick, R. N., merchant, Forbes, Munn & Co., Manila
Hatton, A., engineer, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1626
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hauchecorne, A., vice consul for France, Hoihow Hauer, Dr., interpreter, German Legation, Peking
Hauffe, W. E, employé, Stanton, Schoene & Co., Yokohama Haum, A. L. assistant, Martin & Co., Yokohama
Hausbrand, chief officer, German steamer "Adm. v. Tirpitz," Coast service
Hausherr, J., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kobe
Hausland, A. C., mngr, Imp. Har. Timber Concession, Oriental Timber Corpn., Vladivostock
Hausser, P. F., consul for Great Britain, Swatow
Hauten, J. von, tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Hauxwell, H. S., pilot, P. & O. Steam Nav. Co., Keppel Harbour, Singapore
Havemann, H., techn.-sekretär, Kiaochau
Havilland, G. de V. de, assistant, Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co., Shanghai Havilland, W. A. de, Patent agent for Japan and Corea, Tokyo
Hawes, E. M., miner, Ipoh, Perak
Hawes, J., clerk, Waterworks & Co., Shanghai
Hawes, M. A., miner, Ipoh, Perak
Hawkins, E. D., assistant, Vacuum Oil Company, Manila
Hawkins, F. H., master, Free School, Penang
Hawkins, G. W., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., L., Yokohama
Hawkins, T. G., inspector, Police department, Penang
Hawkshaw, C. B., assistant, Straits Industrial Syndicate, Singapore
Hawkshaw, W. d'Arcy, assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Mukden Hawson, R., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Haxton, G. K., manager, Hongkong Ice Co., Ld., Hongkong
Hay, A. S., engineer, Raoke & Hay, Yokohama
Hay, C. H. P., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Shanghai
Hay, D. M., gunner, Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai Hay, G., assistant foreman, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Yokohama Hay, G. M., assistant, Leigh & Orange, Hongkong
Hay, J. J. G., assistant, Hongkew Medical Hall, Shanghai
Hay, J. M., captain, steamer "Hopsang," China coast
Hay, J. S., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Ld.. Hongkong Hay, T. C., assistant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore
Hay, Thos. W., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering, Co., Shanghai Hay, W., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Iloilo Hayes, J. A., assistant, Dickeson, Jones & Co., Shanghai
Hayes, W. K., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Cantoni
Hayes, E. B., capt., Tug "Fuhle," Shanghai Tug and Lighter Co., Shanghai Hayes, F. C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Hayes, G. V., resident manager, Sperry Flour Co., Hongkong
Hayler, J. A., chief inspector of Police, Perak
Haynemann, M., assistant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
Haynes, A. S., assistant-superintendent of Inimigrants, Penang Haynes, Harry, manager, Victoria Hotel, Shameen, Canton Hays, P. C., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila Hays, T. H., comdr., director of Naval Hospitals, Bangkok Hayward, E. M., employé, Lane, crawford & Co., Hongkong Hayward, H. E., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama Hayward, N., assistant, Smith Bell & Co., Manila
Hayward, W., assistant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama Hazard., médecin de la Legation, French Legation, Peking Hazel, assistant, Universal Supply Co., Shanghai
Hazeland, E. M., civil engineer, Hongkong
Hazeland, F. A., first magistrate and coroner, Hongkong
Heacon, Willson G., lieutenant, 13th Infantry, Manila
Head, C. J., assistant, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai
Healing, L. J., electrical engineer, L. J. Healing & Co., Yokohama
Heanley, Dr. C. M. vaccine manufacturer and bacteriologist, Kowloon, Hongkong Heard, A. J. P., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Tientsin
Heard, Hugh L. P., comdr., H. B. M. S. "Cadmus," China Station Heard, J. R., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Heard, R. H., assistant, Soy Chee Cotton Spinning Co., Shanghai
Hearle, E., assistant laboratory manager, Royal Naval Ordnance Department, Hongkong Hearne, A. G., cashier, Manufacturers' Life Insurance Co. of Canada, Yokohama
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hearne, V. A., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Yokohama
Hearson, H. K., manager, The Oriental Ice Co., Shanghai
Heath, A. H., merchant, Rodewald & Heath, Shanghai and Hankow Heath, G. O., solicitor, Crosse & Yamashita, Kobe and Yokohama
Heath, P., merchant, P. Heath & Co., Shanghai
Heathcote, Gilbert C., lieut.-comdr. Torpedo-boat destroyer "Janus," Hongkong Heathcote, J. R. C., captain, aide-de-camp to Major-General Broadwood, Hongkong Heaulme, R. De, assistant, W. G. Hale & Co., Saigon
Hebb, J. A., lieut. Q. M. in charge of Barracks, A. S. Corps, Singapore
Hechtel, O., assistant, Wendt & Co., Hongkong
Heck, Emile, professor, French Language, Tokyo Imperial University, Tokyo
Heckscher, R., assistant, Carl Wolter & Co., Chemulpo
Hedgeland, E. W., superintendent, Surveyor General's Office, Perak
Hedgeland, R. F. C., acting department commissioner, Maritime Customs, Lappa
Hedley, W., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
1627
Heemstede, L. K. van den Berch van, foreign secretary, Kanagawa Kencho, Yokohama Heeney, G. F., proprietor, Criterion Hotel, Yokohama
Heermann, P. E., jeweller, C. J. Gaupp & Co., Hongkong
Hees, P. C. de, assistant, Olivier & Co., Tientsin
Heffernan, J., chief traffic inspector, Imperial Railways, Kaopangtze, N. China
Hegenbarth, E., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Hegmann, F., assistant, A. Descours, Cabaud et Cie., Haiphong
Heid, R. H.. assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Heide, H. V., assistant, Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Heiden, F., chief engineer, steamer "Locksun" China coast
Heidrich, G., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Heilman, F., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Wuchowfu Heim, A., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Heim, J., vice-consul for Norway, Penang
Heim, O. W., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Yokohama Heimendinger, assistant, Sennet Fréres, Shanghai Heimendinger, M., employé, Sennet Frères, Shanghai Hein, P., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok Heine, Ed., assistant, Illies & Co., Yokohama
Heinemann, C. L., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
Heinemann, W., manager, Tientsin Building Co., Tientsin
Heinlein, C. F., agent, B. Altman, Yokohama
Heinrich, P., general outfitter, Kiaochau
Heintges, Dr. E., consul for Germany, Newchwang and Mukden Heintze, L., acting-consul for Germany, Manila
Heisch, C., merchant, C. Vering, Shanghai
Heisch, P. F., assistant, Bush Brothers, Newchwang
Heise, E. F. G., assistant, Buchheister & Co., Hankow
Heise, R., professor of German, Nobles' College, Tokyo
Heiser, Dr. V. G., director of health, Bureau and chief quarantine officer, Manila
Heitmann, C., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Yokohama
Heitmann, Gustave, merchant. Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Vladivostock
Heitmann, W., merchant, Meier & Co., Kobe
Helbling, J., tea inspector, Gilman & Co., Foochow
Helbritter, R. assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Heldt, F., assistant, Schuldt & Co., Hongkong
Helfer, Captain, S. S. "Sikiank", Coast service
Helg, C., Roman Catholic missionary, Shanghai
Hell, P., assistant, Kruse & Co., Hongkong
Hellenbrand, F. C., assistant, Asiatic Export and Import Co., Kobe
Heller, Victor, merchant, Heller Bros., Yokohama
Hellestrand, M., assistant tidesurveyor in charge, Customs, Whampoa Hellier, M., inspector of schools, Straits and Malacca
Helm, Chs. J., secretary, Helm Bros., Ltd., Yokohama
Helm, Frank P., director, Bureau of Navigation, Manila
Helm, Julius, managing director, Helm Bros., Ltd., Yokohama
Helm, J., manager, Helm Brothers, Ltd., Yokohama
Helm, J. T., assistant, Helm Bros., Ld., Yokohama
Helm, K., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hongkong
"
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1628
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Helme, E. B., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Helmers, J., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Canton
Helms, J., assistant, A. Goeke, Canton
Helms, W., merchant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong Héloury, L., directeur proprietaire, "L'Opinion", Saigon
Helsby, F. G., assistant engineer, Public Works department, Shanghai Helvard, A., storekeeper, Siani Electricity Co., Bangkok
Helvering, E. G., inspector of Machinery, Bureau of Navigation, Manila Hemandass, A., manager, Wassiamul Assomull & Co., Canton
Hemeling, Dr. K. E. G., Chinese secretary, Maritime Customs, Peking Hemmant, G., acting district officer, Negri Sembilan
Hemme, C., assistant, C. Weinberger & Co., Yokohama
Hemmel, J., commis, principal, Hankow
Hemmet, P., secretaire de la rédaction, "Courier d'Haiphong," Haiphong
Hempel, B merchant, Pasedag & Co., and vice-consul for Netherlands, Amoy (absent) Hempel, G. L., civil engineer and architect, Haukow (absent)
Hempel, W. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaocliau
Henbrey, G. J., assistant conservator, Forest department, Perak
Henchman, A. S., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Henckendorff, A. T., dist. mgr. for Manchuria, British American Tobacco Co., Mukden
Henderson, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Henderson, A., K. chief engineer, steamer "Zafiro," Hongkong-Manila
Henderson, A. R., professor, Provincial College, Tientsin
Henderson, C., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore and Perak
Henderson, C. M., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Penang
Henderson, E. R., assistant, Brown & Phillips, Penang
Henderson, F. H., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Lď., Hankow
Henderson, J., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Henderson, J. M., foreman boilermaker, H'kong and Whampoa Dock, Co., K'loon, H'kong
Henderson, N., M. third secretary, British Embassy, Tokyo
Henderson, R., agent, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Penang
Henderson, R., foreman, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Ld., Yokohama
Henderson, V. C., assistant, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Henderson, W., assistant, Sir John Jackson, Ld., Singapore
Henderson, W., chief accountant, Imperial Railways of North China, Tientsin
Henderson, W. C., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Hendrick, S. general manager, Siam Forest Co., Bangkok
Hendrick, Dr. T. A., bishop of Cebu diocese, Cebu
Hendricks, F. A., assistant bookkeeper, Singapore Foundry, Singapore Hendricks, R., land-bailiff, Land Office, Malacca
Hendriks, J. F., assistant, Crane & Co., Singapore
Hendriks, J. W., assistant under secretary, Ministry of Justice, Bangkok Hendroff, M. P., second clerk, Port Dickson, Negri Sembilan
Henel, E., merchant, F. Engler & Co., Saigon
Henké, F. F., tidewaiter, Chinese Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Henke, H., bureau-gehilfe, Kiaochau
Henkel, H., merchant, Carl Wolter & Co., Antung
Henkel, R., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
Henkel, Robt., assistant, China and Java Export Co., Shanghai
Henley, C. M., surveyor, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang
Henley, F. W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Newchwang
Henn, W., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai
Hennessy, P. H., supernumerary medical officer, Singapore Hennig, F., assistant, Sietas Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
Henning, A. C., assistant, W. Forbes & Co., Peking
Henning, A. K., inspector of taxes, Municipal secretariat, Shanghai Hennings, W. G., manager, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Henri, Albert, directeur, Ecole de l'Etoile du latin, Tokyo
Henriot, G., manager, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai Henriques, A. C., reitor, Seminario de S. José, Macać
Henriques, A. C. X., escripturario, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau Henry, D., assistant, Shanghai Tug & Lighter Co., Shanghai
Henry, D. E., engineer, Province Rizal, Philippines
Henry, J., assistant, Chargeurs Réunis, Haiphong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Henry, J., local manager, South British Insurance Co., Singapore Henry, H. D., assistant, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Swatow Henry, S., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Hensel, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Henshan, T. H., assistant manager, Federated Malay States Railways, Perak Hensler, H., assistant, Germania Braterei, Kiaochau
Henson, H. V., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama
Henzler, C., manager, Carlowitz & Co., Tsinanfu
Henzler, R., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Hepburn, S. D., Standard Oil Co. of New York, Nagasaki
4
Heppel, Walter C., engineer lieutenant, H. B. M. S. Bedford," China Station Heras, Carlos de las, p.p. to genl-manager, Philippine General Tobacco Co., Manila Herb, F. C., silk inspector, Reiss & Co., Canton
Herbell, H., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Ld., Singapore
Herbert, E. G., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Bangkok Herbert, Godfrey, lieutenant, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Statien
Herbert, W., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Herbertz, R., assistant, Führmeister, & Co., and consul for Mexico, Hankow
Herbinet, C. R., administrateur adjoint, résident de France, Quang Binh, Annanı Herbold, D., assistant, C. lllies & Co., Kobe
Herden, F., engineer, Siemens Schuckert Werke, Hankow
Hereford, G. A, assistant district officer, Kinta, Batu Gajah, Perak
Herensperger, W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Herklotz, T. D., assistant, Noessler & Co., Shanghai
Herlofson, H., broker, Johnsen & Herlofson, Shanghai
Hermann, A. M. S., assistant, Latham & Co., Singapore
Hermann, V., merchant, Kasai & Co., Osaka
Hermann, Willy, lieutenant, S. M. S. "Leipsig", German Squadron, China.
Hermans, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Hermansen, J. C., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Singapore
Hermeling, P., superintendent, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Hongkong
Hermes, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Hermitage, G., inspector of Police, Shanghai
Herner, F. professor, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki
Hernmarck, lieutenant, S. M. S. "Jaguar," German Squadron, China
Heron, A. C., surveyor, Lloyd's Register of Shipping, Nagasaki
1629
Heron, A. H., wharfinger, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Hongkong Herrera, L. C., in charge of Guatemala Consulate, Hongkong
Herrmann, E. D., assistant, Tait & Co., Yokohama
Herrmann, M. G., assistant, M. & R. Herrmann, Manila,
Herrmann, Dr. Raf., engineer, M. & R. Herrmann, Manila
Hers, J., elève interprète, Belgian Consulate, Shanghai
Hersey, Mark L., Colonel, Bureau of Philippines Constabulary, Manila
Hertslet, H. R., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Hervé, J., missionary, St. Francis Xavier's Church, Shanghai
Hervy, R., assistant, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Shanghai Herzberg, A., assistant, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai Herzog, R. F., merchant, Kobe
Hesse, A., assistant, China Export-Import and Bank Co., Shanghai
Hesse, F., assistant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Hesseling, T. Roman Catholic missionary,
Hesselink, W. F., assistant, Kolkmeijer Rockstrok, Hankow
Hetmar, A., chief accountant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Hett, F. P., solicitor, Brutton & Hett, Hongkong
Heuser, captain, commander, S. M. S. "Leipsig", German Squadron, China
Heuser, C. W., merchant, Heuser, Eberius & Co, Hongkong
Heuser, G., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Hewan, E. D., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Hewetson, J., civil secretary and cashier, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Hewett, E. A., superintendent, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Hongkong Hewett, W. J., tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Hewgill, C. W., advocate and solicitor, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor
Hewitt, A. H., chief engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Hokün Works, Hongkong Hewitt, G. E., mill manager, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Bangkok
"NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1630
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hewitt, R. N., assistant, Atkinson & Dallas, Hankow Hewlett, W. M., acting British Consul, Changsha
Hey, M. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Heyden, lieutenant, commander, S. M. Torpedo boat "S. 90" German Squadron Heyden, R. van der, assistant, Wm. Holst & Co., Yokohama
Heyenga, J., captain, steamer "Phra Nang", China coast
Heyer, A, teacher, Deutsche Schule, Shanghai
Heyer, O., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kiaochau
Heytmen, H. J. C., assistant, Dutch Postal Agency, Singapore
Heyzer, L., engine-driver, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Hger, A. P., reporter, "Straits Times," Singapore
Hibbard, W. S., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai
Hibberdine, R. L., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Hibbs, J. F., merchnat, Berrick Brothers, Yokohama Hibry, H., assistant, Graf, Jacque & Cie., Pnompenh Hickie, S. D., freight agent, China Express Co., Hongkong Hickin, H. J., medical practitioner, Port Edward, Weihaiwei Hickling, C. C., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Hickling, C. H., minister, Union Church, Hongkong Hickling, N., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai Hickman, H. F., assistant, China Fire Insurance Co., Hongkong Hicks, F., sub-editor, "China Mail," Hongkong
Hicks, J., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Hicks, S. J., Arts and Crafts Furnishing Co., Shanghai
Hicky, L., inspector, Police department, Penang
Hielkema, P., assistant, Martin & Co., Yokohama
Hierling, H., assistant, Buchheister & Co., Shanghai
Higgins, H. L., president and general manager and chief engr., Railway Co., Manila Higgs, H., assistant, and pro-Consul, British Consulate, Foochow
High, G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shasi
Higham, F. J., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Highton, Eng. Comdr. F. W,, chief engineer, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Hilbig, marine engineer, S. M. S. "Iltis," German Squadron, China
Hildebrand, H., assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Shanghai
Hildebrandt, H., assistant, China Export-Import and Bank Co., Hongkong Hildebrandt, W., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Canton
Hildred, W. O., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China. Singapore Hilf, Edward, chief clerk, Customs, Cebu
Hill, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Kobe
Hill, A. G., outside supt., Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Shanghai
Hill, A. W., clerk and usher, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Hill, C., sanitary inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Hill, C. J. G., assistant, Royal Insurance Co., Shanghai
Hill, D. J. J., captain, Chief Ordnance Officer, Singapore
Hill, E. E., agent, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Manila (absent)
Hill, E. E., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Čanton
Hill, F. R., financial-manager, Malacca Rubber Plantation Ld., Singapore Hill, G. S., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Hill, P. L. O., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton
Hill, J. C., student-interpreter, British Embassy, Peking
Hill, Robt. H., merchant, Bradley & Co., Swatow
Hill, T., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Hill, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang
Hill, W. H., manager, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Canton
Hill, W. J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Hiller, H. K., engineer, Shanghai Gas Company, Shanghai Hilles, L. D., engineer, Bagnall & Hilles, Yokohama Hilliard, H. D., assistant, Maritime Customs, Swatow Hillier, E. G., agent, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Peking Hillier, H. M., Maritime Customs, commissioner, Tientsin Hillman, H. E., river inspector, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang Hills, H., engine-driver, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Hillyard, Rev. Dr. chaplain, Protestant church, Bangkok Hilton, F., assistant, Borneo Company, Singapore
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hilton-Johnson, Capt. A., first assistant supt. of Police for Chinese, Shanghai Hinch, A. E, assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Hinch, H., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Bangkok
Hinckley, F. E., clerk of court, United States Court, Shanghai
Hind, H. M., assistant, Phoenix Assurance Co., Shanghai
Hind, W. B., solicitor, Brutton and Hett, Hongkong
Hinds, Ernest, major, asst to Adjutant Genl., Div. Staff, Manila Hinds, E. H., assistant, McGregor Brothers & Gow, Hongkong
Hindson, A. E. C., manager, Rose, Downs & Thompson, Ld., Shanghai
Hingst, A., assistant, A. Markwaid & Co., Bangkok
Hinman, L. D., teacher, Division of Cebu, Philippines Hinnekindt, L., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Hinrichs, J., chief postal officer, Chinese Customs, Kiaochau Hinton, F. J., assistant, D. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai Hinton, H., assistant inspector of Police, Perak
Hinton, J. H., managing, director, Moutrie & Co., Shanghai Hinuber, V., attaché, Legation d'Allemagne, Peking Hinz, C., assistant, Sietas & Co., Chefoo
Hirsch, T., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore Hirschfeld, G. C., Importer and Exporter,Kobe
Hirschmann, S. J., assistant, Abenheim Brothers, Yokohama Hirst, J. A., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Hiscock, F. H., agency manager, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Hankow Hislop, R. C., Installation Engineering Department, Singapore
Hissink, W. L. A., assistant, Java-China-Japan-Lijn, Hongkong
Hobart Hampden, E. M., Japanese secretary, British Embassy, Tokyo Hobbs, D). H., assistant, Aylesbury & Garland, Tapah, Perak
Hobbs, F., assistant, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Hobbs, F., assistant, Thos. Cook & Son, Hongkong
Hobbs, Jas., assistant, Findlay & Co., Manila
Hobson, H. E., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Hobson, S. G., assistant supt, Fost and Telegraph, Perak
Hoch, K., medical practitioner, Muller, Justi & Hock, Hongkong
Hochloff, W. W., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow
Hochuke, F. H., shiphandler, F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong
Hockaday, W. T., chief constructor, H.M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Hocking, A S., clerk, coast inspector's office, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Hocking, G. E., third master, Ellis Kadoorie College, Canton
Hodder, C. V., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama
Hodder, Wm. R., paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Hodge, W. J., accountant, Chartered Bank of India. Aus. and China, Penang. Hodges, F. E., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Hodges, E., engineer, Kinta Ice Factory, Perak
Hodges, E. J., assistant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Perak Hodges, G. A., district surveyor, Batang Padang, Perak Hodges, Geo., shipping clerk, British Consulate, Yokohama
Hodges, H. J., third-officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Ping chin," Shanghai Hodgins, A. E, captain, steamer "Haiyang," China coast Hodgins, F. J., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore Hodgins, J., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore
Hodgkinson, G., engineer, Hodgkinson & Co., Osaka
Hodgson, Frederick C., lieut.-col., chief quartermaster, Division Staff, Manila Hodgson, P. M., solicitor, Ewens & Harston, Hongkong
Hodgson, R. M., H. B. M. vice consul, British Vice Consulate, Vladivostock
Hodsoll, F., assistant, Warner, Barnes & Co., Iloilo
Hoefeld, L., broker, Penang
Hoeffer, A., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Penang
Hoeffner, K., assistant, China Export-Import-and-Bank Cie, Yokohama
Hoeft, E., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Tientsin
Hoehener, T., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
Hoene, Herm, assistant, Bergmann & Co., Yokohama
Hoenning-O'Carroll, Baron, councillor, Austro-Hungarian Embassy, Tokyo
Hoerler, O., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Shanghai
Hoerter, M., merchant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
1631
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1632
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hoettler, A., merchant, Taumeyer & Co., Shanghai
Hoff, J. J. H. Vant', assistant, C. and J. Favre-Brandt, Osaka
Hoffman, G. M., employé, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Hoffman, L. W D., surveying assistant, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Hoffmann, C., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Hoffmann, C. P. A., acting-manager, British Borneo Development Co., B. N. Borneo
Hoffmann, F., assistant, Bennett, Daniel & Co., Kobe and Yokohama
Hoffmann, H., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Kobe
Hoffmann, H., director, signs per pro., Rizerie de l'Union, Saigon Hoffmann, Wm., merchant, Wm. Hoffmann & Co., Shanghai Hoffmeister, A., silk inspector, Carlowitz & Co., Canton Hoffsommer, W. E., professor of English, Meiji Gakuin, Tokyo Hogan, H. C., general manager, Singapore Foundry, Singapore Hogan, J., draughtsman, Singapore Foundry, Singapore
Hogan, J. W. W., assistant surgeon, Medical department, Singapore Hogan, N. E., foreman, Singapore Foundry, Singapore
Hogg, A. V., silk inspector, Reiss & Co., Canton and Hongkong Hogg, E. W., assistant, Wni. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Hogg, E. Jenner, merchant, Shanghai
Hogg, F. C., assistant, Tait & Co., Tamsui, Formosa
Hogg, J. D., student-interpreter, British Consulate, Bangkok
Hoggard, F., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Hogge, H. S., storekeeper, Railway Co., Manila
Hoggsette, J. A., asst. director, Bureau of Printing, Manila Hohkloff, P., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin Hohl, E., assistant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Yokohama Hohl, W., assistant, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai Hohmeyer, W., manager, The A. Colburn Co., Tamsui Hohn, W. A., co-manager, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai Hohnke, F., assistant, F. Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau Hoinka, J., assistant, German Legation, Tientsin
Hoisington, G., accountant, St. Mary's Dispensary, Singapore
Holborow, A. C., solicitor, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong
Holbrook, F. J,, assistant-manager, Caledonia Sugar Estates, Penang
Holden, G., superintendent of Works, Public Works, Province Wellesley Holden, L. E., general broker, Birkatt & Holden, Manila
Holder, J. loco inspector, Railways, Moukden
Holdinghausen, chief officer, S.S. "Tientsin," Coast service Holdsworth, P., manager, Walter Nutter & Co., Shanghai Holl, R., assistant, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Shanghai
Holland, C., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Holland, H. D., outdoor-assistant, China Borneo Co., British North Borneo Holland, S. D., assistaut, Darby & Co., British North Borneo
Hollard, chef du Secrétariat, Direction Générale des Postes, Saigon
Holley, W., superintendent, Municipal Slaughter-Houses, Singapore
Holliday, Cecil W., merchant, Cecil Holliday & Co., Shanghai
Holliday, J., examiner, Customs, Swatow
Hollingsworth, A. H., executive engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong Holloway, E. P., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Holloway, G. B., foreman, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong
Holloway, G. W., bookkeeper, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Holloway, H. N., assistant, Bagnall & Hilles, Yokohama
Hollywood, J II, inspector of Police, Kampar, Perak
Hollywood, M. J., inspector of police, Parit Buntar, Perak
Holman, Richard M., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila
Holmberg, A., timekeeper, Singapore Slipway and Engineering Co., Singapore
Holmberg, F. X., clerk of work, Public Works and Survey Department, Penang Holmberg, J. C, clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Holmes, C. E., chief engineer, steamer "Onsang," China coast
Holmes, H. K., solicitor, Hongkong
Holmes, H. S., merchant, H. S. Holmes & Co.. Hongkong
Holmwood, G. S., captain, steamer " Kutwo," China coast
Holroyd, A., assistant, Soychee Cotton Spinning Company, Shanghai Holst, H. D., Maritime Customs, Newchwang
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Holst, Wn., insporter, Wm. Hollst & Co., Yokohama Holste, H., assistant, Simon, Evers & Co., Kobe Holstein, C., manager, Nickel & Company, Kobe
Holt, A. T., loco. inspector, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Holt, Fred. W., paymaster, U. S. N. Pay Office, Yokohama
Holt, H. O., assistant, Wm. Powell, Ld., Hongkong
Holt, H. V., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Holz, J. C. A., tidesurveyor and harbour master, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Holyoak, P. H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Holzapfel, K., postmaster, German Post Office, Hankow
Holzberger, E., assistant, Winckler & Co., Yokohama
Holzhaner, F., assistant, German Consulate, Tsinanfu
Homan, Harold, surveyor, Port of Cebu Customs, Cebu, Philippines
Homburg, H., assistant, Sietas Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
Homer, A., assistant, Auto Palace, Shanghai
Homewood, G., engineer, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Kowkiang
Honniball, G., acting-printer, Customs Printing Office, Shanghai
Hontsma, G. J., acting-agent, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore Honyet, A., interpreter, Belgian Legation, Peking
Hood, Ozawa, Geo., broker, and secretary, Nippon Race Club, Yokohama Hood, W. J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Canton
Hook, J., Sanitary-inspector, Singapore
Hooper, A. O., surgeon, H. M. S. Waterwitch," China Station
Hooper, A. Shelton, secretary, Hongkong Land Investment Co., Hongkong Hooper, E. S., asst. accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Hooper, F. N., artificer, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong
Hooper, H. J.. inspector of smiths, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Hooper, Jos., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf & Godown Co., Hongkong Hooper, W. E., registrar, Hackney Carriage Department, Municipality, Singapore Hooper, W. R., employé, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Hooson, M., first interpreter, Magistrates' Court, Hongkong
Hope, E., assistant, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
Hope, H. Ashworth, solicitor, Gibb & Hope, Perak
Hope, R., assistant, "Hongkong Telegraph," Hongkong
Hoppeler, G. C., silk inspector, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Canton
Hoppenberg, C., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Hora, K. J., architect, Letzel & Hora, Yokohama
Hord, J. S., collector of internal revenue, Manila (absent)
Horden, R. de L., sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai Hore, S., assistant master, Diocesan School and Orphanage, Hongkong
Horhorin, I. M., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Hori, C., engineer, Osaka Harbour Works. Osaka
Horley, H., store accountant, Army Service Corps, Hongkong
Hormon, André d', professor of French, Chinese Imperial University, Peking
Horn, M., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
Hornabrook, E. M., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Hornby, T. W., manager, The Stockton Milling Co., Hongkong
Horne, F. W., importer of American Machinery, Tokyo and Yokohama
Horne, W. N., grade surveyor, Revenue Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan Hornell, E. B. C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Hornhardt. V., captain, commander, S. M. S. "Luchs," Ger Squadron, China Hornidge, G. M. P., manager, Rotan Dahan, L.d., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Hornsby, N., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Chefoo
Hornstein, C. I., assistant, American Trading Co., Yokohama.
Horo, Karel Jan, engineer, Yokohama
Horsfall, G. G., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Horsfall, J. J., assistant, Gordon & Co., Shanghai
Horsin-Deon, G., chemist, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Hortet, R. de l', contrôleur, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Horton, O. L., assistant, C. F. Greenwood, Shanghai
Hosaes, Kurt., assistant, E. Viegelmann & Co., Manila
Hose, C. T., asst. electn. Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong Hose, E., manager, Borneo Co., Ld., Sarawak
Hose, E. S., superintendent of Prisons, Selangor
** NIPPONOPHONE
1633
-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1634
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hoskyn, H. F., merchant, Hoskyn & Co., Iloilo
Hoskyn, H. P., Jr., assistant, Hoskyn & Co., Iloilo Hoskyn, J. C., assistant, Hoskyn & Co., Iloilo
Hospital, J., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Hostalrich, D., poste médical, Phanthiet, Binhthuan, Annam
Hostnig, F., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Hotson, A., berthing officer, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Hottinger, E., merchant, Diethelm & Co., Saigon
Houben, H. I, assistant, Standard Oil Company of New York, Yokohama
Houfe, W. W., consulting engineer, Shanghai
Hough, Spencer, surgeon, U.S. Consulate, Hongkong
Hough, Thomas F., broker and Government auctioneer, Hughes & Hough, Hongkong Houghton, C., assistant inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Houghton, Henry S., medical officer, General Hospital, Wuhu
Houghton, R., captain, steamer "Yatshing," China coast
Houlston, G., examiner, Maritime Customs, Samshui
Hourant, E, attaché-commercial, Direction de l'Agriculture et du Commerce, Hanoi Hourihan, J. J., mechanic, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Houston, Jas., assistant, Findlay & Co., Iloilo
Houstown, J. H. W., district postmaster, Maritime Customs, Szemao
Houten, F. van, manager, Langkon North Borneo Rubber, Co., B. N. Borneo
Houten, L. van., assistant, E. L. Van Nierop & Co., Kobe
Howard, A., merchant, David Sassoon &Co., Shanghai
Howard, B. C., agent, Pacific Mail S.S. Co., and O. & O. S.S. Co., Yokohama Howard, C. R., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Howard, Deane C., Major, surgeon, Med. Corps, Div. Staff, Manila
Howard, E., share and general broker, Hongkong
Howard, Fred. J., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Howard, J. A.. chief inspector of Police, Singapore
Howard, R. J., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Howard, T., locomotive foreman, Singapore-Kranji Railway, Singapore
Howard, W., assistant examiner, Maritime Custous, Wuhu
Howard, W. G., manager, bridgeworks, Inpl. Railways Shanhaikwan, N. China
Howe, C. M., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Singapore
Howe, E. K., manager, The Robert Dollar Co. Shanghai
Howell, C. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Howell, E. B., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Howell, F., first bailiff, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Howell, J., headmaster, High School, Malacca (absent)
Howell, J., superintendent, Reformatory School, Singapore
Howell, L. H., acting agent, Butterfield & Swire, Ningpo
Howell, W., missionary and teacher, Sabu School, Undup, Sarawak
Howell, W., sub-inspector, Gordon Road Station, Shanghai Howell, W. M., assistant, Liddell Bros. & Co., Tientsin Howells, J. W., assistant, Ker & Co., Manila
Howie, Joseph, captain, S.S. "Feiching," China coast
Howie, N. M., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Howl, F. W., assistant, Technical dept., Howarth, Erskine & Co., Singapore Hoy, W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Hoyem, O., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Hoyer, L. de, Imperial Russian Financial Agent, Shanghai
Hubback, J. G., assistant, Theodore R. Hubback, Negri Sembilan
Hubback, Theodore R., consulting engineer, Negri Sembilan
Hubbard, E., asst. tidesurveyor Maritime Customs. Foochow
Hubbard, H., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Hübbe, F., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hankow
Hubbe, H., assistant, Societé Anonyme Belge, Hankow
Hubbell, Clarence W., city, engineer, Engineering and Public Works dept., Manila. Hube, P., importer, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Huber, A., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila Huber, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai Huber, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon Huber, P. E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Hubert, président, Tribunal de Saigon, Saigon
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hubner, A., schlosser, Kiaochau
Hudson, A. J., merchant, Hudson & Company, Ningpo Hudson, H. C., tuner, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Hudson, L. S., assistant, Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co., Kobe Hudson, R., sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong
Hudson, W., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tientsin Huebbe, F., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hankow
Hueber, Th., merchant, Th. Hueber & Co., Shanghai
Huepedew H., assistant, Siemssen Co., Hongkong
Huet, M. E. medecin, Consulat de France, Chentu, Chungking
Hugall, T. N., sanitary inspector, Health Department, Shanghai
Hughes, A. J., secretary, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Hughes, E., miner, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang
Hughes, E. L., assistant, Percy Smith & Seth, Hongkong
1635
Hughes, Edward J., broker and Government auctioneer, Hughes & Hough, Hongkong Hughes, H., headmaster, Kenko-Gijiku (English Mission School), Kobe Hughes, H. E., apothecary, Gopeng, Perak
Hughes, Dr. W., medical officer, British Embassy, Tokyo
Hughes, J. W. W., acting district officer, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan
Hughes, Rev. O. R., chaplain, H. M. Naval department, Hongkong Hughes, W. R., civil engineer, Russian Consulate, Mukden
Hughes, Willlam N., Jr., lieut., chief signal officer, Mindanao, Manila
Hughesdon, H. C., assistant accountant, Penang Sugar Estates Co., Ld., Penang Huijgen, G. E., assistant, Wendt & Co., Canton
Hull, H., accountant, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang
Hull, Willard B., vice consul general and interpreter, U. S. of America, Shanghai Hulme, O. H., assistant, Inspectorate of Chinese Posts, Tientsin
Humbert, F., professors, Saigon Seminary, Saigon
Humbertclaude, H., sous directeur, Ecole de l'Etoile du matin, Tokyo
Hume, H. T., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Ld., Yokohama
Hume, T. J., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore
זי
Hume, W. J. P., auditor general, Auditor General's Office, Selangor (absent)
Hummel, R. U., Bisset & Co., Shanghai
Hummel, W. F., prof. English literature and Economies, Nanking University, Nanking Humphrey, S. T., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Humphreys, C. G., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Humphreys, G. N., lieut., in charge of supplies transport, A. S. Corps, Singapore
Humphreys, Henry, merchant, J. D. Humphreys & Son, Hongkong
Humphreys, R. E., manager, Wise & Co., Manila
Hunaeus, F., assistant, Herm, Jebsen & Co., Penang
Hundertmark, A., manager, Hotel Prinz Heirich, Kiaochau
Hunke, E., assistant, Bielfeld & Sun, Tientsin
Hunnex, W. J., reporter, "North China Daily News and Herald," Shanghai Hunt, E. G., assistant, Hunt & Co., Yokohama
Hunt, F. H., chemist and grocer, Nagasaki
Hunt, F. L., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Hunt, H. J., engineer, North Point Installation, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hongkong
Hunt, H. R., merchant, Hunt & Co., Yokohama and Kobe
Hunt, J. W., assistant, Robert Young, Penang
Hunt, W. H., merchant, Wm. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Hunter, A. C. Ballard & Hunter, Shanghai
Hunter, E. H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Hunter, E. H., merchant, E. H. Hunter & Co., Osaka and Kobe
Hunter, G., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Hunter, G. B., lieut. 12th Cavalry, topographer, Manila
Hunter, G. C., assistant, Ker & Co., Iloilo
Hunter, H., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, L., Hongkong
Hunter, H. E. R., manager, Honkgong & Shangai Bank, Shanghai
Hunter, Jno., assistant, Andrews & George, Yokohama
Hunter, J., assistant, Hongkong and China Gas Co., Ld., Hongkong
Hunter, J., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Shanghai
Hunter, J. A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Hunter, J. H. tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Hunter, R., assistant, Macdonald & Co., Hongkong
"NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1636
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Hunter, R., engineer, Osaka Iron Works, Osaka
Hunter, R., merchant, E. P. Hunter & Co., Kobe and Osaka Hunter, R. D., accountant, W. G. Hale & Co., Saigon
Hunter, T., assistant, Jardine, Mathieson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Hunter, W. J., assistant, Arracan Co., Ld., Bangkok
Huntington, Philip W., captain, Med. Corps Dispensary, Fort Santiago, Manila Hurley, F. C., clerk, Hughes & Hough, Hongkong
Huschelrath, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Hussey, M. É. C., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Singapore Husson, L. H M., chief assistant, Chargeurs Réunis, Kobe Hussy, F., accountant, Samuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Huston, Dr. R. medical practitioner, Shimonoseki
Hutcheson, J. S., chargeman, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Hutchings, J., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong Hutchinson, E, Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Hutchinson, H. L., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co, Shanghai Hutchinson, R. O., first assistant registrar-general, Hongkong Hutchison, G., shipyard supt., Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Hutchison, H. D., merchant, Herbert Hutchison & Company, Shanghai Hutchison, John D., merchant, Hutchison & Co., Shanghai
Hutchison, T., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Hutchison, T. H., assistant, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai Hutchison, W., assistant, L. Moore & Co., Shanghai
Hutchison, W., supt.-engineer, Sandakan Ice and Aerated Water Co., B. N. Borneo Huter, H., assistant, Fisher & Co., Canton
Hutre, Dr. A. E., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Hoihow
Hutson, W. E., manager, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Penang
Huttenbach, A., merchant, Hüttenbach, Liebert & Company, Penang
Hutton, J. K., accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation, Yokohama Huygen, G. E.. assistant, Wendt & Co., Hongkong
Hyde, F. H, proprietor, Astor House Hotel, Swatow
Hyde, M. P., assistant, Maritime Customs, Yochow
Hyde, W., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf & Godown Co., Hongkong Hye, C. S., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld., Yokohama
Hykes, Harold M., clerk, American Post Office, Shanghai
Hyland, A. H., acting postal commissioner, Chinese Post Office, Hankow
Hynd, R. R., agent, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Canton
Hyndman, A. H., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Hyndman, F., clerk, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Hyndman, Henrique, professor de Inglez, Lyceu Nacional, Escola Commercial, Macao Hyndman, H. A., clerk, S. J. David & Go., Hongkong
Hyndman, H., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Hyndman, H., jr., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Hyndman, J., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Yokohama
Hynes, T., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
Ibbotoon, H. J., engineer, Yokohama
Iburg, C. L. H., merchant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Jevers, G. J., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Ike, P., clerk, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Hongkong
Ilbert, O. L., assistant engineer, Electricity dept., Shanghai
Illenberger, A., employé, El Oriente Fabrica de Tabacos, Manila
Illies, C. Jr., merchant, C., Illies & Co., Yokohama
Ilmar, V. V., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Hankow
Ilmer, P., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Imbrie, W., professor of Theology, Meiji Gakuin, Shiba, Tokyo Imhoof, W., silk inspector, T. E. Griffith, Canton
Inch, J. E., pilot, Shanghai
Ingalls, O. L., principal assistant, Sewer and Water Works department, Manila Ingenohl, C., proprietor, The Orient Tobacco Manufactory, Hongkong
Ingenohl v., rear-admiral, German Squadron, China and Japan
Ingerslbeen, W. L., second assistant, Russian Post Office, Shanghai
Inglis, J. M., loco. inspector, Railway dept. Tanjong Pagar Doc Board, Singapore Inglis, W. F., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Ingold, W., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Bangkok
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Ingraham, H. C. M., Peking University, Peking
Ingram, J. H. Union Medical College, Peking University, Peking Ingram, W. L., merchant, Jardine Matheson & Co., Nanking Inman, R. F., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co, Nagasaki Inman, W., pilot, Shanghai
Ingos, J. R., Judicial commissioner, Federated Malay States
Innes, R., marine superintendent, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Innocent, bishop, Russian Greek Church Mission, Peking
Innocent, J. W., acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, and postinaster, Ningpo Inouye, S., representative, Vacuum Oil Co., of Rochester, New York, Otaru
Ireland, B. A. O., assistant, T. C. Avetoom, Penang
Irons, J. A., colonel, military attache, U. S. Legation, Tokyo Ironside, H., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore Ironside, W., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Irvine, C. J. F., manager, S. Moutrie & Co., Tientsin
Irvine, F. D., assistant, Wilson & Co., Tientsin
Irvine, H. C., assistant-manager, Caledonia Sugar Estates, Penang Irving, E., dispenser, Royal Naval Hospital, Hongkong
Irving, E. A., director of education, Hongkong
Irving, J. M., engineer, Hongkong Ice Co., Hongkong
Irwin, A. J., dep. director, Royal Survey Department, Bangkok
Irwin, G. H., draughtsman, Municipality, Penang
Irwin, J. O'Malley, medical practitioner, Irwin & Brown, Tientsin Irwin, J. O. M., surgeon, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Irwine, E. H., assistant, Berrick Bros., Yokohama
Irwine, G. G., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Ld., Yokohama Irwine, H. Y., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Yokohama
Isaacs, M., assistant J. Witkowski & Company, Yokohama
Isaacs, N., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Isaacs, S., merchant, S. Isaacs & Co., Yokohama
Isaacsen, S., assistant, T. A. Christensen & Co., Kobe
Isler, Dr. J. L., J. C. De Becher, Yokohama
Ismer, C., watchmaker, C. Ismer & Co., Shanghai
Ison, A., clerk, Wise & Co., Iloilo
Israel, Arthur J., secretary, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Ivanoff, A. G., assistant, Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow Ivanoff, P. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Ivashoff, A. J., assistant, Steberbatchoff, Tchokoff & Co., Singapore Ivison, H., commission merchant, Yokohama
Iwanoff, S. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Izard, H. C., colonial chaplain., St. Andrew's Cathedral, Singapore Izatt, D. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Iznart, Arturo, assistant, secretary, Philippine General Tobacco Co., Manila Jaehrling, C., proprietor, Botica Santos y Jaehrling, Manila.
Jack, A., agent, Straits Trading Co.. Kuala Lumpur, Selangor
Jack, D., secretary, Howarth, Erskine, Limited, Bangkok
Jack, J., accountant, Dairy Farm Co., Hongkong
Jack, J. B., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Jack, W. M., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Jack, Wm. C., consulting engineer, William C. Jack & Co., Hongkong
Jackman, H. T., executive engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Jacks, L. E, assistant, Customs, Cebu, Philippines
Jacks, Philip, assistant, land officer, Land Office, Hongkong
Jackson, A., assistant, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Jackson, A. C., manager, John Little & Co., Singapore
Jackson, Andrew H. G., solicitor, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong
Jackson, B. J., silk mercer, Vincent, Bird & Co., Yokohama
Jackson, C. L., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
Jackson, D., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Jackson, F. E., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Jackson, G. R., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Kobe
Jackson, H. station supervisor, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Jackson, H. M., surveyor general, Federated Malay States
Jackson, Henry, assistant, Davis, Lawrence & Co., Shanghai
1637
NIPPONOPHONE " BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1638
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Jackson, J., assistant, The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Shanghai Jackson, J., chief building inspector, Municipality, Singapore
Jackson, J., chief officer, steamer "Loongwo," China coast
Jackson, J. A., proprietor, Shanghai Mercantile and Family Hotel, Shanghai
Jackson, J. E., executive engineer, Public Works department, Larut and Matang, Perak Jackson, J. W., surgeon, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Jackson, L., cashier, Tor Hotel, Ld., Kobe
Jackson, P. V., pilot, Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., China coast
Jackson, R. D., assistant engineer, Public Works department, Selangor Jackson, R. D., surveyor, Survey department. Perak Jackson, W., "Hongkong Daily Press," Hongkong.
Jackson, W. S., acting assistant tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Hankow Jackson, W. S., secretary, Yangtsze Insurance Association, L., Shanghai Jackson, Walter, mine owner, Ipoh, Perak
Jacob, J. I., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Ld., Shanghai Jacob, N. B. V., surgeon, H. M. steamer "Woodcock," China Jacob, s, F. B., director, Holland-China Trading Co., Shanghai Jacob, S. I., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai Jacobj, H., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
Jacobs, B., engine driver, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Jacobs, E., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Jacobs, E., engine-driver, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Jacobs, T., Roman catholic missionary, Icharg Jacosalem, Dionisio, provincial governor, Cebu Jacque, L. merchant, Graf Jacque and Co., Saigon
Jacquet, C., vicar general, Societé des Missions Etrangères, Hakodate
Jacquemin, J., assistant, Bavier & Co., Yokohama
Jacquet, L., inspr. chef de service, Direction de l'Agriculture et du Commerce, Hanoi Jacubowsky, O., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Jaeger, O., merchant, Jaeger & Co., Singapore
Jaeger, P., assistant, Jaeger & Co., Singapore
Jaeger, W., assistant, El Oriente Fabrica de Tabacos, Manila
Jaeget, F. H., cartographer, Bureau of Coast and Geodetic Survey, Manila
Jaelon, J., merchant, Haiphong
Jaffe, D., executive engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Jaga, F. E., manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., L., Singapore
Jahn, A. F., assistant, Thomas & Co., Yokohama and Kobe
Jahrand, A., clerk, Jebsen, & Co., Hongkong
Jail, L., chef de comptabilité, Société Française des Distilleries, Hanoi Jaillet, A., assistant, Societé Bordelaise Indo-Chinoise, Haiphong James, B., headmaster, Kowloon School for Girls, Hongkong
James, E. H., inspector, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
James, E. W., assistant, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
James, E. W. H., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
James, F. W., superintendent engineer, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong James, G. W., assistant, Abenheim Brothers, Yokohama
James, H., assistant, Universal Supply Co., Shanghai
James, H., senior writer, Naval Store Department, Hongkong
James, H. D. pilot, Kobe
James, Henry R., lieut. H. B. M. S. "Clio," China Station
James, J. C., head-master, Mahapritaram School, Bangkok Jumes, J. F. assistant, Nickel & Co., Kobe
James, M., assistant accountant, Railway Co., Manila
James, Rev. Bro., principal, St. Xavier's Institution, Penang
James, S. L., superintendent, Eastern Extension, A. and C. Telegraph Co., Saigon James, W. P. assistant, Sale & Frazar, Kobe
Jameson, C. D., supervising engineer of the Waiwnpu, Peking
Jameson, G. M., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai Jameson, J. A., accountant, Hankow Light and Power Co., Hankow Jameson, J. N., merchant, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Jameson, J. P., deputy consul general, American Consulate, Shanghai
Jameson, P. S., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Jamieson, Capt., D, E., landing and shipping agent, R. N. Walker & Co., Nagasaki Jamieson, F. A., locomotive superintendent, Imperial Railways, Tongshan, North China
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Jamieson, J. W., consul general H. B. M. Consulate, Canton Jamieson, T. H., medical practitioner, Penang Jamieson, W. B., broker, Jamieson & Co., Shanghai Jamset, Dr. K., medical practitioner, Hongkong Jansetjee, PA., broker, Hongkong
Janes, K., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Vladivostock
Janes, L., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Vladivostock
Janin, Paul, directeur, Hôpital Municipal de Cholon, Cochin-Chine Janin, Tourane, Annam
Jan-Kerguistel, commandant en chef, Division Navale de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon Jannatty, M. M. C., manager, Abdoolally, Ebrahim & Co., Shanghai Janner, J., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Kiaochau
Jannicke, H., pilot, Shanghai
Jansen, H. P., assistant, Tomlinson & Lermit, Singapore
Jansen, J. C., assistant, Sing-kep Tin Mines, Singapore Jansen, J. K., clerk, British Residency, Penang
Jansen, J. de W., assistant, Maritime Customs, Swatow Janson, O., engineer, Thoresen & Co., Shanghai Jansen, S., sanitary-inspector, Singapore
Jansen, S. F., clerk, Anthony & Anderson, Penang
Janssen, C., merchant, Behn, Meyer & Co., and vice-consul for Germany, Cebu Janssens, Francis, consul for Belgium, Hongkong
Jantzen, capt. lieut., comnmdr. S. M. S. "Vaterland," Ger. Squadron, China Jantzen, W., engineer, Rizerie Orient, Cholon
Jaoneuru, conducteur, Service du Controle du Chemin de Fer, Mengtsz Jaouen, chef de le. section du Contrôle, Chemins de Fer, Hanoi Jaques, A. H., storekeeper, A. H. Jaques & Co., Tientsin Jarck, Wilhelm, assistant, E. Viegelmann & Co., Manila Jardon, J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang Jarlin, S., Roman Catholic bishop of Phaerboeton, Peking Jarmain, W. W., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Yokohama Jarovitsky, Dr., physician, Russian Legation, Peking
Jarrett, F. E., chief officer, steamer "Yatshing," China coast
Jarvis, H., assistant, Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Jarvis, W. J., sub-editor, "Japan Chronicle," Kobe
Jarzembowski, A. B., secretary, German Consulate, Pakhoi
Jaspersen, J., acting vice consul for Germany, Newchwang
1639.
Jaspersen, Julius, importer and exporter and acg. vice consul for Germany, Newchwang Jasse, C., assistant, Radecker & Co., Hongkong
Jasson, C., receveur-principal, Hankow
Jasson, J., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Hankow
Jastrzembski, S. de, assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin Jaubert, P., assistant, Racine Ackermann & Co., Shanghai Janer, W. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Jaurias, C. M. R. A. de, assistant, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz Jay, J. W., assistant, British-Américan Tobacco Co., Canton Jay, P. A., secretary to the U. S. Legation, Tokyo
Jeannerat, résident de Kandal, Cambodge
Jebsen, H., engineer, Chr. Witzke & Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Jebsen, J., merchant, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Jebsen, M., assistant, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Jecke, K., secretary, German Consulate, Shanghai
Jedlieka, Ch., liquidator, Austro-Belgian Trading Co., Shanghai
Jeffcott, W. R., chief officer, steamer" Kiushan," Hongkong Canton
Jeffery, A. E. mine agent, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang Jeffery, E. C., assistant, Cornes &. Co., Yokohama
Jeffreys, W. H., surgeon, St. Luke's Hospital, Shanghai
Jeffries, C. W., first assistant, Observatory, Kowloon, Hongkong Jeffries, H. U., merchant, Hongkong
Jelf, A. S., assistant secretary to Resident, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor Jellie, J. W. S., assistant, Maritime Custoins, Tientsin
Jenick, A., assistant, Wassard & Co., Vladivostock
Jenkin, R., assistant, Holnie, Ringer, & Co., Shimonoseki and Moji
Jenkins, F., proof-reader, Government Printing Office, Singapore
It
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1640
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Jenkins, J. H., storehouseman, H. M. Naval Store Dept., Hongkong Jenkins, James C., judge of first instance, Pangasinan, Philippines Jenkins, John H., dir. supt. of school, Zambales, Philippines Jenkins, A.. assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Hongkong
Jenks, P., assistant, Publication Department, Yokohama Jenlis, I. de, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Jennert, H., chief engineer, steamer "Anghin," Hongkong-Bangkok Jennings, F. K. confidential enquiry agency, Singapore
Jennings, F. S. B., reporter, "Singapore Free Press," Singapore Jennings, H., assistant, Aylesbury & Garland, Perak
Jennings, J., managing-editor, "Times of Malaya," Press, Ld., Perak Jenny, H. assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Hanoi
Jens, E., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Jensen, Gustav, assistant, Thoresen & Co., Shanghai
Jensen, J. L. E.. assistant, Standard Oil Co., Shimonoseki
Jensen, J. P., chief engineer, s.s. "Pacific," Great Northern Telegraph Co., Shanghai Jensen, J. P., tilewaiter, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
Jensen, J. U., examiner, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Jensen, K. T., assistant, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Vladivostock
Jensen, R., assistant, Great Northern Telegraph Co.. Vladivostock
Jensen, T. H., burner, Green Island Cement Co., Hokün Works, Hongkong
Jephson, D. L., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Shanghai
Jephson, H. S., clerk, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong
Jernigan, Prescott F., teacher, Phillippine Normal School, Manila
Jernigan, T. R., attorney and counsellor at law, Jernigan & Fessenden, Shanghai Jerserich, Mario Casanuova di, commander, R.N. "Calabria," China
Jérusalemy, administrateu-adjoint, Quang-Tai, Résidence, Annam
Jespersen, J. T., godown-keeper, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Jess, C. J. F., assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Hankow. Jesselsen, J., assistant, Browne & Co., Moji
Jessen, H., merchant, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Jessula, David, dir., Compagnie de Com. et de Navigation d'Extreme-Orient, Suigon Jessula, Jacques, asst., Compagnie de Com. et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Saigon Jesus, A. A. de, clerk, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Hongkong
Jesus, A. S., clerk, Kelly & Walsh, L., Shanghai
Jesus, F. G. de., assistant, Siam Electricity Co., L., Bangkok
Jesus, F. Montalto, accountant, William C. Jack & Co., Hongkong
Jesus, F. V., superientendent, Sriracha Co., Bangkok
Jesus, G. E. M., manager, Oriental Bakery, Bangkok
Jesus, J. F., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Jesus, J. M., undertaker, Shanghai
Jesus, J. Montalto de, clerk, A. Goeke, Canton
Jesus, J. V. P. de, assistant, Hongkong Iron Works, Hongkong
Jewett, J. H., merchant, Jewett & Bent, Yokohama
Jeziersky, L., manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin
Joanilho, A., bookkeeper, Bell's Asbestos Eastern Agency, Ld., Hongkong
Joanilho, F. A. T., bookkeeper, Geo. Fenwick & Co., Hongkong
Joannes, ingenieur-du-jour, Charbonages du Tonkin, Haiphong
Joannot, J., assistant, Sheldon, Bakels & Co., Shanghai
Joass, H. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Joblin, Miller, vice consul for America, Saigon
Jobst, F. S., bont officer, Customs, Pagoda Anchorage, Foochow
Joenssen, R., assistant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Johannes, E. S., assistant, Adelphi Hotel, Singapore
Johannessen, G, chief officer, steamer "Wongkoi," Hongkong and Bangkok
Johannson, J., assistant, Heitmann and Aurnhammer, Vladivostock
Johansen, G. A., clerk, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Jolansen, M., electrician, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Amoy
Johansen, W., assistant, "North China Daily News & Herald," Shanghai
Johanssen, J. A. J., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai Johanssen, K. P., assistant, T. A. Christensen & Co., Kobe
John, Col. C. W. R. St., chief engineer, Royal Engineers, Hongkong John, C., assistant, Bandinel & Co., Newchwang
John, J., assistant, Universal Supply Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
John, J., overseer, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
John, J. W. H., proof reader, Maritime Customs Printing Office, Shanghai John, R., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
John, S. S., draftsman, Survey department, Poking
Johns, J., pilot, Shanghai
Johns, J. B., assistant engineer, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Johns, J. F., second-assistant, British Consulate, Bangkok
Johns, P., assistant, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Johns. R., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Wuhu
Johns, T. J. R., second officer, Customs revenue cruiser "Pingching," Shanghai
Johnsen J. H., broker, Johnsen & Herlofson, Shanghai
Johnsen, K. K,, pilot, Shanghai.
Johnsford, W., examiner, Maritime Customs, Wenchow
Johnson, A. Burlingame, manager, Insular Lumber Co., Manila
Johnson, A. E., suptding, clerk, Royal Engineers, Hongkong Johnson, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Johnson, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Nanning Johnson, B. G. H., assistant, Boustend & Co., Penang
Johnson, C. B., solicitor, Dennys & Bowley, Hongkong
[641
Johnson, C. Langley, assistant, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Sharp Peak Johnson, C. T., manager, George Town Dispensary, Ld., Perak.
Johnson, Earl, supt., Cadiz, P. I., Insular Lumber Co., Manila
Johnson, E. F., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Johnson, F., lighter superintendent, China Merchants, Steam Navigation Co., Tientsin Johnson, G. A., architect, Scott, Christie & Johnson, Shanghai
Johnson, G. F., assistant, Bradley & Co., Shanghai
Johnson, Gus., asst. purchasing agent, Philippine Govt., Manila
Johnson, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ld., Hongkong
Johnson, J., chief engineer, steamer, "Sui-an," Hongkong-Macao
Johnson, J., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Johnson, J. E., inspector, Mixed Court, Shanghai
Johnson, L. S., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Johnson, Major Frederick, governor, Agusan Province, Philippines
Johnson, R., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Johnson, R., chief engineer, steamer" Chunsang," China coast
Johnson, W. W., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Johnston, Andrew, lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford", China Station
Johnston, A. L., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Bangkok
Johnston, A. R., assistant, Kaye, Jervis & Co., Shanghai
Johnston, B. C. M, assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hankow
Johnston, C. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton
Johnston, G., sub-inspector, Municipal Police, Louza Station, Shanghai
Johnston, J. A., mining-inspector, Ulu Langat, Selangor
Johnston, J. C., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Johnston, J. H., lieut., 4th. Co., Hongkong Singapore Battn. R. G. A., Singapore
Johnston, R. F., district-officer, Weihaiwei
Johnston, T. Ruddiman, English and American Manufacturers' Agent, Tokyo
Johnston, W. M., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock, Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Johnston, W. M., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Tobacco, Manila
Johnston, W. S., manager, Taku Tug and Lighter & Co., Taku
Johnstone, A., assistant, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Johnstone, J., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Johnstone, W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin.
Jokhee, P. B., manager, Mehta & Co., Foochow
Jolles, P. A., secretary, Nickel & Co., Kobe
Jolly, L. G., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Manila Jolly, Wm., secretary, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Jolucewa, N. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Jouah, E., clerk, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Jonas, R. M., clerk, Browett Harold, Shanghai
Jonas, W., commercial attaché, German Consulate, Yokohama
Jonasson, A., assistant, Saw Mills, East Asiatic Cc., Bangkok Jonckheer, J., assistant, Java-China-Japan Lijn, Hongkong Jones, A., captain, steamer "Nanshan," Swatow-Hongkong
[
NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1042
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Jones, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Jones, A. E., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai Jones, A. E., local manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Kewkiang Jones, A. K., clerk, Court of Land Registration, Manila
Jones, A. L., Lloyd's Register of Shipping, Kobe
Jones, Alexander H. lieut., 13th Cavalry, topographer, Manila
Jones, Coward P., assistant paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Cadmus," China Station Jones, D. E. assistant, H. P. Wadman, Shanghai
Jones, D. P. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Soochow
Jones, De Witt C., lieut., engineer, assistant, Military Mapping, Manila Jones, E., assistant, Shanghai Bookstore, Shanghai
Jones, E., boarding officer, Harbour Department, Hongkong
Jones, E. B., broker and estate agent, Yokohama
Jones, E. Evan, dentist, Dr. Joseph W. Noble, Hongkong
Jones, E. S., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore Jones, F. S., president, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Jones, F. W., clerk, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Jones, Fred. C., engineer, Olof Wijk & Co., Shanghai
Jones, H. A., assistant-engineer, Installation Engineering Department, Singapore
Jones, H. D., captain, steamer "Honam," Hongkong and Canton
Jones, H. D. C., manager, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama
Jones, H. E., asst. builling inspector, Public Works department, Shanghai
Jones, H. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Jones, H. W., asst, engineer. Public Works Dept, Tampin, Negri Sembilan Jones, H. W., clerk, Grand Hotel, Shanghai
Jones, J., assistant, Dallas & Co., Tientsin
Jones, J., miner, Pahang Consolidated & Co., Pahang
Jones, J. C., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Jones, J. W. Lee, deputy registrar, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Jones, J. Williamson, agent, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Yokohama
Jones, John, chief officer, steamer "San-ui," West River
Jones, Lewis, G., chaplain, H. B. M. S.Bedford," China Station
Jones, Loftus E. P., barrister-at-law, Hanson, McNeill & Jones, Shanghai
Jones, P. G., assistant, British Embassy, Peking
Jones, P. N. H., first assistant director of public works, Public Works department, H'kong Jones, S. M., assistant, Macleod & Co., Manila
Jones, S. R. assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Jones, S. R., mining assistant, Osborne & Chappel. Perak
Jones, Thos., manager, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, and China, Singapore
Jones, Sir W. H. Hyndman, Chief Justice, Singapore
Jones, W. P. V., traffic-superintendent, Municipal Electric Tramway, Penang
Jonkoff, A. N., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Jonnery, interprète, Compagnie Française des Chemins de fer de l'Indo Chine, Mengtss Jonsen, P. S., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Jonson, E, R., lightkeeper, Gap Rock, Hongkong
Jonsson, C. R., acting berthing officer, Maritime Customs, Canton
Jorann, A. L. F., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Jordan, A. L., superintendent, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Nagasaki
Jordan, Gregory P., medical practitioner and health officer of port, Hongkong Jordan, Sir J., K.C.M.G., British Minister, Peking
Jordan, K. E., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Jorge, A. F., clerk, Delacamp & Co., Kobe
Jorge, F. F., clerk, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Jorge, F. J. V., merchant, Jorge & Co., Hongkong
Jorge, F. T., clerk, Formosa Mercantile Co., Tamsui
Jorge, H. T., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Jorge, J. V., Chinese Secretary, Portuguese Legation, Peking
Jorgensen, E., acting manager, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Jorgensen, J. E., supervisor, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Hongkong
Jorgensen, V., assistant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Josefsen, C., captain, tug "Vulcan," Shanghai
Joseland, F. E., assistant, Tait & Co., Amoy
Joseph, Comte Adrien, trésorier particulier, Cambodge
Joseph, E., clerk, David Sassoon & Co., Ld., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Joseph, E. M., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai Joseph, E. S., broker, Hongkong
Joseph, F. A., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Joseph, H. M., clerk, Municipality, Ichang
Joseph, J., clerk, David Sassoon & Co., Ld., Hongkong Joseph, J. E., broker, Hongkong
Joseph, J. M., broker, Shanghai
Joseph, L., clerk, Noel, Murray & Co., Shanghai
Joseph, M., asst,, Compagine de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Saigon Joseph, M. S., merchant and commission agent, Kobe
Joseph, P., assistant, Whiteway, Laidlaw & Co., Penang
Joseph, R. M., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Joseph, S., asst., Compagine de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Saigon Joseph, S. M., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Kobe
Joseph, S. M., broker, Shanghai
Joss, P., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama.
Jost, A., assistant, Sulzer, Rudolph & Co., Shanghai
Jot, O. O., chief clerk, Siam Electricity Co., Ld., Bangkok
Joubert, A., secrétaire de l'evêque, Cochin-chine, Saigon
Joughin, J. C., assistant constructor, H.M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Jovino, F. P., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai
Joy, J. R., Peking University, Peking
Joyce, C. M., clerk, Compagnie Asiatique de Navigation, Shanghai Joyce, Kenyon A., lieutenant, 6th Cavalry, Manila
Joyce, J. assistant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Perak
Joyner, A. F. N., editor, "Kobe Herald," Kobe Jucker, A., assistant, A. Berli & Co., Bangkok Jucker, H., assistant, A. Berli & Co., Bangkok
Judah, J., clerk, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Judah, J. S., manager, E. Meyer & Co., Singapore
Judah, R. S., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Judell, L. merchant, A. Schomburg & Co., Hoihow and Pakhoi (absent)
Judge, T. assistant, Boys' Day School, Bangkok
Judkins, B., assistant, Jardine Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Juergenson, J., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Nikolsk, Vladivostock
Juerges, R., assistant traffic superintendent, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
Jukes-Hughes, Edward G. de S., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station.
Julean, H Arnold, consul, American Consulate, Amoy
Julien, contrôleur du service des eaux, Saigon
Julien, J. D., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shimonoseki Julyan, P., clerk, Public Works department, Hongkong
Jumeau, chef de Bureau des affaires indigènes, Cambodge
Jung, F., assistant, United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld., Hongkong
Jungelauss, H., assistant, Griumo & Co., Bangkok
Junginger, L., civil engineer, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Jungman, N. assistant, Ebbeke & Co., Shanghai
Junker, E. E., teacher, Higher School, Hongo, Tokyo
Jupp, John A., merchant, J. D. Humphreys & Son, Hongkong
Jupp, L., sub-manager, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Jupp, W. D., manager, China Borneo Co., Hongkong
Jurgens, E., manager, Behn, Meyer & Co., Bangkok
Just, R., engineer, Wijk & Co., Shanghai
Justi, K. medical practitioner, Müller, Justi & Hoch, Hongkong
Kaak, A. W., assistant manager, British American Tobacco Co., Singapore
Kadoorie, Ellis, broker, E. S. Kadoorie & Co., Hongkong
Kadoorie, E. S., broker, E. S. Kadoorie & Co., Hongkong
Kaemmerer, P., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Kaeser, A. E., Thos. Cook & Son, Yokohama
Kagy, A., asssistant, A. Descours, Cabaud et Cie., Haiphong
Kaul, S., assistant, F. Engler & Co., Saigon
Kahler, W. F., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Amoy Kahler, W. R., editor and proprietor, The Union, Shanghai Kahn, A., assistant, I. Oppenheimer, Kobe
Kalm, G. K., accountant, Commercial Bank of Siberia, Vladivostock
1
NIPPONOPHONE
1643
" BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1644
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Kahn, Leopold, manager, La Estrella del Norte, Manila
Kalın, Maurice, assistant, Levy Hermanos, Manila
Kähs, Robert, assistant, Melchers & Co., and German Post director, Chinkiang Kahse, August, manager, Secker's Store, Manila
Kahn, A., assistant, J. Ullmann & Co., Hongkong
Kaigler, Homor W., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Kailey, Wm., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Kalbein, J., assistant, F. H., Schmidt, Kiaochau
Kakting, B. J., assistant, O. W. Lindliohn & Co., Vladivostock
Kalkofen, F., pilot, Shanghai
Kalmberg, C. C., superintendent, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Vladivostock Kalleberg, P. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Canton
Kammerer, P., French missionary, Pakhoi
Kamp, P., merchant, Ebbeka & Co., Shanghai
Kanabeeff, A. P., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kane, Samuel E., supervisor, Mountain Province, Philippines
Kann, E., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Kanter, H., secretary, German Consulate, Nanking
Kapadia, J. M., merchant, M. M. Kapadia & Co., Canton Kappeler, A. assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
Kappenbery, E., merchant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Kapteyn, B. D., assistant, Holland-China Trading Co, Hongkong
Kasakoff, S. M.. assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kastcup, K. K. assistant, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Vladivostock Kastmann, K., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Canton
Katrak, M. H., merchant, Canton
Katz, A., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Katz, J., merchant, Chefoo
Katz, Martin, merchant, Wm. Katz & Co., Vladivostock
Katz, M. tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Katz, M. A., merchant, Wm. Katz & Co., Shanghai
Katz, M. R., assistant, Wm. Katz & Co., Chefoo
Katz, W., merchant, Wm. Katz & Co., Shanghai
Kandulski, B., maschinenbauer, Kiaochau
Kauffmann, Alfr., agent, Pieper & Kauffmann, Yokohama
Kane, A., electricity department, Shanghai
Kauffman, A. L., acting deputy Postmaster in charge of District, Chinese P. O., Chungking
Kaufhold, W., chief engineer, steamer "Machew," China coast.
Kaufman, S. C., assistant, A. S. Rosenthal & Co., Yokohama
Kaufmann, M., merchant, Simon, Evers & Co., Yokohama.
Kaufmann, H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Kaufner, J., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Yokohama
Kautter, lieut., commander, S.M S., "Vorwarts," Ger. Squadron, China
Kautzsch, Dr. M., in charge of Hospital and Sanatorium, Tsinanfu
Kavarana, D. B., merchant, B. F. Kavarana & Co., Canton
Kavarana, F. B., assistant, B. F. Kavarana & Co.. Canton
Kavarana, H. S. manager, S. F. Kavarana, Canton
Kay, C. D., assistant, Craig & Co., Shanghai
Kay, G., assistant, New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai Kay, Robert, assistant, Alex. Campbell & Co., Hankow and Shanghai
Kaye, C. B., merchant, Kaye, Jervis & Co., Shanghai
Kaye, H.H.P., watcher, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Kaye, J. C., acting postmaster, British Post Office, Shanghai
Kean, R., assistant, Nickel & Co., Shimonoseki
Keane, W. L., merchant, E. T. Mason & Co., Yokohama
Keating, A. supt., Green Island Cement Co., Deep Water Bay Works, Hongkong Keating, Rev. Fr., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macao
Keating, J., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Chengtu
Keats, W. O., clerk of works, H. B. M., Office of Works, Shanghai Keay, C. M., assistant engineer, Canton Kowloon Railway, Canton Keay, W. E., assistant, W. Hewett & Co., Shanghai
Keddie, J. F., Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Keeler, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Yochow Keen, A. E., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Manila
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Keenor, J., employé, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai Keer, J. H, assistant, Adamson Gilfillan & Co., Penang
Keil, A., assistant, Meier & Co., Yokohama
Keiller, F. G., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Singapore
Keiper, W., professor of German, Chinese Imperial University, Peking
Keir, A., master, High Malacca School, Malacca
1645
Keith, D., shipwright dept., Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Keith, H., engine driver, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Kell, F. G., tea inspector, Boyd & Co., Amoy & Tamsui
Kell, J. C., assistant, Naval Store Officer, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Kellar, R., assistant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Perak
Kelleher, D., traffic inspector, Imperial Railways, Newchwang
Kelleher, S. C., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila
Keller, H., assistant, Speidel & Co., Cambodge
Keller, Ed., assistant, Ed. A. Keller & Co., Manila
Keller, W. M., assistant, Ed. A. Keller & Co., Manila
Keller, William L., captain, Medical Corps, Manila
Kellersberger, H., assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Saigon
Kelley, W. V., D.D., Peking University, Peking
Kellogg, A. G., assistant accountant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Kelling, C., assistant, Struckmann & Co., Manila
Kellinghusen, O., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Kellinghusen, W., assistant, Belin, Meyer & Co., Manila.
Kelly, J., engineer, Ice Works, Penang
Kelso, W., chief-draughsman, Graving Docks, Singapore
Kelsey, A. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Kelton, Robert H. C., captain, assistant to Quartermaster, Manila
Kember, Dr. A., medical examiner, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Hangchow
Kemp, A. Norman, business manager, "Hongkong Daily Press," Hongkong
Kemp, A V, assistant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Kemp, E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Kemp, G. S., Foster, headmaster, Public School for Chinese, Shanghai
Kemp, Joseph H., registrar, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Kemp, P. R., supt. Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Kemp, W. L., secretary, The Sandycroft Co., Ld., Singapore Kempenaers, T., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Kempf, H. H., agent, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Kobe
Kempffer, E., general-manager, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Kemplen, E. J., district surveyor, Survey Office, Batu Gajah, Perak
Kempster, H. W., general magr. in China, Chamber of Mines Labour Imp. Aga., Tien tsin Kempthorne, A. S., supervisor, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong Kench, O. C., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Hongkong
Kendall, F. C., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Penang
Kenderdine, G., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Kenderdine, J. E., assistant, Johnstone, Cain & Co., Yokohama
Kendrick, F. A., acting asst. manager, China and Japan Trading Co., Kobe
Kengie, A. M., manager, Pagam, La., Singapore
Kennedy, A. C., chief officer, steamer "Loongsang," China coast
Kennedy, A. L., assistant, Commercial Union Assce. Co., L., Yokohama
Kennedy, D., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Osaka Kennedy, F. A., merchant, Hatch, Carter & Co., Tientsin
Kennedy, F. G., inspector of Police, Perak
Kennedy, J., accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Manila
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Kennedy, J., blacksmith, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Kennedy, J. J. Stodart, general magr. & chief engineer, The Electric Traction Co., H'kong Kennedy, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Kennedy, J. W., assistant, Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Perak
Kennedy, S. G., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Kennedy, W., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Kenn, E. R., apothecary, General Hospital, Selangor
Kennett, H. S., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Kennett, H. W., manager, Saw Mills, China-Borneo Co., Hongkong
Kenny, H. W., acting manager, International Banking Corpn., Canton
Kenny, W. E., acting state engineer, Public Works Department, Negri Sembilan
it
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1646
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Kenrick, J. P., engineer-in-chief, Peking Syndicate, Ld., Peking Kent, H. W., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Kent, P. H., barrister-at-law, Kent & Mounsey, Tientsin
Kent W. E., pilot, Shanghai
Keppler, W., assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Saigon
Ker, W. P., consul for Great Britain, Peking
Kerberg, P. de, acting vice-consul, Russian Consulate, Kobe
Kerfoot, Jas., manager, Ewo Cotton Spinning & Weaving Co., Shanghai Kern, J., assistant, Belin, Meyer & Co., Manila
Kerr, D., broker, Fraser & Co., Singapore
Kerr, J., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Bangkok
Kerr, J., foreman shipwright, Bangkok Dock Co., Bangkok
Kerr, J., inspector of police, Hongkong
Kerr, James T., colonel, adjutant general, Division Staff, Manila Kerr, W. A., teacher, Tuburan, Division of Cebu, Philippines
Kerr, W. H., assistant, The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Shanghai
Kerr, Wm., merchant, Wm. Kerr & Co., Kobe
Kerridge, C. W., asst. constructor, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Kertell, F., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Kessler, Wilhelm, merchant, Kumpers & Co., Singapore
Kester, G., miner and consular agent for France, Selangor
Keswick, Henry, managing director, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Ketcham, W. E., assistant, Bagnall & Hilles, Yokohama
Ketschker, G. A., proprietor, Federated Malay States Hotel, Selangor
Keuchenius, H., councillor, German Legation, Bangkok
Keulamons, G., assistant. Hooglandt & Co., Singapore
Keun, W. C. P., chief clerk, Audit office, Singapore
Kew, Chadwick, T., dental surgeon, Drs. Kew Bros., Hongkong
Kew, C. H. W., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Ld., Hongkong Kew, F. Howard, dentist, Drs. Kew Bros., Hongkong
Kew, G. W., chief engineer, steamer "Heungshan," Hongkong and Canton
Kew, Irvin W., assistant, Drs. Kew Bros., Hongkong
Kew, J. W., consulting and motor engineer, J. W. Kew & Co., Hongkong
Keyser, Dr. de., managing director, Société Anonyme Belge, Bangkok
Keyser, P., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Keyt, F. T., second health officer of the port, Hongkong
Keyzer, C. de, overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai Kfeedler, Dr. H. D., medical practitioner, Manila
Kharas, D. K., assistant, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Hongkong Kibat, O., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Kibble, Leslie, D., assistant, Bowden Brothers & Co., Kobe
Kidd, G. M. examiner, Imperial Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Kiddle, H. D., assistant, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Kidger, E., employé, J. Llewellyn & Co., Shanghai
Kiefer, L., manager, Normal Dispensary, Yokohama
Kien, W., manager, Holland-China Trading Co., Hongkong
Kihn, H. J., assistant, Jebsen & Co., Hoihow
Kilby, H. W., sub-accountant, International Banking Corpn., Hongkong
Kilbourne, Edwin D., captain, Medical Corps, Manila
Kildoyle, E., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Kilian, F., manager, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Singapore
Kilian, O., chief engineer, steamer" Meidah," Yangtsze river
Kiliani, R., consul general for Germany and acting consul for Austria, Singapore
Killalee, R., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Killeen, Thur. C. M., merchant, Killeen & Co., Chinkiang and Nanking
Kilner, E., sanitary inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Kimm, D., Hon. Lieut. inspector of Army Schools, Hongkong
Kimmelmann, J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai Kimpton, H. E., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Kindblad, A. E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Wuchow Kindt, E. H., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Singapore Kindt, G. J. C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuchow King, A., assistant, H. Skott & Co., Hongkong
King, A., assistant, Holland-China Trading Co., Shanghai
i
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
King, C. S., assistant, Central Trading Co., Shanghai
King, E. J., shipchandler, T. M. Lathin, and consular agent for U.S.A., Hakodate King, F. G., employé. R. H. Powers & Co., Nagasaki
King, G., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
King, Gilbert W., registrar and coroner, H. B. M. Supreme Court, Shanghai
King, H. E., professor, Peking University, Peking
King, H. F., consul for Great Britain, Kewkiang
King, H. P., representative, Thos. Firth & Sons, Shanghai
King, H. S., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
King, H. Y., professor, Imperial Medical College, Tientsin
1647
King, Hamilton, United States Envoy Extraordinary & Minister Plenipotentiary,Bangkok
King, Harold, assistant, Straits Trading Co., Penang
King, J., assistant, Thurier & Kohr, Hankow
King, J. L, assistant colonial treasurer, Singapore
King, J. W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
King, P. C., accountant, Factory, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
King, Philip W. S., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station
King, P. W., lighter superintendent, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore King, S., assistant, Moller Brothers, Shanghai
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King, W., manager, wharf dept., Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore King, W., manager, Priest, Marians & Co., Yokohama
King, W. F., assistant, Thos, Cook & Son, Yokohama
King, W. H. Tindal, assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong
King, W. S., managing director, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Ld., Hankow
King, Walter, manager, Kelly & Walsh, Hongkong
King, Y. S., clerk, Palace Hotel, Shanghai
King, Z. D., managing director, Brighten, Malcolm & Co., Shanghai
Kingcome, C., treasurer, Smith, Bell & Co., and acting consul for Denmark, Manila Kingcome, E. A., assistant, MacLeod & Co., Cebu & Manila
Kinghorn, H. P., assessment officer, Secretariat, Municipality, Singapore
Kinghorn, J. R., Shore Staff, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Kingman, John J., lieut., Corps of Engineers, assistant, Defensive Works, Manila Kingsmill, Thos. W., civil engineer, Shanghai
Kinipple, W. R., traffic inspector, Police Department, Shanghai
Kinloch, F., assistant, Pengkalen, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Kinnaird, J. D., assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Kinnear, H. R., merchant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai Kinnear, J., foreman, Palang Consolidated Co., Pahang
Kinschot, C. P. Van, district treasurer, Sandakan, B. N. Borneo
Kinsey, W. E., asst. conservator of Forests, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan Kirby, A., marine and general surveyor, Kobe
Kirby, C. E., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Ld., Tokyo
Kirchhoff, F. H., manager, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai
Kirchner, A., merchant, Kirchner & Boger, Shanghai
Kirchner, O., merchant, Kirchner & Boger, Shanghai
Kirchner, P., assistant, The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Shanghai
Kirke, C. C. A., vice consul and accountant, British Embassy, Peking
Kirke, H. L., major, commanding Hongkong-Singapore R. G. A., Kowloon, Hongkong Kirke, R. J., chief detective inspector, Police department, Penang
Kirkhope, H., headmaster, Tientsin School Association, Tientsin
Kirkpatrick, S. M., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Kirkwood, E. M., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Nanking
Kirmse, O., assistant, Heuser, Eberius & Co., Hongkong
Kirn, E., assistant, Tageblat fur Nord-China, Tientsin
Kirschstein, W. A., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Kirsten, W., clerk, German Consulate, Shanghai
Kirtland, A. S., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Kirtland, J. E., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Kirtland, Roy C., lieut., 14th. Infantry, topographical inspector, Manila
Kirton, W., managing editor, "The National Review," Shanghai
Kirwan, H. S., assistant, Clarke & Co., Singapore
Kisliakoff, W. M.. assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kissing, H. C., assistant, Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Kissmann, I., assistant, Waldecker & Poepple, Vladivostock
t
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1648
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Kitchell, O., clerk, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong
Kitching, F., track inspector, Imperial Railways, Tangku, Tientsin Kitching, G. C., manager, A. S. Watson & Co., Canton
Kitching T. E, assistant, Wm. Forbes & Co., Tientsin Kitovitz, D., solicitor, Evans & Kitovitz, Singapore Kitson, E. J., Club Hotel, Yokohama
Kittel, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Kitzel, D., secretary, German Consulate, Shimonoseki and Moji Kjoss, A., captain, steamer "Oscar II.," Wallem & Co., Shanghai Klages, chief, officer, S. S. "Ithaka," Coast service
Klaren, K., assistant, General Hotel des Wagons Lits, Ld., Peking Klarer, C., assistant, Grand Hotel des Wagons Lits, Ld., Peking Klatt, C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Kleemann, O., merchant, Otto Kleemann & Co., Tientsin Klees, H., medical practitioner, Kiaochau
Kleeschutte, Wilhelm, merchant, Tientsin
Kleffel, G., assistant, Diedrichsen & Co., Shanghai
Kleimenow, C., consul-general for Russia, Shanghai
Klein, Otto, assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Hankow
Klein, Rudolf, lieut., S. M. S. "Luchs", German Squadron, China Kleinenbroich, Fr. C., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow Kleinschmidt, E., assistant interpreter, German Legation, Tientsin Kleinschmidt, Th., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hankow Kleinward, O. H., assistant, Moll, Kunzli & Co., Manila Klette, J., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Tientsin
Kley, Capt. G., German Admiralty Yangtse pilot, Shanghai
Kleye, C, assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin
Kliene, H., asst. postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Foochow
Klijhn, N., assistant, Methodist Publishing House, Shanghai
Klimanek, P. H., assistant, Holland-China Trading Co., Hongkong
Klinck, C., superintendent, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Hongkong Klingemann, C., assistant, Simon, Evers & Co., Yokohama Klingen, H., assistant, Bowden Brothers & Co., Kobe Klingenberg, R. assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Yokohama Klinger, F., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Klingner, Paul, secretary, German Consulate, Shanghai Klintin, R., assistant, J. A., Kjellberg & Son, Ld., Yokohama Klobukowski, gouverneur général de Cochin-Chine, Saigon Kloeckner, F, assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok Kloeckner Hugo, assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Tientsin Klopfer, P., captain, s.s. "Anping," China coast Klopp, D., assistant, Garrels, Börner & Co., Hankow Klopp, G., assistant, Garrels, Börner & Co., Shanghai Klsin, O., assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Hankow Klubien, J., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hangchow Kluss, F., assistant, Kocrting, Bume & Reif, Kobe Klyhn, P., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Shanghai Knaack, J., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Knabenshue, S., consul-general, United States Consulate General, Tientsin Knäpel, J. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Kneedler, H. D., vice-president, U. S. Shoe Co., Manila
Knell, F., manager, Kowloon Engineering Works, Macdonald & Co., Hongkong Knight, C. C., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Knight, F. W., writer, Naval Establishment, Weiliaiwei
Knight, G. T., foreman, Army Ordnance department, Hongkong
Knight, H. J., sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong
Knight, James, assistant, A. Cameron & Co., Kobe
Knight, Jean, consul de France, Bangkok
Knight, W. C. H., second officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Chuentiao," Shanghai Knipping, H., consul, German Consulate, Tientsin
Knobelauch, P., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Iloilo
Knocker, S., resident manager, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Singapore Knoke, H. W., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Kiaochau
Knoll, E., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
I
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Knoop, W., assistant, Eberhardt, Bollweg & Co., Kiaochau Knopfe, C., assistant, Wm. Menke & Co. Singapore
Knopp, K., teacher of German, Higher Commercial School, Nagasaki Knott, H. F., employé, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai
Knott, T. M., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Knowles, C. H., lieut., H. M. S. "Waterwitch," China Station
Knowles, G. S., architect, Adams & Knowles, Tientsin
Knowles, J. T., mercht, Smith, Bell & Co., and British vice consul, Cebu Knowles, V. D., barrister-at-law, assistant, E. R. Kock, Singapore
Knowlton, Joseph L., captain, in charge, Quartermaster's Depot, Manila Kuox, A., inspector of Police, Singapore
Knox, E. M., accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation, Manila Knox, G., tidesurveyor-in-charge, Maritime Customs, Taku
Knox, H. St. C., merchant and storekeeper, H. Blow & Co., Tientsin
Knox, J. H., assistant, The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Singapore
Knox, John F., lieut. and comdr., II. M. S. "Widgeon," China Station
Knox, Lefferts, manager, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Hongkong
Knox, R. F., captain, Royal Engineers, Singapore
Knudsen, C. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Knuth, H., outdoor representative, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong Kober, H., merchant, H. Koher & Co., Shanghai
Koch, A., assistant, B. Grimm & Co., Bangkök
Koch, C., assistant, Hopkins, Dunu & Co., Shanghai Koch, Dr., rechsatuwalf und notar, Kiaochau
Koch, E., assistant, Illies & Co., Yokohama
Koch, Fr., assistant, Paul Schramm & Co., Osaka
Koch, G., assistant engineer, Haiho Conservancy Commission, Tientsin
Koch, H., representative, Strauss & Co., Shanghai
Koch, H., sub-manager, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Singapore
Koch, J. G., district land surveyor, Lower Perak, Perak
Koch, L. E., secretary, Municipality, Malacca
Koch, Walter, representative, Barmer Export-Gesellschaft, Bangkok
Kochler, A., assistant, Dentsch Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
Koeber, R. von, professor of Philosophy, Tokyo Imperial University, Tokyo
Koehl, J., professor, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki
Koehler, H., installation engineer, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hankow
Koehler, J., captain, steamer "Keong Wai," China coast
Koehler, W. O., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Koeln. A., manager, Deutsche Asiatische Bank, Hongkong Koen, Thos. A., consulting engineer, Seoul
Koenig, C. V., manager, The Tor Hotel, Ld., Kobe
Koenig, Leo. assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Koenig, P., business manager, "Ostasiatische Lloyd," Shanghai
Koenigsbauer, L., manager, Saw Mill, Lothar Marck & Busch, Hankow
Koenitz, L., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Koerting, J., Koerting, Bume & Reif, Yokohama
Koester, E. A., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Canton
Kofod, F. A. A., pilot, Shanghai
Kohler, Ernst L., manager, Alois Schweiger & Co., Shanghai
Köhler, F. K., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Kohler, Hans, lieut., S. M. S. "Tiger," German Squadron, China.
Kohlschmidt, P., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Koigumi, T., assistant, I. M. Customs, Hangehow
Koiransky, B., directeur, Brasserie Hommel, Hanoi
Kolbe, Hans, lieut., comindr. S. M. torpedo boat "Taku," Ger. Squadron Kolbe, J., engineer, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Kolby, Constantin, lieut., S. M. S. "Vorwarts," Ger. Squadron, China Kolessoff, N. T., first interpreter, Russian Legation, Peking Kolkmeijer, F., merchant, Kolkmeijer & Rockstroh, Hankow Koller, Herman, consul for Austria-Hungary, Yokohama Komatoff, W. M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Amoy Komor, G., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai Komor, I., assistant, Kuhn & Komor, Shanghai Komor, P., secretary, Shanghai Tannery Co., Shanghai
NIPPONOPHONE
1649
** --BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
52
1650
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Komor, S., curio dealer, Kuhn & Komor, Yokohama
Kompolthy, J. von, acting dep. postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Hankow Kondriasheff, W. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Konig, C., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Konig, H., elektro-techniker, Kiaochau
Konig, O. R. J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Yochow
Konig, P., general manager, German Printing & Publishing House, Shanghai Konig, T. R. F., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Konnowsky, P., chief engineer, steamer "Meiyu," Yangtze River Konsberg, I, tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai Konsichkina, L. G., assistant, Chourin & Co., Vladivostock Konsitchkina, W. G. assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Koops, R., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Kobe
Koosache, E. A., launch officer, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang Kooymans, C., overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai Kopff, Th., assistant, Delacamp & Co., Kobe
Kopke, H, chief of the Chancery, German Legation, Tokyo Kopp, G., examiner, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Kopsch, H. H., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Saigon Korkhof, H. H., chief officer, steamer "Phra Nang," China coast Korniloff, Colonel, military agent, Russian Legation, Peking Korostovetz, J., Minister, Russian Legation, Peking Korten, H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hongkong Korwin, A., assistant, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai Kosakow, G., first-secretary, Russian Embassy, Tokyo
Koslick, lieut., S. M. S. "Tsingtau," German Squadron, China Koslowski, W., von, Kliene & Co., Kiaochau
Kotelevitz N. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Kothe, E., assistant, Liebe Wulff & Co., Tsingtau
Kotwal, E. D., general broker, Hongkong
Kough, T. N., district magistrate, British North Borneo
Koumainna, M. N., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kourdiaieff, J. K., second interpreter, Russian Legation, Peking
Kourenkow, M. P., vice-consul for Russia, Hankow
Kousnitzoff, A. N., merchant, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock Kovalsky, T. A., assistant, Trading Company, Hankow
Kox, F. H., asst. engineer, Hanyang Street Works, Hankow
Koyle, Fred. T., lieut., Medical Reserve Corps, Manila
Kozhevar, R. E., chief assistant, Peninsular & Oriental S. Nav. Co., Singapore Kozleft, P. O., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kozloff, J. N., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kraal, E. C., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Kraal, W. E., assistant surveyor, Revenue Survey branch, Negri Sembilan Kraemer, E., assistant, C. Weinberger & Co., Yokohama
Kraentler, A. F., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bunk, Hongkong
Kraft, A., assistant, Bangkok Outfitting Co., Bangkok
Kraft, M., clerk, Dutch Postal Agency, Singapore
Kraft, W., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Kraft, W. D., assistant manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Krahe, F., chief officer, steamer," Pitsanulok," China coast
Kragh, C. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Kramer, A., assistant, F. Bornemann, Hankow
Kramer, C., merchant, Falck & Beidek, Bangkok
Kramer, H., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Tokyo
Kramer, O., assistant, H. Reis & Robitsek, Hongkong
Krapfenbauer, Dr. A., proprietor, Botica Antigua, Cebu Krapfenbauer, P., assistant, Botica Antigua, Cebu Kraschinski, E., assistant, Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau Krashewsky, W. P., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kravtzooff, A., assistant, O. W. Lindholm & Co., Vladivostock Krause, B., interpreter, German Consulate, Amoy Krauss, A., manager, Bodiker, Carl & Co., Tsingtau Krauss, E. L., agent, North China Insce. Co., Ld., Kobe
Krauss, J., councellor, German Legation, Bangkok
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Krause, Dr., S. M. S. "Arcona," German Squadron, China
Krauthoff, Charles R., major, commissary, in charge of Commissary Depot, Manila Krebs, A., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Krebs, Chinese secretary, German Legation, Peking
Kreidner, C. G., pilot, Kobe
Kremer, P., acting vice-consul, French Consulate, Hongkong
Kremer, P. P. P. M., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Kretschmar, K., assistant, Carlowitz & Co. Hanków
Kretzechmar, E. N., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Swatow
Kretzschmar, E., assistant, Anz & Co., Kiaochau
Kretzschmar, F. A., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Penang
Krieg, P., medical practitioner, Paulun von Schab, Krieg, Shanghai
Kriekenbeek, J. W., assistant auditor, Perak
Kries, H. F. W. von, assistant, Maritime Customs, Shasi
Krietsch, E., manager, Yangtsze Wharf and Godown Co., Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Krill, Jos., secretary, Austro-Hungarian Consulate, Shanghai
Kring, C., electrician, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Nagasaki
Kristy, Ch. P., vice-consul for Russia and also for Denmark, Chefoo
Kroeber, assistant, F. H. Schmidt, Kiaochau
Krogh, M., contractor and merchant, Kiaochau
Kroh, A., head-miller, A. Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Krohn, Otto, assistant, E., Viegelman & Co., Manila
Krohn, R., chief engineer, steamer "Keong Wai," Hongkong and Bangkok Krol, H. E., assistant, Holland-China Trading Co., Shanghai
Kroll, G., assistant, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Shanghai
Kroll, P., assistunt, Imperial German Post Office, Swatow Kronacher, F., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Yokohama
Krone, F., chief officer, steamer "Pongtong," China coast
Krone, W., assistant, A. Schomburg & Co., Hoihow and Pakhoi
Kroneck, E., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Kobe
Kropp, M., assistant, Carl Rhode & Co., and vice-consul for Peru, Kobe
Krueck, H., assistant, Lauts & Haesloop, Swatow
Kruger, Dr. F., consul general for Germany, Seoul
Kruger, J., commission agent, P. Kierulfi & Co., Peking
Kruger, K. F., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
1651
Krukow, A. A., manager, South Manchuria & Corea, East Asiatic Trading Co., Dairen. Krüper, G., assistant, L. H. Smith & Co., Chefoo
Kruschinski, C., assistant, F. Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau
Kruse, A. H., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Kruse, J, assistant, Ferd. Bornemann & Co., Shanghai
Kruse, K. W., assistant, Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Singapore
Kruse, W., assistant, Pasedag & Co., and acting consul for Netherlands, Amoy
Kruymel, Ed., assistant, Baer, Senior & Co., Manila
Krzywoszewski, Th. de, manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Hankow
Kuepper, W. assistant, Shanghai Machine Co., Shanghai
Kuezynski, E. R. von, Minister for Austria-Hungary, Yokohama Kufferath, C. Th. J., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kobe Kuhler, K., assistant, Schmidt & Ziegler, Manila
Kuhn, Arthur, curio dealer, Kuhn & Komor, Hongkong Kuhn, F., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai Kuhn, M. A., eleve-interprete, German Legation, Peking Kühne, Dr., vice consul for Germany, Yokohama Kuhndt, M., lohnschreiber, Kiaochau
Kuik, A., engineer, Crown Cork Co., L., Yokohama
Kullmann, J., sub-manager, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
Kummerfeldt, R., assistant, E. A. and Otto Weber, Manila
Kummert, H., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Kümpel, Chr., captain, steamer "Ang Hin," Hongkong and Bangkok Kunan, lieut., S.M.S. "Iltis," German Squadron, China,
Kunicke, R., mech. engineer, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Kunz, H., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Bangkok
Kunze, R., sub.-editor, "Ostasiatische Lloyd," Shanghai
Kunzli, J. J., merchant, Moll, Kunzli & Co., Manila
Kupsch, J. A., shipchandler, Thomsen & Co., Amoy
LE
NIPPONOPHONE
--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
52*
1652
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Kupsch, R., merchant, Kirchner & Böger, Shanghai
Kuss, O. manager, Winckler & Co., Kiaochau
Kutzur, A., chief officer, steamer "Rajah," China coast
Kydd, Thos. W., oriental representative, The Pacific Coast Lumber Mills, Hongkong Kym, L. assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Kynoch, G. W., overseer of works, Public Works department, Hongkong
La Brooy, G. O., agent, Eastern Produce Coal Co., Shanghai
Labardin, A., comptable, L. Hambeau & Co., Haiphong
Labashta, J. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Labeye, L. J., propriétaire, Haiphong
Laborie, director, French School, Hoihow
Labully, F. M., Roman Catholic missionary, Nanning, Lungehow
Lacaze, E., manager, G. Lacaze, Saigon
Lacaze, juge président, Tribunal de Cantho, Cochin-Chine
Lace, Geo. E., asst. supt. of factory, Hongkong and China Shoe Factory, Hongkong Lachand, juge de paix à Compétence étendue, Kouang-Tcheou-Wan
Lacher, J., accountant, Siemens & Schuekert, Osaka
Lachlan, C. T., manager, Selaba Estate, Teluk Anson, Penang
Lachlan, F. P., tea inspector, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Foochow
Lachlan, H., tea inspector, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Tamsui
Lack, G. M., merchant, Lack & Davis, Hongkong
Lack, S, acting accountant, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong Lacourége, J., assistant, Charrière et Cie., Haiphong
Lacy, E. N., assistant, Methodist Publishing House, Shanghai
Lacy, W. H., manager, Methodist Publishing House, Shanghai Ladd, H. H., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai Ladds, W. M., pilot, Singapore
Laengner, Frank, importer, Laengner Gebr, Kiaochaut
Laengner, Martin, importer, Laengner Gebr, Kiaochau
Laeschke, B., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Singapore
Lafarcade, M. de, consul suppléant, Consulat de France, Shanghai
Lathin, T. M., managing director, Japan Cold Storage and Ice Co., Yokohama Laffin, T. M., marine reporter, "Japan Mail," Yokohama
Lattel, C. E., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Ld., Hankow Lafrentz, C. J., merchant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Hongkong Lagerfeld, agent, Transpacific Commercial Co., Vladivostock Lagerfeld, Otto, agent, Transpacific Commercial Co., Vladivostock Lagro, W., manager, Netherlands Trading Society, Shanghai Laidlaw, G. M., assistant district officer, Tasik, Perak Laidlaw, J. W., assistant, Electricity department, Shanghai Laidlay, W., clerk, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai Laidler, T. W., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Lailheugue, médecin adjoint, Hôpital de Choquan, Cholon Laing, A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Laing, G. M., assistant, Warner, Barnes & Co., Tabaco, Philippines Laing, J. T., captain, steamer" Taishan," Swatow and Hongkong Lakin, G. M., assistant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Lake, Edward, merchant, Lake & Co., Nagasaki
Lake, F. B., assistant, Lake & Co., Nagasaki
Lake, P. M. B., captain, steamer "Namsang," China coast
Lake, Staff Sergt.-major, F. T., chief clerk. Army Pay department, Hongkong Lamarre, J. P., merchant, P. A. Lapicque & Co., Hongkong
Lamb, H. S., assistant, Universal Trading Co., Shanghai
Lambarde, F.F., major, 80th Company, R. G. A., Singapore Lambe, Percy, assistant, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Lambe, W. P., assistant, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Lambelet, A., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Peking
Lambert, chief du bureau judicial, Parquet Général, Saigon Lambert, A. C., medical practitioner, Kewkiang
Lambert, E. N., assistant, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Lambert, E. N., assistant, L. J. Healing & Co., Kobe
Lambert, J., assistant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Perak
Lambert, J., assistant, Palmer & Turner, Hongkong
Lambert, Jno, ship and engine surveyor, Lloyd's agent, Hongkong
ין
I
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1653
Lambert, L., procurator, The Good Shepherd Cathedral, Singapore Lambert, W., coach builder, Singapore
Lamberton, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Kobe Lamberton, H. G., chief surveyor (outdoor) Customs, Bangkok Lamberton, R. W., chief inspector, Customs, Bangkok
Lambooy, H., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Lambio, H., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Charbin, Vladivostock Lamble, P. T., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
Lamblot, secrétarie de la rédaction, l'Avenir du Tonkin, Hanoi
Lambooy, J., assistant, A. Ehlers & Co., Shanghai
Lambton, Hon. Sir Hedworth, vice-admiral, comr-in-chief H.B.M.'s Squadron, C. & J. Lammers, P., bookkeeper, Singkep in Maatschappij, Singapore
Lammert, F., assistant, Caldbeck, MacGregor & Co., Hongkong
Lammert, Geo. P., auctioneer, Hongkong, and joint inanager Bradys Ltd., Shanghai
Lammert, H. A., assistant, G. P. Lammert Hongkong
Lammert, L. E., assistant, G. P. Lammert, Hongkong
Lamothe, A., 15, Rue Paul Bert, Hanoi
Lamotte, payeur, Territoire Militaire Cao Bang, Tonkin
Lampe, W., restaurant keeper, Kiaochau
Lamperski, A., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Lampert, J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tang-ku
Lampson, M. W., acting second secretary, British Embassy, Tokyo
Lancaster, F., chief engineer, steamer "Changwo," China coast Lancaster, P. M., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Lancaster, W. O., clerk, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Landahl, J., proprietor, Secker's Store, Manila
Landale, D., merchant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Landen, J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Chungking
Lander, J. W., assistant, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Lander, W. B., lieut. col., staff paymaster, Army Pay Department, Hongkong
Landers, C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kashing, Hangchow
Landers, H. F., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Landgraf, C., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Landis, H. M., professor of English, Meiji Gakuin, Shiba, Tokyo Landmann, G., merchant, Tsingtau
Landolt, J., merchant. J. Landolt & Co., Canton
Landon, Arthur J., lieut., H.B.M.S. "Flora," China Station
Lane, A., chief-clerk, Taijong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Lane, Arthur E., eng.sub.-lieut., H.B.M.S." Bedford," China Station
Lane, E. C., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong Lane, E. D., manager, Hevea Rubber Planting Co., Ld., Johore. Lane, J. H. C., assistant, Fraser & Co., Singapore
Lane, S. A., assistant general manager, Tanjong Pagar Dock, Singapore Lang, A. O., assistant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Lang, Ernest P. H., solicitor, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong Langan, C., clerk, Post Office, Penang
Langan, R., clerk, Boustead & Co., Penang
Langdale, Harry M., surgeon, H.B.M.S. "Cadmus," China Station
Lange, E., assistant, Win. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Lange, E., watchmaker, Chs. J. Gaupp & Co., Hongkong
Lange, Captain, naval attaché, German Legation, Tokyo Lange, F, assistant, Samuel, McGregor & Co., Shanghai Lange, L., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Tientsin Lange, M. N. de, assistant, Philippine Co., Manila
Langelutje, A., assistant, Joh. H. Langelutje & Co., Vladivostock Langhammer, O. J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin Langley, A. O., inspector of police, Hongkong
Langley, F, A. Y., assistant, Guthrie & Co,, Singapore
Langley, J., asst. comp. general, Account & Audit, Bangkok
Langraa, D. M., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong
Langrogne, agent principal, Compagnie Française des Chemins de Fer, Mengtsz
Langstein, L. V., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Langston, S. H., assistant district officer, Bating Padang, Perak
Langtry, W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1654
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lanning, A. E., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Lanning, G. F., attorney, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hankow Lanning, O. V. assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong Lanning, V. H., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai Lansac, chef de ler bureau de Comptabilité, Saigon
Lansberg, J. W., inspector, River Police, Shanghai
Lante, Riccardo G., marine guard, Italian Legation, Peking
Lanz, Conrad H., captain, asst. to Quartermaster, Manila Lanz, E., manager, Behn, Meyer & Co., Ld., Bangkok
Lapicque, P. A., merchant, P. A. Lapicque & Co., Hongkong Laporte, E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Lapsley, R., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Larcina, A. M. L., clerk, Walter Scharff & Co., Shanghai
Large, F., assistant, Harvie & Cooke, Shanghai
Larkin, A. W., accountant, Fraser & Neave, Ld., Singapore Larkin, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Larkins, F., agent, Cornabé, Eckford & Co., Chefoo
Larribeau, A., R. C. missionary, Gensan, Corea
Larsen, C. E., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Larsen, C. N., third-officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Chuentiao," Shanghai Larsen, H. tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Larsen, L., assistant, Wassard & Co., Vladivostock
Larsen, P., assistant, Kyushiu Stevedorage Co., Nagasaki
Larue, V. & G., proprietaires, Glacières de l' Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Lasagna, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Lasoli, P., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Saigon
Lasportes, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Lassen, lieut., S. M. S. "Leipsig," German Squadron, China
Lassiter, William, major, asst. to Inspector Genl., Manila
Last, F. J. W., laud bailiff, Land Office, Hongkong
Latham, H., merchant, Latham & Co., Singapore
Latouliere, M. de., postal officer, C. Imperial Post Office, Hankow Lattimore, D., professor of English, Provincial College, Tientsin Baucher, J., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Lauenstein, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Laugher, H., headmaster, Victoria Bridge School, Singapore
Laughlin, Zach. M., dis. health officer, Province Albay, Philippines
Laumondais, M. C., director, General College of the Missions Etrangères, Penang
Laumouier, Henri, directeur, redacteur en chef, L'Avenir du Tonkin, Hanoi
Launay, A., proprietor, Hotel de la Paix, Tientsin
Laurel, F., lerk, Percy Smith & Seth, Hongkong
Laurel, L., assistant, Mercantile Bank of India Ld., Hongkong
Laurence, B. S., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Laurence, F. L., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila Laurencin, L., assistant, J. Charrière et Cie., Haiphong
Laurent, G., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Lauritzen, C., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Lauroesch, Carl, sub-manager, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Laursen, J. E. F., officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Linhsing," Shanghai
Lauru, C. H., assistant audit secretary, Maritime Customs, Peking
Lauson, H. F., manager, Scottish Union & National Insurance Co., Shanghai Lautherbach, Captain, S. S. "Straats Kraetke," Coast service
Laval, P., merchant, Moine-Comte & Co., Singapore
Laverie, J., captain, steamer "Changwo," China coast
Lavers, P. F., merchant, Lavers & Clark, Shanghai and Weihaiwei Lavest, J. M., Roman Catholic bishop, Lungehow
Law, A. F. G., chief judicial commissioner, Federated Malay States Law, C. A., broker, Kennedy & Co., Penang
Law, D. R., merchant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong.
