學大陵金

NANKING-WUHU

Chin ling da sho

UNIVERSITY OF NANKING

Chinese Language, Literature, History,

Philosophy, Western Subjects, Agri- culture and Forestry, etc.

Y. G. Chen, president

A. J. Bowen, adviser Miss E. M. Priest, treasurer Sie Siang, accountant

H. R. Wei, registrar of the Colleges K. C. Liu, dean of the College of Arts

and Science

J. H. Reisner, co-dean of the College

of Agriculture and Forestry

Djang Fang, prin. of Middle School

H. T. Li, registrar of the Middle School

891

C. T. Gee, supt. of construction and

resident engineer

T. Y. Ni, business manager

S. F. Tsu, Chinese secretary to the

president

Miss M. H. Purcell, English secretary

to the president

VACUUM OIL Co.-Teleph. S. 408; Tel.

Ad: Yangtse

W. Brydon, representative

WING CHONG Co., Universal Providers-

-1, The Bund, Hsiakwan

YANGTSE HOTEL-Tel. Ad: Yangtse

W. Brydon, proprietor

WUHU

湖 蕪

Wú-hú

This port (the name of which signifies " grass and lakes," i.e., swamps) was opened to foreign trade, by the Chefoo Convention, on the 1st April, 1877. It is situated on the Yangtsze, in the province of An-hwei, and is a "half-way" port between Chinkiang and Kiukiang, though nearer to the former. It has the appear- ance of 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 10 to 12 feet in the summer, connects the port with the important city of Ning-kuoh-fu, in southern An-hwei 50 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 is carried on, and may some day be of importance. The silk districts of Nan-ling and King-hsien are situated within 50 miles of Wuhu. Besides the canals leading to Ning-kuoh-fu and Taiping-hsien, there are two others communicating with Su-an and Tung-pó.

The value of the trade of the port for the year 1927 was Hk. Tls. 33,656,178, as compared with Hk. Tls. 49,560,411 in 1926, Hk. Tls. 63,225,860 in 1925, Hk. Tls. 37,797,626 in 1924, and Hk. Tls. 30,550,011 in 1923. Coal may some day become a considerable article of export from Wuhu, both native and foreign capital having been directed to the great coalfields 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. 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. The Yu Fan Iron Mining Com- pany completed a mountain railway, about five miles long, from their mines to the river bank at Tikang, a small port 30 miles up river from Wuhu, in 1918.

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