Law, J., assistant, Thomas Macdonald & Co., Shanghai Law, J., inspector, Municipal Police, Hankow
Law, W. C. Anderson, assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Law, W. O., assistant, Maritime Customs, Wuchow
Law, W. M., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
F
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lawder, C., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance, Co., Hongkong Lawder, C. E., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Lawley, L., arnament staff sergeant, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong Lawrence, A., accountant, Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Perak
Lawrence, A., inspector in charge, Naval Establishment, Hongkong Lawrence, H. P., manager, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Ld., Perak Lawrence, J., captain, steamer "Tai On," Hongkong-Canton
Lawrence, J. A., engine-driver, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
Lawrence, John, professor, English Language, Tokyo Imperial University, Tokyo Lawrence, S. H., engineer, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Lawrie, F. B. A., captain, RM.A., H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station Lawson, Ernest, minister, Presbyterian Church, Penang
Lawson, W. G., chief officer, steamer "Rubi," Hongkong-Manila Lawton, Frank H., captain, chief commissary, Mindanao, Manila Lay, A., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang
Lay, A. H., acting consul for Great Britain, Chemulpo, Corea
Lay, K. F., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Hongkong
Lay, W. G., postal commissioner, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Shanghai Lay, W. T., commissioner, I. M. Customs, Hangchow
Layard, R. de B. M., consul-general for Great Britain, Kobe
Layton, B., bill and bullion broker, Layton & Co., Hongkong
Lazansky, M. W., chief clerk, Port Works, Bureau of Navigation, Manila
Lazaroo, R. F., assistant accountant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Bangkok
Lazarus, L., assistant, Witkowski & Co., Kobe
1655
Le Cospellier, N., directeur de l'exploitation, Mess. Fluviales & Consul de Spain. Saigon Le Fevre, T., acting- superintendent, Survey department, Peking
Lea, H. W., director, Priest, Marians & Co., Yokohama
Lea, L. G., professor, Soochow University, Soochow
Leach, electrician, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai
Leach, A. G., armament staff sergeant, Army Ordnance Departinent, Hongkong
Leach, A. W., assistant, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Leach, G. K., assistant, Imperial Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Leach, W., clerk of works, Public Works dept., Shanghai
League, T., missionary agent, Kiaochau
Lean, F. C., assistant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore
Leang, H. W., accountant, P. Pinfold, Shanghai
Learmouth, Dr. B. L. L., medical officer, Imp. Railways, Hsinminfu, North China
Learmouth, B. L. L., M.B., C.M., Peking University, Peking
Learmouth, F. C., comdr., H. B. M. S. "Merlin," China Station
Lease, Frank E., administrator, Sapong Rubber and Tobacco Estates Co., B. N. Borneo Leask, J. P., assistant, Wise & Co., Iloilo
Leask, J. T., senior medical officer, Medical Department, Singapore
Leask, W. G. G., captain, steamer" Koonshing," China coast
Leask, W. L., assistant, Leigh & Orange, Hongkong
Lebas, E. G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Pakhoi
Lebbe, F. V., director, Church of Notre Dame des Victoires, Tientsin
Lebhe, V., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Lebeaud, C. E., secretary, Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders, Hongkong
Leblanc, lieutenant, French Legation, Peking
Leboucq, G., cashier, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Bangkok
Lebrun, H., fondé de pouvoir, C. Tournier, Saigon
Lebrun, R., employé, C. Tournier, Saigon
Lecaille, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Lechenet, assistant, Dumarest et Fils, Saigon
Leckie, J. McH., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Leckie, W. E., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Leclerc, Em. H., assistant, Guioneaud Frères, Haiphong Leclerc, L., advocat defenseur, Hanoi
Lecoeur, commissaire de Police Central, Saigon
Lecomte, G., vice-consul for France, Amoy
Lecomte, superior, House of Nazareth, Pokfulum, Hongkong
fncot, A., directeur, Banque de l'Indo Chine, Pnom-Penh, Saigon
Ledbury, J. C., assistant, L. Moore & Co., Shanghai
Leduc, consul for France, Foochow
יז
NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1656
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Leduc, L., professor, School of the Star of the Sea, Nagasaki
Lee, A. W. D., accountant, Chinese Post Office, Hankow
Lee, Charles, agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., and consul for Denmark, Amoy Lee, C. H., secretary, W. S. Bailey & Co., Hongkong
Lee, G., stores clerk, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Lee, J. S., chief draughtsman, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Lee, S. K., assistant, C. Vering, Kiaochau
Lee, S. P., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Lee, V. K., director and manager, Han-yel Ping Iron and Coal Co., Hankow
Lee, W. D., district-accountant, Chinese Post Office, Hankow
Leech, J. S., director, Bureau of Printing, Manila
Leeds, E. S., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Newchwang
Leefe, L. N., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong Leeman, T. E., engineer, Inniss and Riddle, Shanghai
Lees, E., partner, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Lees, G. H., partner, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Leeuwen, L. J. S. van, assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore Lefaki, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Lefaivre, Jules, French Minister, Bangkok
Lefevre, F. P., engineer Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan Lefroy, A. J. S., manufacturers' agent, Tokyo
Legendre, juge de paix, Saigon
Legendre, A., medecin, Consulat de France, Chentu, Chungking
Leggatt, W., assistant, Planters Stores & Agency Co., Selangor
Legge, A. E., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Legge, H. R., assistant, Purnell & Paget, Canton
Legge, J., chief officer, S. S. "Fatshan," China coast
Legge, R. H., inspector of Police, Perak
Legier, Archibald S. De St., eng.-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station Legrand, Rev. P., French missionary, Huchow, Hangchow
Legris, Roman Catholic missionary Kewkiang
Legris, secrétaire général, Messageries Fluviales de Cochin-chine, Saigon Lehé, M., résident de France, Phu Yen, Annam
Lehmann, H., assistant, Schuldt Co., Hongkong
Lehmann, H., chief officer, "Meishun," Yangtsze river
Lehmann, R., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Tokyo
Lehrenkrauss, E., secretary, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore Lehrs, P., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Tientsin Leicester, A., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Leicester, C. B., assistant, H. Schaefer & Co., Singapore Leicester, C. W., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore Leicester, W., district surgeon, Pekan, Pahang
Leigh-Clare, R. L., solicitor, Ailen & Gledhill, Singapore Leigh, W., assistant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Shanghai Leigh, W., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Leinung, G., engineer-in-chief, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow
Leiria, J. J., merchant, J. J. dos Remedios & Co., & consul for Brazil & Portugal, Hongkong Leisk, R., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Leitão, Dr., procurador admtvo, P. A. dos negocies Sinicos, Macau
Leitão, E., clerk, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Leitch, A., medical practitioner, Singapore
Leitch, T. M., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Leitch, W. O., resident engineer, Imperial Railways, Kaopangtzu, Tientsin Leite, J. P., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Kobe
Leite, L. A., clerk, International Bank, Hongkong
Leith, A. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Leith, George P., lieut. & comdr., H. B. M. Str. "Moorhen," China Station Leith, J. L., assistant, Holine, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Leithen, R. von der, transport officer, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Lelas, J., asst. examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Lemaire, L., administrateur résident de France, Quang-Binh, Annam Lemarchand, W. R., assistant, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai Lemasson, résident maire, Tourane, Annam
Lemberger, v. V., secretary, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lemoing, J. B., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan Lementy, W., assistant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock
Lemm, F., assistant, Shanghai Book Store, Shanghai
Lemm, John, architect, Hongkong
Lemoine, commandant, Station de Sous Marins, Saigon Lemon, L. C., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Lemos, A. B., bacharel, reitor do Lyceu Nacional, Macao Lemos, L. C., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Lempriere, S. R. assistant, Geo. McBain, Shanghai
Lenclos, J. de, cashier, Banque de L' Indo-Chine, Tientsin Lendrum, G. W., assistant, Caledonia Sugar Estates, Penang
Lendrum, M. B., asst. accountant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Lennie, J. C., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Singapore
Lennox, A., inerchant, Bangkok
Lennox, D. J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Lennox, J., assistant, Butterfield and Swire, Hongkong
Lent, R., assistant, Tait & Co., Yokohama
Lent, W., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Lentali, secrétaire, Police Municipale, Saigon
Lenz, E., sub-manager, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Lenz, R., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong
Lenz, Dr. Ph., consul for Germany and acting consul for Netherlands, Chefoo Lenzmann, C. R., merchant, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Leon, Garnier, administrateur résident, Binh Thuan, Annam
Leon, J. B., assistant, The National Review, Shanghai Leon, M. V., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong Leonard, J., second bailiff, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Leonard, J. C., teacher, Balambau, Division of Cebu, Philippines Leonard, T. A., inspector, Police department, Penang Leonardi, inspecteur, Police Municipale, Saigon
Leonowens, Louis T., managing director, Leoowens, Ld., Bangkok Lepagney, chef du service, Travaux Publics, Kouang Tcheou Wan Lepekhin, J. N., assistant, The Trading Co., Hankow
Lépissier, vice consul, French Consulate, Canton
Lépissier, E. L., deputy-commissioner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Lerberghe, M. van, editor, "Le Journal De Chine," Tientsin
Lereide, Rev. J., missionary, Missions Etrangères de Paris, Chinnampo Lereide, Rev. J., Missions Etrangères de Paris, Chinnampo
Lerma, Y., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila
Lermit, A. W., architect and surveyor, Tomlinson & Lermit, Singapore Leroux, pharmacien, Pharmacie Central de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong Le Roy, résident de Kampot, Cambodge
Lesage, F., pilot, Shanghai
Lesdos, L., assistant, Messageries Maritimes Co., Shanghai
Leslie, H., clerk, Electricity department, Shanghai
Leslie, W. H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Lesparda, adjudant de Division Navale de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Lestang, receveur, Postes et Télégraphes, Kouang Tcheou Wan
Lester, A. B., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Mukden
Lester, A. M., merchant, Robt, Anderson & Co., Hankow
Lester, H. W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Lesalar, E., clerk, Boustead & Co., Penang
Lesslar, J. E., apothecary, Kampar, Perak
Lessler, E. E., land registration agent, Taiping, Perak
Lessner, P., storekeeper, Nagasaki
Lessner, S. D., storekeeper, Nagasaki
Leth, E., assistant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Lethbridge, S. C., storehouseman, Naval store dept., Hongkong
Letzel, J., architect, E, de Lalande Co., Tokyo
Letzel, J., architect, Letzel & Hora, Tokyo
Leuthold, E. H., assistant, Sprungli & Co., Manila
Leuthold, F., manager, Diethelm & Co., Bangkok
Levasseur, conducteur, Travaux Publics, Yenbay, Tonkin
Lévêque, procurator, French Mission, Canton
L
1657
NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1658
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lévêque, J., engineer, Rizerie Orient, Cholon.
Levêque, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Levering, M. M., attorney-at-law, Cebu
Leveson, W. E., secretary, Municipal Council, Shanghai
Levgoasseur, ingénèur chef, Arrondissement de l'Est, Travaux Publics, Saigon
Levi, Ch., assistant, Felix Ullmann, Manila
Levi, I. A., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Levis, L., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore Levitsky, S. A., Russian Post Office, Tientsin Levy, F., assistant, Levy Hermanos, Iloilo
Levy, H., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Ld., Tokyo
Levy, Henry, manager, Manf. Dept., La Estrella del Norte, Manila
Levy, I. S., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong
Levy, Isidore, assistant, Levy Hermanos, Manila
Levy, M., employé, Levy Hermanos, Iloilo
Levy, S. A., merchant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Levy, S. S., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Lewington, W. J., storehouseman, H. M. Naval Store department, Hongkong Lewis, A. H., officer in charge, Chinese Post Office, Tientsin
Lewis, D., assistant, Borneo Co., Ld., Singapore
Lewis, D., employè, P. O'Brien Twigg, Shanghai
Lewis, D., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai Lewis, E. Cornewall, assistant postmaster general, Hongkong Lewis, Frederick, lieut-governor, Bukidnon, Philippines Lewis, J. C., auditor, Province of Cebu, Philippines Lewis, J. H., merchant, Douglas, Lapraik & Co., Hongkong Lewis, Karl, photographer, Yokohama
Lewis, P. R., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Lewis, T., assistant-manager, Sarawak Government Agency, Sarawak
Lewis, W. A., merchant, British American Tobacco Co., Tsinanfu
Lewis, W. J., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Ley, C., engineer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Ld., Tongshan Ley, G., fleet surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station
Leykauff, R. M., merchant, Leykauff & Co., Tientsin
Leynard, F., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Leyne, E. G., motor foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Perak
Leyte, Fred., general agent, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Amoy and Swatow Libeaud, E. J., manager, Dodwell & Co., Tokyo
Lichtenberg, J., teacher of Commerce, Higher Commercial School, Nagasaki Liddell, C. Oswald, merchant, Liddell Bros. & Co., Shanghai and Tientsin Liddell, John, merchant, Liddell Bros. & Co., Shanghai and Tientsin
Lieb, Fr., merchant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Liebert, Gaston, consul for France, and also for Spain, Hongkong and Macao Liedeke, L., tidesurveyor and harbour master, Customs, Samshui
Liddell, P. W. O., merchant, Liddell Bros. & Co., Hankow
Liddicoat, A. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Liddicoat, A. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kashing
Liebe, C., merchant, Liebe, Wulff & Co., Tsingtau
Lightbody. C. W., storekeeper, Shanghai Electric & Asbestos Co., Shanghai Lightbody, T., assistant, Bangkok Dock Co., Bangkok
Lightbody, V. R., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Lightfoot, A. C., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Lightfoot, C. H., assistant, Hellyer & Co., Kobe
Lightfoot, T., chief electric engineer, Swatow-Kaining Electric Light Co., Swatow Ligneul, François, Roman Catholic missionary, Tokyo
Lignier, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking,
Lima, A. d'Almeida, tenente, chef za. Repartiças, Secretaria Militar, Macao Limbach, W., mechaniker, Kiaochau
Limbird, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Limby, S. O., assistant, Atkinson & Dallas, Hankow
Lind, J. H., assistant accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama
Lind, Theodore A., assistant, Sapong Rubber & Tobacco Estates, B. N. Borneo Lindemann, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Lindemann, Karl, assistant, Melchers & Co., and vice-consul for Norway, Hankow
I
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lindemann, W., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Lindholm, K. H. von, acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Lungchow Lindholm. O. W., merchant, O. W. Lindholm & Co., Vladivostock
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Lindley, Archibald, chartered accountant, Gunn & Co., Singapore Lindmeyer, J., merchant, Hankow
Lindner, L., proprietor, China-Borneo Trading Co., Tientsin Lindsay, A., assistant, Shanghai Machine Co., Shanghai Lindsay, G., clerk, Hanson, McNeill & Jones, Shanghai
Lindsay, G. S., assistant, Barlow & Co., Shanghai
Lindsay, H. S., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Lindsey, Claude, chief clerk, Bureau of Public Works, Manila
Lindsey, E. S., general manager, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Hongkong
Lindstrom, E. O., captain, "Kiang Hsin," China coast.
Ling, F. J., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Ling, H. H., general manager, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow
Ling, W., clerk, C. Vering, Shanghai
Link, A., analytical chemist, B. Grimm & Co., Bangkok
Linke, P., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Kiaochow
Linke, W., architect, China Import & Export Lumber Co., Shanghai
Linnestad, O. R., ship and freight broker, Shanghai
Lino, J., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Linossier, F., assistant, R. J. Linossier, Haiphong and Hanoi
Linossier, R. J., merchant, Hanoi and Haiphong
Linossier, R., commis, R. J., Linossier, Haiphong
Linton, A. R., acting manager, Mercantile Bank of India, Singapore
Linton, P., supervisor, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong
1659
Linton, S. E. A., assistant superintendent of works, Public Works department, Penang Lion, G., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Hongkong
Lipmann, J., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Ld., Hankow
Lips, C., silk inspector, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton Lishman, T. H., captain, steamer "Fooshing," China coast Lisitsin, K. E., assistant, Choorin & Co., Valdivostock
Litoinoff, S. W., founder, S. W. Litoinoff & Co., Hankow
Littaye, A, directeur de l'exploitation, Messageries Fluviales, Saigon
Little, E. S., general manager for China, Brunner, Mond & Co., Shanghai Little, E. S., Jun., clerk, Eastern Trading Co., Shanghai
Little, H. A., British Consul, Ichang
Little, H. Martin, assistant, Wm. Little & Co., Shanghai
Little, J. H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Little, Owen S., managing director in China, Eastern Trading Co., Shanghai Little, R., director, Little & Co., Singapore
Little, R, missionary, Singapore
Little, R., inspector of Police, Singapore
Little, W. D., merchant, Wm. Little & Co., Shanghai
Littlefair, J. H., manager, Kwala Lumpur Aerated Water Co., Selangor
Litzelmann, A., engineer, Bielfeld & Sun, Tientsin
Livingston, H. W., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Amoy
Livingstone, H. A. A., lieut-colonel, commanding Royal Engineers, Singapore,
Livingstone, W. S., agent, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Bangkok
Llanos, Ant, assistant, Secker's Store, Manila
Llewellyn, Geo. St. J., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Merlin," China Station
Llewellyn, H. H., assistant, Yangtze Insurance Association, Shanghai
Llewellyn, H. R., assistant, Derrick & Co., Singapore
Llewellyn, J. F., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Bangkok
Llorente J., judge, Court of First Instance, Tarlac, Philippines
Lloyd, C. S. F., clerk, Coast Inspectors' Office, Customs, Shanghai
Lloyd, F., assistant, Vulcan Iron Works, Shanghai
Lloyd, G. T., general manager and editor, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong Lloyd, J. J., assistant, Powell & Co., Singapore
Lloyd, J. T., proprietor and manager, Powell & Co., Singapore
Lloyd, P., assistant, Powell & Co., Singapore
Lloyd, W. F., conservator, Forest department, Bangkok
Lloyd, W. O., boat officer, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Loader, J. F., engineer, Fred. Wilson & Co., Manila
NIPPONOPHONE " -BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1660
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lobato, A. J. G., tenente ajudante do Corpo de Policia, Macao Lobb, H. R. W., traffic manager, Singapore Electric Tramways, Singapore Lobeck, R., telegraph inspector, Bangkok
Lobingier, Chas. S., judge, Court of First Instance, Manila Lobo, P. M., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Lochead, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Locht, F, assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai Lochte, W. E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Lock, H. E., chargeman, H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong Lockhart, J., assistant, Imperial Railways, Tientsin
Lockhart, J. H. Stewart, c.M.G., Commissioner, Port Edward, Weihaiwei Lockhart, W. B., assistant, Benjamin & Potts, Shanghai Locksmith, H. S., merchant, Shanghai
Lockwood, Lot D., treasurer, Agusan Province, Philippines Lockyer, A. E., assistant, Alex. Ross & Co., Hongkong Locquet-Duguesne, greffier notaire, Tourane, Annam Lodge, G., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Ld., Tokyo
Lodwick, E. R., clerk, Public Works Department, Selangor Lody, H., assistant, Langelutje & Co., Vladivostock
Loebell, M. W., manager, Engineering Department, Bume & Reif, Shanghai Loeffler, R., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Yokohama
Loenholm, Dr., honorary legal adviser, Judicial Department, Tokyo Loepthien, F. assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Loewenstein, M. F., manager, Castle Brothers, Wolf & Sons, Manila Loewinsohn, H., assistant, Philippine Co., Manila
Loff, W., proprietor, The Novelty Goods Store, Yokohama Loffer, C., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Yokohama
Loffler, H., maschinenbauer, Kiaochau
Lofters, C., student interpreter, British Legation, Bangkok
Logan, A. C, manager, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Hongkong
Logan, G., teacher, Anglo-Chinese Methodist Episcopal School, Penang,
Logan, J. D., foreman Boilermaker, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, H'kong Logan, J. W. P. surveyor, Survey Department, Selangor
Logan, S. S., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Hongkong Logan, W., accountant, David Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Logerot, M., administrateur-maire, Conseil Municipal, Mairie de Hanoi, Hanoi Lohe, G., electrical engineer, Siemens & Schuckert, Tokyo Lohmann, A., secretary, German Consulate, Hongkong Lohmann, J., assistant, E. A. & Otto Weber, Manila
Lohmann, J. Th., manager, Ned. Ind. Handelsbank, Singapore Lohrentz, C., assistant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
Looker, Herbert Wm., solicitor, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong Loomis, Rev. H., agent, The American Bible Society, Yokohama
Lomas, K. T., assistant engineer, Imperial Railway, Chulinho, Tientsin Long, Charles J., dental surgeon, Division Hospital, Manila
Long, E. A., stenographer, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Long, E. J., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai
Long, E. R., professor, Provincial College, Tientsin
Long, F. R., superientendent, Government Plantations, Perak Long, Howard, supt. of schools, Palawan, Philippines
Long, R. F., electrical engineer, Electric Co., Hongkong
Long, S., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Longhurst, J. H., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Longmire, J. D., manager, International Banking Corporation, Kobe Longmuir, T. F., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Longstaff, J. T., overseer, Public Works Department, Hongkong Longueepée, Roman Catholic Mission, Peking
Longuet, C. W., storekeeper, Kruse & Co., Hongkong
Lönhohn, L. H., German Law, Tokyo Imperial University, Tokyo Lonie, J. L., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Lopes, A. A., clerk, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong
Lopes, A. A., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong"
Lopes, A. G., chief clerk, Port Dickson, Negri Sembilan
Lopes, A. L., informador, Repartiçaõ de Fazenda, Macao
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lopes, C. A., clerk, British Post Office, Shanghai Lopes, C. F., escrivas, Reparticao de Fazenda, Macau Lopes, D. P. J., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong Lopes, F. X., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Lopes, J. M. C., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Lopes, J. M., machinista-naval, Capitania de Porto, Macau
Lopes, L., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Lopes, L. F., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Lopes, L. J., clerk, Colonial Treasury, Hongkong
Lopez, F. J., clerk, Wise & Co., Manila
Lopez, H. J. N., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai Lopez, M., assistant, Moll, Kunzli & Co., Manila
Lopez, M., second clerk, Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan
Loquet, A. L., engineer, Sociéte des Etains de Kinta, Perak
Lorain, pro-vicaire, Vicariat Apostolique du Su'tchuen, Chungking
Lord, E., accountant, New Zealand Fire Insurance Co., Yokohama
Lord, T. P., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Tientsin
Lorden, L. W. C., architect, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Lorenz, C., manager, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Peking Lorenzen, chief officer, S.S. "Peiho," Coast service
Lorenzen, C., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Mukden Lorenzen, M. A., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin Lorey, lieut., S.M.S. "Scharnhorst," German Squadron, China. Loring, G. M., merchant, Hoskyn & Co., Iloilo
Lorioz, C., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Lornie, J., acting district officer, Penang
Lornie, T., third magistrate, District of Police Courts, Singapore
Lorton, engineer, Water Works, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Loske, C., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Lossius, I. J., assistant, Pacific Mail S.S. Co., Hongkong
Lottermoser, F. E., tidéwaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Lotz, F. H., analytical chentist and sole partner, B. Grimm & Co., Bangkok
Louis, Bro., director, Taberd School, Saigon
Louis, G., assistant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Yokohama
Louis, J., printer, General Post Office, Singapore
Loup, A., architect and surveyor, Tientsin
Loup, G., manager, L. Vrard & Co., Tientsin
Loureiro, E., clerk, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Hongkong Loureiro, E. J. W., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Loureiro, J. W., asst. in charge, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon Loureiro, P., acting manager, National Bank of China, Hongkong Loureiro, T., examiner, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz
Lourenço, E. C., capitão reformado, Macao
Lousdale, S., manager, Siemens Brothers, Dynamo Works, Penang Loustan, postmaster, French Post Office, Pakhoi
Louzin, S. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Lovatt, W. H. assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Ichang
Lover, E. G. B., local manager, Thos. Cook & Son, Hongkong
Lover, H., locomotive-foreman, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Loverdo, N., assistant, Schwarz, Gaumer & Co., Hankow
Lovland, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Low, A. F., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Penang
Low, H. A., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Low, R. B., medical-officer, General Hospital Sarawak
Lowder, H. G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Lowe, A. R., chartered acct., Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Hongkong and Shanghai
Lowe, J. P., assistant, Thomas MacDonald & Co., Shanghai
Lowe, L., engineer, Rice and Saw Mills, Sriracha Co., Ld., Bangkok
Lowe, N. E., supt., Royal Survey Department, Bangkok
Lowe, W. P., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Lowinger, V. A., surveyor, Survey Department, Perak
Lowry, C. L., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Lowry, E. K., assistant, Chamber of Mines, Labour Importation agency, Tientsin Lowry, G. D., Union Medical College, Peking University, Peking
"NIPPONOPHONE
77
1061 -
-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1662
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Lowry, H. H., M.A., D.D., Peking University, Peking
Lowry, H. W., employé, Hewett & Co., Shanghai
Lowry, J. W., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Shanghai
Lowson, A. B., asst, accountant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama
Loye, juge de paix, Tribunal de Bienhoa, Cochin-Chine
Loyzaga y Ageo, J. de, proprietor Mercantile Review, and El Comercio, Manila Lubbock, F. B., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Lubbock, R. E., lieut., H.B.M.S. "Kent," China Station
Lubech, C. G., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Lubeck, L. A., assistant, Ballard & Hunter, Shanghai Luber, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Newchwang Lucas, B. D., professor, Soochow University, Soochov
Lucas, Frederick C., lieut., H.B.M.S. "Cadmus," China Station Lucas, H., merchant, H. Lucas & Co., Kobe
Lucas, J. E., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Lucas, J., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macao
Lucas, S. E., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Tientsin
Lucas, Walter C., lieut., H.B.M.S." Bedford," China Station
Lucassen, F. H., proprietor, New Amoy Hotel, Amoy
Lucchs, T., assistant, Hotel de la Paix, Tientsin
Luce, Paul, résident supérieur, Cambodge
Luchring, E., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong Luchsinger, S. E., merchant, Luchsinger & Co., Iloilo Lucht, D. P., professor, Provincial College, Tsinanfu Lucius, Reinhold, analyut, Customs, Bangkok
Lucker, G., assistant, Becker & Co., Kobe
Luckins, L. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Lucyd, R., lieut., H.B.M.S. "Kent," China Station
Lüders, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin.
Ludwig, C. B., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Ludwig, H. J., manager, Sing Kep Tin Maatschappij, Singapore
Lüehrss, W., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai'
Luenschar, H., rept., Suther, Hartmann & Rahtgen's Composition Co., Ld., Singapore
Lüer, E., manager, Hotung Land Co., Ld., and Tientsin Wool Cleaning Factory, Tientsin Luerssen, D., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Lugard, Sir F. J. D., K.C.M.C., C.B., D.S.O., Governor of Hongkong
Lugebil, V., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin
Lugoy, ingénieur-divisionaire, Charbonnages de Tonkin, Haiphong
Luhl A., assistant, Schmidt, Kustermann & Co., Penang
Lumberg, H. W., accountant, Langkon North Borneo Rubber Co., B. N. Borneo
Lund, E., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Canton
Lund, O. W., assistant examiner, Imperial Maritime Customs, Hankow
Lund, V., engineer, Siam Electricity Co., Bangkok
Lundberg, Bjorn, assistant, Olof Wijk & Co., Shanghai
Lundberg, E. M., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Lundholm, B., pilot, Shanghai
Lundin, E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Lundt, R., merchant, Buchheister & Co., Shanghai
Luneau, A., vicar-general, Roman Catholic Mission, Osaka
Lunney, J., foreman-plater, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Lunt, W. B., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Lunt, W. H., captain, "Kwang-Tah," China coast
Luther, H., secretary and manager, Club Germania, Yokohama Luttich, A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kobe
Luttwig, R., assistant, Behr & Co., Singapore Lutz, E., merchant, Moll, Kunzli, & Co., Manila
Lutz, Hans R., merchant, Lutz & Co., Manila
Lutz, J. L., examiner, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Lutze, R., foreman, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Yokohama
Lutzen, A., merchant, Lutzen, Brook & Co., Shanghai
Lux, M. E, superintendent engineer, Tinglisiang Colliery, Hankow
Luxburg, G., premier secrétaire, Legation d'Allemagne, Peking
Luya, J., gérances d'immeubles, Saigon
Luykz, N. G. M., general manager, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Hongkong (absent)
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Luz, A. A., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Luz, A. da, tenente reformado, Macão
Luz, A. F. M., burner, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong Luz, D. da, aspirante, Repartieçao de Fazenda, Macao Luz, D. M. da, assistant, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Canton
Luz, F. A., burner, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong Luz, F. P., da, general reformado, Macao
Luz, F. R., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Luz, F. X. da, superintendent, Empreza Economica, Macao
Luz, F. X., stenographer, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Luz, J. M. T., conego, Camera Ecclesiastica, Macao
Luz, J. M. T., conego de Sa de Macao
Luz, L. A. de J., clerk, E. Pasquet & Co., Canton
Luz. L., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Luz, P. J., escrivão, Camara Municipal, Macao
Luz, S. da, clerk, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai
Luz, S. E. da, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Luz, V. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Lyall, F. W., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Lyddon, Capt. W. G., inspecting ord, officer, Army Ord. department, Hongkong Lye, W. J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Lyle, D., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Lyle, T. H., British consul, Chiengmai, Bangkok
Lyman, V. G., attorney, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Chefoo
Lynam, C. E., assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong Lynch, E. H., inspector of police, Wayside Station, Shanghai
Lynch, J., school master, Military School, Hongkong
Lyne, Thomas J. S., lieut. comdr., H. B. M. S. "Kinsha," Yangtze River Lyness, J. R., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai (absent)
Lynn, G., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Corporation, Bangkok
Lyon, J. A., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
Lyon, H., R.N., commodore in charge of Naval Establishments, Hongkong
1663
Lyon, W. J., actg. engine works mngr., Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Lyons, A., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
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Lyons, A. E. P., lieut., H. B. M. torpedo-i oat destroyer, Otter," Hongkong
Lyons, F. W., deputy captain superintendent of Police, Hongkong
Lyons, F. W., assistant, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
Lyons, H., tidewaiter Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Lysaught, W., merchant, Hongkong
Lysnewsky, W. B., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Lyson, C. H., assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong
Maack, A., assistant, Baer, Senior & Co., Manila
Maas, F. H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Samshui
Maas, H. O., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Maass, captain, commander, S. M. S. "Scharnhorst" Ger. Squadron, China Maasberg, C. A., acting tidesurveyor, Customs, Kiaochau
Mabille, juge président, Tribunal de Chandoc, Cochin-chine
Macaire, assistant, Denis Fréres, Haiphong
Macaire, M., assistant, Royal Brush Goshi Kaisha, Osaka
Macara, A. G., Kobe Club House, Kobe
MacArthur, H., merchant, H. MacArthur & Co., Yokohama
MacArthur, J., gunner, Customs, revenue cruiser "Chuentiao," Shanghai
Macarthur, J. D., merchant, Bangkok
MacArthur, W. H., veterinary surgeon, Colonial Veterinary Department, Penang
Macaulay, H. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Macauley, J., commercial-master, Raffles Institution School, Singapore
Macbain, G., merchant, Boustead & Co., Penang
Macbean, Wm., agent, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Singapore
Macbeth, David, Macbeth & Barrett, Penung
Macbeth, J., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Macbeth, J. C. H., Macbeth & Barrett, Penang
MacCabe, R. W., secretary, Shanghai Electric and Asbestos Co., Shanghai
MacCarthy, I. A. O., major, Army Medical Corps, Military Hospital, Tanglin, Singapore MacCormach, T., chief engineer, steamer "Wosang," China coast
"
NIPPONOPHONE
-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1664
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
MacCann, G. D. N., acting manager, Straits Trading Co., Penang MacDermott, A. T., ex-engineer, Water Works, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor MacDermott, H., asst. traffic supt., Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Macdonald, A. engineer, Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Perak
Macdonald, A., shipping clerk, British Consulate, Kobe
Macdonald, A. A., acting assistant chief clerk, Supreme Court, Shanghai
MacDonald, A. E., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Singapore Macdonald, J. A., asst. mngr., Caledonia Sugar Estates. Penang
Macdonald, J., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Shanghai
MacDonnell, W. H. A., mngr., Kinta Tin Mines, Ll., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Macdonald, Sir Claude Maxwell, G.C.M.G. K.C.B. British ambassador, Tokyo
MacDonald, D., assistant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai
Macdonald, D., chief engineer, steamer "Kaifong," China coast
Macdonald, D., general manager, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Macdonald, Donald, engineer, Macdonald & Co., Hongkong
MacDonald, E. A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Macdonald, J., marine surveyor, Marine Surveyor's Department, Hongkong Macdonald, J. M., assistant, Smith, Baker & Co., Kobe
Macdonald, N., assistant, Rubana Sugar Estates, Penang
Macdonald, R., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai MacDonald, R. G., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai and Hankow
MacDonald, W. E., master, Free School, Penang
MacDonald, W. H., chief clerk, Bureau of Coast and Geodetic Survey, Manila
MacDonald, W. N., engineer lieutenant, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong MacDougall, D. C., assistant, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang MacDougall, F., manager, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Singapore Macdougall, J., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
MacDougall, J. N., chief engineer, steamer "Honam," Hongkong and Canton MacDougall, N. H., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama Mace, W. A, examiner, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Macfarlane, chief engineer, steamer "Tingsang," China coast
Macfarlane, H., bacteriologist, Medical department, Hongkong
Macgowan, A., merchant, Bradley & Co., Swatow
Macgowan, R. J., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf & Godown Co., Hongkong
MacGregor, A. J. L., assistant, Maritime Customs, Soochow
MacGregor, D., superintendent of Parks and Open Spaces, Shanghai
MacGregor, Donald P., sub-lient, torpedo-boat destroyer "Hart." Hongkong Macgregor, J. F., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Shanghai
MacGregor, J. W., first-officer, Revenue Cruiser, "Linhsing," Customs, Shanghai Macgregor, R., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Machado, A. J., clerk, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Machado, A. M., tenente, ajudante de Campo do governador de Macau
Machado, B. A., head clerk, International Banking Corporation, Kobe Machado, F. A., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Machado, F. X., clerk, Jardine Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Machado, J., clerk, Ballard & Hunter, Shanghai
Machado, J., clerk, China & Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Machado, J. M., clerk, Wm. Little & Co., Shanghai
Machard, C., asst., Messageries Maritimes Co., Yokohama
Maciewski, commander legation guard, Russian Legation, Peking
Macintyre, D. C., commander, harbour master, Penang
MacIntyre, E. T., assistant surgeon, General Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor Macintyre, H. A., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Mack, Arthur C., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Mackail, J.H., asst. engineer, Electrical dept., Municipality, Singapore
Mackay, C., installation manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Tongku Installation, Tientsin Mackay, E. A., accountant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai
Mackay, E. F., merchant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Mackay, J. W., assistant engineer, Gas Co., Shanghai
Mackay, John A., broker, Armstrong & Mackay, Manila Macke, B. H., merchant, Macke & Co., Manila Macke, E. L. P., merchant, Macke & Co., Manila
Macke, F., assistant, E. Meyer & Co., Tsingtau, Kiaochau Mackenzie, A., clerk, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Mackenzie, A. H., resident master, St Stephen's College, Hongkong Mackenzie, Alex., representative, Arthur & Co., Limited, Hongkong Mackenzie, H. G., first engineer, Customs revenue steamer "Feihoo," Canton Mackenzie, H. J., grade branch surveyor, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan Mackenzie, J., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Hangchow Mackenzie, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kashing MacKenzie, K., assistant, Native Customs, Newchwang Mackenzie, P., in charge, Photo Zincographic dept., Bangkok Mackenzie, W. H., surveyor, Survey department, Perak
Mackenzie, W. P., assistant, Singapore and Johore Rubber Co., Jahore Mackie, A. J., third interpreter, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Mackie, Alex., factory manager, Crystal, Ld., Shanhaikwan, Tientsin Mackie, C. G., assistant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong Mackie, D. D. Jr., assistant, D. D. Mackie, Singapore
Mackie, F. W., chartered accountant, Kobe
Mackie, F. W., C.A., Pearson, Mackie & Dempster, Yokohama Mackie, J., pilot, Singapore
Mackinnon, J. B. A., assistant secretary, Municipal Council, Shanghai Mackinnon, W. M., chief engineer, steamer "Kiangwo," China coast Mackinson, captain, H., "Hsin-Fung," China coast
Mackintosh, D. H., agent, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Tientsin Mackintosh, F. A., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong Mackintosh, G. A. R., local-manager, Sriracha, Co., Ld., Bangkok MacKinnon, H., capt., s.s. "Hsinfung," China coast
Mackintosh, P. W., inspector of police, Sinza Station, Shanghai Mackintosh, W., assistant, Arracan Co., Ld., Bangkok
Macklin, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Macklin, W. E., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Macknight, J., storekeeper, Penang Syndicate. Tientsin
MacLachlan, C. D., draughtsman, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore MacLaren, J. N., assistant, The Oriental Timber Corpn., Vladivostock Maclay, R. H., merchant, Maclay & Co., Tientein
Maclean, A., manager, Straits Siam Marcantile Co., Singapore
Maclean, A. M., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Maclean, J. A., works superintendent, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Maclean, T., sole partner, Straits Siam Marcantile Co., Singapore
MacLennan, A., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
MacLennan, D., assistant, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
MacLennan, D., tidesurveyor, Customs, Ichang
MacLennn, M., assistant buildings inspector, Public Works department, Shanghai Macleod, G. G., assistant, Leonowens, Ld., Bangkok
Macleod, John T., merchant, Manila
Macleod, Neil, medical practitioner, Macleod, Milles, Marshall & Marsh, Shanghai Macleod, Ronald N., solicitor, Stokes, Platt, & Teesdale, Shanghai
Macleod, W. S., exporter, Macleod & Co., Manila
Macmillan, Captain, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Macmillan, J., assistant, Tanjong Olak-Rubber Plantation, Ld., Johore.
MacMillan, T. D., teacher of English, High Commercial School, Nagasaki Macmillan, W. W., broker, Lyall & Evatt, Singapore
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MacMillan, William T., lieutenant, 23rd Infantry, Manila
Macnab, A., assistant, Nova Scotia Sugar Estates, Perak,
Macnamara, E. T., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Macnaughton, H. C., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama
Macnaughton, J. Hay, assistant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
MacNider, S. C., superintendent, Eng Hok Fong Steamship Co., Hongkong Macoun. J. H., audit-secretary, Maritime Customs, Peking
Macphail, A. W., assistant, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
MacPhail, H., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Macphail, L. R., assistant, International Banking Corpn., Hongkong
Macpherson, Dr., district surgeon, Beaufort, British North Borneo
1005
Macpherson, R., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Manila Macqueen, A. R., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of I. A. & China, Kobe
T
Macray, H. A. J., manager, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai and Hankow
Mactavish, A. D., broker, Teverson & Mactavish, Kobe
CA
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1666
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Madar, O, writer, Royal Naval Ordnance Depot, Hongkong
Madden, L. J. B., contractor and agent, Perak
Maddichs, H. J., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Maddocks, J. O., manager, Sodong Colliery, Sarawak
Maddox, C. W. B., master S. S. "Borneo," Sabah S. S. Co., B. N. Borneo
Madeira, A. R. L., acting chancelier, Portuguese Consulate, Shanghai Madeira, J. K., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Mader, J. H., assistant, Macondray & Co., Manila
Madier, H., merchant, Shanghal
Madier, J., assistant, H. Madier, Shanghai
Maes, A., Roman Catholic Mission, Peking
Maev, agent, Saghalien Coal Company, Vladivostock
Magalhaes, major, A. A. de, commandante, Corpo de Policia, Macao Mage, H., commis, Banque de l'Indo Chine, Haiphong
Magee, G., Davies & Thomas, Shanghai
Magill, G. S., acting assistant commissioner of Police, Perak Magne, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Magnussen, S. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Maguna, Ch., medical officer, French Consulate, Hoihow
Maher, A., clerk, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong
Maher, A., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Shanghai Maher, C. M., clerk, Sun Insurance Office, Shanghai
Maher, D., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Malier, F. A., assistant, Eastern Trading Co., Ld., Shanghai
Maher, J., capitao reformado, Macao
Maher, J. A., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Maher, J. A. M., alferes reformado, Macau
Maher, J. D., clerk, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Shanghai
Maher, J. L. A., assistant, Smith, Baker & Co, Ld., Tamsui
Maher, R. E., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Maher, V. M. C., tenente reformado, Macau
Mahlerwein, T., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladidvostock Mahnfeldt, Rud., lawyer, Shanghai
Mahon, W., pilot, Shanghai
Mahone, T., assistant, Nickel & Co., Kobe
Mahr, H., Bretschneider & Co., Yokohama
Main, C., engineer lieutenant, assistant, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Main, D., assistant, Printing department, Fraser & Neave, Singapore
Main, G. A., merchant, Ker & Co., Manila
Main, G. D., assistant, Scott, Harding & Co., Shanghai
Main, J., assistant, Thomas Bros., Shanglini
Main, S., clerk, Waterworks & Co., Shanghai
Main, S. W., assistant-curator, Botanical Gardens, Singapore Maingon, L., assistant, Olivier & Co., Shanghai
Maington, J. W., manager, Tate and Cumming, Perak
Mair, Colonel Thomas, Bureau of Philippines Constabulary, Manila Mair, R. B. R., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Corporation, Bangkok Maira, E. E., provicaire, Missions Etrangères de l'aris, Mentsz Maitland, F., real estate agent, Linstead & Davis, Hongkong Maitland, H., manager, Maitland & Co., Shanghai
Maitland, J. M., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Kobe Maitland, N. G., bullion broker, Maitland & Fearon, Shanghai
Maitri, L., general-manager, Li Tit Guan Rice Mill, Bangkok
Majer, Capt. N. G., master, Tug" David Gilles," H kong. W'poa Dock Co., Hongkong Majewsky, A. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Major, A. G., assistant, British Consulate, Swatow
Majusheff, S. W., assistant. Cheorin & Co., Vladivostock
Makepeace, W., proprietor and manager, "Singapore Free Press," Singapore
Makin, H. R., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Makins, S., chief draughtsman, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Makinson, A. L. E., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Maksonnoff, O. P., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Malade, G., manager, Bubbling Well Dispensary, Shanghai Malcampo, J., assistant, Malcampo & Co., Amoy
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FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Malcampo, L., assistant, Malcan:po & Co., Amoy
Malcampo, R., assistant, Malcampo & Co., Amoy
Malcohn, W., managing director, Brighten, Malcolm & Co., Shanghai
Malcolm, Allan, captain, s.s. Funshun," China Coast
Malcolm, D. A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Malcolm, George A., teacher, Normal School, Manila Malcolm, S. E., assistant, Borneo Company, Singapore Malevigne, A., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Newchwang Malewsky-Malewitch, N., Russian Ambassador, Tokyo Malitz, O., captain, steam-lighter "Menam," Bangkok Maliverney, administrateur-gérant, L'Avenir du Tohkin, Hanoi Malkin, H. S., captain, steamer "Fausang," China coast Mallett, A. H., manager, British Cigarette Co., Mukden
Malloy, T. F., chief of tech. department, Vacuum Oil Co., Kobe
Malvehy, Antonio, secretary general, Philippine Genl. Tobacco Co., Manila Mammen, T. F. W., pilot, Shanghai
Mañalac, Laureano, head bookkeeper, La Estrella del Norte, Manila Mancell, A. H., agent, A. S. Watson & Co., Shanghai
Mancini, C., broker and commission agent, A. Drewell & Co., Kobe Mandelkoff, C., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow Manderson, H. L., resident master, St. Stephen's College, Hongkong Manerer, K., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai Maninang, Y., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Iloilo Manley, A. L., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Manley, C. L.. assistant, Abenheim Brothers, Yokohama Manley, H. R., assistant, Strome & Co., Yokohama
Manley, J. G., accountant, H.B.M. Office of Works, Shanghai Manley, J. T., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Mann, F., inspector, Police department, Penang
Mann, F. R., assistant, P. & O. Steam Nav. Co., Hongkong
Mann, F. R., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Mann, H. E., stenographer, The Shanghai Horse Bazaar Co., Ld., Shanghai Mann, W. E., master, Free School, Penang
Manner, T., postal-officer, Chinese Post Office, Tientsin
Manners, C. M., wharf manager, Hanyang Iron & Steel Works, Shanghai Manners, J., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Mannheimer, P., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Manning, F. R., assistant accountant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Manning, J. L., asst, treasurer, Finance and Justice, Manila Manning, W., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hongkong Mansel, E. L., medical practitioner, Swatow
Mansel-Smith, W. assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hankow Mansfield, J. J., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai Mansfield, R. D., assistant, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz Mansilha, Dr. M. T. S., secretario geral do Governo, Macau Mansson, M., assistant, Gadelius & Co., Yokohama Mantler, G., assistant, Telge & Schroeter, Tientsin
Manton, C. E., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama Manuk, M., acting secretary, Dairy Farm Co., Hongkong
Manwaring, H. E., manager, The Grand Hotel, Ld., Yokohania Manzo, E. A., clerk, Geo. Fenwick & Co., Ld., Hongkong Manzoni, G., lieut., Italian Legation Guard, Peking Mapa, Cornelio, doctor and surgeon, Iloilo
Marçal, A. A., cashier, Wilkinson & Grist, Hongkong
Marçal, C. G., escripturario Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
Marçal, F. A. B., assistant, Hill, Bergdahl & Co., Hongkong
Marçal, F. M., postal officer, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Hankow
Marçal, G., assistant, Kirchner & Böger, Shanghai
Marçal, J. F., manager, "Amoy Gazette and Shipping Report," Amoy Marcard, lieutenent, S. M. S.Vaterland," German Squadron, China
Marceau, P. G., headmaster, Canton Guild School, Shanghai
March, G. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton
March, F. R., chief electrical engineer, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore March, H., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Tientsin
ir
1667
NIPPONOPHONE "- -BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1668
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
March, N., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Tientsin. Marchand, P., assistant, Hirsbrunner & Co., Shanghai Marchenko, T. I., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Marchi, V., missionary, St. Francis Xaviers Church, Shanghai Marcks, Lothar, architect, Lothar Marcks & Busch, Hankow Marckwald, Dr., vice-consul for Germany, Shanghai Marconi, U., assistant, Maritime Customis, Peking Marcus, A., assistant, Walte & Co., Tientsin.
Marcus, C., assistant, Wm. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Mare, résident de France, Shai Binh, Tonkin
Maréchal, O., assistant, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai Meredith, R. W., inspector of Police, Singapore
Margeric, M. de, French Minister, Peking
Maria, B., chief clerk, Land Office, Malacca
Maria, P. de, pro-vicar apostolic, Roman Catholic Mission, Hongkong Maria, R. Sta., employé, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila Mariani, percepteur, Résidence de France, Phuyen, Annam
Marican, S. A., proprietor, Dragon Cycle Depot, Hongkong
Marie, L., superior, Sanatorium, Pokfulam, Hongkong
Mariette, E., vicar, St. Peter and St. Paul's Church, Singapore
Marina, J. Sta., proprietor, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila Maris, A., manager, Boa Vista Hotel, Macau
Mark, M. W., clerk, Gordon & Co., Hongkong
་་
Markham, H., pilot, Indo-China Steam Nav. Co., China coast Markin, N. W., assistant, The Trading Co., Hankow Markoff, F. I., assistant, Choorin & Co. Vladivostock
Marks, O., Federal Secretary, Federated Malay States (absent) Marks, Oliver, acting district officer, Lower Perak, Perak Marmonier, P., missionary, Roman Catholic Mission, Osaka Marnham, A. W., editor, "Korea Daily News," Seoul, Corea Marples, É. T., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore Marples, F. C., assistant manager, Tali Ayer Estate, Perak Marquant, J., assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Shanghai
Marquardt, W. W., div. supt. of Schools, Province of Leyte, Philippines Marques, A. P., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Marques, C. A. M., clerk, Bisset & Co., Shanghai
Marques, E. A., Governador de Macao, Macão
Marques, E. J., stenographer, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Marques, F. G. M., clerk, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Marques, F. J., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Marques, F. L., clerk, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hongkong
Marques, F. P., Praça Luiz de Camões, Macau
Marques, I. M., manager, Wagons Lits Terminus Hotel, Hankow
Marques, J. F., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, & China, Shanghai
Marques, J. L., capitao, commandant, Fortaleza da Taipo, Macao
Marques, J. M, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai
Marques, Dr. L. P., Praça Luiz de Camoes, Macau
Marques, M., clerk, Hongkong Printing Press, Hongkong
Marques, N., writer, H.M. Victualling Yard, Hongkong
Marques, P. clerk, Fearon, Daniel & Co. Shanghai
Marques-Silva, A., clerk, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Marr, W., assistant, Otto Reiners & Co., Kobe
Marriott, H., acting inspector of prisons, Straits Settlements
Marriott, T. Oswald, medical practitioner, Stedman, Harston & Marriott, Hongkong Marrugat, P. E., secretario, Ateneo de Manila, Manila
Marsh, A., manager, Brett & Co., Yokohama
Marsh, E., storehouseman, Naval Establishment, Weihaiwei
Marsh, E. L., surgeon, MacLeod, Milles, Marshall & Marsh, Shanghai
Marsh, F. E., assist. engineer, Municipal Water Works, Singapore
Marsh, H. F., assistant, Imperial Hotel, Tientsin
Marsh, W., assistant secretary, Municipality, Penang
Marsh, W. clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Marshall, A. M., agent, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai
Marshall, A. W., wharfinger, Pootung wharf, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Marshall, C. W., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Kobe
Marshall, D., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Marshall, D., assistant, Hutchison & Co., Yokohama
Marshall, E. J., accountant, American Trading Company, Kobe Marshall, F. B., merchant, Tait & Co., Tanısui, Amoy
Marshall, F. C., asst. warden of mines, Mines, Pahang
Marshall, F. L., broker, Shanghai
Marshall, G. E., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Marshall, G. R., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore
Marshall, G. V. T., exporter, L. Moore & Co., Shanghai
1669
Marshall, H. A., capt., inspector of ordnance machinery, Army Ord. Dept., Singapore Marshall, H. C., chief manager, Imperial Bank of China, Shanghai
Marshall, H. J., assistant, Hutchison & Co., Kobe
Marshall, H. J. W., secretary, Imperial Railways of North China, Tientsin
Marshall, J., storehouseman, H. M., Naval store dept., Hongkong
Marshall, Jas., manager, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Kobe
Marshall, John S., dental surgeon, Division Hospital, Manila Marshall, M., assistant, Samuel, McGregar & Co., Shanghai Marshall, N. S., manager, International Bank, Yokohama Marshall, R. C., merchant, Craig, Marshall, & Co., Shanghai
Marshall, R. J., medical examiner, Equitable Life Ass. Society of U. S. A.. Shanghai Marshall, V., manager, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Singapore
Marshall, W., director, Taku Tug and Lighter & Co., Ld., Tientsin
Marshall, W. B., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Marshall, W. B., loco, inspector, Railways, Chinchow, N. China Marston, J. A., assistant," Nagasaki Press," Nagasaki Marten, R., merchant, Rádecker & Co., Hongkong
Martens, C., assistant, Pasedag & Co. Amoy
Martens, F., clerk, C. A. Ribeiro & Co., Singapore
Martens, R., supt., Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hongkong Marthoud, J., assistant, Toche & Cie., Shanghai Marthoud, P., assistant, J. Toche & Cie., Shanghai
Marti, F, assistant, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon
Martia, D. M., assistant engineer, Municipality, Singapore
Martieussen, C. A., third-officer, Customs, revenue cruiser "Chuentião," Shanghai Martin, A. J., agent, The "British," Hankow
Martin, A. J., assistant, British Consulate, Hankow
Martin, A. J. J., clerk, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Hongkoug
Martin, A. R., chief writer, Naval Yard, Hongkong.
Martin, A. W., prof. of Applied Science, Nanking University, Nanking
Martin, Aimé, merchant, Haiphong
Martin, C, chief clerk, A. C. Harper & Co., Selangor
Martin, Clarence K. M., coal merchant, Martin & Co., Yokohama
Martin, D. H., chief officer, steamer "Shantung," China coast
Martin, F., assistant, C. Berthel, Shanghai
Martin, F., assistant, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Martin, G., assistant, Racine, Ackermann and Co., Tientsin
Martin, G. P. de, junior assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong
Martin, H. E. M., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Ld, Bangkok
Martin, J., accountant, International Banking Corporation, Kobe
Martin, J., chief draughtsman, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Martin, J, assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama
Martin, J., coal merchant, Martin & Co., Yokohama
Martin, J., fondé de pouvoirs, Pharmacie Centrale de l'Indo-chine, Haiphong
Martin, J. C., resident engineer, Imperial Railway, Tangku, Tientsin
Martin, K. H., assistant, Geo. McBain, & Co., Shanghai
Martin, L., propriétaire, Astor House, Seoul
Martin, P., chief officer, Steamer, "Taksang," China const
Martin, P. H., examiner, Maritime Customs, Soochow Martin, R. M. J., second asst. supt. of Police, Shanghai
י
Martin, S. F. B., solicitor, Logan & Ross, Penang
Martin, T. A., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Penang
Martin, T. H., supt., Registration Branch, Post Office, Hongkong
Martin, V. J., assistant-engineer, Public Works Department, Negri Sembilan
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1670
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Martin, W. J., tidewaiter, maritine Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Martin, Wm., manager, Import dept., China and Java Export Co., Shangha Martins, C. P., chief clerk, Medical Department, Singapore Martineau, payeur de 3e classe, chef de Comptabilité, Hanoi
Martinelli, B., assistant, Adet, Campredon & Co., Yokohama Martinez, A., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Martinez, H., Spanish missionary, Shanghai Martinez, V., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Martinie, R., attaché naval, Legation de France, Peking Martins, E., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai Martiny, G., manager, Meyer Bros., Shanghai Marty, A. R., merchant, A. C. Marty, Haiphong Marty, Ch., directeur, C Tournier, Saigon
Marty, R., assistant, Winsor & Co., Bangkok
Martyn, A. G., foreman boilermaker, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Martyr, J. G. de G., assistant, Jardine Matheson & Co., Ltd., Tientsin
Martyr, J. W., assistant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama
Martz, E., sous directeur, Soc. des Ciments Portland artificiels de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong Martzinkovick, l'. P., assistant, Molchanoff, Pechanoff & Co., Hankow
Marx, P., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Moji
Marye, F. E., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Marzoli, E., assistant, Calcareous Sandstone Brick Factory, Tientsin and Peking Masao, Dr. S., legal adviser, Ministry of Justice, Bangkok
Maslemkoff, A., commercial agent, Belgium Consulate, Vladivostock
Maslenikoff, A. A., merchant, Bryner, Kousnetzoft &Co., Vladivostock
Maslenikoff, E. T., assistant, Bryner Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock. Mason, G. W., assistant, W. M. Dowdall, Shanghai Mason, H. S., state treasurer, Treasury, Taiping, Perak
Mason, W. B., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama Mason, W. I., tide surveyor, Imperial Maritime Customs, Kewkiang Masot, S., Roman Catholic Church, Spanish mission, Foochow Massey, P. W., silk inspector, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Massignan, P., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Massip, L., secretary, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila Masson, F., agent, Messageries Maritimes de Navigation, Tourane Mast, E., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Yokohama
Mastani, Mrs. M., proprietress, "Ostasiatische Nachrichter," Tientsin Master, R. F. C., solicitor, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong Masterman, S., supt., Royal Survey department. Bangkok
Masters, J. P., house-surgeon, European Hospital, Selangor Masters, W. G., assistant director of Posts,, Manila
Mater, P. Rafael, procurador, Ateneo de Manila, Manila
Matheć, R., assistant, Compagnie de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Saigon Mathes, Frl. H., assistant, Sanatorium, Tsinanfu
Matheson, G., inspector, Municipal Police, Central Station, Shanghai
Matheson, H. W., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Yokohama
Mathews, O. R., staff paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station
Mathieu, E., proprietor, Bellevue Hotel, Singapore
Mathiesen, A., works superintendent, Siam Electricity Co., Bangkok
Mathiessen, M., assistant, Belin, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Mathiot, M., chef du Bureau de Comptabilité, Mairie, Hanoi
Mathis, médecin, Hôpital d'Haiphong, Haiphong
Matson, F., supervisor, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong
Matthaei, E., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Yokohama
Matthew, C., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Penang
Matthew, D. D., assistant manager, Selaba Estate, Teluk Anson, Penang
Matthews, F., inspector of Cemetery, Penang
Matthews, G. F., chief officer, steamer "Taisang," China coast
Matthews, J. B., Attorney General, Singapore
Matthews, J. B., Straits Trading Co. assistant, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor
Matthews, J. C. M., electrical-engineer, Public Works department, Selangor Matthews, R. A., chief officer, steamer "Amara," China coast
Matthews, T. C., vestry-clerk, Ecclesiastical Deparment, Malacca
Matthews, W., directeur, Sociéte Cotonnière de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Matti, J. M., watchmaker, Bazar La Puerta del Sol, Manila Mattock, C. J., captain, steamer "Amara," China coast
Mattos, C. F. F. X., aspirante,, Repartiçao de Fazeenda, Macau Mattos, F., clerk, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Mattos, F. X., aminanneuse, Santa Casa da Misericordia, Canton Mattos, P. O., purser, steamer "Honam," Hongkong-Macao Matwin, A., manager, Wassard & Co., Vladivostock
Maugain, juge président, Tribunal de Soctrang, Cochin-Chine Mauldon, E. F., manager, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Mauleffinch, K. H., partner, K. H. Mauleffinch & Co., Singapore
Maundrell, William H., chaplain, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Maurice, J., manager, Compagnie Commerciale d'Extreme Orient, Shanghai
Mauricio, E., employé, W. Powell, Ld., Hongkong
Maury, H., attaché-commercial, Direction de l'Agriculture et du Commerce, Hanoi Maw, D., proprietor, Jas. Motion & Co., Singapore
Max, F., assistant, Harry Fuchs, Mukden
Maxwell, C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Maxwell, C., chief engineer, steamer "Esang," China coast
Maxwell, D. lieut., H. B. M. S. "Alacrity," China and Japan
Maxwell, H., assistant, Abenheim Bros., Kobe
Maxwell, J., assistant, W. S. Bailey & Co., Hongkong Maxwell, J., clerk, General Post Office, Hongkong
Maxwell, T., 6. Battery Road, Singapore
May, C. G., acting surveyor general, Penang
May, E. A. G., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
May, F. H., Sir, K.C.M.G., colonial secretary, Colonial Secretariat, Hongkong May, G., assistant, A. E. Algar, Shanghai
May, G. H., manager, Kelly & Walsh, Yokohama
May, H. F., general manager, Sarawak Government Coal Mines, Sadong, Labuan
May, H. J., first engineer, Customs revenue cruiser "Likin," Kowloon
May, R. S., student-interpreter, British Consulate, Bangkok
May, S. H., asst. engineer, Penang Municipal Electric Tramways, Penang
May, T. Y., assistant, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
Maybon, directeur, Ecole Pavie, Hanoi
Maycock, J. H., foreman, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong
Mayer, administrateur-adjoint, BacKan, Tonkin
Mayer, G., directeur, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Mayers, F. J.. acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Mayes, C. T. assistant, Wm. Holts & Co., Kobe
Mayger, W. E., chief engineer, Arracan Co., Ld., Bangkok
Mayhew, C. L., capt. R. M., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station
Mayhew, T. O., chief sanitary inspector, Singapore
Maynard, F. E. de, contractor, Maynard & Oates, Selangor
Maynard, H. R., assistant, P. O'Brien Twigg, Shanghai
Maynard, Lester, consul for America, Vladivostock
Mayne, C., engineer and surveyor, Public Works department, Shanghai Mayne, C. W. O., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Mayne, G., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Mayne, W. B. O., clerical assistant, Public Works department, Shanghai
Mays, C. E., inspector of Police, Perak
Mayson, W. J., manager, Kelly & Walsh, Singapore
Mazot, H., chief accountant, Banque de l'Indo Chine, Canton
McAdam, H., agent, Mackenzie & Co., Ichang
McAdam, H., resident-agent, Mackenzie & Co., Ichang
McAlister, D., inspector of vehicles, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
McAlister, W., surveyor, Pahang Consolidated & Co., Pahang
McAllum, C. A., acting depy. com'r., Maritime Customs, Canton
McArthur, C., managing director, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
McArthur, D. C., assistant, "Times" Publication department, Yokohama McArthur, John, captain, s.s., "Meifoo," China coast
McArthur, M. S. H., district judge, Labuan
McAskill, K. R., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong McAulay, R., assistant-manager, Byram Sugar Estate, Penang
McBain, G., merchant, Hongkong
**
1671
NIPPONOPHONE "BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1672
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
McBain, R. S. F., merchant, Geo. McBain, Shanghai McBreen, G., clerk, Parsons & Rhodes, Singapore
McCabe, Albert E., judge of first instance, Province of Antigue, Philippines McCabe, H. M., deputy collector, Customs, Cebu, Philippines
McCaig, J., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong,
McCallum, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
McCallum, W. R., agent, Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation, Nagasaki
McCalmont, M. E., superintendent, Civil Hospital, Manila
McCamey, C. C., draftsman, Survey department, Selangor
McCarthy, C., draughtsman, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong McCarthy, P. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ichang
McCarthy, W. J., engineer, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
McCarthy, W. J., engineer, Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu McCarthy, W. J, traffic inspector, Imperial Railways, Fengtai, Tientsin McCartney, T. D., chief engineer, steamer "Tai On," Hongkong-Canton McCarvin, F. E., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
McCaslin, C., manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Newchwang McCausland, C. F., district-officer, Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan McClay, A., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Hongkong McC. Liddell, V., captain, steamer "Cheongshang," China coast McClosky, A. J., senior district surgeon, District Hospital, Selangor McClure, A. J., bullion broker, Blad & McClure, Yokohama
McClure, J., assistant, bullion broker, Blad & McClure, Yokohama McClure, J., superintendent, Slipway, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Bangkok McClure, W., captain, steamer "Taksang." China coast McClure, W., B. A., M. D. Peking University, Peking
McClymont, J., merchant, Chint & Co., Negri Sembilan
McCollum, C. C., teacher, Barite, Division of Cebu, Philippines
McConaghy, R., agent, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Chinwantao McCormack, D., assistant, Denny, Mott & Dickson, Bangkok
McCormack, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong McCormick, C. S., asst. supt., Royal Survey Dept., Bangkok
McCorquadale, J., assistant, China Sugar Refining Company, Hongkong McCowan, D., miner, The Lahat Mines, Ld., Perak
McCoy, Henry B., collector of Customs, Manila
McCracken, J., pilot, Shanghai
McCraken, J., chief engineer, steamer "Laisang," China coast
McCrea, S. M., assistant, Ker & Co., Manila.
McCrealie, J., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves, & Co., Singapore
McCrone, W., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai
McCrory, R. H., secretary and manager, U. S. Shoe Co., Manila
McCubbin, H. J., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
McCubbin, J., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
McCubbin, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
McCubbin, J., resident engineer, Hongkong and China Gas Co., Hongkong
McCulloch, Ralph, asst. governor, Simulao-Hibong, Philippines
McCulloch, W., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, A. & China, Hongkong McCullock, W. D., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong McCullough, E. C., manager, E. C. McCullough & Co., Manila
McDermott, D., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chungking
McDermott, T., asst. postal officer, Maritime Customs, Canton
McDill, J. R., medical practitioner, Drs. McDill & Gilman, Manila. McDonald, A. J., assistant, McDonald, Sons & Co., Tientsin McDonald, A. J., carriage maker, A. J. McDonald & Co., Tientsin McDonald, D., inspector of Police, Hongkong
McDonald, J., merchant, McDonald, Sons & Co., Tientsin McDonald, J. M., assistant, McDonald, Sons & Co., Tientsin
McDonald, W. N. P., assistant, McDonald, Sons & Co., Tientsin
McDonald, Wm. M., eng. Heut., H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
McDonald, William, manager, Singapore Slipway and Engineering Co., Singapore
McDongall, F. J., assistant, J. L. Campbell & Co., Singapore
McDonough, Michael J., captain, asst. to Chief Engineer Officer, Manila
McDougall, A., assistant, H. Skött & Co., Hongkong
McDougall, H., surgeon in charge, Amoy Chinese Hospital, Amoy
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
McDowall, J. L., acting district postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Sianfu McDowell, D. K., C.M.G., principal inedical and health officer, Singapore McDowell, J., detective inspector, of Police, Hongkew Station, Shanghai McEnroe, B., auditor, Sandakan, British North Borneo
McEuen, D. R., assistant, Fearon & Daniel, Shanghai
McEuen, K. J., deputy superintendent of police, Police Department, Shanghai McEwan, A., chief engineer, steamer "Loongwo" China coast
McEwen, J. G., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
McEwen, R. G., sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong
McFarland, G. B., dental surgeon, Bangkok
McFarland, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
McFarlane, J., chief engineer, steamer "Sainam," Canton-Wuchow McGale, E. student-interpreter, United States Legation, Peking McGarva, G., assistant, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
McGarvin, F. E., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
McGavin, J. S., assistant supt. engineer, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
McGavin, John D., sub-manager, La Insular Cigar & Cigarette Factory, Manila
1673
McGeachin, H. C., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Shanghai McGee, A. H. S., chief-engineer, Malacca Rubber Plantation, Ld., Singapore McGerrow, C., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama
McGhee, H., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
McGill, H., estate-manager, Bagan Rubber Co., Bangkok
McGlashan, A., tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
McGlew, A. E., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shimonoseki McGowan, H. E., asst. examiner, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang McGowan, W. H., assistant, Exchange Market, Yokohama
McGram, W., lightkeeper, Cap Rock, Hongkong
McGrath, R. A., president, U. S. Shoe Co., Manila
McGrath, R. E., manager, American Shoe Store, Manila
McGregor, A., engineer, Shanghai Machine Co., Hankow
McGregor, D., assistant manager, Federal Dispensary, Selangor
McGregor, Douglas E., managing director, Samuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai McGregor, J., agent, Chartered Bank of I. A. and China, Tientsin
McGregor, J., inspector in charge, Bubbling Well Police Station, Shanghai McGregor, J. H., British American Tobacco Co., Chemulpo
McGregor, O., assistant. The Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Ld., Shanghai McGregor, R., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
McGregor, T. J., asst. engineer, Public Works, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor McGuffog, J., chief officer, steamer "Choysang," China coast
McHardy, D., inspector of Police, Hongkong
McHugh, F. E., local auditor, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
McHugh, W. H., assistant; Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Sharp Peak McHutchon, J. M. assistant, Butterfield & Swire. Hongkong
Mellraith, G. D., assistant, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Mellroy, J. G., second lieutenant, United States Embassy, Tokyo
McIntosh, A. F, assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
McIntosh, G. C., land surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong
McIntosh, W. F., chief engineer, steamier "Haiyang," China coast
McIntyre, A., assistant engineer, Singapore Electric Tramways, Singapore
McIntyre, A., chief engineer, s.s. "Haitan," Coast ports
McIntyre, B. H., clerk, Post Office, Penang
McIntyre, C., assistant, Chartered Bank, Bangkok
McIntyre, C. A., land and commission agent, Penang
McIntyre, F. W., works manager, Nippon Electric Co., Ld., Tokyo McIntyre, H. A., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Mcintyre, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Melntyre, P., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
McIntyre, P. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Amoy Melntyre, W., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong McIntyre, W. G., assistant, Mackenzie & Co., Ld., Tientsin MeIsaac, J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Kewkiang
McIver, A., assistant, Straits Sugar Company, Gedong, Penang McIver, D. J., assistant manager, Byram Sugar Estate, Penang Melver, M., chief clerk, Harbour department, Hongkong
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NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1674
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
McKay, D. I., mechanical engineer, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang McKay, D., permanent way inspector, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai McKay, J., land bailiffs, Public Works department, Hongkong
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McKay, J., permanent way inspector, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai McKay, P. H., merchant, McKay & Co., Kobe
McKay, W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co, Hongkong McKay, W., lightkeeper, Waglan Island, Hongkong
McKean, G. W., dental surgeon, Hongkong
McKean, Lionel D., asst. paymaster, H.M.S. "Tamar," Hongkong McKechnie, J., chief officer," Kueichow," China coast
McKelvie, A., assistant, Bangkok Dock Co., Bangkok McKelvie, K., assistant, Cecil Holliday & Co., Shanghai
McKenny, W. E., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Chungking McKenzie, A., manager, London Asiatic Rubber & Produce Co., Malacca McKenzie, D. J., revenue officer, Import & Export Office, Hongkong McKenzie, H. G., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
McKenzie, J., manager and secretary, Singapore Dispensary, Singapore McKenzie, R., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Chemulpo McKenzie, R. S., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore
McKeon, F. H., passed asst. surgeon, Quarantine Service, Manila
McKerrow, Wm., managing director, Paterson, Simons & Co., Penang McKie, G. W. M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
McKie, J., merchant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
McKiehan, L. P., health officer, Province Rizal, Philippines
McKimm, J. J., chief engineer, steamer "Fooshing," China coast.
McKinlay, J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
McKinley, C., engineer, tug "Cherub," H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong McKinuell, R. B., director, Lane Crawford & Co., Yokohama
McKinnon, A., captain, steamer "Sui-tai," Hongkong-Macao
McKinnon, J., chief engineer, steamer "Taisang," China coast
McKinnon, M., assistant manager, Caledonia Sugar Estates, Penang
McKinstry, Charles, H., major, chief engineer officer, liv. Staff, Manila
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McKinstry, Charles H., major, engineer, in charge of Defensive Works, Manila McKirdy, A., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
1
McLachlan, J., shop foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore McLaughlin, Dr. A. J., assistant director, Bureau of Health, Manila McLaughlin, J. L., agent, American Bible Society, Manila
McLaughlin, Wendell, private secretary to secretary of Finance and Justice, Manila McLaughlin, W. F., broker, Manila
McLavy, F., examiner, Maritime Customs, Pakhoi
McLean, A. W., clerk and accountant, British Embassy, Tokyo
McLean, L., acting asst. district officer, Krian, Perak
McLeish, W., secretary, Municipal Council, Tientsin
McLellan, C. A., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Shanghai
McLelland, T., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai McLeod, A., merchant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai McLeod, C. D., architect, Singapore
McLeod, C. R., assistant, Straits Trading & Co., Ld., Negri Sembilan McLeod, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong McLeod, J., chief warder, Victoria Gaol, Hongkong
McLeod, J. H., assistant-manager, Caledonia Sugar Estates, Penang McLeod, J., master, Raffles Institution, Singapore
McLeod, K., assistant manager, Caledonia Sugar Estate, Penang McLorn, D., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Peking
McLorn, G., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
McLorn, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
McLoughlin, A. G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
McMahon, J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Ichang
McMahon, N., tidewiter, Maritime Customs, Lappa
McMahon, P. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
McMaland, F. A. S., acting assistant district officer. Batu Gajah, Perak McMichael, E. H., assistant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
McMichael, J. H., merchant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
McMicking, J., clerk, Court of First Instance, Manila
I
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FOREIGN RESIDENTS
McMullan, James, merchant, J. McMullan & Co., Chefoo
McMurdo, G., assistant, New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai
McMurray, D., chief engineer, steamer "Suisang", China coast
McMurray, Wm., supt. engineer, Shanghai Tug and Lighter Co., Shanghai
McNair, J. L., shop foreman, Central Engine Works, Singapore
McNally, James C., consul for United States, Nanking
McNaughton, H. C., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Kobe
McNaughton, J. P., chartered accountant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Hongkong McNeill, D., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., L., Hongkong
McNeill, Duncan, barrister-at-law, Hanson, McNeill, & Jones, Shanghai
McNeillage, R., assistant. Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai McNeillie, D., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong McNidder, Thos, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
1675
MeOstrich, Dr. Francis A., medical examiner, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Amoy McPherson, E. D., assistant, McAlister & Co., Singapore
McPherson, G., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Cebu
McPherson, J., assistant, New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai McPherson, Peter, chief engineer, steamer, "Changsha," China coast
McQuerry, bookkeeper, Bureau of Printing, Manila
McRae, J. A., railway station master, Lower Perak district, Perak
McRietchie, C. B., assistant-engineer, Westminster Construction Co., Singapore McRobie, F., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
McRory, A., inspector, of Police, Negri Sembilan
McSheeky, L. J. P. G., assistant paymaster, Naval Establishment, Weihaiwei Mead, J. H., assistant, Kelly & Walsh, Hongkong
Mead, J. P., assistant conservator, Forest department, Perak
Meadway, J. J., storekeeper, Public Works Department, Selangor
Mears, C. B., clerk of works, Maritime Customs, Peking
Measor, E. A., assistant, Anderson, Meyer & Co., Shanghai
Mechlenburg, Dr., K. interpreter, German Consulate, Nagasaki
Mecke, Fritz, assistant, W. B. Michaelsen & Co., Foochow
Médard, interpreter French Consulate, Hankow
Medici di Mariguano, F., consul for Italy, Hankow
Medina, J. M., clerk, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Shanghai
Medina, L., storehouseman, Royal Naval Ord. Depot., Hongkong
Medworth, C. M., deputy conservator, Forest Departinent, Lampang, Bangkok
Meek, B., civil-engineer, Sir John Jackson, Ld., Singapore
Meek, J., assistant, G. Falconer & Co., Hongkong
Meek, T., manager, G. Falconer & Co., Hongkong Meerwald, S. F., sanitary inspector, Perak
Meester, Th. H. de., vice-consul for Netherlands, Shanghai Meester, T., de., assistant, Java-China-Japan Lijn, Hongkong Meeter, A., assistant, Batu Putch Estate, B. N. Borneo Meeter, F., assistant, Batu Putch Estate, B. N. Borneo Mehl, G. H., postmaster, German Post Office, Peking Mehler, F., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Mehler, R., assistant, G. Landmann, Tsingtau
Mehlhose, Alfredo, assistant, Froehlich & Kuttner, Iloilo Mehne, R., assistant, Deutsche Asiatische Bank, Tientsin. Mehta, B. K., broker, Hongkong
Mehta, B., merchant, Foochow Trading Co., Foochow Mehta, B. P., Mehta & Co., Foochow
Mehta, D. D., manager, M. N., Mehta, Canton
Mehta, S. B., assistant, Winckler & Co., Ono, Kobe
Meier, D., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Ld., Shanghai
Meifire, H., attaché commercial, Direction de l'Agriculture et du Commerce, Hanoi
Meillier, M., delegué á la Cour Internationale, Bangkok
leiues, H., superintendent engineer, Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Singapore
Meinke, J., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Meira, F. X., clerk, Andrews, von Fischerz, & George, Shanghai
Meissner, K., assistant, L. Lebold Shokan, Tokyo
Melbourne, C. A. Dick, deputy registrar, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Mellige, A., assistant, Thos. Cook & Son, Hongkong
Melchers, K. F., merchant, Melchers & Co., Tientsin
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NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1676
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Melchers, William, inerchant, Wendt & Co., Hongkong
Melchior, J. E., assistant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Shanghai Melchisedech, Ed., assistant, E. Lee, Tientsin
Melissen, S., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang Melhnish, G. J., manager, Dodwell & Co., Kobe Meller P, acting manager, Baer, Senior & Co., Manila Meller, W., assistant, Telge & Schroeter, Shanghai
Mellin, Arthur A., lieut., H. M. S. "Tamar," Hongkong
Mello, A. A. de, merchant and commission agent, Macao
Mello, A. de., acting-magistrate, District of Police Courts, Singapore Mello, J. de., clerk, Cinematograph Pathé, Singapore
Mello, J. F., clerk, Boustead & Co., Penang
Mellows, E.. tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Mellows, O., district inspector, Chinese Post Office, Chungking
Mellows, T., inspector, River Police, Shanghai
Melly, J., boarding officer, Marine Department, Penang
Melnikoff, D. M., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Kewkiang
Melotto, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Melville, F. J. W., asst. inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Melville, T. A., supt. of mails, Post Office, Singapore
Melvin, J. D., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Menagh, J. C., chief storekeeper, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Kowloon, Hongkong Menahem, N. S., assistant, S. N. Menahem, Singapore
Mencarini, J., acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Mencarini, M, assistant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Shanghai Mende, F., hide inspector, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Mendelson, Ed., manager, Crown Cork Co., Yokohama
Mendelson, M., merchant, Mendelson & Frank, Yokohama
Mendes, A., clerk, M. W. Greig & Co., Foochow
Mendes, F. X., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Mendes, L., professor do Seminario de S. José, Macao
Mendes, M. A. de N., marine officer, Post Office, Hongkong
Mendes, M. da Silva, bacharel em direito, Macau
Mendieta, Aurelio, reporter, "Libertas," Manila
Mendis, J. G., assistant manager, Gervis Xavier & Co., Negri Sembilan
Mendonça, F., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Mendonça, J., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation, Yokohama
Mendonca, J. M., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Menenorier, J., bishop, vicar general, Roman Catholic Mission, Penang
Menezes, A. G. de, escripturario de Fazenda, Macau
Menezes, F. C. de, recehodor de Fazenda, Macau
Meng, H., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Mengel, O., assistant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Mengens, W. E., stenographer. The Shanghai Horse Bazaar Co., Ld., Shanghai
Menke, Wm., merchant, Wm., Menke & Co., Singapore
Mens, W. v., Roman Catholic Church of St. Ann., Labuan
Menzies, A. R. W., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Mercado, L., cashier, La Insular Cigar & Cigarette Factory, Manila
Mercado, S., accountant, La Insular Cigar & Cigarette Factory, Manila
Merche, H., assistant, Charrière & Cie, Haiphong
Mérel, Right Rev. Magr., bishop, French Mission, Canton
Merklinghaus, Dr. P., German Consul, Hoihow and Pakhoi Merkonloff, M. M., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Mérona, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Merrells, A. P., bookkeeper, McAlister & Co., Singapore Merrells, F., assistant, H. L. Coghlan & Co., Singapore Merrill, E. J., assistant, Abenheim Bros., Kobe
Merriman, W. L., agent, American Trading Co., Shanghai
Merrison, G. W., sub-inspector in charge, Harbin Road Sub-station, Shanghai Mersmann, captain, commander, S. M. S. "Iltis," German Squadron, China
Mertens, H.. assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Mertzech, W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Peking
Merz, Dr. C., consul for Germany, Amoy
Meserve, H. F., general manager, Oriental Consolidated Mining Co., Chemulpo, Cores
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Meslier, commissaire de Police, Kouang Tcheou Wan Mesney, R. F., merchant, Bangkok
Mesney, W. M., chief officer, steamer "Waishing," China coast Mesny, G., professor, Medical College, Tientsin
Mesny, Dr., J E., medical practitioner, Hankow
Mesny, Wm., Chinese Miscellany Office, Shanghai
Messenger, W. G., first officer, steamer "Chipshing," China coast Messinger, J., asst. manger, Astor House Hotel, Tientsin
Messer, C. McI., postmaster general, Hongkong
Messer, P., engineer, American Trading Co., Yokohama
Messner, K., assistant marine supt., Norddeutscher Lloyd, Hongkong
Mesurier, J. Le, superintendent, The United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Singapore
Metailler, chef de bureau du secrétariat, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
Metcalfe, H. W., merchant, Osborne and Chappel, Perak
Mettgenberg, P., engineer, von Duering, Wibel & Co., Shanghai Metzelthin, Th., acting consul for Germany, Pakhoi
Metzenthin, H., supt. captain, Hamberg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai Metzger, F., assistant, Siemens Schuckert Werke, Hankow Metzke, W., chief engineer, steamer "Tsintau," China coast Metzler, A., manager, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton Meurer, André, merchant, Meurer Fils & Co., Canton Meurer, Charles, merchant, Meurer Fils & Co., Canton
Meuser, O., merchant, Rohde & Co., Shanghai'
Mevins, W., manager, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Charbin, Vladivostock Meyer, A., manager, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Meyer, A., Voelkel & Schroeder, Ld., Shanghai
Meyer, Albert, head watchmaker, La Estrella del Norte, Manila
Meyer, C., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Shanghai
Meyer, C. A., tidesurveyor and harbour master, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Meyer, C. E., examiner, Customs, Kewkiang
Meyer, C. H., merchant, Renison & Co., Dairen
Meyer, C. M., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
Meyer, E., merchant, Meyer & Co., Tientsin
Meyer, F., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Meyer, G., assistant, Carl Wolter & Co., Antung
Meyer, G.. assistant, Helm Bros., Yokohama
Meyer, G., chief officer, steamer "Loo Sok," China coast
Meyer, H., asst. hide inspector, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Meyer, H., chief engineer, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Shanghai
Meyer, Hans, assistant, China Import, Export and Bank Compagnie, Shanghai Meyer, I., assistant, Meyer Brothers, Singapore
Meyer, I., assistant, Meyer Brothers, Singapore
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Meyer, J., captain, steam lighter "Bangpakong," Hongkong
Meyer, J. A., assistant, Meyer Brothers, Singapore
Meyer, J. B., storekeeper, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Meyer, J. E., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hongkong
Meyer, K,, lehrling, Kiaochau
Meyer, L., assistant, J. Witkowski & Co., Yokohama
Meyer, M., merchant, Meyer Brothers, Singapore
Meyer, O., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Meyer, O. E, assistant, von Duering, Wibel & Co., Tientsin Meyer, P. A., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila Meyer, R., assistant, Meyer Brothers, Singapore Meyer, Th., merchant, A. Ehlers, & Co., Shanghai Meyer, V., vice consul for Denmark, Shanghai
Meyer, W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Meyer, W., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Meyer Waldeck, kapitan, Stellvertretender Gouverneur, Kiaochau
Meyerink, Wm., merchant, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Shanghai
Meyermann, Dr., direktor, Observatorium, Kiaochau
Meyers, W. W., medical officer, Customs, Pagoda, Anchorage, Foochow
Meyer-Waldeck, chef des stabes, Militarverwaltung, Kiaochau
Meyieres, deuxième-adjoint, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
Meyn, W., assistant, Faust & Co., Tientsin
山
1677
NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1678
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Meynard, A., sub-manager, Messageries Maritimes, Shanghai Meyrick, T. M., captain, steamer Esang," China coast Meywaldt, O., assistant, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Kirin Mezger, O., vice-consul for Germany, Shanghai Michael, Albert, merchant, Shanghai
Michael, I. R., broker, Shanghai
Michael, S. H., merchant, J. R. Michael & Co., Hongkong
Michael, Sidney, assistant, J. R. Michael & Co., Hongkong
Michaelis, marine-oberzahlmeister, Kiaochau
Michailoff, V. E., assistant, O. W. Lindholm & Co., Vladivostock
Michaleff, J. M., assistant, Molchanoff Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow
Michalowitz, M., assistant, Robert Weber, Shanghai
Michand, P., assistant, Beilfek & Sun, Tientsin
Michel, A., commission agent, Kobe
Michel, M. G., procureur général, chef du service judiciaire, Parquet Général, Hanoi Michel-Villez, contrôleur général, Massageries Fluviales, Saigon
Michelau, C., merchant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Michell, Herbert A., asst. paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Merlin," China Station Michell, J., supt., Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Michell, W. C., first commissioner, District, Court Penang
Michels, H., manager, E. Lee, Tientsin
Michels, W., assistant, E. Lee, Tientsin
Michelsen, Dr., Vorstand, Chinesische Kanzlie, Kiaochau
Michie, A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang
Michie, Geo., assistant, Wm. Forbes & Co., Tientsin Michie, W. B., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Mickle, D. M., engineer, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Middleton, E., Asiatic Petroleum Co., Wuhu
Middleton, H., chief accountant, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Middleton, H. E., assistant, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai Middleton, W. B. O., agent, Dickeson, Jones & Co., Shanghai
Middleton, W. R. C., health officer, Singpore,
Midwood, L., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai Mielck, B., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai Mignon, Ch., assistant, Dubuffet & Cie, Yokohama. Miles, Charles V., solicitor, Rodyk & Davidson, Singapore Milhe, P. E., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton Milkowsky, F., assistant, Wassard & Co., Vladivostock
Millar, A., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kashing, Hangchow
Millar, A. examiner, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Millar, A. C., chief engineer, steamer "Sui Tai," Hongkong-Macao
Millar, A. W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Millar, E. R., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Millar, J., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Millar, K. M., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Millar, Patrick, marine surveyor, Manila
Millard, C. E., percepteur, resident de France, Quang Binh, Annan
Millard, H., assistant, Donaldson & Burkinshaw, Singapore
Millard, P. H., factory manager, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Milikin, John D., dental surgeon, Division Hospital, Manila
Miller, A. J., third-officer, Customs revenue cruiser "Linhsing" Shanghai Miller, A., land-bailiff, Land Office, Malacca
Miller, A. M., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Miller, C., writer, Royal Naval Ordnance Depot, Hongkong
Miller, C. B., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Miller, Carleton, U. S. vice-consul, Nagasaki
Miller, D., acountant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Miller, E. P., Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Miller, E. Y., lieutenant, 29th infantry, governor of Palawan, Philippines
Miller, George, manager, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Shanghai
Miller, H. B., consul-general for United States, Yokohama
Miller, H. P., district postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Miller, H. R., professor, Meiji Gakuin, Tokyo.
Miller, J., chief engineer, steamer "Haimun," Coast Ports
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Miller, J., proof reader, "Japan Daily Herald," Yokohama Miller, J., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Miller, J. F., superintendent engineer, Bradley & Co, Hongkong Miller, J. W., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Kobe
Miller, K., assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong
Miller, M. L., chief, Ethnological Bureau of Science, Manila
Miller, N. F., proof reader, Maritime Customs' Printing Office, Shanghai Miller, R. S., Japanese secretary, United States Embassy, Tokyo
Miller, R. S., medical practitioner, Kobe
Miller, S. A., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Miller, T. C. B., secretary and director, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Miller, Verne E., Publishing Co., Manila.
Miller, W. D. B., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Miller, W. M., chemist, and factory manager, Penang Sugar Estates, Penang
Miller, William A., lieut.-governor, Lepanto, Philippines
1679
Milles, H. G. S., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Shanghai Milles, W. J., physician and surgeon, Macleod, Milles, Marshall & Marsh, Shanghai Milligan, J. R., captain, "Kiang-Yung," China coast
Millin, E. G., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore Millington, W. M., acting district officer, Malacca Mills, C. B., revenue auditor, Financial dept., Selangor
Mills, C. F., medical officer, Customs, Ningpo
Mills, E. W. P., student-interpreter, British Embassy, Peking
Mills, J., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Mills, J., assistant, Straits Ice Company, Singapore
Mills, S. V., assistant surveyor, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Mills, W., foreman, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang
Millward, G., Royal Brush Goshi Kaisha, Osaka
Millward, Williain, prof. of Natural Science, Nanking University, Nanking Milne, A., exchange broker, Kobe
Milne, A. B., resident-manager, Changkat Salak Syndicate, Ld., Singapore Milne, E. M., assistant, Andrews & George, Yokohama
Milne, J. M., assistant, L. Leonowens, Ld., Bangkok
Milne, W. T., manager, Steel Brothers & Co., Bangkok Milner, F., assistant, Moller Brothers, Shanghai
Milner, W., clerk, Palace Hotel, Shanghai
Miloslav, K. acting consul for Austria Hungary, Tientsin Milroy, A. A. H., superintendent, Sailors' Home, Hongkong Minal, F., assistant, Anz & Co., Kiaochau
Minard, acting vice-consul for France, Ichang
Mine, Comte., D., merchant, Moine-Comte & Co., Singapore Minett, Percy F., surgeon, H. M. S. "Tamar," Hongkong Minin, S. M., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Minjoot, Chas., assistant, Hooglandt & Co., Singapore Minning, E., captain, steamer Meishun." Yangtsze river
Minnout, A K.. manager, Commercial Bank of Siberia, Vladivostock Minny, S. R., clerk, S. J. David & Co., Shanghai
Miot, R., fondé de pouvoirs, L Flambeau & Cie, Haiphong
Mir, R. P. Fidel, superior de la mision de la Compañia de Jesus, Manila Mirwald, E., chief officer, steamer Chowfa," China coast
Mirza, I. U., clerk, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Misch, F., chief officer, steamer" Meidah," Yangtze River
Miss, C., assistant, F. H. Schmidt, Kiaochau
Mistry, K. D., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong
Mitchell, A., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Kobe
Mitchell, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuchow
Mitchell, A. S., assistant conservator of Forest, Selangor
Mitchell, C. Berkeley, superintendent of Municipal Police, Kulangsu, Amoy
Mitchell, J. acting berthing officer, Customs, Canton
Mitchell J., assistant, Publication department, Yokohama
Mitchell, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Mitchell, J. B., builder and surveyor, Kobe
Mitchell, J. Smith, British American Tobacco Co., Chemulpo
Mitchell, James., broker, Sloan & Mitchell, Manila
"NIPPONOPHONE"-BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
1680
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Mitchell, John, manager, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., and consul for Belgium, Penang Mitchell, L. P., assistant, Ker & Co., Cebu
Mitchell, P. V., assistant, Johnstone, Cain & Co., Yokohama
Mitchell, R. F., chief officer, S. S. "Changsha" China coast
Mitchell, T. A., captain, steamier "Fooksang," China coast Mitchell, T. C., chief clerk, District Office, Penang
Mitchell, Thos. W., clerk, Wheelock & Co., Shanghai
Mitchell, W. A., professor, University, Soochow
Mitchell, W. L, marine-representative, Vacuum Oil Co., Yokohama
Mitchelmore, E. V., assistant manager, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Singapore Mitford, E. Bruce, managing-editor "Japan Mail," Yokohama Mittag, Alfred, assistant, Max. Mittag, Shanghai
Mittag, M., merchant, Shanghai
Mizon, garde indigène, Tourane, Annam
Mobaied, J. N., manager and accountant, Cinematograph Pathé, Singapore Mochinski, L. W., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Mody, H. N., bill, bullion and general broker, Chater & Mody, Hongkong Moeller, J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Moeller, Ph., merchant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Moffat, J., locomotive, inspector, Imperial Railways, Fengtai, Tientsin
Moffitt, R. P., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Moglioni, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Mogra, E. R., merchant, E. R. Mogra & Co., Canton
Mohr, A., merchant, and consul for Sweden and Norway, A. Markwald & Co., Bangkok Mohr, B., engineer, Siemens Schuckert, Osaka
Möhring, F., lightkeeper, Tung Yung, Customs, Amoy
Mohrstedt, A., assistant, E. Meyer & Co., Kiaochau
Moidrey, J. Tardiff de, assistant, Observatory, Zi-Ka-Wei, Shanghai
Moir, G. A., accountant, International Bank, Yokohama
Moir, J. T., superintendent, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Moir, J. T., supt., San Kan Tien Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Moir, P. M., Court of First Instance, Province of Benquet, Philippines Moisan, H., Roman Catholic missionary, Shanghai
Moisson, juge de paix Baclieu, Cochin-chine Molinari, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang Molinié, garde principal, poste de Phan-Ri, Annam Moll, A. E., merchant, Moll, Kunzli & Co., Manila
Mollemann, J., accountant, Netherlands Trading Society, Hongkong Moller, lieut., S. M. S. "Scharnhorst," German Squadron, China Möller, Eric, merchant, Möller Bros., Shanghai
Möller, H., secretary, German Consulate, Nagasaki
Möller, John Arthur, merchant, Möller Bros., Shanghai
Moller, W., A., mining engineer, Imperial Railways, Chulinho, Tientsin
Mollermann, W., captain, steamer "Chow Tai," Hongkong-Bangkok
Mollison, G., foreman, Waterworks Co., Shanghai
Mollison, James Pender, merchant, Mollison & Co., Yokohama
Molloy, É, tidesurveyor and harbourmaster, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Molloy, H. E, clerk, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Molony, Herbert James, bishop of Christ Church, Ningpo
Moltet, L., merchant, Yokohama
Molz, C. A., assistant, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Singapore Momben, B., diplom-ingenieur, Kiaochau
Monaco, A., consul-general for Italy, Shanghai
Monavon, M., directeur, Societé Foncière de l'Indo-Chine, Hanoi
Monbaron, Chas., insurance, shipping and commission agent, Hankow Monbells, E. S. di, lieutenant, R. Nave "Calabria" China
Moncan, G. de, assistant, P. Roque, Haiphong
Monchot, ingenieur-divisionnaire, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong Monestier, A., redacteur en chef, Echo de Chine, Shanghai Monhonval, P., manager, Pharmacie Centrale, Hankow Monilloc, G., vice-consul for France, Chungking Monis, A., foreman, Singapore Foundry, Singapore Monk, A. V., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Monk, W. J., assistant, J. Trevor-Smith & Co., Shanghai
|
I
FRESIDENTS IGNORE
Monnitan, A. W. assistant, L. Leonowens, Ld., Bangkok
Monod, E. C., merchant, E. C. Monod et Fils, Bangkok
Monro, A. E., chief instructor, Imperial Naval College, Nanking
Monro, W. P., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Montaigne, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Montavon, Wm. F., div. supt. of schools, La Union, Philippines
Montbrun, M. Gallois, assistant, W. G. Hale & Co., Saigon
Monteiro, E. B., clerk, British Residency, Pahang
Monteith, J., chief officer, steamer" Haiyang," Coast ports Montel, R., médecin de l'Etat Civil, Services Médicaux, Saigon Montell, A. M., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Montgelas, Count von, first secretary, German Legation, Tokyo
Montgomerie, J. Love, attorney, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Singapore Montgomery, H., e gineer, J. A. Kjelberg & Sons, Yokohama
Montgomery, J. T., assistant general manager, Vacuum Oil Co., Yokohama Montouiery, H., engineer, J. A. Kjelberg & Sons, Ld., Yokohama Moody, M. D., chief clerk and cashier, Civil Hospital, Manila Moon, H. E., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Moon, H. G., eng.-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Kent, China Station Moon, R. Y., engineer, Pulo Lambo Tank Installation, Singapore Mooney, C., secretary, Hongkong Hotel Co., Hongkong
JJ
Mooney, F., captain, steamer "Chipshing," China coast
Moor, C. H. R., vice consul, British Consular district, Nakawn Lampang, Bangkok Moore, A., assistant health officer, Health Department, Shanghai
Moore, B., clerk, C. A. Ribeiro & Co, Singapore
Moore, C. B. W., assistant, I. M. Customs, Newchwang
Moore, C. M., dis. supt. of schools, Surigao, Philippines
Moore, C. Selby, merchant, Brand Brothers & Co., Shanghai
Moore, D. H., assistant, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Singapore
Moore, G., permanent ways engineer, Railway Company, Manila
Moore, Henry R., lieut. H. B. M. gunboat "Bramble," China Station
Moore, J., assistant Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Moore, J. A., assistant engineer, Public Works, Pahang
Moore, J. B., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Moore, J. F., traffic inspector, Imperial Railways, Shanhaikuan, Tientsin
Moore, J. M., agent, Peking
Moore, James, headmaster, Ellis Kadoorie College, Canton
Moore, L. R., asst. master, Yaumati school, Hongkong
Moore, P., sergeant and quarter-master, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong
Moore, R. A., assistant, "Bangkok Times," Bangkok
Moore, R. St., George, engineer, Hankow Water Works, Hankow
Moore, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Soochow
Moore, W. B. A., asst. supt. Civil Hospital, Hongkong
Moore, W. G., district engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Moore, W. O., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Ld., Hankow
Moorehead, T., chief tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Hangchow
Moores, A. R., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Moorhead, Dr. H. B., surgeon in charge, Amoy Chinese Hospital, Amoy
Moorhead, J., medical practitioner, Amoy
Moorhead, R. B., architect, Moorhead & Halse, Tientsin and Shanghai
Moorhead, T. D., acting commissioner (outdoor), Maritime Customs, Nanning
Moosa, J., general broker, Shanghai
Moosa, S., clerk, E. D). Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Moosatoff, A. A., assistant, Molchanoff Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow
Moosdeen, A. R., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Mooser, Geo., agent, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Mooser, Leon, agent, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Mootz, C., Tsingtau, Kiaochau
Moraes, H. F., engineer, Rambutan, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Moraes, J. D., da Costa de, consul general for Portugal (for South China), Canton Moraes, Wenceslau de, consul for Portugal and in charge of Italian Consulate, Kobe Moran, E. E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Moran, T., assistant inspector, Health Department, Shanghai
Morange, inspecteur en chef, Service de l'Agriculture de Cochin-Chine, Saigon
NIPPONOPHONE"--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
62
1681
1682
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Mordhorst, Oscar, merchant, H. M. Schultz & Co., Shanghai
Moreau, E., chaplain, Military Hospital, Saigon
Moreau, H. M. H., tidewaiter, Marítime Customs, Mengtsz
Moreau, L., divisional engineer, Lime Mines, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tongshan Morel, sous directeur, Douanes et Régies, Haiphong
Morens, L., chief traffic audit department, Railway Co., Manila
Morens, M., clerk, La Insular Cigar and Cigarette Factory, Manila.
Morey, D., sub-inspector, Police Department, Shanghai
Morfey, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co. Ltd., Hongkong Morgado, M. R., escrivaéo tabelliao do segundo officio, Macao
Morgan, E. K., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama Morgan, F., assistant, Smith Bell & Co., Manila
Morgan, G. J. W., assistant, Toeg & Read, Shanghai
Morgan, G. S. D., assistant, Sharp, Ross & Co., Singapore
Morgan, H., office assistant, Railway Co., Manila
Morgan, J., general manager and secretary, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai Morgan, J. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of N. Y., Newchwang
Morgan, R., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Morgan, W. H., assistant engineer, Municipality, Negri Sembilan
Morger, J., assistant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Yokohama
Morgin, N. M., superintendent, Satsuma-cho Fire Brigade, Yokohama
Mori, C., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Kobe
Morisot, E., comptable, Filature de Coton, Hanoi
Morisse, G., consul for France, Hankow
Morita, C. H., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Shanghai
Morland, C. H. D., medical practitioner, and medical officer Seamen's Hospital, Swatow
Morley, E., chargeman, H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Morley, J. P., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Amoy
Morley, W., manager, A. S. Watson & Co., Manila
Morling, C. R., mercliant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
Morling, W. A., merchant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
Morphew, G., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Morrell, G. E., solicitor, Goldring, Barlow & Morrell, Hongkong
Morris, A., head master, Saiyingpun School, Hongkong
Morris, A. R., 141 Bluff, Yokohama
Morris, E. B., customs broker and forwarding agent, Manila
Morris, H. A., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Morris, H. M., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Manila Morris, J., assistant, A. Cameron & Co., Kobe
Morris, J., chief accountant, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Kowloon
Morris, J. A., assistant inspector, Public Works department, Selangor
Morris, John, commission and ship agent, Morris & Co., Shanghai Morris, John, director, Kelly & Walsh, Shanghai
Morris, Major G. J., inspector of works, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Morris, R., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama
Morris, R., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Tientsin
Morris, R. V., surveyor, Survey department, Perak
Morris, S. C., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Kiaochau
Morris, W., inspector, H. M. Naval Store department, Hongkong
Morrison, A., manager, Fraser & Neave, Aerated Water Factory, Singapore
Morrison, A., tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Antung
Morrison, E. C., assistant, Borneo Co., Singapore
Morrison, H. D., tea inspector, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hankow and Shanghai Morrison, J., chief accountant, Peking Syndicate, Ld., Tientsin
Morrison, J. R., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Cebu
Morrison, K. S., assistant, Bradley & Co., Hongkong
Morrison, R. D., chief officer, steamer "Fooksung," China coast
Morrison, T. R., agent, China Mutual Lite Insurance Co., Soochow
Morrison, W. J., sub accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Medan
Morrison, W. L. F., foreman of works, Railways, Tongshan, North China
Morrison, W. Y., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Morriss, E. R., secretary, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Morriss, H. F., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Morschell, H. M., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
I
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1683
Morse, F. S., cargo surveyor, Kobe
Morse, H. J., chief accountant, Standard Oil Co, of New York, Hongkong Mortimer, C., merchant, Shanhaik wan
Mortimore, R. H., British consul, Chefoo
Morton, H. E., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow and Shanghai Morton, N. B., director, International Oil Co., Yokohama Morton, R. C., agent, Pacific Mail S. S. Co., Shanghai Morton, T. S., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Tongku Morton, William, interpreter, U. S. Consulate, Harbin Mosberg, Carl, dental surgeon, Shanghai
Mosch, A., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Kobe Mosely, J. B., American dentist, Saigon Moser, B., assistant, F. H. Schmidt, Kiaochau Moses, A. C., merchant, Sarkies & Moses, Singapore Moses, M. C., photographer, Moses & Co., Singapore Moses, M. J., merchant, S. J. David & Co., Kobe Moses, N. C., merchant, Sarkies & Moses, Singapore
Moses, N. S., harbour engineer, William C. Jack & Co., Hongkong Moss, A. P. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Moss, C. H., assistant, Adet, Campredon & Co., Yokohama.
Moss, C. R., div. supt. of schools Province of Benquet, Philippines Moss, D. K., assistant, Alex. Ross & Co., Hongkong
Moss, E. H., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore Moss, E. J., furniture dealer, Yokohama
Moss, H. S., manager, Dodwell & Co., Foochow
Moss, J. E., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Moss, Thomas E., dis, health officer, Mountain Province, Philippines Moss, W. S., asst. manager, China & Japan Trading Co., Ld., Yokohama Moss, Willy, manager, China Hide and Skin Export Co., Hankow Mossard, Mgr. Lucien, vicar apostolic, Mission de Cochin-Chine, Saigon Mossop, A. G., barrister-at-law, Home and Douglas, Shanghai
Motley, R. W. C., commission agent, Yokohama
Mottram, J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton
Mougeot, postmaster, French Consulate, Hoihow
Moulder, A. B., merchant, A. B. Moulder & Co., Hongkong Moulder, Bayard, merchant. A. B. Moulder & Co., Hongkong Moule, A. E., archdeacon, Christ Church, Ningpo Moule, W. A. H., Anglo-Chinese School, Shanghai
Moule, W. S., principal, Trinity College, C.M.S., Ningpo Moulie administrateur résident de France, Hai Duong, Tonkin Moulioukine, N. S., acting consul for Russia, Tientsin Moullie, H. R., chief clerk, Ulu Langat, Selangor
Moulrou, A. E., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Moulton, J. C., curator, Sarawak Museum, Sarawak
Mouly, V., missionary, Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Shanghai Mounsey, K. W., solicitor, Kent & Mounsey, Tientsin
Mountain, A. W., assistant, Leonowens, Ld., Bangkok
Mourron, administrateur adjoint, Hai Duong, Tonkin
Mousset, Rev. G., missionary, Missions Etrangères, Masampo
Mowe, Stuart, bookkeeper, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Singapore
Mowli, A., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Moxon, G. C., agent, Philippine Co., Hongkong
Moysey, F. J., district-officer, Tawas, British North Borneo.
Munt, Dr. W. M., medical officer, Weihaiwei
Mudditt, W. H., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai
Mudra, Dr. A., consul for Germany, Nagasaki
Mudes, Y. M., boat officer, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Mueller, chief engineer, S. S. "Lyeemoon," Coast service
Mueller, C., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Mueller, F., assistant, Lutz & Co., Manila
Mueller, G., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
bineller, H., chemist, Bubbling Well Dispensary, Shanghai Mueller, U., clerk, Secker's Store, Manila
Mueller, W., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
*
NIPPONOPHONE"--BEST AND SIMPLEST TALKING MACHINE
53
1684
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Muelter, A., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Kobe
Muenster, T., engineer, Rizerie Union, Cholon
Muerman, J. C., superintendent, Bureau of Education, Cebu
Muffling, von, vice consul for Germany, Hankow and acting consul at Ichang Mugabure, H. G. Mgr. Pierre-Xavier, archbishop, Catholic Mission, Tokyo Muhle, L., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Mühlenbein, O., manager, Late Hartwig & Co., Singapore
Muhlschlegel, K., assistant, E. Krauss, Tokyo
Muir, C., asst, accountant, Mercantile Bank of India, Singapore
Muir, H., Government marine surveyor, Penang
Muir, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong
Muir, W. A., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Mul, C. C., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore Mulder, F. assistant, Behn Meyer & Co., Ld., Bangkok
Mulder, J. D. F., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Hongkong Mulleitner, G., captain, steamier "Meidah," Yangtze River
Muller, A., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Muller, A. F., assistant of works, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Müller, Bernhard v., lieutenant, S. M. S. "Tiger," German Squadron, China Muller, C., assistant, Sulzer, Rudolph & Co., Shanghai Muller, C. M. J., tide waiter, Customs, Hangchow Muller, Carl, assistant, Santos & Jaehrling, Manila Muller, Dr., interpreter, German Consulate, Yokohama Muller, E., assistant, Abenheim Brothers, Yokohama Muller, F., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hankow Muller, F., assistant, La Urania Cigar Factory, Manila Muller, F., assistant, Strome & Co., Yokohama Muller, G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hankow Muller, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Muller, H. C., assistant surveyor, Customs, Shanghai
Muller, H. C., surveyor, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Müller, Joh. bureauvorstand, Vorwerk, Zimmermann & Büsing, Kiaochau
Müller, J., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Muller, J., assistant, Royal Hair Dressing Saloon, Singapore
Müller, J., pastor, Bethesda Chapel, and supt. Berlin Foundling House, Hongkong Müller, Dr. interpreter, German Consulate, Yokohama
Muller, Max., consul for Germany, Shanghai
Muller, O., assistant, D. Brandt & Co., Singapore
Müller, O., medical practitioner, Müller, Justi and Hoch, Hongkong
Müller, P., engineer, Klose Wilhelm, Shanghai
Muller, W., assistant, F. Engler & Co.. Saigon
Muller, W., assistant, F. H. Schmidt, Kiaochau
Muller, W. G. M., councillor of British Embassy, Peking
Mulligan, G. B., accountant, J. H. Hall & Co., British North Borneo
Mulock, G. F. A., lieutenant and commander, H. M. steamer "Woodlark," China
Mulvey, F. D., workshop foreman, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Mumbux, E., foreman, Badman & Co., Bangkok
Munder, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Kiaochau
Mundie, W. H., editor, "Bangkok Times," Bangkok
Mundell, H. D., solicitor, Sisson & Delay, Singapore
Mundey, T. C., writer, Naval Civil Establishment, Hongkong
Munro, G., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Yokohama Munro, J., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Hankow
Munro, R. G., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Moji
Munroe, Hubert S., lieut. comdr., torpedo-boat destroyer "Hart," Hongkong Munsie, E., chief engineer, steamer "Kwongsang," China const
Munsie, E. W., assistant, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Munster, B. A., 19, Bluff, Yokohama
Munthe, J. W. N., acting-deputy commissioner, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Muntor, D. W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Muntzen, B., chief officer, steamer "Chow Tai" Hongkong and Bangkok
Muraour, J., manager, Oriental Palace Hotel, Yokohama
Muraour, L., proprietor, Oriental Palace Hotel, Yokohama
Murchie, J., general manager, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Bangkok
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Murdoch, H. J., manager, Malacca Rubber Plantation, Ld, Malacca Murdoch, J., teacher, Higher School, Tokyo
Murdoch, T. P., chief engineer, steamer "Namsang," China coast Murdoch, W., chief engineer, steamer "Tungshing," China coast Muriel, H. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Tientsin Murison, W., inspector of police, Hongkong
Murphine, A. R., manager, Laou Kung Mow Cotton S. & W. Co., Shanghai Murphy, C. D., inspector, River Police, Shanghai
Murphy, C. H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Murphy, E. H., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Murphy, E. J., acting div. supt. of Schools, Nueva Vizcaya, Philippines Murphy, E. O., engineer, Bailey & Murphy, Hongkong
Murphy, F. V., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz
Murphy, J., inspector of Police, Singapore
Murphy, J. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Murphy, P. M., master, Colonial steamer "Sea Mew," Singapore
Murphy, T. R., manager, Shanghai Tannery Co., Shanghai
Murray, A. E., engineer lieutenant, H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station
Murray, A. E. T., assistant, Boustead & Co., Penang
Murray, D. B., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong
Murray, G. C., acting sub-manager, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore Murray, G. T., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Marray, George W., engineer commander, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station Murray, H. H. J., Tientsin Anglo Chinese College, Tientsin
Murray, J., assistant, Robert Weber, Shanghai
Murray, J. A. S., captain, Ordnance officer in charge, Hongkong
Murray, J. B., lieutenant, H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station
Murray, J. H., electrical engineer, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Murray, J. R., assistant, Paterson, Simona & Co., Singapore
Murray, J. S., engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Hokün, Hongkong
Murray, J. W. D., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai
Murray, M. A., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Murray, M. M., assistant engineer, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
1685
Murray, P. H., manager, North Point Installation, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hongkong
Murray, P. R., clerk, China Provident Loan and Mortgage Co., Hongkong
Murray, R. B., manager, The Sandycroft Rubber Co., Ld., Singapore
Murray, S., merchant, Forbes Munn & Co., Iloilo
Murray, S., outdoor assistant, China Borneo Co., British North Borneo
Murray, W., agent, Straits Trading Co., Kuala Kubu and Tranum, Selangor
Murray, W. C. manager, Noel, Murray & Co., Shanghai
Murray, W. P. assistant, Rambutan, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Murray, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Musabhoy, M., commission merchant, Kobe
Musgrove, F. A., assistant, Imperial Hotel, Tientsin.
Musicant, M. J., postmaster, Russian Post Office, Shanghai
Muskett, W. H. B., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Musso, F. P., merchant, V. P. Musso & Co., Canton and Hongkong
Musso, L. A., assistant, Italian Far East Trading Co., Hongkong
Musso, S., assistant, Bell's Asbestos Eastern Agency, Ld., Hongkong.
Musso di Peralta, V. P., merchant, V. P. Musso & Co., Hongkong and Canton Mustel, C., bishop, Roman Catholic Mission, Seoul
Mustert, T. C., agent, The Ships' Agency, Ld., Singapore
Mattray, W., bookkeeper, Astor House Hotel, Tientsin
Myer, M., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Shanghai
Myers, J. H., agent, Oriental Palace Hotel, Yokohama
Myers, R. M., assistant, Maritime Custonis, Hokow
Myers, W. W., vice consul for Great Britain, Pagoda Anchorage, Foochow
Myles, J. B., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Myram, M., assistant, Harry A. Badman & Co., Bangkok
Mysing, captain, commander, S. M. S. "Jaguar," German Squadron, China Naftaly, E., assistant, McMullan & Co., Chefoo
Naftaly, F., clerk, Shanghai Horse Bazaar Co., Shanghai
Nagal, P., assistant, Froehlich & Kuttner, Manila
Nailer, T. P., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, and China, Hankow
1686
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1
Nain, C., missionary, vicar, Catholic Church of the Visitation, Negri Sembilan Nairn, A. L., resident master, St. Stephen's College, Hongkong
Nairn, H. J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Nairn, H. M., accountant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore Naismith, W. C., assistant, Ker & Co., Manila
Nambyar, P. K., barrister-at-law, Penang
Nance, W. B., professor, Soochow University, Soochow
Nanson, Wm., solicitor, Rodyk & Davidson, Singapore
Naorojee, B., merchant, Canton
Napier, M. N. Williamson, sub-lieutenant, H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station
Nard, H., assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Haiphong
Nash, T. S., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Nash, W., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Nathan, E. S., exchange and share broker, Nathan & Son, Singapore
Nathan, M. J., secretary, Central Stores, Shanghai
Nathan, W. S., major R.E., agent & general manager, Chi. Eng. & Mining Co., Ld., Tientsin Nathans, M., manager, Bell's Asbestos Eastern Agency, Singapore
Naumann, W., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Hongkong
Naylor, Chas. J. H., auditor, Province of Benguet, Philippines
Naylor, J., assistant, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Nazareth, P. S., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macau
Nazaroff, I. A., engineer, Nicolsk Mill, Vladivostock
Nazer, A. P., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Nazer, G. C., assistant, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai Nazer, S. S., assistant, J. A. Wattie & Co., Shanghai
Neale, C. E., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Neale, H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai (absent) Nealy, R. H., div. supt. of Schools, Tarlac, Philippines
Neathcote, P., clerk, Audit Office, Hongkong
Neave, E. H., wharfinger, Hongkong & Kowloon Wharf & Godown Co., Hongkong Neave, T., supt. engineer, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Nebel, F., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Nedden, Walter Zur, machinery and general importer, Tientsin
Needham, J. E., assistant, divisonal engineer Public Works Department, Shanghai Neeson, J. W. S., pilot, Shanghai
Neff, C. A., chief property clerk, Bureau of Navigation, Manila
Neidhardt, O., asst. traffic superintendent, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Neidt, A., assistant, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Shanghai & Hongkong Neil, W., lightkeeper, Cape Cami Light, Hoihow
Neill, Niel O., lieutenant, H. B. M. S. "Alacrity," China Station
Neill, W., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of I., A. & China, Kobe Neilson, I., B. C., assistant, Gilman & Co., Hongkong Neish, R. D., editor, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai
Nelke, W. T., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Canton Nell, G. M., chief, Clerical Division, Bureau of Science, Manila Nellemann, L., clerk, Hirsbrunner & Co., Shanghai
Nelligan, C., managing-clerk, Wreford & Thornton, Penang Nellner, H., merchant, Garrels, Borner Co., Shanghai
Nelson, chef de verification, Douanes et Régies, Annam
Nelson, A. D., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
་་
Nelson, C. B., chief-engineer, Steamer "Rubi," Hongkong and Manila
Nelson, C. C., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Nelson, F., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Bangkok Nelson, G. S., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Yokohama
Nelson, H. S., colonel, commanding Royal Artillery, Straits Settlements Nelson, J., assistant, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Nelson, Kent, captain, surgeon, Division Hospital, Manila
Nelson, N. W., sub-manager for Japan, New Zealand Insurance Co., Kobe Nelson, Robert D., eng. lieut., H. B. M. S. "Astrea," China Station
Nelson, R., acting, marine superintendent, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Nelson, R. T., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Nergaard, J. P. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Nerty, receveur, Douanes et Régies, Hong-Yen, Tonkin Nesly, secrétaire de Parquet Général, Saigon
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Nesom, G. E., director, Bureau of Agriculture, Manila
Nessler, payeur de 2e. classe, Paierie, Phulaugthuong, Tonkin Nesson, W. P., ticket-clerk, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Shanghai Nestmann, A., assistant, H. Ahrens & Co., Nagasaki
Nethercott, H., foreman, Kiangsu Chemical Works, Shanghai Nettement, Louis, Consul for France, Vladivostock Nettle, P. E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai Netto, A., professor, Seminario de S. Jose, Macau
Neubourg, P., assistant, Anderson Meyer, & Co., Shanghai Neubronner, G. D., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Hongkong
Neubronner, H. A., civil engineer, and Vice Consul for Siam, Penang
Neubrunn, M., asst, examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton
Neukirch E. assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Chabarowsk, Vladivostock Neumark, W., agent, Froehlich & Kuttner, Cebu
Neut, R., storekeeper, Waterworks & Co., Shanghai
Neves, A. M., clerk, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong
1687
Neves, T. F., clerk, Cosmopolitan Dock, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., K'loon, H'kong Neville, D. A., assistant, American Trading Co., Yokohama
Neville, G., assistant, Cornes & Co.. Yokohama
Neville, S. A., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Newall, J. T., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Newall, G., local manager, South British Fire & Marine Ins., Hongkong
Newberne, R. E. L., Bureau of Health, Manila
Newbronner, A. W., supt. of workshops, Municipal Store and Workshop, Singapore Newbronner, N. T., assistant, Stcherbatchoff, Tchokoff & Co., Singapore
Newby, E. C., assistant, Gallon & Co., Swatow
Newcomb, A. C., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Newel, F., manager, "Hankow Daily News," Hankow
Newhard, Harold Frederick, vice and deputy consul for America, Vladivostock Newman, E. J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Newman, G. J. T., clerk, Drummond, White-Cooper & Philips, Shanghai
Newman, J., assayer, Straits Trading Co., Selangor
Newman, J. F., manager, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Wuhu and Nanking Newman, W. A, inspector of Police, Perak
Newmarch, L. J., district engineer, Imperial Railway of N. China, Fengtai, Tientsin. Newmen, Richard D., lieut. 13th Cavalry, topographer, Manila
Newson, C. C., assistant Darby & Co., B. N. Borneo
Newton, A. W., assistant, John F. Duff Kobe
Newton, P. P., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Nexion, F. A., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Peking
Ney, Dr. vice-consul for Germany, Shanghai
Nghán, comptable, Pharmacie Centrale de l'Indo Chine, Haiphong
Niblock, F., superintendent, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Niblock, N. B., merchant, James McMullan & Co., Chefoo
Nichol, A., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton
Nicholas, C. E., lightkeeper, Waglan Island, Hongkong
Nicholas, Dr., medical-officer, Raub, Pahang
Nicholas, F. W., apothecary, Taiping, Perak
Nicholas, John, captain, H. B. M. S., Flora," China Station
Nicholas, J., sanitary-inspector, Penang,
Nicholas, N., assistant, Kowloon Hotel, Hongkong
Nicholas, W., architect, Selangor
Nicholl, J. S., assistant, F. W. Horne, Yokohama
Nicholls, F., mining engineer, Siamese Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Nicholls, H. E., manager of mines, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang
Nicholls, W., clerk, Hongkong and Whainpon Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Nicholls, W. S., accountant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Penang
Nicholson, Lieut. J., dep. commissary of ordnance, Army Ord. dept., Hongkong Nicholson, P. F., gen. manager, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Nicholson, R. A., superintendent engineer, Cosmopolitan Dock, Kowloon, Hongkong Nichtenhauser, H., assistant, Alois Schweiger & Co., Shanghai
Nicol, A. W., assistant, Findlay & Co., Manila
Nicol, J. T., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Nicol, T. R., chief officer, steamer "Kaifong," China coast
1688
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Nicolai, archbishop, Russian Ecclesiastical mission, Tokyo Nicolai, F., manager, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Kiaochau
Nicolaisen, C., electrician, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Hongkong Nicolas, F., missionary, Foochow
Nicoll, C. D., chief officer, steamer "Laisang," China coast
Nicoll, H. R., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, A. & China, Kobe
Nicolle, ingenieur, Societé Franco Belge, Haiphong
Nicolle, H. M., T., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Kobe
Nicolle, P. E., director and accountant, International Oil Co., Yokohama Nicolle, W. G., assistant, Abenheim Bros., Kobe
Nicolson, J. W., manager, Mackenzie & Co., Chungking
Nieber, chief engineer, S.S. "Gouv. Jaeschke," Coast service Niebuhr, W. S., agent, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Swatow Niedharht, E., chemist, Medical Hall, Hongkong
Niel, juge de paix, Tibunal de Tourane, Cochin Chine Nielsen, A., inspector of lights, Maritime Customs, Amoy Nielsen, E., captain lightship, Taku
Nielsen, G., merchant, Schiller & Co., Shanghai
Nielsen, Hans, assistant, Joh. H. Langelutje & Co., Vladivostock Nielsen, J., assistant, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Hongkong
Nielsen, Olef, supt. Great Northern Telegraph Co., Hongkong
Nielson, A. B., Presbyterian missionary, Tainanfu
Nielson, D., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Nieppe, E., de., councillor, Belgian Legation, Peking
Nieuwenhuis, F. J. D., minister, Netherlands Legation, Bangkok
Nievergelt, E., assistant, Froehlich & Kuttner, Manila
Nigg, M. L., pilot, Shanghai
Nightingale, H. O., vice-deputy-consul for America, Foochow
Nightingale, Henry Oscar, vice and deputy, United States, consulate, Foochow Nightingale, J. H., tidesurveyor, I. M. Customs, Changsha
Nikiforoff, M., supt., Nicolsk Mill, Vladivostock
Nikitine, V., vice consul for Russia, Mukden
Nikkels, R. N. W., assistant, Netherlands India Commercial Bank, Hongkong Niklevitch, V. E., assistunt, Bryner, Kousnettzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Niktin, A. P., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Niles, J., compounder, St. Mary's Despensary, Singapore
Nilsen, M. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Nilson, S. T., meter-inspector, Electricity Department, Shanghai
Nilsson, A., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Nilsson, W., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Nipkow, P., assistant, Sulzer, Rudolph & Co., Yokohama Nirrnheim, A., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Kobe Nisbet, J., M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Foochow Nish, W. McJ, assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Ld., Manila Nissen F., assistant engineer, The Lahat Mines Ld., Perak
Nissen, G., installation manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Pagoda, Foochow Nissenson, B., assistant, Wilhelm Kleeschulte, Tientsin
Nissim, D. M., merchant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Nissim, Ed., merchant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Hongkong Nissim, M., assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Shanghai Nitschke, gouvernementssekretar, Kiaochau
Nitschke, R., gouvernment sekretar, Kiaochau
Niven, James D. eng. lieut., H. B. M. S." Bedford," China Station
Niven, W. G., secretary, Singapore Slipway & Engineering Co., Singapore
Nixon, F. A., professor of English, Chinese Imperial University, Peking Nixon, H. E., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore Noailles, l'Abbé Roman Catholic missionary, Yokohama
Noakes, J. G., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Nobbs, A. P., chemist, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Nobe, Dr., S. M. S. "Leipsig," German Squadron, China
Noble, D., assistant accountant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board. Singapore
Noble, F. B, lieut. and comr., H. B. M. Gunboat "Britomart," China Station Noble, Jos. W., surgeon dentist, D. Joseph W. Noble, Singapore Noblston, R. M., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Nock, H. M., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama
Noël, E. W., merchant, E. H. Hunter & Co., Kobe
Noël, G. W., auctioneer, managing director, Noël, Murray & Co., Shanghai Nolan, N. G., chicf interpreter, Supreme Court, Hongkong
Nolan, R., manager, Boustead Institute for Scamen, Singapore
Nolasco, Dr. L., director, Vida Nova," Macao
Nolasco, J., clerk, Buchheister & Co., Shanghai
Nolze, P., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Penang
Nommensen, H., chief engineer, steamer "Chow Tai," Hongkong and Bangkok
Nonchen, C., merchant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Tientsin
Nones, Edward P., captain, assistant to Depot Quartermaster, Manila
Nonis, A.. manager, New Dispensary, Malacca
Nonis, D. M., storekeeper, Cinematograph Pathé, Singapore
Nonis, K. C., clerk, marine Department, Singapore
Nonis, P. H., chief clerk, Registrar of Deeds, Singapore
Nonis, S. A., chief clerk, Municipality, Negri Sembilan
Nonis, T. H., clerk, Post Office, Singapore
Nonweiler, T. F.. manager, Foreign dept,, Tokyo Kaijo Hoken Kwaisha, Tokyo
Noon, H. W., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Nops, W. E., assistant engineer, Electricity Departmant, Shanghai
Norcock, H. L., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai and Hankow
Norden, A., assistant, Langcluetje & Co., Vladivostock
Nordman, A., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Tientsin
Nordmann, K. W., assistant, Bangkok Manufacturing Co., Bangkok
Norman, C. P., assistant, Windsor & Co., Bangkok
Norman, H., district officer, Kuala Langat, Selangor
Norman, H. C., merchant and manager, Scheuer & Co., Kobe
Norman, R. N. B., manager, Adelphi Hotel, Singapore
Normann, W. von, manager, Olof Wijk & Co., Shanghai Noronha, A., assistant, Noronha & Co., Macao
Noronha, A. J., clerk, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Noronha, E. J., assistant, Noronha & Co., Hongkong Noronha, G., escripturario, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau Noronha, H. D., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton Noronha, J. M., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong Noronha, L., printer, Hongkong
Noronha, V. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Norrie, T. B., accountant, International Banking Corporation, Manila Norris, C. V., deputy registrar of births and deaths, Singapore
Norris-Newman, C. L., It. col., editor in chief, "Critic," Tientsin
Norris, W. W., bailiff, Supreme Court, Singapore
North, H. S., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
North, W., sub-accountant, International Bank, Hongkong
Northcombe, F. D., assistant, marine superintendent, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Northcote, M. S., assistant, Hongkong Land Investment Co., Hongkong
Nova, P. E., pilot, Shanghai
Noval, F. R., procurator, Dominican Procuration, Hongkong
Novik, F. C. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Nugent, A., G., sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Shangliai
Nully R. de, assistant, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Nunes, A. A., clerk, F. W. Horne, Yokohama
Nunes, E. A. F., clerk, Forest Department, Selangor
Nunes, E, J., escrivan, Administração do Conselho, Macau
Nunes, H., sanitary-inspector, Singapore
Nunes, Ie. J. C., director, Asylo dos Orphaos, Macao Nunes, J. C. S., clerk, Banque de L'Indo Chine, Singapore Nunes, J. S. S., clerk, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Nunn, B., fourth magistrate, District of Police Courts, Singapore Nunn, William, adviser and dep. dir, general, Customs, Bangkok Nussbannu, M., chef de la police, Conseil municipal, Hankow Nutt, W. F., manager, Straits Trading Co., Ld., Selangor Nuttal, B. W., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila Nuttall, G. K., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Nuttall, W., clerk, registration branch, Post Office, Hongkong
1089
1690
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Nutter, H., manager, Browne & Co., Moji
Nwew, C. H., estate manager, Malacca Rubber Plantation, Ld., Singapore
Nye, D. B., dental surgeon, Tientsin
Nye, P. H.. assistant manager, William C. Jack & Co., Hongkong
Nystrom, E. T., professor of science, civil eng'ing, Shansi Gov't University, Peking Oakden, J. G., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Oakley, H. E., superintendent civil engineer, Admiralty Works, Hongkong
Oates, Fred., contractor, Maynard & Outes, Pahang
Oates, W. I., general-manager, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang Oberlein, C. F., merchant, M. Raspe & Co., Tokyo
Oberlin, Joseph, city editor, "Manila Times," Manila
Obermuller, W., assistant, Brinkmann & Co., Singapore
Objois, mécanicien du Sec. Central, Mers de Chine, Saigon
Obrembski, Dr. M., chemist, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong O'Brien-Butter, P. E., consul-general, British Empire, Yunanfu O'Brien, C. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuhu O'Brien, M. H., marshall, U. S. Court for China, Shanghai O'Brien, Thos. J., American ambassador, Tokyo
Ochs, A., merchant, Rigold, Bergmann & Co., Singapore
Ockenden, E. C., Sailors' and Soldiers' Institute, Weihaiwei
Ockermueller, H., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Shanghai
O'Connell, J. L., merchant, W. G. Hale & Co., vice-consul for Great Britain, Saigon O'Connell, L. A., assistant, W. G. Hale & Co., Saigon
O'Connell, M. A. C., assistant, W. G. Hale & Co., Saigon
Odell, J. W., manager, Westphal, King and Ramsay, Foochow
Oechsle, A., assistant, Goldenberg & Zeithin, Penang
Oehlers, C. C., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Oehmichen, E., assistant, German Consulate, Singapore
Oelkers, Henry, assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai
Oelrichs, A., chief officer, steamer "Devawongse," China coast
Oelsner, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Oertel, W. assistant, C. B. Thomas, architect, Canton
Oestmann, W., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kobe
O'Farrell, G., clerk, Bazar Filipino, Manila
Offer, J. A., asst. architect, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Offermann, P., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Peking
Ogilby, R. C. G., inspector of works, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton Ogrlen, W. A., 21, Nanking Road, Shanghai
Ogins, T., proprietor, Amoy Telephone Co., Amoy
Ogilvie, A., assistant, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Ogilvie, C., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Cebu
Ogilvie, Jas, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Ogliastro, A., consul, for Italy, Saigon
O'Halloran, D. J., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong O'Hara, E., chief-assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Bangkok O'Hara, W., assistant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
O'Hare, E., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Wuchow
Oldis, F. A., printers' furnisher, Yokohama
Oldven, H., captain, steamer "Pongtong," China coast
Olesen, Robert., asst. surgeon, Quarantine Service, Manila
Ohme, A., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong
Ohlmer, E., commissioner, Chinese Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Ohly, R. N., merchant, Tait & Co., and consular agent, for Netherlands, Tainanfu Ohrt, Dr., secretaire interpreter, German Legation, Tokyo
Oiesen, J. F., commissioner, Maritime Customs, Canton
Okeeffe, A. J., lightkeeper Marine departmeut, Penang
Oldenburg, E., broker, Kobe
Oldenburg, H., manager, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Canton
Oldham, J. E., assistant, Little & Co., Singapore
Oldoerp, K., general manager, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai
Olin, O., master, tug "Alexandra," Shanghai Tug and Lighter Co., Shanghai Olissoff, W. I., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Olive, Ó. E. M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Olive, H. E., assistant, Robinson & Co., Singapore
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1691
Olive, Pr. L., professor, Salesianos, Macao
Oliveira, A. F. M. d', clerk, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Shanghai Oliveira, A. M. d', clerk, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai and Hankow
Oliveira, A. M., clerk, M. W. Greig & Co., Foochow
Oliveira, A. S., d', clerk, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Oliveira, E. M., clerk, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai
Oliveira, H., engineer, Shanghai Machine Co., Shanghai
Oliveira, J., assistant, Robinson Piano Co., Singapore
Oliveira, J. M., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Oliveira, J. M., clerk, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
Oliveira, O. M. S., clerk, Green Island Cement Company, Hokün Works, Hongkong Oliveira, S. M., clerk, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai
Oliveira, T. G., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Oliveira, W. Martins, district postal officer, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Swatow
Oliveiro, C. F., clerk, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Oliveiro, E. C., clerk, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Oliveiro, V. R., clerk, Caldbeck, MacGregor & Co., Singapore
Oliver, C. H., chief secretary, Maritime Customs, Peking
Oliver, Douglas A., sub-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Oliver, E. C., clerk to secretary, H. M. S. "Tamar," Hongkong
Oliver, H., employé, S. D. Lessner, Nagasaki
Olivier, J., accountant, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Singapore
Ollerdessn, J., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Shanghai Olmsted, F. H., merchant, Olmsted & Co., Kobe
Olsen, Captain C., marine and general surveyor, Yokohama Olsen, F., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Shangliai
Olsen, F. E., clerk, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai Olsen, H. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs Kewkiang
Olsen, H. N., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Ld., Shanghai Olsen, O., sanitary-inspector, Singapore
Olsen, R. A., assistant examiner, L.M. Customs, Ichang
Olsen, T., dredger master, Public Works department, Hongkong
Olsen, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Olson, C. W., assistant, Aagaard, Thoresen & Co., Hongkong
Olson, C. W., secretary and treasurer, Province of Mountain, Philippines
Olson, J., assistant, C. E. Warren & Co., Hongkong
Olsoon, G. N., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
O'Malley, Irwin J., medical officer, Railways, Tientsin
O'Malley, M. H., principal, Meisic Intermediate School, Manila
O'Neill, G., surgeon, Chamber of Mines, Labour Importation Agency, Tientsin
O'Neill, M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Whampoa
O'Neil, M., inspector, Police department, Penang
O'Neill, W., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Onesime, brother, St. Louis College, Tientsin
Onillon, J. M., assistant, Procure des Missions Etrangères, Hongkong
Oppe, H. S., solicitor, Drummond, White-Cooper & Phillips, Shanghai Orchardson, T. H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Ord, R. A., proprietor and manager, Hongkew Engine Works, Shanghai O'Regan, J., wardmaster, Government Civil Hospital, Hongkong O'Reilly, Geo. A., superintendent of Manila City Schools, Manila
O'Reilly, P. S., div. supt. of Schools, Ilocos Norte, Philippines
Orelli, C. C., councillor, French Legation, Bangkok
Orlif, A., assistant, Moll Kunzli & Co., Manila
Orme, G. N., asst. land officer, Southen District, New Territory, Hongkong Orme, W. B., district surgeon, Taiping, Perak
Ormiston, Evan, manager, Mercantile Bank of India, Hongkong
Ormiston, James, assistant, Macdonald & Co., Hongkong
Orner, J., merchant, Moine-Comte & Co., Singapore
Orth, A., assistant, E. Lee, Tientsin
Ortlepp, F., assistant, Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co., Hongkong
Ortolani, district inspector, Chinese Post Office, Ichang
Ortolani, W., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Chungking Orville, E. U., sanitary inspector, Penang
Usborne, F. D., merchant, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
1692
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Osborne, E., secretary, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Hongkong Osborne, J., clerk, Registration Branch, Post Office, Hongkong
Osborne, J., engine driver, Peak Tramways Co., Hongkong
Osborne, J. J., clerk, Money Order Office, Hongkong
Osborne, J. M. H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Peking
Osborne, Jas. H., secretary, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai
O'Shea, D. J., assistant, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
O'Shea, Henry D., editor and proprietor, "China Gazette," Shanghai
O'Shea, John, editor, "Shanghai Times," Shanghai
Osier, G., Poullet, manager, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Canton
Osland-Hill, G. E., acting asst. ch. acct., Inspectorate of Chinese Posts, Tientsin
Osmidoff, B., assistant, Waldecker & Peoppel, Vladivostock Osmidoff, W., assistant, Waldecker & Peopple, Vladivostock
Osmund, A. F., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Osmund, C., commission agent, Hongkong
Osmund, E. E., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong Osmund, G. V., clerk, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Hongkong Osinund, J. D., clerk, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Ossenbeck, H. J., assistant, Universal Supply Co., Shanghai Ossipoff, N., Chinese secretary, Chinese Eastern Railway, Peking Ossorio, M., consul, for Portugal, Manila
Ostapenks, W. T., secretary, Russian Municipal Council, Hankow Oster Franz, Shipbuilding, Engineering and Iron Works, Kiaochau Ostroverkhow, A. N., consul general for Russia, Hankow Ostwald, Martin, editor, "Deutsche Japan Post," Yokoliama
Oswald, G. R., assistant-manager, Cowie Harbour Coal Co., B. N. Borneo
Oswald, J. C., manager, Fairhurst & Co., and consul for Netherlands, Foochow Otte, J. A., in charge Hope Hospital, Amoy
Otte, R., assistant, Melchers & Co., Tientsin
Otten, G., assistant, Java-China-Japan Lijn, Hongkong
Otten, J. B., assistant, Chartered Bank, Bangkok
Otto, A., assistant, A. Schomburg & Co., Pakhoi
Otto, Albert, vice consul for Norway, and assistant, A. Schomburg & Co., Hoihow Otto, K. N., chief engineer, Japan Cold Storage and Ice Co., Yokohama Otto, W., assistant, Bumann and Berblinger, Hongkong
Ottoson, Jno. Wm., assistant, John F. Duff, Kobe
Ouchterlony, H., assistant, J. A. Kjellberg & Sons, Yokohama
Ouchterlony, H., assistant, J. A. Kjellberg & Sons, Ld., Yokohama Oudendijk, W. J., chargé d'affaires, Dutch Legation, Peking Oudot, A, administrateur, "L'Opinion," Saigon
Ough, A. H., civil engineer, Leigh & Orange, Hongkong Ouspensky, C. student-interpreter, Russian Legation, Peking Outerbridge, Arthur, captain, steamer "Tean," Hongkong-Manila Oveyrin, M. S., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow Ovsiankin, A. W., manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Vladivostock Owen, A. R., agent, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Shanghai Owen, C. C., assistant, Eastern and Oriental Hotel, Penang Owen, D. A. resident of Sarawak proper, Sarawak
Owen, E. B., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Owen, G. E., manager, Grand Carlton Hotel, Hongkong
Owen, G. P., superintendent, Suppression of Rabies dept., Singapore
Owen, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Owen, J. C., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Owen, J. F., chief assistant district officer, Batu Gajah, Perak
Owen, O. E., proprietor, Kowloon Hotel, Hongkong
Owen, M. B., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Owen, S. R., clerk, Waterworks Co., Shanghai
Owston, A., merchant and naturalist, Yokohama
Owston, F., manager, F. Owston & Co., Yokohama
Oxley G., inspector of Police, Singapore
Ozanon, résident de Soairieng, Cambodge
Ozorio, C. E. L., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Ozorio, C. F., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai
Ozorio, E. M., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Ozorio, F. A., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai Ozorio, F. C., clerk, International Bank, Shanghai Ozorio, F. X., clerk, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai Ozorio, F. X. Graça, clerk, Chater, & Mody, Hongkong Ozorio, J. A., clerk, Lauts & Haesloop, Swatow
Ozorio, J. de Graça, clerk, Percy Smith & Seth, Hongkong Ozorio, L., thezoureiro da camara Municipal, Macao
Ozorio, L. A., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Uzorio, L. A. M., clerk, China & Japan Trading Co., Shanghai Ozorio, L. E., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong Ozorio, T., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Paap, Christ, assistant, Joh. H. Langelutje & Co., Vladivostock Pablo, I., assistant, La Insular Cigar & Cigarette Factory, Manila Pablo, M., employé, La Insular Cigar & Cigarette Factory, Manila Pacheco, Ramon, G., Minister for Mexico, Tokyo
Pacheco, A. A., escripturario, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
Pacia, V., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Manila
Pack, William F., governor, Province of Mountain, Philippines
Pack, W. F., governor, Benguet Bagnio, Capital, Manila
1693
Packham, R., cargo superintendent, H'kong. & K'loon, Wharf & Godown Co., Ld., H'kong Padday, A. C., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Paddock, Gordon, vice-consul in charge, U. S. Consulate, Harbin
Padoux, G., legislative adviser, Ministry of Justice, Bangkok
Paez, B., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila
Page, C. F., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Page, Edney, managing director, Brewer & Co., Shanghai
Page, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiukiang
Page, G. B., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Page, H. C., deputy treasurer, Province of Benguet, Philippines
Page, H. W., employé, Dairy Farm Co., Hongkong
Page, Reginald, depôt manager, British-American Tobacco Co., Bangkok
Page, Robert H., barbour master, U. S. Customs, Cebu
Pages. J., director, General College of the Missions Etrangères, Penang
Paget, C. S., architect, Purnell & Paget, Canton
Paget, gendermerie et police, Hadong, Tonkin
Pagler, H. A., clerk, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Pahl, A., assistant, Carl Rohde & Co., Kobe
Paillard, M., acting consul general for France, Seoul, Corea Pain, meubles ebénisserier, Tourane, Annam
Paine, Albert E., manager, S. Moutrie & Co., Hongkong Pakenham, G. C., assistant, H. Lucas & Co., Kobe
Pakhaloff, C. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Pang, C., public-vaccinator, Medical Department, Singapore Palen, L. S., acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Antung Palencia, V., Roman Catholic Missionary, Hankow Palha, Dr., A. F. M., Quadro de Saude, Macau
Palm, A. W. T., assistant, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Palmaroli, V., Spanish consul, Yokohana
Palmer, C., assistant, Liddell Bros. & Co., Hankow
Palmer, C. H., tidesurveyor and harbourmaster, Maritime Customs, Pagoda, Foochow Palmer, E. R., secretary, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Palmer, H., head overseer, H'kong. Cotton Spinning, Weaving & Dyeing Co., Ld., H'kong
Palmer, H. B., assistant, Straits Industrial Syndicate, Singapore
Palmer, H. F., assistant, Pacific Mail S. S. Co., Kobe
Palmer, H. O., sub-editor, "Japan Mail," Yokohama
Palmer, Irving M., sub-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station
Palmer, J. B. K., clerk, Supreme Court, Singapore
Palmer, W., locomotive and shop foreman, Peking Syndicate, Tientsin Palomino, S., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Paludan-Muller, O., supt., engineer, East Asiatic Co., Bangkok Palwer. A. W., deputy-conservator, Forest Department, Bangkok Pamo, A. A., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society. Singapore Pando, R., inspector, La Insular Cigar & Cigarette Factory, Manila Pannenborg, É. H. M., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
1694
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Panny, J. A., assistant, Deutscher-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai Panoff, J. K., assistant, Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow Pantring, W., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatiche Bank, Peking Paoli, lieutenant, French Legation, Peking
Papasian, P. M., merchant, Yokohama
Pape, chief officer, S. S. "Lyeemoon," Coast service Pape, C., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hangchow Pape, F., secretary, German Post Office, Shanghai Pape, W., merchant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin Papon, président, Cour d'Appel, Saigon
Pappadopoulos, M., inspector, M. Pappadopoulos & Co., Shanghai
Pappier, Gust. E., assistant, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Shanghai
Paquet, N. A., engineer-in-chief, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tongshan, N. China Paramore, Kobt., captain, "Taishun," China coast
Pardoc, Ed. P. H., lieut. R. M., H. M. S. "Tamar," Hongkong
Pardoe, A. G., Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Parera, chef de cabinet, Résidence Superieure de l'Annam, Hué
Parge, F., assistant, E. Lee, Tientsin
Parham, N., managing-director, A. Cameron & Co., Kobe
Parham, Nowlson, managing director, A. Cameron and Co., Yokohama and Kobe Paris, P., bishop of Kiang-nan, Roman Catholic Misssion, Shanghai
Park, G. W., health officer, Penang
Park, H.. assistant, Siam Forest Co., Ld., Bangkok
Park, James, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Parker, G., assistant manager, Caledonia Sugar Estates, Penang
Parker, J. H. P., consulting-engineer, Parker, Robb & Co., Shanghai
Parker, R. F., assistant, Curtis Brothers, Chefoo
Parker, R. H., managing director, the Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Parker, W. L., tilesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Parker, W. R., chief engineer, Naval Establishment, Weihaiwei
Parkes, P. R., assistant, British Cigarette & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Parkhill, A. S. T., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hankow
Parkin, J. C., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton
Parkin, W. R., assistant, "North China Daily News & Herald," Shanghai Parkinson, T., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Tientsin
Parkson, O., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Foochow
Par art, chief engineer, S. S. "Hoangho," Coast service
Parr, C. W. C., district officer, Klang, Selangor
Parr, E. N. D., assistant, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Yokohama
Parr, G. C., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore
Parrett, S. G, manager, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Penang
Parrott, A. E. H., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Parrott, A. George, medical practitioner, Shanghai
Parrott, F., agent, British & Foreign Bible Society, Kobe
Parry, C. A., editor, "Japan Daily Herald," Yokohama
Parry, R. A., secretary, Sun Life Insurance Co. of Canada, Canton Parshin, S. 1., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Parsons, A. E., clerk in charge, Municipal Gas. dept., Singapore Parsons, E. E., manager, New Zealand Insurance Company, Shanghai Parsons, G. P., works foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Ipoh, Perak Parsons, L., accountant, Straits Trading Co., Ld., Selangor Partett, Harold G., vice consul for Great Britain, Hakodate Parthasarathy, M. R., in-charge, St Mary's Dispensary, Singapore Pasche, H., assistant miller, China Flour Mill Co., Shanghai Paschen, P., assistant, Arnhold Karberg & Co., Hankow
Pascual, T., Roman Catholic missionary, Ban Kine-Cheng, China Paske-Smith, M., acting vice-consul for Great Britain, Manila Pasqualucci, Adolfo, capitano commissario, R. N. "Calabria," China Passmore, G., principal warder, Victoria Gaol, Hongkong
Passmore, N. K., section engineer, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Passmore, W. C., captain, steamer "Haiching," China coast
Passos, J. M., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Pasturand, L., caissier, Banque de l'Ind Chine, Haiphong
Patchitt, W., manager, Borneo Company, Singapore
4
L
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Pate, P. W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama Patel, J. B., storekeeper, J. Byramjee & Co., Hongkong Paterson, G., assistant, Borneo Co., Ld., Sarawak
Paterson, Graham, director, Paterson, Simons & Co., Penang Paterson, H., manager, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Ipoh, Perak Paterson, J., bill broker, Layton & Co., Hongkong
Paterson, J. B., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Paterson, R., assistant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Shanghai
Paterson, S. L., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiukiang
Paterson, W., assistant, Luzon Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Patey, E. O., reporter, "China Critic," Tientsin
Paton, A. works manager, Tientsin Iron Works, Tientsin
Paton, Geo., chief engineer, The Tientsin Gas & Electric Light Co., Tientsin Paton, W., pilot, Shanghai
Patrick, F. A. Page, assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Canton
Patrick, H. C., medical practitioner, Shanghai
Patry, R., administrateur resident, Thua Thien, Annam
1695
Patstone, L. F., supt. St. Construction & Bridges, Engring. & Public Works Dept, Manila Pattenson, L. M., assistant, Borneo Company, Singapore
Patterden, W. L., assistant, Gilman & Co., Hongkong
Patterson, A., consulting engineer, Yokohama
Patterson, A. R., assistant, Arnhold Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Pattison, Geo. B., manager, A. A. Vantine & Co., Kobe
Pattison, H. H., captain military attaché, United States Embassy, Tokyo
Pattison, W., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Shanghai & Hongkong
Patty, J. C., assistant, Macleod & Co., Manila & Cebu
Paturel, C., exporter, Shanghai
Paul, archimandrite, Russion Orthodox Mission, Seoul
Paul, H. T., merchant, Paul & Co., Kobe
Paul, K., assistant, Vehling & Co., Yokohama
Paul, S., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Hongkong
Paul, W., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Yokohamia
Paul, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Paula, E. F. de., lingua, Repartiçao do Expediente Sinico, Macau Paula, F. de., capitão, Commandants Fortaleza da Taipa, Macau Faulier, résident de Kompong-chuang, Cambodge
Paulillo, Alberto, tenente commissario, Legazione Italiana, Peking Paulsen, H., assistant, Blackhead & Co., Hongkong Paulsen, J., assistant, E. Gipperich & Co., Tientsin
Paulsen, W. C., engineer, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai Pavloff, S. A., attorney, Russo-Chinese Bank, Vladivostock Pawelke, F., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
ני
Pawle, R., manager, Mines Borneo Co., Sarawak
Pawloff, S. J., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Pawsey, A. E., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Paxon, H. C., civil engineer, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Payne, E., assistant, Collins & Co., Shanghai
Payne, F. G., station superintendent, Electricity department, Shanghai Payne, G., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Payne, G., marine superintendent., Indo-China S. N. Co., Shanghai
Payne, H., assistant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
Payne, J., storehouseman, H. M. Naval Store department, Hongkong
Payne, L. F., superintendent engineer, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore Payne-Livock, K., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Payne, O. B., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Payne, Wm. W., president and manager, Export & Import Lumber Co., Manila Payralire, résident de France, Ha Nam, Tonkin
Paz, A. de., Spanish missionary, Shangliai
Peach, J. A., asst. examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Peach, N. W., employe, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Peacock, C., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Peacock, J., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Peacock, Jas, chief officer, C. N. steamer "Tean," Hongkong-Manila Peacock, W., acting protector of Chinese, Singapore
1696
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Peak, W., R., assistant-Chinese-Secretary, United States Legation, Peking Peake, T. M., assistant, Lanadron Rubber Estates, Ld., Juhore
Pearce, A. W. assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Pearce, E. C., merchant, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
Pearce, H., inspector, Police department, Penang
Pearce, H. C., commission agent, Pearce & Garriock, Hankow Pearce, T. E., John D. Hutchison & Co., Hongkong
Pears, B., assistant, Lanadron Rubber Estates, Ld., Johore Pears, E., manager, Lanadron Rubber Estates, Ld., Johore Pears, F., manager, Singapore and Johore Rubber Co., Johore Pearsall, A. A., assistant, Planters Stores & Agency Co., Selangor Pearse, W. W., asst. medical officer of health, Hongkong Pearson, A. C., secretary to the Government, British North Borneo Pearson, A. E., chartered accountant, Yokohama
Pearson, A. E., C.A., Pearson, Mackie & Dempster, Yokohama Pearson, C. D., assistant engineer, Waterworks Co., Shanghai Pearson, C. E., assistant, Vulcan Iron Works, Shanghai Pearson, C. K., cutter, John Little & Co., Ld., Selangor Pearson, E., storehouseman, H. M. Naval Store dept., Hongkong Pearson, F. A., clerk, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
Pearson, G. W., acting consul, British Consulate, Pakhoi (Hoihow) Pearson, H., sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong
Pearson, J. H., partner, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong and Singapore Pearson, J. H., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Pearson, T., sergeant of escort, British Embassy, Peking
Pearson, T. Y., importer, T. Y. Pearson & Co., Ningpo.
Peart, S. P.. medical officer, Batu Gajah, Perak
Pecarrire, A., assistant, Jules Berthet, Saigon
Peck, Alfred R. W., chaplain, H. B. M. S. Astraea," China Station Peck, A., acting harbour master, Perak
Peck, A. K., assistant officer, Kwala Pilah, Negri Sembilan
Peck, A. P., physician and surgeon, Tientsin
Peck, E. J., surveyer, Survey department, Selangor
Peck, F. F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Pect, J. W., assistant, Horse Repository, Hongkong Pedersen, C., employé, Peak Tramways Co., Hongkong Pedersen, S. G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Peebles, P., manager, Shanghai Land Investment, Co., Shanghai Peel, A. R., minister, British Legation, Bangkok
Peel, C. A., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Peel, L., assistant, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Peel, W., district officer, Negri Sembilan
Pegge, W. O., examiner, Native Customs, Tientsin
Peickert, J. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock.
Peill, S., M.B., CH.B., Peking University, Peking Peirce, R., engineer, Municipality, Singapore Pelaz, G.. Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Pelissien, C., assistant, Charriere Co., Hokow
Pellet, C., directeur, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Annam
Pellet, maitre-mineur, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong
Pelling, W. W., clerk, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong
Pellmann, D, secretary, German Consulate, Singapore
Pelly, John N., sub-lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station.
Pelmear, N. G., mine agent, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang
Pelofi, F., medical officer, Maritime Customs, and Consular agent for France, Lungchow Pels, N. J., Singkep Tin Mines, Singapore
Peltner, F., assistant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
Pelu, A. C., French missionary, Nagasaki
Pemberton, C., secretary, China Fire Insurance Company, Hongkong
Pemberton, W. D., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Bautista, Manila
Penbycross, F. H., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Pender, J. C. sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India Aus. & China, Yokohama Pendlebury, J. C., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong Penfold, F. George, assistant, Abenheim Bros., Kobe
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Penfold, J. H., draughtsman, H. M. Naval, Establishment, Hongkong Penfold, M. H., commander, H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong Pénicond, Rev. Pére, Roman Catholic missionary, Hoihow Penlington, J. N., editor, Advertiser Publishing Co., Yokohama Pennefather, Geo., captain, "Taming," Hongkong-Manila Penney, Geo. J., auctioneer, K be
Penney, W. H., protector of Chinese, British North Borneo Pennors, comptable, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong Penny, F. George, broker, Fraser & Co., Singapore
Pennycuick, J. M. assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Penang Penrose, Major George H., chief quartermaster, Mindanao, Manila. Péplace, lieutenant, Infanterie Coloniale, Saigon
Peploe, N. R., sub-lieut., torpedo-boat destroyer "Janus," Hongkong Pepper, S., assistant, East Point Sugar Refinery, Hongkong Pepper, W., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Yokohama Péralle, inspecteur des ecoles, Instruction Publique, Saigon
Peralta, A. V., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Peralta, S. M., manager, Malacca Rubber Plantation Ltd., Singapore Peralta, F. A., clerk, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Percebois, D., first assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Peregrini A., manager, Schweiger & Co., Hankow
Pereira, A., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Pereira, A. J. G., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Yokohama
Pereira, A. M. Roza, freight and general broker, Hongkong
Pereira, A. M. F., clerk, H. M. H. Nemazee, Hongkong
Pereira, B. M., second clerk, Marine Office, Negri Sembilan
Pereira, B. P., inspector, Police department, Penang
Pereira, C. J M., clerk, Caldbeck, MacGregor & Co., Hongkong
Pereira, C. M. S., clerk, Weeks & Co., Singapore
Pereira, D. B., apothecary, Ipoh, Perak
Pereira, E., clerk, Grossmann & Co., Hongkong
Pereira, E. F., clerk, Compagnie Commerciale d'Extreme Orient, Shanghai
Pereira, E. G., chief clerk, Public Works department, Selangor
Pereira, E. J., clerk, American Trading Co., Shanghai
Pereira, F. A., clerk, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Pereira, F. C., clerk, Stamp Office, Singapore
Pereira, F. M., Roza, clerk, Toyo Kisen Kaisha, Hongkong
Pereira, F. X., bacharel em direito, Macao
Pereira, H. A., manager and editor, "Shen-pao," Shanghai Pereira, H. M., clerk, Ballard & Hunter, Shanghai
Pereira, P., clerk, Deacon & Co., Canton
Pereira, J., assistant, W. Shewan & Co., Hongkong
Pereira, J., clerk, Sun Insurance Office, Shanghai
Pereira, J., professor, Seminario de S. José, Macau
Pereira, J. A., chief clerk, Government Printing Office, Singapore
Pereira, J. B., clerk, Police Department, Singapore
Pereira, J. F., clerk, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Pereira, J. G., clerk, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Shanghai
Pereira, J. J., asst. superintendent, Government Printing Office, Singapore
Pereira, J. M. G., clerk, Jardine. Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Pereira, J. M., commission agent, Macau
Pereira, J. V., director, Direcçao da Impreusa Nacional de Macau, Macan
Pereira, L. J., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama.
Pereira, M., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Pereira, P. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Pereira, R. D., head overseer, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Pereira, R. J., clerk, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Pereira, J. M. Roza, clerk, International Banking Corporation, Hongkong Pereira, T. M., clerk, International Bank, Hongkong
Pereira, T. M., writer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Pereira, T. S., clerk, Brewer & Co., Shanghai
Pereira, W. A., clerk, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore Perez, F., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama Perez, L. bishop, vicaire apostolic of Northern Hunan
1697
1698
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Pérez, Luis, importer, Pérez Samanillo Hermanos, Manila Pérez, R., importer, Pérez Samanillo Hermanos, Manila. Perier, recedeur de l'enregistrement, Tourane, Annam Perier, G., postal officer, Chinese Post office, Canton Perindorge, Dr. G. de, dental surgeon, Shanghai
Perkins, Alfred H. S. Steale, asst. paym., H. B. M. S. "Astraea," China Station Perkins, C. J., surveyor, Survey department, Selangor
Perkins, D. J., solicitor, Drew & Napier, Singapore
Perkins, Frederick, major, adjutant general, Mindanao, Manila.
Perkins, M. F., student interpreter, United States Legation, Peking
Perkins, S. R., first boarding officer, Marine dept., Penang
Perkins, T. L., executive engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong Perkunder, F., clerk, German Consulate, Hongkong
Perl, G, B., dental surgeon, Kobe
Pernifzsch, Dr. interpreter, German Consulate, Shanghai
Pernot, chef de bataillon, French Legation Peking
Pernot, L., assistant, Olivier & Co., Shanghai
Pernott, A. J., acting manager, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Bangkok
Péron, directeur, Collége Chasseloup-Loubat, Saigon
Péron, lieutenant, Infanterie Coloniale, Saigon
Perpetuo, C., clerk, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Perpetuo, J. clerk, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai
Perpetuo, T. M., marine officer, Post Office, Hongkong
Perreau, A., assistant, H. L. Coghlan & Co., Singapore
Perreau, Jules, directeur, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon (absent) Perret, administrateur adjoint, Hangyen, Tonkin
Perrett, H., assistant, Police department. Penang
Perrichon, L., vicar, St. Francis Church, Penang
Perricone, Ngo, lieutenant, R. Nave "Calabria," China
Perrie, R., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Perrin, A., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Saigon Perrin, L'abbé H., missionary, Sainte Famille, Kobe
Perrot, médecin, Hôpital Colonial et Militaire, Saigon
Perrott, A. H., lieutenant, Military Staff, Singapore
Perrott, T., major general, commanding troops, Straits Settlements, Singapore Perry-Ayscough, H. G. C., actg. asst. sec., Insp. of Chinese Imp. Posts, postmaster, Tientsiä Perry, F., headmaster, Cathedral School, Shanghai
Perry, J., station-master, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Perry, L. E., chief clerk, Municipal Board, Manila
Perry, S. S. assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Perry, W. A., electrical engineer, Shanghai Electric & Asbestos Co., Shanghai
Pershing, John J., general governor, Provmce Moro, Philippines
Perthuisot, docteur, Résident de France, Phuyen, Annam
Perwerseff, M. M., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Pessanha, C. A professor, Cadeiras Annexas ao Lyceu, Macau
Pestara, F. A. C., assistant, Robinson Piano Co., Singapore Pestonjee, J., clerk, Treasury, Hongkong
Pestouji, R., clerk, International Bank, Hongkong
Petchenkin, M. P., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Peter, A. A., clerk, Public Works department, Selangor
Peter, D. A., missionary, Penang
Peter, W. G., accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, & China, Singapore Peterhansel, G., assistant, Wilck & Mielenhausen, Shanghai
Peters, E. C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson Co., Ld., Tientsin
Peters, H., assistant, C. E. Boeddinghaus, Nagasaki
Peters, H. K., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai Peters, V. V., financial clerk, Immigration department, Penang Petersen, J., assistant, Sietas Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau Petersen, K, assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Chefoo
Petersen, L. H., assistant, Nickel & Co., Kobe
Petersen, P. C., assistant-examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow Petersen, P., district inspector, Chinese Post Office, Peking Petersen, R., captain, steamer "Samsen," China coast
Petersen, W., assistant, Mount Austin Rubber States, Ld., Singapore
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Peterson, F., clerk, District Court, Penang
Peterson, F., engineer, Marine Department, Penang
Peterson, H. A., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Peterson, H. H., clerk, Municipality, Penang
Peterson, James J., attorney-at-law, Manila
Peterson, R., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Tokyo Peterson, V., clerk, Municipality, Penang Petigura, P. J., merchant, Foochow
Petillot, chef de Cabinet, Cambodge
Petithuguenin, P., premier interprète, vice consul de France, Bangkok Petley, H. W., electrical engineer, Hongkong Electric Co., Hongkong Pétrement, A., vice consul for Belgium, Tientsin
Petri, J., section-engineer, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Petrie, B., manager, Toli Ayer Estate, Perak
Petrie, T., acting assistant editor, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong Petroff, N. J., assistant, The Trading Co., Hankow
Petroff, N. K., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Petroff, S. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Pett, Montague W., superintendent, Fire Brigade, Singapore Pettersen, F. O, inspector, River Police, Shanghai Petterson, A. E., clerk, Weiller Zeman, Singapore Pettersson, W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuhu Pettick, H. G., assistant, Foochow Trading Co., Foochow Pettick, P., manager, Foochow Trading Co., Foochow
Pettick, S, A., assistant, Foochow Trading Company, Foochow Pettick, T. H., assistant, Foochow Trading Co., Foochow Pettick, W. C., assistant, Foochow Trading Co., Foochow Pettier, l'Abbé Alfred, K. C. missionary, Yokohama Petts, H. T., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Petzold, B., editor, "Tageblatt fur Nord-China," Tientsin
Peugrim, A., manager, Schweiger & Co., Hankow
Peuster, P. O., acting manager, Peak Hotel, Hongkong
Petur, E., secrétaire general, Société Française des Distilleries, Hanoi Peux, A., assistant, W. G. Hale & Co., Saigon
Pezzini, G. M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Pezzini, P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Pfaff, F. W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Pfankuchen, A. E., acting asst. tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Canton
Pfann, E., councillor of the Chancery, Austro-Hungarian Embassy, Tokyo
Pfeifer, A.. assistant, Kloss & Co., Saigon
Pfeifer, O., assistant, Kloss & Co., Saigon
Pfeiffer, H., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Pfeng, W., assistant, Siemssen & Krohn, postmaster, German Post Office, Foochow Pfenninger, M., silk inspector, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Pfister, C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hankow
Pfister, R., assistant, Seiber & Co., Yokohama
Pfordten, V. assistant, London Asiatic Rubber & Produce Co., Malacca
Pfort, H., master, S. S. "Sabah," Sabah Steamship Co., B. N. Borneo
Pfund, R., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
1699
Phalen, James M., capt. med. corps president, Board for Study of Tropical Diseases, Manila Pharoah, R. S., chief warder, Convict Establishment, Perak
Phelips, H. R., local auditor, Audit Office, Hongkong
Phelps, J., assistant, Hirsbrunner & Co., Shanghai
Phelps, J. H., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Philbey, A. J., pilot, Ningpo
Philip, F. M., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Philipp, G., assistant, Ferd. Bornemann, Hankow Philipp, post direktor, Kiaochau
Philippi, G., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Philippo, R. C., assistant, Cecil Holliday & Co., Shanghai
Philips, C. M., principal, Raffles Institution, Singapore
Philipsen, Hans, assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Phillips, C. M., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore Phillips, G. A., assistant postmaster, Labuan
1700
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Phillips, G. H., merchant, John D. Hutchison & Co., Shanghai Phillips, H., assistant Chinese secretary, British Embassy, Peking Phillips, J., assistant, Chinese Engineering Co., Chinwangtao Phillips, P., deputy conservator of forests, Selangor
Phillips, P., traffic inspector, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Phillips, R. H., manager, Strathmashie Estate, Bagan Dato, Perak Phillips, R. P., accountant, Brown & Phillips, Penang
Phillips, R. P., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Phillips, T. Morgan, barrister-at-law, Drummond, White-Cooper & Phillips, Shanghai Philpott, O. J., assistant, Bain & Co., Anping
Phipps, J. H., chief clerk, Resident Councillor's Office, Penang
Phipps, Wm. C., accountant, Fraser & Neave, Singapore
Physick, F. S., assistant, Pritchard & Co, Penang
Piaget, A. C., administrateur, "L'Opinion," Saigon
Piatt, C. E., lighthouse engineer, division, Bureau of Navigation, Manila Picanon, M., directeur-general, Douanes et Regies de l'Indo-Chine Picard-Destelan, M. H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton Picca, A., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Hankow Pichon, A, L., assistant, I. M. Customs, Tengyueh Pickenpack, H., merchant, Herm-Jebsen & Co., Penang Pickenpack, Johs. merchant, Herm-Jebsen & Co., Penang Pickering, J., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Moukden
Picklack, A., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Charbin, Vladivostock Pickles, G. A., lieut. aud qr-master, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Pickwick, F. H., agent and general manager, Hotung Land Co., Tientsin Piel, général de division, commandant supérieur des Troupes, Saigon Pieleke, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Pieper, E., agent, Pieper & Kauffmann, Yokohama
Piequet, C., contrôleur et verificateur, Service des Contributions, Saigon Pierbox, A., sub-manager, Horse Repository, Singapore
Pierce, W. H., manager, The Century Stone Co., Shanghai
Piercy, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Piercy, Geo., head inaster, Diocesan School and Orphanage, Hongkong Piercy, J. E., surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong
Piercy, R. S., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Pieris, S. J., asst. surveyor, Royal Survey dept., Bangkok Pierrat, M., payeur adjoint, Recette Municipale, Saigon
Pierret, G., asst., Compagnie de Commerce et de Nav. d'Extreme-Orient, Saigon Pierrucci, brigadier chef, Police Central, Saigon
Pierrugues, A., clerk, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Kiaochau
Piers, W. K. C., grade surveyor, Revenue Survey branch, Negri Sembilan.
Piersdorff, N. S., consulting engineer and merchant, Chingkiang
Pietzcker, W., agent for Insurance Companies, Kobe
Piggott, Sir Francis T., chief justice, Supreme Court, Hongkong Piglowski, A., merchant, Hanoi
Pignatel, V., storekeeper, Pignatel & Co., Nagasaki
Pigott, F. J., deputy colonial surveyor-general, Penang
Pike, C. A., clerk, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
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Pike, Gerald T. F., commander, H. B. M. S. Monmouth," China Station Pike, H. B., accountant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Pike, O. B., asst. manager, Caledonia Sugar Estate, Penang
Pike, R. S., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Pilcher, E. M., major, Army Medical Corps, Tanglin, Singapore Pile, A. G., draughtsman, Admiralty Works, Hongkong Pilgrim, von, Captain, S. S. "Lyeemoon," Coast service Pilipenko, V., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Pilkington, C., manager, Cotton Spinning Co., Shanghai Pillay, A. V., chief-clerk, Immigration department, Penang
Pillay, C., master, Malacca High School, Malacca
Pillay, D. P., accountant, Singapore & Kranj Railway, Singapore
Pillay, M. S., clerk, Marine department, Penang
Pillay, S. S. clerk, Land Office Pampin, Negri Sembilan
Pilter, A. M. assistant, Gopeng Tin Mining Co., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Pin, Dr. E., médecin, Legation de France, Bangkok
!
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Pincione, T,, mechanical engineer, Haiho Conservancy Commission, Tientsin Pinfold, F., electrical engineer, Shanghai
Pinhorn, H. Q., lieut. colonel, district paymaster S. S., Singapore
Pinhorn, R. H., headmaster, Free School, Penang
Pinkerton, W. O., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Pinkney, R., superintendent, Posts and Telegraphs, Perak Pinna, J., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Pinna, S., clerk, Cruz Basto & Co., Hongkong
Pinnan, F. assistant, Otto, Kleemann & Co., Tientsin Pinckney, Herbert, broker, Stewart Brothers, Hongkong Pinelli, P., chancelier, French Consulate, Yokoliama
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Ping. T. A., assistant, Reid, Evans & Co., Hankow
Pinguet, E., manager, Auto Palace, Shanghai
Pinheiro, H. M. V., escripturario, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau Pinto, I. Z., clerk, Revenue Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan
Pinto, M., enfermeiro-mór, Companhia de Saude, Macao
Pintos, C. P., clerk, Holland-China Trading Co., Hongkong
Piontkowski, E. S. von, district engineer, construction, Railway Co., Manila Piper, C.. assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong and Canton
Piq, C., silk inspector, P. Dourille, Yokohama
Piquet, C., assistant, Thos. Cook & Son, Hongkong
Piry, T., postal secretary, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Piser, H., gaoler, Gaols, Perak
Pitcairn, W. G., chief officer, Revenue Cruiser "Likin" Customs, Kowloon Pitceathly, R. D., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Pithie, I., chief engineer, steamer "Kutsang," China coast
Pitt, E. H., assistant, Evatt & Co., Penang
Pitt, G. A., manager, Horse Repository, Ld., Selangor
Pitt, H. M., Chandler & Pitt. Manila
Pittendrigh, Jr., Wm., clerk, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong
Pitteri, H., assistant, Berigny & Co., Kobe
Pitz, R. R, British Borneo Exploration Co., Ld., British North Borneo Pitzipois, G. D., British Consul, Chingkiang
Pjankoff, I. P., merchant, Pjankoff & Brothers, Vladivostock
Place, F. L., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai
Placzek, A., rector, St. Joseph's Church, and military chaplain, Hongkong
Plage, P., China Sugar Refining Co., Ld., Hongkong
Plagne, L., commissaire, Commissariat de Police, Haiphong
Plaisant, A. L., Plaisant Frères, Seoul
Plaisant, P. A., Plaisant Freres, Seoul
Planchet, J. M., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Plantie, L., administrateur-adjoint, Ninh-Binh, Tonkin
Plarr, L., general agent for France, Vladivostock
Plaschke, B., Nord-Lloyd inspector, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Plat, Ld., magasenier, L. Flambeau & Cie., Haiphong
Plate, J., assistant, Nickel & Co., Kobe
Plater, L., superior, St. Francis Xavier's Church, Shanghai
Platt, Winfrid A. C., barrister-at-law, Stokes, Platt & Teesdale, Shanghai Plattring, N., merchant, David, Sommer & Co., Cebu
Platz, von, korvettenkapitan, Artillerie Depot, Kiaochan
Playfair, G. M. H., British consul, Foochow
Pledger, F. A., assistant, Boustead & Co., Penang
Plentin, secretaire general, Societé de Construction de Levallois, Saigon
Pleshakoff, assistant, Heitmenn & Aurnhammer, Iman, Vladivostock
Plowman, W. L., foreman boilermaker, Railways, Tongshan, N. China
Plumb, A. J., chief clerk, Tonnage Dept., Tangjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Plummer, J. A., assistant, Bradley & Co., Hongkong
Plummer, J. I, chief assistant, Observatory, Kowloon, Hongkong
Plummer, N. L., assistant, Nova Scotia, Sugar Estates, Perak
Plummer, W. P., assistant, Derrick & Co., Singapore
Flumner, G. S., accountant, British Borneo Exploration Co., B. N. Borneo
Plumpton, M. E, manager, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Plunkett, W., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Poate, F. W., assistant, Mackenzie & Co., Shanghai
1701
1702
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Poate, W. H., commission agent, Mackenzie & Co., Shanghai
Pubbets, J., chief officer, steamer "Rajaburi," China coast
Podgorni, A. P., assistant, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Podshivaloff, A. I., asst., Imp. Har. Timber Concession, Oriental Timber Corp., Vladivostoc Poel, H., marine superintendent, Auglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Ld., Singapore Poeppel, E., merchant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock
Pohl, A., assistant, Siber, Wolff & Co., Yokohama Pohl, R., merchant, C. Illies & Co., Yokohama Poignand, T., assistant, Schiller & Co., Shanghai Poignand, W., assistant, Schiller & Co., Shanghai
Point, E., vice-consul interprete, Consulat de France, Shanghai
Poirst, résident de Kompong-Spen, Cambodge
Poisat, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Poisuel, V., curate of the Roman Catholic Cathedral, Seoul
Poix, Dr. Á., médecin, Legation de France, Bangkok
Poizat, A., assistant, J. M. Poizat, Manila
Poizat, J. M., merchant, Manila
Pokoruny, E., assistant, L. Soyka, Shanghai
Polaud, W. B., vice president and chief engineer, Philippine Railway Co., Manila
Polder, Leon van de, councillor, Netherlands Legation, Tokyo
Poletti, A., Roman Catholic missionary, Toyeung, Sha-ü-chung
Poletti, P., postal officer, Inspectorate of Chinese Posts, Shanghai Polglase, J., secretary and assessor, Municipality, Singapore Poli, G. D., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton
Polking, T., assistant, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
Polkinghorn, S., chief engineer, steamer "Hangsang," China coast Pollak, R., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Shanghai
Pollard, Fred., assistant, Vivanti Brothers, Yokohama
Pollard, H. E., assistant engineer, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Polley, J. D., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Pollock, A. B., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of I., A. & China, Hongkong Pollock, A. R, assistant, Bradley & Co., Swatow
Pollock, H, E., K.o., barrister-at-law, Hongkong
Polstorff, K., secretary, German Consulate, Hongkong
Poltrock, W., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
Polyzoides, A., assistant manager, Siam Photo Supply Co., Bangkok
Pomade, commandant le détachement, Poste de Damai, Annam
Pombo, Carlos E, manager, Pombo & Caballere, Manila
Pomet, chef du secrétariat, Douanes et Régies, Saigon
Pomilinkoff, A., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Vladivostock
Pompei, secrétaire particulier, Résidence Supérieure de l'Annam, Hué Pond, Dr., medico provincial, Cebu
Pond, E. H., assistant, Brewer & Co., Hongkong
Pond, Edward, merchant, A. B. Moulder & Co., Hongkong Ponget, A. L., comptable, Courrier d'Haiphong, Haiphong
Pons, Cure' de Cathédrale, Chungking.
Pons, J., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Fonsignon, chef du 4e. Bureau de la Dm. Général de Finance, Hanoi Pontius, Albert W., consul for United States of America, Swatow Ponzi, P., French missionary, Peking
Poole, C. J., marine officer, Post Office, Hongkong
Poole, H. A., managing director, Mosle & Co., Tokyo
Poole, O. M., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama
Poonawalla, N. M. A., merchant, Kobe
Pope, A. W. U., traffic manager, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Pope, W., chargeman H.M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Popert, F., mcht., H. N. Ahrens & Co., and vice-consul for Brazil, Kobe and Yokohama
Popoff, W. W., teacher of Russian, Higher Commercial School, Nagasaki
Popoff, Z., chief of Russian Police, Hankow
Popowich, assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Iman, Vladivostock
Poppe, C., ingenieur, Kiaochau
Poppe, N. M., consul general for Russia, Harbin
Popper, H., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Porçet, conducteur, Service du Control du Chemin de Fer, Mengtsz
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1703
Porchel, L., merchant, Haiphong
Porcher, F. M., manager, Leigh Estate, Port Dickson, Negri Sembilan
Porroni, M., regenta, Casa de Beneficencia, Macau
Portaria, F. de, Customs and shipping assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Shanghai
Porteous, F. J., assistant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore
Porter, A. M. J., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Porter, B. E., assistant-paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Clio," China Station
Porter, C. W., assistant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Shanghai
Porter, H., vice-consul for Great Britain, Tientsin
Porter, H. W. inspector of Police, Perak
Porter, John B., major, judge advocate, Division Staff, Manila. Porter, J. C, bookkeeper, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai Porter, K., merchant, Kiaochau
Porter, T. H., clerk, J. A. Wattie & Co., Shanghai
Porter, V. R. N., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Clio," China Station
Posar, H., clerk, Gibb, Livingston, & Co., Shanghai
Postlethwaite, R. N., accountant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ld., Kobe Poths, H. M., assistant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore
Potten, J., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Hankow
Potter, F. W., assistant engineer, Shanghai Gas Company, Shanghai Pottinger, W. J., secretary, Tientsin Iron Works, Tientsin
Potts, A. C. Hutton, broker, Yokohama
Potts, E., engineer, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Potts, G. H., broker, Benjamin & Potts, Shanghai
Potts, P. C., broker, E. S. Kadoorie & Co., Hongkong
Potts, W. H., estate agent, Linstead & Davis, Hongkong Pouchard, F., ingénieur, Coal Mines, Chinnampo
Pouget, L., assistant vicar, Good Shepherd Cathedral, Singapore Pouget, R. C., receveur, French Post Office, Chefoo
Poulailler, G., employé, C. Tournier, Saigon
Poulin, administrateur, resident de France, Son-tay, Tonkin
Poulsen, J., clerk, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
Pountney, A. M., assistant, protector of Chinese, Singapore Pourquier, comptable, Bae Kan, Tonkin
Pouthion-Lavielle P. J. L., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Pakhoi Powell, A. B., chief of Real Estate, Manila
Powell, J. S., judge, Court of First Instance, Batangas, Philippines
Powell, S. J., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Power, J. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Power, J., boat officer, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Power, J. C., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Power, J. O., acting chief accountant, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Powers, L. M. L., teacher, Cebu, Division, of Cebu, Philippines.
Powles, J., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Powney, H. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Pozzoni, D., bishop of Tavía, and vicar apostolic, Roman Catholic Mission, Hongkong Prager, J., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Manila
Prahl, W. C. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Pramann, F., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Praschma, C., assistant, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Prat, Fr. P., vice procurator, Dominican Mission, Hongkong
Prat, M., Roman Catholic missionary, Lo-Chu-Cheng
Prata, P. F. C., clerk, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong
Pratt, E. assistant district officer, Lower Perak District, Perak
Pratt, F. L., assistant, "North China Daily News & Herald," Ld., Shanghai
Pratt, F. P., inspector, Norwich Union Insurance Company, Shanghai (absent) Pratt, H. G. W., assistant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama
Pratt, J. T., British vice-consul, Shanghai
Pratt, R. S., assistant, British Consulate and postmaster, Canton
Pratt, W., assistant, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
Pratt, W. G., sub-manager, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Hankow
Pratt, W., secretary, Laou Kung Mow Cotton Spinning and Weaving Co., Shanghai. Prautch, A. W., rentier, Calle Noria, Manila
Pray, Fred. S., assistant, S. L. Smith, Vladivostock
1704
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Predolin, E., Astor House Hotel, Chefoo
Preeston, R. S., cashier, Straits Trading Co., Ld., Selangor Prehl, R., secretary, German Consulate, Tsinanfu
Presby, S. Allen, assistant, Schmidt & Ziegler, Manila
Prescher H., merchant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Prescott, W., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Prestage, J. T., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Preston, W. B., district-officer, British North Borneo
Pretre, M. E., chef du secretariat du Conseil Municipal, Hanoi Prétre, T., cashier, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Singapore Prêtres, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Prettejohn, H. E., chief accountant, Maritime Customs, Peking Pretzsch, E. P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Prevel, comptable, Société Française des Distilleries, Hanoi Preville, R. de, assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Priadilow, J., secretary, Russian Consulate, Shanghai Price, F. M., editor, "Malay Mail," Selangor
Price, H., manager, Bombay-Burma Trading Corporation, Bangkok Price, H. E., assistant, L. Tollien & Co., Tientsin
Price, H. E., assistant, MacLeod & Co., Manila
Price, W. H., chemical department, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama Prideaux, B. T., asst. sanitary inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Prien, G., Cigar and Tobacco merchant, Hongkong
Priest, C., chief officer, C. N. steamer "Taiyuan," China coast
Priest, J., inspector, Waterworks Co., Shanghai
Primault, inspecteur chef Brigade, Backan, Tonkin
Prior, H., assistant, Police and Prison, Sarawak
Priscott, J. E., manager, Tawao branch, North Borneo Trading Co., B. N. Borneo Pritchard, W. L., resident-surgeon, Manchester North Borneo Rubber Co., B. N. Borneo Procter, G. C., F. W. Barker & Co., Singapore
Pruss, C., proprietor, Lenz & Co., Bangkok
Pruss, O., assistant, Lenz & Co., Bangkok
Prudhomme, assistant, Bonnefoy et Cie, Saigon
Pullen, W. G., clerk, Royal Army Medical Corps, Singapore
Pulun, C. accountant, Vacuum Oil Co., Hanków
Purvis, R., Police department, Penang'
Prince, Eric A., accountant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Pringle, A. E., inspector of schools, Penang
Pringle, Robert D., general secretary, The Young Men's Christian Association, S'pore. Pringle, Jr W., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Hongkong
Prins, K., assistant surveyor, Revenue Survey branch, Negri Sembilan
Prior, E., superintendent, Reformatory School, Singapore
Pritchard, G. H., merchant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Pritchard, H. F., salesman, Vacuum Oil Co., Manila
Pritchard, R. V. L., third magistrate, British North Borneo.
Proctor, Alex. secretary, Fraser & Neave, Singapore
Prochaska, U., engineer, Karel Jan Hora, Yokohama
Prohaska, A., secretary, Austro-Hungarian Consulate, Yokohama
Prohl, F., chief officer, steamer "Tsintau," China coast
Prokopjew, W., manager, Heitmann & Auruhammer, Iman, Vladivostock Prollius, A. von, minister, German Legation, Bangkok
Proton, J., assistant, Varenne & Co., Canton
Protzen, M., assistant, Froehlich & Kuttner, Manila
Pruche, A., agent, Messageries Maritimes Co., Haiphong
Prud'homme, H., ingenieur en chef, Chemins de fer, Peking Pruecklmair, J., engineer, Rizerie Union, Cholon
Pruess, W. assistant, H., Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Prufer, C., chief engineer, steamer "Phranang," China coast
Pryce, C., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Hongkong Pryor, J. C., surgeon, U. S. Naval Hospital, Yokohama
Pugh, E., assistant, Keiss & Co., Shanghai
Pugh, G. W., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Pugh, John W., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station Puhre, J. J., assistant, Russian Post Office, Tientsin
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Pujalte, M., partner, Pujalte y Compañia, Manila
Pumfrett, A. J., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Puras, N., Augustinian missionary, Shanghai
Purcell, W. H., bookkeeper, Kelly & Walsh, Hongkong
1705
Purdon, E., St. Clair, asst., Smith, Bell & Co., and vice-consul for Great Britain, Iloilo
Purnell, A. W., architect, Purnell & Paget, Canton
Purois, Frank Prior, engineer, Tokyo Imperial University, Tokyo
Purser, S. W., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Mukden
Purton, G., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Purves, D., engineer, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Pust, F., chief engineer, steamer" Meilee," Yangtsze river
Puthod, A., silk inspector, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
Putley, A. C., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Puvogel, J. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Pye, E. B., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Pye, Leigh F., assistant, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Kobe
Pykett, G. F., principal, Anglo-Chinese Methodist School, Penang Pyne, W. M., major, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Pynenburg, C. A., assistant, Singkep Tin Maatschappij, Singapore
Quackenbush, E., manager, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Shanghai
Quackenbush, Lieut. Gerrit Van S., asst. to Chief Quartermaster, Mindanao, Manila. Quarck, F. W., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Canton
Quarrier, C. E., staff sergt., chief clerk, Head Quarter Office, Singapore Quattrocchi, Salvatore, capitano medico, R. N. "Calabria," China Quelch, C. W., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Quelch, E., accountant, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai Querfurt, O., assistant, Melchers & Co., Canton
Quelch, H., travelling representative, Garner, Quelch & Co., Shanghai Quien, C., assistant, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
Quillet-Delcaire, R., assistant, L. Suzor, Yokohama
Quin, W., clerk-in-charge, Water Rate department, Singapore
Quinn, J. B., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Quinnell, F., accountant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama
Quinton, V., professor, Saigon Seminary, Saigon
Quoika, A., mechanical engineer, Shanghai
Raaschou, T., consul general for Denmark and consular Judge for China, Shanghai Raaymaakers., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Rabbitt, J. A., manager for F. W. Horne, Osaka and Kobe
Rabbitt, J. F., assistant China and Japan Trading Co., Kobe Rabe, G., foreman, Royal Railway department,, Bangkok Rabel, A., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Bangkok
Racine, E, assistant, Charrière, & Cie., Hokow
Racine, G., merchant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Racot, F., assistant, Pharmacie Centrale, Hanków
Racsfeldt, K., assistant, Richard Neumann, Shanghai
Radcliffe, C. A., commander R. N., master attendant, Marine Department, S'pore Rademacher, A., Paul Schramm & Co., Kobe
Radloff, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Newchwang
Radwan, V., assistant, Otto Kleemann & Co., Tientsin
Räeber, L. J., assistant, Sprungli & Co., Manila,
Raeburn, P. L., clerk, Engineers' department, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Raemdonck, E. van, medical officer, Hanyang Iron & Steel Works, Hankow
Rafen, F., pilot, Shanghai
Rafferty, James J., collector of Customs, Cebu, Philippines.
Raffray, président, 3e. et 4e. chambre, Cour d'Appel, Saigon
Ragan, Charles A., captain, Medical Corps, Manila
Ragot, H, assistant, Denis Frères, Haiphong
Raguet, E., French missionary, Nagasaki
Kahf, C., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hankow
Rahinsky, D., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Peking
Railton, H. E., merchant, Shanghai
Rainey, C. D, teacher, Medellin, Division of Cebu, Philippine Raiteri, R., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz Raipho, W. J., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Shanghai
1706
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Ralphs, E., second master, Queen's College, Hongkong Ram, E. A., civil engineer, Denison, Ram & Gibbs, Hongkong Rama, Felix de la, armador y propietario, Manila Rama, L., assistant, Bandinel & Co., Newchwang
Rambaud, J., receveur des postes, French Consulate, Mengtsz Rameaux, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Ramirez, L., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Ramlot, P., co-manager, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Ramplin, F. S., assistant, Kelly & Walsh, Shanghai
Ramsay, A., sub-editor and reporter, "Hongkong Daily Press," Hongkong
Ramsay, C. II., special treasury commissioner, Bangkok
Ramsay, H. E., director, Westphal, King & Ramsay, and vice-con. for Sweden, Hankow Ramsay, J., chief inspector, Municipal Police, Central Station, Shanghai
Ramsay, J. M., foreman turner, flongkong and Whampoa Dock Co.,Kowloon, Hongkong Ramsay, N. B., director, Craig & Co., Shanghai
Ramsay, R., captain, steamer "Nanning," Canton-Wuchow
Ramsay, T., assistant, W. S. Bailey & Co., Hongkong
Ramsden, H. A., exporter, Jun Kobayagawa & Co., Yokohama
Ramseger, H., merchant, Bergmann & Co., Kobe
Ramsey, A. F., chief engineer, steamer "Haiching," Coast ports
Ramsey, A. F., engineer, Ramsey & Co., Hongkong
Ramsey, T. C., merchant, Weihaiwei
Ramsey, W. L., accountant, Chartered Bank of India, A. & C., Manila
Rance, H., chief oflicer, steamer "Wingsang", China coast
Ranck, O., chief engineer, steamer, "Chowfa", China coast Randall, G., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Randall, W. A., deputy auditor, Bureau of Audits, Manila Ranft, O., manager, Germann & Co., Manila
Rangel, A. M., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai Rangel, I. M., commission agent, I. M. Rangel & Co., Shanghai Rangel, J. L., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai Rangel, J. R., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Rangel, S. J., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Rangel, T., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Rangel, V. F., clerk, Holland China Trading Co., Shanghai Rankin, H., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Kobe Rankin, H. F., principal, Anglo-Chinese College, Amoy Rankin, J., agent, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Kobe Rankin, W., engineer, Straits Sugar Co., Gedong, Penang Ransfond, C., assistant, F. W. Barker & Co., Singapore
Ransom, S. A., medical officer-in charge, Public Health & Marine Hospital, Shanghai Rapanakis, G., proprietor, Hankow Hotel, Hankow
Raper, E. J., assayer, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang
Rapp, F., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Rapp, G., clerk, John D. Humphreys & Son, Hongkong
Rapp, H., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Rappitt, J. A., assistant, F. W. Horne, Yokoliama
Rapsey, K., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer. Vladivostock
Raptis, J. H., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Ravenhill, A. G., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Hongkong
Raymond, E. B., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Rayner, F. S., works supt., "South China Morning Post", Hongkong Rasmiessen, J., secretary, Adda Rubber Estates, Ld., Johore Rasmussen, A. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Rasmussen, C., pilot, Shanghai
Rasmussen, J., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Singapore
Rasmussen, M. C., burner, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong
Ratard, L., consul-general for France, Shanghai
Ratinet, L., assistant, Descours, Cabaud et Cie., Saigon.
Ratjen, R., assistant, Delacamp & Co., Kobe
Ratcliffe, A., principal warder, Victoria Gaol, Hongkong
Ratcliffe, J., godown-keeper, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Rattenbury, G., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rattey, W. J., employé, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co. Kowloon, Hongkong Rauchholz, A., civil engineer, technical dept., Siemssen & Co., Shanghai Rautenfeld, P. B., von, deputy commissioner, Maritime Customs, Swatow Rauzy, P., merchant, Saigon
Ravais, F. M., entrepreneur, 39, Boulevard Carreau, Hanoi Raven, A. R. F., architect, Weaser & Raven, Hongkong Raven, F. J., manager, China Realty Company, Shanghai Ravenor, W. F., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore Ravetta, J. E., manager, Hotel de la Paix, Tientsin Rawlins, F. C., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Ray, A. W., assistant, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai Ray, E. H., ship and general broker, Hongkong Ray, E. W., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Yokohama Ray, G. B., salesman, Davis & Lawrence & Co., Shanghai Ray, W. A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hankow Rayden, F., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai Raymond, A., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong
Raymond, E. M., assistant, E. S. Kadoorie & Co., Hongkong Raymond, J. E., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Kobe
Raynae, conducteur, Service du Contrôle des Chemins de Fer, Mengtsz Rayner, C. E., merchant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Rayner, Samuel, assistant master, Public School for Chinese, Shanghai Rayney, T., driver, Singapore & Kranji Railway, Singapore
Rayssac, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Read, A. W., director, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Read, Dudley H., assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Shanghai
Read, G. L., accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Bangkok
Read, H. H., broker, Toog & Read, Shanghai
Read, H. P., assistant inspector, Municipality, Penang
Read, J. D., travelling inspector of accounts, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Read, J. T., assistant engineer, Installation Engineering Department, Singapore Réan, R., acting consul for France, Canton
Reas, G. B., pilot, Shanghai
Reay, J., assistant district officer, Land Office, Kuala Kangsa, Perak
Reber, Dr. Hans, physician and surgeon, Shameen, Canton
Rebolledo, Efren, first secretary, Mexican Legation, Tokyo
Rebuffat, médecin, Hopital Colonial et Militaire, Saigon
Réches, S., Asiatic Petroleum Co., Kiaochau
Recilla Don Manuel Inclan de la, secretary, Spanish Legation, Tokyo Reder, H., assistant, Weill & Zerner, Singapore
Reding, H., assistant, L. Grénard & Co., Shanghai
Redmond, Edwin, assistant, Soy Chee Cotton Spinning Co., Shanghai Redway, C. B., assistant, P. W. Barker & Co., Singapore
Reed, A. J., accountant, Post Office, Hongkong
ני
Reed, E. B., land surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong
Reed, W. G., clerk, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Reek, D. J., managing-partner, Hammer & Co., Singapore
Reek, D. J., surveyor, Dutch Underwriters' Association, Singapore
Reeks, H., assistant postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Chinkiang
Rees, G., chargeman, H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Rees, J. F. van, agent, Netherlands Trading Society, Hongkong
Rees, L. C., principal land surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong
Rees, P., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Wuchowfu
Rees, R., manager, Cowie Harbour Coal Co., British North Borneo
Rees, T. officer-in-charge, Customs Revenue launch "Kwantin," Kowloon Reeve, H., assistant, Scott, Harding & Co., Shanghai
Reeves, H., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Reeves, J. II., captain, military attaché, U.S. Legation, Peking Refardt, C., merchant, Raspe & Co., Kobe and Yokohama Regerat, maitre mineur, Charbonnages du Tonkin, Haiphong Regnault, juge président, Tribunal de Longxuyen, Cochin-Chine Regnier, administrateur, commissaire du Govt., Hoo Binh, Tonkin Rego, D., assistant, Pharmacia Popular, Macau Hego, Dr. J., superintendente, Cadeia Publica, Macau
1707
1708
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rehbein, C., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai Reher, W. captain, steamer "Rajah," Hongkong-Bangkok Rehers, W., captain, Steamer "Wongkoi," Hongkong-Bangkok Rehims, G., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai Rehm, Th., manager, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Tientsin Rehwoldt, F., captain, steamer "Devawongse," China coast Reiber, Fritz, exporter, Shanghai
Reiber, Oskar, assistant, Fr. Reiber, Shanghai
Reich, ingénieur directeur, Societé de Construction de Levallois, Saigon Reich, C., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Reichert, E., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Kiaochau
Reid, A., medical officer, Kuantan, Medical department, Pahang
Reid, Alex., secretary, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Reid, C., assistant, Ta Ching Kwang Tung Electric Supply Co., Canton
Reid, D. E., student interpreter, British Consulate, Bangkok
Reid, D. W. assistant, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Reid, G. A., supt. of works, Tansan Mineral Water Co., Ld., Kobe
Reid, G. K., veterinary surgeon, Bangkok
Reid, J., asst. general manager, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Reid, J., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Yokohama
Reid, J. B., assistant, Ker & Co., Cebu
Reid, N. B., magr., Holme, Ringer & Co., and vice con. for Norway, Moji and Shimonoseki
Reid, N. W., agent, Straits Trading Co., Pudu, Selangor
Reid, P. S., district treasurer, Province Alcock, Kudat, B. N. Borneo
Reid, R. T., Paterson, Simons & Co., manager, Penang
Reid, Robert R., assistant, Ker & Co., Iloilo, Philippines
Reid, W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Reid, W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Reid, W., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Singapore
Reid, W. J., assistant general manager, Vacuum Oil Co., Shanghai
Reider, C., vice-consul for United States of America, Wuhu
Reidhaar, L., physician, and medical examiner, Manufacturers' Life Ins., Co., Yokohama
Reidie, J. senior sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong
Reiffinger, G., merchant, Varenne & Co., Yokohama
Reigen, Joh. v., supt. engineer, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Hongkong
Reilly, Henry J., lieutenant, 13th Cavalry, Manila
Reimers, A., assistant, Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Reimers, D., captain, steamer "Pitsanulok," China coast
Reimers, H., assistant, Illies & Co., Yokohama
Rein, Bernt, assistant, Wallem & Co., Shanghai
Reina, J., assistant inspector, Royal Railway department. Bangkok Reincke, J., assistant, Sietas & Co., Chefoo
Reiner, R. O., business manager, Korea Mission Field, Seoul
Reinfeldt, N. assistant, Joh. H. Langelütje & Co., Vladivostock Reinhardt, C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hoihow
Reinhardt, W., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong Reinhold, H., merchant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
Reinsdorf, F., consul for Germany, Shimonoseki and Moji Reipert, R., clerk, R J. Linossier, Haiphong
Reis, E. O., acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Nanking Reis, J. S., asst. director, Bureau of Navigation, Manila Reischaner, A. K., professor of English, Meiji Gakuin, Tokyo Reisener, O. K. H., tidlewaiter, Maritime Customs, Tientsin Reiss, A., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Reiss, H., merchant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Reiss, T. C., postmaster, Russian Legation, Peking Reith, A. M., agent, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Saigon Reith, J., foreman, Bangkok Dock Co., Bangkok
Rembry, G., Roman Catholic Missionary, Peking
Remedios, A., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai
Remedios, A. A., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Remedios, A. A. dos, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Remedios, A. C., clerk, S. Moutrie & Co., Shanghai
Remedios, A. E, fiscal do Lui-pun, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Remedios, A. F. dos, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong Remedios, A. F. dos, clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Remedios, A. H. dos, clerk, Dallas Horse Repository Co., Shanghai
Remedios, A. M. P., head clerk Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Tientsin Remedios, A. S., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Remedios, A. V. dos, clerk, Remedios & Co., Hongkong
Remedios, B. B. dos, clerk, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai Remedios, C. A., çclerk, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Remedios, C. A. dos, clerk, Falconer & Co., Hongkong
Remedios, C. C. dos, clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Remedios, C. E. dos, clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Hongkong
Remedios, C. M. P., clerk, Netherlands Trading Society, Hongkong
Remedios, C. S., clerk, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Remedios, D. A., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Remedios, E. A. dos, writer, Royal Naval Hospital, Hongkong Remedios, E. G., clerk, Shewan, Tomes & Co., "Canton Remedios, E. M. O., clerk, Grossmann & Co., Hongkong Remedios, F. F., clerk, Hastings & Hastings, Hongkong
Remedios, F. M. A., amanuense, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
Remerlios, F. M. R., clerk, Shanghai Electric and Asbestos Co., Shanghai Remedios, F. H., clerk, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Hongkong Remetlios, F. X., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Remedios, F. X., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai Remedios, F. X., clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Remedios, F. X. dos, rentier, Macao
Remedios, G. M. P., clerk, Buchheister & Co., Tientsin.
Remedios, H., clerk, Reiss & Co., Hongkong
Remedios, H. dos, clerk, Dallas & Co., Shanghai
Remedios, H. H. dos, clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Hongkong
Remedios, J. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Remedios, J. A. dos, aspirante, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau Remedios, J. C., clerk, Radecker & Co., Hongkong
Remedios, J. C. dos, clerk, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
Remedios, J. C. V. dos, junr., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Remedios, J. F., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, and China, Hongkong Remedios, J. G. dos, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Remedios, J. J. dos, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Remedios, J. J. V. dos, clerk, International Banking, Corporation, Hongkong
1709
Remedios, J. L. dos, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Yokohama Remedios, J. M., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Remedios, J. M. B. dos, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Remedios, J. M. Placé dos, assistant, Imperial Bank of China, Shanghai
Remedios, J. M. V. dos, clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Remedios, J. O., clerk, Mercantile Bank of India, Hongkong
Remedios, J. R., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Remedios, J. S., clerk, General Post Office, Hongkong
Remedios, J. V., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Canton
Remedios, L. A. dos, director, Post Office, Macau
Remedios, L. E. dos, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Remedios, L. M. dos, rentier, Macao
Remedios, M. A. dos, clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Remedios, P. A. V. dos, first clerk, registration branch, Post Office, Hongkong
Remedios, P. M. dos, clerk, Grossmann & Co., Hongkong
Remedios, R. A. dos, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Remedios, R. B., clerk, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Remedios, R. J. dos, clerk, Mercantile Bank of India, Hongkong
Remedios, S. G., clerk, China and Japau Trading Co., Shanghai
Remedios, S. V., assistant, Maritime Customs, Wuchow
Remedios, S. V., clerk, General Post Office, Hongkong
Remedios, V. L. dos, clerk, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong Remillard, H., student interpreter, United States Legation, Peking
Remy, A., assistant, Compagnie Commerciale d'Extreme Orient, Shanghai Remy, Roman Catholic Mission, Peking
Renault, H., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Kobe
1710
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rencken, J. M., assistant, Schuldt & Co., Shanghai
Rendall, E. S., fur inspector, Holland-China Trading Co., Tientsin Rendall, G. H., surveying assistant, Public Works dept., Shanghai Renesse, A. L. R., assistant, Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Singapore Renison, G., merchant, Renison & Co., Dairen
Renison, H., assistant, Renison & Co., Dairen
Rennie, J., assistant, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang
Rennie, J. S. M., assistant secretary, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Rennie, T., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Nantai, Foochow
Rennie, Thomas N., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Renny, A. G. L., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Amoy
Renouf, A. V., assistant, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Rentiers, J. B., vice-consul for Great Britain and Austria, Kobe
Renwick, C., assistant, Straits Sugar Co., Gedong, Penang
Renz, G., assistant, Lutz & Co., Manila
Reploeg, H., farmer, Kiaochau
Reppmann, A. V., assistant, The Oriental Timber Corpn., Vladivostock
Reselva, C., clerk, Meerkamp & Co., Manila
Résillat, M.. assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Ressich, V. C., assistant. W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Rethoré, ingénieur, Arrondissements de la Navigation Maritime, Saigon
Retz, Fr., merchant, and consul for Norway, Yokohama
Retzlaff, O., assistant, A. Meier & C., Kobe
Reuben, N., broker, Singapore
Réus, J. H. de, consul general for South China, Netherlands Consulate, Hongkong: Reuss, G., assistant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore
Reutens, A. J., clerk, Adamson, Gilfillan, & Co., Penang
Rentens, A. L., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Singapore
Reutens, J.. sanitary inspector, Penang
Reutens, P. A., secretary, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore
Reutens, T. A., first clerk, British Residency, Kuala Lipis, Pahang
Reutens, V., managing clerk, P. K. Nambyor, Penang
Reuter, H., agent, Shanghai Agentur, Kiaochau
Reutter, O., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Revel, C., assistant, London Asiatic Rubber and Produce Co., Malacca Reverchon, E., assistant, Descours Cabaud et Cie, Saigon
Revert, P., acting agent, Chargeurs Réunis, Haiphong
Revol, juge président, Tribunal de Vinhlong, Saigon
Rew, J. M., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Hongkong Rex, G., minister, German Legation, Peking
Rexhausen, J., assistant, Faust & Co., Tientsin
Rey, l'Abbi P., Roman Catholic missionary, Yokohama
Rey, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Rey, Marcelin, Librairie et papeterie commerciales, Saigon Reyboubet, directeur, Ecole Franco-Annamite, Annam
Reyes, A., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Manila Reyes, Cav. F., consul for Italy, Manila
Reyes, J. N., clerk, Ker & Co., Manila
Reyes, M., city attorney, Law department, Manila
Reyes, P. F., chief clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Manila
Reyes, Rafael, general agent, Manila Slip Co., director de minas de Compostela, Manila Reymers, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Reynaud, Louis, vice consul for France, Foochow
Reynaud, Mgr. P. M., bishop of Fessulan, Mission of Chekiang, Ningpo
Reyne, Frederick A., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Merlin," China Station
Reyne, S. B. R., clerk of works, Public Works department, Selangor
Reyneke, D. J., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Reynell, A. E., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Foochow
Reynell, E., assistant, H. E. Reynell & Co., Kobe
Reynell, H. E., merchant, H. E. Reynell & Co., Kobe
Reynell, H. E., Jr., assistant, H. E. Reynell & Co., Kobe
Reynolds, C. H., lieutenant, 4th Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Reynolds, E. M., captain, steamer "Kiangwo," China coast
Reynolds, Hon. E. W., mayor, city assessor, City of Baguio, Philippines
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Reynolds, F. O., supt. engineer, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
1711
Reynolds, James, manager director, New Engineering & Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai Reynolds, W. II., engineer, Standard Oil Co., of N. Y., Chinkiang
Reyss, H., electrical engineer, Siemens & Schuckert, Tokyo
Rhine, C. F., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Yokohama
Rhoderick, C. E. G., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Rhodes, Hastings, solicitor, Parsons & Rhodes, Singapore Ribault, captain, steamer "Binh Thuan", China coast Ribeiro, A., clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Ribeiro, A. H., clerk, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Hongkong Ribeiro, A. J. V., clerk, Schuldt & Co., Hongkong
Ribeiro, C. A., clerk, Ilongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Ribeiro, C. A., commission agent, C. A. Ribeiro & Co., Singapore Ribeiro, C. F. V., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Ribeiro, C. M. V., clerk, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Hongkong Ribeiro, Delfino, merchant, José Ribeiro & Co., Macao Ribeiro, F., clerk, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Hongkong
Ribeiro, F. C., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Ribeiro, F. J., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Ribeiro, F. J. V., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong Ribeiro, F. X. V., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Ribeiro, F. X. V., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong Ribeiro, H. J., assistant, Ribeiro & Co., Macau
Ribeiro, J. A. C. V., clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong Ribeiro, J. A. V., clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Ribeiro, J. C., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Ribeiro, J. C. V., clerk David Sassoon &Co., Hongkong
Ribeiro, L. A. V., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Ribeiro, L. F. V., clerk, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Ribeiro, L. J., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Ribeiro, L. V., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Ribeiro, O. F., clerk, China Export-Import-and-Bank Cie., Hongkong Ribeiro, R. F., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Iloilo Ribeiro, V. R. V., assistant, Green Island Cement Co., Macau Ricard, juge président, Tribunal Province Mytho, Saigon Rice, F. W., bookkeeper, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Rice, H. C., assistant inspector, Municipality, Penang
Rice, H. T., assistant, Dick, Kerr & Co., Tokyo
Richard, Timothy, chancellor, Imperial University, Peking
Richard, Wm. L., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Richards, Chas, assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Richards, D. O., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Singapore Richards, D. S., gradle surveyor, Revenue Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan Richards, E. C., chief clerk, P, & O. Stean Navigation Co., Shanghai Richards, F. B., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila & Cebu Richards, II, assistant, Kinta Tio Mines, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Richards, H. E., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Penang
Richards, H. G., acting district engineer, States Railways, Perak
Richards, J. H., assistant, Andrews, von Fischerz & George, Ld., Shanghai Richards, L. H., captain, "Hsin-Yu," China coast
Richards, J. H., manager, Gopeng Tin Mining Co., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Richards, R., artificer, staff sergt., Army Ordnance Dept., Hongkong
Richards, R., superintendent, St. Peter's Church Mission, Singapore
Richards, T. J., assistant, Green Island Cement Co., Deep Water Bay, Hongkong
Richardson, A. J., assistant, Herbert Hutchison & Co., Shanghai
Richardson, E. R., architect, Negri Sembilan
Richardson, F., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Richardson, G. A., merchant, Bradley & Co., Shanghai
Richardson, J. T., district officer, Kinabatangan, British North Borneo
Richardson, J. W., acting deputy commissioner, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Richardson, Thomas Wm., merchant, Bradley & Co, Swatow
Richarme, G., silk inspector, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Canton
Riches, H. G., assistant, Woollen Vosy & Co., Tientsin
Richet, I., Roman Catholic missionary, Wuhu
1712
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Richmond, Chas, F., auditor, Province Moro, Philippines Richmond, George D., dentist, Kobe
Richmond, G. F., chief, Division of Chemistry, Manila
Richter, A., proprietor, Imperial Hotel, Yokohama
Richter, F., assistant engineer, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Richter, H., assistant, Bruseh Hydraulic Tin Mining Co., Perak
Richter, H. H., manager, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Dairen
Richter, Th., engineer, blast furnace dept., Hanyang Iron & Steel Works, Hankow Richter, W., assistant, A. Oestmann & Co., Kobe
Richter, W., baker, Kiaochau
Richthofen, Baron von, second secretary, German Legation, Tokyo
Rickard, H., clerk, C. A. Ribeiro & Co., Singapore
Rickcord, E. P., asst. paymaster, H.M.S." Waterwitch," China Station
Rickett, F. B., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Ricketts, D. P., senior district eng., Imperial Chinese Railways, Shanhaik wan, Tientsin Rickmans, P., assistant, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Rickmers, R., assistant, A. Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Ricquebourg, sous directeur de Cambodge, Douanes et Régies, Saigon.
Rictual, A., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Iloilo
Riddle, A. R., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Kobe
Riddle, W. S. Young, chief accountant, Chamber of Mines Labour Imp. Agcy,, Tientsin Ridge, W. S., editor, "The National Review," Shanghai
Ridges, H. C., protector of Chinese, Chinese Secretariat, Selangor
Ridley, Clarence S., lieut., engineer, asst., Military Mapping, Manila
Ridley, H. N., director, Botanical Gardens, Singapore
Rieck, Ad., manager, Vladivostock Brewery, Vladivostock
Rieck, C., assistant, Garrels, Börner & Co., Shanghai
Rieck, R. W. R., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochout
Riecken, J., clerk, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Riedler, Vincenz, assistant, A. Ehlers & Co., Tientsin
Rief, J., assistant, Delacamp & Co., Kobe
Rieffer, capitaine, Artillerie Coloniale, Saigon
Riovely, Charles, secretary and manager, Chima Land and Finance Co., Shanghai Rigault, F., assistant, A. Descours, Cabaud et Cie., Haiphong
Rigby, E. H., résident engineer, Imperial Railway, Fengtai, Tientsin
Rigby, F. B., assistant, Andersen, Meyer & Co., Shanghai
Ringer, F., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Ringer, S., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Rinker, T. O., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Riggall, Robert M., surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station
Rigold, E. E., employé, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Rings, O., accountant, Rizerie Orient, Cholon
Rijke, H. C. de, private secretary, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Rijke, J. de, engineer in-chief, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Rijnberk, W. E. van, merchant, Hooglandt & Co., Singapore
Riley, W. L. G., engineer in charge "Labuan," Sabah Steamship Co., B. N. Borneo Rimaud, A., directeur, Dumarest et Fils, Saigon
Rincon, M., secretario, Banco Español Filipino, Manila
Rishworth, T., Military Station paymaster, Singapore
Risk, M., chief engineer, steamer"Yuensang" Hongkong-Calcutta
Risk, R., engineer, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Rissland, H., naval store officer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Ritchie, A., shipchandler, Ritchie & Co., Hongkong
Ritchie, A., superintendent, United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Ld., Hongkong
Ritchie, B. M., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama
Ritchie, D., manager, Straits Sugar Co., Gedong Estate, Penang
Ritchie, D. W., captain steaner Wosang," China coast
Ritchie, David R., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Cadmus," China Station Ritchie, E., assistant, International Bank, Yokohama
Ritchie, G. M., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Ritchie, J., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Ritchie, J., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Yokohama Ritchie, W. W., district postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Chengtu Ritter, F. W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
1713
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Ritter, F. W. H., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Yokohama Ritter, G., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Tientsin Ritter, J., assistant, Melchors & Co., Hankow
Ritter, O. H., cashier and accountant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Shanghai Ritthansen, O., assistant, Walter Scharff & Co., Shanghai
Rittmüller, F., acting manager, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Rivera, M., clerk, Fernandez Hermanos, Manila
Rivero, P. J., clerk, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
Rivero, S., clerk, China & Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Rivers-Moore, C. N., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Rivers, W. C., colonel (captain 1st Cavalry), asst, director Constabulary, Manila Rivet, H. vicar, The Good Shepherd Roman Catholic Cathedral, Singapore Rivett, A. R., district-officer, Jesselton, British North Borneo
Rivilla, L., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Rix, Heinrich, assistant China Export, Import, and Bank Compagnie, Shanghai Ritzan, H. E., manager, Saw Mills, East Asiatic Co., Bangkok
Roach, J. S., captain, steamer "Haitan," China coast
Roach, R. B., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Roadnight, E. A., local secretary, Pusing Lama Tin Mines, Ld., Perak
Robaglia, payeur, Binh-Thuan, "Annam
Robarts, A., clerk, Hugo Gyzeman, Shanghai
Robarts, A., purser, receiving hulk "Corea," Shanghai
Robarts, C., mate, receiving hulk "Corea," Shanghai
Robarts, E. E., lingua, Repartiçao do Expediente Sinico, Macau Robarts, R. R., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Hongkong
Robb, J. M., consulting engineer, Parker, Robb & Co., Shanghai Robb, W. Me F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Robbers, J. G., civil engineer and legation architect, Peking Robbins, W., missionary, Trinity College, C. M. S. Ningpo
Robert, commandant de la Brigade de Gendarmerie, Consulat de France, Mengtsz Robert, L., assistant, Biedermann & Co., Hanoi
Robert, L., procureur general, Procure des Missions Etrangères de Paris, Hongkong Robert, S. I, assistant, Ivy & Robinson, Shanghai
Robert, W., bishop of Labuan & Sarawak, Sarawak
Robert, W. H., assistant, Sanatorium, Tsinanfu
Roberts, A., engineer, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama
Roberts, A. E., chief engineer, steamer "Taksang," China coast
Roberts, A. G., assistant engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Roberts, B., assistant, Exchange Market, Yokohama Roberts, E. A., examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton Roberts, E. J., clerk and assistant, Fraser & Neave, Penang
Boberts, F. L., assistant, Eastern Trading Co., Ld., Shanghai
Roberts, F. O., proprietor, Photo. Supply Co., Manila Roberts, G., employe, Clark & Co., Weihaiwei
Roberts, G., second class tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Roberts, I. H., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Roberts, K., asst. engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Cantou
Canton
Roberts, R. J, installation manager, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Chinkiang Roberts, S., assistant-manager, Caledonia Sugar Estates, Penang
Roberts, S. E., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Roberts, S. S., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Roberts, S. W., assistant, Geo. McBain, Shanghai
Roberts, W., assistant, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Chinwangtao Roberts, W. A., acting Transport officer, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Roberts, W. J., park-keeper, Public Works Department, Shanghai Robertson, A., broker, Lyall & Evatt, Singapore
Robertson, A. W. L., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Robertson, C. A., chief officer, steainer "Yuensang" Hongkong-Manila
Robertson, C. T. A., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Robertson, D. F., surveyor for the Bureau Veritas, Nagasaki
Robertson, G., assistant manager, Byram Sugar Estate, Penang Robertson, Horatio, commission agent, Shanghai
Robertson, H., cuginecr, E. H. Hunter & Co., Osaka and Tokyo Robertson, H. S., assistant, Wm. Little & Co., Shanghai
54
1714
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Robertson, J. B., assistant, Aylesbury & Garland, Perak
Robertson, J. D., travelling representative, McAlister & Co., Singapore Robertson, James, assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Robertson, James A. B., asst. paym., H. B. M. S,, "Bedford," China Station Robertson, Jas. L., merchant, E. H. Hunter & Co., Osaka
Robertson, J., asst.-manager, Kuling Estate, Kewkiang
Robertson, J. A., sub-agent, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Medan Robertson, K. B. S., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore Robertson, K. J., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Robertson, N., foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Robertson, N. M., assistant, Ker & Co., Manila
Robertson, T. C., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Robertson, T. W., superintendent engineer, Star Ferry Co., Hongkong
Robertson, W., inspector of police, Shaukiwan, Hongkong
Robertson, W. R., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Tientsin Roberty, J. B., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Robin, E., professor, Medical College, Tientsin
Robin, M., administrateur de 4me. cl., chef de service administratif, Saigon Robins, Augustine W, lieut. 13th Cavalry, topographer, Manila
Robins, Thomas, M., lieut., engineer, Defensive Works, Manila
Robinson, A., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Robinson, A. E., manager, H. Price & Co., Hongkong
Robinson, A. P., solicitor, Drew & Napier, Singapore
Robinson, A. R., assistant, John D. Hutchison & Co., Shanghai
Robinson, C. C., deputy port health officer, Singapore
Robinson, C. H. J., staff surgeon H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station Robinson, C. S., assistant collector, Land Revenue, Negri Sembilan
Robinson, Eugene, lieut. 7th Infantry topographer, Manila
Robinson, E. C., engine driver, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Robinson, F. A., assistant, Ivy & Robinson, Hankow and Shanghai
Robinson, F. H., superintendent, Power Station, Electric Tramways, Singapore Robinson, G. A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Robinson, H., assistant, Scott, Christie and Johnson, Shanghai Robinson, H. inspector, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Robinson, H., surveyor, Survey department, Ichang
Robinson, H. C., director of Museum, Federated Malay States
Robinson, H. O., asst. engineer, Public Works, Kuala Selangor, Selangor Robinson, J., store accountant, Army Service Corps, Hongkong
Hobinson, John, master, steamer "Shantung," China coast
Robinson, M., assistant, Rosenstock Publishing Co., L., Shanghai
Robinson, P. H., master carder, International Cotton Mill, Pootung, Shanghai
Robinson, P. M., electrical engineer, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Robinson, R., assistant engineer, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Robinson, S., pilot, Singapore
Robinson, S. R., draper, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Robinson, W., gunner, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Hongkong
Robinson, W. H., acting asst. director, Public Works. Manila
Robinson, W. J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Kobe
Robinson, W. V., gen. maner, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong, Shanghai & Singapore
Robinson, W. W. K., draper, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Robison, C. C., superintendent, Customs, Sarawak
Robjohn H. W., assistant, Andrews, von Fischerz & George, Shanghai
Robles, A., partner, Pujalte y Compañía, Manila
Robless, C., clerk, Boustead & Co., Penang
Robless, E., inspector, Municipality, Penang
Robson, A. E., assistant, Wallem & Co., Shanghai
Robson, G. F., asst. manager, Docks & Machine Shops, Tanjong Pagar Board, Singapore Robson, J.H.M., man. dir., Malay Mail Press Co., and financial agt., Kuala Lumpur, Selango Robson, J. J., engineer, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Robton, C., assistant, Herbert Dent v Co., Canton
Roby, E., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., L., Hongkong
Rocha, Alfonso, clerk, Manila Ship Co., Manila
Rocha, Alfredo, director, Banco Español Filipino, Iloilo
Rocha, A. da C., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rocha, A. G. da, clerk, Caldbeck, MacGregor & Co., Hongkong Rocha, C. B. da, clerk, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Hongkong Rocha, E., sub-cajero, Banco Español Filipino, Iloilo Rocha, E. M., clerk, Sander, Wieler & Co., Hongkong.
Rocha, F. J. da, recevedor, Santa Casa da Misericordia, Macau Rocha. G., professor de musica, Macan
Rocha, I. da, clerk, Bradley & Co., Hongkong
Rocha, J. A. P. da, clerk, Bradley & Co., Hongkong
Rocha, J. M. da, clerk, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Rocha, J. M. P., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai
Rocha, M. L., clerk, Money Order Office, Hongkong
Rocha, R. L., inspector of cargo boats, Harbour department, Hongkong
Rocha, V. C. da, clerk, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Rochaix, employé, C. Tournier, Saigon
Roché agent, Services Techniques, Saigon
Roche, J. P., clerk, A. Ellers & Co., Shanghai
Roche, R., assistant, Cornabe, Eckford & Co., Kiaochau
Rocher, L. R., assistant, Maritime Customs, Hoihow
Rock, A. L, manager, A. A. Vantine & Co., Kobe and Yokohama
Rockenach, Samuel D., major, Philippine Scouts, Manila
Rockstroh, E., merchant, Kolkmeyer & Rockstroh, Hankow Rode, C. A., clerk, C. A. Liberio & Co., Singapore.
Korle, Fr., clerk, Melchers & Co,, Tientsin
Rodesse, M., deputy registrar, Supreme Court, Singapore
Rodewald, J. F, merchant, Rodewald & Heath, Shanghai & Hankow
Rodger, A., manager, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Rodger, Hugh, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Rodger, J., assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Rodger, R., captain, steamer "Zafiro," Hongkong-Manila
Rodger, R. K., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Amoy
Koding, H., assistant, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Tientsin Rodrigues, A., clerk, International Bank, Shanghai
Rodrigues, A., clerk, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang
Rodrigues, A. A., chief clerk, Resident Councillor's Office, Malacca
Rodrigues, A. M., informador, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macan
Rodrigues, A. M., Roman Catholic missionary, Taulak
Rodrigues, C. A., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Rodrigues, E. A., clerk, Colonial Treasury, Singapore
Rodrigues, E. M., chief engineer, steamer "Hoi Sang," Canton-Macao
Rodrigues, F. J., secretario, Empreza Economica, Macao
Rodrigues, F. S., clerk, Land Office, Singapore
Rodrigues, H., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Rodrigues, J., clerk, Harvie & Cooke, Shanghai
Rodrigues, J. C., clerk, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Rodrigues, J., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Rodrigues, L. G., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bauk, Hongkong
Rodrigues, M. C., proof reader, Government Printing Office, Singapore
Rodrigues, P. J. M., clerk, Money Order Office, Hongkong
Rodriguez, E., Spanish missionary, Shanghai
Rodriguez, F., assistant surgeon, Medical department, Penang Rodriguez, F. X., clerk, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Alacrity," China Station
Rodriguez, L. J., clerk, Shanghai Electric and Asbestos Co., Shanghai Roe, Arthur C., assistant paymaster, H. B. M. S" Roehreke, O., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow Roehrich, F., manager, Wolf and Sons, Shanghai Roelli, H., clerk, Kuenzle & Streiff, Iloilo
Roeper Bosch, P. A., assistant, Wm. Holst & Co., Yokohama Roeper, G., employé, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Roeper, Geo., merchant, M. Raspe & Co., Kobe
Roeper, M., assistant, Sander, Weiler & Co., Kiaochau
Roese, Geo., physician, Hankow
Koest, D, G., merchant, Diethelm & Co., Saigon.
Kogadeo, G., third secretary, Italian Legation, Tokyo
54*
1713
1716
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Roger, F. Theo,, teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila Rogers, C., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Rogers, C. C., mains-superintendent, Electric Light department, Penang Rogers, Harry L., chief paymaster, Division Staff, Manila
Rogers, T. H. T., advocate and solicitor, Selangor
Rogers, W. II., assistant, Standard Oil Co, of New York, Shanghai
Rogerson, A., senior writer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Rogez, Maurice, International Sleeping Car and Express Trains Co., Yokohama
Rogge, C., assistant, Siemsson & Co., Shanghai
Rognoni, percepteur, Hadong, Tonkin
Rohde, C., merchant, Sietas, Plambeck Co., Kiaochau
Rohde, H., assistant, Melchers Co., Hankow
Rohde, J., assistant, Melchers, & Co., Hankow Rohrbein, F., assistant, Bergmann & Co., Yokohama Rohreke, G., merchant, Carlowitz & Co., Kiaochau Rohrmann, J., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore Roijen, J. H. van, Minister for Netherlands, Tokyo Rojo, J., bookkeeper, Vacuum Oil Co., Manila
Rolfe, A. J., assistant, H. MacArthur & Co., Yokohama
Rolfe, P. H., captain, steamer "Yuen Saug," Hongkong-Manila Rolland, C. E., captain, 80 Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Romain, brothier, St. Lewis School, Chefoo
Rombach, A., merchant, Rombach & Co., Hongkong Romisch, G., assistant, Lco. Römisch, Tokyo
Romisch, Leo., merchant, Tokyo
Rondon, J. A. M., Rondon & Co., Seoul
Rooke, W. M., engineer, Rooke & Hay, Yokohama
Roope, W. J., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Roper, W., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Kiaochau
Roque, H., armateur, Haiphong
Roque, P., armateur, Haiphong
Ros, G., interpreter, Italian Consulate, Shanghai
Rosa, C. M. da, assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Rosa, Major Don Ed. Herrera de la, military attaché, Spanish Legation, Tokyo Rosales, José, sub-manager, Philippine General Tobacco Co., Manila
Rosario, E. J., clerk, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Rosario, E. del, chief clerk, International Banking Corporation, Cebu
Rosario, E. T. do, clerk, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Hongkong
Rosario, F. M., clerk, Schuldt & Co., Shanghai
Rosario, F. X. do, inspector da Policia Municipal, Macao
Rosario, M. del, cashier, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Cebu
Rosario, P. A., clerk, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hongkong
Rosario, S., assistant, New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai Rosario, S. del., judge, Court of Land Registration, Manila
Rosario, S. F. o., escrevente, Capitania do Porto, Macau
Rose, A. de, clerk, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Rose, A. V., assistant, Geddes & Co., Hankow
Rose, A. W. T., clerk, International Cotton Manufacturing Co., Shanghai Rose, Archibald, British Consul, Tengyueh
Rosc, C. H., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Rose, E., postal officer, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Ichang
Rose, F. C. S., storekeeper, Canadian Pacific Railway, Hongkong
Rose, G. E. J., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Wuhu
Rose, G. S., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Rose, J. S., assistant, Health Officer, Penang
Rose, Louis A., architect and surveyor, Hongkong
Rose, Robert, architect, Denham & Rose, Shanghai
Rose, Thomas I., share and general broker, Hongkong
Rose, W. E., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Hongkong
Rosemann, C., engineer, Bume & Reif, Shanghai
Rosen, H. N. D., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Rosenbaum, merchant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Rosenbaum, S., merchant, Behr & Co., and consul for Belgium, Singapore
1717
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rosenfeld, A. B., cotton importer, Spunt & Rosenfeld, Shanghai Rosenkrans, W. R., div. supt. of School, Province Samar, Philippines
Rosenlehner, H., bookkeeper, Rizerie Union, Cholon
Rosenstock, C. W., dir. and gel. mgr., Rosenstock Publishing Co., S'hai and H'kong Rosoman, P. R., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Rospopoff, N., consul general for Russia, Nagasaki Ross, A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ichang
Ross, A., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Ross, A. J., managing director, Sharpe, Ross & Co., Singapore Ross, C. H., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co. Ltd., Hongkong Ross, C. H., instructor, Higher Commercial School, Tokyo Ross, C. H. J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Ross, Campbell, surgeon, H. M. S. "Woodlark," China Station Ross, D., mines manager, Kanaboi Ld., Negri Sembilan Ross, E. M., assistant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Shanghai
Rosse, F. Th., manager, Amur Steamship and Trading Co., Vladivostock Ross, H., building surveyor, Public Works department, Shanghai
Ross, H. C., representative, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Ld., Formosa Ross, J., asst. postal officer, Chinese Post Office. Tientsin
Ross, J., overseer, Public Works Department, Hongkong
Ross, James, judge, Court of First Instance, Iloilo
Ross-Reid, T., editor, "Hankow Daily News," Hankow
Ross, S. B. C., probationer district officer, New Territories, Hongkong Ross, Win., captain, "Kungping," China coast
Ross, W., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Ross, W. W. G., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Canton
Rosse, O., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Rossiter, H., silk inspector, Reiss & Co., Canton
Rossiter, W. W., assistant, New York Export & Import Co., Shanghai
Rossler, Dr., consul for Germany, Canton
Rost, C. W., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Roth, L., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai
Rothe, H., assistant, Simon, Evers & Co., Kobe
Rothery, A., foreman plumber, Waterworks & Co., Shanghai Rothhardt, H. C., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Tientsin
Rothkegel, C., architect, Tientsin.
Rott, chef de bataillon, major, Tirailleurs Annamites, Saigon. Rotz, M. M. de, missionary, French mission, Nagasaki
Roubaud, médecin, Hôpital de Saigon, Saigon
Roudiére, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Roumagoux, E., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Hankow
Roumiantzeff I. I., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Rousaneff, A. J., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Rouse, A. B., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Hongkong
Rouse, G. H., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Cebu
Rousse, J. M. C., deputy postal commissioner, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai Rousseau, E., merchant, Tientsin
Rousseau, médecin, Postes Medicaux, Saigon,
Rousseau, résident de Pursat, Cambodge
Roussel, G., Taupiu et Cie., Hanoi
Routaboul, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Roux, E., assistant, Oppenheimer & Cie., Yokohama Roux, F. le, assistant, F. Borneman, Hankow Rouxel, E., Roman Catholic missionary, Wuhu
Rowan, J. W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Rowan, R. T., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Rowbottom, H. W., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Yokohama
Rowe, E. S. B., assistant, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Rowe, F. B., assistant, Liddell Bros & Co., Tientsin
Rowe, H. F., dean of Fowler School of Theology, Nanking University, Nanking Rowland, F. W., examiner, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Rowland, G., assistant, Denny, Mott & Dickson, Bangkok
Kowland, T. J., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Rowland, W. R., proprietor, Landquart Estate, Port Dickson, Negri Sembilan
1718
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rowlands, Percy, chaplain, H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station Rowlands, W. Bowen, secretary, Sanitary Board, Hongkong
Rowlands, W. B., accountant, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Palang Rowlatt, R. H., assistant, Westphal. King & Bamsay, Hankow Rowley, F. J. de R., assistant, Thos. Cook & Son, Hongkong
Rowley, Randall A., teacher, Normal School, Manila
Rowley, T. W., district officer, District Office, Coast, Negri Sembilan Rowoldt, B., assistant, Sauder, Wieler & Co., Tientsin Rowsell, F. J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Foochow
Royds, W. M., acting consul for Great Britain, Tainanfu,
Royen, J. H. van, diplomatic representative for Denmark, Tokyo
Royle, Lieut. L. L. H., H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Roza, A. J. R., clerk, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Roza, C. A. da, clerk, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Hongkong
Roza, C. B. da, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong Roza, D., assistant, Dent & Co., Macao
Roza, D. da, jun., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Roza, E. D. da, clerk, Chamber of Commerce, Hongkong
Roza, F. da, clerk, International Banking Corporation, Yokohama
Roza, F. L. da, clerk, W. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Roza, G. F. da, clerk, Chartered Bank of India Aus. & China, Hongkong
Roza, I. C. da, clerk, H. K. Holmes, Hongkong
Roza, J. B. de, assistant, Samuel, McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Roza, P., clerk, registration branch, Post Office, Hongkong
Roza, R. B., clerk, Colonial Treasury, Singapore
Roza, R. M. F., clerk, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Roza, R. R. capitão reformado, Macao
Rozario, A., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Rozario, A., foreman, Typographia Mercantil, Macau
Rozario, A., sub-manager, "Kobe Herald," Kobe
Rozario, A. A., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Foochow
Rozario, A. A., installation manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Foochow
Rozario, A. C., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Hongkong
Rozario, A. F, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong Rozario, A. F., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Rozario, A. S., clerk, Waterworks Co., Shanghai
Rozario, C. C., chief clerk, Land Office, Kuala Kangsar, Perak
Rozario, C. G., clerk, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Canton
Rozario, do, juge de paix, Tribunal de Tayninh, Cochin-chine
Rozario, E. de, clerk, Police department, Singapore
Rozario, E. J. E., clerk, assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Rozario, E. M., clerk, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Hongkong
Rozario, E. S., amanuense, Secretaria Militar, Macau
Rozario, F. B., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Rozario, F. G., book-keeper, "China Mail," Ld., Hongkong Rozario, F. J., amanuense, Repartição de Fazenda, Macau
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Rozario, F. J, assistant second bailiff, Supreme Court, Hongkong Rozario, F. X., clerk, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hongkong
Rozario, F. X. H. do, clerk, Colonial Secretary's Office, Hongkong Rozario, G., Foochow Printing Press, Foochow
Rozario, J., clerk, Noronha & Co., Macau
Rozario, J. A., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Rozario, J. B., clerk, Powell & Co., Singapore
Rozario, J. F., chief clerk, District Office, Negri Sembilan
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Rozario, J. F. E., clerk, Treasury, Hongkong
Rozario, J. J., chief clerk, Singapore Slipway & Engineering Co., Ld., Singapore
Rozario, J. L., clerk, Sweetmeat Castle, Shanghai
Rozario, J. L. M. do, clerk, Connell, Bros, & Co., Hongkong
Rozario, J. M. P., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Rozario, J. M. S., clerk, Bradley & Co., Hongkong
Rozario, Leonardo do, clerk, José Ribeiro, Macao
Rozario, R. de., third clerk, Land Office, Malacca
Rozario, S. M. do., clerk, Portuguese Consulate General, Canton
Rozario, T. D., first clerk, Public Works department, Selangor
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rozario, V. A., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, & China, Hongkong Rozario, V. C., clerk, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hongkong
Rozario, W. J., assistant, Langkor North Borneo Rubber Co., B. N. Borneo Rozello, F., sanitary inspector, Penang
Rozier, A., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Ruandel, P., vicar, R. C. Misson, Malacca
Rublee, Wm. A., consul general, U. S. Consulate, Hongkong
Ruchwaldy, J., assistant, John Little & Co., Singapore
Rucker, G. W., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
1709
Ruddock, M. C., superintendent, Eastern Extension, A, and C. Telegraph Co., Foochow Rudenberg, W., assistant, W. Scharff & Co., Shanghai Rudland, J., assistant, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai Rudolphy, F. G. C., assistant, Customs, Wenchow Rüdt, B., vice-consul for Germany, Singapore
Rueda, E., propietario, Rueda llermanos y Ca., Manila
Rueda, S., propietario, Rueda Hermanos, y Ca., Manila
Ruediger, E. H., chief, serum section, Bureau of Science, Manila
Ruegg, R., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Yokohama.
Ruella, J. P., tenente, Corpo de Policia, Macau
Ruella, J. P., tenente, official as ordens do governador, Macau
Ruffet, M., commissaire de police, Ninh Binh, Tonkin
Ruffin, W. vou., secretary and postmaster, German Consulate, Swatow
Ruhrtral, E., assistant, Maritime Customs. Kewkiang
Ruiz, A., partner, Pujalte y Compañia, Manila
Rule, J. A. jur., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Canton
Rull, P., assistant, Craig & Co., Shanghai
Rumble, V. J. S., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Mukden.
Rumbold, H. G. M., councillor, British Embassy, Tokyo
Rummel, L., locomotive superintendent, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Rümcker, H., merchant, Reuter, Brockelman & Co., Shanghai
Rumjahn, U., cashier, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong
Rummel, F., assistant, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Runcie, J., chief engineer, "Taiyuan," China coast
Rundell, W. A., writer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Randle, Eng, commdr. M., first assistant, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Runge, E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Buolt, F. von., vice-consul for Germany, Bangkok
Ruppert, E., technical manager, Hanyang Iron & Steel Works, Haukow
Ruprecht, L. T., chief of shipping dept., Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Rusmussen, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Jchang
Russa, B., proprietor, Hotel de Pekin, Peking
Russell, A., manager, Curnow & Co., Nagasaki
Russell, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Russell, C. W., traffic assistant, Railway Co., Manila
Russell, G. C. F., agent, Cornabe, Eckford & Co., Weihaiwei
Russell, H., storekeeper, Geo. Whymark & Co., Kobe
Russell, H. L., assistant secretary, Maritime Customs, Peking
Russell, Inglis, assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Russell, J., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Russell, J. Beckett, auditor and asst. secretary, Electric Railroad & Light Co., Manila
Russell, J. J., general broker, Russell & Co., Manila
Russell, John, superintendent, Government Printing Office, Selangor
Russell, M., managing director, J. Curnow & Co., L, Yokohama and Hakodate
Russell, M., storekeeper, Geo. Whymark & Co., Kobe
Russell, P. C., representative, Swan & Maclaren, Selangor
Russell, R. C., assistant, Kuala Lampur, Selangor
Russell, W., second marine surveyor, Harbour department, Hongkong
Russell, Dr. Wallace B., Methodist Hospital, Nanking
Russells, S. W., Govt. printer, British North Borneo
Rust, C. A, asst, supt., Royal Survey department, Bangkok
Rust, f., agent, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hankow
Bust, W., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hankow Ruston, P. W., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Manila
Rutherford, C. H., assistant, Collins & Co., Tientsin and Shanghai
1720
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Rutherford, Henry H., captain, Medical Corps, Manila
Rutherford, N. H., manager, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai Rutherford, P., assistant, Collins & Co., Tientsin
Rutherford, T., manager, "Straits Times," Singapore
Rutherfurd, R. O., commander, Customs, revenue cruiser "Likin," Kowloon
Rutter, R. V., foreman blacksmith, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Ruttonjee, H., storekeeper, H. Ruttonjee & Son, Hongkong
Ruttonjee, J. H., storekeeper, H. Ruttonjee & Son, Hongkong Rutz, H., assistant, Germann & Co., Manila
Ryan, E., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore Ryan, F., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Ryan, F. I., deputy-conservator, Forest Department, Bangkok Ryan, Frank E. C., capt., H. B. M. S. "Astraea," China Station Ryden, J. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Rymer, E. H., comdr., H. B. M. S. "Kent," China Station
Sa, F. Diogo de, capitão do porto, Macao
Sa, L. da, storekeeper, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Sabard, G., rédacteur, "L'Echo de Chine," Shanghai
Sabatier, G., proprietor, Royal Hair Dressing Saloon, Singapore
Sabatier, L., assistant, Royal Hair Dressing Saloon, Singapore
Sach, Captain, steamer "Gouv. Jaeschke," Coast service
Sachau, C. E. A,, assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow Sachs, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Sachse, Mrs. G., Kingsclere Private Hotel, Hongkong Sachse, R., ussistant, G. L. Hempel, Hankow
Sachse, T., captain, steam lighter "Chansaboon," Bangkok Sacomant, trésorier-general, Tresorerie Général, Hanoi Sacotte, L., admr, adjoint, Résidence Langson, Tonkin Sage, W., clerk, Reiss & Co., Canton
Sugeder, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Sahara, T., sub-editor, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai Saharoff, S. D., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Sahlin, E. G., commercial attaché, Swedish Consulate, Shanghai Salling, G., assistant, A. N. Ahrens & Co., Kobe
Saill, Chas. G., assistant, Macondray & Co., Manila
Sainderichin, N., assistant, Schwarz, Gaumer & Co., Hankow
Saint-Pol, R., proprietor, Caves du Terminus, Hankow
Saker, R. M., assistant, Atkinson & Dallas, Shanghai
Sale, F. G., managing dir., Sale & Frazur, and vice consul for Chile, Yokohama and Tokyo Saleeby, Dr. A. M., house surgeon, Civil Hospital, Manila
Sales, J. F., merchant, Sales & Co., Canton
Sales, R. C., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Saliege, E., fondé de pouvoir, Ogliastro Frères et Cie., et gerent du Consulat d'Italie, Saigon Salis, F., Minister for Switzerland, Tokyo
Salisbury, H. S., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama Salmon, M. A., vicar general, French Mission, Nagasaki
Salomon, J., merchant, Kumpers & Co., Singapore
Salonga, M., chief clerk, Law department, Manila
Salzmann, É. F., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapore
Salzmann, F., solicitor, Allen & Gledhill, Singapore
Samanillo, J. A., manager, Pérey Samanillo Hermanos, Manila
Sambuc, médecin resident, Hôpital d'Haiphong, Haiphong
Sammels, D., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Sammons, Th., U.S. consul general, Yokohama
Sample, Capt. William R., commanding Detachment of Enlisted Men, Mindanao, Manil
Samples, J. A., berthing officer, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Sampson, F. A., assistant overseer, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Sampson, Jolin, supt. engineer, Oriental Hotel, Kobe
Samson, D., manager, Macke & Co., Manila.
Samson, Domingo, governor, Province of Albay, Philippines
Samson, J., merchant, Reid, Evans & Co., Hankow and Shanghai
Samuel, C. R., solicitor, Presgrave & Matthews, Penang
Samuelsen, lieut., S. M. S. "Jaguar," German Squadron, China Samuelsen, O. E. N., asst. examiner, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Samuelson, Clarence F., dep. chief, Fire department, Manila Samuelson, F. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow Sanches, E., clerk, A. Ehlers, & Co., Shanghai
Sandbach, A. E., captain, steamer "Tuckow," China coast Sandberg, P., manager, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Sander, Albrecht, merchant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai
Sanders, E. D., accountant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Sanderson, C. E. F., managing director, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Sanderson, F. Norman, solicitor, Gibb & Hope, Perak
Sanderson, R. P., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Tientsin
Sandford, G. S., sub-agent, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Foochow Sandford, H. C., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Kobe
Sandri, E., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Sandri, O., assistant, Kolkmeijer & Rockstroh, Hankow
Sands, Thos., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai
Sandstede, F., assistant brewer, Kirin Brewery Co., Yokohama
Sanguinetti, V., engineer and manager, James Morrison & Co., Ld., Tokyo
Sanny, A. R, assistant, Perrin, Cooper & Co., Tientsin
,
Santos, A. M. dos, clerk, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Canton
Santos, C. A. dos, record keeper, Royal Siamese Railway, Bangkok Santos, D. F., clerk, "Shanghai Times," Shanghai
Santos, D. J., boarding officer, Post Office, Hongkong
Santos, E. M., writer, Royal Naval Ordnance Depot, Hongkong
Santos, F. X. dos, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Santos, J., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Santos, J. C., clerk, registration branch Post Office, Hongkong Santos, I., foreman, Noronha & Co., Hongkong
Santos, L., proprietor, Botica Santos y Jaehrling, Manila
Santos, Lope K., governor, Province of Rizal, Philippines
Santos, M., employé, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Santos, M. A. dos., alferes, Companhia de Infanteria, Macao
Santos, S. F., meter reader, Public Works department, Hongkong
Sarard, H., engineer, China Borneo Co., British North Borneo
Saravane, M., assistant, Chargeurs Réunis, Haiphong
Sarda, payeur chef de comptabilité, Trésorerie, Hanoi
Sargant, Josepli, accountant, Straits & Penang Sugar Estates Company, Penang Sargeant, A., artificer, staff sergt., Army Ordnance department, Hongkong Sargent, E., assistant, Bush Brothers, Newchwang
Sargon, Ellis, assistant, David Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Sariff, K., clerk, Fraser & Neave, Ld., Selangor
Sarle, A. L., attorney, L. C. Gillespie & Sons, Hankow
Sarran, R., examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Sarre, Conway C., assistant, Cinematograph Pathé, Singapore Sartor, A., administrateur résident, Ninh Binh, Tonkin
Sasias, receveur comptable, Bureau des Postes, Tourane
Sass, J., merchant, Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau
Sass, P., clerk, German Consulate, Hongkong
Sassoon, M. S., broker, Hongkong
Sathe, G. G., assistant engineer, The Electric Traction Co., Hongkong
Saton, S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Satorres, E. T., accountant, Compañia General de Tobacos de Filipinas, Iloilo
Satow, P. A., inspector of mines, Mines department, Perak
Saubolle, L., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Saudine, Y., clerk, Dallas & Co., Shanghai
Sauer, A., assistant, Kierulff & Co., Peking
Sauer, W. E., chief surveying assistant, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Saugar, P. M., merchant, Dauver & Co., Amoy
Saul, G. M., merchant, Hoskyn & Co., Iloilo
Saul, W. E. M., clerk, Hoskyn & Co., Iloilo
Saumont, conseiller, Conseil Municipal, Hanoi
Saunders, C. J., acting judge, District Court, Singapore
Saunders, G. H., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Saunders, N. T., assistant, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Shanghai
Saunders, W. G., silk inspector, Reiss & Co., Canton
1721
1722
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Saunders, W. H., assistant. Bain & Co., Tainanfu Saunderson, S., engineer, Siemens & Schuckert, Tokyo Saunier, lieutenant, Infanterie Coloniale, Saigon
Sauret, M., French missionary, Nagasaki
Sausmarez, Sir H. W. de, judge, H.B.M. Supreme Court, Shanghai Saussine, J. E., vice-consul for France, Pakhoi and Tunghing Sauter, H., assistant, Tait & Co., Tainánfu
Sauvage, E., clerk, French Post Office, Shanghai
Sauvage, Postes et Télégraphies, Namdinh, Tonkin
Sauvayre, J., assistant, Boyer. Mazet, Guilliée & Co., Shanghai
Sauveur, E. J., assistant, Rondon, Plaisant & Cie., Chemulpo
Savage, R. A. J., superintendent of Mails, Post Office, Hongkong
Savage, V. L., vice-consul for Great Britain, Mukden
Savary, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Church of Sacred Heart of Jesus, Shanghai Savecheff, F. E., assistant, S. L. Smith, Vladivostock
Savin, capitaine, French Legation, Peking
Sawer, W. E, captain, steamer "Chunsang," China coast
Sawkins, D. T., asst. supt., Royal Survey dept., Bangkok
Sax, C., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Saxon, J., mill manager, Soy Chee Cotton Spinning Co., Shanghai
Sayce, K., storekeeper, Hongkong
Sayer, G. B., assistant, "North China Daily News & Herald," Shanghai
Sayer, G. J. B., civil engineer, Hongkong
Sayer, H. C. land surveyor, Public Works department, Hongkong
Sayer, H. W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Ltd., Hongkong Sayle, T., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Sazie, juge, président de Travinh, Cochin-Chine
Scagliotti, A., assistant, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Scandrete, A. J., manager, Insurance Agencies, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore Scarborough, T. W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Scatchard, R. E., surveying assistant, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Scaub, H., agent, Kuenzle & Streiff, Cebu
Sceats, H. J., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Foochow
Schab, P. von, medical practitioner, Paulun von Schab, Krieg, Shanghai
Schaefer, H., merchant, H. Schaefer & Co., Singapore
Schafer, A., factory engineer, Perhentian Tinggi Estate, Negri Sembilan
Schäfer, H., assistant, Bergmann & Co., Yokohama
Schäfer, John S., lieut., H. M. S. "Waterwitch," China Station
Schäfer, K., maurerpolier, Paul Friedr. Richter, Tsinanfu
Schaffner, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
Schaick, L. J. van., capt. 16th infantry, gov. of Mindoro, Province, Philippines Schaller, F., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
Schamberg, H., assistant, Secker's Store, Manila
Scharff, R. Schmidt, chairman Helm Bros., and vice-consul for Norway, Yokohama Scharff, W., merchant, Scharff & Co., Shanghai
Scharffenberg, P., secretary, German, Legation, Tientsin
Scharnhorst, G. C., bailiff, Suprerae Court, Singapore
Scharoff, P. A, attorney, Russo-Chinese Bank, Vladivostock
Scharrmann, Wilh., assistant, Joh. H. Langelütje & Co., Vladivostock
Schasovnikoff, Rev., A., Russian Greek Church, Peking
Schatzon, F., foreman, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Yokohama
Schaumann, J., assistant, Otto Reimers Co., Kobe
Schaumloffel, E. A., acting Deputy Postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Mukden Scheel, H., assistant, Becker & Co., Yokohama'
Scheel, W., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau Scheele, H., manager, Bangkok Outfitting Co., Bangkok Scheerer, F., assistant, R. N. Walker & Co., Nagasaki
Scheibler, J. Fr., manager, W. B. Michaelsen & Co., Foochow Scheidges, R., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Shanghai Scheidges, R., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Yokohama Scheidling, O., captain, steamer "Kolisichang," Hongkong-Bangkok
Scheithaner, H. H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon Schell, H., merchant, Faust & Co., Tientsin
Schell, G., assistant, Jules Berthet, Saigon
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Schell, W., assistant, Ferd. Bornemann, Shanghai
Schellenberg, M., assistant, Sulzer, Rudolph & Co., Yokohama Schellhass, Albs. W., broker, Hongkong
Schellhorn, C. E., assistant, Schuchardt & Schutte, Shanghai Schellhoss, H., assistant, German Consulate, Shanghai Schendel, G. van., vice-consul for Belgium, Shanghai
Scheneider, W., chief engineer, steamer "Petchaburi," China coast Schenk, A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai Schenk, E., assistant, F. W. Horne, Yokohama
Scher, Bruno T., lieutenant 3rd. Infantry, Manila.
Scheuk, E. W., chief officer, steamer "Kwongsang," China coast Scheuten, K. assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Kobe
Schick, O. F., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Schierenberg, H., assistant, Ferd. Bornemann & Co., Hongkong Schild, L., assistant, China Export & Bank Cie., Kobe
Schilde, A., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Schill, H., chief engineer, steamer "Wong Koi," Hongkong and Bangkok Schillig, A., maurerpolier, Paul Friedr. Richter, Tsioaufu
Schilling, F., chief officer, steamer "Ang Hin," Hongkong-Bangkok Schimmelmann, H. v., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Shimonoseki Schindewolf, M., accountant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Hongkong Schirbaum, P., merchant, Carl Wolter & Co., Chemulpo, Corea Schirm, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Schirmer, K., mixed court assistant, German Consulate, Shanghai Schjoth, C. P., assistant, Brunner, Mond & Co., Shanghai
Schlager, J. H., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Schlee, H., merchant, Robt. Anderson & Co., Foochow and Kewkiang Schlesiger, H. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Schlettwein, U., assistant, Meyer Bros., Shanghai
Schlichting, H., merchant, Haukow
Schliewiensky, A., proprietor. Hotel d'Allemagne, Vladivostock
Schlifter, H., overviewer, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow
Schloter, H., Voelkel & Schroeder, Ld., Shanghai
Schlothauer, assistant, Otto Liuke, Kiaochou
Schlottow, W., assistant, Alfred Siemssen, Kiaochau
Schlueter, C., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Kobe
Schlüter, Carl, merchant, Ulderup & Schlüter, Hongkong,
Schluter, H., assistant, Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co., Hongkong Schmeling, R. A., relieving, lightkeeper, Hoihow
Schmetz, F., captain, steamer" Chowfa," China coast
Schmid, O., assistant, Moll, Kunzli & Co., Manila
Schmidt, A., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Schmidt, A., assistant, Ditmer, Brunner Brothers, Ld., Shanghai
Schmidt, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuchowfu
Schmidt, Alf., chernical expert, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama & Kobe
Schmidt, C., assistant, Meyer Bros., Shanghai
Schmidt, C. J., assistant, China Export, Import and Bank Cie., Kobe
Schmidt, C. W., assistant, Anz & Co., Chefoo
Schmidt, C. W., professor, Mining School, Hankow
1723
Schmidt, Carl, C.E., engr. in chief, Swedish-Asiatic Consulting Engineering Co., S'hai. Schmidt, Chas. V., assistant, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Kobe
Schmidt, Dr. Friedrich, S. M. S. "Jaguar," German Squadron, China
Schmidt, E., electrician, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow
Schmidt, G., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Tientsin Schmidt, T. H., assistant, C. Weinberger & Co., Kobe Schmidt, Ed., assistant manager, Schmidt & Ziegler, Manila
Schmidt, F., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Shanghai
Schmidt, H., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Ld., Shanghai
Schmidt, H., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Kiaochau
Schmidt, H., assistant, Hamburg-Amerika Linie, Hongkong
Schmidt, J., chief engineer, steamer "Devawongse," Hongkong and Bangkok Schmidt, J. H., assistant, Langfeldt & Co., Yokohama Schmidt, L., engineer, Shanghai Machine Co., Shanghai Schmidt, P., merchant, Faust & Co., Tientsin
1724
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Schmidt, P., assistant, Bumann & Berblinger, Hongkong
Schmidt, P. E., store-keeper, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Schmidt, P. H., assistant, German Legation, Tientsin
Schmidt-Scharff, R., manager, Fr. Retz & Co., and vice consul for Norway, Yokohama Schmidt, W., accountant, Dentsch-Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Schmidt, W., assistant, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Schmidt, W., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Schmidt, W., employé, The Orient Tobacco Manufactory, Manila
Schmidt, W. E., agent, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ld., Hankow
Schmidt, W., werkfuhrer, Kiaochau
Schmidt, W. W. E., superintendent engineer, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow
Schmidthauser, compt. genl., Socioté Française des Charbonnages de Tonkin, Haiphong
Schmit, W. J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Schmitto, L. G. J. W., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Schmitto, O., H., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kewkiang
Schmitz, C., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Chefoo
Schmoll, capitaine French Legation, Peking
Schmutz, C., foreman, German Post Office, Chefoo
Schnakenbeck, H., assistant, Otto, Reimers, & Co., Yokohama
Schneider, Charles, assistant, John M. Switzer, Cebu
Schneider, E., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Schneider, E. E, manager, Timber Testing Laboratory, Bureau of Forestry, Manila Schneider, G. A. F., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Schneider, J., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Schneider, L., assistant, Dethelm & Co., Bangkok
Schneider, M., chief officer, steamer "Samsen," China coast Schneider, O., assistant, Deutsch Asiatische Bank, Tientsin Schneider, O., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Schneider, T. H. M., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Schnerr, F., chief auditor and traffic superintendent, Royal Railway dept., Bangkok Schnevoigt, R., chief engineer, steamer" Pongtong." China coast
Schnitzler, Ernest, assistant, Deutsch-Chinesische Seiden-Industrie Gess., Kiaochau Schnom, F. E., agent, Cement Tile Works, Ld., Shanghai
Schoch, Otto, assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Hanoi
Schoeks, clerk, German Consulate, Hankow
Schoen, E. A., assistant, Meerkamp & Co, Manila
Schoene, F., broker, Stanton, Schoene & Co., Yokohama
Schoening, J. W., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Kobe
Schoenebeck, W., assistant, Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
Schoenemann, A., assistant, F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong
Schofield, R., assistant, Bush Brothers, Dairen
Schofield, R., assistant, Bush Brothers, Newchwang
Scholl, inspecteur, Binh Thuan, Annam
Scholz, Dr. vice consul for Germany, Yokohama
Scholz, R., secretary, German Municipal Council, Hankow Schomburgk, C., broker, Singapore
Schonberg, A., assistant, Belin, Meyer & Co., Penang
Schönherr, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Schoppe, W. C. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Schoolmaster, C. H., manager, Oil Refinery, Saitozaki, near Hakata
Schooner, J. P., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Schouísky, N. A., consul for Russia, Foochow
Schrader, lieut., S. M. S. "Scharnhorst," German Squadron, China
Schrader, O., assistant, Faust & Co., Tientsin
Schramek, F., assistant, Russo-Chinese Rank, Shanghai
Schramm, C. G,, merchant, Paul Schramm & Co., Yokohama
Schramm, F., assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Hankow
Schramm, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Schregardus, N. H., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Schreiber, A. P.,.grade surveyor, Revenue Survey branchi, Negri Sembilan
Schreiber, H., piano tuner, J. G. Doering, Yokohama
Schreyer, O., surgeon, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Schroder, captain, commander S. M. S. "Arcona," Ger. Squadron, China Schröder, Ed., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Schroeder, F., exchange editor, "Japan Times," Tokyo Schroder, C. engineer, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Bangkok Schroder, Joh. Aug., exporter, Hankow
Schroder, P., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Vladivostock Schroder, Y. H., accountant, Netherlands Trading Society, Penang Schröeder, Werner, assistant, E. Viegelmann & Co., Manila Schroeder, C., assistant, Medical Hall, Singapore
Schroeder, H. C. W., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat,, Shanghai Schroetter. Fe., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Singapore Schroder, W., agent, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Tsinaufu Schroeder, A., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kobe
Schröter, Carl, merchant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Hongkong Schubert, A., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Canton Schubert, J., assistant, Fuhrmeister, Klose & Co., Shanghai Schubert, R., vice-consul for Germany, Penang Schubert, R. P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Schuchard, Joh., merchant, Buchheister & Co., Hankow Schuchner, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Canton Schudel, G., merchant, D. Brandt & Co., Singapore Schuenemann, R., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai Schuengel, H., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore Schuldt, A. E., merchant, Schuldt & Co., Shangbai
Schule, F. H., engineer, Bangkok
Schüle, Otto, man. and dir., Katz Brothers, and consular agent U. S. A., Penang Schuling, F., asst. clerk and interpreter, German Consulate, Hongkong
Schulk, Ed., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhaminer, Vladivostock
Schullenback, C., employé, Taikoo Sugar Retining Co., Hongkong
Schulte, H., postmaster, German Post Office, Tsinanfu
Schultz, Albrecht, assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin
Schultz, Chas. S., chief engineer and representative, Dick, Kerr & Co., Tokyo Schultz, G., silk inspector, E. Pasquet & Co., Canton Schultz, J., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila Schultze, A., assistant, Melchers Co., Hankow Schultze, H., chancellor, Gernian Legation, Tokyo Schulz, chief engineer, S. S. "Suimow," Coast service Schulz, chief officer, S. S. "Kowloon," Coast service Schulz, A., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Schulz, A., captain, tug "Cyclop," Bangkok Schulz, C., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Yokohama Schulz, K., schnied, Kiaochow
Schulz, O., installation-manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Tientsin
Schulz, W., assistant, Fearon, Daniel & Co., Shanghai
Schulze, E., general manager, China Import & Export Lumber Co., Shanghai. Schulze, J., Dr. Jur., interpreter, German Consulate, Nanking
Schulze, L., manager, China Hide & Skin Export Co., Hankow
Schulze, M., assistant, Franzen & Co., Singapore
Schumacher, E., captain, steam lighter "Meklong," Hongkong Schumacher, H., merchant, Ferd. Bornemann, Hongkong Schumitz, E., chief officer, steamer" Machew," China coast Schumpeter, H., attaché, Austro-Hungarian Consulate, Shanghai Schuppisser, P., assistant, Froelilich & Kuttner, Manila Schutter, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kiaochau Schutz, H. L., general-manager, Grand Hotel, Singapore Schutz, P. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau Schützler, staff engineer, German Naval Squadron, China Schwabe, E., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Schwaff, A., prokurist, F. Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau Schwager, E., assistant, Melchers & Co., Canton
Schwalko, L. I., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostok
Schwandes, B., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
Schwarz, M., merchant, Schwarz, Gauner & Co., Shanghai
Schwarz, T., assistant, J. R. Simon & Co., Yokohama
Schwarze, P., manager, Foreign department, Siam Commercial Bank, Bangkok Schwarzenbach, F., manager, Ed. A. Keller & Co., Manila
1725
1726
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Schwarzenstein, Baron Dr. Mumm von, ambassador, German Legation, Tokyo Schwarzer, G. Á., examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Schwarzkopf, F., shipchandler, F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong Schwarzkopf, S C., immigration officer, U. S. Customs, Cebu
Schween, H., assistant, Windsor & C., Bangkok
་་
Schweiger, H. R., acting tidesurveyor, Chinese Maritime Customs, Soochow Schweinitz, B. v., assistant, Hamburg Amerika Linie, Shanghai
Schwenke, K., assistant, Sietas, Plumbeck & Co, Kiaochau
Schwinges, Cl., general manager, "La Concha" Button Factory, Manila Schwyzer, F., assistant, Nabholz & Co., Shanghai
Scialdone, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Seidmore, Geo. H., U. S. Consul, Kobe
Sclauders, W. W., clerk of works, H. B. M. Office of Works, Shanghai Scorrer, E., clerk, Moorhead & Halse, Shanghai
Scothill, W. E., principal, Peking University, Peking
Scotson, Jas, assistant manager, Richard Haworth & Co., Shanghai
Scott, A., assistant surveyor, H. B. M. Office of Works, Shanghai
Scott, A., sub-agent, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Ipoh, Perak Scott, A. F. S., major, 78th Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Scott, A. P. assistant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Yokohama Scott, C. D., inspector, Municipal Police, Hankow
Scott, E., assistant, H. Skott & Co., Hongkong
Scott, F. R., assistant, Mackenzie & Co., Ld., Tientsin
Scott, F. W. R., assistant, Donaldson & Burkinshaw, Singapore
Scott, Fred,, deputy postinaster, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Scott, Gilbert B., surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Nightingale," China Station
Scott, H. G., general manager, Siamese Tin Syndicate, Ld., Bangkok Scott, H. W., inspector of gunnery, Military Department, Sarawak Scott, James H. E., teacher, School of Commerce, Manila
Scott, J. engineer, Hakodate
Scott, J. B., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Scott, J. P., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Saigon Scott, J. S., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Yokohama
Scott, J. W., puisne judge, Penang
Scott, Mark, captain, Police Precinct I., Luneta, Manila.
Scott, P., assistant, Sian Forest Co., Bangkok
Scott, P. W. A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Scott, R., acting collector, Land Revenue, Malacca
Scott, R. B, chief engineer, Pahang Consolidated & Co., Pahang
+
Scott, R. H., district manager, Mutual Life Insurance Co., Newchwang
Scott, R. H., manager, Mutual Life Insurance Co., Newchwang
Scott, R. W., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Scott, T. G., manager, Printing Office, Fraser & Neave, Singapore
Scott, T. L., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Scott, Walter, architect, Shanghai
Scott, William R., lient. 7th Infantry, topographer, Manila
Scott, W., assistant, Findlay & Co., Manila
Scott, W. postal officer, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Scott, W. S., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama Scoular, R. director, John Little & Co., Singapore
Scriba, C. P. H., merchant, Curl Scriba & Co., Nagasaki
Scriven, George P., lieut. col., chief signal officer. Div. Staff, Manila Scriven, H. E., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Scriven, M. E, assistant surgeon, Medical department, Penang Scrivenor, J. B., geologist, Federated Malay States
Scrymgeour, J., acting-agent, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Bangkok Scully, F. P., chief clerk, Police department, Penang
Scully, R. S., chief clerk, Supreme Court, Penang
Scully, T. G. A., assistant surgeon, Merlical department, Singapore Scully, W. F., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Scurr, F., chief officer, steamer "Tuckwo," China coast
Scutt, F. O., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Sdoo, C., assistant, Alex. Campbell & Co., Hankow Seafoot, J., assistant, Dallas & Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Seaman, J. F., merchant, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Seanlon, M. P., medical officer, Medical department, Singapore
Sears, captain James H., naval attache, United States Legation, Peking Sears, Captain J. H., naval attaché, U. S. Legation, Tokyo
Seaton, W. M., assistant, Forbes, Munn & Co., Iloilo Seaver, G., captain, Police Precinct 4, Manila
Sebes, H., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Tientsin
Sechand, A., assistant, Dumarest et Fils, Saigon
Seckenaorff-Gutend, Baron R. von, merchant, R. Gurend & Co., Tsinanfu
Secker, F., sub-editor, Daily Newspaper, Kiaochau
Sedgwick, J. H., vicar, All Saints Church, Tientsin
Sedgwick, R. E, assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Peking See, K. G, electrical engineer, Hanyang Steel Works, Bankow Seeberger, F., accountant, Siemens-Schuckert, Tokyo' Seeds, W., third secretary, British Legation, Peking Seegelken, F., assistant, A. Ehlers & Co., Shanghai Seeger, C., assistant, Hill, Bergdahl & Co., Hongkong Seekamp, A., merchant, C. Rohde & Co., Yokohama Seelhorst, G., assistant, Winckler & Co., vno, Kobe Seevers, H., secretary, Pinghsiang Colliery, Hankow Seffert, G., assistant, Varenne & Co., Yokohama
Segerdal, J. N.. assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Seggie, Thos., sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Yokohama Segueira, C., clerk, Netherlands Trading Society, Hongkong
Segueira, C., clerk, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Séguret, A. M. L., Roman Catholic missionary, Lungchow Seidel, A., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Kiaochau
Seidl, H., assistant, Nabholz & Co., Yokohama
Seiler, Franz, assistant, Joh. H. Langelütje & Co., Vladivostock
Seitz, C. L.. merchant, China Import and Export Lumber Co., Shanghai Seitz, F., broker, Shanghai
Selby, Walter A., lieut. H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China
Selig, G., assistant, Winckler & Co., Tokyo,
Selke, O., assistant, Noessler & Co., Shanghai
Selkirk, T. R., assistant, Forbes, Munn & Co., Iloilo
Sell, W. C., chief officer, steamer "Nanshan," Swatow & Hongkong
Sellar, A. M., assistant, Keppel Harbour Section, Singapore
Sellar, T. H., captain, steamer "Sui-wo," China coast
Sellers, H. A., traveller, Riley, Haygreaevs & Co., Singapore Sellés Jose, Sellés Hermanos, Kobe
Sellés, Juan, Sellés Hermanos, Kobe
Sells, H C., assistant postmaster-general, Penang
Selwood, S., tin-dresser, Pahang Consolidated & Co., Pahang
Sembill, captain, steamer "Borneo," Hongkong-Borneo
Semenoff, J. L., merchant, Semenoff & Co., Vladivostock
Semko, S. K., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Sendal, Baron de, Minister, and consul general for Portugal, Yokohama and Tokyo Sendres, E., cajero, Banco Español Filipino, Manila
Seng, P., assistant, Siam Electricity Co., Ld., Bangkok
Senna, Á. B. T., clerk, U. Spalinger, Canton
Senna, A. R., clerk, Yangtsze Wharf and Godown Co., Ld., Shanghai
Senna, F. P., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Canton
Senna, F. X., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Senna, I. B., clerk, A. R. Burkill & Sons Shanghai
Senna, J., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co, Ld., Canton
Senna, J. M. de clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Senna, J. M. E. S., assistant postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Pakhoi
Senna, J. M. F, de, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Senna, L., clerk, The Shanghai Horse Bazaar Co., Shanghai
Senna, V. F., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
1727
Sepher, S. A., asst., Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Ld., Hongkong Sequeira, A. J. M., clerk, A. R. Marty, Hongkong
Sequeira, G. J., clerk, A. R. Marty, Hongkong
Sequeira, J., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
1728
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Sequeira, J. A. chefe do serviço telephonico, Taipa e Macao Sequeira, L, J, auctioneer, Bangkok
14
Sequeira, N. A., proof reader, Shanghai Times," Shanghai Sequeira, P. N., clerk, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong Sergius, Rev., Russian Greek Church, Peking
Serguf, G., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Serizier, resident de France, Quang-Nam, Annam
Serkis, L., manager. L. Suzor, Yokohama
Serle, G. B., surgeon, Singapore Dispensary, Singapore
Sernó, A., merchant, Grosser & Co., Yokohama and Kobe
Serry, H., jr., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore Servanin, I., assistant, H. Madier, Shanghai
Service, W., superintendent engineer, Naval department, Sarawak Sesano, B, Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Seth, E. L., managing clerk, Sisson & Dealy, Singapore
Seth, Enos, secretary, Humphreys Estate and Finance Co., Hongkong Seth, G. G., assistant to the attorney general, Singapore
Seth, Harold, broker, Hongkong
Seth, J. H., accountant, Percy Smith & Seth, Hongkong
Seth, S. A., secretary, Dairy Farm Co., Hongkong
Sévérac, A., engineer, Rizerie Orient, Cholon
Severin, A. B., clerk, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai Severn, C., acting Secretary, Federated Malay States
Sewell, C. A. S., assistant, High School, Bangkok
Sewell, C. Y. B., surveyor, Survey department, Perak Seyriel, A. Kaufmann, Kiaochau
Seydler, R., assistant, China Export, Import and Bank Cie., Hongkong Seyffert, J. O., assistant, Geiseo & Gilbert, Yokohama
Seymour, J. N., instructor, Higher School, Hongo, Tokyo Shabalin, J. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock" Shackleton, C. F., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Shadgett, H. E., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai (absent)
Shainiu, B., tidewaiter, Ma itime Customs, Changsha
Shairp, W., assistant manager, Selaba Estate, Teluk Anson, Penang
Shallard, H. W. D., chief clerk, Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co., Hongkong Shand, T., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Shane, W., master, steamer "Tungkiang," China coast
Shand, W. A., asst. supt., Royal Survey department, Bangkok Shannon, C. R., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Hongkong Sharman, L. C., assistant, Bernard & Co., Yokohama
Sharnhorst, G. D., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Sharp, A., assistant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Sharp, A. F., archdeacon, vicar of St. Thomas Church, Kuching, Sarawak
Sharp, P. B., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Cebu
Sharpe, R. H., assistant, Sharpe, Ross & Co., Singapore
Sharpe, W. K., assistant, Kennedy & Co., Penang
Sharpin, H. D., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Sharples, E. W., assistant, Tuhrmeister & Co., Shanghai
Sharples, H. J., portmaster, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Sharples, J., engineer, Laou Kung Mow Cotton S. & W. Co., Shanghai
Shaw, A., mgr., Hongkong Cotton Spinning, Weaving & Dyeing Co., H'kong (absent) Shaw, Alex., assistant, China Express Co., Hongkong
Shaw, E., assistant, Hongkong Cotton Spinning, Weaving and Dyeing Co., Hongkong Shaw, E. L., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Shaw, Ernest A., fleet surgeon, H. M. S. Tamar," Hongkong
Shaw, F. J. L., assistant, Wm. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Shaw, F. S., engineer and merchant, L. J. Healing & Co., Kobe
Shaw, G. E., acting assistant, district officer, Lower Perak, Perak Shaw, Geo. L., merchant, Antung
Shaw, H R., superintendent, Survey Office, Selangor
Shaw, J. C., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Shaw, J. R., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway, Co., Yokohama Shaw, James T., tailor and outfitter, Hongkong
Shaw, K. M., architect, Ford & Shaw, Tientsin
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Shaw, L. D., medical practitioner, Irwin & Brown, Tientsin Shaw, N. R. M., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Shaw, R. E., pro. accountant, International Banking Corporation, Manila Shaw, Rowan, barrister-at-law, Logan & Ross, Penang
Shaw, T. H. R., assistant, Butterfield & wire, Hongkong
Shaw, W., armourer staff sergeant, Arny Ordnance Department, Hongkong Shaw, Dr. W. R., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila Shea, F. N., sub agent, American Trading Co., Kobe Shealey, A. S., assistant, Lack & Davis, Hongkong Shearer, J., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai Shearer, R. H., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai Sheedy, C. J., acting chief inspector of Police, Singapore
Sheffield, J. N., surveyor, Survey Department, Perak
Shekell, H. C., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Shekury, G. J., general broker, and managing director Central Stores, Shanghai
Sheldon, B. P., merchant, Sheldon Bakels & Co., Shanghai
Shelford, W. H., managing director, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore and Penang Shellam, W. A., loco, inspector, Railways, Yingkow, N. China
Shellim, E., manager, David Sassoon & Co., L., Hongkong Shelonin, A. G., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Shelton, E., boat officer, Maritime Custoins, Ningpo
Shen, Y. L., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Shengle, J. C., general manager, Kiangsu Chemical Works, Shanghai
Shenton, W. E. L., solicitor, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong
Sheppard, Major C. L., naval ordnance officer, Royal Naval Ord. Depot, Hongkong
Sheppard, G. W., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Tientsin
Sheppard, Jos. O., assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong
Sheppard, P. A., assistant engineer, Imperial Railway, Tientsin Sheppard, P. A., C. A. E's Office, Imperial Railway, Tientsin
Shepherd, C. E., manager, Grand Hotel, Shanghai
Shepherd, E. B., assistant, Land Investment and Agency Co., Ld., Hongkong Shepperd, S. F., assistant," Japan Chronicle," Kobe
Shepherd, Willis O. A., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Kewkiang
Sherbakoff, S. J., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Sheridan, C. B., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Tientsin
Sheridan, J. J., assistant, Garner, Quelch Co., Shanghai
Sheriff, A. locomotive inspector, Imperial Railways, Tangku, Tientsin Sherman, G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Sherriff, A. W., "Japan Gazette," Yokohama
Sherriff, C. A., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Sherslakoff, J. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Sherwood, M. E., deputy registrar of Deeds, Singapore
Shevaram, K., manager, Dhunamall, Chelaram & Co., Canton,
Shewan, W., merchant, Wm. Shewan & Co., Hongkong
Shibbeth, E. H., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Shanghai
Shibbeth, M., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Shields, C. E, supervisor, Eastern Extension, A. & C. Telegraph Co., Hongkong Shields, Major E. G., purchasing agent, Philippine Govt., Manila
Shields, R., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Kashing, Hangchow
Shields, S. R., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Shields, W. E., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama. Shirdan, T., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Shires, H., foreman of works, Admiralty Works, Hongkong
Shoemaker, Fred., district auditor, Province Albay, Philippines Shokolenko, M. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Shorey, A. C., sub-accountant, International Bank, Hongkong
Shottey, Roman Catholic Missionary, Kewkiang
Showler, W. Y., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama Shroff, F. P., assistant, S. J. David & Co., Hongkong
-!
Sia, T. B., physician, Shanghai
Sibbold, S. K., executive engineer, Public Works, Pahang
Sibiril, médecin, Postes médicaux, Saigon
Sicard, F., Roman Catholic Missionary, Swatow
Sickel, A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
1720
1730
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Sidebottom, J. N., merchant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila Sidler, Alb., consulting engineer, Germann & Co., Manila Siebert, Dr. F., interpreter, German Consulate, Mukden Siebert, E., merchant, Siemssen & Co., Tientsin
Siebs, Edo. A. H., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hankow Siebs, H. A., merchant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong
Siegel, C. F., foreman, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Siegert, W., manager, Pratu Samyot Store, Bangkok
Siegler, W., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Sieling, H., assistant, The Orient Tobacco Manufactory, Hongkong
Siemen, N., captain, steam lighter "Patria," Bangkok"
Siemers, G., secretary, Hotel van Wijk Co., Singapore
Siemsen, F. H., boat-officer, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Siemssen, E., director, Germania Brauerei, Kiaochan
Siemssen, G., merchant, Siemssen & Krohn, and consul for Germany & Sweden, Foochow Siffert, D., consul-general for Belgium, Shanghai
Sigalas, E. de, assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Hongkong Silakoff, T. P., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Sillius, P., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Kobe
Silva, A., amanuense, Secretaria Militor, Macau
Silva, A. C., clerk, North China Isce. Co., Ld., Hongkong
Silva, A. da, commission agent, Placé da Silva & Co., Canton
Silva, A. E. da, clerk, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Silva, A. H. da, clerk, Linstead & Davis, Hongkong
Silva, A. H. M. da, land and general broker, Hongkong
Silva, A. J. C., da, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Shanghai
Silva, A. L. da, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong
Silva, A. M. da, clerk, China and Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Silva, A. M. da., interpreter Sinologo, Macau
Silva, A. M. da, clerk Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong
Silva, A. M. C. da, assistant, P. & O. Steam Navigation Co., Hongkong
Silva, A. R., tenente, Corps de Policia, Macau
Silva, A. T. Gomes da, clerk, P. A. Lapicque & Co., Hongkong
Silva, A. V., clerk, Carlowitz & Co., Hongkong
Silva, C. A. da., proprietor, The Victoria Confectionery, Singapore
Silva, C., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Silva, C. C. da., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Silas, C. D., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Hongkong Silva, C. J. da., editor e redactor, "A Verdade," Macau
Silva, C. J. da, major reformado, Macao
Silas, D. H., assistant, D. Sassoon & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Silva-Netto, A. F. B., assistant, Jorge & Co., Hongkong
Silva, C. M. Basco da, clerk, China and Japan Trading Company, Shanghai
Silva, E. A., clerk, Andrews, von Fischerz & George, Shanghai
Silva, E. A., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China, Hongkong Silva, E. de., boarding Officer, Malacca
Silva, E. da, clerk, Hongkong Printing Press, Hongkong
Silva, E. da., escrivão, Asylo dos Orphiaos, Macau
Silva, E. E. da, clerk, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Silva, E. F. da, clerk, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai
Silva, E. L., ajudante escripturario, Santa Casa da Misericordia, Macau
Silva, E. M. da, clerk, H. Lucas & Co., Kobe
Silva, F. da, foreman printer, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai
Silva, F., secretary, "Vida Nova," Macao
Silva, F. C., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Silva, F. F., clerk, British Post Office, Shanghai
Silva, F. G. Eça da, clerk, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Silva, F. B., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Silva, F. F. Eça da, clerk, David Sassoon & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Silva, F. M. da, clerk, Jebsen & Co., Hongkong
Silva, F. P., clerk, Imports and Exports Office, Hongkong
Silva, F. R., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Yokohama Silva, F. X., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Silva, F. X. A, da, interprete sinologo, Macao
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Silva, G. F., arcediago, Cabedo, Macao
Silva, G. F., arcediago, secretario de Camara Ecclesiastica, Maca
Silva, G. H., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton
Silva, H. M., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong
Silva, H. Nolasco, director, Pharmacia Popular, Macao
Silva, H. P., capellào, Capella do Hospital de S. Raphael, Macau
Silva, I., clerk, Chartered Bank, Shanghai
Silva, Izabelo de, treasurer, Province Rizal, Philippines
Silva, J., asst. engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Macao
Silva, J., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Silva, J. A. B., clerk, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Hongkong
Silva, J. A. da, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila Silva, J. C. da, clerk, Weeks & Co., Hankow
Silva, J. C. J., sub-editor, "Straits Echo," Penang
Silva, J. D. O. da, clerk, Wendt & Co., Canton
Silva, J. E. da, amanuense, Administraçao do Concelho da Taipa, Macau
Silva, J. F. de, surveyor, Survey department, Selangor
Silva, J. F. Eça da, assistant, J. M. Eça da Silva & Co., Canton Silva, J. F. S. da, amanuense da Secretaria Geral, Macao
Silva, J. M., assistant, L. Gameau Hongkong
Silva, J. M. da, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Silva, J. M. Eça da, clerk, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Silva, J. M. B. da, clerk, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Silva, J. M. Eça da, merchant J. M. Eça da Silva & Co., Canton
Silva, J. M. G., stenographer and typist, Wilkinson & Grist, Hongkong Silva, J. M. J., clerk, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai
Silva, J. M. P., clerk, Stamp Revenue Office, Hongkong
Silva, J. N. da., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Silva, J. T. da, clerk, Hughes & Hough, Hongkong
Silva, L. A. da, clerk, Horse Repository, Hongkong
Silva, L. Ayres da, proprietor, Macao Cycle depot, Macao
Silva, L. J. da, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Silva, L. L., clerk, F. Bornemann & Co., Hongkong
Silva, L. M., importer, Silva & Co., Hongkong
Silva, M. A. da, clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Hongkong Silva, M. E. da, clerk, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hongkong
Silva, M. M. A., capellào, Egreja de Santa Clara, Macan
Silva, M. M. da., clerk, Deutsh Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Silva, P. da, clerk, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Canton
Silva, P. A., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Aus, & China, Shanghai
Silva, P., clerk, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Silva, P. F. da, assistant, A. A. Vantine & Co., Yokohama
Silva, P. M. N. da, printer, Guedes & Co., Hongkong
Silva, P. N. da, Jr., interprete sinologo. Macao
Silva, R. C. da, clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong
Silva, R. E., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Silva, S. de., chief clerk, Serembar. Negri Sembilan
Silva, S. S., escripturario, Santa Casa da Misericordia, Macao
Silva, T. A., amanuense da Secretaria Geral, Macau
Silva, T. E., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Yokohama
Silver, D., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Chungking
Silverthorne, Jas, proprietor and editor, "Chefoo Morning Post," Chefoo
Sim, J. D. Keith, assistant, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Shanghai
Sim, W. R., manager, Connoisseur, Ld., Shanghai
Simcock, F., asst. to director, Bureau of Navigation, Manila
Simcock, P., superintendent, Green Island Cement Co., Macao
Sime, J. L., agent, Straits Trading Co., Kajang, Selangor
Sime, W. M., manager, Bukit Lintang Rubber Estates, Ll., Malacca
Simmons, A. J., assistant, Jaques & Co., Tientsin
Simmons, A. L., inspector of Police, Perak
•
Simmons, A. W. J., overseer of works, Public Works department, Hongkong
Simmons, G., loco. inspector, Railways, Tientsin
Simmons, J., assistant collector, Land Revenue, Negri Sembilan
Simmons, J. H., clerk, Hongkong and China Gas & Co., Ld., Hongkong
1731
1732
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Simmons, J. W., acting-district-officer, Perak
Simmons, M., assistant, Spunt & Rosenfeld, Shanghai
Simmons, R., assistant, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Simmons, R. O., acting secretary and works manager, "Critic," Tientsin
Simms, H. G., secretary, North China Insurance, Co., Shanghai
Simo, W. S., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Ld., Tientsin
Simões, A. P., clerk, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai Simões, A. P., clerk, Jardíne, Matheson & Co., Ld., Shanghai Simoes, C. P., clerk, China and Japan Trading Co., Shanghai Simões, F. X. clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Simoės, J. A., alferes, Corps de Policia, Macau
Simon, A., directeur, Glacières d'Indo-Chine, Haiphong Simonet, F., assistant, Descours Cabaud et Cie,, Haiphong Simoni, administrateur de le. cl. de service, Cabinet, Hanoi
Simons, H. M., managing director, Paterson, Simons & Co., Penang Simper, E. C., employé, Robinson Piano Co., Hongkong
Simpson, A., assistant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Singapore
Simpson, A. B., surgeon, Singapore Dispensary, Singapore
Simpson, C. J. W., architect and surveyor, H.B.M. Office of Works, Shanghai
Simpson, E., merchant, Lenox, Simpson & Co., of Manchuria, Daireu
Simpson, G., inspector of police, Perak
Simpson, H., chief officer, steamer "Lienshing," China coast
Simpson, H. D., general manager & sec., Bangkok Manufacturing Co., Ld., Bangkok Simpson, Irwine, assistant, Denny, Mott & Dickson, Bangkok
Simpson, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Simpson, R. R., assistant, Vulcan Ironworks, Shanghai
Simpson, W., employé, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Sims, W. A., branch manager, Commercial Union Assurance Co., Singapore
Simson, W. C. S., capt., Hk.-S'pore Batn., R. A., private sec. to H. E. the Governor, Il'kong Sinclair, A., marine superintendent, Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Hongkong
Sinclair, G. F., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Sinclair, W., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Sinclair, W. H., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Sindner, F. C., accountant, Rizerie de l'Union, Saigon
Singer, E. A., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Singer, H. P., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Clinkiang
Singer, P., assistant, L. Lebold Shokan, Tokyo
Singer, T. F., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hankow
Singer, W. J., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Sinneker, G., manager, Chang Kah Pang Wharf, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Sintzenich, C. F. E., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Sinukoff, M. E., assistant, Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co., Hankow
Siqueira, E. J., clerk, "North China Daily News & Herald," Shanghai Siqueira, F. F., clerk, Meyer Bros., Shanghai
Siqueira, G. M., clerk, Chartered Bank, Shanghai
Siqueira, J. M., aspirante, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
Sirugue, receveur comptable, Postes et Télégraphes, Saigon
Sisley, George J., eng. lieut., H. M. torpedo-boat destroyer, "Virago," China Station
Sitnikoff, A. I., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Sixt, Otto, assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
Sjobeck, Gus., assistant, W. & J. Sloane, Kobe
Sjoestedt, L. F., assistant, Bryner Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Sjostedt, N. T., second officer, Customs revenue cruiser "Pingching," Shanghai
Skelton, A. H., storekeeper, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Skerrett-Rogers, C., tea inspector, F. H. England & Co., Foochow
Skidmore, T. E., assistant manager, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai Skinner, C. A., secretary, Vulcan Ironworks, Shanghai
Skinner, C. F., district officer, British North Borneo
Skinner, O. H., medical practitioner, Thomson & Aird, Hankow
Skinner, R. W., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Skott, Chr., assistant, H. Skott & Co., Hongkong
Skott, H., merchant, H. Skott & Co., Hongkong
Skribanowitch, H., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Plagow, Vladivostock Skrimshire, C. V. S., lieutenant, Hongkong-Singapore Battn. R. G. A,.
Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Skrinishire, E. P. W., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Nagasaki Slade, E. L., assistant, Borneo Co., Sarawak
Slade, H. W., merchant, Gilman & Co., Hongkong
Slade, Marcus Warre, barrister-at-law, Hongkong
Slaney, A. E., inspector of works, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton Slater, A. J., engineer, Public Works, Kuala Kangsar, Perak Slater, G. B., assistant, James Morrison & Co.. Ld., Tokyo
Sleap, A. E., acting accountant, Mercantile Bank of India, Hongkong Sleap, S. A., assistant, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai Slettengren, A., assistant, The National Review," Shanghai Slight, E. T., asst. postal offieer, Chinese Post Office, Nanking Sloan, J. C., agent, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Cebu
Sloan, James, broker, Sloan, and Mitchell, Manila
1733
Sloan, Robt. J., consulting med, director, Equitable Life Ass. Soc. of U. S., Y'hama & S'hai Sloan, W. A., assistant, Sloan & Mitchell, Manila
Slowe, C. R., assistant, Ebbeke & Co., Shanghai
Sly, E. A. H., assistant, British Consulate, Tientsin
Skingle, R. C., assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Singapore
Smagt, F. A. van, engine driver, Royal Railway department, Bangkok
Small, A., foreman, Public Works, department, Hongkong
Smart, R. D., professor, Soochow University, Soochow
Smart, W., reporter, "South China Morning Post," Hongkong
Smiles, R. harbour engineer, Fenwick & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Smirnoff, J. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Smith, Allan, asistant, Abenheim Bros., Yokohama
Smith, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Smith, A., chief clerk, Post Office, Singapore
Smith, A. A., manager, Arracan Co., Let, Bangkok
Smith, A. B., broker, Kennedy & Co., Penang
Smith, A. Corbett, assistant secretary, Municipal Council, Shanghai
Smith, A. G., captain, steamer "Hinsang," China coast
Smith, A. G. L. A., Advertiser Publishing Co., Yokohama
Smith, A. G. S., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Smith, A., supermumerary medical officer, Singapore
Smith, A. MoT., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Smith, A. W., assistant, Alex. Ross & Co., Hongkong
Smith, A. W., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Canton
Smith, B. de Berniere, assistant, China & Japan Trading Co., Shanghai Smith, Chas. H., judge, Court of First Instance, Manila
Smith, Crowther, solicitor, D'Almada & Smith, Hongkong
Smith, C., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Smith, C. A., chief clerk, Bureau of Audits, Manila
Smith, C. D. acting consul for Great Britain, Wuchow
Smith, C. F., manager, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Foochow
Smith, C. T., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Smith, D., chief engineer, steamer "Waishing China coast
Smith, D. G., second engineer. Arracan Co., Ld., Bangkok
Smith, E. A., storekeeper, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Smith, E. B. Heaton, assistant, Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai Smith, E. Grant, assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Smith, F. J., district postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Soochow
Smith, F. L., district postal officer, Ningpo
Smith, F. H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Smith, F. H., inspector, Hackney Carriage Department, Municipality, Singapore
Smith, F. M., teacher, Tabogan Division of Cebu, Philippines
Smith, G. Morton, assistant, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Smith, G. J., assistant, Sapong Rubber & Tobacco Estates, B. N. Borneo
Smith, G. P., eye surgeon, Imperial Railways, Tientsin
Smith, George W., captain, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station Smith, H., broker, Smith & Ballard, Tientsin
Smith, H. C., accountant, Burr Photo Co., Shanghai
Smith, H. C., assistant, Syme & Co., Singapore
Smith, H. C., chief engineer, steamer "Nanning," Canton-Wuchow
Smith, H. Percy, chartered accountant, Percy Smith & Seth, Hongkong
1734
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Smith, H. Staples, shipping agent, Deacon & Co., Canton Smith, J., inspector of police, Hongkong
Smith, J., outside foreman, Central Engine Works, Shanghai Smith, J. C. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Canton Smith, J. D., manager, Eastern Smelting Co., Selangor Smith, J. E., medical practitioner, The Pharmacy, Penang Smith, J. L., consul in charge U. S. Consulate, Chunking Smith, J. M., captain, steamer "Wingsang," China coast
Smith, J. R. M., chief manager, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Smith, J. T., inspector, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Smith, J. T., manager, L. Tallieu & Co., Tientsin
Smith, James W., district health officer, Province of Benguet, Philippines Smith, John G., commission agent, J. G. Smith & Co., Hongkong
Smith, K. Van R., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Yokohama Smith, L.. acting, assistant judge, H. B. M. Supreme Court, Shanghai Smith, L. F., assistant, Aruhold, Karberg & Co., Tientsin
Smith, L. H., agent, Russo-Chinese Bank, Chiefoo
Smith, M. Spencer, manager, The Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Yokohama. Smith, M. A., medical attendant, British Consulate, Bangkok
Smith, Matthiessen, acting manager, Dodwell & Co., Kobe
Smith, M. S., assistant, Bombay Burnah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Smith, N. F., merchant, Smith, Baker & Co., Yokohama
Smith, Norman, assistant, Wm. Little & Co., Shanghai
Smith, P. assistant, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Smith, P. A., instructor in English, Hiroshima Higher Nomal School, Tokyo Smith, P. A. T., assistant, L. Tallien & Co., Tientsin
Smith, P. E. J., assistant, Pulo Bukam Tank Installation, Singapore
Smith, P. H., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Smith, R., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Shanghai
Smith, R. E., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Smith, R. E., senior assistant, Raffles Institution School, Singapore
Smith, R. M., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
Smith, R. S., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Smith, S., boatswain, fongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Smith, S. Bell, captain, steamer "Sainam," Canton-Wuchow
Smith, S. J., Baptist Mission, Bangkok
Smith, S. J., proprietor, Bang Kolem Printing office, Bangkok
Smith, S. L., commission merchant, Vladivostock
Smith, S. N., chief clerk to Chief Ordnance Officer, Hongkong
Smith, S. R., assistant engineer, Public Works, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor Smith, S. W., student interpreter, British Legation, Hankow
Smith, T. Sercombe, puisne judge, Supreme Court, Singapore Smith, T. H., acting boat officer, Maritime Customs, Iloiliow Smith, V., assistant, postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Kewkiang Smith, W., assistant, Luzon Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Smith, W., clerk, Martin & Co., Yokohama
Smith, W. editor, "B. N. Borneo Harald," British North Borneo
Smith, W. E., forwarding agent, Lower Perak, Perak
Smith, W. G., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Shanghai
Smith, W. J., assistant engineer, Public Works department, Selangor
Smith, W, K., mill assistant, Ewo Cotton Spinning and Weaving Co., Shanghai Smith, W. M., general manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ld., Shanghai
Smith, W. W., district magistrate, British North Borneo
Smith, Warren D., chief, Division of Mines, Bureau of Science, Manila Smith, William F., chief clerk, Fire, department, Manila
Smithers, T. J., chief engineer, steamer "Lienshing." China coast
Smyth, E. H., assistant, Deacon & Co., Canton
Smyth, F., share and general broker, Vernon & Smyth, Hongkong
Smyth, J. P., assistant, I. M. Rangel & Co., Shanghai
Smyth, J. W., manager, Bangkok Dock Co., Ld., Bangkok
Smyth, W., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Shanghai
Smythe, H., chief engineer, steamer "Kinshan," Hongkong-Canton Snabilié, C. J. W., Dutch Solicitor, Singapore
Snell, J. A., medical officer, Martime Customs, Soochow
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Snewin, E. A., sub-editor and reporter, "Straits Times," Singapore
Snow, A., pilot, Singapore
1735
Snow, G. H. A., assistant, International Sleeping Car and Express Trains Co., Tokyo Snowden, F., assistant chief engineer, Railway Co., Manila
Snowden, T. C., storehouseman, H. M. Victualling Yard, Hongkong
Snowman, A. W., assistant, A. Bune, Hongkong
Snyder, R., outdoor assistant, China-Borneo Co., British North Borneo
Soares, A. D., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Soares, A. F. de J., merchant, Soares & Co., Hongkong
Soares, A. M. L., merchant, Soares & Co., Hongkong
Soares, C. M., clerk, Barretto & Co., Hongkng
Soares, E. E, clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Soares, E. E., Jr., clerk, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Soares, F., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Soares, F. P. de V., accountant, Peninsular & Oriental S. N. Co., Hongkong
Soares, F. X., Covego de Só de Macau, Macau
Soares J., clerk, A. A. de Mello, Macau
Soares, P. P., clerk, Kruse & Co., Hongkong
Soares, V. F., clerk, Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co., Hongkong
Sobbe, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Sobey, W. T., mine foreman, Pahang Consolidated Co., Pahang
Sobugen, Dr., S. M. S. "Iltis," German Squadron, China
Soerensen, chief engineer, S. S. "Kowloon," Coast service
Soeters, P. M., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Singapore Soisson, J. P., engnieer Hanyang Steel Works, Hankow Sokolik, D. A., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Solirene, pharmacien, Pharmacie Française et Etrangère, Saigon Solly, W. J., postmaster, British Post Office, Shanghai (absent)
Solomon, F. P., merchant, Japan Import & Export Commission Co., Yokohama Solomon, H. H., chief clerk, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Shanghai
Solomon, S. J., assistant, E. D. Sassoon & Co., Shanghai
Solowieff, K. M., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Solte, E., assistant, Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Somekh, B. A., merchant, Shanghai
Someren, R. G. van, solicitor, Singapore
Somerton, S. H.. assistant, "Japan Gazette," Yokohama
Somerville, A. McD., captain, steamer "Fatshan," Hongkong-Canton
Somerville, D. K., general manager, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore
Somerville, H. E. manager, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore
Somerville, W. T., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Sommavilla, S., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Sommer, B., merchant, David Sommer & Co, Cebu
Sommer, F., merchant, Telge & Schroeter, Tientsin
Sommerville, F. A. lieut., H. B. M. S. "Astraea," China Station
Somow, H. de, consul general for Russia, Seoul
Soothill, W. E., principal, Imperial University, Tientsin Sorba, comptable, Binh Thuan, Annam
Sorba, secrétaire, Instruction Publique, Saigon
Sorby, V., electrical engineer, Electric Co., Hongkong
Sorensen, A. S., assistant, Aagaard, Thoresen & Co., Hongkong Sorensen, L., pilot, Shanghai
Sorensen, O., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Santuao
Sorms, A, W., assistant examiner, I. M. Customs, Chefoo
Sorvig, A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Sostoa, C. de,, consul for Spain, Shanghai
Sotelo, V., cajero, Banco Español Filipino, Iloilo
Souhoff, S. F., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Soallard, E., curate, Saigon Cathedral, Saigon
Sourdeval, percepteur, Ninh Binh, Tonkin
Souron, P., assistant, Observatory Zi-Ka-Wei, Shanghai
Sourovikin, A. K., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Soutar, F., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering, Co., Hongkong
Souter. G., assistant, Benjamin & Potts, Shanghai
Souter, H. P., assistant, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
1736
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Southam, W. C., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore
Southcott, W. E., merchant, W. Forbes & Co., Tientsin
Souvey, H., assistant, Procure des Missions Etrangères de Paris, Hongkong Souza, A., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Singapore
Souza, A. C., clerk, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai
Souza, A. C. de, clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Nagasaki
Souza, A. J. de, clerk, Thomas Bros., Shanghai
Souza, A. M., clerk, Public Works department, Hongkong
Souza, A. M. de, first assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Souza, A. S., purser, steamer "Heungshan," Hongkong-Canton. Souza, A. Z., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon Souza, C. J. E, clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
Souza, C. M., Pharmacin & Drogaria, Macau
Souza, C. T., assistant surgeon, Medical department, Malacca
Souza, C. X. D', managing director, Gervis & Co, Negri Sembilan
Souza, D. E., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Souza, E. J., surveyor-officer, Public Works & Survey Department, Malacca Souza, E. M. de, clerk, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai
Souza, E. V. M. R. de, clerk, Soares & Co., Hongkong
Souza, F. de., storekeeper, Horse Repository, Singapore
Souza, E. E. de., sanitary inspector, Singapore
Souza, F. L. de., clerk, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Souza, F. M. X. de, clerk, Messageries Maritimes Co., Hongkong
Souza, F. O. de, physician, Singapore Pharmacy, Singapore Souza, F. S., clerk, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Sonza, G. R., bailiff, Land Office, Singapore
Souza, H. C. P., clerk, Laud Office, Singapore
Souza, J., clerk, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Hongkong
Souza, J., overseer, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong
Souza, J., de, employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Souza, J. E., clerk, Colonial Treasury, Singapare
Souza, J. P., official, Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macau
Souza, J. J. Silva e, clerk, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai Souza, J. M., Repartiçao de Fazenda, Macao
Souza, J. M. C. de, clerk, Bradley & Co., Shanghai
Souza, L., clerk, Hongkong Printing Press, Hongkong
Souza, L. F., chief clerk, McAlister & Co., Singapore
Souza, L. P., chief clerk, Land Office, Singapore
Souza, M. de, clerk, Barlow & Co., Shanghai
Souza, M. C. de clerk, Standard Oil Co., Shanghai Souza, O., clerk, L. Soyka, Shanghai
Souza, P. C., printer, Shanghai
Souza, P. Z., assistant, Post Office, Macau
Souza, R. C. de Silva e, clerk, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Shanghai
Souza, R. L. de., clerk, Municipality, Penang
Souza, S. A., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Souza, S. S., conego da Sé de Macao, Macao
Souza, T. F., clerk, Reuter, Bröckelmann & Co., Hongkong
Souza, V., inspector, Municipality, Penang
Souza, V. B., clerk, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Hongkong
Souza, W. J. J., assistant, Electric Co., Ld., Hongkong
Sowdon. S., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore
Soyka, L., import and export agent, Shanghai and Hankow Soyka, O., import and export agent, Shanghai
Spada, G., rector, Rosary Church, Kowloon
Spagna, commander of Guard, Italian Legation, Peking Spahn, H., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Kobe
Spain, G. B., manager, C. Nickel & Co., Moji
Spakler, Chev. H., consul-general for Netherlands, Singapore Spalckhaver, W. Ó. C., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Hongkong Spalding, A. D., surgeon, Naval Medical Officer, Hongkong Sparke, C. E., assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Shanghai Sparkes, N. L., assistant, Shanghai Land Investment Co., Shanghai Späthe, H., proprietor and manager, F. W. Rosenbaum, Shanghai
Spear, H., pilot, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Speare, W., storehouseman, Royal Naval Ordnance Depot, Hongkong Speck, O., assistant, E. Biedermann & Co., Saigon
Specka, Dr., acting consul for Germany and Italy, Kobe
Spedding, Thos., captain, "Irene," China coast
Speelman, M., manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Speidel, F. W., merchant, Speidel & Co., Saigon Speidel, W., merchant, Speidel & Co., Saigon
Spence, C. L., assistant, Birch, Kirby & Co., Kobe
Spence, E. H., assistant, Royal Brush Goshi Kaisha, Osaka
Spence, F., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang Spence, G. M., assistant, E. H. Hunter, & Co., Kobe
Spence, P. L., assistant, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Spence, R., foreman plater, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Spenceley, S. A., merchant, S. A. Spenceley & Co., Hankow
Spencer, F. D., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Ltd, Bangkok
Spencer, F. S., assistant, New York Export and Import Co., Shanghai Spens, R. N., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Tientsin Sperlein, T., secretary, German Consulate, Chengtu Sperling, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Peking Spicer, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Spielman, F. F., assistant, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Yokohama Spiers, A., chief engineer, steamer "Wingsang," China coast Spillmann, H., silk inspector, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Canton Spilman, H. A., teacher, Opon, Division of Cebu, Philippines Spinks, E., asst. conmr. of Police, Detective Branch, Perak Spittles, B. J., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong Spitz, O., assistant, L. Soyka, Shanghai
Spitze, M., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Vladivostock
Spivey, H. E., head master, Boys' Day School, Bangkok
Spooner, S., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Spottiswood, Alastair R. F., lieut., H. B. M. S. " Astraea," China Station
Spottiswoode, T., sub-inspector, Police Department, Shanghai
Sprague, W. C., assistant, Standard Oil Co., Shanghai
Sprick, W. A., assistant, Belin, Meyer & Co., Cebu
Spring, T., foreman plumber, Waterworks Co., Shanghai Springfield, M. O., second asst. supt. of Police, Shanghai
Sprungli, E., assistant, La Urania Cigar Factory, Manila
Sprüngli, E., merchant, Sprüngli & Co., and consul for Switzerland, Manila (absent) Spunt, J., cotton importer, Spunt & Rosenfeld, Shanghai
1737
Spunt, R., zaill clerk, Jaou Kung Mow Cotton Spinning & Weaving Company, Shanghai Spurge, H. S., assistant A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Spuring, H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Squair, A. C., clerk, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Squibb, C. H., sanitary inspector, Municipality, Seremban, Negri Sembilan
Squire, E. L., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama
Squire, W., assistant, Cornabe, Eckford & Co., Chefoo
Squire, W. M., assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Stabb, N. J., acting sub-manager, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Stables, G., assistant manager, Straits Sugen Co., Gedong, Penang
Stacpole, H. D., lieut. col., district paymaster, Army Pay Department, Hongkong Starfeln
elmann, G., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Stadelmann, R., assistant, Otto Streuli, Yokohama
Stademann, M. L., manager, Dicthelm & Co., Singapore
Stadt, Y. W. N., mine owner, Gapis Tin Mining Co., Palang
Stadtaus, A., assistant, C., Weinberger & Co., Kobe
Staeber, E., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kinochow
Staeger, N., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai staengle, A., assistant, Speidel & Co., Saigon Staff, A. L.. assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Stafford, G. M., superintendent, Survey department, Pahang Stafford, H. E, chief Division, Civil Hospital, Manila Stafford, L. U., surveyor, Kuala Langat and Klang, Selangor Stagg, M., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Singapore
1738
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Staheeff, A. D., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock. Stahl, C., assistant, H. Diederichsen, & Co., Shanghai Stainfield, E. L., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Staley, F., assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai Stalker, W. S., captain, steamer "Tungshing," China coast Stalmann, R., assistant, Ferd. Bornemann, Shanghai
Stamm, E. I., assistant, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock Stamm, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Stampff, J., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Stancliffe, C., chief officer, steamer "Heungshan," Hongkong-Canton
Standen, J. T., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Stanford, S. G. employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Yokohama
Stang, L., asst., Denis Frères, and vice commercial agent for United States, Saigon Stangaard, K., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuhu
Stanton, W. K., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Shanghai
Stanley, F., chief warder, Prison, Singapore
Stanley, F. J., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Stanley, H. E. O., Jand dept., Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tientsin
Stanley, John S., deputy collector, Bureau of Customs, Manila
Stanton, A. L., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of N. Y., Kobe
Stanton, C., broker, Stanton, Schoene & Co., Yokohama
Stanton, Charles E., major, chief paymaster, Mindanao, Manila
Stanton, E. A., merchant, Deacon & Co., and vice-consul for Norway, Canton
Stanton, W. B., asst. Naval Store Officer, Naval Yard, Weihaiwei
Stapleton, F. W., manager, Victoria Dispensary, Hongkong
Stapleton, H. T., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Manila Stark, J., architect, Penang
Stark, P., assistant, German Consulate, Tientsin.
Starkey, E., merchant, Gearing & Co., Chinking
Starling, A. W., manager, Printing dept., "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai
Starling, H. C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Starling, R. C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Starling, H. V., asst. inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Starling, S. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Chungking
Starr, H., master, Free School, Penang
Stasch, E., manager, Welhelm Kleeschulte, Tientsin
States, W. G., tile waiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong
Staub, J., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Iloilo and Manila
Staude, Dr., vice consul for Germany, Tientsin
Stave, P., assistant, A. Ehlers & Co., Tientsin
Stavers, H., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Stchekin, W. P., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow
Steadman, V., architect, Williams, Draper & Steadman, Perak
Stearns, H. E., manager, British Dominions Marine Insurance Co., Shanghai
Steavenson, Dudley V., solicitor, Deacon, Looker & Deacon, Hongkong
Stebbins, W., tidesurveyor, I. M. Customs, Shanghai
Stebbing, W. T., assistant, Printing Office, Kelly & Walsh, Hongkong
Stechmann, A. L., merchant, Tientsin
Stedman, C. B., merchant, Hellyer & Co., Yokohama
Stedman, F. O., medical practitioner, Stedman, Harston, Marriott & Ainslie, Hongkong Stedman, L., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co, Tientsin
Stedman, T. W., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Chefoo
Steedon, W. C Van, assistant, Meerkamp & Co., Manila.
Steehler, W. A., factory manager, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Steel, D., assistant, W. R. Loxley & Co., Hongkong
Steel, J. W., writer, Naval Establishment Weihaiwei
Steele, H. E., executive engineer, Public Works Department, Negri Sembilan Steele, W. H., asst. traffic manager, Imperial Railways, Tientsin
Steen, H., assistant, Taumeyer & Co., Shanghai
Steen, J. C., assistant engineer, Kowloon-Canton Railway, Kowloon, Hongkong Steenhouwer, C., assistant, Max. Mittag, Shanghai
Stoere, H., deputy collector, Bureau of Internal Revenue, Manila
Steffen, A., accountant, Yangtsze Wharf & Godown Co., Shanghai ¡Steffen, A., manager, Chersonese Syndicate, Bangkok
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1739
Steger, M., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., and vice-consul for Sweden, Canton
Steger, R., assistant, Nabholz & Co., Shanghai
Stegmann, F., chief engineer, steamer, "Meishun," Yangtsze river
Stegman, A., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow
Stehr, captain, S. S. "Tsintau," Coast service
Stein, Alex. L., manager, Sun Life Assurance Co., Hongkong Stein, B., assistant, Diederichsen & Co. Shanghai
Stein, W., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Kobe
Steinacher, R., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Steinback, A., assistant, Fr. Reiber, Shanghai
Steinberg, C., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Habarofsk, Vladivostock Steiner, W., engineer, Rizerie Union, Cholou Steiner, W., engineer, Rizerie de l'Union, Saigon Steinfeld, H., assistant, Simon, Evers & Co., Kobe Steinhoff, F., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hongkong Steinsch, W., secretary, German Consulate, Yokohama Steitz, F. J. T., watcher, Maritime Customs, Kiaochow Stellingwerff, C., assistant, E. L. Mondon, Ld., Shanghai
Stellingwerff, J., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Shanghai Stellingwerff, P. J. J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Stelting, J. A. D., lightkeeper, Hoihow Harbour Light, Hoihow Stembridge, W., assistant, C. Nickel & Co., Kobe
Stempel, M. A., c/o Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Steuernagel, F., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Stepanoff, J., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin
Stepharius, C., merchant, Buchheister & Co., Shanghai
Stephen, A. G., manager, Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation, Manila
Stephen, R., lightkeeper, Lamko Light, Hoihow
Stephen, Robt., captain, S. S. "Hsinchi," China coast
Stephen, R. F., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Kobe
Stephens, G., storekeeper, Municipality, Negri Sembilan
Stephens, M. F., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Yokohama
Stephens, Matthew J. D., solicitor, Hongkong
Stephens, R. J., assistant examiner, I. M. Customs, Foochow
Stephens, S., assistant, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ld., Kobe Stephens, Theo., commission agent, Hankow
Stephens, T. H., dentist, Manila
Sterelny, A. I, assistant, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock Sterelny, M. J., Transpacific Commercial Co., Vladivostock
Sterkendries, M., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Stetson, H. S., sub-accountant, International Bank, Yokohama
Stevens, E., chief tidesurveyor and harbour master, Customs, Amoy Stevens, F. G., assistant, Rodyk and Davidson, Singapore
Stevens, K. A., Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Singapore
Stevens, Philip H., teacher, Philippine Normal School, Manila
Stevens, T. P., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Stevens, W. J. U., grade surveyor, Revenue Survey Branch, Negri Sembilan
Stevens, W., shop foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co, Singapore
Stevens, W. T., assistant accountant, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tientsin Stevenson, A., assistant manager, Dairy Farm Co., Hongkong
Stevenson, A. M., acting district engineer, Ipoh, Perak
Stevenson, C. C.. assistant, Shanghai Land Investment Co., Shanghai
Stevenson, E., commander, H. B. M. torpedo-boat destroyer "Otter," Hongkong
Stevenson, J. S., pilot, Kobe
Stevenson, W. G., merchant, W. F. Stevenson, Co., acting consul for Sweden, Manila
Stewardson, R. E., architect, Scott, Christie & Johnson, Shanghai
Stewart, A. D., manager, Church Missionary Society's Day Schools, Hongkong
Stewart, A. E., assistant, China and Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Stewart, A. H., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hankow
Stewart, A. J., assistant master, Public School, Shanghai
Stewart, A. Mackintosh, proprietor, The Dispensary, Penang
Stewart, A., McC., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Tacloban, Manila Stewart, C., captain, "Chi-Yuen," China coast Stewart, C. C., clerk, Land Office, Penang
1740
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Stewart, C. E., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Selangor Stewart, C. J. L., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Stewart, Chs., sub-accountant, International Bank, Hongkong Stewart, C. U., merchant, Samuel McGregor & Co., Dairen
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Stewart, F., assistant superintendent engineer, Bangkok Dock Co., Ld., Bangkok Stewart, Francis G., lieut., H. M. gunboat "Thistle," China Station
Stewart, G. E., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Stewart, H. A., manager, Russo-Chinese Bank, Yokohama
Stewart, H. B., supt. of works, Municipal Council, Tientsin
Stewart, J., chief engineer, steamer "Nanshan," Swatow & Hongkong Stewart, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Stewart, J. E, engineer, Peking Syndicate, L., Tientsin
**
Stewart, J. H., chief engineer, steamer Koonshing," China coast Stewart, John L., property officer, Bureau of Education, Manila Stewart, J. W., assistant, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Stewart, K. D., assistant, Maitland & Co., Shanghai
Stewart, Murray, bill and bullion broker, Stewart Bros., Hongkong Stewart, N. R., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co, Manila
Stewart, P., assistant superintendent engineer, Naval Department, Sarawak
Stewart, R., writer, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Stewart, R. S., assistant, Brown & Phillips, Penang
Stewart, S. P., teacher, Cebu, Division of Cebu, Philippines
Stewart, W., saw mill manager, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., K'loon, Hongkong Stewart, W. M., capt., Deputy Assistant Quarter-Master General, Hongkong
Sticker, A., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Iloilo
Stickings, G. F., chief engineer, Hozan Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu Stickings, G. F., chief engineer, Bain & Co., Tainanfu
Stiebritz, A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Stieler, A., assistant, Garrels, Borner & Co., Shanghai
Stilke, W., chief engineer, steamer "Loo Sok," Hongkong-Bangkok Still, A. W., editor, Straits Times," Singapore
++
Still, R. G., assistant, Eastern Trading Co., L., Shanghai
Stinton, B. A.. asst. paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Kent", China and Japan Stirling, J., acting deputy postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Foochow Stitt, G. H., acting sub-manager, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Yokohama Stock, H. L. W., district officer, Kaningau, British North Borneo Stockfisch, A., assistant, Rigold, Bergmann & Co., Singapore Stockhausen, A. A. Z. von, tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wuhu Stockhausen, C., assistant, F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong Stockley, H. H. F., capt. aide de camp to the Governor, Singapore Stockwell, C. F., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Canton Stockwell, G., master, Victoria Bridge School, Singapore
Stodart, L. T., acting chief engineer, I M. Customs, Shanghai
Stoermer, W., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Stoffregen, K., assistant, F. Schwarzkoff & Co., Kiaochau
Stohp, T., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Stokes, F. M., lieutenant, superintendent of Police, Jesselton, B. N. Borneo
Stokes, G., clerk, Post Office, Hongkong
Stokes, H. G., Bombay Burmalı Trading Corporation Ld., Bangkok
Stokes, J. W., local manager, Howarth, Erskine, Ltd., Penang
Stokes, E. R., state engineer, Public Works, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor
Stoldt, C., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Stolle, V., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Stoltz, Olav, assistant, Wallem & Co., Hongkong
Stolzer, R., assistant manager, Hotel Prinz Heinrich, Kiaochau
Stone, C. L., assistant general manager, Manila Electric Railroad and Light Co., Manils
Stone, F., assistant, The Olivier Import & Export Co., Shanghai
Stone, W. H., engineer, foreign adviser, Communications Department, Tokyo
Stone, F, assistant, Cornes & Co., Yokohama
Stonor, O. F., district officer, Batang Padang, Perak
Stooke, J. H., assistant, Cornabé, Eckford & Co., Chefoo
Stopani, W. A., agent, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Singapore
Stoppa, P., share and general broker, Hongkong
Stoppel, R, assistant, Wm. Holst & Co., Yokohama
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Stormes, G. B., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Storms, C. H., principal, Sampaloc Intermediate School, Manila Storrie, A. P., assistant, Wm. Powell, Ld., Hongkong
Stoschek, G., assistant, Bilger & Galluser, Tientsin
Stothard, George, manager, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang
Stovell, E. F., pilot, Singapore
Struck, A., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Straetmani, L., assistant, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Strafford, C., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Strahler, F., merchant, F. Strahler & Co., Yokohama Stranbe, F., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Kiaocbau Stranch, lieut., S. M. S. Iltis," German Squadron, China Strang, J. D., manager, Vulcan Ironworks, Ld., Shanghai Strangman, H. H., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
44
Strangman, R. H., tidesurveyor and harbour master, Maritime Customs, Hankow Strangman, R. T., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Hankow
Stransz, A., Jr., auditor, Philippine Railway Co., Manila
Stratton, A. C, head miller, China Flour Mill Co., Ld., Shanghai
Stratton, D., assistant engineer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai Stratton, W. M., asst, engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Strauss, V., section engineer, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Strebel, G., merchant, Struckmann & Co., Manila Strecker, H., postmaster, German Post Office, Tientsin Streib, U., assistant, Rohde & Co., Shanghai
Streng, J., manager, Heitmann & Auauhammer, Chabarowsk, Vladivostock Streuli, Otto, Yokohama
Stricker, A., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Strickland, W. R., chief clerk, H. B. M.'s Supreme Court, Shanghai Stringer, H. L., foreman, Army Ordnance Department, Hongkong Stroak, captain, "Kwang-Chi," China coast
Strochlin, H., secretary, Swiss Legation, Tokyo
Strohl, R., assistant, Jaeger & Co., Singapore
Strohm, K. A., assistant, Germann & Co., Manila
Strom, J., tidesurveyor and harbourmaster, Newchwang
Stromdahl, O. M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kashing, Hangchow Strome, C. J., merchant, Strome & Co., Yokohama and Kobe
Strome, O., assistant, Strome & Co., Yokohama
Stronach, A., agent, Straits Trading Co., Sungei Besi, Selangor
Strong, G. V., second lieutenant, United States Embassy, Tokyo Strong, J. N., assistant, Sale & Frazar, Yokohama
Strong, Richard P., superintendent, Biological Laboratory, Manila
Strooten, L. M. van der, engine-driver, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Stroud, E. P., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Kobe
Strover, A. J., British American Tobacco Co., Chemulpo
Strube, G., surveillant, Filature de Coton Hanoi, Hanoi Struckmann, C. T., merchant, Struckmann & Co., Manila Struckmeyer, Max., merchant, Telge & Schroeter, Shanghai Struckmeyer, O., merchant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai Strufe, Otto, sub-manager, Olof Wijk & Co., Shanghai Struszynkski, H. v., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Tientsin Struve, H. broker, Shanghai
Struve, K., apothecary, managing partner, Medical Hall, Singapore
Stryker, Dr. E. de M., physician, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul
Stuart, A., registrar of imports and exports, Marine department, Singapore
Stuart, C. W., manager, Samuel Macgregor & Co., Dairen
Stuart, Edwin R., captain, in charge of Military Mapping, Manila
Stuart, F. D., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Yokohama
Stuart, J., chief traflic inspector, Electric Tramways, Singapore
Stubbe, C., manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Tientsin
Stubbings, J. J., electrical engineer, Hongkong Electric Co., Hongkong Stubbs, N., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore
Stubbs, R., employé, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Stubbs, T. P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon
Stubbs, T. W., accountant, Treasury, Singapore
1741
1742
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Stuckey, E. J., B.S., M.B., CH.B., Peking University, Peking Stucki, F., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow Stucky, G. R., assistant, Aylesbury & Garland, Perak
Studd, A. W., sergeant-major, Shanghai Volunteer Corps, Shanghai Stuhlmann, A. A., merchant, Stuhlmann Alfred & Co., Penang Stuijfbergen, P., assistant, Holland, China Trading Co., Hongkong Stuivinga, R. Th., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Saigon
Stumooll, Dr. F., vice-consul, for Austria-Hungary, Shanghai Stumpf, W., assistant, Meier & Co., Yokohama
Sturcke, J., assistant, Raspe & Co., Yokohama
Sturges, A. W., manager, Fraser & Neave, Ld., Ipoh
Sturmann, Chas., general manager, China and Java Export Co., Shanghai
Sturrock, G., assistant, engineer, Public Works Department, Negri Sembilan Stursberg, W. A., assistant, Inspectorate of Chinese Posts, Tientsin Sturzenegger, R., assistant, Rautenberg, Schmidt & Co., Singapore Stutfield, P., chemist, Straits Trading Co., Sungei-Besi, Selangor Stutzke, R., electrical engineer, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Styles, Win., assistant, Dewette & Co., Yokohama
Suarez, P. M., procurador g'ral, Mision de la Compania de Jesus, Manila Such, H. J., merchant, W. Hewett & Co., Shanghai
Suche, capitaine, Compagnie d' Ouvriers, Artillerie, Saigon
Sudhammaitri, P., Russian Legation, Bangkok Suen, V., missisonary, Aurora University, Shanghai Suffort, T., assistant, Central Trading Co., Shanghai Suffiad, A. B., clerk, Supreme Court, Hongkong Suffiad, A. G., assistant, Chartered Bank, Hongkong Suffiad, A. M., assistant, Chartered Bank, Hongkong Suffiad, M. B., clerk, Colonial Secretariat, Hongkong Sugden, A. H., acting commissioner, Customs, Hankow Suhl, A., acting consul for Austria-Hungary, Penang
Suhl, H., assistant, Deutsch-Siamesische Handels Ges, Bangkok Suhl, M., merchant, Rautenberg, Schmidt & Co., Singapore Suhr, H., assistant, Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Suhrke, E. B., assistant, Aall & Co., Yokohama
Suiter, J. B., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Sulerzyski, S. von, assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Sullivan, C. A., assistant, Vacuum Oil Co., Shanghai
Sullivan, C. D., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Sullivan, E. D., inspector of Police, Hongkong
Sullivan, H. B., manager, Sullivan & Francis, Manila
Sullivan, J. D., manager, Burn Photo Co., Shanghai
Sullivan, J., merchant, Heath Co., Tientsin.
Sullivan, M. S. O., employé, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Sulzer, K., assistant, Sulzer, Rudolph & Co., Yokohama
Summers, C., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Summers, E. H., director, Taylor, Cooper & Co., Kobe
Summers, H., assistant, Hongkong & Kowloon Wharf & Godown Co., Ld., Hongkong
Summers, H. V., director, Samuel Samuel & Co., Yokohama
Summers, J., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama and Tokyo
Summers, M. E., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Changsha
Summers, Ricardo, consul for Liberia, Manila.
Sumner, H. L, inspector of schools, Negri Sembilan
Sun, P. F., assistant, Dunning & Co., Shanghai
Sunner, J. H., superintendent, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore
Sung, Y. S., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Shanghai
Surh, K. B., assistant, Maritime Customs, Antung
Surhoff, A., captain, steam lighter "Tacheen," Hongkong
Surplice, F. R. C., assistant, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Surplice, H., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Susenuhl, W. F., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Kiaochau
Sutchiffe, A. A., lieutenant, Royal Army Med. Corps, Blakang Mati, Singapore
Suter, H., sub-manager, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Suter, W., chief clerk, Secretariat, Singapore
Sutherland, A. examiner, Maritime Customs, Amoy
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Sutherland, A. R., junior assistant master, Queen's College, Hongkong Sutherland, D., chief officer, S. S. Huichow," China coast
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Sutherland, J., asst. marine supt., Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong Sutherland, P. D., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Hongkong Sutherland, T., revenne officer, Import and Export Office, Hongkong
Sutterle, F. W., managing director for China, American Chinese Co., Shanghai Sutton, A. L., manager, San Nicholas Iron Works, Manila
Sutton, C., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Tientsin
Sutton, Charles E., eng. lieut., H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station
Sutton, F., land-surveyor, Public Works Department, Hongkong
Sutton, H., silk inspector, T. E. Griffith, Canton
Sutton, J. B., commissioner in the East for Govt. of New South Wales, Kobe
Sutton, N., assistant, Boys' Day School, Bangkok
Sutton, W, assistant, Chinese Engineering & Mining Co., Tientsin
Sutton, W. D., chemist, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong
Suvoong, Dr. V. P., translator, Kiangnan Arsenal, Shanghai
Suzor, G. W., proprietor, Phoenix Hotel, Yokohama
Suzor, L., estate and commission agent, Yokohamna
Suzuki, P., assistant, L. Suzor, Yokohama
Svendsen, L., assistant, China Import and Export Bank Co., Yokohama Swabey, W. S., major, commanding Army Service Corps, Singapore
Swallow, R. W., B.SC., professor of Science, Peking University, Peking Swan, E., assistant, Huttenbach Bros. & Co., Singapore
Swan, E. A, assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Singapore
Swan, G. C., assistant, Geo. Whymark & Co., Kobe
Swan, H. E., acting collector of Land Revenne, Selangor
Swan, J. M., surgeon, Canton Hospital, Canton
Swan, W. G., asst, surveyor, Royal Survey dept., Bangkok
Swan, W. R., engineer in charge, Keppel Harbour Section, Singapore
Swannie, J. S., chief officer, steamer "Sui-an," Hongkong-Macao
Swanson, C., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Swanstrom, C. A., examiner, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
Swann, W. assistant, Findlay & Co., Manila
Swanson, A., assistant, Exchange Market, Yokohama
Swanson, J. H., superintendent, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Bangkok
Swanston, J. G., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Swart, S., merchant, Schuldt & Co. and Swedish vice-consul, Hongkong
Sweet, A. M., assistant, Samul Samuel & Co., Shimonoseki, Japan
Sweeting, If. S. Commander, Revenue Cruiser "Kaipan," Kowloon
Sweatingbain, Wm., stenographer, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Shanghai Sweeton, N., interpreter, Hackney Carriage Department, Municipality, Singapore Swet, D. van, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Swete, M. H. F., deputy conservator, Forest department, Bangkok
Swets, C. A., overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Swets, W. H., overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Sweet, William E. L., instructor in English, Higher Normal School, Tokyo Sweney, E., district surveyor of Revenue, Negri Sembilan
Swettenham, J. P., executive engineer, Public Works Dept, Pahang
Swettenham, R. F. R., settlement officer, Negri Sembilan
Swift, J. A., asst. engineer, Public Works dept., Jelebu, Negri Sembilan Swift, J. T., instructor in English, Higher Normal School, Tokyo
Swindell, F. G., colonial chaplain, Straits and Malacca
Switzer, John M., merchant, Cebu
Switzer, M., assistant, Waterworks Co., Shanghai
Sword, G. A., assistant, Boyd & Co., Tamsui
Sykes, E. E., assistant, Anthony & Anderson, Penang,
Sykes, H., mastor, Diocesan School and Orphanage, Hongkong
Sykes, M., lieutenant, 80th Company R. G. A., Singapore
Sykes, O. J., asst., financial adviser, Bangkok
Sylva, J. A., commission merchant, Tientsin
Symons, J., fitter, Municipality, Penang
Symons, J. S., pilot, Shanghai
Symons, T. N., Prye Rubber and Coconut Plantations, Ld., Penang Symonds, F. H., manager, Pusing Lama Tin Mines, L., Perak
1743
1744
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Symonds, J. d'Aarcy, superintendent of Police, Singapore and Malacca Symonds, W., asssistant, King Edward Hotel, Hongkong
Symonds, W. North, barrister-at-law, Hankow
Symons, C. H. L., assistant, Jardline, Matheson & Co., Ltd., Shanghai
Szigetvary, L. E. N., acting tilesurveyor and Har-master, Maritime Customs, Shasi Tabbah, Aref, merchant, Tabbah, Saleh & Aref, Shanghai
Taeubert, W., captain, steamer "Locksun," China coast
Tadd, E. J., Captain, steamer "Laisang," China coast
Taft, C. H., treasurer, Peking University, Peking
Taggart, J. H., sub-manager, Hongkong Hotel Co., L., Hongkong
Taggart, W. P. G., sub-agent, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Cebu
Tait, E. G., manager, Insurance departinent, Warner, Barnes & Co., Manila
Tait, J. M., tea inspector, Tait & Co., Tamsui and Amoy
Tait, L., assistant, Straits Steamship Co., Singapore
Tait, W., deputy inspector general, Royal Naval Hospital, Hongkong
Talati, D. D. merchant, D. Dinshah & Co., Hongkong
Talati, F. P., merchant, Hongkong
Talbot, C. A., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz
Talbot, F. W., revenue auditor, Perak
Talbot, R. M., assistant, Maritime Customs, Peking
Talbot, W. H., asst. genl. manager, Equitable Life Assurance Society of U.S.A., Yokohama Tall, P., chief officer, steamer Lantau," West River
Tallers, W., merchant, Kobe
Talina, E. L., deputy registrar, Supreme Court, Singapore
Tamet, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Tamplin, Lewis H., manager, Ewo Timber Depot, Chinkiang Tanner, E. B., Normal master, Queen's College, Hongkong
Tanner, H., inspector, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong Taplin, E. A., manager, A. Cameron & Co., Yokohama Tappin, C. F., assistant, Dunning & Co., Shanghai
Tanjiline, A. V., consul for Russia, Foochow
Tanner, E. J. S., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai Tanner, P., assistant, Ed. A. Keller & Co., Manila
Tape, B. W., resident secretary, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Ld., Hongkong Tapp, J. R., victualling store officer, H. M. Naval dept., Hongkong
Tappenden, F., suptdg, steward, China Navigation Co., Shanghai
Tarde-Lambert, J. E., assistant, Oriental Press, Shanghai Tarrant, J. A., acting secretary, A. S. Watson & Co., Hongkong Tatu, B. D., assistant, Tata Sons & Co., Shanghai
Tata, D. J., merchant, Tata Sons & Co., Shanghai
Tata, F. K., manager, N. W. Ollia & Co., Hongkong
Tata, N. D., assistant, Tata Sons & Co., Kobe
Tate, J., chief officer, steamer "Tingsang," China coast
Tate, P. G., clerk, Wheelock & Co., Shanghai
Tate, W. H., managing director, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., W. H. Tate & Co., Taiping, Perak Taubert, C., capitaine, attaché militaire, Legation Allemagne, Peking
Taupin, G., imprimeur et editeur, C. Taupin & Co., Hanoi
Tavares, C. A., clerk, China. Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai
Tavares, F. J., clerk, Percy Smith & Seth, Hongkong
Tavares, F. X., clerk, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Tavares, F. X. M. P., clerk, Carlowitz & Co., Canton
Tavares, J. F., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Tavares, J. M. P., assistant, Alex. Ross & Co., Hongkong
Taverner, F. L.. assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Kobe
Tayler, A. L., employé, Arts & Crafts Furnishing Co., Shanghai
Tayler, J. B., vice-principal, Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College, Tientsin
Tayloff, T. P., assistant, Choorin & Co, Vladivostock
Taylor, A., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Taylor, A., sub-manager, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Taylor, A. C., merchant, Taylor & Co., Chefoo
Taylor, A. W., sanitary inspector, Penang
Taylor, A. M., solicitor, Bryant & Taylor, Perak
Taylor, A. W., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Taylor, B., assistant, Bathgate & Co., Foochow
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Taylor, C. A., timekeeper, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Taylor, Carson, assistant, The Rosenstock Publishing Co., Manila Taylor, David J. H., engineer, Thomas Taylor, Manila
Taylor, E. R., architect, Tomlinson & Lermit, Singapore Taylor, Hon. Basil R. H., harbour-master, Hongkong
Taylor, D. B., manager for Japan, Smith, Baker & Company, Kobe
1745
Taylor, F., second assistant secretary to High Commissioner, Federated Malay States Taylor, F. E., commissioner, Maritime Customs, and postmaster, Chinkiang
Taylor, F. E., second magistrate, Courts, Selangor
Taylor, G. F., lightkeeper, Cape Collinson, Hongkong
Taylor, H. C., pilot, Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., China coast
Taylor, H. H., assistant, Frazar & Co., Shanghai
Taylor, H. H., manager, China Provident Loan & Mortgage Co., Hongkong
Taylor, H. J., assistant, Curnow & Co., Ld., Yokohama'
Taylor, H. S., captain, Royal Army Medical Corps, Tanglin, Singapore Taylor, J., inspector H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Taylor, J., reporter, "China Mail," Hongkong
Taylor, J., secretary, Taku Pilots' assoc., Taku
Taylor, J. B., assistant, New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shanghai Taylor, J. D., agent, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hankow
Taylor, J. K., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Taylor, J. W., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hongkong
Taylor, J. W., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Hongkong
Taylor, J. W. S., senior writer, H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Taylor, John Y. H., engineer, Thomas Taylor, Manila
Taylor, L. B., engineer, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation Ld., Bangkok Taylor, L. R. E., lieutenant, Hongkong Singapore R.G.A., Hongkong
Taylor, P. H., captain, aide-de-camp to H. E. The Governor, Hongkong Taylor, R. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Custouns Kowloon
Taylor, S. J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Taylor, Thomas, engineer, Manila
Taylor, T. E., second officer, Customs revenue cruiser "Liuhsing," Shanghai
Taylor, W., chemist, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Taylor, W., foreman patternmaker, H'kong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Taylor, Wallace, medical practitioner, Osaka
Taylor, W. C., colonel, Bureau of Philippines Constabulary, Manila
Taylor, W. F., draughtsman, H. M. Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Taylor, W. H., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Taylor, W. H., inspector of Police, Singapore
Taylor, W. H. M., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Kewkiang
Taylor, W. R., assistant, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Taylor, W. R. H., assistant, Bombay-Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Taylor, W. T. Sir, K.C.M.G., resident general, Federated Malay States
Tchekan, J. O., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Tchetchelnitzki, M., manager, Stag Hotel, Hangkong
Tchirkoff, I. I., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Tchouiko, V., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock Teale, F. A., assistant, Schaefer & Co., Singapore
Tebb, L. D.. assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Tientsin Tebbutt, C. L., clerk, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Teesdale, John H., solicitor, Stokes, Platt & Teesdale, Shanghai Tegner, F. M., assistant, Vivanti Brothers, Yokohama
Teichert, C. W. P., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Teichman, E., student interpreter, British Embassy, Peking Teichmann, K., assistant, Rigold, Bergmann & Co., Singapore Teichmann, R., assistant, Kirchner & Boger, Shanghai
Tellason, P. I., assistant, Bryner, Kousnitzoff & Co., Vladivostock Tellefsen, A. K., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Mengtsz
Teller, B., manager, S. D. Lessner & Co., Kobe
Temlett, A. L, tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Temme, L., merchant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama
Templer, G. W., manager, Sungei Salak Rubber Co., Negri Sembilan Tenlet, président, Cour d'Appel de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon Tennent, D., manager, The Dispensary Ld., Singapore
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1746
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Tennent, D. R., assistant, Skipworth, Hammond & Co., Kobe Tennent, T. G. B., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Hongkong Tenner, O., manager, "Tageblatt fur Nord China," Tientsin
Tenney, B. P., student interpreter, United States Legation, Peking Tenney, C. D., Chinese Secretary, United States Legation, Peking
Terkelsen, O. C., acting controller, Great Northern Telegraph Co., Tientsin
Terrell, A. Z., solicitor, Drew & Napier, Singapore
Terrey, E. W., superintendent fitting department, Hongkong & China Gas, Co., H'kong Terry, Henry T., Tokyo Imperial University, Tokyo
Terry, R. E., teacher, Dumanhug, Division of Cebu, Philippines
Terry, S., assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Terrien, F., vicar, Church of the Most Holy Rosary, Selangor
Terrill, W. J., assistant inspector, Health department, Shanghai
Terzi, E., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Teschendorf, C., tidewaiter, Maritime Custons, Chungking
Tessarech, chef, Bureau de Comptabilité, Résidence Superieure, Cambodge Tessersohn, R., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Tester, P., local manager, Cominercial Union Assurance Co., Hongkong Tetley, L. T., assistant, Schult & Co., Shanghai Teubner, H., assistant, Becker & Co., Kobe
Teucher, W., assistant, Kuenzle & Streiff, Manila
Teusler, Rudolf Bolling, physician, Tokyo
Teverson, H. F., broker, Teverson & Mactavish, Kobe
Tewes, O., analytical chemist, Grimm & Co., Bangkok
Thatcher, J. H., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon
Thayer, Hon. R., judge, United States Court for China, Shanghai Theen, Th., assistant, F. Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau
Theisen, A. R., tide waiter. Maritime Customs, Kewkiang Theiss, C. captain, steam tug, "Vulcan," Hongkong Théodat, L., brother, St Louis College, Tientsin
Thermes, secrétaire général, Parquet Général, Saigon
Theseira, D., chief clerk, Marine department, Malacca
Thesmar, J., acting controller, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai Thevenin, commissaire de police, Tourane, Annam
Thezeloup, administrateur adjoint, Residence Hanam, Tonkin Thieck, Maurice, assistant, Gysin Fréres, Kobe
Thieffey, G., Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Thieffry, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang Thiel, E., assistant, F. Blackhead & Co., Hongkong
Thiel, F., acting consul general for Germany, Yokohama Thiel, Walter, assistant, Germann & Co., Manila
Thiele, P. M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Thieme, A., assistant, Langelutje & Co., Vladivostock
Thieme, O., clerk, Siemens Schuckertwerke, Shanghai
Thil, architect, arrondissements des Batiments civil, Saigon
Thillinather, A., chief clerk and boarding officer, Marine Office, Negri Sembilan Thimonier, assistant, Dumerest et Fils, Saigon
Thoburn, A. R., missionary, Singapore
Thögerson, G. G., asst. examiner, Customs, Shanghai
Thoehl, W., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
L
Thom, J., general manage, Times," Publication department, Yokohama
Thom, W. Jr., assistant, Denison, Ram & Gibbs, Hongkong
Thom, W., pilot, Pagoda Anchorage, Foochow
Thomas, sous directeur du Laos, Douanes et Régies, Saigon
Thomas, A. C., chief clerk, Marine department, Penang
Thomas, Charles E. Lloyd, lieut. and comdr., torpedo-boat destroyer "Fame," Hongkong
Thomas, Chas. W., architect and civil engineer, Davies & Thomas, Shanghai
Thomas, C. B., architect, Canton
Thomas, E., merchant, Boyd & Co., Tamsui and Amoy
Thomas, F., correspondent, "Ostasiatische Nachrichten," Tientsin
Thomas, F, proprietor, Tientsin
Thomas, F. H., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Canton
Thomas, Geo., clerk, Green Island Cement Co., Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Thomas, Gottfr., merchant, Thomas & Co.. Kobe
Thomas, G. E., clerk of works, Public Works department, Hongkong Thomas, G. R., chargeinan H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Thomas, H., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Shanghai
Thomas, H. R., 2nd lieutenant, 78, Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Thomas, H. R. II., merchant, Thomas Bros, Shanghai
Thomas, J., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Thomas, J. G., clerk of works, Engineers' Department, Customs, Shanghai Thomas, J. L., assistant, A. H. Jaques & Co., Tientsin
Thomas, J., outdoor assistant, China-Borneo Co., British North Borneo Thomas, K., assistant, K. J. Williams, Shanghai'
Thomas, J. L., attorney, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Amoy
Thomas, O. V., electrical engineer, Municipality, Penang Thomas, P., agent, Messageries Maritimes Co., Hongkong
Thomas, P., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
Thomas, K. D., captain, steamer "Heungshan," Canton and Hongkong Thomas, W. A. H., assistant, Samuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai Thompson, A. M., asst. engineer, Municipal Gas Co., Singapore Thompson, B., assistant, Helm Bros., Yokohama
Thompson, B., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Shanghai Thompson, C., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai Thompson, C. C., state treasurer, Pahang
Thompson, Fred. A., treasurer, Province of Moro, Philippines
Thompson, F. D., assistant, Cornabe, Eckford & Co., Chefoo
Thompson, G., chief storekeeper, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Thompson, H. A., acting in charge Drafting Branch Survey dept., Bangkok
Thompson, H. M., clerk of works, Maritimo Customs, Shanghai
Thompson, H. S., lieutenant, H. K. S'pore Royal Garrison Artillery, Hongkong Thompson, H. S., manager, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Shimonoseki
Thompson, J., superintendent engineer, Babcock & Wilcox, Ld., Yokohama Thompson. J. A., medical officer, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Thompson, J. E., accountant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Bangkok
Thompson, J. J., assistant engineer, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Thompson, M. L., Standard Oil Co. of New York, Hongkong
Thompson, N. D'A., asst. paymaster, H. M. S. "Tamar," Hongkong Thompson, R. A., examiner, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Thompson, S. L., assistant, Boustead & Co., Singapore
Thompson, T. J., medical practitioner, Nagasaki
Thompson, W. Leonard, assistant, China & Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Thompson, W. L., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Canton
Thompson, W. W., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Thomson, A. M., colonial treasurer, Hongkong
Thomsen, B., assistant, Heitmann & Aurnhammer, Vladivostock
Thomson, D. G., assistant manager, British Borneo Para Rubber Co., B. N. Borneo Thomson, E. O. H., mining assistant, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Thomson, F. M., assistant, Walte & Co., Tientsin
Thomson, G., assistant, The Lahat Mines, Ld., Perak
Thomson, G. H., assistant, A. R. Burkill & Sons, Shanghai
Thomson, G. S., manager, Dodwell & Co., Yokohama
Thomsen, H. assistant, Nickel & Co., Shinzaike Yard, Kobe
Thomson, H. A. E., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Singapore
Thomson, H. P., assistant, W. F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Thorson, Irvin, manager, Newchwang Wharf & Godown Co., Ld., Newchwang
Thomson, J. Alex., medical practitioner, Thomson & Aird, Hankow
Thomson, J., chief officer, S. S. "Haitan," Coast ports
Thomson, J. C., assistant surgeon, Civil Hospital, Hongkong
1747
Thomson, J. C., magr., and Secretary, The New Building & Construction Co., Shanghai Thomson, J. D., agent, Yangtsze Insurance Association, Kobe
Thomson, J. R., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Yokohama
Thomson, R., assistant, A. S. Watson & Co., Manila
Thomson, R., assistant, Luzon Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Thomson, R. Ross, assistant, Butterfield and Swire, Tientsin Thomsen, T. A., merchant, Grosser & Co., Kobe
Thomson, T. W., acting supt. Normal School, Manila
55*
1749
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Thomson, W., chief engineer, steamer "Tuckwo," China coast Thon, E., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Kobe
Thone, A., assistant, Messageries Maritimes, Haiphong Thorburn, C. I., assistant, Arracan & Co., Ld., Bangkok
Thorburn, J. G., chief engineer, steamer "Hinsang," China coast Thordsen, A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kobe
Thordsen, Th., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kobe
Thoresen, O., merchant, Thoresen & Co., Shanghai
Thorn, C. H., proprietor, "Box of Curios," Yokohama
Thorn, E. V., proprietor, Box of Curios Printing and Publishing Co., Yokohama Thorne, C., act, dep. commissioner, Anhui Salt Lekin Collectorate, Tatung
Thorne, Chas., managing director, "Bangkok Times," Bangkok
Thorne, G. S., engineer in chief, Ta Ching Kwang Tung Electric Supply Co., Canton Thorne, S. M., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Ipoli, Perak Thornicraft, T. C., Kobe
Thornton, G.. assistant, McEwen, Frickel & Co., Shanghai
Thornton, M. R., advocate and solicitor, Wreford & Thornton, Penang Thornton, Rev. J. B., pastor, Kobe Union Church, Kobe
Thornton, S. L., senior puisne judge, Penang
Thornton, W. T., assistant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Tientsin Thorsen, W. B., mine foreman, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul
Thouraude, G., general agent, Chargeurs Réunis, Yokohama and Kobe Thoy, A. E, chief permanent way inspector, Royal Railway, Bangkok Threlfall, W. H., superintendent of mails, Post Office, Penang Thring, W. B. P., lieutenant, No. 50 Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Thritard, A., assistant, Compagnie Commercial d'Extreme Orient, Shanghai Thun, J., assistant, Rombach & Co., Swatow
Thunder, C., architect and surveyor, Newchwang
Thunder, M. H., manager, Tekka Ld, Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Thune, R., engineer, Gadelius & Co., Yokohama
Thurier, F., assistant, Thurier & Kohr, Hankow
Thurier, J., wine merchant, Thurier & Kohr, Hankow
Thurier, L., assistant, Thurier & Kohr, Hankow
Thurn, A., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Thurnheer, T. clerk, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Thursfield, R. P., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila
Thuryappah, S., station master, Singapore and Kranji Railway, Singapore
Thuss, R., installation manager, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Tai Hok Tsui, Hongkong Thwaites, C., manager, C. Thwaites & Co., Yokohama
Thwaites, H. W., assistant, Electricity department, Shanghai
Thynne, A. C., lieutenant, Army Service Corps, Hongkong
Tibbey, H. M., assistant, McGregor, Samual & Co., Shanghai
Tibbs, J. M., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Tibbs, W. E., assistant, Thos. Cook & Son, Hongkong Tiberghien, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Tichonoff, assistant, Wassard & Co., Vladivostock
Tickell, G. T., asst. engineer, Public Works, Pahang
Tickell, H. R., lieut. and comdr., H. B. M. steamer Sandpiper," China Station Tieche, E., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Tiedemann, P. H., consul for Russia, Hongkong
Tiedemann, Rudolf, clerk. Secker's Store, Manila
Tiedt, G., assistant, Reuter, Brockelmann & Co., Cauton
Tiefenbacher, M., merchant, Wm. Meyerink & Co., Shanghai
Tiefermann, R., assistant, Lauts & Haesloop, Swatow
Tielcke, B., assistant, Buchheister & Co., Tientsin
Tigges, Al, acting interpreter, German Consulate, Canton
Tihomiroff, S. D., assistant, The Trading Co., Shanghai
Tijoux, G., chef de la comptabilité, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Haiphong
Tilbrook, A., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Tilleke, W. A. G., attorney-general for Siam, Bangkok
Tillery, W. C., chief engineer, steamer" Fausang," China coast
Tilley, H. G., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Tillman, H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ltd., Hongkong Tilston, A. E., manager, Oriental Hotel, Kobe
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Timeke, H.. assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Times, A. C., sub accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. and China, Saigon Timm, C., engineer, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai
Timm, C. F., merchant, Shanghai
Timmers, A., pro. vicar, Roman Catholic mission, Ichang
Timmerscheidt, R., Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Timmins, M. J., wharfinger, Tunkadoo wharf, Shanghai
Tineke, J. H., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., British North Borneo
Ting, K. D., clerk, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Tinseau, L. de, président, Messageries Fluviales de Cochin-chine, Saigon
Tinsley, S. H., assistant, American Trading Co., Shanghai
Tipp, J. A., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Tipper, A. E., assistant, China Mutual Life, Insurance Co., Tientsin Tipple, R., surveyor to Lloyd's Agents, Yokohama
Tisdall, B. D., assistant, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Tisdall, C. E. G., agent, British & Foreign Bible Society, Singapore Tisdall, G. A., procurist, Russo-Chinese Bank, Newchwang Tismar, R., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Ichang Titoff, G. W., assistant, Molchanoff, Pechatnoff & Co., Halikow Titus, F. W., assistant, Fuhrmeister & Co., Shanghai
Titzek, E. O., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., British North Borneo Tizon, P. J., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
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Tjomsland, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongmoon
Tobar, T., Roman Catholic missionary, Tainunfu, Forniosa Tobiessen, O., assistant, Samuel Samuel & Co., Tamsui
Tobin, R. J., agent, Singer Sewing Machine Co., Yokohama Toche, J., merchant, J. Toche & Cie., Shanghai
Tod, H., assistant, Vulcan Iron Works, Shanghai
Tod, P., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Todd, A. E., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank of India, Aus. & China, Yokohama Tord, C., manager, The Siputeh Tin Mines, L., Perak
Todd, William, assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Toderhagen, W., tischler, Kiaochau
Todrick, G. A., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Manila
Toeg, R. E., sharebroker, Toeg & Read, Shanghai
Tofte, A. V., assistant, L. H. Smith & Co., Chefoo
Tokmakoff, V. W., assistant, Trading Company, Hankow
Tolentino, G., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila
Tolle, G., merchant, Langelutje & Co., Vladivostock
Tollefsen, E., postal commissioner, Chinese Post Office, Peking
Tolliday, F. B., acting deputy postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Taiyuan Tomalla, H., chief engineer, steamer "Rajaburi," China coast Tomkins, J. F., assistant, Singleton, Benda & Co., Kobe
Tomlin, F. L., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan, & Co., Singapore
Tomlinson, J. R., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Tomlinson, S., civil engineer, Tomlinson & Lermit, Singapore Toms, W. J., assistant, Thomas Kershaw, Kobe
Toncker, L., inspector of works, Canton-Kowloon Railway, Canton
Tongue, H., wharf office assistant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Toogood, H. T., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Tooker, H. P., executive engineer, Public Works Department, Hongkong
Tooney, D. M., master, Anglo-Chinese Methodist School, Penang
Toomey, T., assistant, Royal Naval Canteen, Hongkong
Tonnesen, M., assistant, The East Asiatic Co., Bangkok Tooritzin, G. J., assistant, Trading Company, Hankow Toovey, R., manager, W F. Stevenson & Co., Manila
Topenot, M, chancelier interprète, vice consul de France, Bangkok Topham, D. F., assistant, A. C. Harper & Co., Selangor
Toritch, Waldemar, interpreter, American Consulate, Vladivostock Tornlinson, S., missionary, Singapore
Tornoe, J., manager and secretary, Langfeldt & Co., Yokohama Torp, S. O. A., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Torre, S. de la, vicar provincial, Spanish Augustinian Mission, Shanghai
Totton, G. K., manager for Japan, New Zealand Fire Insurance Co., Yokohama
1749
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1750
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Totton, H. J., assistant, South British Insurance Co., Ld., Hongkong Touche, J. D. D. de la, assistant, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang Tough, G. T., chief officer, steamer "Suisung," China coast Toukin, C., boat-officer, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Toukin, M., assistant, Cornabé, Eckford & Co., Chefoo
Tournier, Rev. F., missionary, Gensan, Corea
Tournois, P., administrateur-maire, Résidence-Mairie de Haiphong, Haiphong Tours, B. G., consul for Great Britain, Amoy
Toussaint, H. W. L. Steenstra, assistant, Holland-China Trading Co., Shanghai Tower, F. W., manager, cigarette dept., British Cigarette Co., Hankow Towers, G. F., chief clerk, Engineer's department, Municipality, Singapore Towfique, M., assistant-manager, Meklong Railway & Co., Bangkok
Towill, C. B., assistant, Guthrie & Co., Singapore
Town, C. G., manager, W. M. Strachan & Co., Kobe
Towner, H. V., superintendent, Public Works and Survey deparment, Malacca Townley, E. F., district officer, Kwala, Selangor
Townley, J. A., archdeacon, St. Thomas Church, Kuching, Sarawak
Townsend, H. S., div. supt. of Schools, Tayabas, Philippines
Townsend, W. D., merchant, Townsend & Co., Chemulpo, Corea
Tozer, E. Á., advocate and solicitor, 9, Raffles Place, Singapore
Traeger, H. C.. track inspector, Imperial Railways, Fengtai, Tientsin Train, W. H., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Tratman, D. W., second asst. registrar general, Hongkong
Travis, W., assistant electrical engineer, Electric Tramways, Ld., Singapore- Traub, M., merchant, Behr & Co., Singapore
Traun, W., assistant, C. Illies & Co., Tokyo
Trautmann, W., tailor, Wilck & Mielenluusen, Shanghai
Travers, E. A. Ó., state surgeon, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor Travers, N., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Samshui Travesado, Joaguim de, vicc consul for Spain, Manila
Travess, T. C., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Shanghai
Trayes, F. G., principal, Training College for Teachers, Bangkok Treacher, H., assistant, Straits Trading Co., Selangor
Treadgold, E. J., writer, H. M. Naval Audit department, Hongkong Trefurt, O., assistant, Melchers & Co. Hankow
Tregillus, E. C., tidesurveyor and har. master, Customs, Wuhu Treichler, H., assistant, Siber, Wolff and Co., Yokohama
Treide, Hermi, assistant, Joh. H. Langelütje & Co., Vladivostock Trendel, A., proprietor, Trendel's Hotel, Tsinanfu
Trendel, W., manager, Grand Hotel, Peking
Trenerry, H. E., assistant, Kelly & Walsh, Singapore
Trengrove, J. W., manager, Robinson Piano, Co., Hongkang
Trenk, lieut., S. M. S. "Scharnhorst," German Squadron, China
Trent, Grant T., judge of first instance, Province of Albay, Philippines Treppenhauer, C., clerk, C. Ismer & Co., Shanghai
Tresize, J. H., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld., Yokohama Tresize, K. M. M., assistant, Bagnall & Hilles, Yokohama
Tresize, W. K., manager, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Yokohama Treuke, R., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kiaochau
Trevor, F. Loch, secretary, Standard Life Assurance Co., Shanghai Trevor-Smith, J., merchant, Trevor-Smith & Co., Shanghai
Trewby, George, commander, H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station
Triadou, Ch. assistant, P. Rauzy & P. Ville, Saigon
Trinborn, J. G., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Trincavelli, L., controleur, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon
Tripp, T., assistant, Lowe, Bingham & Matthews, Shanghai
Trithard, A., cierk, French Post officer, Shanghai
Trivett, A. W., yard clerk, Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Ld., Bangkok Triwedi, H. C., assistant, Bush Brothers, Newchwang
Trockey, M., engineer, The Grand Hotel, Ld., Yokohama
Troitzky, G. W, second assistant, Russian Post Office, Shanghai
Trompson, F. D., assistant, Cornabé, Eckford & Co., Dairen
Tronssoff, W. W., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Trost, J., merchant, J. Trost & Co., Tientsin
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Trouillet, M., acting manager, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hankow Trousdell, J. P., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hankow Trowbridge, C. R., chief, detective Police Department, Manila Truche, H., chef mécanicien, Coal Mines, Chinnampo True, A. M., sub-editor, "Shanghai Times," Shanghai Trueman, T. E., general manager, Weeks & Co., Shanghai
Truman, R. N., agent, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Shanghai Trump, J., director of Public Works, Federated Malay States
Truppel, vice admiral, Kaiserlicher Gouverneur, Kiaochau
Tsheglowitz, M. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Tuason, A., inerchant, Hijos de J. S. Tuason, Manila. Tuason, M., merchant, Hijos de J. S. Tuason, Manila. Tuck, F. L., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Peking Tucker, A. W., surgeon, St. Luke's Hospital, Shanghai Tucker, F. F., B.S., M.D., Peking University, Peking Tucker, G. E., bill and bullion broker, Shanghai Tuckzek, professor, Gouvernementsschule, Kiaochau Tudhope, A. C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Tudhope, G., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Hangehow Tuebinger, E., assistant, Straus & Co., Shanghai
Tujiline, O., sturlent interpreter, Russian Legation, Peking
Tulip, W., assistant, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Tully, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Turk, P. B., Roman Catholic missionary, Hankow
Turnbull, D., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Turnbull, J., asst. accountant, Mercantle Bank of India, Singapore Turnbull, T. G., assistant, Canadian Pacific Railway, Co., Hongkong Turnbull, W. A., agent, Butterfield & Swire, Ichang Turnbull, W. S., ti ewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kongnioon Turnbull, W. J., secretary, Tansan Mineral Water Co., Ld., Kobe Turner, A. H., acting agent, North China Insurance Co., Singapore Turner, Arthur, architect, Painier & Turner, Hongkong
Turner, D., general manager, British Dispensary, Singapore
Turner, E. G., div, supt. of schools, Pangasinan, Philippines Turner, E. N., assistant, Badman & Co., Bangkok Turner, F., assistant, Malakoff Plantations Co., Penang Turner, W. P. W., assistant, British Consulate, Canton
Turner, G. A., assistant, Ilbert & Co., Shanghai
1701
Turner, Geo., assistant, linotype dept., "South China Morning Post," Ld., Hongkong Turner, Hon. John, adinr, and attorney, Straits & Penang Sugar Estates Co., Penang Turner, I., head watchman, Hongkong & Whampoa Dock, Kowloon, Hongkong
Turner, J., overseer, Shanghai Land Investmant Co., Shanghai
Turner, J. E., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Turner, R. C., chief architectural, Public Works dept., Shanghai
Turner, R. W., assistant, Prye Rubber & Cocoanut Plantations, Penang
Turner, T., assistant, Nickel & Co., Kobe
Turner, W., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Tientsin
Turner, W. B., engineer, Hankow Light & Power Co., Hankow
Turner W. C. D., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Tuska, E. H., merchant, Kobe
Tutcher, W. J., assistant superintendent, Botanical & Forestry Department, Hongkong Tutt, W, master, steamer "San-ui," West River
Tuxford, A. S., manager, N. Lazarus, Hongkong
Tuxford, I., asst. engineer, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Tvilde, A., assistant, East Asiatic Co., Singapore
Tweedy, C. D., first officer, steumer "Kutsang," China coast
Twigg, P. O'Brien, wholesale and retail chemist, Shanghai
Twiss, F. R., surveyor, Survey department, Perak
Tyack, J. T., merchant, Hugo Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Tyan, E. S., house physician, St. Luke's Hospital, Shanghai
Tyler, G., loco. foreman, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai
Tyler, J. E., superintendent, Government Printing Office, Singapore Tyler, W. F., coast inspector, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Tyndall, H. D., assistant, Maritime Customs, Foochow
1752
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Tyrtoff, G. A., assistant, O. W. Lindholm & Co., Vladivostock Tyson, C., clerk, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Udden, A. T., vice consul for Sweden, Tokyo
Uffenheimer, J., assistant, Koerting, Bume & Reif, Kobe
Uhde, M. E. C., assistant, Sander, Wieler & Co., Shanghai
Uhler, F., chef de la comptablilité, Société F'çaise des Charbonnages du T'kin, Haiphong Ulanoff, W. E., assistant, The Trading Co., Hankow
Ulaxuf, P. U., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Uldall, N. J., assistant, examiner, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Uldall, S. V. A., works manager, Green Island Cement Co., Ld., Hongkong
Ulderup, Johanns P., merchant, Ulderup & Schlüter, Hongkong
Ulianoff, P. M., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Ulleriks, F., manager, Oriental Store, East Asiatic Co., Bangkok Ullmanni, Edmond, assistant, Felix Ullmann, Ma ila
Ulrich, A., assistant interpreter, German Legation, Bangkok Ulrich, O., chief engineer, Siam Electricity Co., Bangkok Ulrichs, J. H., assistant postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Haukow Underwood, H. G., Mrs., editor, "Korea Mission Field," Seoul Underwood, J. H., chemist, China Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong Underwood, J. M., merchant, Ker & Co., Manila'
Ungerer, administrateur adjoint, Hong-Yen, Tonkin Ungewitter, P., assistant, Siemssen & Krohn, Foochow Unite, S. E., assistant, Martin L. Cohn & Co., Yokohamu Unjenin, S. W., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co, Hankow
Unland, A., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Tientsin
Unsworth, R., berthing master, H. & K. Wharf and Godown Co., Hongkong Unterberger, G., assistant, Ebbeke & Co., Shanghai
Unverzagt, L. Z., merchant, Bangkok
Unwin, F. S., commissioner, Imperial Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Unwin F. S., district-postmaster, Chinese Post Office, Chefoo
Unwin, W. J., land bailiff, Land Office. Hongkong
Upcott, M. J., solicitor, Drew & Napier, Singapore
Upton, G., assistant, W. M. Strachan & Co., Kobe
Upton, H., assistant Sale & Frazer, Ld.. Yokohama
Upton, I. H. H. S., assistant engineer, Public Works Dept., Coast, Negri Sembilan Urbal, G. J. A., asst, postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Hankow
Urbal, G. T. A., postal officer, Chinese Post Office, Hankow
Urbánek, M., medical officer, Customs, Chinkiang
Urbauck, M., assistant medical officer, Shanghai Nanking-Railway, Shanghai Ure, C. W., land agent, J. P. Bisset & Co., Shanghai
Urhan, F., assistant, Becker & Co., Yokohama
Uribarri, Ramiro Gil de, Minister for Spain, Tokyo
Urquhart, J. A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Usac, Vicente, captain Police Precinct 5, Manila
Uschmann, A., godownkeeper, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Hongkong
Utne, Y., assistant surveyor, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai Vacquerel, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Vade, R. A., assistant, Lanadron Rubber Estates, Ld., Johore
Valsel, captain, s.s. "Peiho," Coast service
Valberg, W. L., sanitary inspector, Municipality, Negri Sembilan Valder, P., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kiaochau
Valente, F., clerk, Meerkamp & Co., Manila
Valentin, Dr., S. M. S. "Scharnhorst," German Squadron, China
Valentine, Jas., sub-manager, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Shanghai
Valentine, W. A., captain, steamer "Kinshan," Hongkong-Canton Valette, assistant, Denis Frères, Haiphong
Valette, L., brigadier de Police, Haiphong
Valk, H., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
Vallance, J., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Vallat, percepteur, Résidence Thuan Thien, Annam
Vallet, L., clerk, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai
Valpy, F. W. W., assistant engr., Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Valpy, G. C., assistant protector of Chinese, Chinese Secretariat, Selangor Valtorta, H., Roman Catholic missionary, Nam-tau
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Van Ess, T. W., auditor, Oriental Consolidated Mining Co., Chemulpo Vandamm, A. P., local manager, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Chinkiang Vandelet, O., laiterie, Vandelet & Farant, Cambodge
Vandenberg, F. V., clerk, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Vane, H., treasurer, Federated Malay States
Vane, S. R., assistant, Edward Wheen, Shanghai
Vanez, secrétaire municipal, Tourane, Anuam
Vanhersecke, G., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Vania, A. D., merchant, Canton
Vaño, Jaime, comerciante, Cebu
Vanrenen, F. A., inspector of school, Selangor (absent)
Vanrenen, W. C., warden of mines, Mines department, Perak
Varadhona, A., United States Legation, Bangkok
Vardan, H. S., vicar, American Church, Singapore
Vardigan, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Varella, J. A., supt., Government Printing Office, Singapore
Varin, directeur, Banque de L'Indo-Chine, Battambang
Varlan, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Varley, A. A., assistant, British Borneo Exploration Co., B. N. Borneo
Varnum, R. M., assistant, Geo. H. Macy & Co., Yokohama
Varnum, R. M., merchant, Varnum, Arnould & Co., Yokohama
Varriano, L., commissionaire, Palace Hotel, Shanghai
Vas, M. A., bookkeeper, L. Gameau, Hongkong
Vasania, J. J., merchant, Hongkong
Vasunia, J. P., merchant, Canton & Hongkong
Vasania, P. J., merchant, The Parsee Trading Co., Canton
Vasania, R. P. merchant, The Parsee Trading Co., Canton
Vaskewich, P., attaché, Russian Consulate-General, Seoul, Corea
Vatin, ingénieur, Societe de Construction de Chemins de fer Indo-Chinois, Mengtsz
Vatin, ingénieur, Societe de Construction de Chemins de Fer, Mengtsz
Vaughan, J., pilot, Shanghai
Vaughan, L., manager, Pengkalen, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak
Vaughan, N., assistant, Karel Jan Hora, Yokohama
Vaughan, T. I, sub-inspector in charge, Gordon Road Depot, Shanghai Vaz, A., assistant, Katz Brothers, Ld., Singapore
Vaz, J. M., carcereiro, Cadeia Publica, Macau
Veaux, F., Roman Catholic missionary, Swatow
Veen, H. van der, assistant engineer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai Veen, J. H., asst., supt., United Asbestos Oriental Agency, Singapore
Vehling, W., merchant, Vehling & Co. Yokohama
Veitch, F. G., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Veitch, H., assistant, Scott, Christie & Johnson, Shanghai
Velez, A., sub-contador, Banco Español Filipino, Iloilo
Velez, V., assistant accountant, La Insular Cigar & Cigarette Factory, Manila Velhagen, A., manager, El Oriente Tobacco Factory, Manila
Veling, A. E., teacher, Argao, Division of Cebu, Philippines
Vella, Cav. Dr. Oresta da, consul for Italy, Tientsin
Vendrell, M., merchant, and consul for Chili, Kobe Vennewitz, E. R., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai Ventura, A. G. de. S., adjunto, Capitana do Posts, Macau Ventzke, Hermann, assistant, Froehlich & Kuttner, Manila Vera, M., assistant, Meerkamp & Co., Manila Vercruysse, P., Roman Catholic missionary, Ielang Verlon, John, staff surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Kinsla," Yangtsze
Verdon, P., supt., Royal Survey dept., Bangkok
Veresenagin, J. S., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow
Verhaeghe, J., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Verhaeren, H., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Verhamull, manager, Pohoymull Bros., Canton
Verissel, T., assistant, J. Reynaud, Yokohama
Verkey, L., district medical officer, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok
Verner, D., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Ichang
Vernier, Auguste administrateur adjoint, Binhthuan, Annam
Vernon, A., proprietor, Boà Vista Hotel, Macau
1753
1754
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Vernon, J. Y. V., sharebroker, Vernon & Smyth, Hongkong
Vernon, T. C., assistant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Shanghai Veroulart, M., interprete, French Legation, Peking
Verriere, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Verry, G. T, surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station
Verschoor, W. A., assistant, Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co., Singapore Versiglia, Pe. Luigi, director dos Salesianos, Macao
Versini, M., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Verzegnassi, Engenio, capitano macchinista, R. N. "Calabria," China Vesterdal, A., manager, Mount Austin Rubber Estates, Shanghai Vetten, E, kesselschmied, Kiaochan
Vetter, K. A. H., assistant, Jaques & Co., Tientsin
Vey, J., assistant, St. Peter and St. Paul's Church, Singapore
Veynes, Comte Leo. de Sicyes, vice-consul for France, Manila
Vialet, M., directeur general, Direction General des Postes de l'Indo-Chine, Saigon Vianna, E. H. R., escrivào, Administração do Conselho, Macao
Vianna, L., fiel, Cemiterio de S. Miguel, Macao
Vickers, D. U. teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Victal, A. M. P., clerk, Shewan, Toines & Co., Bank, Kobe
Victal, F. A., amanuense, Procuratura Administrativa, Macao Victal, F. T., manager, Oriental Hotel, Macao
Victal, P. E., clerk, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Victal, V. W., clerk, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Victor, H., reporter, "Hongkong Daily Press," Hongkong Victor, J. M., clerk, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Canton Victor, J. T., clerk, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Vida, F., assistant, Shanghai Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Vidal, Dr. J., juiz, de direito, Macao
Vidigal, A. G., tenente, Secretaria Militar, Macau
Viegssier, P., sous chef de la comptabilité, Messageries Fluviales de Cochin-Chine, Saigon Vieira, A. F., clerk, China and Japan Trading Co., Shanghai
Vieira, A. J., clerk, Alex. Ross & Co., Hongkong
Vieira, B. S., clerk, Holland China Trading Co., Hongkong Vieira, D. M., writer, Naval Civil Establishment, Hongkong Vieira, J. M., merchant, Vieira & Co., Hongkong Vieira, U. A clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai Vienne, J. de, Roman Catholic missionary, Peking Vier, J. C., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Amoy
Vierra, J. E., manager, Straits Oriental Co., Singapore Vierra, R., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Bangkok Vieth, W., assistant, M. Raspe & Co., Tokyo Vietinghoff, V., attaché, Legation d'Allemagne, Peking Viez, E. V. H., examier, Maritime Customis, Wuchow Vignolo, G. B., assistant, Martin & Co., Yokohama
Villamor, Ignacio, attorney general, Bureau of Justice, Manila Villas, Geo., clerk, Stokes, Platt & Teesdale, Shanghai'
Ville, P., merchant, Saigon
Villemot, P., procurator, French Roman Catholic Mission, Seoul
Villeneuve, J., professor, Saigon Seminary, Saigon
Viloudaki, N, A. manager, Exports, Eastern Trading Co., Shanghai
Vin, F, assistant, Toche and Cie., Shanghai
Vincent, D. B., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Vincent, Dr. F. W., chief, Benguet Sanitarium, Philippines
Vincent, E. E., Roman Catholic missionary, Peking
Vincent, H. A., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama
Vincent, S. A., assistant, Bowden Bros. & Co., Yokohama
Vincent, W. K. E., milliner, Vincent, Bird & Co., Yokohama
Vinci, Count G. C., Minister for Italy, leking
Vine, W. J., managing director, Hall & Holtz, Shanghai
Viney, J. I., student interpreter, U. S. Consulate, Shanghai
Vining, F. W. F., fleet paymaster, H. B. M. S. "Flora," China Station Vinnichenko, S. P., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock Vinson, chef du Secrétariat, Saigon
Virgil, C. S., assistant, Connell Bros. & Co., Hongkong
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Visser, A., overseer, Whangpoo Conservancy Office, Shanghai
Visser, Dr. M. W. de, student interpreter, Netherlands Legation, Tokyo Vitale, Baron Guy, first secretary, and interpreter, Italian Legation, Peking Vivanco, G. de, assistant, Germann & Co., Manila
Viveash, W. H., assistant master, Diocesan School and Orphanage, Hongkong Vizconde, J., coal merchant, Singapore
Vizenzinovich, V., interpreter, Spanish Consulate, Shanghai
Vlaminck, M., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Vliegenthart, J. C., engineer, Haiho Conservancy Commission, Tientsin Vockerodt, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg Co., Tientsin
Vogel, A., assistant, Olivier & Co., Shanghai
Vogel, F., assistant, H. N. Abrens & Co, Kobe Vogeler, captain, S.S. "Ithaka," Coast service
Vogelesang, H. L., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Ixl., Singapore Vogler, H., assistant, Reiss & Co., Shanghai
Vogt, captain, S.S. "Loongmoon," Coast service
Vogt, Dr., K. assistant, German Consulate,
Vogtland, F., captain, steam tug "Undine," Hongkong
Voigt, A. F. W., examiner, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
Voigts, F., lawyer, Vorwerk & Voigts, Shanghai
Voirol, P., assistant, Deutsch Siamesische Handels Gesels., Bangkok
Voitel, chancelier de Prey Veng, Cambodgo
Volger, E., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Singapore
Volkert, K., assistant, Schwarz Gaumer & Co., Haukow
Vonillon, agent mécanicien, Tourane, Annam
Villanova, C., signalman, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Voller, A., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong Volodin, Á. J., assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow Volpicelli, Comm. Z., consul-general for Italy, Hongkong Vorobieff, M. S., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock Voorden, R., van., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang Voretzsch, Dr Jur. E. A., consul for Germany, Hongkong Vorouets, M., assistant, Russo-Chinese Bank, Tientsin Vorwerk, F., Dr. Jur., lawyer, Vorwerk & Voigts, Shanghai
Vos, A. E. E. de, assistant, British Residency, Kuala Lipis, Pahang Vos, E. de, medical practitioner, Medical Hall, Singapore Voss, C. de, assistant, A. Walte & Co., Tientsin
Voss, W., dockmeister, Kiaochou
Vouillement, G., assistant, A. R. Marty. Haiphong
Voules, A. B., superintendent of Convict Establishment, Perak Voyce, G. T., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Wahu
Vuillerme, directeur des travaux de l'Arsenal, Saigon Vuyst, C. de., Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang Wack, H., assistant. Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore Wacker, K., clerk, German Consulate, Shanghai Wacker, J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Hoihow
Wackermann, M., assistant traffic supt., Royal Railway department, Bangkok Waddell, J., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Waddilove, W. J., assistant, Standard Oil Co., of New York, Shanghai
Wade, C. S., assistant, Dick, Kerr & Co., Tokyo
Wade, John, captain, "Kiang-Yu," China coast
Wade, R. H. R., private secretary of Customs, Peking
Wade, T. S. D.. clerk, Yangtsze Wharf & Godown Co., Shanghai Wade, W. E., accountant, Taku Tug & Lighter Co., Ld., Tientsin Warlia, C. P., head-clerk, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Wadler, G. C., staff sergt., first assistant, A. M. Corps, Singapore Wadman, H. P., 5, Hankow Road, Shanghai,
Waelchli, T., assistant, Froelich & Kuttner, Manila
Waespé, F., asst., Compagine de Commerce et de Nav, d'Extreme Orient, Saigon Wagenblass. H. M., div. supt. of Schools, Province of Isabela, Philippines
Wagner, C., barrister-at-law, Selangor
Wagner, E. A. S., barrister-at-law, Selangor
Wagner, H., assistant, Winckler & Co., Ono, Kobe
Wagner, J., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
1755
1756
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Wagner, L., assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Hongkong Wagner, L. O. assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
Wagner, M. A., assistant, Arnhold, Kurberg & Co., Kiaochau Wagner, M., cleve interprete, German Legation, Peking Wagner, O., watchmaker, C. J. Gaupp & Co., Hongkong Wagner, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Wahl, Lutz, captain, in charge of States and Issue Commissary, Wahondin, N. Ñ., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Manila
Wait, O. H., clerk of works, Public Works and Survey department, Penang
Waite, G. W., proof reader, Maritime Customs Printing Office, Shanghai
Waite, W., travelling superintendent, Kowloon Canton Railway, Shatin, Hongkong Wakefield, C. E. S., acting commissioner, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Wakeford, V. E., assistant, Andrews, von Fischerz and George, Shanghai
Wakeman, G. H., land officer, Laud Office, flongkong
Walch, L. assistant, J. Ullmann & Co., Hongkong
Waldburger, J., manager, Deutsch Siamesische Handels Ges, Bangkok
Waldeck, M, chef des Stabes, Kiaochau
Waldecker, E, merchant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock
Waldemar, F., assistant, Harry Fuchs, Mukden
Waldron, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Walduck, E. C. V., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Tientsin
Wales, H. H., second, officer, Customs Revenue Cruiser
Linhsing," Sanghai
Walford, G., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Cagayan, Philippines
Walford, H., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Iloilo
Walk, George, E., div. supt. of Schools, Capiz, Philippines
Walker, A., harbour master and tidesurveyor, Customs, Wenchow
Walker, B. G., assistant, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Yokohama Walker, Bathurst, solicitor, Hanson, McNeill & Jones, Shanghai
Walker, C. C., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Walker, D. A.. assistant, James Motion & Co., Singapore
Walker, Fred. W., supt., Factory, Hongkong and China Shoe Factory, Hongkong
Walker, F. G., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong
Walker, F. G. C., assistant, Health department, Shanghai
Walker, H., clerk of works H. B. M., Office of Works, Shanghai
Walker, H.. B, assistant, Macleod & Co., Manila and Cebu
Walker, Capt., R. N., marine and general surveyor, R. N. Walker & Co., Nagasaki Walker, H. E., reporter, "Manila Times," Manila
Walker, H. G. N., captain, steamer "Lienshing," China coast
Walker, H. W., captain, steamer "Kwongtung," Coast ports Walker, J., engineer, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Kiaochow
Walker, Jas., manager, Dairy Farm Co., Hongkong
Walker, J. W., assistant, Harper & Co., Selangor
Walker, L., director, Samuel, McGregor & Co., Shanghai
Walker, R., Banzai Aerated Water Factory, Nagasaki
Walker, R. P., auditing officer, H. M. Naval department, Hongkong
Walker, R. S. F., C.M.G., commandant, Federated Malay, States
Walker, R., jr., employé, R. N. Walker & Co., Nagasaki
Walker, T. T., merchant, Yokohama
Walker, Wm., conveyancer and general writer, Yokohama
Walker, W. B., asst. manager, Standard Oil Co, of New York, Hongkong Walker, W. T., assistant engineer, Public Works Department, Hongkong Walkinshaw, A. W. W., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hongkong Wall, A. C., branch manager, Fraser & Neave, Ld., Singapore Wall, C. W., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Wallace, C., assistant, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Wallace, D. F. A., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Tientsin
Wallace, Fred., captain, S.S." Haean," China coast
Wallace, F. G.. manager, Tanjong Olak Rubber Plantation, Ld., Johore
Wallace, G., assistant, Lavers & Clark, Shanghai
Wallace, W. A., surveyor, Survey Department, Perak
Wallace, J. H., merchant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki
Wallace, R., assistant, North & Rae, Yokohama'
Wallace, R., shipwright, Graving Docks, Singapore
Wallace, S. M., cashier, Standard Life Insurance Company, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Wallace, T., accountant, Waterworks & Co. Shanghai
Wallace, W. H. acting agent, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Amoy Wallach, M., electrical engineer, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow Wallas, A. G., assistant, Maritime Customs, Canton
Wallays, E., superior, missions Etrangères, Penang
Walleff, Damianus, de, Roman Catholic missionary, Ichang
Wallem, H. J., general broker, Wallem & Co., Shanghai
Wallenberg, G. O., Minister, and consul general for Sweden, Tokyo Waller, A. J., assistant, Kelly & Walsh, Ed., Shanghai
Waller, C., assistant, Barlow & Co., Singapre
Waller, C. E., engineer, Khie Heng Bee Estate, Penang
Waller, H. H., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Canton
1757
Wallich E. H., state engineer, Public Works Department, Seremban, Negri Sembilan Walpole, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
Walpole, R., acting boat officer, Customs, Swatow
Walsh N. P., assistant. Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Penang
Walsemann, R., assistant, Diederichsen & Co., Tientsin
Walsh, George D., surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Walsham, P. R., assistant in charge, Maritime Customs, Foochow and Santuao
Walt, A. M., assistant, Geo. Hood, Yokohama
Walter, C., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Walter, Colonel R., second Russian Military Agent in China, Shanghai
Walter, J., assistant, International Bank, Yokohama
Walter, N., assistant, Meisei Gakko, Osaka
Walter, O., accountant, Sino-Belgian Bank, Shanghai
Walter, R., interpreter, German Consulate, Tientsin
Walter, R. secretary to Government, and magistrate, Weihaiwei
Walter, U., chief officer, steamer "Paklat," China coast
Walters, R. H., assistant, Badman & Co., Bangkok
Walther, J., merchant, J. G. Walther, Kiaochau
Walther, P., assistant, M. Raspe & Co,, Kobe
Waltson, S., boiler inspector, Railways, Tongshan, North China.
Walzer, V., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Tientsin
Walzmann, R., assistant, P. Kierulff & Co., Peking
Wanderleach, E, assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Shanghai
Wannsick, L., merchant, Peking
Ward A. E. C., settlement officer, Land Revenue Dept., Negri Sembilan
Ward, A. J., foreman electrician, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., K'loon., H'kong Ward, A. S., reporter, "Manila Times," Manila
Ward, B. M., architect, Union Estate & Investment Co., Ld., Yokohama
Ward, C. W., sanitary inspector, Sunitary Board, Hongkong
Ward, F., meter inspector, Electricity department, Shanghai
Ward, F. K., assistant master, Public School, Shanghai
Ward, F. W. R., assistant, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama Ward, H. B., asst, chartered accountant, Evatt & Co., Singapore
Ward, J., assistant, Kinta Tiu Mines, Ld., Osborne & Chappel, Perak Ward, J., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Canton
Ward, J. C., representative, Edgar Allen & Co., Osaka and Tokyo Ward, J. F., ex. engineer, Public Works, Klang, Selangor
Ward, S. H., agent, Hall & Holtz, Tientsin
Ward, T., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila.
Ward, W. A., sanitary inspector, Penang
Ward, W. S., manager, Astor House Hotel Newchwang
Wardall, Ralph H., principal, School of Commerce, Manila
Warden, Edward, C., engineer lieutenant, H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Wardrop, A. Tucker, capt. superintendent of police, Sandakan, British North Borneo Wardrop, J. N., assistant, Darby & Co., British North Borneo
Wardroper, W. S., merchant, Peking,,
Ware, J. H., chief engineer, steamer" Chipshing," China coast
Wargnez, employé, L. Govelu et Cic., Haiphong
Waring, J. H., secretary to manager, Singapore Electric Tramways, Singapore
Warkin, secrétaire de Chambre mixte de Commerce, Annam
Warming, S., merchant, Bavier & Co., and consul for Denmark, Yokohama
Warnsley, T. H., assistant, Perrin, Cooper & Co., Tientsin
1758
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
1
Warmsley, W. H., assistant, Perrin, Cooper & Co., Tientsin. Warmsley, W. J., assistant, Perrin, Cooper & Co., Tientsin Warner, H. D., accountant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Bangkok Warnes, C. A., employé, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Warnke, A., chief engineer, steamer, "Pitsanulok, "China coast Warnsloh, H., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
Warrack, A. N., sub-accountant, Chartered Bank, Bangkok
Warren, A., assistant, Royal Naval Canteen, Praya East, Hongkong Warren, F. P., clerk, U. S. Post Office, Cebu
Warren, C. E., building contractor, C. E. Warren & Co., Hongkong Warren, J. P., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Kobe
14
Warren, Leonard, surgeon, H. B. M. S. Robin," China Station
Warren, R. L., assistant, Maritime Customs, Santuao
Warren, Sir Pelham L., British consul-general, Shanghai
Warrener, W. H. L., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ld.. Hongkong
Warrington, J. C., assistant accountant, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Warry, C. E. D., depot manager, British American Tobacco Co., Singapore Warwick, A. C., merchant, Harry A. Badman & Co., Bangkok
Warwick, F. V., assistant, Taikon Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Washbrook, H. G., assistant, J. Trost & Co., Tientsin
Wasserfall, H., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hongkong Wassilenko, E., assistant, Waldecker & Poeppel, Vladivostock Wassilieff, T., consul for Russia, Fusan, Corea
Waterhouse, W., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong Watkins, A. J. W., civil engineer, Swan & Maclaren, Singapore Watkins, G. A., managing director, Watkins, Limited, Hongkong Watkins, Harvey H., manager, Davis & Lawrence Co., Shanghai Watkins, W. L., exchange broker, Singapore
Watrous, Geo. S., manager, China and Japan Trading Co., Nagasaki Watson, A., assistant inspector, Health Department, Shanghai Watson, A. G., assistant, Paterson, Simons & Co., Singapore Watson, A. J., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Shanghai Watson, C. J., clerk, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai Watson, C. M., assistant, Mackenzie & Co., Shanghai Watson, D. L., pilot, Shanghai
Watson, E., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Wuchow Watson, E., engine driver, Peak Tramways Co., Hongkong Watson, E. L., assistant, Adamson, Gilfillan & Co., Singapore Watson, H. A., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore Watson, J., employé, Peak Tramways Co., Ed., Hongkong Watson, J., science master, Raffles Institution School, Singapore Watson, J. E., assistant, Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Shanghai Watson, J. R., manager, British Borneo Para Rubber, B. N. Borneo Watson, J. S., clerk, A. R. Burkill & Sons, Shanghai
Watson, K., engineer, Scott, Hartling & Co., Shanghai
Watson, N. L. assistant, The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Wa
atson, R. G., commissioner of Lands and Mines, Federated Malay States
Watson, W., accountant, "North China Daily News & Herald," Shanghai
Watson, W. C. H., postal commissioner, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Mukden Watson, W. Malcolm, merchant, John J. Hutchison & Co., Hongkong Watson, R. H. M., captain, No. 4 Company, R. G. A., Singapore
Li
Watson, Capt. J. E., inaster, dredger Canton River," Hongkong Dock Co., Hongkong Watson, J. N., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Kobe
Watson-Paul, Capt. G. V., district manager, China Mutual Life Insce. Co., Hangchow Watt, J. A. D., manager, Anglo-Chinese Agencies. Shanghai
Watt, W. T., director-in-charge, Imperial Medical College, Tientsin
Watt, A. W. J., assistant, H mgkong and Shanghai Bank, Manila
Watt, C. D., manager, La Minerva Cigar Factory, Manila
Watt, J. M., employé, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Singapore
Watt, W. N., shop foreman, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Yokohama Wittcemo, M., vice-consul, Belgian Consulate, Shanghai
Watthé, Roman Catholic missionary, Kewkiang
Wattie, James A., managing director, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Shanghai Watts, A. H., shipping dept. Chinese Engineering and Mining Company, Tientsin
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Watts, E. N., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Watts, J. broker, Watts & Co., Tientsin
Watts, W. O., chief clerk, U. S. Army, Quartermaster dept., Nagasaki Watts, T. E., broker, Watts & Co., Tientsin
Wawn, C. chief officer, steamer "Taishan," Swatow and Hongkong
Way, W. T. L., secretary, Taku Tug and Lighter Company, Tank
Wayte, W. J., engineer, Pengkalen, Ld., Osborne & Chiappel, Perak
1759
Weale, A. G. Morey, merchant, Cormes & Co., and consul for Greece, Yokohama (absent) Weall, T. G., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Hongkong
Weare, A. H., chief officer, steamer "Fansang," China coast Weare, E. K., assistant, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Weaser, W. L., architect, Weaser & Raven, Hongkong Weatherall, M. E., assistant, Maritime Customs, Peking
Weaver, J. W., foreman, Yokohama Engine and Iron Works, Yokohama
Webb, C., assistant, Luzon Sugar Refining Co., Hougkang
Webb, E. M., assistant, Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Webb, J. W., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Webb, P. E., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Kobe
Webb, W. B., pro. accountant, International Banking Corporation, Manila Webb, C. P. H., clerk, Army Service Corps, Singapore
Webb, E. W., boilermaker, Peking Syndicate, Tientsin
Webb, S., clerk, Post Office, Penang
Webb, J. W., representative, Vacuum Oil Co. of Rochester, New York, Osaka Webb, B., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong
Webb, J. W., assistant, Bryner, Kousnetzoff & Co., Vladivostock
Webb, J. W., assistant, Vacnum Oil Co., Osaka
Webber, V. H., assistant, Sun Insurance Office, Shanghai
Webber, R. G., pro, accountant, International Banking Corporation, Manila Weber, C., assistant, Thomas & Co., Yokohama
Weber, G., assistant, E. Krauss, Tokyo
Weber, Geo. E., p.p. to genl. manager, Philippine General Tobacco Co., Manila Weber, Harold, assistant, A. Ehlers & Co., Shanghai
Weber, Robert, merchant, Shanghai
Weber, G., assistant, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Weber, E. A., merchant, Manila
Weber, H., assistant, E. A. & Otto Weker, Manila.
Webster, E. M., business manager, "Manila Times," Manila
Webster, J. S., deputy registrar of Lirths and deaths, Singapore
Webster, T., agent, Kronig & Co., Shanghai
Webster, A. E., assistant manager, Fraser & Neave, Singapore
Webster, E. G., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Webster, J., accountant, Equitable Life Assurance Society of U.S.A., Yokohama
Webster, T., assistant, Hopkins, Dunn & Co., Shanghai
Webster, Wm., consulting engineer and contractor, Singapore
Wechel, D. H., assistant, Hollandi-China Trading Co., Tientsin
Weckbacher, A., assistant, Observatory Zo Se, Shanghai
Wedd, A. P. W., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Weddenburn, C. C., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok
Wedehase, H. chemist, F. Blackhead & Co, Hongkong
Wedel, f., techniker, Kiaochau
Wedemeyer, C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Kiaochau
Wedemeyer, G., engineer, Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Wedgworth, W. A, div. supt, of Schools Occidental Negros, Philippines
Weed, D. D. T, Advertiser Publishing Co., Yokohamna
Weeks, J. R., assistant, Lavers & Clark, Shanghai
Weeks, P. D., assistant, Pearce & Garriock, Hankow Weens, Paul, reporter, "Manila Times," Manila
Wegmann, F., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co, Canton
Wegmann, R, assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Peking
+
Wegner, A. assistant, Struckmann & Co., Manila
Wegwood, O., engineer, Green Island Cement Co., Hongkong
Wehle, M., assistant, Germania Braueréi, Kiaochau
Wehler, C. W., head-overseer, Royal Railway, Bangkok
Wehner, A. F. P., lieutenant, instructor in gunnery, S. S., Singapore
1760
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Weickert, T., aufseher, Kiaochan
Weigall, A. R., consulting engineer, Seoul Mining Co., Seoul, Corea Weigall, G. S., captain, steamer "Mausang," China coast
Weil, M., assistant, L. Soyka, Shanghai
Weil, R., assistant, American Shoe Co., Shanghai
Weiler, L., director general, Royal Railway Department, Bangkok Weill, A., manager, La Estrella del Norte, Levy Hermanos, Iloilo Weill, A., manager, Seunet Freres, Hongkong
Weinberger, C., importer, C. Weinberger & Co., Yokohama Weineck. lieutenant, S. M. torpedo boat "S. 90," German Squadron Weinglass, J. M., postmaster, Russian Post Office, Chefoo Weinstock, A., secretary, Chinese Eastern Railway, Peking
Weippert, W. H. C., assistant Chinese secretary, Customs, Peking
Weir, Dr. Fl. f., medical attendant, Consulate of Great Britain, Chemalpo Weir, F. G., health officer, Medical Department, Malacca
Weir, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Weir, J. N., chief operator, U. S. Post Office, Cebu
Weir, W. L., assistant, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore Weise, D., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Kiaochau
Weiss, F., acting consul for Germany, Chengtu Weissenborn, H., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kobe Welch, A. J., merchant, J. A. Wattie & Co., Shanghai
Welch, C., storehouseman, H. M. Naval Store department, Hongkong Welch, S. II. T., chief clerk, Ipoh Foundry Co., Perak Weld, F. J., district officer, Kuala Kangsa, Perak
Welham, H., editor, "Penang Gazette" Press, Ld., Penang Welker, O., assistant, German Post Office, Tientsin
Wellington, D. C., assistant, Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Wellmann, F., chief officer, steamer "Meilee," Yangtsze river
Wells, A. E., assistant conservator, Forest Department, Perak (absent) Wells, A. G., engine-driver, Westminster Construction Co., Singapore Wells, A. J., first clerk, Singapore & Kranji Railway, Singapore Wells, F. A., assistant. Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Wells, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Wells. M. E. H., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Wells, R. W., assistant, Maitland & Co., Shanghai
Wells, T. J., tidewaiver, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Wells, W. W., estate manager, British Borneo Development Co., B. N. Borneo (absent) Welsh, W. D., captain, steamer "Suisang," China coast
Welzel, polizechef, Polizeiamt, Kiaochau
Wemyss, J. D., manager, Eastern Shipping Co., L., Penang
Wemyss, L. H., assistant, Huttenbach Liebert & Co.. Penang Wenborn, C. A., assistant, Howarth, Erskine & Co., Perak Wendenburg H., schiftbaumeister, Kiaochau
Wendler, G., assistant, Otto Reimers & Co., Yokohama
Wendon, T. U., storekeeper, L. Tallicu & Co., Tientsin Wendschuch, Dr. F., consul for Germany, Nanking
Wendt, A. W., engine driver, Royal Railway department, Bangkok Wendt, C., assistant, F. Schwarzkopf & Co., Kiaochau
Wendt, F. A., merchant, Wendt & Co., Hongkong
Wendt, H., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Manila
Wendt, R, assistant brewer, Kirin Brewery Co., Yokohama
Wenhain, H. V, Union Medical College, Peking University, Peking Wenkstern, N. Fritz von, teacher, Higher School, Kumamoto, Tokyo Wentworth, W. D., manager, Kyushiu Stevedorage Co., Nagasaki Wentzensen, J. H., merchant, Shanghai
Wenzel, J., captain, steamer "Paklat," China coast
Werckmeister, G., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kobe
Werdermann, R., general manager, E. Van Nierop & Co., Kobe Werner, E. T. C., British consul, Kewkiang (absent) Wertheimber, L, assistant, Pila & Co., Yokohama
Wertre, E., chief of records division, Manila
Wesemann, P., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore Wesley, J. M., inspector, Municipality, Penang
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Wessels, D., chief engineer, steamer "Borneo," Hongkong and Borneo W esser, E., assistant, F. H. Schundt, Kiaochów
West, H. J., pilot, Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., China coast.
West, John, director, Kelly & Walsh, Shanghai
West, S., master, tug "Cherub," H. M. Nayal Establishment, Hongkong West, S. H., assistant, Howarth, Erskine, L., Singapore
West, P. J. assistant, S. Moutrie & Co., Hongkong
Westcott, L. G., assistant, Holme, Ringer & Co., Nagasaki Westcott, T. D., manager, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Hakata
Westendorff, P., merchant, Garrels, Börner & Co., Shanghai and Hankow Westenholz, Aage, general manager, Siam Electricity Co., Bangkok Westerburger, C. A. H., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., IIongkong Westerhout, A. W., manager, Straits Industrial Syndicate, Singapore Westerhout, J. H. L., apothecary-in-charge, Civil Dispensary, Penang Westerhout, Newbold B., assistant, Donaldson & Burkinshaw, Singapore Westerlund, Carl A., captain, S. S. "Yushun," China coast
Westernhagen, major von, attaché militaire, Legation Allemagne, Peking Wetters, B. L. Van Daalen, chemist, Sugar Factory, Bain & Co., Tainanfu Weston, C. M., Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation, Ld., Bangkok Weston, Henry G., assistant, Germann & Co., Manila Westpahalen, chief engineer, S. S. "Sikiang," Const service Westphal. A. W., chairman, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Shanghai Westphal, O. A., assistant, Westphal, King, & Ramsay, Shanghai Westphal, H., assistant, Kierulff & Co., Peking
Westphal, H. G. K. F., tidewaiter, Maritine Customs, Hankow Westphal, W., assistant, I. Kierulff & Co., Peking Westphalen, J., merchant, Winckler & Co., Kobe
Wetherell, R. H., pilot, Pagoda Anchorage, Foochow
Whaite, W. P. M., assistant examiner, I. M. Customs, Canton
Whamond, D. M., assistant, Butterfield and Shanghai
1761
Wharhirst, R. W., assistant, ordnance store officer, Royal Naval Ord. Depot, Hongkong Wharton, Eric L., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station
Wharton, L. D., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Wheal, I. A., overseer, Public Works department. Hongkong
Wheeler, A., locomotive inspector, Imperial Railway, Tongshan, North China
Wheeler, E., medical practitioner, Yokohama
Wheeler, F., captain, steamer "Loongsang," China coast
Wheeler, G. Post, second secretary, U. S. Legation, Tokyo
Wheeler, H. S., agent, W. & J. Sloane, Kobe
Wheeler, S., assistant, Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Wheeler, S. J., assistant, James Morrison & Co., Ld., Tokyo
Wheeler, E., in-charge General Hospital, Yokohama
Wheeley, Edward, merchant, Alfred Dent & Co., Shanghai
Wheelock, G. M., auctioneer, Wheelock & Co., Shanghai
Wheelock, T. R., auctioneer, Wheelock & Co., Shanghai (absent)
Wheen, A. F., merchant, Edward Wheen, Shanghai
Wheen, Edward, merchant, Shanghai
Whey, J., manager, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
Whinery, R. H., acting district-engineer, Province Albay, Philippines
Whipple, C. D., div, supt. of School, Nueva Ecija, Philippines
Whitaker, J. H., reporter, Straits Times, Singapore
Whitaker, S., assistant, F. W. Barker & Co., Singapore
Whitamore, R. A., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Shanghai
White, A. T., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Shanghai
White, C. J., merchant, Samuel McGregor & Co., Dairen
Whith, A. R., overseer, Public Works department, Shanghai
Whittaker, A., inspector, Police department, Weihaiwei
White, Ed., merchant, Robert Anderson & Co., Hankow, Kewkiang and Shanghai White, E. P, assistant, Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Penang
White, E. W., assistant, Wm. Powell, Ld., Hongkong
White, Frank R., second assistant, director of education, Manila (abt.)
White, G., foreman mason, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong White, G. F. C., lieut. Hongkong-Singapore Battalion, R. A., Hongkong
White, H. I'H., assistant, Pacific Mail Steamship Co., Hongkong
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1762
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
White, H. P., merchant, Douglas, Lapraik & Co., Hongkong White, H. T., employé, Robinson & Co., Singapore White, J. accountant, McAlister & Co., Singapore White, P., proprietor, Fuhkien Wine Agency, Foochow White, R. J., examiner, Maritime Customs, Shanghai White, S. A., proprietor, Fuhkien Wine Agency, Foochow
White, T., tide waiter, Maritime Customs, Hankow
White, T. C., narshal and clerk of Con-ul's Court, U S. Consulate, Shanghai White, T. J. C., district treasurer, Tenom, British North Borneo
White, W. A., assistant, Ward, Probst & Co., Shanghai
White, W. A., manager, Sun Life Assurance of Canada, Singapore
White, W. J., assistant, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Yokoliamu
White, John, lieut, and comdr. H. B. M. steamer "Robin," China Station White, J. E., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Hankow
White, J. W., asst. engineer, Public Works department, Hongkong White, W., asst. engineer construction, Railway Co., Manila White, Wm. Callen, assistant, Paul Pettick & Co., Foochow
White, Wm. R. J., lieut., H. M. gunboat "Thistle," China Station
White, F. W., assistant, Audrews, von Fischerz & George, Ld, Shanghai White, J., draftsman, Survey department, Selangor
White, J. E., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Hankow
White, O., assistant, British Consulate, Seoul
White, W. J., captain, tug "Fuhle," Shanghai Tug & Lighter Co., Shanghai Whitehead, C. B., assistant superintendent of Police, Singapore Whiteing, P., assistant, American Trading Co., Yokohama Whitelaw, A., foreman, Howarth, Erskine, Ld., Bangkok Whitelaw, J., captain, S. S. " Hsin Chang," China soast Whitelaw, G. C., assistant, Victoria Dispensary, Hongkong Whitelock, H. J., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Ld., Hankow Whiteside, H. S., secretary of estates, Ipoh, F.M.S.
Whiteside, J., professor, Anglo-Chinese College, Shanghai Whiteside, H., accountant, The Lahat Mines, Ld., Peruk
Whitfield, T., representative, Norddeutscher Lloyd, Singapore
Whitfield, C., manager, C. Whitfield & Co., Amoy
Whitfield, F. W., chief clerk, Municipality, Singapore
Whitfield, P., secretary, China Mutual Life Insurance Co., Amoy
Whitfield, Thos., druggist, C. Whitfield & Co., Amoy
Whitham, R. P., manager, Jones, Brothers, Ld., Shanghai
Whiting, G. W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Whitlock, M. K., assistant, Kennedy & Co., Penang
Whitmarsh, A., assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Hongkong
Whitmore, R., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Peking
Whitney, W. Norton, surgeon, Akasaka Eye & General Hospital, Tokyo
Whittall, James, agent, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Shanghai
Whittemore, L. B., teacher, Malaboyoe, Division of Cebu, Philippines
Whittick, F. G., prof. of Eng., College for non-provs, and trav. representative, Tsinanfu
Whittimore, W. D., sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Shanghai Whittle, J., marine superintendent, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai (absent)
Whymark, G. H., auctioneer, Whymark & Ailion, Kobe Whyte, J., assistant, British-American Tobacco Co., Canton
Whyte, A. A., assistant, J. Lewellyn & Co., Shanghai
Whyte, L. M., sub-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Yokohama
Whyte, T. A., lieutenant, Royal Artillery, Singapore-Hongkong
Wibel, Kurt, merchant, von Duering, Wibel & Co., Tientsin.
Wichmann, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Hankow
Battalion, Hongkong
Wickham, W. H., manager, Hongkong Electric Company, Hongkong
Widler, E., assistant, Wilhelm Klose, Shanghai
Widmann, Ad., merchant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Widmer, H., assistant, P. Roque, Haiphong
Wiedemann, E. A., resident secretary and cashier, New York Life Insurance Co., Tokyo
Wiedemann, clerk, German Consulate, Hankow
Wiedmann, chief engineer, S. S. "Loongmoon," Coast service
Wiegand, L., assistant, Schuldt & Co., Shanghai
Wiegandt, flag-lieut., German Naval Squadron, China
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Wielandt, G., engineer in chief, Siemens-Schuckert Werke, Hankow Wiemer, Hugo, postmaster, Imperial German Post Office, Canton
Wienberg, H. N., accountant, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., Shanghai Wiersum, H., assistant, Simon, Evers & Co., Yokohama
Wiesinger, O., assistant, China Export, Import & Bank Cie., Hongkong
Wiesner, H., werftbuchfuhrer, Kiaochow
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Wiget, H., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Saigon
Wightman, M. S., private secretary to Chief of Dept. of Pub. Instruction, Manila Wightwick, H. G., electrical engineer, Si gapore Electric Tramways, Singapore Wigton, T., assistant, Schiller & Co., Shanghai
Willfahrt, E., manager, Russo Chinese Bank, Peking
Wijk, H. van, manager, Hotel van Wijk Co., Singapore
Wijuberg, B. G. J., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Shanghai
Wilby, Francis B., lieut., engineer, asst., Military Mapping, Manila
Wilckens, A., assistant, Bennett, Daniel & Co., Yokohama (absent) Wilckens. C., assistant, C. Weinberger & Co., Kobe
Wilde, S., captain, steamer "Hangsang," China coast
Wilden, H. A., acting consul general for France, Chungking
Wilden, J. C., revenue officer, Import & Export Office, Hongkong
Wilder, Amos P., consul general for United States of America, Hongkong
Wilding, H. St. J., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chinkiang
Wilding, Michael H., lieut. and comdr., H. M. steamer "Woodcock," China Station Wildman, Leonard D., captain, asst. to Chief Signal Officer, Manila
Wilford, F. C., storekeeper, Lane, Crawford & Co., Hongkong
Wilgress, H. T., agent, Canadian Pacific Railway Co., Yokohama
Will, T., manager, Grand Hotel des Wagons Lits, Ld., Peking
Wilhelm, F., engineer, Siemens & Schuckert, Tokyo
Wilkens, Ed., merchant, Ebbeke & Co., Shanghai
Wilkens, H., assistant, Markwald & Co., Bangkok
Wilkins, A. P., manager, Malacca Rubber Plantation, Ld., Singapore Wilkins, Cecil E., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Kingha," Yangtsze
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Wilkins, G., reporter, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai
Wilkinson, Charles D., solicitor, Wilkinson & Grist, Hougkong
Wilkinson, Edgar S. surgeon, H. B. M. S. "Merlin," China Station Wilkinson, F. E., vice consul for Great Britain, Newchwang
Wilkinson, F. E., assistant, Cornes & Co., Kobe
Wilkinson, G. B., manager and chief engineer, Sir John Jackson, Ld., Singapore
Wilkinson, H. P., barrister-at-law, and Crown Advocate, Supreme Court, Shanghai Wilkinson, H. V., assistant, P. & Ó. Steam Navigation Co., Kobe
Wilkinson, R. J., acting secretary to Resident, Larut, Perak
*།
Wilkinson, R. J., custodian, Recreation Ground, Hongkong
Wilkinson, W. principal warder, Victoria Gaol, Hongkong
Wilkinson, W. A., executive engineer, Public Works department, Selangor
Wilkinson, W. H., consul general for Great Britain, Chungking
Willcocks, J. H., assistant, Rigold Bergmann & Co., Singapore
1763
Willcox, Cornelis De W., major, in charge, Genl. Staff, Mil. Information Division, Manila Willeke, A., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Willers, J., assistant, A. Oestmanu & Co., Kobe
Williams, A. L., assistant surgeon, Pauper Hospital, Singapore
Williams, A. P., manager, McAlister & Co. (Dubash dept.), Singapore
Williams, B., store clerk, Pula Sambo Tank Installation, Singapore
Williams, B. L., assistant, Travers, Joseph & Sons, Singapore
Williams, B. R, staff sergt. major, chief clerk, Army Service Corps, Honkgong
Williams, C. A.'S., assistant, Maritime Customs, Nanking
Williams, C. H., United States Consulate, Tientsin
Williams, C. I., commander, Customs revenue cruiser "Linhsing." Shanhai
Williams, C. J., assistant, Shewan, Tomes & Co., Kobe
Williams, C. L. L., deputy consul gen, and interpreter, U.S. Consulate, Newchwang
Williams, C. R., architect, Williams, Draper & Steadman, Singapore
Williams, D. L. W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Williams, D. R. V., assistant, Smith, Bell & Co., Manila
Williams, E. A. Mountford, asst. Lowe, Bingham, & Matthews, Hongkong and Shanghai Williams, E. C., assistant, Shanghai Tug & Lighter Co., Shanghai
Williams, E. T., electrical engineer, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
1764
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Williams, F., acting boat officer, Maritime Customs, Kiukiang
Williams, F. C., eng. com., H. B. M. S. "Bedford," China Station
Williams, G., assistant, London Asiatic Rubber & Produce Co., Malacca
Williams, L., manager, Club Hotel, Yokohama
Williams, J. H., manager and engineer, Singapore & Kranji Railway, Singapore Williams, J. W., assistant, Peking Syndicate, Ld., Tientsin
Williams, K. C., jeweller, Shanghai
Williams, K. J., jeweller, Shanghai
Williams, lieut. N. J., officer in charge of Mule Transport, Army Service Corps, Hongkong Williams, M. M., assistant, Pacific Mail S. S. Co., Köbe
Williams, N. T., professor of mechanical engineering, Imperial University, Tientsin Williams, P J., assistant, Thomas Bros., Shanghai
Williams, P. L., assistant, W. Mansfield & Co., Singapore
Williams, R., chief inspector of Police, Malacca
Williams, R. H., assistant, English High School, Macau
Williams, R., staff sergt. major, chief clerk, Hd.-qrs. Office, Hongkong
Williams, R. B., sub-accountant, International Bank, Canton
Williams, S., sub-agent, International Banking Corporation, Cebu Williams, S. G., asst. engineer, Water Works, Singapore Williams, T. J., clerk, Post Office, Penang
Williams, W. H., accountant, Ichang Consolidated Co., lchang Williams, W. H., assistant, Wise & Co., Manila
Williams, W. H., chief examiner, Maritime Customs, Canton
Williams, W. H., headmaster, Victoria School for Boys, Hongkong
Williams, W. J., station supervisor, Naval Establishment, Hongkong
Williamson, A. A., vice-consul in charge United States Consulate, Dairen
Williamson, A. S., surveyor, Lloyd's Register of Shipping, Yokohama Williamson, F. V., lieut., H. B. M. S. "Monmouth," China Station
Williamson, H. D., supt. engineer, Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Kobe and Yokohama Williamson, J., pilot, Singapore
Williamson, P. H., asst. computer, Bureau of Coast & Geodetic Survey, Manila Williamson, W. J. F., financial adviser, Bangkok
Williamson, W. S., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai Willis, J., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Ningpo
Willis, R., acting British consul general, Mukden
Willis, W. A., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Shanghai
Willits, H. P., assistant postmaster, Post Office, Iloilo
Willkomm, R., Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Shanghai
Willoughby, J., engineer, Dodwell & Co., Tokyo
Willoughby, major, military attaché, British Legation, Peking Wills, G. A., sanitary inspector, Penang
Wilmer, W., accountant, Shanghai
Wilmer, W., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Penang
Wilmot, A., foreman, Riley, Hargreaves & Co., Singapore
Wilse, G., postal officer, Imperial Chinese Post Office, Tatung, Wuhu
Wilshusen, W., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hankow
Wilson, Alan, civil engineer and architect, Penang
Wilson, A., assistant, Maritime Customs, Chefoo
Wilson, A., inspector of police, Teluk Anson, Perak
Wilson, A. G., business supt., Canton Hospital, Canton
Wilson, A. R., accountant, Shanghai and Hongkew Wharf Co., Shanghai Wilson, A. S., inspector, Police Training Depot, Singapore
Wilson, A. S., solicitor, Stokes, Platt & Teesdale, Shanghai
Wilson, A. W., assistant, Nova Scotia Sugar Estate, Peruk
Wilson, A. W., stevedore, landing and shipping agent, Nagasaki Wilson, Capt. Walter Police Precinct 2, Manila
Wilson, chrystopher, solicitor, Hastings & Hastings, Hongkong Wilson, D., inspector of Police, Perak
Wilson, E. E. B., captain, Royal Engineers, Singapore
Wilson, E. L., assistant, Health Department, Shanghai
Wilson, F., manager, Prye Rubber & Coconut Plantations, Ld., Panang
Wilson, G. T., assistant, Shanghai Dock & Engineering Co., Shanghai
Wilson, G., superintendent engineer, Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., Shanghai Wilson, G. C., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Wilson, G. G., assistant postmaster, Singapore
CC
Wilson, Harry G., paymaster, H. B. M. S. Bedford," China Station Wilson, H. C. J., assistant, Wheelock & Co., Shanghai
Wilson, John. assistant, Shanghai Dock and Engineering Co., Shanghai Wilson, J. A., merchant, Howell & Co.. Hakodate
Wilson, J., assistant, Rubana Sugar Estates, Penang
Wilson, J., merchant, H. Wolskel, Singapore
Wilson, J., manager, Perak Sugar Cultivation Co., Perak
Wilson, J. B., bookkeeper, Oriental Press, Shanghai
Wilson, J. L., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Hangchow Wilson, J. J., architect, Palmer & Turner, Hongkong
Wilson, J. L., local manager, Valvoline Oil Co., Bangkok Wilson, J. P. A., principal medical officer, Johore
Wilson, J. W., auditor, Audit Office, Sandakan, B. N. Borneo Wilson, J., 13 Nanking Road, Shanghai
Wilson, K., assistant, Jewett & Bent, Yokohama
Wilson, K. B., assistant, T. E. Griffith, Canton
Wilson, L., assistant, Rosenstock Publishing Co., Ld., Shanghai
Wilson, Newell, dental surgeon, Hongkong
Wilson, R., chief engineer, steamer "Kingsing," China coast
Wilson, R. E., merchant, Alex. Campbell & Co., Shanghai and Hankow Wilson, T., second officer, Fire Brigade, Singapore
Wilson, T. E., assistant overseer, Municipal Sejretariat, Shanghai
Wilson, T. M., inspector, Municipal Police, Louza Station, Shanghai Wilson, T. W. R., clerk, Public Works departmant, Shanghai
Wilson, H. W., assistant, Samuel, Samuel & Co., Kobe
Wilson, W., assistant, Wm. Forbes & Co.. Tientsin
Wilson, W., clerk, General Post Office, Singapore
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Wilson, W., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Wilson, W., consul for Belgium, Amoy
Wilson, W., merchant, Tait & Co., Amoy
Wilson, W. B., superintendent engineer, Penang Sugar Estates, Penang Wilson, W. J., assistant, Vulcan Iron Works, Shanghai
Wilson, W. K., assistant, G. Strauss & Co., Yokohama
Wilson, W. R., assistant engineer, Imperial Railways, Shanhaikwan, Tientsin Wilson, Walter E., captain, Police department, Manila
་་
Wilson, Rev. Wilbur F., professor of English, Nauking University, Nanking Wilton, E. C. C., consul for Great Britain, Tsinanfu
Wimmel, P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kinkiang
Winckel, C. P., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Kowloon, Hongkong Winckler, F., contremaitre-chef, Filature de Coton Hanoi, Hanoi Winchenbach, marine-intendanturrat, Finauzverwaltung, Kiaochaw Windett, A. H., assistant, Mendelson & Frank, Yokohama
Windhorst, L., chief officer, steamer "Keongwai," Hongkong and Bangkok Wing, E. E., pro-accountant, International Banking Corporation, Manila Wingrove, Geo. R., secretary, Shanghai Gas Company, Shanghai
Wingrove, W. F., broker, and secretary Shanghai Stock Exchange, Shanghai Winkelmann, H., manager, Bremen Chaircane Manufacturing Co., Singapore Winkler, F., secretary, Austro-Hungarian Consulate, Hongkong Winling, J. A., berthing officer, Maritime Customs, Shanghai
Winslow, H. P., district, traffic manager, Shanghai-Nanking Railway, Shanghai Winstanley, M., assistant, Sale & Frazar Ld., Yokohama
Winstedt, R. O., acting assistant district officer, Matang sub, district, Perak Winteler, M., assistant, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Shanghai
Winter, A., assistant, Melchers & Co., Hongkong
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Winter, F. B., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Hankow
Winter, H.. assistant, J. L. Campbell & Co., Singapore
Winter, H. E., assistant, Siam Forest Co., Lakon-Lampang, Siam
Winter, I., ingenieur, Kiaochow
Winter, W., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Shanghai
Wintroff, H., assistant, A. Schomburg & Co., Pakhoi
Wintzer, H., tea inspector, Siemssen & Krohn, Foochow
Wirkl, P. Von Buri, consul-general for Germany, Shanghai Wirth, Hermann, merchant, Canton
1765
.1766
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Wirtz, J. C., merchant, Smith, Baker Co., Kobe
Wisbet, R. H., deputy-conservator, Forest Department, Bangkok Wiser, Konrad Ritter von, consul for Austria-Hungary, Hongkong Wirsig, E., accountant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Hankow Wisemanu, H., chief engineer, steamer "Choysang," China coast Wishaw, J., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong Wislizenus, A., judge, Court First Instance, Bohol, Philippines Wisner, P. F., assistant, Wisner & Co., Shanghai
Witchell, J., assistant, Green Island Cement Co., Hongkong Witchell, R. C., sanitary inspector, Sanitary Board, Hongkong Witthaner, R, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Tsintsin Withers, W., inspector of police, Hongkong
Witschi, R., assistant, Racine, Ackermann & Co., Shanghai Witt, G. N., assistant, H. N. Ahrens & Co., Yokohama Witt, L., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau Witte, lieut., S. M. S. Luchs," German Squadron, China
Witte, H., secretary, German Consulate, Newchwang and Mukden Wittib, C., Roman Catholic missionary, Hangchow
Wittotock, P., captain, steamer "Loo Sok," Hongkong-Bangkok Wittsack, boat officer, Maritime Customs, Newchwang
Witzke, Chr. engineer, Chr. Witzke & Co., Kowloon, Hongkong
Wiychgel, Dr. G. J., Shanghai
Wodehouse, P. P. J., assistant deputy Superintendent of Police, Hongkong Woelber, W., assistant, Behn, Meyer & Co., Singapore
Woelmont, Baron Henry, de., secretaire, Belgian Legation Tokyo
Woelz, W., assistant, A. Clouet & Co., Singapore
Wohnlich, H., assistant, Diethelm & Co., Saigon
Wölber, W., assistant, Katz Brothers, Singapore
Woldringh, C., manager, Netherlands India Commercial Bank, Hongkong Wolf, A. G., accountant, Swift & Co., of Chicago, Shanghai
Wolf, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hongkong and Canton
Wolf, F. de, chief accountant, Compagnie Française de Tramways, Shanghai Wolf, H. E., postal commissioner, Chinese Post Office, Pakhoi
Wolf, A., assistant, H. Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Wolf, Hans, assistant. Carl Scriba & Co., Nagasaki
Wolf, A., accountant, Libby, McNeill & Libby, Shanghai Wolf, P., assistant, Jaeger & Co., Singapore
Wolfe, F., tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Shanghai Wolfe, J. B., professor, Provincial College, Tientsin W lfe, E. D. C., head of Sanitary dept., Hongkong
Wolfe, H. W., overseer, Public Works department, Hongkong
Wolfe, S. W., manager, The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Shanghai Wolfe, W., storehouseman, H. M. Victualling Yard, Hongkong Wolfendale, R., physician, London Mission Hospital, Chungking Wolferstan, 1. E. P., acting district Judge, Penang Wolff, A., assistant, Langeluetji & Co., Vladivostock
Wolff, Carl, storekeeper, Tientsiu
Wolff, J., director, Meisei Gakko, Osaka
Wolff, J. J. C., de, assistant, Diethelm & Co., Saigon
Wolff, M., managing director, Siemens & Schuckert, Tokyo
Wolff P. R., assistant, Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co., Hongkong Wolff, H., assistant, Bergmann & Co., Yokohama.
Wolkenburg, 2me. Secrétaire, Legation l'Allemagne, Peking
Wolllein, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow Wollheim, E., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Hankow Wollsieffen, C., assistant, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Peking Wolpovitch, F., merchant, Harbin
Wolskel, H., importer, Singapore
Wood. A. P., secretary and engineer-in-chief, Shanghai Waterworks Co., Shanghai Wood, C. H., chief officer, steamer Haiching," Coast ports
W od, D., supt. of accounts, Public Works Department, Hongkong
Wood, G., assistant manager, Island Trading Syndicate, Labuan Wood, G. G, assistant, Leigh & Orange, Hongkong
Wood, G. W., assistant, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Penang
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Wood, J., assistant, International Bank, Yokohama Wood, J. Dunford, assistant, Wreford & Thornton, Penang Wood, J. R., acting first Magistrate, Hongkong, Wood, P., assistant, Noël, Murray & Co., Shanghai Wood, R., reporter, "Shanghai Mercury," Shanghai
Wood, R. B., manager, Steam Laundry Co., Hongkong
1767
Wood, R. H., merchant, Smith, Bell & Co., and consul for Denmark, Manila (absent) Wood, W. A. R., vice-consul, British Consulate, Bangkok
Wood, W. C., manager, International Cotton Manufacturing Co., Shanghai
Wood, W. W., forest manager, Bombay Burma Trading Corporation, Bangkok
Wood, A., instructor in English, Higher Normal School, Tokyo
Wood, E. M., assistant, Macondray & Co., Manila
Wood, H., assistant, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Yokohama
Wood, E. J., surveyor, Sarvey department, Perak
Wood, J. T., assistant, Survey department, Pahang
Wood, T., assistant, Standard Oil Co. of New York, Shanghai
Wood, W. T., Survey department, Selangor
Wood, W. S., manager, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
Wood, Y., assistant, Tabaqueria Filipina, Shanghai
Woodbridge, S. Isett, editor, Chinese Christian Intelligence, Shanghai
Woodcock, G. A, first clerk, Magistracy, Hongkong
Woodford, A. J., bookkeeper, British American Tobacco Co., Singapore
Woodford, P. I., managing conveyancing clerk, Rodyk & Davidson, Singapore Woodford, R. H., clerk of works, Public Works department, Negri Sembilan Woodford, A., sanitary inspector, Penang
Woodford, H. B., clerk, electricity department, Shanghai
Woodget, A. S., chief officer, Steamer Hansang," China coast
Woodhead, H. G., reporter, "North China Daily News & Herald," Shanghai
Woodhouse, E., lieutenant, Royal Engineers, Hongkong
Woodley, M., agent, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Tansui, Formosa
Woodley, W., storehouseman, H. M. Victualling Yard, Hongkong
Woodroffe, W. G. O., inspector of Police, Perak
Woutman, M. H., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Hongkong
Woodruff, C., assistant, Japan Import and Export Commission Co., Yokohama Woodruff, F. G., commission agent, Yokohama
Woodruff, F. assistant, Langfeldt & Co., Yokohama
Woodrough, F., teacher, Tokyo Higher Technical School, Tokyo
Woods, A. A., medical officer, Tapah, Perak
Woods, Arthur, manager, Richard Haworth, & Co., Shanghai
Woods, L. H., district officer and magistrate, Kudat, British North Borneo
Woods, D. R., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Woodward. A. N., assistant, Standard Oil Co., Shanghai
Woodward, A. M. T., assistant, Abenheim Brothers, Yokohama
Woodward, H., chargeman, H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Woodward, L. M., judicial commissioner, Federated Malay States
Woodward, C. H., lieut. and comdr., H. B. M. S. "Nightingale," China Station Woollacott, J., chief officer, steamer "Sui-tai," Hongkong-Macao
Woollen, J. J., chemist, Woollen, Vosy & Co., Tientsin
Woolley, E. S., captain steamer "Onsang," China coast
Woolley, G. C.. district officer, Province Clarke, British North Borneo
Woolley, W. H., snior sanitary inspector, Sanitary department, Hongkong
Woolley, S., inspector of Police, Perak
Woolley, Alf, chief agent in Japan, Peninsular and Oriental S. Nav. Co., Kobe Woolnough, W. S., assistant, Pritchard & Co., Penang
Wo
com, Z. T. K., asst. engineer, Hanyang Iron and Steel Works, Hankow
Woost, F., werkmeister, Kiaochau
Wootton, P. H., acting agent American Trading Co., Kobe
Worcester, Dean C., secretary of the Interior, U. S. Philippine Commission, Manila Worcester, W. G. G., assistant, P. & O. S. N. Co., Hongkong
Worden, V., assistant, Mollision & Co., Yokohama
Worsley, R. II., teacher, Manila High School, Manila
Worth, W. H., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Worth, J. H., shipping agent, Chinese Engineering and Mining Co., L., Taku Worth, T. G., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
1768
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Worthington, A. F., magistrate, Selangor
Wortmann, A., inanager, Markt & Co., Shanghai
Wortmann, R., manager, Markt Co., Shanghai
Wotherspoon, W., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Ltd., Hongkong Wotrosky, inspecteur chef-brigad, Backan, Tonkin
Woude, R. van, assistant, Asiatic Petroleum Co., Shanghai
Woude, W. van, sub-agent, Netherlands Trading Society, Penang Woxen, S., tidewaiter, Martime Customs, Wuhu
Wragge, W., assistant, Melchers & Co., Shanghai
Wrage, D., assistant, P. Kierulff & Co., Peking
Wreford, F. C., assistant, Borneo Company, Singapore Wreford, J. F., solicitor, Wreford & Thornton, Penang Wrench, R. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Changshia Wrench, R., assistant, Samuel McGregor & Co., Shanghai Wrentmore, C. G., acting director, Public Works, Manila Wrentmore, S. G., assistant, Hall & Holtz, Tientsin Wrigel, Carl, bookkeeper, Richard Neumann, Shanghai Wright, A., assistant, engineer, Electricity department, Shanghai Wright, A. E., assistant engineer, Public Works Department, Hongkong Wright, F. C., secretary, Railway Co., Manila
Wright, G. H., solicitor, Hanson, McNeill & Jones, Shanghai
Wright, R. T., agent, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Kobe Wright, S. F., assistant, Native Customs, Newchwang
Wright, Tom, editor, "Straits Echo," Penang
Wright, T., tidesurveyor, Maritime Customs, Tientsin
Wright, W. N., proprietor, Wright's Hotel, Yokohama
Wright, E. A., assistant sanitary inspector, Health Department, Shanghai
Wright, W., superintendent shipwright, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore
Wright, A. E., writer, H. M. Naval Store office, Hongkong
Wright, C. E., div. supt. of schools, Oriental Negros, Philippines
Wright, E., assistant, Johnson & Phillips, Hankow
Wright, F. A., chief clerk, Lighthouse Division, Bureau of Navigation, Manila Wright, J. T., broker, Hongkong
Wright, J. M., captain, steamer" Kingsing," China coast
Wright, T. T., chief engineer, S. S. "Amara," China coast
Wright, John T., staff paym., H. B. M. S, "Astraea," China Station
Wrightson, C. W., merchant, Fearon, Daniel & Co., Shanghai
Wrightson, E. G., first officer, steamer, "Wosang," China coast Wrigley, C. C., lieut. col., chief Ordnance officer, Hongkong
Wuebbens, Carl, assistant, Trans-Pacific Commercial Co., Vladivostock
Wuebbens, C., assistant, Trans-Pacific Commercial Co., Vladivostock
Wuensche, H., assistant, Kunst & Albers, Nikolajewak, Vladivostock
Wuilleumier, G., secretary, International Cotton Manufacturing Co., Shanghai
Wulf, P., merchant, Liebe, Wulff & Co., Tsingtau
Wullschleger, J., silk inspector, E. Pasquet & Co., Canton
Wulven, E.A.C. van, depository accountant, British & Foreign Bible Society, Singapore Wunsch, Dr., medical practitioner, Kiaochau
Würsch, H., assistant, Sprungli & Co., Manila
Wuschhof, O., assistant, Sietas, Planebeck & Co., Kiaochou
Wyatt, E. B., assistant, Standard Oil Co., Shanghai
Wyatt, H., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Changsha
Wyatt-Smith, S., assistant, British Consulate, Hankow
Wyckoff, M. N., secretary, Meiji Gakuin, Shiba, Tokyo
44
Wyles, W. S., commander, Customs, revenue cruiser Pingching," Shanghai Wylie, G. supt. lithograhic dept., "South China Morning Post," Hongkong Wylie, Wilson P., city engineer, Engineering & Public Works dept., Manila Wymer, Basil L., lieut. H. B. M. S. Cadmus," China Station Wyngaard, A., engineer, Pulo Sambac Tank Installation Singapore
Wynne, H. S., foreman joiner, Hongkong and Whampoa Dock Co., Kowloon, Hongkong Wynyard, F., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard & Engineering Co., Hongkong
Wyvill, F. H., assistant, R. A. Harding, Hongkong
Wywodzeff, A. de., consul general for Russia, Singapore
Xavier, A. F. de C., clerk, Goddard & Douglas, Hongkong Xavier, A. J., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Xavier, A. M., clerk, Barretto & Co., Hongkong Xavier, A. V., major reformado, Macao
Xavier, C. A. P., clerk, Ewens & Harston, Hongkong Xavier, E. M., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong Xavier, F. M., clerk, Arnhold Karberg & Co., Hongkong Xavier, F. M., clerk, Johnson, Stokes & Master, Hongkong Xavier, G. A., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Xavier, J. R., clerk, Max. Mittag, Shanghai Xavier, F. R. clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai Xavier, H. A., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Ld., Kobe Xavier, H. H., clerk, Herbert Dent & Co., Canton
Xavier, H. J., clerk, Dodwell & Co., Hongkong
Xavier, I. M., assistant engineer, Public Works Department, Hongkong Xavier, J., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Shanghai
Xavier, J., clerk, Siemssen & Co., Shanghai
Kavier, J. M. accountant, Goldring, Barlow & Morrell Hongkong
Xavier, J. M. R., clerk, Kuhn & Komor, Hongkong
Xavi r, J. M. S., proprietor, Eastern Punting Office, Hongkong
Xavier, J. P., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Hongkong Xavier, L. C, writer, H. M. Naval Yard, Hongkong
Xavier, L. G., clerk, Banque de l'Indo-Chine, Hongkong
Xavier, L. L., manager, Hongkong Printing Press, Hongkong
Xavier, L. T, clerk, Findlay, Richardson & Co., Yokohama
Xavier, M. M., clerk, Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China, Yokohama Xavier, P., clerk, Hongkong Rope Manufacturing Co., Hongkong
Xavier, P. A., clerk, Hongkong Printing Press, Hongkong
Xavier, P. M., clerk, Russo-Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Xavier, R. F., clerk, Russo Chinese Bank, Shanghai
Xavier, R. P., contador e distribuidor, Reputicao Judicial, Macau
Xavier, S., clerk, Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, Shanghai
Xavier, L., timekeeper, Green Island Cement Co., La., Macau
Xavier, L. B. L., director, Observatoris de Macau, Macau
Xavier T. F., conego de Si de Macau, Macau
Xavier, T. V., manager Fati Installation. The Asiatic Petroleum Co., Canton
Xavier, V. H., clerk, China Provident Loan & Mortgage Co., Hongkong
Xavier, V. M. F., clerk, Ewens & Harston, Hongkong
Yard, Thos. G., superintendent, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Yard, W. E., assistant, British Cigarette Co., Shanghai
Yadrishinkoff, W. M. assistant, S. W. Litvinoff & Co., Hankow
Yancey, David W., private secretary to Commissioner Branagan, Manila.
Yearley, F. P., assistant, Chamber of Mines Labour Importation Agency, Tientsin.
Yerk, W. K., assistant, H. Skott & Co., Hongkong
Fetts, Walter P., surgeon, H. M. gunboat "Thistle," China Station
Yorke, E., commander, Naval Establishment, Weihaiwei
Youffrey, chef d'atelier, Briqueterie Tuilerie Mécaniques, Hanoi
Young, Alex., engineer, Manila Slip Co., Canacao, Manila
Young, A. Conway, assistant, "Japan Chronicle," Kobe
Young, A. E., chief surveyor, Survey Department, Federated Malay States Young, A. H., Captain c.M.G., Colonial secretary, Singapore
Young, Carlos, assistant, Macondray & Co., Manila
Young, C. N., employé, Taikoo Sugar Refining Co., Hongkong
Young, C. W., Union Medical College, Peking University, Peking
Young, D., assistant, Taikoo Dockyard and Engineering Co., Hongkong
Young, Douglas M., Far Eastern Advertising Agency, Kobe
Young, E. A., assistant examiner, Maritime Customs, Hanko w
Young, E. C., works manager, Imperial Railways Tongshan, Tientsin
Young, E. T., boat officer. Maritime Customs, Kowloon
Young, G. M., assistant, Butterfield & Swire, Hankow
Young, Harold E., electrician, Fire department, Manila
Young, H. S., assistant, Borneo Mines Co., Sarawak
Young, H. W. K., lieut., H. M. S. "Widgeon" China Station Young, J. M., merchant, Rodewald & Co., Shanghai Young, J. R., assistant, Netherlands Trading Society, Penang Young, L. J., agent, Penang
1769
1770
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Young, M. H., Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College, Tientsin
Young, Robert, consulting engineer, Penang
Young, R., assistant, Vulcan Ironworks, Shanghai
Young, R., editor, "Japan Chronicle," Kobe
Young, R. C., architectural assistant, Public Works, Shanghai
Young, R. D., accountant, Mercantile Bank of India, Singapore Young, R. D., assistant, Macondray & Co., Manila Young, S. C., assistant, Bain & Co., Anping
Young, S. C., manager, Tientsin Meat Supply & Co., Tientsin Young, W., barrister-at-law, Penang
Youngson, A., assistant, Westphal, King & Ramsay, Shanghai Yu, T. K., tidewaiter, Maritime Customs, Taku
Yuill, A., assistant, Ker & Co., Manila
Yule, K. G., chief draughtsman, Tanjong Pagar Dock Board, Singapore Yu usay, E, judge, Court of First Instance, Bulacan, Philippines
Yvanovich, G. A., clerk, Jardine, Matheson & Co., Hongkong
Yvanovich, G. A. Jr., clerk, A. R. Marty, Hongkong
Yvanovich, J. A., clerk, International Banking Corporation, Hongkong Yvanovich, P. A., clerk, Schuld & Co., Hongkong
Yzelman, A. E., clerk, Public Works Departinent, Pahang Zabel, F., assistant, A. Oestmann & Co., Kobe
Zach, E. von, acting-consul for Austria Hungary, Singapore Zachariae, C., agent, Arnhold, Karberg & Co., Tsinanfu Zachariae, H., traffic-supt., Siamese Tramway Co., Bangkok Zacharias, H. C. E., merchant, Zacharias & Co., Selangor Zae, N. S., assistant, Bielfeld & Co., Shanghai Zaeckel, A., merchant, Zaeckel & Co., Tientsin Zahn, M., assistant, Nabholz & Co., Yokobaina
Zamponi, Fr., Roman Catholic missionary, San-bue, Iloifung Zatonsky, A. D., assistant, Choorin & Co, Vladivostock Zeddlies, K., engineer, Germann & Co., Manila
Zeh, W. A., assistant, Carlowitz & Co., Kobe
Zeiler, R., assistant, Winckler & Co., Kobe and Yokohama Zell, P., assistant, Paul, Schramm & Co., Osaka
Zelleweger, Wm., assistant, Sieber, & Co., Yokohama
Zeltmann, H., assistant, F. Engler & Co., Saigon
Zencovich, C., assistant, Meurer Fils & Co., Canton
Zeperink, K. N., assistant, Choorin & Co., Vladivostock
Zeppeliu, L. J. C. von, consul general for Netherlands, Shanghai
Zercher, R. K., auditor. Province of Rizal, Philippines
Zerndt, marine engineer, S. M. S. "Tiger," German Squadron, China Zerner, M., merchant, Weill & Zerner, Singapore
Zernin, H, electrical engineer, Siemissen & Co., Shanghai Ziegenspeck, H., merchant, Noessler & Co., Shanghai
Ziegershals, B., assistant, Sietas, Plambeck & Co., Kiaochau
Ziegler, Ch. médecin, Haiphong
Ziervogel, C., assistant, H., Diederichsen & Co., Kiaochau
Zierrogel, J. P, medical officer, Shanghai Nanking Railway, Shanghai Zillig, E., tax collector, Municipal Secretariat, Shanghai
Zimmermann, C., proprietor and manager, F. Clarke & Co., Singapore Zimmermann, F., assistant, Arnhok, Karberg & Co., Hankow
Zimmermann, H., assistant New Engineering and Shipbuilding Works, Shangha
Zimmermann, Manfred, notar, Vorwerk, Zimmermann & Büsing, Kiaochau Zimmermann, S., merchant, S. Zimmerniann & Co., Shanghai
Zinn, A. O., private secretary to Commissioner Worcester, Manila
Zinow, A., assistant, British American Tobacco Co., Ld., Hankow Zobel, A., architect, Lotbar, Marcks & Busch, Hankow
Zobel, K., registrar, German Consulate, Bangkok
Zoellner, K., captain, steamer "Machew," China coast
Zokl, J. P. F., assistant, Maritime Customs, Kiaochau
Zonne, Y. C., general manager, Gapis Tin Mining Co., Penang
Zotzman, L., electrical engineer, Raub Australian Gold Mining Co., Pahang Zschech, Dr., S. M. S., "Tsingtau," German Squadron, China Züellig, F. E., assistant, Ed. A. Keller & Co., Manila
FOREIGN RESIDENTS
Zuléta, N., assistant, Forbes, Munn & Co., Iloilo Zuellig, E., assistant, Froehlich & Kuttner, Manila
Zumpe, P., assistant secretary, German Consulate, Canton Zurcher, A., assistant, Dalmann & Co., Singapore
Zurn, P., watchmaker, Hirsbrunner & Co., Shanghai
Zuylen, H. van, marine superintendent, Java China Japan Lijn, Hongkong Zwack, G., secretary, Philippine Weather Bureau, Manila
Zylker, A. F., Sing-kep Tin Mines, Singapore
1771
LIST OF PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES
IN
CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Abernethy, Miss G., American Southern Baptist Mission, Chefoo
Ackerson, Miss A., Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Siangyang via Hankow Ackerson, Miss E., Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Siangyang via Hankow Acock, Miss A. A., American Baptist Missionary Union, Sendai, Japan Adam, J. R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Anshunfu via Yochow and Kweiyang Adams, A. S., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hopo via Swatow Adams, J. E., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Taiku, Corea Adams, J. S., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang Adams, S. G., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang
Adams, W. F., M.D., and wife, Reformed Church, United States, Yochow, via Hankow Adams, W. W., American Southern Baptist Mission, Tengehowfu, via Chefoo Adams, Miss A. P., American Board Mission, Okayama, Japan
Adams, Miss E. L., American Baptist Missionary Union, Kinhwafu
Adams, Miss J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Adamson, A., and wife, Presbyterian Australian Mission Fusan, Corea
Adkins, R. E., M.D., and wife, American Baptist Misny. Union, Kityang via Swatow Agar, Miss G., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Taochow, Kansuh Ague, Miss E. P., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Hiroshima, Japan
Ahlman, Miss O. G. W., Swedish Mission in China, Hanchenghsien via Hankow Ahlstrand, G., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Chienchow, Sianfu via Hankow Ahlstrom, Miss T., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Aiken, E. E.,and wife, American Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Paotingfu viaTientsin Aitken, Miss I., L.R.C.P.& S., ED., United Free Church of Scotland, Liaoyang via Newchwang Akers, Miss, Unconnected, Shiltao, via Chefoo
Alanko, H., Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshih via Shasi
Albaugh, Miss I. M., American Presbyterian Mission (South) Kiangyin
Albertson, W. B., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengta
Albertson, Miss M. M., American Meth. Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul
Albolther, Miss H. S., American Presbyterian Mission, Tokyo
Alcorn, Miss E. H., Mission of the Methodist Church of Canada, Kofu, Japan (absent) Alderson, J. W., and wife, Unconnected, Juichowfu, via Kiukiang
Aldis, W. H.. and wife, China Lalan 1 Mission, Paoning, Sze
Aldis, Miss K. M., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze
Aldrich, Miss M., American Episcopal Mission, Kyoto
Aldridge, Miss A. S., English Baptist Zenana Mission, Chowtsun
Alexander, B., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Changsha, Hunan
Alexander, J. Wesleyan Missionary Society, Liuyang, Hunan
Alexander, R. P., M.A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tokyo
Alexander, Miss B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hirosaki, Japan Alexander, Miss S., Amer. Pres. Mission, Wamina Jo Gakko, Osaka
Alf, A., and wife, American Bible Society, Canton
Allan, C. W., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wuchang Allan, F. F., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Jenshow
Allen, Mrs. O. A., Independent, Canton
Allchin, G., and wife, American Board Mission, 31, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka
Allchin, Miss Florence S., Amer. Board Mission, Doshisha Jo Gokko, Kyoto, Japan Allchin, Miss M. F., Amer. Board Missions, 31 Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka Allen, H. A. C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kutsingfu via Mengtze
Allen, Mrs. M. H. Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Shanghai Allen, Miss A., Methodist Church of Canada, Kofu, Japan Allen, Miss A. R., China Inland Mission. Wanhsien, via Ichang Allen, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Chinkiang
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Allen, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hok-Chiang, Ngucheng via Foochow Allen, Miss Maud, Independent, Tsachsien, Shantung
Allibone, Miss E. H., China Inland Mission, Nanpu via Tchang.
Alling, Miss B. S., Meth, Epis. Miss. Aoyama, Tokyo
Allum, F. A., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Chowkiakow, Honan
Allward, Mrs. M. C., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Ally, Miss, American Presbyterian Mission South, Konsan, Corea
1773
Almblad, A. F., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Paoteo, Wangjefu, via Peking Alty, H. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Alward, Miss Clara, Women's Union Miss. Soc., 212 Bluff, Yokohama
Ambler, J. C., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Hirosaki, Japan
Ambler, P. V., China Inland Mission, Chaocheng, Sha., via Peking
Ament, Mrs. W. S., American Board of Comsurs, for Foreign Missions, Peking Amundsen, E., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Yunnanfu
Ancell, B. L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Andersen, Miss T. E., China Inland Mission, Shekichen via Hankow
Anderson, J. Webb, M.D., South China Medical College, Canton
Anderson, A. S., Moore, M.A., English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu via Amoy Anderson, B. L., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Kulangsu, Amoy Anderson, C. J., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Sianfu via Hankow Anderson. Dr. Robert, Hauges Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Anderson, D. L., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Soochow Anderson, G. A., and wife, Chiua Inland Mission, Shekichen via Hankow
Anderson, H. E., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society. Wuchow via Canton Anderson, H. J. P., M.A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
Anderson, James, Mormon Mission, Morioka, Japan
Anderson, J. G., M.A., London Missionary Society, Tientsin
Anderson, J., Latter Day Saints (Mormon) Morioka, Japan
Anderson, J., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission in Japan, Takayama, Hida, Japan Anderson, J. A., M.D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Taichow via Ningpo
Anderson, J. P., Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Waichowfu via Canton
Anderson, K. R., Swedish Mission in China, Honanfu
Anderson, P., L.R.C.S. & P., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa Anderson, P. H. American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton
Anderson, R. L., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Soochow
Anderson, W. J. W., M.D., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Fatshan via Canton
Anderson, Miss C., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Wukung, Sianfu via Hankow Anderson, Miss E., Swedish Mission in China, Chiehchow via Taiyuanfu
Auderson, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Tsoyun, via Peking
Anderson, Miss E. E., MD., American Presbyterian Mission, Soochow Anderson, Miss F. K., Swedish Holiness Union, Tsoyun via Taiyuanfu
Anderson, Miss G. S., Scandinavian Alliance, Piangliang, and Sianfu via Hankow Anderson, Miss H., Scandinavian Alliance Mission in Japan, Takayama (absent) Anderson, Miss I. E., Swedish Mission in China, Hoyang via Peking
Anderson, Miss I. M., Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Changchow Anderson, Miss J. R., China Inland Mission, Kweiki via Kiukiang
Anderson, Miss K., Danish Lutheran Mission, Fengliwang Cheng via Newchwang Anderson, Miss K., Swedish Holiness Union, Tsoyun via Taiyuanfu
Anderson, Miss M., American Lutheran Mission, Sinyangchow, Honan
Anderson, Miss A. M., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Fengchen via Taiyuanfu Anderson, Miss M. T., Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Canton
Anderson, Miss T. E., China Inland Mission, Shekichen via Hankow
Andersson, K. R., Swedish Mission in China, Honanfu
Anderzen, C. A., and wife, Swedish Holiness Union, Tsoyun via Taiyuanfu
André, A. E., and wife, Swedish Evan. Missy. Covenant of Amer., Fancheng via Hankow Andrew, G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Lanchowfu via Hankow and Sianfu
Andrew, Miss G F., China Inland Mission, Lanchowfu via Hankow and Sianfu
Andrew, Miss J.M., M.B., Ch. B., United Free Church of Scotland, Keiyuen via Newchwang Andrews, Bishop W. and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hakodate Japan
Andrews, H. E. V., and wife, China Islan: Mission, Shunking, Sze, via Ichaang Andrews, R. W., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Akita, Japan Andrews, W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Sintu, Sze
Andrews, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Go-sang-che via Foochow
Andrews, Miss M. E., American Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Msns., Tungehow Chi.
1774
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Angvik, Miss C., Norwegian Mission in China, Han-cheng, Yuncheng via Peking Angwin, Miss R., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Annand, A. S., and wife, National Bible Society of Scotland, Tientsin
Annis, Miss H., China Inland Mission, Chubsien, Sze., via Ichang
Aplin, Miss H. G., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Appleton, C. F., and wife American Free Methodist Mission in China, Kaifengfu, Hona
Archer, Miss A. L., Church of England Miss. Soc., Nagano, Shinshiu, Japan
Archibald, J., and wife, National Bible Society of Scotland, Hankow
Argento, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kwangchow via Hankow
Argento, Miss C., China Inland Mission, Shekichen, via Hankow
Ankeny, Miss J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Armbruster, Miss T., Rose, Church of Christ Mission, Akita, Japan Armfield, Miss M., Church Missionary Society, Mienchmhsien, Sze Armstrong, G. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Ichofu via Chinkiang Armstrong, R. C., and wife, Methodist Church of Canada, Kanazawa, Japan Armstrong, Miss M. E., Methodist Church of Canada, Kanazawa, Japan Armstrong, O. V., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Chiukiang Aructvedt, N., Norwegian Missionary Society, Jyang, Hunan via Changsha Arpiainen, Miss J. W., Finnish Free Church Mission, Yungfenghsien via Kiukiang Asbury, Miss Jessie J., Church of Christ Mission, Akita, Japan Ashbaugh, Miss A. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagasaki
Ashmore, W., Jr., D.D., und wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow Asken, Miss M. E., Missionary Home and Agency, Shanghai
Aspland W. H. G., M.D... F.R.C.S., ED., and wife, Church of England Mission, Peking Atchison, R., and wife, Independent, Tennoji Mura, Osaka
Atkinson, Miss A. P., Methodist Episcopal Church, Nagoya, Japan
Atkinson, Miss M. J., Presbyterian Mission, South, Kochi, Japan
Atkinson, Miss V. M., Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Soochow
Atter, A., and wife, Apostolic Faith Mission, Shanghai
Atwood, I. J., M.D., and wife, American Board of Coms. for Fgn. Msns., Fenchow, Shansi Aurell, K. E., and wife, Christian and Missy. Alliance, Atsuta, Nagoya, Japan (absent) Austen, W. T., and wife, Chaplain of Seamen's Mission, 82, Settlement, Yokohama Austen, Miss M., M.D., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu
Avison, D. O. R., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea Axling, W., and wife, Amer. Bapt. Miss. Union, 6, Ura Sarugaku Cho, Kanda, Tokyo, Jap. Axling, Miss M., Swedish Missionary Society, Hwangchow via Hankow
Ayers, T. W., M.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Ayres, J. B., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Yamaguchi, Japan Babcock, Miss B. R., American Episcopal Mission, Fukushima, Japan
Babington, S. N., M.D., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Taichowfu via Ningpo Bach, A. H., and wife, China New Testament Mission, Pakhoi
Bachlor, Miss R., Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Badcock, J. S., Church of England (S. P. G.) Kanghoa, Corea
Baer, F. B., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Hankow
Bahr, I., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Thongtauha via Hongkong
Bahr, M., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Fayen Luk Hang via Canton
Baird, G. B., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Luchowfu via Wuhu
Baird, W. M., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Bailey, Miss E. C., China Inland Mission, Kiungchow Sze.
Ba eman, P. R and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hangelow
Baker, B. L., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Chaochowfu via Swatow Baker, E. G., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Tsingchowfu via Kiaochow
Baker, J. A. A., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hongkong
Baker, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Shiuhing via Canton
Baker, Miss F. A. R., China Inland Mission, Antung Ku., via Chinkiang Baker, Miss L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Baldwin, J. H., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau
Baldwin, J. M., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Toyohashi, Japan Baldwin, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Ballagh, Mr. J. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Meiji Gakuin, Tokyo Ballagh, Miss A. P., Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Tokyo (absent)
Ballagh, J. H., D. D., Dutch Reformed Church in America, 48, Bluff, Yokohama Ballard, Miss S., St. Hilda's Mission, 3, Yaraimachi, Ushigome, Tokyo (absent) Baller, F. W., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1775
Balme, Dr. H., English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu, Shansi
Balmer, Miss J., English Presbyterian Mission, Wukingtu, via Swatow
Band, S., B.A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Wukingfo, via Swatow Banister, Ven. Archdeacon W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong Bankhardt, F. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yenpingfu via Foochow Banks, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Ningkwofu via Wulu
Bannan, E. J., China Inland Mission, Changteh, Hunan Barber, E. O., China Inland Mission, Yicheng via Peking
Barber, Miss E. P., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Anking Barclay, J., Gurney, Matsuye, Japan (absent)
Barclay, T., M.A., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa Barclay, Miss P. A., China Inland Mission, Kweichowfu via Ichang
Barham, A. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Luchow via Chungking Barker, Miss I. M., South Chilli Mission, Tamingfu
Barlow, C. H., M.D., and wife American Baptist Missionary Union, Huchowfu Barns, Miss Emma, British & Foreigu Bible Society, Nagoya, Japan (absent) Barnes, Miss E. E., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Atsuta, Japan (absent) Barnes, Miss L. H., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow Barnett, E. J., Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Barnett, H., and wife, Unconnected, Jehoi (Chêntefu) via Peking Barnett, Miss M., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa Barr, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Barraclough, Miss, China Inland Mission, Luchenghsien via Peking
Barrett, W. M., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Taiku, Corea Barrett, Miss M., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea
Barrie, H. G., M.D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kuling via Kiukiang
Bartel, H. C., and wife, Independent, Tsaohsien, Shantung
Barter, A. J., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Barter, Miss M. K., China Inland Mission, Taikang via Hankow
Burtlett, S. C., and wife, American Board Mission, Otaru Hokkaido, Japan
Bartlett, Miss C., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hokchiang via Foochow Barton, H., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shaohingfu
Barton, Robert, H. Mormon Mission, Asahigawa, Hokkaido, Japan
Barton, M. F.. Mormon Mission, 19, Nishiki Machi, Kofu, Japan
Bashford, J. W., PH.D., D.D., LL.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking Bassett, Miss B., American Baptist Missionary Union, Suifu via Chungking
Batchelor, J., F.R.G.S., and wife. Church Missionary Society, Sapporo, Japan (absent)
Batchelor, Miss E., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Bates, J. C. L., M.A., and wife, Mission of Methodist Church of Canada, Kofu, Japan (abt.) Bates, Miss R. C., American Board Mission, 59 Nakayamate Dori, Rokuchome, Kobe
Batey, Miss M., American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Seoul
Batey, Miss Martha Methodist, Episcopal Church South, Wonsan, Corea
Batterham, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Yanghsien via Hankow
Batty, Miss L. A., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Baucus, Miss G., Methodist Episcopal Church, 37, Bluff, Yokohama
Bauernfeil, Miss S. M., Evangelical Association of North America, Tokyo (absent) Baugh, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Baumann, L., and wife Rhenish Missionary Society, Tungkun via Canton
Baumer, Bliss E., German China Alliance Mission, Yunho, via Wenchow
Baxter, A., London Missionary Society, Canton
Baxter, A. K., L.R.C.P. & S.ED., and wife, United Methodist Church Mis., Wutingfu, Shantung Baxter, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Kweiki via Kiukiang
Bayne, P. M., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Beach, J. G., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Chung Kianghsien, Sze.
Beals, Z. Charles, and wife, American Advent Christian Mission, Wuhu
Beaman, W. F., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kiatingfu via Chungking
Bean, B. F., and wife, United Brethren in Christ, Canton
Beard, W. L., B.A., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Foochow
Bearder, Miss A. M., Church of England Mission, Peking
Beath, Miss N., M.B., C.M., English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Beattie, J., M. A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
Beattie, Miss R., Methodist Church of Canada, Ueda, Shinshiu, Japan
Beatty, J. C. P., M.D., T.C.D., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Beatty, Miss E., M.D., T.C.D., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Kwangning via N'chwang
1770
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Beauchamp, M.. J.A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kweichowfu via Ichang Beaumont, Major, and wife, Salvation Army, Tokyo
Beck, E. A.. Reformed Church in the United States, Chenchoufu, Hunan
Beck, S. A., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea Becker, A. L., and wife, Amer. Meth. Episcopal Church Mission, Pyongyang Beckingsale, Miss J., B.A., English Baptist Zenana Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Beckman, R., and wife, Scandinavian C. A. Mission, Luchuanlisien, Sianfu via Hankow Beebe, Mrs. R. C., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Beech, J., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Begg, T. D., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Shanghai
Behrents, O. S., M.D., and wife, American Lutheran Mission, Kioshan, Honan Beinhoff, E. O., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Honaufu
Belcher, W. M., and wife, China Inland Mission, Liangchowfu and Sianfu
Bell, E., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kwanju, Corea Bell, J., A.T.S., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Suitcichow, Shensi
Bell, Miss A. L., London Missionary Society, Chiangchiu via Amoy
Bement, Miss F. K., American Board of Comsrs, for Fgn. Msns., Shaowu via Foochow Bement, Miss L. P., M.D., American Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Msns., Shaowu via Foochow Bender, J., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Lungchuan Che. via Wenchow Bender, Miss M. E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Benderlock, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Bengtsson, O., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Sianfu via Hankow
Benham, Miss E., London Missionary Society, Tingchowfu via Amoy
Bennett, H. J., and wife, American Board Mission, Tottori, Japan (absent)
Bennett, Miss E. L., China Inland Mission, Ninghai via Ningpo
Bennett, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Bennett, Mrs. A. A., American Baptist Mission, Yokohama
Benning, Miss A., English Presbyterian Mission, Chianghoa, Formosa
Benninghoff, H. B., and wife, Amer. Baptist Msny. Union, 29,Sanaizaka Machi, Ichigaya, Tok Benson, H. F., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Msn.,30, Kami Yanagi Cho, Hiroshima, Jap Benz, Miss L., Independent, Tsaohsien, Shantung
Bere, Miss M., D.C.S., Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Berg, A., aud wife, Swedish Mission in China, Yuncheng via Taiyuanfu
Berg, Mrs. A., Swedish Missionary Society, Hwangchow via Hankow
Berg, Miss G., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Tengchow, Honan
Bergen, P. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Bergfjord, K., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Yunyang via Hupeh
Bergin, Miss F. L., Unconnected, Nanchang via Kiukiang
Bergling, A. R., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Hanchenghsien via Hankow Bergström, F. Ó., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Msn.,920, Uenohara, Nakano, Tokyo Fu Bergstrom, S., and wife, Scandinavian China Alliance Msn., Hingping, Sianfu, via Hankow Bernhardt, Miss B., Hildesheim Mission for the Blind, Kowloon
Bernheisel, C. F., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Bernsten, B., and wife, Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfu, Chi. Berry, A. D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo
Berry, Miss, London Missionary Society, Tsangchow, via Tientsin
Berst, W. R., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Changtel, Hunan
Bertels, C. N., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church, Aoyama, Tokyo (absent) Beschnidt, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Tatungfu, via Peking
Best, C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Laian via Naaking
Best, Miss M., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea
Betow, Miss E., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sienyu via Foochow Bettinson, Miss A. H., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Beutle, J. A., and wife German China Alliance Mission, Yunho via Wenchow
Bevan, H. L. W., M.A., Loudon Missionary Society, Shanghai
Bevis, E. G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Cheuchowfu via Hankow
Bible, F. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow
Bickel, Captain L. W., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Himeji, Japan Bickersteth, Mrs., Society P. G., Shizuoka, Japan (absent)
Bigelow, Miss Florence, American Presby erian Mission, Yamaguchi, Japan
Bigelow, Miss G. S., American Presbyterian Mission, Yamaguchi
Biggam, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Ninghai via Ningpo
Biggin, T., M.A., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tungchow via Peking Biggs, Miss C. M., China Island Mission, Sintientsz via Ichang
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1777
Bigler, Regina M., M.D., United Brethren in Christ, Canton
Billing, A. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Billings, B. W., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Pyenyang, Corea Binford, G., and wife, Society of Friends, Mito, Ibaraki-ken, Japan Bing, Miss A. V., Methodist Episcopal Church, Sapporo (absent) Birch, Miss E. S., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Bird, C. H., B.A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kaifeng via Hankow Bird, F., China Inland Mission, Chungking
Birdman, D. F. H., American Presbyterian Mission South, Mokpo Birrell, M. B., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchang Bishop, C., Religious Tract Society, Tokyo
Bishop, C., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, 15-B, Tsukiji, Tokyo
Bishop, H. N., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Bishop, W. J., and wife, Independent, 73, Myogadani Machi, Koishikawa, Tokyo Bissonette, W. S., and wife, Methodist Publishing House in China, Foochow
Bitton, W. N., London Missionary Society, Shanghai
Bjertnæs, S., Norwegian Missionary Society, Sichow via Peking
Bjorklund, Miss M., Swedish Mission in China, Ishih via Taiyuanfu
Bjorkman, Miss M. S., Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfu, Chi. Black, E. F., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Black, Miss, China Inland Mission, Laohokow via Hankow Black, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Laohokow via Hankow Black, Miss E., English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Black, Miss J., China Inland Mission, Laohokow via Hankow Blackmore, Miss, Unconnected, Tuchiawopu via Tangshan
Blackmore, Miss I. S., Methodist Church of Canada, 13, Torüzaka Machi, Azabu, Japan Blackmore, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Blackstock, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo
Blackstone, J. H., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang
Blain, J. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Kashing
Blair, C. E., M.B., CH.B., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tingchowfu via Amoy
Blair, W. M., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S A., Pingyang, Corea Blakely, Miss G. M., China Inland Mission, Tungsiang, Ki., via Kiukiang
Blalock, T. L., and wife, Gospel Mission, Taian, Shantung Blanchett, C. I., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Bland, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Anking
Bland, F. E., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Blandford, E. J., and wife, North-West Kiangsi Mission, Wucheng Ki,, via Kiukiang Blasner, F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Changshu Ki., via Kiukiang
Blauvett, Miss E. H., M.D., Reformed Church in America, Siokhe, via Amoy
Bleby, H. L., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kokura, Japan (absent)
Bliss, E. L., M.D., and wife, American Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Msns., Shaowu via Foochow Blom, C., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Yuncheng via Taiyuanfu
Blount, Miss M.L., Methodist Episcopal Ch. South, 133, Kami Nobori Cho, Hiroshima, Japan Blumhardt, B., Allgemeiner Evangelisch Protestantischer Missionsverein, Tsingtau Blumhardt, Miss H., Allgemeiner Evangelisch Protestantischer Missions., Tsingtau Blundy, J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kienningfu via Foochow Boardley, Miss L., United Methodist Church Mission, Wenchow
Boardman, Miss E. B., American Presbyterian Mission, (South), Hangchow Boaz, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Nang-wa via Foochow Bobby, W. G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kienping via Wuhu Boddy, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau Boehne, Miss E. S., American Presbyterian Mission, Tsinan via Tsingtau Böen, E. O., Independent Lutheran Mission, Sihsien, Honan
Boggs, J. J., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Böhnker, Miss K. L., German China Alliance Mission, Chuchow via Wenchow Boileau, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Ningtel via Foochow
Boiling, Mrs. T. B. J., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Hoyang via Peking Bolton, Miss A., Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
+
Bolton, Miss E. R., China Inland Mission, Taning Sha., via Peking
Bolwig, C., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Takushan via Newchwang Bomar, Miss M. B., Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Huchowfu Bonafield, Miss J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Bondfield, G. H., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Shanghai
56
1778
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Bone, C. and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hongkong
Bonnell, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Ch. South, 35, Nakayamate Dori Shichone, Kobe Bonsey, A., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hankow
Bonthius, A., M.P., and wife, Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Bonwick, Major, Salvation Army, Seoul, Corea
Boone, H. W., M.D., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Boot, H. P., M.A., Reformed Church in America, Chiang-chiu via Amoy
Booth, E. S., and wife, Msn. of the Reformed Dutch Ch. in America, 178, Bluff, Yokohama Booth, R. T., M.B., B.CH. (R.U.I.), and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow Booth, W. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chefoo
Booth, Miss M. E., China Inland Mission, Paoning Sze.
Booth, Miss N., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow
Borbein, Miss I., Berlin Missionary Society, Canton
Borg, Miss J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Borjeson, Miss H., Swedish Missionary Society, Hwangchow via Hankow
Bornand, G., Basel Missionary Society, Lilong via Hongkong
Borst-Smith, E. F., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Yennganfu, Shensi
Bosanquet, Miss A. C., Church Missionary Society, 145, Kokutaiji Mura, Hiroshima, Japan
Bosanquet, Miss N., S. P. G., Okuhirano, Kobe
Bosshard, J., British and Foreign Bible Society, Hongkong
Bostick, G. P., and wife, Gospel Mission, Pochow, Anhwei
Bostick, Miss A. T., Gospel Mission, Pochow, Anhwei
Bostick, W. D., and wife, Gospel Mission, Pochow, Anhwei
Bostroin, Miss, Danish Lutheran Mission, Takushan via Newchwang Bosworth, Miss S. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Fouchow
Botham, Mrs. T. E., China Inland Mission, Ninghaichow via Chefoo Bott, Miss Glen, S. P. G., 33, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe
Bouldin, G. W., and wife, Southern Baptist Convention, Fukuoka, Japan Boulton, Miss E. B., Church Miss. Soc., 60, Satsuma Bori, Nishiku, Osaka Boutflower, Bishop C. H., D.D., S. P. G., 153, Honmura Cho, Azabu, Tokyo Boutflower, Miss C. H., D.D., S. P. G., 153, Honmura Cho, Azrabu, Tokyo Bowen, A. C., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Soochow Bowen, A. J., M.A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking Bowles, G., and wife, Society of Friends, 30, Kouncho, Mita, Tokyo
Bowles, N. E., B.A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu
Bowman, Miss N., C. Miss. Soc., 174, Shinonome Cho Nichome, Higashiku, Osaka, Japan Bowser, Miss Hilda G., Christian Literature Society for China, Shanghai
Box, E., and wife, London Missionary Society, Shanghai
Boyd, H. W., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Boyd, J. R. S., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kutien via Foochow
Boyd, Miss L. H., American Episcopal Mission, 3, Misaki Cho Sanchome, Kanda, Tokyo Boyer, Miss M., Independent, Shanghai
Boynton, C. L. B.A., and wife, Young Men's Christian Association, Shanghai
Boys, G. S., and wife, S. P. G., Okayama, Japan (absent)
Brackbill, Miss S. C., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Braddock, W. H., Y. M. C. A., teacher, Yamaguchi, Japan
Bradley, Dr. Neville, and wife, Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Bradley, J. W., M. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Sutsien via Chinkiang Bradley, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Bradley, Miss L., Church Missionary Society, Ningtaik via Foochow
Bradshaw, F. J., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kiatingfu via Chungking Bradshaw, Miss A. H., American Board Mission, Sendai, Japan
Braithwaite, G., & wife, Japan Book and Tract Society, 6, Hikawa Cho, Akasaka, Tokyo Bragg, T., L. R. C. P. & S., and wife, London Missionary Society, Weichen via Shunteft Brand, H. G., and wife, Independent, Kogimachi, Tokyo
Brand, J. C., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, 30-A, Tsukiji, Tokyo
Brander, Miss J., English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Brecken, E. R., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Cheng-tu.
Brethorst, Miss A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tzechow, Sze.
Brêton, E., Liebenzell Mission, Hengchow via Yochow
Bretthauer, Miss E., B.D., M.D., American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang
Brewster, W. N., p.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow Bridge, A. H., and wife, London Missionary Society, Weichen via Shuntefu Bridge, J. E. E., Unconnected, Wentenghsien via Weihaiwei
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
1779
Bridle, G. A., Church of England (S.P.G.), Sunwo, Corea
Briggs, F. C., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Himeji, Japan Briggs, Miss, London Missionary Society, Hongkong
Brighthill, Miss E. N., Reformed Church in the United States, Chenchowfu, Hunan Brillinger, A. M., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Cheng-tu.
Brimstin, Miss M. E., Canadian Methodist Mission, Cheng-tu
Briscoe, W. F. H., China Inland Mission, Hungtung via Peking
Briseid, Miss T., Unconnected, Shihtao via Chefoo
Bristowe, Miss F. M., American Episcopal Mission, Aomori, Japan
Britton, T. C., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Soochow
Britton, Miss F. M., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Canton
Broadfoot, T.A., B.A., B.D., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Kongmoon via H'kong- Brock, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chowkiakow via Hankow
Brockman, F. M., B.A., International Committee of the Y. M. C. A., Seoul
Brockman, F. S., and wife, International Committee of Y. M. C. A., Shanghai Brokaw, H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kure, Japan
Brook, Miss J. P., China Inland Mission, Hiangcheng via Hankow
Brooks, Miss C. A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Brooks, Miss I. L., Methodist Publishing House in China, Shanghai
Broomhall, A. H., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chungking Broomhall, Dr. B. C., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu Broomhall, M., B.A., and wife, China Inland Mission (in England)
Broström, Miss, Danish Lutheran Mission, Takuskan via Newchwang
Broumton, J. F. China Inland Mission, in America
Brown, C. C., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu via Amoy Brown, C. L., D.D., and wife, Lutheran Mission, Kumamoto, Japan
Brown, F., F.R.G.S., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Brown, G. G., and wife, China Inland Mission (in England)
Brown, G. S., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yenpingfu via Foochow Brown, H., Y. M. C. A., teacher, Kyoto, Japan
Brown, H. J. B., and wife, Church of England Mission, Peking
Brown, J. E., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Luchowfu via Wuhu
Brown, T. C., B.A., B.D., London Missionary Society, Chiangchiu via Amoy
Brown, Miss A., Presbyterian Women's Missionary Union, Fusan, Corea
Brown, Miss A. E., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Brown, Miss C. E., Bible Mission Society, Tsin Shaan
Brown, Miss H. M., Independent, Chofu
Brown, Miss M. C., China Inland Mission, Kwangsinfu via Ningpo
Browne, B. Score, M.C., Church Missionary Society, Taichowfu
Browne, W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Chuki
Browne, Miss, American Board of Comsrs. for Foreign Msns., Tungchow, Chi. Brownell, H. C., B.A., Canton Christian College, Canton,
Browning, R. E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Brownlee E. A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Anking
Brownlow, Miss M., Church Missionary Society, Hakodate, Japan
Bruce, J. H., B.A., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte-fu, Ho
Bruce, J. P., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Tsingchowfu via Kiaochow Bruen, M. W., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Taiku, Corea Brun, S., M.A., B.D., and wife, Norwegian Missionary Society, Sinhwa via Changsha Bryan, A. V., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Port Arthur, Manchuria Bryan, H. C., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Nodoa via Hoihow, Hainan Bryan, R. T., D.D., American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai Bryan, Miss F. C., American Southern Baptis Mission, Shanghai
Bryant, E. E., B.A., B.D., London Missionary Society, Weichen via Shuntefu Bryant, Miss E. M., Church Missionary Society, Piratori, Japan
Bryer, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kienning via Foochow
Bryers, Miss S. E., Church Missionary Society, Anhsien, Sze,
Bryson, A. G., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tsangchow via Tientsin Bryson, T., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tientsin
Bryson, Miss M. E., M.B., CH.B., English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu, via Amoy Buchanan, T. F., National Bible Society of Scotland, Hankow
Buchanan, W. C., and wife, Presbyterian Church U.S.A. South, Nagoya, Japan
Buchanan, W. Mc.S., and wife, Presn. Ch. U.S.A. South, 20, Yamamoto Dori Shichome, Kobe
Bucher, J. F., and wife, Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow via Hankow
56*
1780
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Buck, Rev. Frank C., Foreign Christian Mission, Luchowfu via Wuhu Buck, Miss F. M., Missionary Home and Agency, Shanghai
Buckner, H. F., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Wuchow via Canton Bugge, S., B. Sc. M.A., B.D., Norwegian Missionary Society, Changsha Bull, W. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kunsan, Corea Bull, Miss L., American Episcopal Mission, 6, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka
Bullen, W. B., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Otaru Japan (absent) Bullis, Miss E. M., Methodist Episcopal Church, Aoyama, Tokyo Bullock, A. A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking Bunbury, G. A., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong Buncombe, W. P., B.A., and wife, Church Miss Soc., 52-A, Tsukiji, Tokyo
Bunker, D. A., and wife, Am. Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea Bunting, C. A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Wanan Ki., via Kiukiang Burbridge, Miss N., China Inland Mission, Kintingfu via Chungking, Burch, C. A., and wife, American Advent Christian Mission, Chuchsien
Burden, W. D., and wife, Sey. Day Adventist Misn., 846, Sendagaya Machi Akasaka, Tokyo Burdick, G. M., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul Burdick, Miss S. M., PH.E., Seventh Day Baptist Mission, Shanghai Burén, Miss E. A. E., Swedish Mission in China, Honanfú
Burgess, O., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Burke, W. B., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Soochow Burke, Miss Margaret E., American Advent Christian Mission, Chaohsien Burkwall, J. O. T., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Canton Burlingame, Miss E. M., Independent, Canton
Burn, Miss E. F., China Inland Mission, Chinkiaug
Burne, A. E., and wife, Church of England Mission, Weihaiwei
Burnip, E., London Missionary Society, Siangtan, Hunan
Burns, W., Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfn, Chi.
Burnside, Miss C. L., C. M. S., Fukuoka, Japan (absent)
Burroughs, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Sangiong via Foochow
Burt, E. W., B.A., English Baptist Mission, Weihsien via Chefoo
Burton, Miss, Church Missionary Society, To-sung via Foochow
Burton, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Anjen via Kiukiang
Bushell, Miss J., Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Butchart, J., M.D., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Luchowfu via Wuhu Butcher, Miss, Unconnected, Tuchiawop'u via Tongshan
Butler, Miss A. E., English Presbyterian Mission, Chianghoa, Formosa Butler, Miss E. H., American Friends Mission, Nanking
Butler, Miss E. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Button, Miss L. C., B.A., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Butzbach, A. H., and wife, Evangelical Association of North America, Shenchowfu, Hunan Buxbaum, C.H., and wife, Independent, 4.Kobinatadai Machi Itchome, Koishikowa, Tokyo Buys, Miss Jennie, American Dutch Reformed Mission, Kagoshima, Japan
Buzzell, Miss A. S., American Baptist Missionary Union, Sendai
Byerly, Miss A. E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang via Hankow Byers, G. D., American Presbyterian Mission, Hoihow, Hainan
Byles, Miss, M.B., CH.B., London Missionary Society, Hankow
Bynon, Miss M. H., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau
Cable, E. M., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Kongju, Corea
Cable, Miss A. M., China Inland Mission, Huochow via Peking
Cahusac, Miss B., American Episcopal Mission, Kyoto, Japan
Caine, F. A., Mormon Mission, 81, Yakuojimae Machi, Ushigome, Tokyo
Cajander, Miss E., Finnish Free Church Mission, Yungfenghsien via Kiukiang
Caldwell, A. Oscar, Y. M. C. A., teacher, Miyazu, Japan
Caldwell, C. N., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Taichow, Ku., via Chinkiang Caldwell, E. B., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Caldwell, H. R., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hokchiang, via Foochow Caldwell, T., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shihchian, Sze.
Callahan, W. J., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Hiroshima, Japan (abt.) Callum, D. A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Chungpa, Sze.
Calvert, Miss E. E., London Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow Cambridge, C. O. Pickard, S. P. G., Hamamatsu, Japan
Cameron, A. N., and wife, "Broadcast Tract" Press, Changsha, Hunan Cameron, Mrs., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
1781
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Cameron, Miss C., American Presbyterian Church Mission, Taiku, Corea Campbell, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Panghai, (Chenyuen) via Yochow Campbell, Miss Edith, Canadian Methodist Mission, and Toriizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Campbell, Miss E. P., Amer. Pres. Miss., 33, Krami Niban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Campbell, C. K., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Soochow
Campbell, Geo., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kaying via Swatow Campbell, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow
Campbell, W., F.R.G.S., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa Campbell, W. M., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Kiungchow via Hoihow, Hainan Campbell, Mrs. J. P., American Methodist Episcopal Church (South), Seoul, Corea Candlin, G. T., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Tangshan
Cane, Miss L. M., China Inland Mission, Yushan via Ningpo Cannell, W. R., Church Missionary Society, Shihchuan, Sze. Canner, W., Church of England Mission, Yungching Hsien Cannon, A. L., China Inland Mission, Jaochow via Kiukiang Canright, H. L., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu Capen, R. T., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow Carden, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Cardwell, J. E., Chinese Tract Society, Shanghai
Caren, T. H., London Missionary Society, Canton
Carlén, O., Swedish Holiness Union, Hunyuan via Peking
Carleson, Mrs N., Swedish Holiness Union, Tatungfu via Taiyuanfu
Carleton, Miss M, E., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Lekdu, via Foochow Carlson, Miss D., American Episcopal Mission, Akita, Japan.
Carlton, Miss C., Church Missionary Society, Chungkianglisien, Sze. Carlyle, Miss L., China. Inland Mission, Tungsiang, Ki., via Kinkiang Carothers, Miss A. M., M.D. American Presbyterian Mission, Soochow Carpenter, G. B., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow Carpenter, J. B., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Carpenter, Miss M. M., Amer. Bap. Miss. Union, 10,Fukuro Machi, Surugadai, Tokyo Japan Carper, Miss Elizabeth R., M.D. American Presbyterian Mission, Limehowfu Carr, J. C., M.D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyangfu via Peking Carr, S. H., M.D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kaifeng via Hankow Carr, Miss H. E., China Inland Mission, Taning, Sha via Peking Carroll, Miss A., American Methodist Church (South), Song-do, Corea Carscallen, C. R., B.A., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu Carson, E. J., B.A., B.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu Carson, F. S., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow
Carson, J., B.A., and wife, Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Newchwang
Carter, Adjutant, H. and wife, Salvation Army, Kobe, 88, Yamashita Cho, Yokohama Carter, Miss A. E., Mission to Chinese Deaf, Chefoo
Carwardine, C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chengku via Hankow
Cary, Otis, D.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Karasumaru-dori, Kyoto
Case, Dr. J. N., and wife, Unconnected, Weihaiwei
Caspersen, Miss E., Norwegian Missionary Society, Changsha
Casselman, H. H., and wife, Reformed Church Mission, Kita Yohan Cho, Sendai, Japan Cassels, Bishop, W. W., B.A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Cassidy, Miss B., American Advent Christian Mission, Wuhú
Cassidy, F. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hirosaki, Japan (absent) Casswell, Miss E., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze
Castle, H., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Castleton, A.G., English Baptist Mission, Peicheng. Putai City via Kinochow Cecil-Smith, G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kweiyang via Chungking Chalfant, F. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtan Chalfant, W. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Ichowfu via Chinkiang Chambers R. E. and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton Champness, C. S., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yiyang, Hunan Chandler, H. E., American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Chandler, Miss Ada B., American Board Mission, Asahigawa, Hokkaido, Japan Chapin, M. E., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Tokuyama, Yamaguchi Ken, Japan Chapin, D. C., American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfu
Chapin, Miss A. G., Am. Board of Commissioners for Fgn. Msns., Tungchow, Chi. Chapman, G., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, 23, Kawaguchicho, Osaka Chapman, J. J., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Nara, Japan
1782 PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Chapman, T. W., M.Sc., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Wenchow Chapman, W. C., Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Chapman, Miss Mary A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Toriizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Chappell, B., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyoma, Tokyo Chappell, J., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Mito, Japan (absent) Charles, M. R., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang Charles, Miss A., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Charter, G. A., L.R.C.P. & S., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi Chase, Miss M. L., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Sunchun, Corea Chen, H. Y., Book Room and Educational Depository, Shanghai
Cheshire, Miss A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Cheshire, Miss E. T., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Child, F., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kweilinfu
Chittenden, Miss C. E., Am. Board of Comsrs. for Foreign Missions, Inghok via Foochow Cholmondeley, L. B., M.A., St. Andrew's Mission, 25, Iwato Cho, Ushigome, Tokyo Christensen, C., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Port Arthur Christensen, C. A. L. B., Unconnected, Tuchiawop'u via Tongshan Christensen, L., American Lutheran Mission, Loshan, Honan
Christie, D., F.R.C.P., L.R.C.S., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden Christie, W., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Choni (Thibetan) Church, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kutien via Foochow Churcher, Miss E. J., China Inland Mission, Kwangyuan, via Ichang
Churchill, A. W., M.B., Church Missionary Society, Kienningfu via Foochow Churchill, Miss É. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Clagett, Miss M. A., Amer. Bapt. Miss. Union, 101, Hara Machi. Koishikawa, Tokyo Claiborne, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Shanghai Clark, C. A. and wife American Board Mission, Miyazaki, Japan
Clark, C. A. and wife, American Presbyterian Church Mission, Seoul
Clark, H. M., B.A., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Weilwei Ho
Clark, I. B., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Suifu via Chungking Clark, W. T., M.D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Talifu via Mengtze
Clark, Miss A. M., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow
Clark, Miss E. J., Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Clark, Miss, London Missionary Society, Hengchowfu Hunan
Clark, Miss N. J., Foreign Christian Missionary Society Chuchow, An., via Nanking Clarke, G. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Tientsin
Clarke, W.H., and wife, South. Baptist Convention,U.S.A., Kyo Machi, Kumamoto, Japan Clarke, S. R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kweiyung via Chungking
Clarke, Miss I., Church Missionary Society, Shachingfu
Clarke, Miss J. C., Church Missionary Society, Ningteh via Foochow Clarke, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Kweichowfu via Ichang
Clarke, Miss M. E., Church Missionary Society, Funingfu, Foochow Clark, Miss M. M., Church Missionary Society, Ningpo Classon, J. L., Swedish Holiness Union, Hunyuan via Peking Clausen, H., Kieler China Mission, Pakhoi
Clawson, Miss Bertha F., Church of Christ Mission, Tokyo (absent) Claxton, A. E., and wife, London Missionary Society, Chungking Clayson, W. W., B.A., and wife, London Missionary Society, Canton Clayton, G. A., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow
Clement, Prof. E. W., and wife, Amer. Bapt. Miss. Union, Ichigaya, Tokyo Clements, A. J., China Inland Mission, Fushun, Sze., via Chungking
Clements, H., Church Missionary Society, Shaohingfu
Cline, J. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Shanghai
Clinton, J. M., M.A., LL.B., and wife, Y.M.C.A., Kogimaclii, Tokyo
Clinton, J., and wife, Chinese Student Misn, 21, Iida Machi Rokuchome, Kojimachi, Tokyo Clinton, Mrs. T. A. P., China Inland Mission, Changteh via Yochow
Clough, Miss E. S., China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang
Coates, H.H., D.D., and wife, Misn.,Cana. Met., 23, Kami Tomizaka Cho, Koishikawa, Tokyo Contes, Miss Alice L., Methodist Protestant Mission, Hamamatsu, Japan,
Cobb, E. S., and wife, American Board Mission, Karasumaru Dori, Kyoto Japan Cochran, J. B., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hawaiyitan, An., vin Nanking Cochran, S., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hwaiyuan, An., via Nanking Cochrane, T., M.B., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Peking Cockram, Miss II. S., Church Missionary Society, 41, Kajiya Cho, Kagoshima
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1783
Cockroft, Miss Ada W., American Board Mission, 60, Yamamoto Dori Shichome, Kobe Codrington, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kutien via Foochow Cody, Miss, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang
Cody, Miss M. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagasaki
Cogdal, Miss M. E., American Presbyterian Mission, South Gate, Shanghai
Coit, R. J., American Presbyterian Mission, South, Kwangju
Cole, A. F., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Cole, G. H., M.E., and wife, International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Tientsin Cole, J. G., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu via Tientsin
Cole, W. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yungchun via Foochow
Cole, Miss F., China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang
Coleman, H. E., and wife, Society of Friends, 144, Honmura Cho, Azabu, Tokyo Coleman, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Kieniang via Foochow Coleman, Miss I. M., China Inland Mission, Yanghsien via Hankow Coles, Miss, Japan Evangelistic Band, 120 of 2 Okuhirano Mura, Kobe Coleston, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Nangwa via Foochow Collan, S., and wife, Finnish Missionary Society, Yuingting via Shashi Collier, Miss C., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Collier, Miss L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Collier, Rev. C. T., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Seoul, Corea Collins, Miss F. L., China Inland Mission, Kinki via Kiukiang
Collyer, C. T., and wife Am. Methodist Episcopal Mission South, Seoul
Connaughty, Miss L., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Connell, Miss H., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Tamsui, Formosa
Connolly, G. P., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, 16, Tatsuoka Cho, Hongo, Tokyo
Converse, Miss C. A., American Baptist Missionary Union, 34, Bluff, Yokohama
Conway, H. S., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shekichen via Hankow
Cook, H. H., and wife, Reformed German Church in America, Yamagata, Japan
Cook, Miss C. D., China Inland Mission, Chenchowfu, via Hankow
Cook, Miss E. K., United Methodist Church Mission, Chuchai
Cook, Miss M. M., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Hiroshima, Japan
Cooke, A. W., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Sendai, Japan
Cooke, Miss K. E., China Inland Mission, Tyang, Ki., via Kiukiang
Coole, T. H., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kucheng via Foochow Cooper, A. S., B.A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Cooper, E. C., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yungchowfu Hunan Cooper, E. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hungtung via Peking
Cooper, F C., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Cooper, S. E., and wife, Free Methodist Mission, Akashi, Japan
Cooper, Mrs. W., China Inland Mission (in England)
Cooper, Miss A. B., Church of England Zenana Mission, Lo-nguong via Foochow Cooper, Miss E. B., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Tengchowfu, via Chefoo Cooper, Miss F., L.S..A.. Church of England Zenana Mission, Lo-nguong via Foochow Cooper, Miss, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Wonsan, Corea
Copp, A., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Chefoo
Coppock, Miss G., Young Women's Christian Association, Shanghai
Corbett, C., H. and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tungchow, Chi
Corbett, Dr. Hunter, New Missionary Home, East Beach, Chefoo
Corbett, H., D D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chefoo
Corbett, Miss M. N., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking
Corbin, Paul H., and wife, American Board of Comsnrs. for Fng. Msns., Fenchow, Shansi Cordell, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission, South, Chunju
Cormack, J. G., L.R.C.S. & P., ED., London Missionary Society, Hwangpi via Hankow Cormack, Miss I., China Inland Mission, Anjen via Kiukiang
Cornaby, W. A., and wife, Christian Literature Society, Shanghai Corneross, Miss F., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chinkiang
Cornford, C. E., Independent, Hangchow
Cornish, Miss Etta, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Wakamatsu, Aizu, Japan
Cornwall-Legh, Miss M. H., English Church Mission, 3, Yarai Machi, Ushigome, Tokyo Correll, Irvin H., D.D., and wife, Am. Epis. Miss., 27, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan Correll, Miss Ethel, American Episcopal Mission Akita, Japan
Corriher, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission (South) Kashing.
Cory, A. E., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking
Cosand, J., and wife, United Brethren in Christ, 1,929, Shimo Shibuya, Tokyo
1784
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Cottrell, R. F., and wife Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Chowkiakow, Honan Couch, Miss S. M., Misu. of the Ref. Dutch Ch. in Am., 14-A, Higashi Yamate, Nagasaki Coultas, G. W, and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Coulthard, J. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Cousins, C. D., and wife, London Missionary Society, Poklo, via Canton
Cousins, H. S., B.A., Church of England Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau
Cousland, Dr. P. B., M.B., C.M., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
Covert, Miss M. C., American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningpo
Cowan, Miss A. M., M.B., C.II.B., United Free Church of Scotland, Ashio via Newchwang Cowen, J. L., and wife, Methodist Publishing House in China, Shanghai
Cowles, R. T., China Baptist Publication Society, Canton
Cowman, C. É., and wife, Oriental Missionary Society, Kashiwagi, Tokyo
Cox, G. A., L.R.C.P. & S., ED., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chinkiang
Cox, J. R., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Jenshow via Chung-king
Cox, Miss A. M., Church Missionary Society, 7, Shindaiku Machi, Nagasaki
Cox, Miss M. E., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Coxon, Miss, London Missionary Society, Hengchowfu, Hunan
Cozad, Miss E. G., American Board Mission, 59, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe Crabb, E., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hengehow, Hunan
Craig, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow
Craig, Miss T. A.. China Inland Mission, Chiefoo
Craig, Miss M., Canadian Methodist Church Azabu, Tokyo (absent)
Cram, W. G., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Songdo, Corea Crane, Miss E. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Wuhu
Crawford, A. R., M.A., and wife, Irish Presbyterian Mission, Chinchow via Newchwang Crawford, O. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Soochow Crawford, W., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu Crawford, W. M., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Crawford, Miss, L., Unconnected, Tehnganhsien viu Kiukiang
Crawford, Miss, L. J., American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang
Crawford, Miss O. M., Church Missionary Society, Fukuoka, Japan (absent) Crawford, Miss, M. B., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wuchang
Cream, Miss S. A., China Inland Mission, Yencheng, Ho.
Cree, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Creighton, J. W., American Presbyterian Mission, Yuengkong,
Cribb, Miss R., Japan Evangelistic Band, 120 of 2, Okuhirano Mura, Kobe, Japan
Critcliett, Carl, and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Pyengyang Crocker, W. E., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Chinking Crofoot, J. W., M.A., and wife, Seventh Day Baptist Mission, Shanghai
Crofts, D. W.,B.A., B.D., B.SC., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chenyuan via Yochow Crombie, Miss E., Canadian Methodist Church, Shizuoka, Japan
Crooks, Miss E., M.B., C.M. Irish Presbyterian Church Msú., Kirin via Newchwang Crooks, Miss G., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chinkiang
Crosby, Miss J. N., Women's Union Missionary Society of America, 212, Bluff, Yokohama. Cross, Miss C., S.P.G., 16, Hirakawa Cho Rokuchome, Kojimachi, Tokyo
Crossette, Mrs. M. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau
Crouse, F. C, and wife, American Bible Society, Kiukiang
Crowl, Miss Á. L., American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang
Crummer, Miss L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Crampe, Miss, Independent, Foochow
Crutcher, A. T., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Crystall, Miss E. J., China Inland Mission, Sisiang, via Hankow
Cu, Miss L. B., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hokchiang via Foochow Cuff, A., and wife, Unconnected, Juichowfu via Kiukiang
Culverwell, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Yingshan, Sze., via Ichang Culverwell, Miss F. II., China Inland Mission, Nanpu via Ichang Cumber, Miss Mira L., Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Cundall, E., L.R.O.S. & P., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Anlu via Hankow Cunningham, A. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Peking Cunningham, J. R., and wife, Christian & Msnry. Alliance, Wuchow Cunningham, R., China Inland Mission, Luchow via Chungking
Cunningham, W. D., and wife, Independent, 6, Naka Cho Nichome, Yotsuya, Tokyo Cunningham, W. R., M.D., Américan Presbyterian Mission, Yibsien via Chinkiang Curd, Miss Lilian, Am. Southern Presbyterian Mission, Shiraka Cho, Nagoya, Japan
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Curnow, J. O, and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Suining, Sze Currell, Dr. H., and wife, Australian Presbyterian Mission, Fusan, Corea Currie, Miss M. S., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Curphey, A. G., M.B., L.B.C.P. & S., Edin, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking Curtis, F. S., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Seoul, Corea
Curtis, H. H., China Inland Mission, Kiangtsin via Chungking Curtis, J., Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow
Curtis, W. L., and wife, American Board Mission, Niigata, Japan (absent) Cushman, Miss C.E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Cuthbert, W. J., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Kyoto (absent) Cuthbertson, Jas., and wife, Japan Evangelistic Band, Kobe (absent)
Cutler, J. P., Latter Day Saints (Mormon), Asahigawa, Hokkaido, Japan
1785
Cutler, Miss M. M., M.D., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea Czach, Miss T., Liebenzell Mission, Ukang via Yochow
Czerwinski, C., and wife Liebenzell Mission, Siangtan, via Yochow
Daehlen, I., and wife American Lutheran Mission, Sinyangchow, Honan
Dahl, Miss B. H., Apostolic Faith Mission, Shanghai
Dahlberg, Miss H. A., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Saratsi via Peking
Dale, Miss E. P., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Wuhu
Dalland, O., Norwegian Missionary Society, Iyang, via Changsha
Daniel, T. H., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kunsan, Corea
Daniel, Miss N. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo
Daniels, Miss M. B., American Board Mission, Osaka
Danielson, Miss M., Am. Bap. Miss. Union, 119, Tanimachi Kuchome, Higashiku, Osaka Dannenberg, W. E., and wife, Fgn. Christian Missionary Soc. Chuchow, An., via Nanking Darling, Miss A. R., China Tuland Mission, Shanghai
Darlington, T., and wife China Inland Mission, Wanhsien via Ichang
Darly, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kienning via Foochow
Darroch, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Daughaday, Miss A. M., American Board Mission, Sapporo, Japan
Davenport, C. J., F.R.C.S., and wife, London Missionary Society, Shanghai Davenport, E. C., M.D., South China Medical College, Canton
Davey, Miss G. C., China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Davey, P.A., and wife, Church of Christ Mission,72, Myogadani Machi Koishikawa,Tokyo Davidson, A., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Davidson, A. W., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Davidson, D. C., M.A., United Free Church of Scotland, Hulan via Newchwang
Davidson, R. J., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Chentu
Davidson, W. H., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. (LOND.), & wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking Davidson, Miss M. S., United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Davies, A. E., B.A., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa
Davies, C. F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kweiyang via Chungking
Davies, H., M.A., Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Canton
Davies, J. P., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kiating via Chungking Davies, Miss H., China Inland Mission, Sintientsi (Paoning) via Ichang
Davies, Miss H., London Missionary Society, Hongkong
Davis, C. F. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chuhsien Sze., via Ichang
Davis, D. H., D.D., and wife, Seventh Day Baptist Mission, Shanghai
Davis, F. W., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Davis, G. L., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Changli via Tientsin Davis, Geo. L., Y. M. C. A. (absent)
Davis, G. R., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Davis, H. E., and wife, Seventh Day Baptist Mission, Shanghai
Davis, J. D., D.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Karasumatu Dori Kyoto Davis, J. Merle, and wife, Y.M.C.A., Nagasaki
Davis, J. W., D.D., LL.D., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Nanking
Davis, W. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Sosui Hama, Kyoto Davis, W. W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Davis, W. G., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchang
Davis, Miss A. A., China Inland Mission, Iang-keo via Ningpo
Davis, Miss Ruth F., W.C.T.U., 118, Honmura Cho, Azabu, Tokyo
Davison, C. S., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission Ayama, Tokyo
Davison, J. C., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kumamoto Dawes J. V. and wife, Gospel Mission, Taian, Shantung
1786
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Dawson, W. F., and wife, London Missionary Society, Peking Dawson, Miss A., Unconnected, Nanchang via Kinkiang Day, D. J. S., and wife Reformed Church in America, Amoy Day, F. Church of England Mission, Yungchung, Hsien
Day, L. J., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Shanghai
Day, Miss Ida B., Canadian Methodist Mission 8, Toriizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo
De Forest, J. H., D.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Sendai, Japan
De Forest, Miss C. B., American Board Mission, Kobe, Japan
De Greeuw, Miss H. J. A., China Inland Mission, Anjon via Kiukiang
De Haan, A. B., and wife, Am. Board of Commers. for For. Mission, Pangchun via Tientsin
De Pree, H P., B.D., and wife, Reformed Church in America, Chiangchiu via Amoy
De Wolfe, Miss H. E., Canadian Methodist Mission, Uyeda, Japan (absent)
Dean, J. C., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wahu Dean, Miss J., American Reformed Presbyterian Mission, Takhing via Canton Deane, Mrs., A. M., Friends' Foreign Mission, Tung-chwan, Szo
Deans, F. S., British and Foreign Bible Society, Chengtu
Deans, W., and wife, Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Demaree, T. W. B., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Matsuyama, Japan Deming, J. H., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang
Deming, Rev. C. S. American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Chemulpo, Corea Dempsey, P. T., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Tayeli via Hankow Denham, J. E., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow Denham, Miss, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yungchowfu, Human
Denning, C. S., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Chemulpo
Denton, Miss M. F., American Board Mission, Doshisha Girl's School, Kyoto, Japan. Derr, C. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chenchow, Hunan Deutsch, I., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Devol, G. F., M.D., and wife, American Friends' Mission, Luho, via Nanking Dewstoe, E., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Canton Dickerson, Miss A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hakodate Dickey, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission, Ningpo Dickie, F., China Inland Mission, Kinhwafu via Ningpo
Dickinson, Miss E. E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, 37, Bluff, Yokohama
Dickson, Miss A. I., B.A., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Kongmoon via Hongkong Diehl, F., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Fukwing via Hongkong
Dietrich, G., Basel Missionary Society, Nyenlangli, via Swatow
Dietz, Miss M. K., Akasaka Hospital, 17, Hikawa Cho, Akasaka, Tokyo
Dildine, H. G., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yungchun via Foochow Dilley, F. E., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Peking Dinneen, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow Dixon, Miss E. M., S. P. G., 29, Shimbori Cho, Shiba, Tokyo
Dobson, G. F. C., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shanghai
Dobson, W. H., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Yeungkong Dodd, A. B., and wife American Presbyterian Mission, Tsinan via Tsingtau Dodge, Miss, K. A., American Baptist Missionary Union, limeji, Japan (absent) Dodson, Miss S. L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Doherty, W. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Sinchanghsien, via Ningpo Domay, G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Linkiang via Kiukiang
Dooley, Miss L., Am. Presbyterian Mission, Hokuriku Girls' School, Kanazawa, Japan Dooman, I., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Wakayama, Japan (absent) Doring, H., British and Foreign Bible Society, Canton
Douglas, G., M.A., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Liaoyang via Newchwang Douglass, C. W., and wife, Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Dow, Miss J., M.B., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho.
Dow, Miss Nellie E., American Advent Christian Mission, Nanking
Dowd, Miss A., Presbyterian Church U.S.A. South, Kochi, Japan (absent)
Dowling, Philip H., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Taihoku, Formosa
Dowling, Miss M. A., American Baptist Missionary Union, Shaohingfu
Downing, Miss, C. B., Chefoo Missionary Home, Chefoo
Dozier, C. K., and wife, Southern Baptist Convention, Fukuoka, Japan
Draffin, G. F., China Inland Mission, Nanchowting via Yochow
Drake, J. H., Church of England, Chemulpo, Corca
Drake, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Yingshan, Sze, via Jehang and Wanhsien Drake, Miss K. I. D., Canadian Methodist Mission, Ueda., Shinshiu, Japan
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Drake, Miss N., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Soochow Drane, Miss L. A., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Naulinghsien via Wuhu Draper, G. F. and wife Methodist Episcopal Mission, 222, Bluff, Yokohama Draper, Miss F. L., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sienyu via Foochow Dresser, Miss E. E., American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking"
Drew, Dr. A. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Kunsan, Corea Dreyer, F. C. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chaocheng, Sha., via Péking Dring, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Iyang, Ki., via Kiukiang Drummond, W. J., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking Drysdale, I. F., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Tientsin
Du Bose, H. C., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Soochow
Du Bose, P. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Soochow
Dubs, C. N., and wife, United Evangelical Church Mission, Changsha via Hankow Duffy, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Wuhu
Duffus, Miss M., English Presbyterian Mission, Wukingfu via Swatow
Duncan, Miss A. N., English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu, via Amoy
Duncan, Miss H. M., China Inland Mission, Yungfenghsien via Kiukiang
Duncan, Miss M. B., American Presbyterian Mission, Ningpo
1787
Duncanson, R., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Kongmoon, via Hongkong Dunk, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Shiuhing via Canton
Dunlap, I, and wife, United Evangelical Church Mission, Liling via Yochow Dunlap, R. W., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Tengchowfu, via Chefoo Dunlop, J. G., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Fukui, Japan
Dunne, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Dunning, M.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Mutomachi Dori, Kyoto Dunphy, Miss H., Unconnected, Nanchang via Kiukiang
Dunscombe, Dr. W.C., M.C., and wife, Seventh Day Adven., 30, Oiwake Cho, Hongo, Tokyo Durham, Miss L., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Duryee, Miss A., Reformed Church in America, Tongan via Amoy
Duryee, Miss L. N., Reformed Church in America, Tong-an via Amoy
Duthie, J., Unconnected, Pakou via Tangshan
Dyck, Miss M., Independent, Shanhsien
Dye, D., American Baptiot Missionary Union, Suifu via Chungking
Dye, Miss E., American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Seoul
Dyer, A. L., and wife, Japan Evangelistic Band, 120 of 2, Okuhirano Mura, Kobe
Dyer, Miss C. P., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Changli via Tientsin
Dyer, Mrs. L., Independent, Shanghai
Dyer, Miss E., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Dymond, F. J., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Tungchwan, Yun. Dysard, Miss Julia, American Presbyterian Mission South, Kunsan
Dzau, S. K., College Y.M.C.A. of China, Shanghai
Eadie, G., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho.
Eagger, E., and wife, Unconnected, Pakow via Tongshan
Eames, C. M, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsiningchow via Chinkiang
Earle, A. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kunsan, Corea
Earle, J. R., B.A., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Jenshow
Eastman, V. P., and wife, Am. Bd. of Conners. for Fgn. Mission, Linching via Tsingtau Easton, G. F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hanchungfu via Hankow and Sianfu Ebeling, W. H. C., and wife, Am. Bd. of Commers. for Fgn. Mission, Tungchow, Chi. Eberlein, O., Basel Missionary Society, Hoyün, via Canton and Weichow
Eckart, K., Berlin Missionary Society, Shiuchowfu via Canton
Eckerson, F., M.A., Reformed Church in America, Tong-an via Amoy Edgar, J. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Batang, Sze.
Eddon, W., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Wuting, Shantung Edinonds, Miss A. M., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking Edmunds, C. K., PH.D., and wife, Canton Christian College, Canton Edward, D. W., International Committee of Y.M.CA., Peking Edwards, D. W., B.A., Young Men's Christian Association, Peking Edwards, R. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Limehowfu
Edwards, W., and wife, Augustana Synod Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Edwards, Dr. E. H., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu, Shansi Edwards, Miss A. S., Church Missionary Society, Chungpa, Sze.
Edwards, Miss M. A., China Inland Mission, Sisiang via Hankow
Ehn, P. E., and wife, Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Kweihwating via Taiyuanfu
1788
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Ehrstrom, Miss A. E., Finnish Free Church Mission, Yungsin, Ki., via Kiukiang Eich, G., M.D., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Tungkun via Canton Ekeland, Rev. T. L., and wife, American Lutheran Mission, Juning, Honan Ekvall, D. P., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Titaochow Kansul Ekvall, M. E., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Minchow, Kansul Eldridge, Miss A. E., China luland Mission, Chefoo
Elgie, Miss H., American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningpo
Ellerbek, A., M.D., Danish Lutheran Mission, Antung via Newchwang
Elliott, C. C., M.D., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Elliott, T. M., B.Sc., and wife, Young Men's Christian Association, Hongkong Elliott, W. S., and wife, American Bible Society, Tungchow Chi.
Elliot, Miss M., Independent, 40, Yo Cho Machi, Okubo, Ushigome, Tokyo
Ellis, Wm. S., Mormon Mission, Sapporo, Japan
Ellis, E.W., and wife, Am. Bd. of Commrs.for Fgn. Msns., Linching via Tsingtao and Techou
Ellis, Miss M.A., Amer. Board of Commrs. for Fgn Mans., Linching, via Tsingtao and Techou Ellis, Miss S., Society of Friends, 30, Koun-machi, Mita, Tokyo
Ellison, E. J., B.Sc., English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Ellison, R., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Shiuchow via Canton
Ellmers, Miss I. M. A., China Inland Mission, Antung, Ku., via Chinkiang
Elsenhans, Miss A., Basel Missionary Society, Hongkong
Elterich, W. O., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chefoo
Eltham, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Liangchowfu, via Hankow and Sianfu
Elwin, W. H., and wife, Chinese Student Mission, 7, Sasugaya Cho, Koishikawa, Tokyo Elwin, Miss R., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Emberson R., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Shizuoka, Japan
Embery, W. J., China Inland Mission, Tengyueh via Mengtze
Emslie, W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chuchowfu, via Ningpo
Endemann, G., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Fayen, Shak Kok via Canton Endicott, J., B.A., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Encisson, Anna W., Scandinavian American Christian Free Mission, Canton Eng, Miss H. K., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Engdahl, K. W., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Ichang
Engel, G., and wife, Australian Presbyterian Mission Fusan, Corea
Engesland, Miss A., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Laohokow, Honan
Engle, I., and wife, Hephzibah Faith Mission. 2124, Minami Ota Machi, Yokohama Englund, W., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Lantien via Hankow Engstrom, Miss H. W. S., Swedish Mission in China, Mienchib
Ensign, C. F., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau Ensor, G., Independent, 3, Tosaki Muchi, Koishikawa, Tokyo
Ensor, Miss E. V., Independent, 3 Tosal í Machi, Koishikawa, Tokyo
Entwistle, W. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Liuanchow via Wuhu
Erdman, J. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Yamaguchi
Erffmeyer, Miss E. L., Evang. Assoc. of North Am., 84, Sasugaya Cho, Koishikawa, Tokyo
Erickson, S. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Takamatsu, Japan Ericsson, A. A., Swedish Mission in China, Ishih via Taiyuanfu
Ericsson, Miss M., Scandinavian American Christian Free Mission, Canton Eriksson, Miss A., Swedish Mission in China, Tungchowfu, She., via aiyuanfu
Ernsberger, Miss E., M.D., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea Erskine, W. H., and wife, Church of Christ Mission, Akita, Japan
Erwin, Miss Cordelia, American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Song-do, Coreu. Espeegren, O., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Nanyangfu, Honan
Espey, J. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
Estes, W. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Huchowfu
Estey, Miss E. M., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Yeng Byen, Corea Etchells, Miss E., Grace Mission, Tangsi via Shanghai
Eubank, M. D., M.D., and wife, Am. Baptist Missionary Union, Huchowfu
Evans, A., United Methodist Church Mission, Tungchwan Yun
Evans, A. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shunking via Ichang
Evans, C. H., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Maebashi, Japan
Evans, E., and wife, Independent, Shanghai
Evans, P. S., Jr., M.D., and wife, Amer. Southern Bapt. Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Evans, Miss A., Church Missionary Society, Asahigawa, Hokkaido, Japan
Evans, Miss Sala, Southern Presbyterian Mission, Shirakabe Cho, Nagoya, Japan Ewald, Miss K., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1789
Ewan, R. B., M.D,, and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Ewing, C. E., and wife, Am. Board of Commissioners for Fgn. Missions, Tientsin Ewing, Miss J., English Presbyterian Mission, Eng-chun via Amoy Ewing, Miss M., English Presbyterian Mission, Eng-chun via Amoy Eyestone, Rev. J. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Mintsinghsien, Foochow Eyre, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Faers, A. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Fagerholm, A. D., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow Fahmy, A., M.B., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Chiangchiu via Amoy Fairbourn, W. R., Latter Day Saints (Mormon), 19, Nishiki Machi, Kofu, Japan Fairclough. C., China Inland Mission, Yenchow via Hangchow
Faithfull-Davies, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow Falls, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyaohsien via Peking Faris, P. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Ichowfu via Chinking Faris, Miss M., American Presbyterian Mission, Yihsien via Chinkiang Farmer, W. A., B.PH., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow Farnham, J. M. W., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai Fauske, H., and wife, Lutheran Brethren Mission, Taaoyang via Hankow Faust, A. K., and wife, German Reformed Church in the United States, Sendai, Japan Favors, Miss A., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Luchowfu via Wuhu Featherstone, Miss C., Norther-West Kiangsi Mission, Wucheng Ki, via Kiukiang Fearn, J. B., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A. Shanghai Fearon, Miss M. E., China Inland Mission, Wanhsien, Sze., via Ichang
Fearon, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Fell, J. W., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Felt, C. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Fenn, C. H., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Peking Ferguson, D., M.A., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa
Ferguson, H. S., and wife, China Inland Mission, Vingchowfu via Wuhu
Ferguson, J. Y., B.A., M.D.C.M., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Tamsui, Formosa Ferguson, W. D., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Luchow, via Chungking Ferguson, W. N., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Chengtu via Chungking Ferguson, Miss M. R., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Fernance, Adjutant, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo
Fernstrom, K. A., and wife, Swedishi Missionary Society, Ichang
Fiddler, J. S., and wife, China Inland Mission, Ningsiafu via Hankow and Sianfu
Field, F. E., American Presbyterian Mission, Tsiningchow via Chinkiang
Field, F W. (and wife, absent), Seventh Day Adventist, 30, Oiwake Cho, Hongo, Tokyo
Field, W. P. G., incumbent of Christ Church, The Parsonage, Yokohama
Field, Miss E. H., M.D., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea
Fielden, Miss H., American Baptist Missionary Union, Yachowfu via Chungking Finch, Miss E., Independent, Yokosuka, Japan
Finlay, Miss L. Alice, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Fukuoka, Japan
Finn, Miss E. N., Independent, Shanghai
Fish, Miss M. L., Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Fishe, C. T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Wuhu
Fishe, Miss E. A., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Fishe, Miss M. H., China Inland Mission, Hokow, Ki., via Kiukiang
Fisher, A. J., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Fisher, C. H. D., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, 30-B. Tsukiji, Tokyo
Fisher, G. M., and wife, Y.M.C.A., 22, Fujimi Cho Gochome, Kojimachi, Tokyo Fisk, G., B.D., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Tsowping via Kiaochow
Fitch, G. F., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
Fitch, George, R.A., B.D., International Committee at the Y.M.C.A., Shanghai
Fitch, J. A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Fitch, R. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow Fitch, Miss A., Young Women's Christian Association, Shanghai
Fittemore, Miss L. H., American Free Methodist Mission in China, Kaifengfu, Honan Flagler, Miss C., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Fleischer, A., B.SC., M. A., B.D., and wife, Norwegian Missionary Society, Iyang, via Changsha Fleischmann, C. A., China Inland Mission, Yunnanfu via Hokow and Mengtze
Fleisje, L., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Chenping Ho
Fleming, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission South, Soochow
Fleming, Miss E. E., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Ichowfu via Chinkiang
1790
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Fleming, Miss H. B., China Inland Mission, Anjen via Kiukiang
Fleming, Miss K., China Inland Mission, An-ren via Kewkiang
Fleming, Miss Church of England Zenana Mission, Nangwa via Foochow
Fletcher, F.J., and wife, Am. Free Methodist Mission in China,Tsingkiangpu, via Chinkiang Fletcher, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Fletcher, Miss S., Church Missionary Society, Hongkong,
Foggitt, Miss E., B.A., London Missionary Society, Shanghai
Folke, E., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Yuncheng via Taiyuanfu
Follwell, Dr. E. D., and wife, American Methodist Epsel. Church Msn., Pyengyang, Corea Folmer, Miss K., Danish Lutheran Mission, Fenghwangcheng via Newchwang
Fonda, Miss E. L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa
Foote, W. R., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Wonsan, Corea
Ford, E. L., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Ford, H. T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Taikang via Hankow Ford, Miss A., London Missionary Society, Shanghai
Ford, Miss R. M., China Inland Mission, Lanchi via Ningpo
Forest, Miss A. L., Methodist Protestant Church, Nagoya, Japan (absent) Forge, Miss F. A., Church Missionary Society, Hinghwafu via Foochow Forge, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hinghwafa via Foochow Forrler, Miss E., German China Alliance Mission, Chuchow, via Wenchow Forssberg. Miss A. O., Swedish Mission in China, Ishih via Taiyuanfu Forsyth, R. C., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Chowtsun via Kiaochow Forsythe, W. H., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chun-ju, Corca Foss, Bishop, H. J., D.D., and wife, The Firs, Shinomiya, Kobe
Foster, A., B.A., and wife, London Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow Foster, J. M., D.D., American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Foster, W. L, and wife, Seventh Day Adventist, Wakamatsu, Aizu, Japan Foster, Miss T., Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Soochow Foucar, H. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Ningkwofu via Wuhu
Fouts, F., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Ichowfu via Chinkiang
Fowle, Miss F. J., China Inland Mission, Suitingfu, via Ichang and Wanhsien
Fowler, H., L.R.C.P. & S., and wife, London Missionary Society, Siaokan via Hankow Fowles, E. R., English Baptist Mission, Shou Yang, Shangi
Fox, Miss M., B.SC., Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Foxley, C., and wife, S.P.G., Yamamoto Dori, Shichome, Kobe
Fradd, Miss, K. Christian and Missionary Alliance, Tsingyang via Wuhu
Franck, G. M., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chengtu
Franke, A. H., and wife, Liebenzell Mission, Ukang via Yochow
Franklin, Miss, English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Franz, Miss A. K. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Franzen, Rev. E., Swedish Missionary Society, Kienli via Hankow
Fraser, A. L., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Shaohingfu
Fraser, J. O., B.SC., China Inland Mission, Tengyuch via Mengtze
Fraser, Miss C. G., Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Frazey, Miss L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kucheng via Foochow
Fredberg, G. S., Swedish Holiness Union, Hunyuan via Peking
Fredén, S. M., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Kingchow, Hupeh
Fredericks, Mrs. L. P., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Fredrickson, Miss M., American Lutheran Mission, Juning Honan
Freeman, C.W., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Freeth, Miss F. M., Church Missionary Society, 2, Choanji Cho, Kumamoto, Japan
Freidstrom, N. J., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Paoteo, Wangjefu, via Peking French, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Huochow via Peking
French, Miss E. B., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Hangchow
French, Miss F. L., China Inland Mission, Hwochow via Peking
Frewer, Miss B. L., Church Missionary Society, Chuki
Frey, Miss L. E., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea
Froelich, L. D., B.A., International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Peking
Froiland, T., M.D., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Tengchow, Honan
Fry, E. C., and wife, American Christian Convention, Utsunomiya, Japan
Fugill, Miss E. M., Church Missionary Society, Hamada, Japan
Fuller, A. R. (and wife, absent), Church Missionary Society, Nagasaki
Fullerton, Miss E. C., L.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Fulton, A. A., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Fulton, G. W., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kanazawa, Japan Fulton, S. P., D.D., and wife, Southern Presbyterian Mission, Kobe (absent) Fulton, T. C., M.A., and wife, Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Moukden Fulton, Miss M. H., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton Funk, C. A., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Hankow
1791
Funk, Miss G. A.. American Board of Comsurs, for Fgn. Msns., Shaowu via Foochow Funk, Miss M. A., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuhu
Furness, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Fuson, C. G., B.A., and wife, Canton Christian College, Canton
Fyock, Miss Alice, American Episcopal Mission, 11, Higashi Ichiban Cho, Sendai, Japan Gaff, C. A., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Fatshian via Canton Gage, B., B.A., and wife, Yale Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Gailey, R. R., M.A., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Peking Gaines, Miss N. B., Southern Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hiroshima, Japan Gaither, Mrs. J. A., Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Sungkiangfu Galbraith, Miss A. E., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Titaochow, Kansuh Gale, F. C., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang
Gale, J. S., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea Galgey, Miss L. A., Ch. Msny. Society, 105, Koyatake Cho, Choshi, Chiba Ken, Japan Gallop, Miss E. M., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze
Galloway, J. L., and wife, Bible Missionary Society, Macao
Galloway, Miss II. R., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Galt, H. S., and wife, American Board of Comsnrs. for Fgn. Mins., Tungchow, Chi. Gamble, Rev. F. K., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Songdo, Corea
Gamewell, F. D., PH.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Gammon, C. F., and wife, American Bible Society, Shanghai
Gardener, Miss, F., Church Missionary Society, Shimo Take Cho, Gifu, Japan
Gardiner, J, China Inland Mission, Nanchowting via Yochow
Gardiner, J. M., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, 15, Goban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo
Gardner, G. M., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Msns., Foochow
Gardner, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kienning via Foochow
Gardner, Miss Minnie, Meth. Episcopal Church, Aoyama, Tokyo
Garduer, Miss Sarah, American Presbyterian Mission, Tokyo (absent)
Garland, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Tsingehow, Kan
Garland, Miss S., China Inland Mission, Tsingchow, Kan
Garner, A. I., English Baptist Mission, Taiyuanfu, Shansi
Garner, Miss E., M.D., Women's Union Mission, Shanghai
Garner, Miss V., Southern Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kobe (absent)
Garnet, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Pingnan via Foochow
Garretson, Miss E. M., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow Garrett, F., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking Garriock, Miss R. T., United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Garritt, J. C., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking
Garvin, Miss A. E., American Presbyterian Msn., 189, Kokutaiji Mura, Hiroshima, Japan Gasser, F., German China Alliance Mission, Kienchang via Kinkiang
Gaston, J.M., M.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Laichow, via Chefoo Gates, W. D., M.A., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang
Gates, Miss, Unconnected, Tuchiawop'u via Tongshan
Gates, Miss A. F., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang
Gauld, W., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Tamsui, Formosa Gaunt, T., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Taichowfu
Gay, Miss F., Church of England Mission, Pingyin, via Chefoo Gaynor, Miss L. E., M.D., American Friends' Mission, Nanking
Geary, Miss E., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Gedye, E. F., M.A., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow Gee, N. G., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Soochow
Gehman, Miss D., American Board of Com. for Foreign Missions, Taikuhsien, Shansi Geller, W. H., and wife, London Missionary Society, Siaokan via Hankow Gelwicks, G. L., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hengchowfu, Hunan Gemmill, W. C., M.A., St. Andrew's Mission, 11, Sakae-cho, Shiba, Tokyo (absent) Genahr, I., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Hongkong
זי
Georg H. L., German China Alliance Mission, Sungyang, via Wenchow
George, Miss E. C., Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Geisler, A. B., Paul, Independent, Taian, Shantung Japan.
1792
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Gerline, J. L., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Seoul, Corea
Gerhard, Prof. P. L., and wife, German Reformed Church in U. S. A., Sendai Gerhard, Miss M. E., German Reformed Church in America, Sendai Gheer, Miss J. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kagoshima
Gibb, G. W., M.A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hweichow via Tatung Gibb, J. G., C.M., M.D., M.S., London Missionary Society, Peking Gibb, J. McG., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Gibbons, Mrs. F. E., Canadian Church Mission, Matsumoto, Shinshin, Japan Gibbons, Miss K. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Kanazawa, Japan Gibson, J. C., M.A., D.D., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow Gibson, O. J., Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Shanghai
Gibson, R. M., M.D., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hongkong Gibson, W. W., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Paoching via flankow Giesel, R., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Fuitschu via Canton Gicsewetter, W., Rhenish Missionary Society, Kangpui via Canton Giess, H., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow via Swatow
Giffin, J. H., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kaying via Swatow Giles, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Sa-iong via Foochow Giles, Miss E. L, China Inland Mission, Tsinchow, Kan
Gill, J. M. B., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Gillard, Miss M. E., Church Missionary Society, Shachingfu
Gillespie, W. H., M.A., Irish Pres. Church Mission, Kwangchengtze via Newchwang Gillespy, Miss J. C., Church Missionary Society, Yonago, Hoki, Japan (absent) Gillett, P. L., M.A., and wife, International Committee of Y. 3. C. A., Seoul, Corea Gillett, Miss E. R., Railway Mission, Akasaka, 123, Kashiwagi, Yodobashi Machi, Tokyo Gillespy, Miss, English Presbyterian Mission, Chaochowfoo via Swatow
Gillies, R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hotsin, via Peking
Gillison, T., M.B., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hankow
Gilman, A. A., B.A., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Changsha Gilman, F. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kacheck via Hoihow, Hainan Gilmer, W. T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yoyang via Peking
Gilman, Miss G., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Gjelseth, A. B., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Piuchow, Sze., via Hankow Glauville, S., China Inland Mission, Fushun, Sze, via Chungking
Glass, W. B., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Glassburner, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hokchiang via Foochow Gleason, G., and wife, Y. M. C. A., 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka
Gleditsch, Miss B., Norwegian Missionary Society, Taohualuen, Lyang via Changsha Glenn, Miss A., Hephzibah Faith Mission, Choshi, Japan
Glenn, Miss L., Hephzibah Faith Mission, Choshi, Japan
Glenton, Miss M. V., M.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Gleysteen, W. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Peking
Gloss, Miss A. D., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Glover, R. H., M.D., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchang Glover, Miss E. E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Changli via Tientsin Goddard, A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shasi Goddard, F. W., M.D., American Baptist Missionary Union, Shaohingfu Goddard, J. R., D.D., American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningpo Goforth, J., and wife, Canarlian Presbyterian Mission, Changte llo Gohl. E., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Chonglok via Swatow Goldie, Miss E. S., Church Missionary Society, Foochow Golisch, Miss A. L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking Gonder, R. K., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yoyang via Peking Gooch, Miss, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow
Goodall, T. W., and wife, China Inland Mission (in Europe).
Goodchild, T., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Goodchild, Miss E. L., English Baptist Mission, Tsingchowfu, via Kiaochow
Goodrich, C., D.D., and wife, Ain. Board of Coinsrs, for Fgn. Msns., Peking Goold, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Mienhsien via Hankow
Corbold, R. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kyoto
Gardner, Mrs. A. D., Amer, Board Mission (absent)
Gordon, J. A., and wife, Unconnected, Tukiapu via Kiukiang
Gordon, K. M., American Board of Commissioners for Foregn Missions, Tientsin
Gordon, R. J., M.A., M.B., C.M., and wife, Irish Pres. Ch. Msn., Kwangchengtze via Newchwang
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Gordon, Miss F. M., American Board Mission, 60, Yamamoto Dori Shichome, Kobe Gordon, Mrs. A. D., American Board Mission, Kyoto (absent)
1793
Gorman C., and wife, American Christian Convention, 41, Kawahori Cho, Sendai, Japan Gorman, C. P., American Board Mission, Sendai, Japan
Gornitzka, K. T. W., Norwegian Mission in China, Sincheo (Taning), Sha., via., Peking Gorsmen, Miss K., Danish Lutheran Mission, Antung via Newchwang
Gossard, J. E., M. D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yenpingfti, via Foochow
Gothberg, N., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Paot'eo Kweihwacheng via Peking Gothberg, Miss I. A., Scandinavian China Alliance, Saratsi, via Peking
Gotteberg, J. A. O., and wife, Norwegian Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Gourige, Miss E., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Gough, Miss H. A., China Inland Mission, Pachow, Sze., via Ichang
Gould, R. J., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Hankow
Gowans, Miss A. H., American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfu via Tientsin
Gowdy, J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Gracie, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yungkang via Ningpo
Grafton, T. B., and wife, Am. Presbyterian Mission (South), Süchowfu via Chinkiang
Graham, A., L.R.C.P., and wife, Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Graham, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yunnan-fu via Hokow and Mengtze
Graham, J. R., and wife, American Pres. Msn. (South), Tsingkiangpu via Chinkiang Graham, Miss A., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Graham, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Pingnan via Foochow
Graham, Miss Ella, Presbyterian Mission South, Kwanju
Graham, Miss, M. F., United Free Church of Scotland, Liaoyang via Newchwang Grainger, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chengtu
Gramatte, E., Berlin Missionary Society, Hongkong
Grandin, Miss L., L.R.C.P. & S., United Mothodist Church Mission, Chaotungyun Grant, J. B., and wife, London Missionary Society, Chichow via Peking
Grant, J. S., M.D., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningpo Grant, W. II., B. A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Weihwei, Ho
Graves, F. R., D.D., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Graves, R. H., D.P., M.D., American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton
Graves, Miss L. J., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Graves, Miss E. W., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Gray, A. V., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking
Gray, H., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Gray, W. R., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Osaka (absent)
Gray, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Graybill, H. B., M.A., Canton Christian College, Canton
Green, C. H. S., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hwailu via Tientsin
Green, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Green, Miss K. R.. Reformed Church in America, Chiangchiu via Amoy
Green, Miss M., English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu, Shansi
Greene, D. Crosby, D.D., and wife, Am. Board Mission, 12, Shin Ryudo Cho, Azabu Tokyo
Greene, Fred. E., Y.M.C.A. teacher, 142, Okazaki Cho, Kyoto, Japan
Greene, G. W., D.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton
Greene, Miss P., American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton
Greening, A. E., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Peicheng, Putai City, via Kiaochow
Greening E. B., English Baptist Mission, Tingchowfu, Shantung
Greeson, R. and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Songchin, Corca
Gregg, Miss J. G., China Inland Mission, Hwailu via Tientsin
Gregg, G. A., Young Men's Christian Association, Seoul
Gregory, Miss A. M., China Inland Mission, Sintientsi (Paoning) via Ichang
Gregson, Miss D., S.P.G., 15, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe
Greig, A. L., und wife, London Missionary Society, Hengchowfu, Hunan
Greig, J. A., F.R.C.S., ED., and wife, Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Kirin via Newchwang Greiser, B., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Yinfa via Canton
Greschat, G., Berlin Missionary Society, Hongkong
Gresham, Miss A., Unconnected, Weihaiwei
Gressitt, J. F., and wife, American Baptist Mission, Yoshida Machi, Kyoto, Janan Grey, W. T., St. Andrew's Mission, S.P.G., 11, Sakae Cho, Shiba, Tokyo
Grier, M. B., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Ssüchowfu via Chinkiang Grierson, Dr. R., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Songchin, Corea
Grierson, R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyanghsien, via Wenchow
1794
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Griesser, R. A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Griffin, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Griffin, Miss A., Church Missionary Society, 24, Gokurakuji, Cho, Fukuoka, Japan Griffith, J., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presb. Mission, Changte, Ilo
Griffith, M. L., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shuntehfu via Peking
Griffiths, Miss M. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hirosaki, Japan
Griffiths, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Lo-nguong via Foochow
Grills, Miss B. A., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Kwangchengtze, via Newchwang Grimes, A. C., North China Tract Society, Peking
Griswold, Miss F. E., American Board Mission, Maebashi, Japan
Groesbeck, A.F., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Chaoyanghsien via Swatow Groff, G. W., B. S., Canton Christian College, Canton
Grohmann, I., Kieler China Mission, Paklioi
Grosse, Miss, N. V. Methodist Protestant Mission, 2448, Bluff, Yokohama
Groth Miss A. F. K., Liebenzell Mission, Changsha
Groseth, Miss I. C., Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fanchong via Hankow
Grover, D. L., and wife, American Board Mission, Karasumaru Dori, Kyoto Groves, Miss E. R., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Grotefend, Miss M., Berlin Foundling House, Hongkong
Grundy, W., China Inland Mission, Juian, via Wenchow
Gudal, J. M. Q., and wife, American Lutheran Mission, Hankow
Guerney, W. N., Church of England (S. P. G.) Seoul, Corea
Guest, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Ansbunfu via Yochow and Kweiyang
Guex, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Changshan, Che, via Ningpo
Guinness, G. W., B.A., M.B.,B.CH., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kaifeng via Hankow
Guldbrandsen, Miss D., Norwegian Missionary Society, Taohualuen, Iyang via Changsha Gulick, S. L., D.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Nashinoki Cho Kyoto
Gunten, Miss E. von, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuhu
Gustafson, Miss A., Swedish Holiness Union, Tatungfu via Taiyuanfu
Gustafson, F. A., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Msn., Chongsin Sianfu via Hankow Guthapfel, Miss M. L., Women's F.M.S. of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Msn., Seoul Hacking, Miss C. M., China Inland Mission, Taikang via Hankow Hadden, J., M.B., B.CH., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yungchowifu, Hunan Hadden, Miss, M. Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Haden, R. A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Soochow
Haden, T. F., and wife, Southern Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kwansei Gakuin, Kobe Hagelskacr, L., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Fenghwangcheng via Newchwang Hager, C. R., M.D., D.D., and wife, American Board of Comsrs. for Fg. Mens., Hongkong Hager, S. E., and wife, Southern Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kitano Cho Yochome, Kobe Hagestande, Miss A., American Lutheran Mission, Sinyangchow, Honan Hagin, F. E., and wife, Church of Christ Mission, Koishikawa, Tokyo (absent) Hagqvist, W., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Chienchow, Sianfu vía Haukow Hagsten, Miss H. A., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Lungchow, She., via Hankow Hahne, A., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Ishih via Taiyuanfu
Hail, A. D., D.D., and wife, Am. Presbyterian Mission, 33, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan Hail, J. B., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Wakayama, Japanı Hail, J. E., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, 22, Furukawa, Tsu, Ise, Japan Hail, W. J., B.A., Yale Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Hail, Miss Annie., American Presbyterian Mission, 33, Kawaguchi Cho, Kanazawa, Japan Halderman, Miss 1., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Nanlinghsien, via Wuhu Halsey, Miss L.S., American Presbyterian Mission, 33, Kami Niban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Halsey, Miss R. R., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Halthe, P. O., Norwegian Missionary Society, Ningsiang via Changsha Halthe, Miss H., Norwegian Missionary Society, Ningsiang via Changsha Halfield, Miss L., M. D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Hall, E. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Seoul
Hall, F. J., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Peking
Hall, J. C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kanchow, Ki., via Kiukiang
Hall, Miss A. U., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow Hall, Miss E. E., China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Hall, Miss J. D., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Tsingkianpu
Hall, Mrs. R. S., M.D., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Pyengyang, Corea Hall, Mrs. W. J., M.D., Women's F.M.S. of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Pyengyang Haller, Miss Cora, Evang. Assoc. of North Am. Misn., 84, Sasugaya Cho, Koishikawa, Tokyo
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Halley, Miss E., London Missionary Society, Shanghai
Hallin, E., Swedish Holiness Union, Soping via Taiyuanfu
Hallin, Miss F., Swedish Mission in China, Yuncheng via Taiyuanfu
Hallman, Miss S. B., American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Pyengyang,
Hallock, Rev. H. G. C., PH.D., Metropolitan Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
1795
Hamblen, S. W., and wife American Baptist Missionary Union, 30B, Tsukiji, Tokyo (abt.) Hambley, Miss L. H., Canadian Methodist Mission, Jenshow
Hamill, F. P., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Hamilton, E. A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Sintu, Sze.
Hamilton, G. W., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shuntehfu, Chihli Hamilton, H. J., B.A., and wife, Church Miss. Society, 43, Higashi Katala Nagoya, Japan Hamilton, T., China Inland Mission, Hwangyen, via Ningpo
ני
Hamilton, W. B., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsinan via Tsingtau Hamilton, Miss E., 1, Nagasaka Cho, Azabu, Tokyo
Hamilton, Miss L. C., Church Missionary Society, 12, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan Hamlett, P. W., American Southern Baptist Mission, Soochow
Hammond, A., China Inland Mission, Yenchow via Hangchow
Hampson, W. E., China Inland Mission, Changsha
Hampton, Miss M. S., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hakodate (absent)
Hancock, C. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Chinkiang Hancock, Miss A. M., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Hanna, W. J., China Inland Mission, Pingi via Mengtze
Hannah, C. B., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Hanington, Miss Mabel, M.B., Church Missionary Society, Ningteh via Foochow Hankins, W. C., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Kulangsu, Amoy Hansen, G., and wife, Apostolic Faith Mission, Shanghai
Hansen, Miss E. B., Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfu, Chi
Hansen, Miss K. I., Reformed Church of U.S A., Higashi Sanban Cho, Sendai, Japan Hanson, P. O., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau
Hardie, R. A., M.D., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Wonsan, Corea
Harding, D. A. G., and wife, China Inland Mission Tsinchow, Kan.
Harding, D.J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kutsingfu via Mengtze
Hardman, M., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Hargrave, Miss I. M., Canadian Methodist Mission, 8, Toriizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Harkness, Miss M., English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Harlow, J. C., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Shouyang, Shansi
Harlow, Miss C. M., China Inland Mission, Nanpu, Szc., via Ichang
Harmon, F., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Chowtsun via Kiaochow
Harrington, C. K., D.D. (and wife, absent), Amer. Baptist Miss. Union, 75, Bluff, Yokohama Harrington, Capt. Nellie, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza, Nichome,
Harrington, F. G., and wife American Baptist Missionary Union, Yokohama (absent) Harris, Bishop, D.D., LL.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo
Harris, G. G., B.A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking
Harris, J., English Baptist Mission, Tsingchowfu, Shantung.
Harris, Bishop Merriman C., D.D., L.L.D., Ayama Gakuin, Tokyo
Harris, W. E., Mormon Mission, Shizuoka, Japan
Harris, Mrs. S. S., Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Sungkiangfu
Harris, Miss L. E., M.B., Friends' Foreign Mission, Tungchwan, Sze.
Harrison, W. B., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Kunsan, Corea Harrison, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Haitan via Foochow Harrison, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Sisiang via Hankow
Harrison, Miss J., Japan Evangelistic Band, 1:0 of 2, Okuhirano Mura, Kobe
Harrison, Miss P., American Southern Baptist Mission, Yingtak via Canton Harstad, Miss M., Lutheran Brethren Mission, Tsaoyang via Hankow Hart, E. H., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Wuhu Hart, S. L., M.A., D.Sc., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tientsin Hart, Miss C. E., Canadian Methodist Mission, Ueda, Shinshiu, Japan Hart, Miss E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow Hartford, Miss M. C., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yenpingfu via Foochow Hartshorne, Miss Anna C., Independent, 16, Guban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Hartwell, G. E., B.A.,B.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu Hartwell, J. B., D.D., American Southern Baptist Msn., Hwanghsien, via Chefoo Hartwell, Miss A. B., American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Hartwell, Miss E. S., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow
1796
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Harvey, C. W., B.A., and wife International Committee of Y.M.C.A, Tientsin Harvey, E. D., M.A., and wife, Yale Foreign Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan Harvey, Miss E. J., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Hasenpflug, Miss M. T., United Evangelical Church Mission, Changsha via Hankow Haskell, Mr., and wife, China New Testament Mission, Pakhoi
Haslam, Miss M. E., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Hathaway, Miss M. A., Universalist Miss., 50, Takata Oimatsu Cho, Koishikawa, Tokyo Hattrem, Miss R., Norwegian Mission in China, Hotsin, Kiangchow via Peking Hauch, J. P., and wife, Evangelical Association of North America, 44, Tsukiji, Tokyo Havers, Miss E. L., Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Hawes, Miss C. E., American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Hawk, J. C., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Changchow Hawkins, Miss I., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Kashing
Hawley, E. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shuntehfu, Chihli Hawley, J. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yungchun via Foochow Hay, J. P., M.A., United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Hayes, C. A., M.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Wuchow via Canton Hayes, J. N., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Soochow
Hayes, W., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsingchowfu via Kiaochow Hayman, J. R., China Inland Mission, Paoning Sze.
Haynes, Miss E. J., Women's F.MS, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Pyengyang, Corea Hayward, J. N., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Hazard, Miss A., American Advent Christian Mission, Nanking
Head, Miss J., Church Missionary Society, Matsuye, Japan (absent)
Headland I. T., PH.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Heard, Miss A. M., Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow
Hearn, T. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Huchowfu
Hearn, T. O., M.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Pingtu via Kiaochow Heaslett, S., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Tokushima, Japan
Heaton, Miss C. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, 2, Samban Cho, Sendai, Japan Heckelman, F. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sapporo, Japan Hedley, J., F.R.G.S., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Tientsin Hedström, Miss H., Scandinavian American Christian Free Mission, Canton Heebner, Miss F. K., American Board of Commissioners, for Fgn. Msns., Taikuhsien, Sha Heicher, M K. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Miss., 12-c, Higashi Yamate, Nagasaki Heidingsfeld, A., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Fayen Thongau, via Canton Heikinheimo, Dr. H., Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshih via Shashi Heimbeck, Miss II., Norwegian Missionary Society, Changsha
Heinrichsohn, F. K., and wife, Reformed Church in the United States, Chenchowfu, Hunan Helck, J, W. B., American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Wonsan Hellestad, O., American Lutheran Mission, Kioshan, Honan Helps, J. S., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow
Hemingway, W. A., and wife, American Board of Commissioners, Taikuhsien, Sha. Henderson, Miss M. T., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wusib Hendry, J. L., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Huchowfu Henke, F. G., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kiukiang
Hennigar, E. C., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Fukui, Japan
Henriksen, Mrs. Ch., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Sianfu via Hankow Henry, James M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Henry, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Henry, Miss A. J., M.D., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Henry, Miss M., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Henshaw, Miss B. D., Christian and Missionary Alliance Siangtan
Hensley, Miss, E. American Southern Baptist Mission, Chefoo
Henty, Miss, A., Church Missionary Society, Gifu, Japan
Herbert, W. T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Tatsienlu via Chungking Herbert, Miss F., China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Herboltzheimer, J., N., and wife, Seventh day Adventist, Nagasaki
Hereford, J. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Yamada, Japan
Hermann, A., China Inland Mission, Hwailu via Peking
Hermann, Dr. H., Rhenish Missionary Society, Tungkun via Canton
Herring, W., F., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Chengchow, Honan Herriott, C. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow
Herschel, Miss E., English Presbyterian Mission, Changpu via Amoy
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
1797
Hersey, R. M., B.A., and wife, International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Tientsin Hertz, Rev., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Hwaijen via Newchwang Hertzberg, A., M.A., M.SC., and wife, Nor. Miss. Society, Taohualuen Iyang via Changsha Hess, I. L., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Hesse, Miss S. E. E., Swedish Mission China, Chielichow via Taiyuanfu
Hessler, Miss Minnie K., Free Methodist Miss., 1921, Hidein Cho, Tennoji, Osaka, Japan
Hewett, J. W., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife China Inland Mission, Suitingfu via Ichang
Hewett, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Hewett, Miss E. J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, 2, Samban Cho, Sendai, Japan Herwig, Miss E., Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow, via Swatow
Hewitt, II. J. China Inland Mission (in Europe)
Hewitt, W. H., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Hewitt, Miss E. J., Methodist Episcopal Church, Sendai
Heyward, Dr., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yungchowfu, Hunan
Heywood, J. W., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Ningpo
Heywood, Miss G. M., Amer. Epis. Miss., 1, Hama Cho San., Nihonbashi Kee, Tokyo, Japan Hibbard, C. A., Y. M. C. A., Kagoshima, Japan
Hibbard, C.V. (and wife, in Tokyo), Y.M.C.A., Dalny, Manchuria
Hickman, J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shihchuan, Sze.
Hicks, C. E., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Chaotung, Yun. Hicks, W. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Peking Higgs, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Hwochow via Peking
Higgins, Miss S. H., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Hill, E. N., and wife, Unconnected, Weihaiwei
Hill, G. W., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Uniou, Kyoto Japan (absent) Hill, J. K., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Suichow via Hankow
Hill, K. R J., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Fengchen, via Taiyuanfu Hill, L. P., and wife, Church of England Missionary Society, Tokushima, Japan Hill, Miss Anna, Women's Union Miss. Soc. of American, 212, Bluff, Yokohama Hill, Dr., and wife, London Missionary Society, Peking
Hill, Miss M., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Hill, Miss M. A., American Friends' Mission, Nanking
Hillary, E. R., Church of England (S.P.G.), Kanghoa, Corea
Hillman, Miss M. R., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Chemulpo Hills, O. F., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chefoo
Hilty, Miss L, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wanchih via Wuhu Hind, J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Fuhning via Foochow Hind, J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kokura, Japan
Hind, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow
Hinds, J., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Chuchai via Ningching Hingston, Miss W., China Inland Mission, Shekichen, via Hansow
Hinkey, P. Christian and Missionary Alliance, via Wuchow
Hipwell, W. E., Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Hints, Richard F., Y. M. C. A., teacher, Gakko Cho, Niigata, Japan
Hirst, J. W., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Seoul
Hitch, Rev. J. W., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Wonsan, Corea,
Hitch, T. G., and wife, Y. M. C. A., teacher, Naval College, Etajima, Aki, Japan
Hjort, Miss R., China Inland Mission, Kiehsiu via Peking
Hoag, Miss L. H., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chinkiang
Hobart, W. T., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Hockin, A., and wife, Canadian Methodist Missionary, Chengtu
Hocking, Miss Julia C., American Board Mission, 60, Yamanoto Dori Shichome, Kobe
Hockman, W. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kiatingfu via Chungking
Hodder, Commissioner Henry H. C., and wife, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo
Hodges, Miss O. I., Methodist Protestant Mission, Yokohama (absent)
Hodgkin, H. T., B.A., M.D., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Chengtu
Hodnefield, Miss O., Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Hodous, L., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow Hoekje, W. G., American Dutch Reformed Mission, Karatsu, Hizen, Japan
Hoffman, A. C., S.T.L., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Jenshow Hofmann, J, A., M.D., The John G. Kerr Refuge for Insane, Canton
Hoffsommer, W.E.,and wife, Amer. Dutch Reform.Miss., 13, ReinanzakaCho, Akasaka, Tokyo Hogan, Miss, F. M. F., St. Hilda's Mission, Nagasaki-cho, Azabu, Tokyo Hogg, A., M.A., M.D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
1798 PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA)
Hoggard, Col., Salvation Army, Seoul, Corea
Höglander, J. D., Swedish Holiness Union, Hunyüan via Peking
_
Hogman, N., and wife Swedish Mission in China, Tungchowfu, via Taiyuanfu Holbrook, Miss Mary A., American Board Mission, 60, Yamamoto Dori Shichome, Kobe Holden, J., Church Missionary Society, Yungchoufu
Holderman, Miss I., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Naulinghsien via Wuhu
Holé, P., Norwegian Mission in China, Sihchieo via Peking
Holland, Miss J. M., Church Missionary Society, 13, Kawaguch Cho, Osaka
Hollander, T. J., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow Hollander, T. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Hollenweger, O., Liebenzell Mission, Changsha
Hollis, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Kowloon City
Holm, G., Lutheran Brethren Mission, Tsaoyang via Hankow
Holme, Miss M. H., American Friends Mission, Luho, via Nanking
Holmes, C. P., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Hamamatsu, Japan Holmes, T. D., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kinhwafu Holmsten, Miss H., Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfu, Chi. Holt, Miss S. A., Unconnected, Sinchanghsien via Kiukiang Holzmann, Miss L., Berlin Foundling House, Hongkong
Homeyer, W., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Namhungchow via Canton Hong, T., Missionary Home and Agency, Shanghai
Honn, N. S., and wife, American Free Methodist Mission in China, Chengchow, Honan Honsinger, Miss W. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchangfu via Kiukiang
Hood, Miss, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Soochow
Hook, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Hooker, A. W., M.D., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Fatshan via Canton
Hooker, W. C., and wife, American Bible Society, Chungking
Hopkins, F. J., and wife, Unconnected, Nanchang via Kiukiang
Hopkins, N. S., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking Hopwood, Miss E. A., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Hopwood, Miss L. M., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Horne, W. S., and wife, China Iuland Mission, Kanchow, Ki., via Kiukiang
Horne, Miss A. C. J., Church Missionary Society, Kokura, Japan
Horne, Miss A. M., London Missionary Society, Chiangchiu via Amoy
Horner, Miss M. C., L.R.C.P. & S., United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Horobin, Mrs. C., China Inland Mission (in England)
Hosken, Miss E., Christian Catholic Church in Zion, Shanghai
Hoskyn, Miss J. F., China Inland Mission, Pingyangfu via Peking
Hosler, P., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Hoste, D. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Hotvedt, I. M. J., M.D., and wife, Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fanchêng via Hankow Hötzel, G., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Taiping via Canton
Houghton, H. S., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Wuhu
Houlding, H. W., and wife, South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu via Tientsin
Hounshell, C. G., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Seoul (absent) Houston, Miss Ella, Presbyterian Church U.S.A. South, Shirakabe Cho, Nagoya, Japan Houser, Miss B., Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Shanghai
Howard, A. T., D.D., and wife, United Brethren in Christ, 1,912, Shimo Shibuya, Tokyo Howard, Miss R. D., Chu. Misn. Soc., 174, Shinonome Cho Nichome, Higashi Ku, Osaka Howden, H. J., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Anhsien, Sze.
Howe, Miss A. L., American Board Mission, 22, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe Howe, Miss G., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang
Howell, G. T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Howell, Miss E. M., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Howie, Miss J. L., Canadian Methodist Mission, 8, Tomizaka, Azabu, Tokyo, Japan Howie, Miss L., United Free Church of Scotland, Kaiyuen via Newchwang Hoy, W. E., and wife, Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow via Hankow Hu, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Hubbard, G. H., and wife, American Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Msns., Pagoda Anchorage Hudson, G., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Hangchow
Hudson, W. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Kashing
Huelster, Miss L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Huey, Miss A., American Southern Baptist Mission, Laichow via Chefoo Hughes, F. S., M.A., Church of England Mission, Peking
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1799
Hughes, Miss G. A., Amer. Baptist Mission (absent)
Hughes, G. L., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Hughes, H., and wife, S. P. G., 5. Nakayamate Dori Sanchome, Kobe
Hughes, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Hughes, Miss A. M., Church Missionary Society, Kushiro, Japan (absent)
Hughes, Miss E. E., Church Missionary Society, Kushiro, Japan
Hughes, Miss E. M., S. P. G., 16, Hirakawa Cho Rokuchome, Kojimachi, Tokyo
Hughes, Miss G. A., American Baptist Missionary Union, Osaka, Japan (absent) Hughes, Miss J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kiukiang
Huhn, F., Berlin Missionary Society, Shiuchowfu via Canton
Hohold, Miss E. S., Church Missionary Society, Minami Hisaya Cho, Nagoya, Japan Hultkrantz, Miss A. M. L., Swedish Mission in China, Sinanhsien
Hume, E. H., M.D., and wife, Yale Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Hummel, W. F., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Hunt, E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Wenchow
Hunt, W. B., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Hunt, W. R., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Wuhu
Hunt, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Luanfu via Peking
Hunt, Miss C. E. W., Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Hunter, G. W., China Inland Mission, Tibwatu, Sin,, via Lanchowfu, Kan.
Hunter, J. W., Church of England Mission, Taian via Tsingtau
Hunter, Mrs. G., China Inland Mission (in England)
Huntington, D. T., B.A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Ichang Huntley, G. A., M.D., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hanyang Huntoon, Miss C. M., American Baptist Missionary Union, Shachingfu Hutcheson, A. C., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Kashing Hutchings, Miss A. M., Railway Mission, 123, Kashiwagi, Yodobashi Machi, Tokyo Hutchinson, A. B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kumamoto, Japan (absent) Hutchinson, A.C., Church Missionary Society, 125, Yamashita Cho, Kagoshima, Japan Hutchinson, A. J., and wife, London Missionary Society, Chiangchiu via Amoy Hutchingson, R., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Shiu Chow, via Canton Hutson, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kwanhsien, Sze. Hutton, T., and wife, Independent, Hsinhwa via Chinkiang Hutton, Miss A. M., Independent, Hsinhwa via Chinkiang Hyde, Miss J. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking Hykes, J. R., D.D., and wife, American Bible Society, Shanghai Ibbotson, T. C., Church Missionary Society, Kweilinfu
Iliff, G. D., D.D., Bishop, and wife, Church of England Mission, Chefoo and Tai-an Iglehart, C. W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo
Iglehart, E. T., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hirosaki, Japan
Imbrie W., D.D., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Meiji Gakuin, Shirokane, Tokyo Imhof, Miss L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sapporo, Japan
Inglis, J. W., M.A., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Kaiyuen via Newchwang Ingman, Miss E. E., Finnish Free Church Mission, Yungsin, Ki., via Kiukiang
Ingram, J.H., M.D., and wife, American Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Msns., Tungchów, Chi. Irish, H. H., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Irvin, Dr. C. H., M.D., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Fusan, Corea Irvin, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Iang-keo via Ningpo
Irvine, Miss E., Women's Union Mission, Shanghai
Irvine, Miss M. J., Women's Union Mission, Shanghai
Irwin, J. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Têngchowfu via Chefoo Isaksson, Miss E., Swedish Missionary Society, Ichang
Istad, Miss S., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Yunyang, Hupeh
Ivey, Miss M. M., American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Seoul, Corea
Jack, M., M.A., B.D., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Tamsui, Formosa
Jackson, B. H., T. and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Tungliang via Chungking
Jackson, J., and wife, Am. Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang via Hankow Jackson, O. M., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Mienchuhsien
Jackson, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Longuong via Foochow Jackson, Miss L., Church of England Zenana Mission, Longuong via Foochow
Jackson, Miss L. F. M., China Inland Mission, Kwangsinfu, via Ningpo
Jacobson, I. W., and wife, Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Nanchang, Hupeh Jaffray, R. A., and wife, Christian Missionary Alliance, Wuchow via Canton
Jakobsen, Miss B., B A., Norwegian Missionary Society, Sinhwa via Changsha
1800
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
James, T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Luchow via Chungking
James, Miss J. B., China Inland Mission, Anjen via Kiukiang
Jansen, Jay C., Mormon Mission, 81, Yakuojima Machi, Ushigome, Tokyo
Janzon, Miss A., Swedish Mission in China, Honanfu
Japan Book and Tract Society, 3, Yuraku Cho Nichome, Kojimachi, Tokyo
Jaquit, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Jefferys, H. S., Independent 53, Akashi Cho, Tsukiji, Tokyo
Jefferys, W. H., M.D., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Msn., Shanghai Jenkins G. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission Taoyuan,
Jenkins, H. S., M.D., F.R.C.S. (ENG.), English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Jenkins, P., and wife Church Missionary Society, Canton
Jennings, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Luchenghsien via Peking
Jennings, W., China Inland Mission, Kweichowfu via Ichang Jensen, C. J., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Sianfu via Hankow
Jensen, E., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Kwantien via Newchwang Jensen, L, and wife, Kieler China Mission, Limehow, via Pakhoi
Jensen, Miss A., Swedish Alliance Mission, Kienyang via Hankow
Jephson, Miss, Church of England (S. P. G.), Kanghoa, Chemulpo
Jeter, Miss E., American Southern Baptist Mission, Pingtu via Kiaochow Jewell, Mrs. C. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Jewell, Miss C. I., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Jewell, Miss M. W., Independent, Shanghai
Jex-Blake, Miss M. R., Church Missionary Society, Muroran, Hokkaido, Japan
Johannessen, Sister D., Norwegian Missionary Society, Taohualuen, Iyang via Changsha Johannsen, Miss A. M., China Inland Mission, Yushan via Ningpo
Johanson, A. T., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Tungchowfu, Sianfu via Hankow Johanson, J. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Johanson, Miss H. S., Swedish Holiness Union, Pachow, Sze.
John, G., D.D., London Missionary Society, Hankow
Johnsen, Mrs. G., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Laohokow via Hankow
Johnson, A., and wife, Apostolic Faith Mission, Shinchiachuang
Johnson, C. F., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Tsinan via Tsingtau
Johnson, E., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Paot'en, weihwacheng, via Peking Johnson, E. L., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Peking Johnson, J. S., Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Kingmen via Hankow Johnson, John, and wife, Fgn. Christian Missionary Society, Nantungchow via S'hai Johnson, O. S., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Canton Johnson, O. S., Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Kingmen via Siangyang, Hupeh Johnson, V., and wife Wesleyan Missionary Society, Pingchiang, Hunan
Johnson, Dr. W. O., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Taiku, Corea Johnson, W. R., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang
Johnson, W. T., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Sapporo
Johnson, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kienning via Foochow
Johnson, Miss, Methodist Episcopal Church (South), Songdo, Corea
Johnson, Miss C., American Lutheran Mission Kioshan, Honan
Johnson, Miss C., Women's Union Mission, Shanghai
Johnson, Miss E. C., China Inland Mission, Küwo, via Peking
Johnson, Miss H. M., Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Fanchéng via Hankow Johnson, Miss J. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Kanazawa, Japan
Johnson, Miss Kate V., Chu. of Christ Mission, 262, Hayashi Cho, Hongo, Tokyo Johnson, Miss R. T., Church of Christ Mission, 69, Kwozenji Dori, Sendai, Japan Johnson, Miss T., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Pingliang via Hankow and Sianfu Johnston, W. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsinan via Tsingtau Johnston, Miss H., Independent, Kiukiang
Johnston, Miss I. B., Independent, Kiukiang
Johnston, Miss Margaret, Independent, Kiukiang
Johnston, Miss Mary, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Sutsien via Chinkiang Johnstone, Miss Janet M., Amer. Presbyterian Mission Girls' School, Kanazawa, Japan Jelliffe, R. O., B.A., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Tzeliutsing Jolliffe, C. J. P., B.A., B.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Jones, A. F., L.R.C.P. & S., ED., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Yungpiugfa Jones, E. C., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Jones, E. E., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningpo
Jones, E. H.(and wife, absent), Amer. Bapt. Missionary Union, 45, Minami Machi, Mito, Japan
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1801
Jones, F., Church of England Mission, Chefoo
Jones, F. D., United Methodist Church Mission, Wenchow
Jones, G. H., D D., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul
Jones, H. P., and wife, Southern Med. Epi. Misn. Nagarikawa Cho, Hiroshima, Japan Jones, Dr. J., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Ningpo
Jones, J. Ira, and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, 77, Tenjin Cho, Fukuoka, Japan Jones, L., and wife, China Inland Mission, Haukow
Jones, R. E., and wife, Unconnected, Tehnganhsien via Kiukiang
Jones, S., and wife, Independent, Kuling via Kewkiang
Jones, U. R., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow
Jones, W. Y., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kyoto, Japan (absent)
Jones, Mrs. J. R., American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking
Jones, Miss M. I., American Baptist Missionary Union, Huchowfu
Jones, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kutien via Foochow
Jones, Miss A. M., Church Missionary Society, Canton
Jones, Miss D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Jones, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Mingchiang via Foochow
Jones, Miss E. F., American Free Methodist Mission in China, Kaifengfu, Honan
Jones, Miss F., American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien viz Chefoo
Jones, Miss L. F., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wanchih via Wuhu
Jones, Miss Laura, American Board of Comsns. for Foreign Msns., Paotingfu via Tientsin Jones, Miss M. S., Young Men's Christian Association, Shanghai
Jones, Miss S. E., China Inland Mission, Sinchanghsien, via Ningpo Jonsson, Miss A., Swedish Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow Joseland, F. P., London Missionary Society, Amoy
Jost, Miss H. J., Canadian Methodist Mission, 75, Hirosaka Dori, Kanazawa, Japan
Jost, Miss Mary, Canadian Methodist Mission, 75, Hirosaka Dori, Kanazawa, Japan Jourolman, Miss R., American Presbyterian Mission South, Kiangyin
Jowett, H., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Joyce, F. S., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hiangcheng via Hankow
Joynt, Miss D. C., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Judd, C. H., and wife, China Inland Mission (in Europe)
Judd, C. Howard, and wife. China Inland Mission, Kíukiang
Judd, F. H., M.B., C.M., and wife, China Inland Mission, Jaochow via Kiukiang
Judson, J. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow
Judson, Miss C., American Board Mission, Matsuyama, Japan
Julius, Miss O., Church Missionary Society, Toyohashi, Japan (absent)
Junk, T., Independent, Tsachsien, Shantung
Junkin, W. F., und wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South,) Sutsien via Chinkiang
Junkin, W. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Chunju, Corea
Just, Mrs. L., China Inland Mission, Changshan, Che, via Ningpo
Kahn, Miss I., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang
Kampinann, F., and wife, Liebenzell Mission, Hengchow via Yochow
Kanno, Miss A. C., Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow, Hunan
Karlen, E., Swedish Mongol Mission, Halong, Osso, via Kalgan
Karlsson, A. A., Swedish Holiness Union, Tatungfu via Taiyuanfu Karlsson, A., Swedish Holiness Union, Tatungfu via Taiyuanfu
Karr, Mrs. E. L., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Karstad, J., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Lushan, Honan
Kastler, C. W., and wife, Central China Religious Tract Society, Hankow Kauderer, J. G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Nanchang via Kiukiang Kauffman, I., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Taochow, Kansuh
Kengey, Miss M. D., Canadian Methodist Mission, 8, Tomizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Kearney, T. R., and wife, Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Kearns, K. E., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in USA. Sun-chun, Corea Keeler, J. L., AL.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Changli via Tientsin Keen, C. S., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kinhwafu
Keen, Miss E. M., Church Missionary Society, Kokura, Japan
Kees, M, A., and wife, International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Canton
Keirn, T. D.D., and wife, Universalist Mission, 15, Dote Sanban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Keller, F. A., B.A., M.D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Changsha
Keller, P. E., and wife, Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow via Hankow Kellog, A. B., Y. M. C. A., teacher, Odawara, Japan
Kelly, J. F., M.D., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Nodoa via Hoihow, Hainan
1802
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Kelly, W., M.D., and wife, Reformed Church in the United States, Chenchowfuvia Hankow Kelly, Miss M, Australian Presbyterian Mission, Chinju
Kelly, Miss M., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking
Kelly, Miss W. H., American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai
Kelhofer, E., and wife, Evangelical Association of North America, Shenchowfu, Hunan Kember, A. T., F.R.C.S., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Kemp, H. A., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Chaochowfu via Swatow Kemp, R. A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang
Kempf, J., American Reformed Presbyterian Church, Takling via Canton Kempson, Miss F. A. B., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze. Kendrick, Miss., American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Songchin
Kennedy, A., and wife, Grace Mission, Tangsi via Shanghai
Kennedy, F. W., M.A., and wife, Can. Board Misn., Arigasaki, Matsumoto, Shinshiu, Japan Kennett, R. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chengku via Hankow Kent, Miss K. A. E., S. P. G., 29, Shimbori Cho, Shiba, Tokyo
Kepler, A. R., and wife American Presbyterian Mission, Siangtan, Hunan Kern, D. S., B.A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking
Kerr, Mrs. J. G., The Jolin G. Kerr Refuge for Insane, Canton
Kett, Miss Mary S., Y. W. C. A., 41, Sanban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Ker, Miss L. A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Kestler, Miss E. E., American Presbyterian Mission, Kunsan, Corea
Ketring, M. E., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Kettlewell, F., S.P.G., Shiba, Tokyo, Nakayamata Dori Shichome, Kobe
Keyte, J. C., M.A., English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Kidder, Miss A. H., Amer. Bapt. Miss. Union, 10 Fukuro Machi. Surugadai, Tokyo Kidwell, Miss L. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Fukuoka, Japan Kiehlnecker, K., Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow, via Swatow
Kiehn, P., Independent, Tsaohsien, Shantung
Kilborn, O. L., M.A., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Kilbourne, E., A. and wife, Oriental Miss. Soc., Kashiwagi, Yodobash, Machi, Tokyo Kilbourne, Edwin S., Oriental Mission, Soc., Kashiwagi, Yodobashi Machi, Tokyo Kilen, D., and wife, Lutheran Brethren Mission, Tsaoyang via Hankow Kilen, R., and wife, Lutheran Brethren Mission, Tsaoyang via Hankow Killam, Miss A., Canadian Methodist Mission Girls' School, Kofu, Japan
Killie, C. A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfú via Tientsin Kimball, Miss J., American Episcopal Mission, Nara, Japan
King, A., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tientsin
King, A. F., M.A., St. Andrew's Mission, S.P.G., 11, Sakae Cho, Shiba, Tokyo King, H. E., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
King, N. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyangfu via Peking King, P. J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shachingfu King, Miss I., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Sungkiangfu King, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chiukiang
Kingsbury, W., de L., Met. Epis. Mission, 182, Minami Hisaya Cho, Minami, Japan Kingsmill, Miss., Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Kinnear, H. N., M.D., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Fgu. Mans., Foochow Kinney, Miss J. M., B.A., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Tamsui, Formosa Kip, Mrs. H. C., Reformed Church in America, Sio-khe via Amoy
Kirk, J., M.B., CH, B., and wife, Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Canton Kirkland, Miss A. O., English Baptist Zenana Mission, Tsingchowfu via Kiaochow Kirkwood, T., M.A., M.B., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tientsin Kirveskoski, Miss M., Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshih via Shashi Kistler, J., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Kitley, W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Mowchow, Sze. Kjorsvik, Miss, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Künchow, Hupeh Klavenes, F., M. A., B.D., Norwegian Missionary Society, Changsha
Klein, H., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Sungyang via Wenchow Klein, M., and wife, Free Methodist Mission, Sumoto, Awaji, Japan Klemm, Miss E., American. Episcopal Mission, Hodono, Akita, Japan Klingman, C. C., and wife, Independent, 68 Zoshigaya, Koishikawa, Tokyo Knickerbocker, E. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Ningpo, Knight, O. H., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Matsuye, Japan (absent) Knight, W. P., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyangfu, via Peking Knipe, W. L. L., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Tehyang, Sze.
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1803.
Knott, C. W., M.Sc., London Missionary Society, Hankow
Knowles, Miss M., American Methodist Episcopal Mission South, Wonsan, Corea Knox, R., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Mokpo
Knox, Miss Bessie, American Presbyterian Mission South, Mokpo
Knox, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Kohler, Mrs. L. E., China Inland Mission, Kweiyang via Chungking
Kolfrat, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission, Siangtan, Hunan
Kölkenbeck, Miss H. M., China Inland Mission, Yingshan, Sze., via Ichang
Kollecker, A., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Canton
Koons, Miss S. L., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau
Koskenniemi, E., and wife, Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Iida Machi, Shinshiu, Japan Kranenberg, Miss M., Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Kranz, P., and wife, Independent, Shanghai
Krause, O. J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Kray, R., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kuchuk via Canton
Krienke, G. F. A., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Kienchang via Kiukiang Kristensen, Miss O., Danish Lutheran Mission, Fort Arthur'
Kristiansen, N., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Port Arthur
Krout, Miss G., Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfu, Chi.
Krüger, G. H., and wife Basel Missionary Society, Kichung via Hongkong
Krumling, F. C., M.D., and wife, Evangelical Assoc. of North America, Shenchowfu, Hunan Kullgren, N., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Kienli via Hankow
Kumm, Miss E. L. P., Liebenzell Mission, Changsha
Kunkle, J. S., American Presbyterian Mission, Limchowfu
Kunst, Miss I., Liebenzell Mission, Changsha
Kunze, A., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Kiaochow
Kupfer, C. F., PH.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kiukiang
Kurz, Miss E., Foreign Christian Mission, Nanking
Kuykendall, L., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchang
Kuyper, Miss J. M., Dutch Reformed Church of America, 178, Bluff, Yokohama Kvamme, M. K., and wife, Apostolic Faith Mission, Shanghai
Lachlan, Mrs. H. N., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Lack, C. N., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yencheng, Ho
Lacy, W. H., D.D., and wife, Methodist Publishing House in China, Shanghai Lacy, W. N., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Lagerquist, A. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Laohokow via Hankow
Laidler, Miss A., English Presbyterian Mission, Wukingfu via Swatow Laine, Miss A., Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshih via Shashi
Laird, C. N., M.A., Canton Christian College, Canton
Laird, P. J., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Changsha Lajus, Miss B. H., China Inland Mission, Yüshan via Ningpo Lake, J., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton Lamb, H., and wife, Unconnected, Nganihsien, via Kiukiang Lambert, Miss., Church Missionary Society, Foochow Lambert, Miss A., Unconnected, Nanchang via Kiukiang
Lambert, Miss M., Church of England Mission, Peking
Lammenranta, Miss T., Finnish Missionary Society Tsingshih via Shashi
Lampe, W. E., and wife, German Reformed Ch. in the United States, Sendai, Japan (abt.) Lampen, Miss S., Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshih via Shashi
Landahl, C. W., and wife, Hauge's Synodes Mission, Taipingtien, via Hankow
Lande, L., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Shihwakai, Hupeh
Landis, H. M., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Meiji Gakuin, Shirokane, Tokyo
Landis, M. L., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, via Wuchow
Landis, Miss L. L., Christian and Missionary Alliance, via Wuchow
Landis, Miss M. L., Christian and Missionary Alliance, via Wuchow
Landsborough, D., M.B., C.M., English Presbyterian Mission, Chianghoa, Formosa
Lane, Miss., Church of England Zenana Mission, Ciongbau via Foochow
Lane, Miss., English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu, Shansi
Lang, D. M., M.D., and wife, Church Missionary Society, 55, Motomachi, Hakodate Lang, Miss H., South Chilli Mission, Tamingfu
Langford, F. H., B.A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking
Langhorne, A., China Inland Mission, Yicheng via Peking
Langman, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Mokanshan
Langton, Miss H. G., Church Missionary Society, Tokyo (absent)
1804
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Laning, Dr. H., M.A., American Episcopal Mission, 5, Kawaguchi-Cho, Osaka Laning, Miss M., American Episcopal Mission, 19, Kobito Cho, Wakayama, Japan Laning, Miss S., American Episcopal Mission, 5, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka
Lanius, Miss A. B., Met. Episcopal Church South, Nagarikawa Cho, Hiroshima, Japan Lanneau, Miss S. S., American Southern Baptist Mission, Soochow
Lansing, Miss H. M., Reformed Dutch Church in America, Kagoshima, Japan (absent) Large, A. W., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Larsen, L. K., M.D., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Antung, Manchuria Larson, F. A., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Kalgan
Larson, Miss F. L., Scandinavian American Christian Free Mission, Canton Larsson, G. E., Swedish Holiness Union, Tatungfu via Taiyuanfu
Lasell, S. L., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Kacheck via Hoihow, Hainan Latimer, J. V., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Huchowfu Latourette, K. S., PH.P., Yale Foreign Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan Lattimore, Miss M., American Presbyterian Mission, Hwaiyuan, An,, via Nanking Latter, Miss H. M., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Kongmoon, via Hongkong Lavington, A., China Inland Mission Shanghai
Law Keem, M.D., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Fatshan Lawrence, A., and wife, B. & F. Bible Society, 95, Vedo Machi, Kobe Lawrence, Mrs. A., Church Missionary Society, Mowchow
Lawrence, Rev. B. F., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Suining, Sze. Laws, A. F., Church of England (S.P.G.), Kanghoa, Corea
Lawson, D., and wife, China Inland Mission, U-u (Chen) (Luanfu) via Peking Lawson, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yuanchow Ki, via Kiukiang Lawson, Miss L., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiating
Lawton, W. W., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Chengchow, Honan Lay, Miss A. C., China Inland Mission, Kinki, via Kiukiang
Laycock, A. P., M.A., M.B., B.CH., China Inland Mission, Kaifeng via Hankow Layman, H. L., and wife, Methodist Protestant Mission, 38, Hinode Cho, Yokohama Layton, E. A., M.D., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking
Lea, Bishop A., M. A., and wife, Ch. Missionary Society, 96, Daimyo Machi, Fukuoka, Japan Lea, H. A. H., MLA., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Leach, Miss, Unconnected, Shihtao via Chefoo
Leaman, C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking Leaman, Miss L., American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking
Leaman, Miss M. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking
Leander, A., and wife, Swedish Baptist Mission, Kiaochow
Learmonth, B.L.L., M.B., C.M., and wife, Irish Presbyterian Mission, Sinminfu via N'chwang Learned, D. W., D.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Imadegawa-dori, Kyoto Japan Learned, Miss Grace, American Board Mission Doshisha Girls' School, Kyoto, Japan Learner, Miss M., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa
Leathers, Miss M., Church Missionary Society, Taichowfu
Leavitt, Miss J., American Presbyterian, Mission, Tanabe, Wakayama Ken, Japan Leavens, D. H., B.A., Yale Foreign Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Leavens, Miss D. D., American Board of Commissioners for For. Missions, Tungchow, Chi
Lebeus, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sienyu via Foochow
Lechler, J. H., M.B., Church Missionary Society, Mienchuhsien, Sze.
Lecky, Miss H., English Presbyterian Mission, Changpu, via Ámoy
Ledliard, Miss Mary., Ch. of Christ, Mission, 267, Nakazato, Takinogawa Mura, Tokyo Lee, C. M., M.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wusih
Lee, E. J., M.A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Anking
Lee, G., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea
Lee, S., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wnsueh, via Kiukiang
Lee, W. K., Book Room and Educational Depository, Shanghai
Lee, Miss., Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Lee, Miss A., Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Lee, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagoya, Japan (absent)
Lee, Miss V. J., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Hangchow
Leggat, Miss B., China Inland Mission, Chenchowfu via Hankow
Leggate, A. R, M.B., CH.B., United Free Ch. of Sootland, Chaoyangchen via Newchwang Lehmann, Miss H., China Inland Mission, Nankangfu via Kiukiang
Lehmann, R., chairinan-ingenieur, Cerman Church, Tokyo
Leiser, F. O., B.A., and wife, International Committee of the Y. M. C. A., Canton Leith, Miss A. G., China Inland Mission, Kweiki, via Kiukiang
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1805
Leland, H. D., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Iwakuni, Yamaguchi Ken, Japan Lenander, Miss E. Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfu, Chi
Lenneau, Miss S., American, Soochow
Lennox, Miss C., North-West Kiangsi Mission, Wucheng, Ki.
Lennox, Mrs. E. J., North-West Kiangsi Mission, Wucheng, Ki.
Leonard, Miss E. E., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Peking
Leonhardt, T., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Moilim via Swatow
Lequear, H. R., Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow via Hankow Lerrigs, C. E., and wife, International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Hongkong Leslie, P.C., M.D., M.R.C.S., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho. Lester, W. H., and wife, Unconnected, Kiukiang
Lester, Miss E. S., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Soochow Leete, Miss J. M.. Church Missionary Society Mienchow, Sze.
Leuschner, W., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Shiuchowfu via Canton Leverett, W. J., American Presbyterian Mission, Nodoa vin Hoihow, Hainan. Leveritt, Miss E.D., Methodist Episcopal Churcli South U.S.A., Changchow Lewin, Miss G., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Lewis, A. B., China Inland Mission, Hanchungfu via Hankow and Sianfu Lewis, Bishop W. S, D.D., LL.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow Lewis, Dr., English Baptist Mission, Taiyuanfu, Shansi
Lewis, Miss Alice G., Society of Friends, 30, Koun Machi, Mita, Shiba, Tokyo Lewis, Miss Amy G., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama Jo Gakuin, Akasaka, Tokyo Lewis, Charles, G., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Suifu via Chungking Lewis, Charles, M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfu via Tientsin Lewis, G. W., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Ungkung via Swatow Lewis, S., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chinkiang Lewis, S. C., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Chenchow, Hunan Lewis, Miss E. F., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfu Lewis, Miss E., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow Lewis, Miss G. B., "Broadcast Tract" Press, Changsha, Hunan Lewis, Miss H., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Lewis, Miss Stella W., C. of Christ Misn., 2,395, Minami Kawahori Cho, Minamiku, Osaka Leybourn, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hokchiang via Foochow
Lide, Miss J. W., American Southern Baptist Mission, Tengchowfu, via Chefoo
Liddell, J. D., and wife, London Missionary Society, Chichow via Peking
Liddell, Miss M. M. E., China Inland Mission, Shekichen via Hankow
Lifbom, J. A., Swedish Holiness Union, Tatungfu via Taiyuanfu
Light, Sol F., Y.M.C.A., teacher, 123, Nagata Cho, Kagoshima, Japan Light, Miss K., London Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow
Lilly, C., Y.M.C.A., teacher, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan
Lilly, Miss Ruby, American Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Wonsan, Corea Linam, Miss A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yenpingfu via Foochow
Lincoln, C.F.S., M.D., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Lindblad, Miss A. C., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Lindberg, J. E, and wife, Swedish Baptist Mission, Chucheng, Kiaochow
Linden, H., and wife, Rhienish Missionary Society, Thongtauha via Hongkong
Lindenmeyer, Fr., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow via Swatow
Linder, L. H. E., Swedish Mission in China, Tungchowfu, She.
Lindgren, Miss E., Swedish Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow
Lindholm, Miss E. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Ningpo
Lindsay, A. W., D.D.S., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Lindsay, W. W., B.L., and wife, China, Inland Mission, Kuling via Kiukiang
Lindsey, Miss L. A., German Reformed Ch. of U. S., Highashi Samban Cho, Sendai, Japan Lindstrom, C. F., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Kiukiang Lindstrom, H., and wife, Christian and Miss. Alliance, 24, Shino Naka Machi, Hiroshima Lindvall, Miss D., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Sianfu via Hankow
Lingle, W. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Siangtan, Hunan
Linom, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Küwo via Peking
Lipp, E., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Moilim via Swatow
Lippard, C. K., D.D., and wife, Lutheran Mission, Saga, Japan
Leppin, Miss B. U. A., Liebenzell Mission, Yuanchow via Yochow
Littell, S. H., B.A., and wife, American Prot. Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow Little, L. L., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Kiangyin Little, C., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
1806
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Little, Miss E. L.,Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Littlewood, G. P., United Methodist Church Mission, Yungpingfu
Livens, Miss, London Missionary Society, Peking
Llandler, Miss A. B., American Board Mission, Sapporo
Lloyd, L., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow Lloyd, H., American Episcopal Mission, 45, Tsukiji, Tokyo Lloyd, Miss E., London Missionary Society, Peking
Lloyd, Miss F., China Inland Mission, Nanpu via Ichang
Lloyd, Miss J., English Presbyterian Missión, Tainan, Formosa
Loyde, Miss M. A., China Inland Mission, Shekichen, via Hankow
Loader, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Saiong via Foochow
Lobdell, N. L., and wife, Universalist Mission, 79, Oiwa Muta, Shizuoka
Lobenstine, E. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hwaiyüan, An., via Nanking Lochead, A. W., B.A., B.D., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Weihwei, Ho. Locke, W. T., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chenchow, Hunan Locke-King, Miss., Church of England Zenana Mission, Saiong via Foochow Lockwood, W. W., PH.B., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Shanghai Loeber, Rev. Chas., and wife, Amer. Meth. Episcopal Church Mission, Chemulpo, Cores Lochr, G. R., M.A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Sungkiangfu Loftus, Z. C., M.D., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Batang Logan, C. A., and wife, American Southern Presbyterian Mission, Tokushima, Japan Logan, O. T., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Changteh via Hankow Loliss, O. H., Basel Missionary Society, Hoshoowan, via Canton and Weichow Lombard, F. A., American Board Mission, Mutomachi Dori, Kyoto
London, Miss M. H., American Presbyterian Mission, 33, Kami Niban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Long, Miss H., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kagoshima, Japan (absent) Longden, W. C., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chinkiang Longley, R. S., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Junghsien Longstaff, Miss, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Taianfu via йankow Longstreet, Miss I. D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Lekdu via Foochow Loomis, H., and wife, American Bible Society, 223, Bluff, Yokohama
Loomis, Miss C. D., M.A., Women's Union Miss. Soc. of America, 223, Bluff, Yokohama Loosley, A. O., and wife, China Inland Mission, Tientai via Ningpo
Lorenz Miss F. V., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kucheng via Foochow
Loughlin, Miss M. E., South Chihli Mission, Weilsien
Louthan, A. D., M.D., American Southern Baptist Mission, Chengchow, Hon an Loveless, Miss A. M., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Lovell, G., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Changteh, Hunan
Lowe, C. J., and wife, Bible Missionary Society, Macao
Lowe, J. W., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Laichow via Chefoo Lower, T. E., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Hsinchow, Shansi
Lowery, M. L., Y.M.C.A., teacher, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan
Lowrie, J. W., D.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfu via Tientsin Lowry, G. D. N., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Lowry, H. H., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Lowrey, Miss E., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Canton Lowrey, Miss V., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Canton Lucas, B. D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Soochow Lucas, Miss G. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking
Lucas, Miss O. C., China Inland Mission, Chuhsien, Sze., via Ichang
Luce, H. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Lund, F. E., and wife, American Protesta ut Episcopal Church Mission, Wuhu Lundgren, G., and wife, Apostolic Faith Mission, Chengtingfu, Chi.
Lundvall, Miss H., Scandinavian Allice, Missn. Tsingchow, Kan., via Hankow and Sianfu Luther, Miss Ida R., American Presbyterian Mission, Pyeng Yang, Corca Lutley, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hungtung via Peking Lutschewitz, W., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Tsimo via Tsingtau Lyall, A., M.B., C.M., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Lykkegaard, J., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Fenghwangcheng via Newchwang Lynn, Miss N., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Pingtah via Wuchow
Lyon, C., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsiningehow via Chinkiang Lyon, D. W., M.A., B.D., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Shanghai Lyon, Mrs. M. E., American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow Lyon, Miss E., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Lyon, Miss E. M., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow Lyon, Miss L. D., American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow Lyons, H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyangfu via Peking
1807
Lyons Miss L. E., Amer, Board of Commissioners for For. Missions, Pangchun via T'tsin. Lyttle, W., and wife, United Methodist Church, Mission, Ningpo
Maag, E., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Chuchow via Wenchow
MacArthur, Miss, English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu via Amoy
MacBean, Miss J. A., M.D., C.M., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Kongmoon via H'kong. Macdonald, Miss A. C., Y. W. C A., 41, Sanban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Macdauley, Clay, Unitarian Mission, Shikoku Machi, Mita, Tokyo, Japan Macdonald, Miss A. Caroline, Y.M.C.A., Kogimachi, Tokyo
Macdonald, Miss C. C., China Inland Mission, Iyang, Ki., via Kiuking Macdonald, Miss J. E. McN., China Inland Mission, Liuanchow via Wuhu Macdonald, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Chowkiakow via Hankow
MacEwan, H. G., China Inland Mission, Changteh, Hunan
MacFadyen, A. A., M.D., and wife, Am. Presbyterian Men. (South), Süchowfu via Chinkiang Macfarlane, A. J., M.A., London Missionary Society, Hankow
MacGill, Miss C. B., Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
MacGillivray, D., M.A., B D., and wife, Christian Literature Society, Shanghai Macgowan, J., London Missionary Society, Amoy
MacGown, Miss M. G., American Board Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Tientsin Machle, E. C., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Macintyre, Mrs. W., United Free Church of Scotland, Haicheng via Newchwang Macintyre, Miss B., United Free Church of Scotland, Kaiyuen via Newchwang MacIver, D., M.A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Wukingfu via Swatow Mackay, Miss J., English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu via Amoy Mackey, Miss M. A., M.D., American Presbyterian, Mission, Paotingfu via Peking
Mackenzie, A. R., M.A., B.D., United Free Church of Scotland, Liaoyang via Newchwang Mackenzie, M., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho Mackenzie, M., B.A., M.B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Mackenzie, M. C., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Sam-ho-pa via Swatow Mackenzie, N., Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Mackenzie, Miss J. K., American Southern Baptist Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Mackie, Miss J., Church Missionary Society, Tokushima, Japan
Macklin, W. E., M.D., and wife, Foreigu Christian Missionary Society, Nanking
Maclagan, P. J., M.A., D.PHIL, and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow Maclagan, Miss G. J., English Presbyterian Mission, Changpu, via Amoy
MacLaren, Miss J., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Macleod, K., and wife, China Inland Mission, Ninghai via Ningpo
MacMillan, Y.M.C.A., teacher, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan
MacNair, T. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, 2, Nishimachi, Tokyo (absent) MacNaughtan, W., M.A.,and wife, United Free Church of Sland., Chaoyangchen via N'chwang Macpherson, A. K., China Inland Mission, Fenghwa via Niugpo
MacRae, Miss E., American Episcopal Mission, Maebashi, Japan
MacWillie, J., M.D., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Madden, M. B. (and wife, absent), Church of Christ Mission, 69, Kwozenji Dori, Sendai Maddison, Miss A., Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Madeley, F., M.A., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Chingchowfu, Shantung
Madeley, W. F., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Wakamatsu, Japan
Madsen, C., Danish Lutheran Mission, Antung via Newchwang
Maggi, Miss, American Presbyterian Mission, Shuntehfu, Chihli
Magnusson, A., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Paotéo, Wangjefu, via Peking Maguet, Miss E., Amer, Pres. Mission, Wilmina Jo Gakko, Osaka, Japan
Mahood, Miss Lillie, Police Mission, 40, Ogawa Manda, Tokyo
Maier, M., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Phyangtong via Swatow
Maier, Miss B., Independent, Tsaohsien, Shantung
Maier, Miss, English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu, Shansi
Maier, H., Basel Missionary Society, Chongtsun, via Swatow and Hsingning
Main, D., L.R.C.P., F.R.C.S., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow Main, W. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Mair, A., China Inland Mission, Anking
Mair, Miss C. F., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Ham Hung, Corea
Maisch, W., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Hoshoowan via Canton and Weichow Major, J. N., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
1808
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Makeham, Miss S. E., Canadian Board Mission, Matsumoto, Japan Malcolm, W. R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Taiho, An., via Nanking Mallett, Miss G., Methodist Protestant Mission, 244-B, Bluff, Yokohama Malone, G. H., and wife, American Advent Christian Mission, Nanking Malott, Miss D. R., Independent, Piyanghsien, Honan Malpas, E. J., B.A., and wife, London Missionary Society, Shanghai Manderson, Miss M., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking Mandeville, Miss E. M., China Inland Mission, Hwochow via Peking Manger, Miss, English Baptist Mission, Hsinchow, Shansi Manly, W. E., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu Mann, E. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Fukiang, Kan. Mann, I. J., Baptist Mission, Peking
Mann, J. C., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hamada, Japan Mann, Miss I. P., American Episcopal Mission, Utsunomiya, Japan Manning, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tzechow, Szę. Manns, Miss S., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Shanghai Manz, F., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Fuchow, Ki. March, A. W., American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow
Marchbank, Miss N., China Inland Mission, Kweiki via Kiukiang
Marker, Miss J. B., Women's F.M.S. of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Seoul
Marker, Miss Jessie., American Meth. Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea
Markland, Miss O. N., Canadian Methodist Mission, 8, Tomizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Marriott, M. S., Mormon Mission, Sapporo, Japan
Marriott, Miss J. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tehwa via Foochow
Marrs, Miss A. S., Friends' Foreign Mission, Tungchwan, Sze.
Marshall, Dr. F. W., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Chuchai via Ningching Marshall, G. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kanchow, Ki., via Kiukiang
Marshall, G. W., and wife. American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Marshall, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Lienkong via Foochow Marston, Mrs. L. D., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Martin, A. W., M.A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking Martin, J., Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Martin, J. B., and wife, China Inland Mission (in Europe)
Martin, W. A. P., D.D., LL.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Peking
Martin, Miss C., American Episcopal Mission, Kawagoye, Saitama Ken, Japan Martin, Miss E., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau
Martin, Miss R., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Martinson, A., and wife, American Lutheran Mission, Kioshan, Honan
Masliu, T. P., B.A., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow Mason, H. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kingtzekan via Hankow Mason, I., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Suining via Chungking Mason, Miss B. O., Book Room and Educational Depository, Shanghai
Mason, Miss Pansy, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kiatingfu via Chungking Massey, Miss E. E., Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Massey, Miss R., M.B., CH.B., London Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow Mateer, Mrs. C. W., American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Mateer, R. M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau Mather, W. A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfu via Tientsin Mathews, H., and wife, Church of England Mission, Taian via Tsingtau Mathews, R. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Sihwa via Hankow Mathews, Miss M. S., American Presbyterian Mission South, Hangchow Matson, A., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Ito, Idzu, Japan
Matson, P., and wife, Swedish American Missionary Covenant Siangyang via Hankow Matthew, Miss M. L., Y. W. C. A., 41, Samban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo
Matthews, W. K., and wife, Southern Methodist Episcopal Miss., Kwansei Gakuin, Kobe Matthewson, W. P., and wife, Free Methodist Mission, Osaka Japan, (absent) Mattox, F. L., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow Maurer, H., Basel Missionary Society, Chionghangkang via Hongkong Maute, S., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Nyenhangli via Swatow Maw, W. A., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Mawson, W., M.A., and wife, Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Canton Mawson, W. G., and wife, Church of England Mission, Pingyin via Chefoo Mawson, Miss J., Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Canton Maxwell, J. L., M.D., B.SC., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
1809
Maxwell, J. P., M.B. B.SC. F.R.C.S., and wife, Eng. Presbyterian Msn., Eng-chun via Amoy Mayer, Paul, and wife, Evang. Assoc. of North America, 44, Tsukiji, Tokyo Mayer, S., Basel Missionary Society, Fophin, via Swatow and Hsingning Mayes, Dr. W. C., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Wonsani, Corea McAll, P. L., B.A., M.B., CH.B., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hankow
McAlpine, R. E., and wife, Amer. Southern Pres. Mission, Shirakabe Cho, Nagoya, Japan McAlpine, R. M., Unconnected, Jeho via Peking
MeAmmond, R. B., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Junghsien
McBurney, Miss J. G., M.D., American Reformed Pres. Church, Takhing via Canton McBurney, Miss K. W., M.D., American Reformed Pres. Church, Takhing via Canton McCaleb, J. M., and wife, Independent, 68, Zoshigaya, Koishikawa, Tokyo
McCallie, H. D., Amer. Presbyterian Mission South, Mokpo
McCall, C. A., and wife, Church of Christ, Mission, Narayama, Akita, Japan McCandliss, H. M., M.D., and wife, American Pres. Mission, Hoihow, Hainan
McCann, J. H., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Msns., Linching McCarthy, F., L.C.P., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
McCarthy, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yunnanfu via Hokow and Mengtze McCarthy, W., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Msn., Anking McCartney, J. H., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking McCauley, Mrs. J. K., American Presbyterian Mission, 356, Okubo, Tokyo McClelland, Miss., Church Missionary Society, Goosangche via Foochow
McClintock, P. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Nodoa via Hoihow, Hainan McCloy, Dr. Thos., and wife, Independent, 4, Hikawa Cho, Akasaku, Tokyo McClure, W., M.D., B.A., and wife, Canadian Pres. Mission, Weihwei, Ho. McCord, E. K., and wife, American Christian Convention, Sendai (absent)
McCorkle, R.A., and wife, Ch. of Chr. Miss., 2,395, Minami Kawahiori Cho, Minamiku, Osaka, McCormick, Mrs. M. P., American Presbyterian Mission South, Soochow
McCoy, R. D., and wife, Church of Christ Miss., 267, Nakazato Takinogawa Mura, Tokyo McCoy, Miss B. C., American Presbyterian Mission, Peking
McCracken, J. C., M.D., and wife, Canton Christian College, Canton
McCulloch, R. A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Jaochow via Kiukiang
McCulloch, Miss F. E., China Inland Mission, Hokow, Ki., via Kiukiang
McCully, Miss., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Ham Hung, Corea
McCutchan, H. W., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Sutsien, via Chinkiang
McCutchan, J. T., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Miss. South, Taichow, Ku., via Chinkiang McCutchen, L. O., American Presbyterian Mission South, Chun-ju, Corea
McDaniel, C. G., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Soochow
McDonald, J. A., M.D., C.M., and wife, Canadian Pres. Misn., Koongmoon, via Hongkong McDonald, Miss F. M., China Inland Mission, Luanfu, Sha, via Peking
McDowall, W. C., M.A., Church of England Mission, Peking
McEwen, Miss, Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Canton
McFarland, E. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Church Mission, Taiku, Corea McFarlane, Miss C., China Inland Mission, Kwangsinfu via Ningpo
McGill, W. B., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Pingyang, Corea
McGill, Miss E., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Hwaikingfu, Ho.
McGinnis, J. Y., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Tunghianghsien McGinnis, R. H., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Kasegi Machi, Ötsu, Japan McGregor, Miss M. B., English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
McIlwaine, W. B., and wife, Amer. Southern Pres. Miss., 180, Takajo Machi, Kochi, Japan McIntosh, G., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai McIntosh, Miss I., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Weibwei, Ho. McIntosh, Miss M. I., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho.
McIntyre, R. L., and wife, China Inland Mission, Suifu, via Chungking
McIntyre, Miss, L., American Southern Baptist Mission, Chengchow, Honan
McKay, H., Jun'r., Book Room and Educational Depository, Shanghai
McKay, W. R., M.A., B.D., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Misn., Kongmoon via H'kong. McKenzie, C. F., M.D., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kinhwafu McKenzie, D. R., D.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Kanazawa, Japan
McKenzie, N., Church Missionary Society, Shinhing via Canton
McKenzie, Miss R., China Inland Mission, Tyang, Ki., via Kiukiang McKie, G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Luanfu via Peking McKillican, Miss J. C., American Presbyterian Mission, Peking.
Mckim, Rt. Rev. Bishop J., D.D., and wife, American Episcopal Miss., 38, Tsukiji, Tokyo
McKim, Miss B., American Episcopal Mission, 11, Higashi Ichiban Cho, Sendai, Japan
57
1810
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
McLachlin, L. E., B.A., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Foochow McLean, H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Talifu via Mengtze
McLean, Miss R., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Kongmoon, via Hongkong McLennan, Miss E., B.A., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho. McLeod, D., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Tamsui McMillan, Dr. Kate., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Ham Hung, Corea MeMordie, Miss E., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Moukden McMullan, James., and wife, Chefoo Industrial Mission, Chefoo
McMurtry, S. O., B.A., M.D., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Weihwei, Ho. McNeill, Miss, E., B.A., United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
McNeill, Miss M., L.R.C.P. & S., Irish Pres. Church Miss., Kwangchengtze via Newchwang McNeur, G. H., and wife, Presbyterian Church of New Zealand, Canton MeNulty, H. A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Soochow MeOwan, B. M., and wife, Church of England Mission, Taian via Tsingtau McPherson, J. L., M.A., International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Hongkong Melhun, J. F., M.B., C.M., English Presbyterian Mission, Sam-ho-pa via Swatow McQuillan, Miss A., Church of Scotland Mission, Ichiang
McRae, C. F., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai McRae, D. M., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Ham Hung Corea McRae, Miss E., American Board Mission. Maebashi, Japan
McRobert, Miss B., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Sutsien via Chinkiang McRoberts, W. A., China Inland Mission, Fenghwa via Ningpo
McWhirter, J., M.A., and wife, Irish Presbyterian Ch. Misn., Kwangning via Newchwang McWilliams, Miss, Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Fakumen via Newelwang Mead, A. W., China Inland Mission, Ilweichow via Tatung
Mead, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Mead, Miss L., Amer. Bapt. Miss. Union, 11, Kamidon Shichome, Nishi Ku, Osaka, Japan Meade, J. L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Meade, Miss B., American Episcopal Church, Wakamatsu, Japan
Meadows, J. G., M.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Wuchow via Canton Meadows, J. J., China Inland Mission, Shohsingfu
Mearlows, Miss J., American Southern Baptist Mission, Wuchow via Canton Meadows, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Shohsingfu
Meadows, Miss Lily, China Inland Mission, Shohsingfu
Mebane, Miss Mary G., American Southern Presbyterian Mission, Kochi, Japan (absent) Medland, Miss L., London Missionary Society, Amoy
Melling, P. P., and wife, Amer. Southern Bap, Miss., 68, Ilirano Cho, Kagoshima, Japan Meebold, Miss A. J., American Board of Comin'rs for For. Mission, Inghok via Foochow Meech, S. E., London Missionary Society, Peking
Meedar, M., and wife, Finnish Missionary Society, Yuingting via Shashi
Meengs, Miss A. H., Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Meigs, F. E, and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking
Meikle, W. L., and wife, Free Methodist Mission, 5,401, Shimpoin Cho, Tennoji, Osaka Meikle, J., China Inland Mission, Siufenghsien via Kiukiang
Mellodey, Miss L., Church Missionary Society, Mienchulsion, Sze.
Mellor, Miss A. E., China Inland Mission, Liangchowfu via Hankow and Sianfu
Mellow, J. H., China Inland Mission, Yingchowfu via Wuhu
Melrose, Mrs. M. R., American Presbyterian Mission, Nodoa, Hainan
Melton, Miss M. E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagasaki (absent)
Melville, T., and wife, Unconnected, Fungsinhsien via Kiukiang
Menzies, J., M.D., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Hwaikingfu, IIo.
Menzies, Mrs. A., China Inland Mission, Wenchow
Menzies, Miss B., Australian Presbyterian Mission, Fusan, Corea
Merchant, Miss, Church Missionary Society, To-sung via Foochow
Merrill, L., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chinkiang
Merrill, Miss C. E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kiukiang
Merrington, Mrs. Unconnected, Pakow via Tangshan
Merrins, E. M., M.D., and wife, Amer. Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Mertens, Miss E. D., Church: Missionary Society, Chungpa, Sze.
Metcalfe, Miss G. E., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Metcalfe, Miss E. E., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Meyer, O., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Hongkong
Meyers, J. T., and wife, Meth. Episcopal Church South, Nobori Cho, Hiroshima, Japan.
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1811
Middleton, R. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Meihsien via Hankow Miederer, C., China Inland Mission, Linkiang via Kiukiang
Miles, B. N., B. A., and wife, S. P. G., 34, Nakamura Machi, Yokohama Miles, G., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Teianfu, via Hankow Miller, A., China Inland Mission, Fenghwa via Ningpo
Miller, D., China Inland Mission, Ningkwofu via Wuliu
Miller, E. H., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea
Miller, E. D., Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Chowkiakow, Honan
Miller, E. P., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang
Miller, E. R., M.A., and wife, Reformed Dutch Church in America, Kojimachi, Tokyo
Miller, F. S., American Presbyterian Mission, Chongju, Corea
Miller, G., and wife, Chinese Inland Mission, Ningkwofu, via Wuhu
Miller, H. K., and wife, Amer. German Reformed Miss., 59, Kwozenji Dori, Sendai, Japan Miller, H. W., M.D., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Shanghai
Miller, Hugh, Agent, British Foreign Bible Society, Seoul, Corea
Miller, J. A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shuntehfu, Chihli
Miller, J. B., and wife, China Inland Mission, Tunglu via Hangchow
Miller, L.S.C., Evangelical Lutheran Miss., 847, Haruyoshi Shichiban Cho, Fukuoka, Japan Miller, Mrs. B., Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Shanghai
Miller, Miss Alice., Independent, Naka Cho Nichome, Yotsuya, Tokyo
Miller, Miss B. F., Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow via Hankow
Miller, Miss B., Women's Union Mission, Shanghai
Miller, Miss E. J., M.B., CH.B., United Free Church of Scotland, Liaoyang via Newchwang Miller, Miss C. A., Anierican Southern Baptist Mission, Laichow via Chefoo Miller, Miss L. A., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Chemulpo Millican, F. R., and wife, Am. Free Methodist Mission in China, Chihsien, Honan
Milliken, Miss E. P., Amer. Presbyterian Misn., 33, Kami Niban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo Millman, R. M., and wife, Church Missionary Society, 443, Takeya Mura, Hiroshima, Japan Mills, E. O., Y. M. C. A., teacher, Chofu, Yamaguchi Ken, Japan
Mills, D. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kiukiang
Mills, Mrs. A. T., Mission to Chinese Deaf, Chefoo
Millward, W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Milsum, W. B., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyaohsien via Peking
Milward, W., and wife, National Bible Society of Scotland, Amoy
Milton, Ensign, Salvation Army, Seoul, Corea
Miner, G. S., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Miner, Miss L., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking
Minkkinen, D., and wife, Evang. Lutheran Miss, Shimosuwa, Shinshiu, Japan Minniss, Miss L. V., American Baptist Missionary Union, Kinhwafu Mintle, Miss R., Hephzibah, Faith Mission, Choshi, Shimosa, Japan
Minty, C. S., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow
Miskelly, W., M.A., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Kyushu, Kirin
Mitchell, E. C., and wife, American Reformed Pres. Mission, Takhing via Canton Mitchell, I. E., M.D., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Canton Mitchell, R. A., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Msn., Weihwei, Ho. Mitchell, T. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Chenchow, Hunan Mitchell, Miss Ida, M.D., Irish Presbyterian Mission, Fakumen via Newchwang Mitchell, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Church South US A., Shanghai Mitchell, Miss M. S., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Mitchil, Mrs. C. W., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hanyang via Hankow Mjelve, H., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Nanyangfu, Honan Moberg, Miss S. O., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Moffett, L. I., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Kiangyin Moffett, S. A., D.D., and wife, Msn. of Pres. Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Moffett, Miss C., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Soochow
Mohler, F. M., Y. M. C. A., Hongkong
Moler, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Pingyanghsien via Wenchow Molland, Mrs. C. E., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking
Molony, H. J., D.D., Bishop, and wife, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo Mouch, F., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Tsungjen via Kiukiang Moncrieff, H., M.A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Chiang, Formosa Moneure, John, American Southern Baptist Mission, 29, Sakura Baba, Nagasaki Monk, Miss A. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Sapporo, Japan Montfort, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Sieng-iu via Foochow
57*
+
I
1812 PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Montgomery, Capt. S. Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo
Montgomery, J. H., M.B., CH.B., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Changpu viaAmoy Montgomery, R. P., Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Montgomery, T. II., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsingtau
Montgomery, Miss 4. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Kiungehow, Hoihow, Hainan Moody, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Anjen via Kiukiang
Moomau, Miss A., Apostolic Faith Mission, Shanghai
Moon, Miss Lottie, American Southern Baptist Mission, Téngchowfu via Chefoo Moore, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Liangchowfu via Hankow and Sianfu Moore, J. Z., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Pyengyang Moore, J. P., D.D., and wife, German Reformed Church in the U. S., Akasaka, Tokyo Moore, J. R, and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Mission South, Seoul
ני
Moore, J. W., and wife, Amer. Southern Presbyterian Mission, Susaki, Kochi Ken, Japan Moore, Miss. Church Missionary Society, Fonchow
Moore, Miss Ella, Society of Friends, 26, Rizen Machi, Mito, Japan Moore, Miss E. S., Australian Presbyterian Mission, Fusan, Corea
Moore, Miss M. E., American Presbyterian Mission, Sapporo Japan
Moore, Miss M. E., B.A., Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Moorman, Miss M. E., American Southern Baptist Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Moose, J. W., and wife, Presbyterian Church U.S.A. South, Susaki, Japan
Moose, Rev. J. R., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Chunchew
Moran, H. A., B.A., International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Hankow
Morgan, E., and wife, Christian Literature Society, Shanghai
Morgan, E. L., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Chefoo Morgan, E. W., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Morgan, H. B., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Morgan, J. B., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Agricultural College, Sapporo, Japan
Morgan, L. S., M.D., and wife, Am. Prosbyterian Msu. (South), Tsingkiangpu via Chinkiang Morgan, Miss C., China Inland Mission, Talifu via Mengtze
Morgan, Miss Agnes, American Presbyterian Mission, Wilmina Jo Gakko, Osaka, Japan Morgan, Miss F. K., Canadian Methodist Mission, 8, Tomizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Morgan, Miss I. V., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Naulinghsien via Wuhu Moritz, Miss S., Hildesheim Mission for the Blind, Kowloon
Morley, A., L.R.C.S. & P., ED., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Teianfu via Hankow Morris, A. R., American Episcopal Mission, 141, Bluff, Yokohama
Morris, C. D., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Yeng Byen, Corea
Morris, D. B. S., American Presbyterian Mission, Hwaiyuan, An., via Nanking
Morris, Miss Jean, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Morris, Miss F. L., China Inland Mission, Kichsiu via Peking
Morris, Miss S., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Morrison, Miss M. C., Reformed Church in America, Chiang-chiu via Amoy
Mort, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Gong-tau via Foochow
Mortimore, W. J., B.A., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu
Morton, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
Morton, Miss E. H., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Tsingkiangpu
Morton, Miss M., American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
Moseley, C. B., and wife, Meth. Epis. Church South, 23, Kita Nagasu Dori Shichome, Kobe
Mosher, G. F., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wusih,
Mosser, Miss Clara, Amer. German Reformed Misn. Higashi Sanban Cho, Sendai, Japan Mosson, Miss E. M., Chefoo Industrial Mission, Chefoo
Mottley, F. W., B.A., Canton Christian College, Canton
Moule, A. E., Archdeacon, B.D., Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Moule, A. J. H., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shanghai
Moule, G. E., Bishop, D.D., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Moule, G. H., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Takeda, Japan (absent)
Moule, H. W., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hangchow Moule, W. A. H., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shanghai
Moule, W. S., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Moule, Miss J. F., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Moulton, Miss J., Reformed Dutch Church in America, 178, Bluff, Yokohama Mountford, Miss B., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow
Mowatt, J. A., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Hwaikingfu, Ho
Mower, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Hwailu via Peking
Muir, D. D., L.R.C.P. & S., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Tichling via Newchwang
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Muir, J. R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Batang, Sze.
Muir, Miss G. M., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Muir, Miss W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang
Muller, C., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Longheu, via Hongkong
1813
Muller, G., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Lungchuan, Che., via Wenchow Muller, H., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Hongkong
Muller, J., and wife, Berlin Foundling House, Hongkong
Müller, W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Mulloney, J. J., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Mumford, D. C., M.D., and wife, United Evangelical Church Mission, Liling via Yochow
Munn, W., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze.
Mundle, Miss S., United Free Church of Scotland, Liaoyang via Newchwang Mungeam, H. J., China Inland Mission, Pingyaohsien via Peking
Munro, J. M., China Inland Mission, Wenchow
Munroe, E. R., and wife, Oriental Missionary Society, Yaumatei, via Hongkong
Munroe, H. H., and wife, Southern Presbyterian Mission, 159, Ohashi Dori Kochi, Japan Munson, Miss A. M., China Inland Mission, Küwo via Peking
Murdock, Miss A., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Hwaiyuan, An., via Nanking Murdock, Miss Margaret, American Presbyterian Mission, Hwaiyuan An., via Nanking Murdock, Miss Mary, American Presbyterian Mission, Hwaiyuan An., via Nanking Murfitt, Miss J. E., United Methodist Church Mission, Ningpo
Murphy, U. G., and wife, Methodist Protestant Mission, Nagoya (absent)
Murray, D. A., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, 22, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka Murray, D. S., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tsangchow, via Tientsin
Murray, E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Murray, J., American Presbyterian Mission, Tsinan via Tsingtau
Murray, J., M.A., London, Missionary Society, Tientsin.
Murray, W. H., and wife, Mission for the Chinese Blind, Peking
Murray, Miss C. K., China Inland Mission (in England)
Murray, Miss E. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Siangtan, Hunan
Murray, Miss H., Mission for the Chinese Blind, Peking
Murray, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang
Myers, C. M., M.A., and wife, Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Myers, H. W., and wife, Sout. Presbyterian Mission, 112, Yamamoto Dori Shichome, Kobe Myers, Q. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Myers, Miss A. M., M.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Myers, Miss B., United Brethren in Christ, Canton
Myers, Miss M. D., American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Wonsan, Corea Mylne, C., United Methodist Church Mission, Chaotung, Yun.
Myrberg, A. A., Swedish Holiness Union, Soping via Taiyuanfu
Nagel, A., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Lilong via Hongkong
Nagel, Miss G., Kieler China Mission, Pakhoi
Nance, W. B., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Souchow
Napier, A. Y., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Yangchow, via Chinkiang Nash, Miss E., Church Missionary Society, Yonago, Hoki, Japan
Neal, J. B., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsinan via Tsingtau
Neale, F. H., and wife, China Inland Mission (in America)
Neave, J., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Neely, Miss C. J., American Episcopal Mission, 472, Nishi Okubo, Tokyo Fu, Japan Nelsen, J. P., and wife, Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Kurume, Japan
Nelson, C. A., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Canton Nelson, C. J., and wife, Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Siangyang via Haukow Nelson, D., and wife, American Lutheran Mission, Sinyangchow, Honan Nelson, Miss J., Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Fancheng via Hankow Netland, Mrs. O., American Lutheran Mission, Kioshan, Honan
Neubacher, M., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Chongtsun via Canton and Weichow Neumann, J. H., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Neumann, Miss E., Berlin Missionary Society, Shiuchowfa, via Canton
Neville, Miss C. G. L., St. Hilda's Mission, S.P.G., 1, Nagasaka Cho, Azabu, Tokyo Nevius, Mrs. J. L., American Presbyterian Mission, Chefoo
Newbold, Miss E. G., Amer. Episcopal Mission, 11, Higashi Ichiban Cho, Sendai, Japan Newcombe, Miss B., Church of England Zenana Mission, Sang-iong via Foochow Newcombe, Miss M., Church of England Zenana Mission, Sang-iong via Foochow Nowell, G. M., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow
814
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Nowell, Miss M., M.D., Women's Union Mission, Shanghai
Newell, Rev. H. B, and wife, American Board Mission, Matsuyama, Japan Newman, Miss H., St. Hilda's Mission, S.P.G., 1, Nagasaka Cho, Azabu, Tokyo Newman, Miss L., American Presbyterian Mission, Siangtan, Hunan
Newton, C. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kiungchow via Hoihow, Hainan Newton, J. C. C., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Chu. South, Kwansei Gakuin, Kobe Newton, W. C., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Newton, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Lienkong via Foochow
Newton, Miss G., American Presbyterian Mission, Paotingfu
Ng, Y. C., Missionary Home and Agency, Shanghai
Niblock, H. B., Chefoo Missionary Home, Chefoo
Nicholaisen, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sienyu via Foochow Nicholls, A. G., China Inland Mission, Sha p'u-shan, Yunnanfu
Nichols, H. S., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Nanlinghsien via Wuhu
Nichols, J. W., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Nichols, Miss L., American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Seoul Nicholson, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Ningtel via Foochow
Nickalls, E. C., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Tsingchowfu, Shantung Nicodemus, F. B., Y.M.C.A., teacher, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan Nicolai, His Grace Archbishop, Russian Ecclesiastical Mission, Tokyo Nielson, A. B., M.A., English Presbyterian Mission, Tainan, Formosa
Nielsen, N., M.D., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Hsiuyen via Newchwang Nielsen, Miss E., Danish Lutheran Mission, Takushan via Newchwang Niles, Miss M. W., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton Nilsen, Miss Anne, Hauges Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Nilson, J. G., und wife, Scandinavian Ch. Alliance Msn., Lungchow, She., via Hankow Nilson, P., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Pinchow via Hankow
Nilssen, J. E., M.A., M.D., and wife, Norwegian Missy. Soc., Taohualuen, Lyang via Changsla Nilsson, K., Swedish Missionary Society, Hwangchow, in Hankow Nisbet, J. 1., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, South, Chunju Nisbet, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kutien via Foochow Niven, G. C., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Gifu, Japan (absent) Niven, Miss A. G., Australian Presbyterian Mission, Fusan, Corea
Noble, W. A., PH.D., and wife, Amer. Methodist Episcopal Church Msn., Pyengyang, Corea Noble, Miss Faye, Y.M.C.A., 22, Fujimi Cho Gochome, Kojimachi, Tokyo, Japan Nolan, J. W., M.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Kwang-ju, Córea
Nolterius, Miss D., English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
Nordeu, Miss L., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Kienyang via Hankow Nordlund, V. L., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Sianfu via Hankow
Norgaard, P., International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Fenghwangcheng, Manchuria Norgaard, P., Danish Lutheran Mission, Hsiuyen via Kiukiang
Norman, D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission Nagano, Shinshiu, Japan Norman, Miss L., Independent, 12 Agata Machi, Nagano, Japan Norman, Miss R., Unconnected, Shangkaohsien via Kiukiang
Norris, F. L., M.A., Church of England Mission, Peking
North, T. E., B.A., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hanyang via Hankow North, Miss H. F., American Southern Baptist Mission, Shiuhing via Samshui
Norton, Dr. A. H., and wife, Auer. Meth. Episcopal Church Mission, Yeng Byen, Corea Norton, Miss E. L. B., Church Missionary Society, Sapporo, Japan
Nourse, Miss, M. A., American Baptist Missionary, Union, Hangchow Nott, Miss G., Church Missionary Society, Kumamoto, Japan (absent)
Nottidge, Miss H. E., Japan General Mission, Shiken Cho, Nikko, Japan Nowack, W. N., and wife, Independent, Piyanglisien, Bonan
Noyes, H. V., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Canton Noyes, W. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Canton Noyes, Miss H., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Nyberg, Miss L., Finnish Missionary Society, Yningting via Shashi Nyffenegger, Miss A., Independent, Tsachsien, Shantung
Nylund, Miss J., Lutheran Mission, Shimo Suwa, Shinshiu, Japan
Nylin, Miss L. M., Swedish Mission in China, Puchowfut via Peking
Nystrom, C. F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Ningsiafu via lankow and Sianfu Oakeshott, Miss R. E., China Inland Mission, Kienping via Wuhu
Oatway, Miss F. E., Church Missionary Society, Geng-tau via Foochow
Obee, E. I., and wife, Methodist Protestant Mission, 47, Chokyuji Machi, Nagoya, Japan
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1815
Oberg, O. E., and wife, Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Saratsi, via Peking Ockenden, E. C., and wife, Unconnected, Weihaiwei
Oehler, W., Basel Missionary Society, Chonghangkang via Hongkong Oehme, Miss, L. E., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wachow Ogborn, Miss K. L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Wuhu
Ogden, J. C., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Batang Ogden, Miss E. A., China Inland Mission, Kianfu, Ki., via Kinkiang Ogden, Miss M. R., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Anking Ohrset, Miss I., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Laohokow via Hankow Oisteso, I. B., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Missiou Tengchow, Honan Oldfield, W., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Oldham, H. W., English Presbyterian Mission, Changpu, via Amoy Oldham, J. H. B.A.. Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking
Oldham, Miss L., Church of Christ Mission, 35, Nakano-cho, Ichigaya, Tokyo Olds, C. B., and wife, American Board Mission, Miyazaki, Japan Oldt, F., M.D., and wife, United Brethren in Christ, Canton
Olesen, O., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Hsiuyen via Newchwang
Olesen, P. O., China Inland Mission, Anshunfu, via Yochow and Kweiyang Oliver, Miss E., American Friends' Mission, Nanking
Olson, Miss A., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Sang-kia-chwang, Wukung via Hankow Olson, Miss E., Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Olsen, C. A., Swedish Holiness Union, Tatungfu via Taiyuanfu
Olsen, F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kiungchow, Sze.
Olsen, Miss O., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Pingliang, and Sianfa via Hankow Omelvena, J., M.A., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Sinminfu via Newchwang
O'Neill, F.S.W., M.A., and wife, frish Presbyterian Church Mission, Fakumen via N'chwang Onyon, Miss M., Church Missionary Society, Lienkong
Openshaw, H. J., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Yachowfu via Chungking Orr-Ewing, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kiukiang
Orr, J. S., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang
Orr, Major, R. Hamilton and wife, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo
Osborne, Miss C. M., Universalist Mission, 50, Takata Oimatsucho, Koishikawa, Tokyo Osborne, Miss H.L., Am. Bd. of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Diongloh, via Foochow Osgood, E. J., M.D., and wife, Foreign Christian Missy. Society, Chuchow An., via Nanking Osnes, E., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Laohokow via Hankow
Ost, J. B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Chuki
Ostergaard, Mr. Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Shihwakai, Hupeh
Otte, J. A., M.D., and wife, Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Ovenden, Miss G., London Missionary Society, Amoy
Overland, Miss H, China Inland Mission, Kiaugchow, Sze.
Oviatt, Miss G., Independent, Wuhu
Oviatt, Miss M., Independent, Wuhu
Owen, C. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kwangju, Corea
Owen, J. C., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Pingtu via Kiaochow Owen, J. W., China Inland Mission Chengteh, Hun.
Owings, D. H., Bible Mission Society, Kongmoon
Oxner, Mrs. C. H., American Southern Baptist Mission, Pingtu via Kiaochow
Paddock, W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Paddock, Miss A. E., Young Women's Christian Association, Shanghai
Page, E. L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Page, I., and wife, China Inland Mission, Anshunfu, via Yoclow and Kweiyang Page, N., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Teianfu via Hankow
Page, Rev. A. H., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Page, Miss F. J., China Inland Mission, Pachow, Sze, via Ichang
Page, Miss P., American Baptist Missionary Union, Suifu via Chungking
ני
Paine, Miss J. O., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Chemulpo, Corea Paine, Miss T. L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Soochow Painter, G. W., D.D., American Presbyterian Mission South, Hangchow Painter, S., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kusaba Cho, Kumarnoto, Japan Pak, Mrs. È. K., M.D., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea Pakenham, H. R., B.A., M.B., Church Missionary Society, Kienningfu via Foochow Pallesen, Miss, Danish Lutheran Mission, Takushan via Newchwang
Palmberg, E., and wife, Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Lichuanhsien, She. Palmberg, G., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Lichuanhsien, She.
1816
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Palmborg, Miss R. W., M.D., Seventh Day Baptist Mission, Shanghai Palmer, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Ningpo
Palmer, Miss C. M., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Palmer, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Lanchi via Ningpo
Pantin, Miss M., L.S.A., Church of England Zenana Mission, Pingnan via Foochow Park, W. H., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Soochow
Park, W. L., Miss, Southern Methodist Epis. Misn., 35, Nakayamate Dori Shichome, Kobe Park, Miss C., Methodist Episcopal Church South, USA., Shanghai
Parker, A. P., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Shanghai Parker, G., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kingtzekwan via Hankow
Parker, J., and wife, London Missionary Society, Chungking
Parker, J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Yungchowfu, Hunan
Parker, R. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Changchow via S'hai Parker, Miss Alice, American Southern Baptist Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Parker, Miss A., S.P.G., Okuhirano, Kobe
Parker, Miss E., Church Missionary Society, Hangchow
Parker, Miss E..Churches Christ, Misn., 267,Nakazato, Takinogawa Mura,Tokyo Fu, Japan Parmelee, Miss H. F., American Board Mission, Matsuyama, Japan (absent) Parmenter, Miss M., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Nanlinghsien via Wuhu Parr, Miss E. M., China Inland Mission, Tuslian via Canton and Wuchow Parrott, F., and wife, National Bible Society of Scotland, 95, Yedo Machi, Kobe Parry, H., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chungking
Parshley, W. B., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, 75, Bluff, Yokohama Parsons, C. H., B.A., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Parsons, H., United Methodist Church Mission, Chaotung, Yun. Parrott, Miss A. L., International Committee Y.M.C.A., Shanghai Partridge, J. A., Church of England Mission, Yungching Hsien
Partridge, Bishop S. C., D.D., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Kyoto, Japan (absent) Pasley, Miss M. L., Church Missionary Society, Hamada, Japan
Paterson, T. C., M.D., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Tsowping via Kiaochow
Paton, B. L., M.D., English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu via Amoy
Paton, W. B., B.A. and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Wukingfu via Swatow
Faton, W., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Paton, Miss M., English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Paton, Miss M., United Free Church of Scotland, Ashio via Newchwang
Patterson, B. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Msn. (South,) Sutsien via Chinkiang Patterson, Miss E. G., American Presbyterian Mission, Limehowfu
Patton, C. E., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Yeungkong
Patton, Miss A. N., American Southern Presbyterian Mission, Tokushima, Japan (absent) Patton, Miss F. D., American Southern Presbyterian Mission, Tokushima, Japan Patton, Miss L. R., American Presbyterian Mission, Canton
Paul, A., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Wuhu
Paulson, E. M., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Pingliang, and Sianfu via Hankow Paxton, J. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Chinkiang
Payne, H., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Tsowping via Kiaochow
Payne, Miss, J. E., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking Payne, Miss E. C., Church Missionary Society, Otaru, Japan
Peacock, Miss N., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Sungkiangfu
Peake, E. C., M.B., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hengchowfu, Hunau Pearce, T. W., London Missionary Society, Hongkong
Pearce, Miss E. C., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Pearse, E., and wife, China Inland Mission (in England)
Pearse, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Hokow, Ki., via Kiukiang
Pearce, Miss E. A, Oriental Missionary Society, Kashiwagi, Yodobashi Machi, Tokyo Pearse, Miss J. B., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Pearson, Adjutant, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo, Japan
Peat, J. F., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Peck, Miss S. P., American Episcopal Mission, Heian Jo Gakuin, Kyoto
Pedersen, Miss I., American Lutheran Mission, Kioshan, Honan
Pedley, H., and wife, American Board Mission, Maebashi, Japan
Peeke, H. V. S. (and wife, absent), Reformed Dutch Church in America, Nagasaki, Japan Peel, Miss S., B.Sc., London Missionary Society, Chichow via Peking
Peerman, E. L., American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Wonsan
Peet, L. P., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Peet, Miss S. C., China Inland Mission, Fukow via Hankow
1817
Peill, S. G., M.B., C.., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tsangchow via Tientsin Pell, J. W., L.R.C.S. & P.,ED., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Tayeh via Hankow Pemberton, Miss R. J., China Inland Mission, Paoning, Sze.
Peregrine, Miss A. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Wuhu Penrod, Miss C. T., Japan Evangelistic Band, Tokyo (absent)
Perkins, H. P., and wife, American Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Mans., Paotingfu via Tientsin Perkins, Miss, A. L., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Canton
Perkins, Miss E. S., American Board of Comsrs, for Fgn. Msns., Diongloh via Foochow Perley, D. M., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Perry, F. A., and wife, Methodist Protestant Church, Shizuoka, Japan (absent)
Persson, Miss M., Swedish Baptist Mission, Chucheng
Peters, Miss A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Peters, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kucheng via Foochow
Peters, Miss S., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Peterson, J., Swedish America Missionary Covenant, Fancheng via Hankow
Peterson, Miss A. J., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Chiba, Shimosa, Japan Peterson, Miss T., Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Petersson, Miss E., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Chenyuan, via Hankow Pettec, J. H., D.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Okayama, Japan (absent) Petterson, Miss E. E., Scandinavian China Alliance Miss., Lungchow, She., via Hankow Petterson, Miss I. M., American Baptist Missionary Union, Bakan, Japan (absent) Petterson, Miss Ida, Swedish Missionary, Society, Ichang
Petterson, Miss Inga, Amer. Baptist Mission (absent)
Pettersson, Miss B. M. P., Swedish Mission in China, Sinanhsien
Pettigrew, Miss Jessie L., American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Pettus, W. B., B.A., and wife, International Committee of the Y. M. C. A., Shanghai Pfannemüller, H., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Nanfeng via Kewkiang Pfleiderer, M. E., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Hongkong
Phelps, G. S., and wife, Y. M. C. A., Kyoto (absent)
Phelps, Miss F. E., Methodist Episcopal Church, Mission, Sendai, Japan (absent) Phelps, Miss K. E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Phelps, Miss L. L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow Philipps, Miss E. G., St. Hilda's Mission, Azabu, Tokyo
Phillimore, Miss R., Church of England Mission, Peking
Phillips, A. A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze.
Phillips, H. S., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kienningfu via Foochow Phillips, W., M.D., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Newchwang
Phillips, Miss L., Apostolic Faith Mission, Shanghai
Phillips, Miss M., M.B., Church of England Mission, Pingyin via Chefoo
Piell, E. J., M.B., C.M., F.R.C.S., and wife, London Missionary Society, Peking
Pierce, L. W., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Pierce, Miss P., Oriental Missionary Society, Yaumatei, via Hongkong.
Pierson, G. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Asahigawa, Japan.
Pieters, A., and wife, Reformed Dutch Church in America, Nagasaki
Pieters, A. A., American Presbyterian Church Mission, Seoul
Pieters, Miss J. A., Reformed Dutch Church in America, Kagoshima, Japan
Pifer, Miss B. C., German Reformed Church in the United States, Tokyo (absent) Pike, D. F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Tushan via Canton and Wuchow
Pike, Miss C. A., China Inland Mission, Kiehsiu via Peking
Pilley, E., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Huchowfu Pillow, W. H., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yungchowfu, Hunan Pillow, Miss, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yungchowfu, Hunan
Pilson, Miss E., I, China Inland Mission, Fukow via Hankow
Pinsent, Mrs., A. M., Canadian Methodist Mission, Shizuoka, Japan
Piper, Miss E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Pitcher, P. W., M.A., and wife, Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Pitts, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Place, A. W., and wife, Ch. of Christ Mission, 267, Nakazato, Takinogawa Mura, Tokyo Platt, J. C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kweichowfu via Ichang
Plewman, T. E., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Plumb, Miss F. J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Plummer, Dr. W. E., and wife, United Methodist Church, Mission, Wenchow
Plymire, M. F., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Taochow, Kan.
1818
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Polhill, A. T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Suitingfu, via Ichang and Wanhsien Poling, Miss I. E., United Evangelical Church Mission, Changsha via Yochow, Honan Polk, Miss M. H., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Soochow Pollard, S., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Chaotung, Yun,
Pollock, J. C., Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Poole, Miss Lillian, Independent, Nara, Japan
Pooley, Miss, Church of England (S. P. G.), Chemulpo, Corea
Porteous, G., China Inland Mission, Pingi via Mengtze
Porteous, R. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yuanchow Ki., via Kiukiang
Porter, H. D., M.D., D.D., and wife, Am. Board of Comsrs. for F. M., Pangchuang via Tientsin Porter, R. B., China Inland Mission, Shunking, Sze., via Ichang
Porter, L. C., and wife, Am. Board of Comsrs. for Foreign, Missions Tungchow, Chi. Porter, Miss L., Book Room and Educational Depository, Shanghai
Porter, Miss Ida, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Tsingpu via Shanghai Porter, Miss M. H., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking Portway, A. C., China Inland Mission, Tsenyi, via Chungking Posey, Miss M. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
Post, J., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Postance, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Hokchiang via Foochow
Pott, F. L. H., D.D., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Poulter, Miss J., Church Missionary Society, Hokchiang via Foochow
Poulter, Miss M., M.D., Church Missionary Society, Hokchiang via Foochow
Powell, P., and wife China Inland Mission, Panghai (Chenyuan) via Yochow
Powell, Miss A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Powell, Miss E. A., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Powell, Miss L. M., German Reformed Church in the United States, Sendai (absent) Pownall Mrs., Unconnected, Nanchang via Kewkiang
Pownall, Miss A. J., Church Missionary Society, Anlisien, Sze.
Pracy, Miss E. M., China Inland Mission, Chengku via Hankow Pracy, Miss C. E., China Inland Mission, Chengku via Hankow
Pratt, Miss S. A., Women's Union Missionary Society of Am., 212, Bluff, Yokohama
Preedy, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Laingchowfu via Hankow and Sianfu Preston, J. F., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Kwangju, Corea Preston, T. J., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Changteh, Hunan Preston, Miss E. D., Church Missionary Society, 163, Shimizu Dori, Kure, Japan Price, H., and wife, Unconnected, Nanchang via Kiukiang
Price, P. F., and wife, Am. Presbyterian Mission South, Tunghianghsien, via Kiahsing Price, Rt. Rev. Bishop, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Price, Miss L. W., American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai
Priest, Miss S., American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai
Prindiville, Miss M. J., S.P.G, 33. Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe Pringle, J. C., Y.M.C.A. Teacher, Higher Normal School, Hiroshima, Japan. Pringle, Miss E. C., St. Hilda's Mission, S.P.G., Azabu, Tokyo
Procter, J. T., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Shanghai
Provence H. W., TII.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai Pruen, W. L., L.R.C.P. & S., and wife, China Inland Mission (in England)
Pruitt, C. W, and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Prytz, Miss F., Swedish Mission in China, Puchowfu, via Peking
Pullar, H. W., M.A., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Yungling, via N'chwang Puutula, O., Finland Missionary Society, Tsili via. Shashi
Pye, Watts O., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Fenchow Pyke, J. H., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Pyke, Miss M. A., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho.
Pyle, Miss M. E., Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Soochow
Pylkkanen, W., and wife Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshih via Shashi Qualen, H. J. von, Scandinavian American Christian Free Mission, Canton Quimby, Miss F. M., American Advent Christian Mission, Nanking Quinn, Miss M., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Tsingyang via Wuhu Quirmbach, A. P., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu Ralston, Miss K., China Inland Mission, Lukiao via Ningpo
•
Ramminger, K., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Lokong, via Swatow
Ramsay, H. C., and wife, American Bible Society, Chengtu
Ramsay, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Kieniang via Foochow
Rainsay, Miss I. W., China Inland Mission, Chungking
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1819
Ramsay, Miss L., English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu, via Amoy
Ranck, C. E., and wife, Evangelical Association of North America, Shencliowfu, Hunan Ranck, Miss E. E., Evang. Assoc. of North America, 84, Sasugaya Cho, Koishikawa, Tokyo Rankin, H. F., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
Rankin, Miss L., Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Huchowfu Rankin, Miss Nellie B., American Presbyterian Mission, Chunju Rankine, Mrs., Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Ransom, Miss Mary E., Amer, Presbyterian Mission, Osaka Ransome, Miss E., Church of England Mission, Peking.
Ranson, Miss A. L., American Episcopal Mission, Sendai, Japan (absent) Rape, C. B.. and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tsechow, via Chungking Rasmusen, Miss C., Lutheran Brethren Mission, Tsaoyang via Hankow Rattenburg, H. B., B.A., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wuchang Raw, Miss E., Foreign Christian Mission, Nanking,
Rawlings, G. W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Osaka Rawlings, Miss H. M., American Baptist Missionary Union, Huchowfu Rawlinson, F., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai Ray, J. F., and wife, Southern Baptist Mission, Shimonoseki, Japan Read, Dr. Rachel, Independent, Akasaka, Tokyo
Read, Miss E. M.. Church Missionary Society, Chuki
Readshaw, Miss C., China Inland Mission, Ningkwofu via Wuhu
Redfern, H. S., B.SC., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Ningpo Reed, Dr J. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Chunchen Reed, Dr. J. W., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Songdo Reed, H. T., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Sungkiangfu Reed, Miss, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wuchang
Rees, P., M.D., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wuchow via Canton Rees, W. H., and wife, London Missionary Society, Peking,
Rees, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang
Reeve, W. E, Church Missionary Society, Sapporo, Japan
Reeves, C. W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kienningfu via Foochow Rehnberg, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Yushan via Ningpo
Rehnberg, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Yüshan via Ningpo
Reichelt, K. L., and wife, Norwegian Miss. Society, Ningsiang via Changsha, Hunan Reid, J. T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Takutang via Kiukiang
Reid, W., T., Dr. American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Songdo, Corea
Reid, Miss B. P., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking Reid, Miss E. P., China Inland Mission, Takutang via Kiukiang
Reid, Miss H. L., China Inland Mission, Chihchowfu via Tatung
Reid, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Chihchowfu via Tatung
Reid, Miss M. M., China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Reid, Miss F. M., Independent, Tsechowfu, via Peking and Hwaichingfu Reifsnider, C. S., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Fukui, Japan Reifsnider, J., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, Kyoto, Japan
Reifsnyder, Miss E., M.D., Woman's Union Mission, Shanghai
Reimert, W. A., and wife, Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow via Hankow Reinecke, Miss J., Hildesheim Mission for the Blind, Kowloon
Reinhard, A. H., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Reischauer, A. K., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Msn., Meiji Gakuin, Shirokane, Tokyo
Reikie, Miss H. E. K., China Iuland Mission, Yangchow
Relyea, Miss S., American Baptist Missionary Union, Kinhwafu
Ren, Pastor, China Inland Mission, Hangchow
Renius, V., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Sianfu via Hankow
Rennie, Wm., Y.M.C.A., teacher, 9, Moto Machi, Hakodate, Japan
Renskers, H., Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Reppert. Rev. R. R., and wife, American Meth. Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul, Corea Reusch, G., jun., Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow via Swatow
Reynolds, W. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Seoul, Corea Reynolds, Miss B. J. L., China Inland Mission, Chihchowfu, via Tatung
Rhein, W., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Canton
Rhind, Miss J. P., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuhu
Rhodes, F. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Rice, A. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Haichow via Chinkiang Richard, H., jr., PH.B., E.E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wachang
1920 PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Richard, T., D.D., LITT.D., Christian Literature Society for China, Shanghai Richardson, W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Taiping, Che, via Ningpo Richardson, Miss H. L., Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Shanghai Richardson, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Sintientsz (Paoning) vía Chungking Richmond, Miss A. B., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Rickards, Miss M., St. Hilda's Mission, S.P.G., 1, Nagasaka Cho, Azabu, Tokyo, Japan Ricker, R. C., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tsechow, Sze Ricker, Miss Jessie, American Presbyterian Mission, Yamada, Japan Ricketts, Miss J., American Presbyterian Mission, Hangchow
Riddel, W., M.A., M.D., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Wukingfu via Swatow Riddell, Miss H., Church Missionary Society, Kumamoto, Japan
Ridgely, L. B., B.A., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Ridler, H. B., Church Missionary Society, Hokchiang via Foochow Ridley, H. F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Siningfu via Hankow Ridley, Miss M., Unconnected, Sinchanghsion via Kiukiang
Rieke, H., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Tungkun via Canton Righter, Miss C. E., American Baptist Missionary Union, Kinhwafu Riker, Miss J., Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Yamada, Japan Riley, Miss F., China Inland Mission, Kwanlisien, Sze.
Rinell, J. A., and wife, Swedish Baptist Mission, Kiaochow
Ringberg, Miss M., Swedish Mission in China, Honanfu
Rioch, Miss Mary M., Church of Christ Mission, 35, Nakano Cho, Ichigaya, Tokyo Ririe, B., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kiatingfu via Chungking
Ritson, Miss E. R., Church Missionary Society, Tokushima, Japan (absent)
Ritter, Miss P., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Ritzman, M. E., United Evan. Ch. Mission, Siangtan via Yochow Hunan Roach, B. P., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Yingtak via Canton Robb, A. F., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Wonsan, Corea Robb, A. I., and wife, American Reformed Presbyterian Msn., Takhing via Canton Robb, J. K., and wife, American Reformed Presbyterian Msn., Takhing via Canton Robb, W, M., and wife, Amer. Reformed Prosby. Mission, Takhing via Canton Robb, W. C., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Hachiman, Omi, Japan
Robb, Miss J. B., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Song Chin, Corea Robbins, W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Robbins, Miss H., Women's Foreign Msny. Soc. of Methodist Epl. Church, Pyengyang (abt.) Roberts, B. A., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Shanghai
Roberts, Miss A., Ch. Msny. Society, 24, Naka Rokuban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo, Japan Robertson, A., and wife, Unconnected, Lachokow via Hankow
Robertson, C. H., M.E., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Tientsin Robertson, D. T., M.A., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Robertson, W. E., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Hengchowfu, Hunan Robertson, H., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tsao-shih via Hankow Robertson, H. D., B.A., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu Robertson, W. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Taichowfu via Ningpo Robertson, Miss E, Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Wilmina Jo Gakko, Osaka Robertson, Miss M. A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kofu, Japan Robinette, Miss P., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Robinson, C. E, and wife, Church of Christ, Mission, 69, Kwozenji Dori, Sendai, Japan Robinson, J. C., Ch. Miss. Society, 69, Shimo Nagare Kawa Machi, Hiroshima, Japan Robinson, T., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Shiuchow via Canton Robinson, T. A. S., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chowchih via Hankow Robison, Rev. B. E., and wife, Amer. Baptist Missionary Union, Ningpo Robotham, Miss A. K., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Robson, Staff-Captain and wife, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichiome, Tokyo Robson, Captain Florence, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo
Robson, J. K., M.D., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Wuting, Shantung Robson, Miss I. A., China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang
Rodberg, Miss H., Swedish American Missionary Covenant, Siangyang via Hankow Rodd, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Kienning via Foochow Rodman, Miss P., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Kiangyin Rodwell, J. P. Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Roobuck, Miss M., United Methodist Church Mission, Yungpingfu Roeder, Miss W., American Baptist Missionary Union, Tungeliwan, Sze. Roed, O., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Laohokow via Hankow
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Rogers, G. A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Liangshan, via Ichang Rogers, R. A., B.A., English Presbyterian Mission, Changchowfu, via Ämoy Rogers, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Rogers, Miss M. J., Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Soochow Rogers, Miss, S. C., S. P. G., 16, Hirakawa Cho Rokuchome, Kojimachi, Tokyo Rohm, R., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Tsinyün via Wenchow Rolle, Miss, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Rollestone, Miss L. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Ningpo
Rollstin, W. P., Independent, 155, Kami Sanchome, Sonesaki, Kita Ku, Osaka
1821
Rolman, Miss E. L., Amer. Bapt. Miss. Union, 9, Naka Cho Sanchome, Yotsuya, Tokyo Romeke, Miss S., China Inland Mission, Kiehsiu via Peking
Romig, H. G., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsiningchow via Chinkiang Rönka, Miss I., Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingslih via Shashi
Rönning, H. N., and wife, Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow
Roots, L. H., D.D. (Bishop), and wife, American Protestant Epl. Church Mission, Hankow Rorvik, Miss A., Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Laohokow via Hankow
Rosa, Dr., J. B., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Wonsan, Corea Rose, Miss Carrie H., American Presbyterian Mission, Otaru, Japan Rosenberg, A., and wife, Methodist Publishing House in China, Shanghai Rosenius, Miss A., Swedish Mission in China, Hoyang, via Peking Roskelley John H., Mormon Mission, Sapporo, Japan
Ross, A. R., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Songchin, Corea
Ross, C., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Sungchun, Corea Ross, G. M., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Hwaikingfu, Ho
Ross, J., D.D., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Ross, J. B., M.D., and wife, Amer. Methodist Episcopal Mission (South), Wonsan, Corea
Ross, R. M., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Limehowfu
Ross, Miss B. A., American Baptist Missionary Union, Kityang via Swatow
Ross., Miss M., English Presbyterian Mission, Eng-chun via Amoy
Roth weiler, Miss L. C., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission (absent) Rotzel, C. L., Y. M. C. A., teacher, Shinmachi, Yamaguchi, Japan
Rout, Miss A., Unconnected, Weihaiwei
Row, G. F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chiefoo
Rowan, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Rowe, H. F., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Rowe, J. H., and wife, Southern Baptist Mission, 29, Sakura Baba, Nagasaki Rowe, J. L., China Inland Mission, Kanchow, Ki., via Kiukiang
Rowland, G. M., D.D., and wife, American Board Mission, Sapporo, Japan Rowland, Paul, Y. M. C. A., teacher, 32, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan Rowland, Miss J. M., S. P. G., 15, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe Rowlands, F. W., M.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Sasebo, Japan Rowlands, W., M.A., B.D., London Missionary Society, Wuchang Rowlands, Miss M., B.A., London Missionary Society, Peking
Rowley, W., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Anlu, Hankow
Royall, F. M., and wife, Christian Catholic Church in Zion, Shanghai
Roys, C. K., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau
Rudd, H. F., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningyuanfu via Chungking Rudland, W. D., and wife, China Inland Mission, Taichow via Ningpo
Rudland, Miss G., China Inland Mission (in England)
Rudy, Miss E. N., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Rufus, W. C., and wife, Anier. Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Pyengyang, Corea
Bugg, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Iyang, Ki, via Kiukiang
Rugh, A., B.A., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Shanghai
Ruhl, W. N., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Taochow, Kansuh
Ruhlmann, E., Independent Tsiningchow, Shantung
Ruigh, D. C., and wife, Reformed Dutch Church in America, Morioka, Japan (absent)
Rumsey, Miss F. M., American Baptist Mission, 47, Shimotera Machi, Japan
Russell, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagasaki (absent)
Russell, Miss M. H., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chikusa Machi, Nagoya, Japan
Russell, Miss N. N., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking Russell, Miss, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hanyang via Hankow
Rüter, C., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Taiping via Canton
Ryan, M. L., and wife, Apo. Faith Movet., 20, Odaware Cho Itchome, Tsukiji, Tokyo, Jap. Ryd, J. O., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Tsingningchow via Hankow
1822
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Rydberg, A. E., and wife, Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Shanghai Rydén, B. E., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Shasi
Ryder, Miss Gertrude E., American Baptist Mission, 101, Hara Machi, Tokyo
Ryerson, G. E., M.A., and wife, Canadian Board Mission, 30, Kita Machi, Takanawa, Tokyo Sadler, J., and wife, London Missionary Society, Amoy
Safford, Mr., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Shanghai
Sallee, W. E, and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Kaifengfu, Honan
Sallee, Miss M., American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai
Salquist, C. A., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Yachowfu via Chungking Saltmarsh, Miss A. I., China Inland Mission, Tsingkiangpu via Chingkiang
Sames, H., China Inland Mission, Linkiang via Kiukiang
Sandberg, J. T., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Yuncheng via Taiyuanfu Sander, Miss M., Church Missionary Society, Hiroshima, Japan (absent)
Sanders, A. H., China Inland Mission, Yunnanfu via Hokow and Mengtze
Sanderson, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Sanger, F., M.B., Church Missionary Society, Hinghwafu via Foochow
Santee, Miss Helen, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sapporo, Japan
Saunders, A. R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Saunders, J. R., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Yingtak via Canton Saunders, Mrs., Church Missionary Society, To-sung via Foochow
Sautter, A., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Lenphin, via Canton
Sauzé, Miss F., China Inland Mission, Kienping via Wubu
Savin, L., M.R.C.S., L.R C.P., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Chaotung, Yun. Savolainen, V., and wife, Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Shimo Suwa, Shinshiu, Japan Sawdon, E. W., B.SC., Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Sawdon, E. W., Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Sawyer, R. A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Scatliff, Dr. A. W., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hokchiang via Foochow
Schaeffer, Miss C. L., Am. Presbyterian Mission, Kacheck via Hoihow, Hainan
Schaub, Mrs. P., Basel Missionary Society, Hongkong
Schereschewsky, Miss C. E. Amer. Episcopal Misn., 30, Ligura Kata Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Schilberg, Miss P, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Shanghai
Schild, E. O., Liebenzell Mission, Paotsing via Yochow
Schiller, E., and wife, General Evang. Miss. Soc., 10, Shogoin Cho, Kyoto
Schleglémilch, Miss D., 330, Uramonzen Cho, Nagoya
Schlosser, G. D., American Free Methodist Mission in China, Tsingkiangpu, via Chinkiang Schmid, P., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Hokshooha, via Swatow
Schmidt, J. J., and wife, Independent, Shanhsien, Shantung
Schmidt, O., and wife, German China Alliance Mission, Chuchow via Wenchow Schmidt, Miss L., Liebenzell Mission, Paotsing via Yochow
Schmitz, Miss H., Rhenish Missionary Society, Taiping via Canton
Schmoll, F., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kuchuk via Canton and Weichow
Schneder, D. R, D.D. and wife, Amer. Ger. Ref. Misn., 78, Higashi Sanban Cho, Sendai, Japan Schneider, F., Basel Missionary Society, Kuchuk via Canton and Weichow
Schneider, Miss F., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze.
Schoch, K., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Lokong via Swatov
Schoch, V., M.D., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow via Swatow
Schofield, Mrs. H., China Inland Mission (in England)
Scholes, E. F. P., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Chenchow, Hunan Scholes, W. L., M.A., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hongkong
Scholes, Miss N., Australian Presbyterian Mission, Chinju
Scholz, G., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Tschuthongau via Canton
Scholz, T., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Tsimo via Tsingtau
Schoppe, F. K., and wife, Liebenzell Mission, Paotsing via Yochow
Schrack, Miss B. Z., South Chihli Mission, Tuningfu via Tientsin
Schroeder, E., and wife, Evang. Miss. Soc., 23, Kami Tomizaka, Koishikawa, Tokyo
Schüler, W., and wife, Allgemeiner Evangelisch Protestantischer Missions vercin, Tsingtau Schultze, O., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow via Swatow
Schumaker, T. E., and wife, American Baptist Mission, Otaru, Japan (absent)
Schür, Miss A., German China Alliance, Yangchow
Schwarz, Miss L., German China Alliance Mission, Antung, Ku.
Schwartz, H. B., D.D., (and wife, abt.), Methodist Episcopal Misn., Naha, Loochoo, Japan
Schwartz, H. W., M.D., and wife, Met. Episcopal Mission, 94, Samban Cho, Sendai, Japan Schweitzer, K. W., German China Alliance Mission, Kienchang via Kiukiang
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1823
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Scofield, G. H., and wife, Amer. Free Methodist Mission in China, Yungtsihsien, Honan Scorer, Miss H. M., China Inland Mission, Chuhsien, Sze., via Ichang
Sectt, C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsingtau
Scott, C. P., D.D., Church of England Mission, Peking
Scott, C. W., B.A., Church of Englanul Mission, Newchwang
Scott F. N., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, 6, Higashi Yamate, Nagasaki Scott, J. H., and wife, American Baptist Mission, 19, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan
Scott, S., S.P.G., Mission, 5, Nakayamate Dori, Sanchiome, Kobe
Scott, P. M., M.A., Church of England Mission, Peking
Scott, T. A., M. A., Church of England Mission, Newchwang
Scott, W. G., B.A., M.P., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Changte, Ho.
Scott, Mrs. A. K., M.D., American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Scott, Miss A. O., Church Missionary Society, Taichiowfu
Scott, Miss E. M., Church Missionary Society, Ningteh, Foochow
Scott, Miss Ida, M.D., American Reformed Presbyterian Mission, Takhing via Canton
Scott, Miss J., China Inland Mission, Wenchow
Scott, Miss M., North-West Kiangsi Mission, Wucheng, Ki.
Scott, Miss M., Church of England Mission, Peking
Scott, Miss M., American Episcopal Mission, Tenma, Nara, Japan
Scranton, Mrs. M. F., Women's F.M.S. of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Seoul Seabrook, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Seagrave, Miss M., Independent, Tsechowfu via Peking and Hwaichingfu Searle, E. C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Pingyanghisen via Wenchow Searle, Miss S. A., American Board Mission, 60, Yama, Kobe, Japan (absent)
Sears, W. H., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Pingtu via Kiaochow Sedgwick, J. H., and wife, Church of England Mission, Tientsin Seeds, Miss L., Methodist Episcopal Mission, 221, Bluff, Yokohama Seeds, Miss M. K., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Fukuoka, Japan Seelhorst, Miss A. V., Hildesheim Mission for the Blind, Kowloon Seely, J. B., Latter Day Saints (Mormon), Sapporo, Japan
Seidlemann, Miss P., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Sienyu via Foochow
Seipel, A., and wife, German-China Alliance Mission, Ningtuchow via Kiukiang Seiple, W. G., PH.D., and wife, Amer. German Reformned Mission, 29, Tsuchidoi, Sendai Selden, C. C., PH.D., M.D., and wife, The John G. Kerr Refuge for Insane, Canton Selkirk, T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Bhamo, Burmah
Sells, Miss A. P., Church Missionary Society, 42, Kajiya Cho, Kagoshima, Japan Selmon, A. C., M.D., and wife, M.D., Seventh Day Advt. Mission, Chowkiakow, Honan Sergy, Rt. Rev. Bishop, Russian Ecclesiastical Mission, Surugadai, Tokyo, Japan Service, C. W., B.A., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu Service, R. R., B.A., and wife, International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Chentu Service, Miss M., S.P.G., Mission, 15, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe Setterburg, Miss A. A., Swe:lish Holiness Union, Tsoyun via Taiyuanfu Settlemeyer, C. S., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Nanking Seville, G. H., B.A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Wenchow Seward, A. E., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Anhsien, Sze.
Seymour, W. F., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tengchowfu via Chefoo Seymour, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Kweiki via Kiukiang
Shambaugh, W. J., and wife, United Evangelical Ch. Misn., Siangtan via Yochow Hunan Shannon, Miss I. L., Amer. S. Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hiroshima, Japan (absent) Shannon, Miss K., American S. Met. Epis. Misn., Kami Nagare Cho, Hiroshima, Japan Shantz, W. A., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Siangtan Shapleigh, Mrs. A. L., China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Sharman, A. H., and wife, United Methodist Church, Mission, Wenchow
Sharp, C. E., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea
Sharp, Mrs. A. H., American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Kongju
Sharp, Miss Annie, China Inland Mission, Kweiki, via Kiukiang
Sharpe, Miss A. E., China Inland Mission, Kwanhsien, Sze.
Sharrocks, Rev. A., M.D., and wife, Msu. of Pres. Church in U.S.A., Sun-chun, Corea Shaw, C., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hinghwafu via Foochow Shaw, H. P., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Shanghai
Shaw, R D. M., B.A., S.P.G., Mission, Numadzu, Japan
Shaw, Miss E. C., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Shaw, Miss L. L., Church Missionary Society, 12, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka Shearer, W. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chowkiakow via Hankow
1824
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Shebbeare, Miss U., Church of England Mission, Peking
Sheffield, D. Z., D.D., and wife, Am. Board of Comsnrs. for Fgn. Msns., Tungchow, Chi, Shekelton, Miss, English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu
Shelton, A. L., M.D., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Batang
Shepard, Mrs. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kucheng via Foochow
Shepard, Miss M. W., Reformed Church in America, Amoy
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Sheppard, G. W and wife, United Methodist Church, Mission, Ningpo
+3
Shepperd, Miss E. A., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Sheridan, W. J., MD., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Tzeliutsing
Sherman, A. M., B.A., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow Sherman, Mrs. G. B., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Sherman, Miss M. B., American Presbyterian Mission, Tsu, Japan
Shewring, Miss M. J., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Shields, E. T., M.D., and wife, American Baptist. Missy. Union, Yachowfu via Chungking Shields, R. T., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Soochow
Shields, J., English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Shields, Miss E. L., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U. S. A., Sun-chun, Corea Shimer, Mrs. H., American Friends' Mission, Nanking
Shindler, F. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Ningkwofu via Wuhu
Shipley, J. A. G., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Sungkiangfu Shire, Miss M. J., L.R.C.P. & S., Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow Shiveley, B. F., and wife, United Brethren in Christ, Kyoto
Shoemaker, J. E., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Ningpo
Shore, Miss L., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Tsingyang, via Wuhu Shorrock, A. G., B.A., English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Shortt, C. H., M.A., Canadian Board Mission, Takata, Japan
Sibley, H. A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kucheng Hup, Hankow
Sibley, W. E., B.A., B.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Penghsien
Sibree, Miss A., L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S., London Missionary Society, Hongkong
Sidebotham, R. H., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Fusan, Cores Sifton, Miss H., B.A., English Baptist Zenana Mission, Tsingchowfu via Kiaochow Signor, Miss A., Independent, Shanghai
Sihvonen, E., Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshil via Shashi
Sikemeier, W., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Nyenhangli via Swatow Silcock, H. T., M. A., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Chengtu
Sills, A., Church Missionary Society, Kienningfu via Foochow Silsby, J. A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai Silver, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission, Shanghai
Simister, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Simmons, E. Z., D.D., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton
Simms, Miss E., M.D., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Chinchow via Newchwang Simpson, W. W., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Taochow, Kansuh Simpson, Miss A., English Baptist Zenana Mission, Chouping via Kiaochow
Simpson, Miss A. M., China Inland Mission, Talifu via Mengtze
Simpson, Miss C.. Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Simpson, Miss E. M., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Sinclair, T. L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Singer, Miss Florence E., Matho list Episcopal Mission, Hakolate, Japan
Sinton, J. R., China Inland Mission, Luichow via Chungking
Sites, C. M. L, PILD., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yenpingfu, Foochow Sjöblom, H., M.A., B.D., and wife, Finnish Missionary Society, Tsingshih via Shashi Skinner, J. E., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Yenpingfu, via Foochow Skinner, Miss A., American Presbyterian Mission, Kiungchow, Hainan Sköld, J., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow
Skollenberg, Miss A., Scandinavian China Alliance Msn. Chenyua (Chingchow), via H'kow. Skow, Miss A. C., China Inland Mission, Hokow, Ki., via Kiukiang
Skraastad, Thv., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Chenping, Ho. Slate, Miss A. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, 221, Bluff, Yokohama Slater, Miss A. B., China Inland Missiou, Chefoo
Slimmon, J. A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Msn., Hwaikingfu, Ho. Sloan, W. B., and wife, China Inland Mission (in Europe)
Sloan, Miss A., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Soochow
Sloan, Miss G., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Soochow Small, W., Cariadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
1825
Smalley, Miss R. L., China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Smalley, S. E., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai Smart, R. D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission South, U.S.A., Soochow Smart, W. H., American Episcopal Mission, Yamagata, Japan
Smelser, F. L, and wife, Hephzibah Faith Mission, 2,124, Minami Ota, Yokohama Smerdon, Dr. E. W., United Methodist Church Mission, Wenchow
Smith, A.H., D.D., and wife, Amer. Board of Couns. for Fgn. Msns., Pangchun via Tientsin Smith, Captain A., Salvation Army, Nichome, Tokyo
Smith, D., M.A., English Baptist Mission, Yülinfu, Shensi
Smith, D., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Shiuchow via Canton. Smith, E. H., and wife, Amer. Board of Commsrs. for Foreign Msns., Inghok via Foochow Smith, F. D., Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Kurume, Japan
Smith, F. H., Methodist Episcopal Mission, 3, Higahi Yamate, Nagasaki, Japan
Smith, J., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Tatung
Smith, H. M., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Mission South, Tunghianghsion via Kiahsing Smith, H. S., and wife, Unconnected, Yungcheng, via Weihaiwei Smith, P. J., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Hsinchow, Shansi Smith, S. Henderson, English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu, Shansi
Smith, P. A., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Higher Normal School, Hiroshima, Japan Smith, Roy, Y.M.C.A., teacher, Higher Commercial School, Kobe, Japan Smith, S. P., and wife, Independent, Tsechowfu via Peking and Hwaichingfu Smith, T. H., and wife, London Missionary Society, Peking
Smith, W. G., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Smith, W. E., and wife, American Presbyterian Church Mission, Fusan
Smith, W. E., M.D., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Junghsien
Smith, Miss E. D., M.D., American Board of Coms. for Foreign Msns., Ingbok via Foochow Smith, Miss E. M., China Inland Mission (in England)
Smith, Miss G., Christian Missions, Ningpo
Smith, Miss H., Young Women's Christian Association, Shanghai
Smith, Miss I., China Inland Mission, Liuanchow via Wuhu Smith, Miss I. M., Christian Missions, Ningpo
Smith, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Smith, Miss L. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kagoshima, Japan Smith, Miss S. C., American Presbyterian Mission, Sapporo, Japan Smithson, Miss A., Rhenish Missionary Society, Taiping via Canton
Smyth, E. C., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Chowtsun via Kiaochow
Smyth, Capt. Annie, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo
Snavely, Miss G. E., Women's F.M.S. of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Msn., Chemulpo Snell, J. A., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U. S. A., Soochow Snodgrass, Miss M. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Tengchowfu via Chefoo Snork, Miss V. L., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U. S. A., Pingyang, Corea
Snuggs, E. T., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton
Snyder, C. F., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Taochow, Kan.
Snyder, L. H., International Committee of the Y. M. C. A., Seoul, Corea
Soderberg, Rev., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Soderbom, C. G', and wife, Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Suanhwafu via Peking Söderstrom, Mrs. U., China Inland Mission, Chowkiakow via Hankow Sollman, Miss M., American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Soltau, Miss M. E., China Inland Mission, Hiangcheng via Hankow
Somerville, C. W., CH.B., and wife, London Mis. Society, Wuchang via Hankow Soothill, W. E., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Wenchow Soper, J., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tokyo (absent) Soper, Miss Maud, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagoya, Japan (absent) Sorenson, T., and wifo, China Inland Mission, Tatsieniu, via Chungking Souter, W. E., National Bible Society of Scotland, Chungking Southey, J., and wife, China Inland Mission (in Australia),
Sövik, E., and wife, American Lutheran Mission, Sinyangeliow, Honan
Sowerby, A., and wife, Eaglish Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu via Tientsin
Sowerby, J. H., M.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shasi
Spainhour, Miss, American Southern Baptist Mission, Soochow
Spamer C. O., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Takamatsu, Japan
Spangler, Miss R. A., Reformed Church in the United States, Chenchoufu, Hunan
Sparham, C. G., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hankow
Sparling, G, W., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Tzeliutsing
1826
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Speicher, J., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kityang via Swatow Spencer, D. S., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo Spencer, Miss E. E., Canadian Board Mission, Nagano, Shinshiu, Japan Spencer, Miss M. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo
Spiers, Miss E., Canadian Methodist Mission, Jenshow
Spiese, Miss Laura M., Independent, 99, Kashiwagi, Yodobashi Machi, Tokyo Spore, C. E., and wife, United Brethren in Christ, Canton
Sprague, W. P., and wife, Amer. Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Missions, Kalgan via Peking Spreckley, W. R., Church Missionary Society, Chungpa, Sze.
Sprent, F. H., and wife, Church of England Mission, Newchwang
Sprowles, Miss A. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hakodate, Japan
Spurling, Miss E., Missionary Home and Agency, Shanghai
Squibbs, W., F.R.C.S. CL.R.C.P., ED., and wife, C.M.S., Mienchuhsien, Sze, Squire, H. J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Ichang
Squire, W., Chefoo Missionary Home, Chefoo
Squire, Miss, B. A., United Methodist Church Mission, Chaotung, Yun. Squire, Miss E. M., B.A., United Methodist Church Mission, Chaotung, Yun. St. Jolin, B., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Stålhaminar, G. A., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Mienchi
Standen, Miss M. E, China Inland Mission, Iyang, Ki., via Kiukiang
Standring, W. H., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Soochow
Stanford, A. W., and wife, Am. Board Misn., 53, Yamamoto Dori Gochome, Kobe, Japan Stanislaw, A., Liebenzell Mission, Hengchow via Yochow
Stanley, C. A., jun., and wife, American Board of Commissioners, Pangchun via Tientsin Stanley, C. A., D.D., American Board of Coms, for Fgn. Missions, Tientsin
Stanley, E. J., Church Missionary Society, Funningfu via Foochów
Stanley, Miss L. M., American Friends' Mission, Nanking
Stark, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Starmer, Miss E. L., M.B.C.M., United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Steadman, F. W., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Morioka, Japan (abt.) Steelc, J., B.A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Steele, H. T., and wife, S. P. W., Gobancho, Okayama, Japan
Steele, H. W, and wife, S.P.G. Mission, Goban Cho, Okayama, Japan
Steele, Miss U.F., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu
Steger, Miss C. E, Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Huchowfu
Steger, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Huchowfu
Steiger, G. N., Ainerican Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Steiner, J. F., American German Reformed Mission, 112, Kita Niban Cho, Sendai, Japan Steinmann, Miss M. German China Alliance Mission Yunho, via Wenchow
Stelle, W. B., and wife, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking Stellmann, Miss F., China Inland Mission, Küwo via Peking
Stemmerich, W. A., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Minchow, Kan.
Stephen, R., and wife, Unconnected. Jeho (Chengtefu), via Peking
Stephens, P. II, and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Chefoo
Stephens, S. E., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Steuer, Miss K., Berlin Missionary Society, Shiuchowfu via Canton
Steven, F. A., and wife, China Inland Mission (in America).
Stevens, C. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Fengsiangfu via Hankow
Stevens, E. S., and wife, Church of Christ Mission, Akita, Japan (absent)
Stevens, G. B., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Sutsien via Chiakiang Stevens, P., Churchi Missionary Society, Kwelingfu
Stevens, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Stevenson, J. W. (and wife, absent), China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Stevenson, O., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yunnanfu via Hokow and Mengtze
Stevenson, Miss G. S., Church Missionary Society, Otaru, Japan
Stevenson, Miss T., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Stewart, A. D., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Stewart, E. F., and wife Christian and Missionary Alliance, Changteh
Stewart, H. B., and wife, London Missionary Society, Shanghai
Stewart, J. L., B.A.,B.D., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Stewart, J. R., Church Missionary Society, Mienchuhsion, Szc.
Stewart, S. A., American Southern Meth. Ep. Mission, Miyaichi, Yamaguchi Ken, Japan Stewart, Miss, London Missionary Society, Hongkong
Stewart, Miss M. E., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze.
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Stewart, Miss G., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Hankow Stewart, Miss K., Church Missionary Society, Hongkong
Stimpson, J. H., Mormon Mission, 19, Nishiki Machi, Kofu, Japan
Stinson, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Stirewalt, A. J., Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Kumamoto, Japan
Stobie, J., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Ashio via Newchwang
Stobie, W. R., and wife, United Methodist Church Mission, Wenchow
Stocker, I. T., Church of England Mission, Pingyin via Chefoo
1827
Stockman, P. R., B.A., and wife, American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Ichang Stocks, Miss H., American Advent Christian Mission, Nanking
Stokes, M. B., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Songdo, Corea Stokke, K. S., and wife, American Lutheran Mission, Juning, Honan
Stokstad, Christian, B. S. Hauges Synodes Mission, Fanchang via Hankow
Stooke, J. A., and wife, Chefoo Missionary Home, Chefoo
Stone, Miss M., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kiukiang
Stonelake, H. T., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Hsinchow, Shansi
Storr, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Kowloon City
Storrs, C. L., jr., Am. Bd. of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Shaowu via Foochow Stott, Mrs. G., China Inland Mission (in America)
Stott, Miss A. O., Church Missionary Society, Taichow
Stotts, J. M., Independent, Chikungshan
Stotts, J. U., and wife, Independent, Chikungshan
Stotts, Miss L. F., Independent, Chikungshan
Stout, Miss, W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Stowe, Miss Grace H., American Board Mission, Tottori, Japan
Stowe, Miss Mary E., American Board Mission, Tottori, Japan
Straeffer, Miss F. R., American Presbyterian Mission South, Kwang-ju, Corea
Strand, Miss A., Scandinavian China Alliance Mission, Chenyuan, via Hankow
Strawick, Miss G., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tehwa via Foochow
Strecker, Miss F., Berlin Missionary Society, Tsingtau
Strong, W. S., and wife, American Bible Society, Peking
Strout, Miss Flora E., Woman's Christian Temce. Union, 118, Honmura Cho, Azabu, Tokyo
Stryker, Miss, M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Stuart, D. T., D.D., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Soochow
Stuart, G. A., M.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Shanghai,
Stuart, J. Leighton, and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Nanking
Stuart, J. L., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Hangchow Stuart, W. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Hangelow Stuart, Miss J., English Presbyterian Mission, Chianghoa, Tainan, Formosa Stubbs, H. E., China Inland Mission, Hanchungfu via Hankow and Sianfu Stuckey, E. J., M.B., C.M., and wife, London Missy. Society, Chichou via Techou, Tientsin. Studdert, T. de C., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Fungingfu via Foochow Sturt, R. W., Unconnected, Jeho via Peking
Suhr, T. L. C., and wife, United Evangelical Church Mission, Changsha, Hunan Sundquist, Miss E., Swedish Missionary Society, Machenghsien via Hankow Sundstrom, J., and wife, Bible Mission Society, Macao
Suter, Miss M., China Inland Mission, Yushan via Ningpo
Sutherland, D., M.A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Sua-bue via Hongkong Suthon, Miss G., American Episcopal Mission, Karsumaru Dori, Kyoto, Japan
Sutton, H. B., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Wusueh via Kiukiang
Suttor, Miss I., Church Missionary Society, Geng-tau via Foochow
Swallen, W. L., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Swan, J. M., M.D., and wife, South China Medical College, Canton
Swann, Miss M. R., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu
Swanson, Miss A., Scand. China Alliance Mission, Wukung, Sianfu via Hankow
Swearer, W. C., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Kongju (abt., Sweet, C. T., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, 56, Tsukiji, Tokyo, Japan Sweet, W.S., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Hangchow
Switzer, Miss M. E., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Sworder, Miss M., Church of England Mission, Peking
Sydenstricker, A., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Chinkiang Sykes, Mrs. A., American Presbyterian Mission South, Kiangyin
Symington, Miss A. A., English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
Symons, C. J. F., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Shanghai
1828
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Synge, S., M.B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow Taber, Miss Inez E., Society of Friends Mission, 30, Koun Machi, Mita, Tokyo Taft, M. L., D.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Changli via Tientsin Taft, Miss G., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chinkiang
Taggart, Miss M. H., South Chihli Mission, Tamingfu
Talbot, A. A., and wife, Am. Presbyterian Mission (South), Tsingkiangpu via Chinkiang Talbot, Mrs., F. E., China Inland Mission, Chenchowfu via Hankow
Talbot, Miss B., American Presbyterian Mission South, Kashing
Talbott, C. C., United Evan. Church Mission, Siangtan, Hunan
Talcott, Miss E., American Board Mission, 59, Nakayamate Dori Rokuchome, Kobe
Tallmon, Miss S. B., M.D., Am. Bd. of Com. for Foreign Missions, Linching via Tsingtao- Talmage, Mrs. M. E., Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Talinage, Miss K. M., Reformed Church in America, Amoy Talmage, Miss M. E., Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Tannkvist, S., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Hwangchow via Hankow Tappan, D. S., jr., American Presbyterian Mission, Kiungchow, Hainan Tapson, Miss A. M., Church Missionary Society, Hakodate, Japan
Tarrant, Miss M. M., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Soochow
Tatchell, W. A., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow Tatchell, Miss., Church Missionary Society, Haitan via Foochow
Tate, L. B., American Presbyterian Mission South, Chun-ju, Corea
Tate, Miss M. S., American Presbyterian Mission South, Chun-ju, Corea
Tattershall, Miss A. S., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Tatum, E. F., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai'
Tayler, J. B., M.SC., London Missionary Society, Tientsin
Taylor, A., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Taylor, A. O., Mormon Mission, 81, Yakuojimae Machi, Ushigome, Tokyo
Taylor, A. S., M.D., American Southern Baptist Mission, Yanchow via Chinkiang
Taylor, B. V. S., M.B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hinghwafu, via Foochow
Taylor, C., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Kongju
Taylor, Dr. F. H., and wife, China Inlaud Mission, (in England)
Taylor, Dr. Wallace, M.D., and wife, Amer. Board Miss., 15, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan Taylor, E. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Hungtung via Peking
Taylor, Elliott C., Mormon Mission, Shizuoka, Japan
Taylor, H. B., M.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Anking
Taylor, H. H., B.A., Church Missionary Society, Teliyang, Sze.
Taylor, H. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kwangtehchow, via Huchow
Taylor, J., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Chengtu
Taylor, R. C., B.A., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze.
Taylor, R. E. S., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking
Taylor, W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kianfu via Kiukiang
Taylor, W. C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Wanhsien via Jchang
Taylor, W. E., PH.D., and wife, International Committee of the Y. M. C. A., Shanghai Taylor, Wm. J., and wife, Police Mission, 40, Ogawa Machi, Kanda, Tokyo
Taylor, Miss B., North-West Kiangsi Mission, Wucheng, Ki.
Taylor, Miss C. M., Church Missionary Society, Hinghwafu, via Foochow
Taylor, Miss E. G., China Inland Mission, Iang-kéo via Ningpo
Taylor, Miss E. T., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Suichow via Hankow
Taylor, Miss I., American Southern Baptist Mission, Tengchowtu, via Chefoo
Taylor, Miss S., South Chihli Mission, Tuningfu
Tennent, Miss A. C., Church Missionary Society, 24, Gokurakuji Cho, Fukuoka, Japan Tenny, C. B., and wife, American Baptist Mission 45-B, Bluff, Yokohama, Japan Terning, O., Swedish Missionary Society, Kingchow, Hupel
Terrell, Miss A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Terry, Miss E. G., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau Tetlow, Miss H. L., American Episcopal Mission, Heian Jo Gakuin, Kyoto, Japan Teusler, Dr. B., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, 27, Tsukiji, Tokyo, Japan Thacker, Miss L., M.B., B.S., Lond., English Presbyterian Mission, Chingchew vía Amoy Tharp, E. J, and wife, Unconnected, Pakow via Tangshan
Thayer, J. T., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Thomas, E. A. J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Tehyang via Chungking Thomas, E. D., and wife, Mormon Mission, 81, Yakuojimae Machi, Ushigome, Tokyo Thomas, G. M., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Suichow via Hankow Thomas, T., Church Missionary Society, Taichowfu
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1820
Thomas, Rev. W. E., Methodist Episcopal Church South, Chunchen Thomas, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow Thomas, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Siengiu, via Foochow Thomas, Miss B. A. M., Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow Thomas, Miss F. L., Unconnected, Nanchang via Kewkiang
Thomas, Miss H. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagasaki (absent) Thomasma, Miss G., American Dutch Reformed Mission, Nagasaki Thomasson, H. W., China Inland Mission, Suitingfu via Ichiang
Thompson, Prof. A. B., American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Songdo
Thompson, D., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, 16 Tsukiji, Tokyo Thompson, E. H., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Taichowfu via Ningpo Thompson, Dr. Gordon, Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Thompson, H., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Engchun, via Amoy Thompson, H. G., China Inland Mission, Suitingfu via Ichang and Wanhsien Thompson, J. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Songdo, Corea Thompson, J. E., D.D.S., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking Thompson, J., Methodist Publishing House in China, Shanghai
Thompson, T. N., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsiningchow via Chinkiang Thompson, Miss A. de F., American Dutch Reformed Miss., Yokohama, Japan (absent) Thompson, Miss Charlotte, Amer. Sout. Pres. Miss., 127, Hamano Cho, Takamatsu, Japan Thompson, Miss, Church Missionary Society, 7, Shindaiku Machi, Nagasaki
Thompson, Miss E. B., American Southern Baptist Mission, Hwanghsien via Chefoo Thompson, Miss I. E., Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Canton
Thompson, Miss M. P., American Presbyterian Mission (South), Suchowfu, via Chinkiang Thomson, A., B.A., and wife, Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Weihwei, Ho.
Thomson, C., aud wife, China Inland Mission, Hwangyen via Ningpo
Thomson, G. D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Yeungkong
Thomson, R. A., and wife, American Baptist Mission 39, Kitano Cho, Nichome, Kobe
Thomson, Ven. Arch. E. H., D.D., and wife, Amer. Protestant Episcopal Church, Shanghai Thomson, Miss M., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Hwaikingfu, Ho.
Thonstad, Miss, A. American Lutheran Mission, Juning, Honan
Thor, A. E, and wife, Scandinavian American Christian Free Mission, Canton
Thorp, Miss E., Church Missionary Society, Kokutaiji Mura, Hiroshima, Japan Throop, M. H., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Thurston, Mrs. J. L., Yale Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Thwing, E. W., and wife, Interl, Reform, Bureau, c/o Meth. Publishing House, Tokyo Tilley, Miss L., China Inland Mission, Changsha via Yochow
Timberlake, Miss Alice, Canadian Methodist Mission, 8, Tomizaka Machi, Azabu, Tokyo Tindale, Major Jas. H., and wife, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo
Tippet, Miss C. F., China Inland Mission, Pingyangfu via Peking
Tipton, W. H., and wife, American Southern Baptist Mission, Wuchow via Canton
Titus, C. B., and wife, Foreign Christian Mission, Chaohsien via Wuhu
Tjader, C. H., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Chiehchow via Taiyuanfu
Tjellstrom, A. P., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Shusi
Tocher, F., Church of Scotland Mission, Ichang
Todd, J. H., and wife, China Inland Mission (in Australia)
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Todd, P. J., M.D., Independent, Canton
Todd, Mrs. S. C., Bible Mission Society, Macao
Todd, Miss A. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tehwa via Foochow
Tomalin, E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Tomkins, L. C. F., B.A., and wife, London Mission Society, Hwangpi via Hankow
Tomkinson, Mrs., E., China Inland Mission, Ninghai via Chefoo
Tomlinson, Miss S. C., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Anking
Tompkins, C. E., M.D., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Suffu via Chungking Tonkin, Miss It. L., Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Shanghai
Tonnér, G., Swedish Missionary Society, Hwangchow via Hankow
Tooker, F. J., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Siangtan, Honan
Tupe, S. G., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Fatshan Canton
Tæpper, O., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Chucheng via Tsingtau
Topping, H. (and wife, absent), American Baptist Mission Morioka, Japan
Tornvall, D., and wife, Scandinavian China Alliance Misu., Pingliang via H'kow andSianfu Torrance, T., China Inland Mission, Chengtu
Torrence, Miss A. R., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Torrey, R. L., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hochow, Sze.
1830
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Torset, J., Norwegian Missionary Society, Changsla
Totten, F., and wife, Methodist Protestant Church, Yokohama (absent) Townsend, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Pingnan via Foochow Townshend, S. H., and wife, Baptist Mission, Chikungshan
Toyne, E. G., China Inland Mission, Kiatingfu via Chiungking Tracey, Miss A. W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kiukiang
Tracy, Miss M. E., Women's Union Missionary Society (absent), Yokohama Tranter, Miss A., China Inland Mission, Lanchi via Wenchow
Traub, Mrs. F., China Inland Mission, Nankangfu, via Kiukiang
Traub, Miss A. E., Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow, Hunan
Traver, Miss E. G., American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Travis, Miss G. B., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Trent, Miss E. M., Church Missionary Society, Fukide Machi, Habashita, Nagoya, Japan Tribe, Miss E. N., M.D., London Missionary Society, Shanghai
Trimble, F. H., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow
Trimble, Miss L. A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Trindle, J. R., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanchang
Tristram, Miss K. A., B.A., Church Missionary Society, 12, Kawaguch Cho, Osaka Trojahn, Miss E. E. V., Liebenzell Mission, Yuanchow via Yachow
Trowitzsch, K., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Syu Yin via Canton Trüdinger, A., and wife, China Inland Mission, Vicheng via Peking Trüdinger, Miss D., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Trüdinger, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Antung Ku., via Chinkiang
True, Miss Alice, American Christian Convention Mission, Ishinomaki, Japan
Trygstad, Rev. Ġ. M., and wife, Hauge's Synodes Mission, Fancheng via Hankow Tucker, A. W., M.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Tucker, F. F., M.D., and wife, Am. Board of Comsrs. for For. Msns., Pangchun via Tientsin Tucker, H. St. G., American Episcopal Mission, 54, Tsukiji, Tokyo Tucker, Miss E. M., China Inland Mission, Nanpu, Sze., via Ichang Tull, F., and wife, China Inland Mission, Yangchow via Chinkiang Turley, R. T., and wife, British and Foreign Bible Society, Moukden Turnbull, Miss M. E., Church Missionary Society, Ningpo Turner, A. B., Bishop, Church of England, Seoul (absent)
Turner, G. R., M.B., CH.B., and Missionary Society, Chiangchiu via Amoy Turner, J. J., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu via Tientsin
Turner, P. J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Chungkianghsien, Sze.
Turner, W. P., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Uwajima, Japan Turner, Miss A., United Methodist Church Mission, Chuchai via Ningching
Turner, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Chubsien, Sze., via Ichang
Turner, Miss E. F., Church Missionary Society, Shaohingfu
Turner, Miss English Baptist Mission Taiyuenfu, Shansi
Turner, Miss J. L., China Inland Mission, Kweiyang via Chungking
Tuttle, Miss Methodist Episcopal Church South U. S. A., Shanghai
Tuttle, Miss Ora, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Seoul
Tuxbury, Mrs. Nína, Am. Baptist Miss., 11, Kamidori Shicbome, Nishiku, Osaka, Japan Tveit, L., and wife, Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Künchow, Hupeh
Tweedie, Miss G., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kofu, Japan
Twilley, Staff-Captain W., and wife, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo Twizell, Miss E. S., China Inland Mission, Chichowfu, via Ningpo
Tyler, W. E., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kanchow Ki, via Kiukiang Tyng, D., B.A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Ufford, A. F., M.A., American Baptist Missionary Union, Shaohingfu Ufford, A. F., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Shaobingfu Umbreit, S. I, and wife, Evang. Assoc. of North America, 50, Tsukiji, Tokyo Underwood, H. G., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea Unwin, Miss G. M., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
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Upperman, Miss M., Independent, Tokyo, Japan (absent)
Upton, Miss E. F., American Episcopal Mission, Kawagoye, Saitama Ken, Japan Upward, B., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hankow
Urquhart, D., China Inland Mission, Sinoyi via Peking
Usher, Miss C. M., English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
Uurakahti, Miss A., Finnish Missionary Society, Yuingting
Uusitalo, Miss S., Evangelical Lutheran Missions, 816, Sendagaya, Tokyo Fu, Japan Vail, Miss J. S., Methodist Episcopal Mission Aoyama, Tokyo, Japan
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1831
Vale, J., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chengtu
Van Buskirk, M.D., J. D., American Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kongjse, Corea Van Dyck, H., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuhu
Van Dyke, E. H. and wife, Methodist Protestant Mission, 15-A, Tsukiji, Tokyo, Japan
Van Horn, G. W., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Mission, 13, Kawaguchi, Osaka (absent) Van Petten, Mrs. C. W., Methodist Episcopal Mission, 221, Bluff, Yokohama
Van Valkenburgh, H. B., and wife, American Presbyterian (South), Kashing
Vanderburgh, E. D., M.D., and wife, American Presbtn. Mission, Siangtan via Hunan Vanderslice, Miss American Board of Comprs. for For. Mission, Peking
Vander Linden, Miss L., Reformed Church in America, Amoy
Vanscoy, Miss A., Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Canton
Varcoe, Miss C. E., China Inland Mission, Yunnanfu via Hokow and Mengtze Vardon, E. B., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Tungchwan, Sze.
Varney, Miss L. E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow
Vasel, Miss M., Liebenzell Mission, Changsha
Vaughan, A. P., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Niigata
Vaughan, J. G., and wife Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Vaughan, Miss M. L. B., American Presbyterian Mission, Tsingtau
Veazey, Miss M. A., Canadian Methodist Mission, Shizuoka, Japan
Venable, W. H., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Kashing
Verity, G. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau Veryard, R. K., China Inland Mission, Changsha
Vesey, F. G., sub-agent, British and Foreign Bible Society, Seoul, Corea
Viking, C. F., and wife, Christian Catholic Church in Zion, Shanghai
Vinson, J. W., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Sutsien via Chinkiang
Vinton, Dr. C. C., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea Virgo, Miss E., Canadian Methodist Mission, Kiatingfu
Voak, Miss S., Independent, Kienteh via Anking
Voget, Miss K., Berlin Missionary Society, Tsingtau
Vogt, G., Berlin Missionary Society, Fayen Luk Hang via Canton
Vogt, V.,B.S.C.,M.A.,M.D., and wife, Nor. Missy. Society Taohualuen, Iyamr via Changshi Vomel, J. H., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Hongkong
Von Gunten. Miss E., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wahu
Von Poseck, Miss C. H., Independent, Hsinhwa via Chinkiang
Von Werthen, Baron, and wife, English Baptist Mission, Chinanfu Vories, W. M., Y. M. C. A., teacher, Hachiman, Omi, Japan
Vortisch, H., M.D., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Hoyun via Canton and Weichow Voskamp, C. J., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Tsingtau
Voskuil, H. J., Reformed Church in America, Siokhe via Amoy
Voss, H. E., and wife, United Evangelical Church Mission, Liliug via Yochow, Hunan Vyff, J., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Antung via Newchwang
Wade, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Kucheng via Foochow
Wadman, J. W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church, Honolulu
Wagner, Miss E., Amer. Methodist Espiscopal Church South, Song-do, Corea (absent) Wahlin, Miss E., Swedish Baptist Mission, Kiaochow
Wahlquist, D. R., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Machenghsien via Hankow Waidtlow, C., and wife, Danish Lutheran Mission, Port Arthur
Wainwright, Miss M. E., American Board Mission, Okayama
Walen, Miss I., Lutheran Brethren Mission, Tsaoyang via Hankow
Walentin, G., Swedish Holiness Union, Hunyuan via Peking
Wales, G. M., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Amoy
Walke, R. A., American Episcopal Mission, Tokyo, Japan (absent)
Walker, F. B., S. P. G. Mission, 5, Nakayamate Dori Sanchome, Kobe
Walker, J. E., D.D., American Board of Comners. for Fgn. Msus., Shaowu via Foochow Walker, M. J., and wife, National Bible Society of Scotland, Chinkiang
Walker, M. P., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Shanghai
Walker, Mrs. A. A., American Board Mission, 60, Yamamotodori Shichome, Kobe, Japan Walker, Mrs. E. A., Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Walker, Miss B. R., Gospel Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtao
Walker, Miss J. C., Amer. Board of Commissioners for Fgn. Msns., Shaowu via Foochow Walker, R. G., China Inland Mission, Chowkiakow, via Hankow
Walker, R. R., M.B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Hinghwafu via Foochow
Wall, Miss T., American Episcopal Mission, Hirosaki, Japan Wallace, E. W., B.A., B.D., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
1832
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Wallace, G., and wife, American Episcopal Mission, 25, Tsukiji, Tokyo, Japan Wallace, H. F., M.A., B.D., English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow
Wallace, J. H., B.A., International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Tokyo
Wallace, Mrjas, H., Y. M. C. A., Waseda, Tokyo
Wallace, W. J., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Taichowfu
Wallace, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Fukow via Hankow
Wallace, Miss E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Wallenberg, Miss C., Scandinavian Alcle. Miss Tsingchow, Kan, via Hankow and Sianfu Waller, J. G., M.A., and wife, Canadian Board Mission, Ueda, Shinshiu, Japan
Walley, Mrs. L. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kiukiang
Wallis, Miss E., China Inland Mission, Hiangcheng via Hankow
Walmesly, Miss M. A., Church Missionary Society, Mienchuhsien, Sze.
Walne, E. N., D.D., and wife, Southern Baptist Convention U.S.A., Fukuoka, Japan (abst.) Walsh, W. S., B.A., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Walter, Miss E. M., Church Missionary Society, Gifu, Japan (absent)
Walter, Miss English Baptist Mission, Taiyuenfu, Shansi
Walton, H. B., M.A. and wife, S. P. G. Mission, 2,082, Minami Ota Machi, Yokohoma Walvoord, A., and wife, Reformed Dutch Church in America, Nagasaki
Wambold, Miss K. C., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea
Wandel, A. E., Swedish Missionary Society, Wuchang via Hankow
Wa
Vansey, H, R., and wife, Japan General Mission, Shiken Cho, Nikko, Japan Ward, E. B., and wife, United Brethren in Christ, Canton
Ward, Ensign, Salvation Army, Seoul, Corea
Ward, Miss E., American Presbyterian Mission, Peking
Ward, R., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kucheng via Foochow
Ward, Miss Elizabeth, American Board Mission, 25, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka, Japan Ward, Miss I. M., Amer. Presb. Miss., 33, Kami Niban Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo
Ward, Miss R. P., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow Ware, J., and wife, Foreign Christian Missionary Society, Shanghai
Ware, Miss A. C., China Inland Mission, Chüchowfa, via Ningpo
Warnock, Miss C., American Episcopal Miss., 15, Globan Cho, Kojimachi, Tokyo, Japan Warnshuis, A. L., M.A., and wife, Reformed Church in America, Sio-khe via Amoy Warr, Miss N., Unconnected, Nanchang via Kewkiang
Warren, C. M. and wife, American Board Mission, Tottori, Japan
Warren, C. T., and wife, Church Missionary Society,, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka Warren, G. G., and wife, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Changsha
Warren, O., China Inland Mission, Hankow
Warren, W. H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shaohingfu
Warren, Mrs. C. F., Church Missionary Society, Tokushima, Japan
Warren, Miss B., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Wasson, A. W., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church, Song-do, Corsa Wasson, J. S., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tingchowfu via Amoy Waterman, Miss M. E., China Inland Mission, Tsingkiangpu via Chinkiang Waters, B. C., and wife, China Inland Mission, Anshunfn via Yochow and Kweiyang Waters, W. B., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Nakatsu, Buzen, Japan Waters, G. H., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow Waters, Miss A. G., Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Sungkiangfu Waters, Miss M. E., China Inland Mission, Chuhsien, Sze., via Ichaug Watkins, Miss J. H., Methodist Episcopal Church South, U.S.A., Soochow
Watkin, Miss M., London Missionary Society, Canton
Watney, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Uongbuang via Foochow Watson, J., M.A., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Changpu via Amoy Watson, J., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Suiteichow, Shausi
Watson, J. R.. M.B., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Tsingchowfu via Kiaochow Watson, P. T., M.D., and wife Am. Board of Commrs, for For. Miss'ns., Fenchow, Sze. Watson, W. H., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan Watson, Miss R. J., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nagoya (absent) Watt, Rev. F. J., B.SC., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze Watt, Miss H. M., English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi
Watts, Miss E. E., LL.A., Christians' Mission, Ningpo
Weakley, W. R., and wife, Southern Methodist Episcopal Miss., 14, Kawaguchi Cho, Osaka Weaver, C. S. and wife, Churches of Christ Miss., 2,395, Minami Kawahori Cho, Osaka Weaver, Miss G., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chikusa Machi, Nagoya, Japan Webb, Á. E., St. Andrew's Mission, Shiba, Tokyo, Japan (absent)
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1833
Webb, Mrs., American Presbyterian Church, Pyengyang, Corea
Weber, Miss L. I., China Inland Mission, Tsingkiangpu via Chinkiang Webster, G. W., and wife, Swedish Mission in China, Haichow via Peking
Webster, J. B., American Southern Baptist Mission, Chinkiang
Webster, J., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden
Webster, J., Wesleyan Missionary Society, Yungchou, Hunan
Webster, J. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Fuslun, Sze., via Chungking
Webster, Miss B., China Inland Mission, Ningkwofu
Wedderburn, L. D. M., M.A., United Tree Church of Scotland, Ashio via Newchwang Wedderspoon, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Foochow
Wedicson, Miss J., Scandinavian Alliance Mission, Chenyuan, via Hankow
Weekes, E. J., B.A., Canton Christian College, Canton
Weekes, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Ciongbau via Foochow
Weeks, Miss E. M., English Baptist Mission, Tsingchowfü,
Weidner, Miss S. L., American German Reformed Mission, Sendai, Japan Weir, A., M.A., Irish Presbyterian Church Mission, Moukden
Weir, H. H., and wife, Church of England (S.P.G.), Chemulpo
Weiss, F., Berlin Missionary Society, Canton
Welbon, A. G., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Seoul, Corea Welbourne, J. A., American Episcopal Mission, 3, Yayoi Cho, Hongo, Tokyo
Weld, Miss M. F., American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Wells, H. R., and wife, London Missionary Society, Hongkong
Wells, Dr. J. H., and wife, Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Pingyang, Corea Wells, M., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Tsingtau
Wells, R. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Weihsien via Tsingtau
Wells, Miss, Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Wells, Miss, English Presbyterian Mission, Choochowfu, via Swatow
Wells, Miss Florence, Women's Union Missionary Society, 212, Bluff, Yokohoma
Wells, Miss A. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chungking
Wells, Miss G. E., Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze
Wells, Miss L. A., American Presbyterian Mission, Yamaguchi, Japan
Wells, Miss P. C., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Foochow
Wellwood, R., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningyuanfu via Chungking. Wellwood, Miss C., Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Wendell, Miss I., Scandinavian American Christian Free Mission, Canton
Wendt, Miss Kieler, China Mission, Limchow via Pakhoi
Wennborg, F. A., and wife, Swedish Missionary Society, Machenghsien
West, Miss A. B., Amer. Pres. Man., 2, Nishimachi, Nihonenoki, Shiba, Tokyo, Japan
Westaway, S. P., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chengtu
Westcott, Miss P. E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow
Westen, Miss M., Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Jída Machi, Shinshiu, Japan Wester, G. W., Swedish Mission in China, Chiehchow via Taiyuanfu
Westergren, J., Swedish Baptist Mission, Chucheng
Westnidge Hy., China Inland Mission, Fushun, Sze., via Chungking
Weston, Miss M. D., Church of England S.P.G., Kojimachi, Tokyo (absent)
Westrup, J. J., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Chowkiakow, Honan
Westwater, A. M., L.R.C.P. & S., United Free Ch. of Scotland, Liaoyang via N'chwang
Westwood, W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Anking
Wharton, Mrs. R. G., Independent, 19, Ipponmatsu, Daikokuzaka, Azabu, Tokyo, Japan Wheeler, Miss E. L., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang
Wheeler, Miss L. M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Peking
Wherry, J., D.D., American Presbyterian Mission, Peking
Whilden, Miss L. F., American Southern Baptist Mission, Canton
Whitcher, H., B. A., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Weihsien
White, F. J., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Shanghai
White, H. G., China Inland Mission, Shunking, Sze., via Ichang
White, H. W, and wife, American Presbyterian Msn. (South), Süchowfu via Chinkiang White, S. S. (and wife, absent), American Board Mission, Okayama, Japan
White, Miss E. R., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
White, Miss L. M., B.A., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
White, Miss M. C., Methodist Episcopal Church South U. S. A., Soochow
White, Miss M. F., American Southern Baptist Mission Tengchowfu, via Chefoo White, Miss M. L., Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Huchowfu White, Mrs. Wm. J., Independent, Azabu, Tokyo
1834
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Whitehorn, A. L., American Episcopal Mission, Fukui, Japan Whitelaw, A., and wife, Unconnected, Laohokow via Hankow
Whiteside, J., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South U.S.A., Shanghai Whiteside, R. A., Church Missionary Society, Anhsien, Sze.
Whitewright, J. S., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Chinanfu via Tsingtau Whitfield, Mrs. J., Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Whiting, H. C., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Church, Chai Ryong, Corea Whitman, G. E., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Kaying via Swatow Whitman, Miss M. A., American Baptist Missionary Union, Surugadai, Tokyo (absent) Whitmore, F. B., B.A., M.D., and wife, International Committee of Y.M.C.A., Nanking Whitney, II T., M.D., and wife, Am. Board of Comnrs. for Fgn. Msns., Inghok via Foochow Whitney, J. P, and wife, Independent, 803, Miyamura Cho, Matsumoto, Shinshiu, Japan Whitney, Dr. W. N., and wife, Medical Mission, 17, Hikawa Cho, Akasaka, Tokyo Whittemore, N. C., and wife, American Presbyterian Church Mission, Sun-Chun, Corca Whittlesey, R. B., and wife, China Inland Mission, Chungking Whitworth, K. B., Y.M.C.A., teacher, Nagasaki, Japan
Whyte, G. D., M.B., C.M., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Swatow Wichner, F., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Santong via Canton Wickenden, Miss I. E., American Baptist Missionary Union, Hangchow Wicks, C. H., B.A., Canton Christian College, Canton Wicks, S., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Pakhoi
Wied, Miss A., Church Missionary Society, Mienchuhsien, Sze.
Wieneke, A., and wife, Independent, Taian, Shautung
Wigham, B., Friends' Foreign Mission, Chungking
Wighan, L., B.A., and wife, Friends' Foreign Mission, Tungchwan, Sze.
Wight, A., M.B., C.M., and wife, English Presbyterian Mission, Chaochowfu, via Swatow Wight, Mrs. C., American Presbyterian Mission, Tengchowfu via Chefoo
Wilbur, E. H., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Canton
Wilbur, Hollis A., Y.M.C.A. Kobe, Japan
Wilcox, J. W., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shanghai
Wilcox, Miss E. F., American Baptist Mission 47, Shimotera Machi, Himeji, Japan Wilcox, Miss H. R., South Chihli Mission, Taningfu
Wilcox, Miss V. M., American Presbyterian Mission, Yuengkong
Wilder, G. D., and wife, Am. Board of Comnrs. for Foreign Msns., Tungchow, Chi. Wilder, Mrs. F. D., Am. Board of Comsnrs. for Foreign Mans., Tungchow, Chi. Wiley, Miss M., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow Wilford, E. L., M.B., L.R.C.P. and S., Edin. Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking Wilhelm, R.,and wife, Allgemeiner Evangelisch Protestantischer Missionsverein, Tsingtau Wilkes, Paget, and wife, Japan Evangelistic Band, Kobe (absent), Wilkinson, A. T., and wife, Canadian Methodist Mission, Toyama, Japan Wilkinson, G., M.B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Wilkinson, J. R., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South), Soochow Wilkinson, Miss, Wesleyan Missionary Society, Hankow
Williams, E., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu
Williams, E. R., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Mienchow, Sze
Williams, F. A, China Inland Mission, Hanchungfu via Hankow and Sianfu
Williams, F. E. C., and wife, American Methodist Episcopal Church Mission, Kongju Williams, J. E., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Nanking
Williams, M., D.D., Am. Board of Commissioners for Fgn. Missions, Taikuhsien, Shansi Williams, R., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Williams, W. P., Church Missionary Society, Funingfu via Foochow
Williams, W. W., M.D., Methodist Episcopal Mission Yungan via Foochow
Williams, Mrs. E. O., China Inland Mission (in England)
Williams, Mrs. J. E., China Inland Mission, Chinking
Williams, Miss F. M., China Inland Mission, Sintientsz, Paoning via Ichang Williams, Miss Lulu, Independent, Nara, Japan,
Williams, Miss M. J., China Inland Mission, Pachow, Sze., via Ichang
Williams, Miss M. E., Methodist Protestant Mission, 244B, Bluff, Yokohama
Williamson, Jas., Presbyterian Mission Press, Shanghai
Williamson, H. R., B.D., English Baptist Mission, Hsinchow, Shansi
Williamson, Miss K. I. China Inland Mission (in Europe)
Willeford, Miss Mary D., American Southern Baptist Mission, Laichow via Chefoo
Wills, E. F., M.B., C.M., and wife, London Missionary Society, Tsao-shib via Hankow Wills, J. E., American Southern Baptist Mission, Shanghai, South China
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA 1835-
Wilson, A. B., and wife, China Inland Mission, Sienku via Ningpo
Wilson, A. G., Medical College, Canton
Wilson, C., North-west Kiangsi Mission, Wucheng, Ki.
Wilson, Adjutant Thos., and wife, Salvation Army, 11, Ginza Nichome, Tokyo, Japan Wilson, J. K., jr., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang Wilson, J. W., and wife, London Missionary Society, Changsha, Hunan
Wilson, J. W., and wife, Unconnected, Weihaiwei
Wilson, R. C., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Soochow
Wilson, W., M.B., C.M., and wife, China Inland Mission, Suitingfu via Ichang
Wilson, W. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Oita, Bungo, Japan (abt.). Wilson, W. F. M. A., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Nanking
Wilson, Dr. R. M., American Presbyterian Mission, South, Kwangju
Wilson, Miss A. R. V., American Presbyterian Mission, (South), Hangchow
Wilson, Miss D. M., China Inland Mission, Chefoo
Wilson, Miss E. M., Methodist Protestant Mission, 330, Ura Monzen Cho, Nagoya, Japan Wilson, Miss F. O., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Tientsin
Wilson, Miss L. M., China Inland Mission, Wanhsien via Ichang
Wilson, Miss M. E., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Hinghwa via Foochow
Wilson, Miss R., American Presbyterian Mission (South,) Tunghianghsien via Kashing Wiltshire, S. G., China Inland Mission, U-u (Cheng) Luanfu via Peking
Windsor, T., and wife, China Inland Mission, Tsenyi via Chungking Winslow, H. H., and wife, Seventh Day Adventist Mission, Shanghai
Winn, Miss M. L., Reformed Dutch Church in America, Mishima, Aomori, Japan Winn, T. C., and wife, Amer. Presbyterian Mission, Dalny, Manchuria Winther, J. M. T., and wife, Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Kurume, Japan Wirick, Miss L. J., Independent, 72, Wakamatsu Cho, Ushigome, Tokyo Withers, Miss L., American Baptist Missionary Union, Kityang, via Swatow Witherby, Miss, Church of England Zenana Mission, Hinghwafu, via Foochow Witt, H., and wife, Liebenzell Mission, Yuanchow via Yochow Witte, H. H. F., Liebenzell Mission, Yuanchow via Yochow
Wittemore, N. C., Mission of Presbyterian Church in U.S.A., Sun-chun, Corea Wittenberg, H., M.D., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow via Swatow Woern, A. G., Swedish Holiness Union, Soping, via Taiyuanfu
Wolhgemuth, A., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Nam-on via Canton Wohlleber, C., and wife, Liebenzell Mission, Changsha
Wold, O. R., and wife, Hauge's Synodes Mission, Tzeho via Taipingtien
Wolfe, Ven, Archdeacon J. R., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Foochow Wolfe, Miss A. K., Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Wolfe, Miss A. M., Church Missionary Society, Foochow
Wolfe, Miss M. E., Church Missionary Society, Go-sang-che via Foochow
Wolfendale, R., L.R.C.P. & S., ED., and wife, London Missionary Society, Chungking Wonnick, Miss G., China Inland Mission, Yangchow
Wood, F. M., and wife, China Inland Mission (in Europe)
Wood, R. E., B.A., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang via Hankow Wood, Miss, English Baptist Mission, Hsinchow, Shansi
Wood, Miss C. E., Church Missionary Society, Toyohashi, Japan.
Wood, Miss M., American Friends Mission, Luho via Nanking
Wood, Miss Muriel, Canadian Methodist Mission, Chungking
Wood, Miss M.E., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Wuchang via Hankow Wood, Miss M., London Missionary Society, Chichow, via Peking Woodberry, J., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Shanghai
Woodbridge, S. I., D.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission (South,) Shanghai Woodd, C. H. B., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Momoyama Chu Gakko, Osaka Woodhull, Miss H., American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Foochow Woodhull, Miss K. C., M.D., American Board of Commissioners for Fgn. Missions, Focehow Woods, H. M., D.D., and wife, American Pres. Mission (South,) Hwaianfu via Chinkiang Woods, J. B., M.D., and wife, Amer. Pres. Mission (South,) Tsingkiangpu via Chinkiang Woods, T., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Kutien via Foochow
Woods, Miss J., American Presbyterian Mission (South,) Hwaianfu via Chinkiang Woodsworth, H. F., Y.M.C.A. Teacher, 123, Nagata Cho, Kagoshima, Japan Woodsworth, Miss II., Canadian Methodist Mission, Renshou
Woodward, E. L., M.D., American Protestant Episcopal Church Mission, Anking Woodward, H., and wife, Church Missionary Society, Gifu, Japan
Woodworth, A. D., D.D., and wife, Am. Christian Convention, 26, Kasumicho, Azabu, Tokyo
1836
PROTESTANT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA, JAPAN AND COREA
Wooldridge, H. C., Church Missionary Society, Ningpo
Worley, J. H., PH.D., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kucheng via Foochow Worley, L. E., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Worley, Mrs. R. E., American Baptist Missionary Union, Swatow
Worship, T. A., and wife, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wuchow
Worth, G, C., M.D., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission South, Kiangyin
Worth, Miss Ida M., American Methodist Episcopal Church South, Oita, Bungo, Japan. Worthington, Miss H. J., Church Missionary Society, Kure, Japan
Wray, Miss M. A., Church Missionary Society, Taichiowfu
Wright, H. K., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Ningpo
Wright, J. M., M.D., and wife, Am. Reformed Presbyterian Msn., Takhing via Canton Wright, Miss A. H., American Episcopal Mission, Mito, Japan'
Wright, Miss Ada, Amer. Board Mission, Mito, Japan
Wunsch, R., M.D., Allgemeiner Evangelisch Protestantischen Missionsverein, Tsingtau Wupperfeld, H., and wife, China Inland Mission, Kaihsien via Ichang
Wyckoff, Prof. M. N., and wife, American Dutch Reformed Mission, Shirokane, Tokyo Wyckoff, Miss Gertrude, Amer. Board of Comsrs. for Fgn. Msns., Pangchu via Tientsin Wyckoff, Miss Grace, American Board of Comsrs. for For. Msns., Pangchu via Tientsin Wylie, Miss M., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Atsuta, Nagoya, Japan Wynd, W., and wife, American Baptist Missionary Union, Osaka (absent)
Wynne-Willson, Miss D. S., Church Missionary Society, Shirakabe Cho, Nagoya, Japan Wythe, Miss Grace, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Aoyama, Tokyo Yard, Miss E. M., China Inland Mission, Kwangyuan, Sze., via Ichang
Yates, O. F., American Presbyterian Mission (South,) Hwaianfu, via Chinkiang Yen, F. C. M.D., and wife, Yale Foreign Missionary Society, Changsha, Hanan Yerkes, C. H., and wife, American Presbyterian Mission, Yihsien via Chinkiang Yost, John W., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Mission, Chengtu Young, A., L.R.C.P. & S., and wife, English Baptist Mission, Sianfu, Shensi Young, A. R., L.R.C.P. & S., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Moukden Young, C. W. M.D., and wife, Am. Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Peking Young, E.M'K., M.B.,C.M., and wife, United Free Church of Scotland, Ashio via Newchwang Young, L. L., Canadian Presbyterian Mission, Ham Hung
Young, R., and wife, China Inland Mission, Shucheng via Wubu
Young, W. A., M.B., C.M., and wife, United Free Ch. of Sland, Chaoyangchen via Newchwang Young, Miss A., Christian and Missionary Alliance, Wanchih via Wuhu Young, Miss E. G., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Taianfu via Tsingtau
Young, Miss F., China Inland Mission, Anjen via Kiukiang
Young, Miss F. A. M., China Inland Mission, Sienkü, via Ningpo
Young, Miss M., Methodist Episcopal Mission, Kwassui Jo Gakko, Nagasaki Young, Miss M. M., Church Missionary Society, Shirakabe Cho, Nagoya, Japan Youngman, Miss K. M., American Presbyterian Mission, 6, Tsukiji, Tokyo Youngren, A., and wife, Free Methodist Mission, 1,921, Hidein Cho, Osaka Yun, T. H., and wife, Methodist Episcopal Church South, Songdo, Corea Zahn, T., and wife, Rhenish Missionary Society, Tungkun via Canton Zaugg, E. H., and wife, Reformed Church in the U. S., Kwozenji Dori, Sendai Zehnel, K., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Tschi Chin via Canton Zieger, A., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Tsingtau
Ziegler, G., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Lilong via Hongkong Ziegler, H., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Hokshooha via Swatow Ziegler, H., International Committee of the Y.M.C.A., Tientsin
Ziemer, Miss S. E., Reformed Church in the United States, Yochow via Hankow Zimmer, J., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Kayinchow via Swatow Zimmerling, R., and wife, Berlin Missionary Society, Canton
Zimmermann, Miss D. I., American Baptist Missionary Union, Ningpo Zwemer, Miss N., Reformed Church in America, Siokhe via Amoy Zwissler, C., and wife, Basel Missionary Society, Hoyün via Canton
CHINESE NEWSPAPER
1837
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1838
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