As with Paterno do
personal
the other
Itm
rule.
Bon, but
anda lio boomed-airited,
Poctradanjolal
would profe Hle and all vomers. It may be d in the protection of me rig as now were tire à prospe
native
inquiet to he
St-In the add
Accund damed he had boreat it, but failed
weeks hard labour,
* THE RECENT NAVAL
MANOEUVRES.
·Cincinnátus has been getting ernor, Sir Hoary Hhake, to the Legislatia to nibstantiate his assertions and was given onbtedly the most, realistio we have had since
steamom to Australia.
Council at the meeting on Thursday the 28 OBTAINING WORRY UNDER FAIAN PERERKORs ult., His Excellency atated “That the present Abdool Rahman, an Indian, without employ. financial position of the Colony is satisfactory, ment, as charged with obtaining about $600 and that on the 31st December, 1900, there was made tate pretences from four other Indians, balance of assets over liabilities of $1,100,785.69, in that he promised to obtain for them passages which does not include the value of silver at of Messrs. Butterfeld and Swipe's the Mint, $40,415.82" (paid for I presume as it appears to be considered as an asset)-so that the Rotund balance of assets over liabilities was on 31st December last $1,141,91.51, What is the necessity for such a large credit balance ? and how is the money invested?
2
Concerned with shove acoused is another Indias named Mahomed, who, as defendant elatis, has the monoy, with which he absconded to Macao.
andus credis in history if he went back to his plough for the same reason that Caillos wish to avoid the provines in which his operations com pelled the admiration of his American opponents, But there are generals who did not become wealthy by insurrection, and who can take up civil rule where they fought without fear of vedasins. Such rich ought to be a help in bringing peses and prosperity to the people. There is nothing that the masses wish so Hos of decently as a cessation of strife. The recent trip of the Commission through the north showed how ardent and universal is this wish. Surely it is not intended that the present Partly leaders may plan and scheme and clash, residente in the Colony shall pay for all the and do what they please at Manila if they will only intended new buildings-afflelal ones and im permit an end to the course of robbery, murdor,provements of one sort and another and that a and devastation which hos paralysed industry, loan will not be raised whereby our sexamined by Inspector Collett, testified to It will be enough for the masses if they may could pay their share of the permanent build- anjoy in their homes the order and protectionings and improvements of this Colony? The which government should afford them. When Chancellor of the Exchequer in London when they shall be convinced of power enough at he finds a balance at the credit of a year's Manila to insure them such protection, the revenue, and that a succeeding year will also
thous
dést they would government
mre benedits against aterno's faith
w he
of s tranfer of
government to his own klud be after his fashioning. He is believe in the doctrine that patriotient is patriotism and business is business, and that the two have no necessary Telation
CINEL FRORBAL TABAT00) D It will not do to trust implcitly to the Feds. thə nəz zula. frared less conspicuously per
did for
troduced
“patriotism,
vate pra these meeting
disposition
let Paterno Spain conferred Jederal
srislative Com-] In strip of BOTIN Lalande with the sion, he permitted himself to be sily every meating as a man
ons do not agi private practice, but
that
him decorations
fore
go on the trip out of pars elect of his valuable, pri.
hon that he made at with Americanism, His people. value of lils that he
while Ipsin valed, that konours in that that insurrection Loth occupandy, and
to give up the Jnvested him. ozled into vON- ion, and ors asually rată pesotice make the
The naval menmuvres of 1901 are un-
of rol warfare in those yearly exercises To we first begun to try to approach the conditions as anything like a reliable judgment on the duct of the various detail of the manoeuvres, would require access to, and careful study of, the umpires reports, which themselves may be baged to a great extent on theoretical grounds but there are a few conclusions to be derived, which he who runs may read: None of them are new to thestudent of naval matters, and most of them have been brought before the readers of this paper, but all should be well thought ever by everyone who has the welfare of his
try at heart.
results of the several dations, and on the con-
C
$13,00 FER DOZ.
L
THE BEST
U
B
PURE
The obvious test has once more been em. phasised that a homogeneous aquadron of OLD modern ships as represented by the X Flsot must always have great advantages over ons crons, was inferior in practically every other such as the B Flest, which, thonga more num- respect. The corollary to this is that we rainnot depend on being able to send our Channel Fleet to the Mediterranean unless the enemy's Best in northern waters consiste of ships in the samo elaas as those which form our resETTS squadron.
leaders. whom even now they would blindly probably leave a larger balance, immediately Butterfield and hour defendant told the reiterated expression of opinion that, our
follow would find few responses to a call for another insurrection,
CORRESPONDENCE, We do not hold ourselves responsible for the
opinions expressed by our correspondents.}
THE AMEER OF AFGHANISTAN.
TO THE EDITOR OF THE DAILY PRESS," 9th. Jctober.
copy
Six,--La your loaderette on the late Ameer of Afghanistan you giveexpression to a different opinion as to his merits to those of other people who know something about him, and I snclose a of verses by Sir Alfred Lyall, K.C.B.. Lieut-Governor of the Punjab and Soind, who had good reason to know the late Ameer. If you can give room for them, they will express the character of the dead potentate much better than people could who did not know him so well as Sir Alfred Lyall. Kipling was writing on fairly good information when he penned the "Amear's Moray." ---- Yours, etc.,
------ BIMLA......... (Enclosure.)
THE AMEER'S MESSAGE.
BY SIE ALFRED C. LYALL, K.C.B.
Abdurrahman, the Darani Khin, to the Ghilzaie
Chief wrote her
**
God has made me Ameer of the Afghins, but
thou on thy hills art free.
I rule by the sword and signet; I cars not to
flatter or bribe;
I take nor fee nor servico of the noble Ghilzie
tribe..
Nor pledge nor promise I ask of thee; I
-pardon if all man know
That thy heart has been hard against me, and
friend has been my foe, thy For the sons of Sher Ali are exiles, their best
men broken orified; · And thom who escaped are homeless, and all
who'remained are dead.
Ench is the work of the Merciful, whose vill
is to emite or to save į
It is He gives wealth and vengeance, or tears
o'er a bloodstained grave. Now, while the swords are a moment still, ere
ever fresh blood shall run.
MF. E. J. Grist nopeared for the defence, Inspector Collett told his Worship that defondant obtained twolte sovereigns and two ten-dollars notes from one, seves ten-dollar and fourteen Ave-dollar notes from the second, and one hundred-dollar and four ten-dollar notos from another on the 7th instant, on the Hongkong Cricket Ground.
The first witness, an unemployed watchman, having given defendinne xaney to obtain for him a passage to Australis, as the latter claimed to be able to do so. The money, 12 sovereigns, was paid on the Cricket Ground. Defendant gare the money to another man, named Hahomed, who went in to Messes.
ostensibly to
To get the
Our readers will, perhaps, be tired of announces that certain Taxes and Duties will tickets. After half be reduced for the coming year.
them he would go and look Mahomed up, scouting is sadly deflelent, and that the creation He also failed to come back. At 5 p.m. that of a special type of vossal for this purpose Why is such not done hers? The 13 paraffinom. ilies and his three friends saw urgently needed. The present manoeuvres bare cont. per annum we have now been paying for defendant walking along Queen's Road. They smply confirmed the correctness of this opinion. some years and at present on rents which in asked him how about the money or tickets, a valuable oruiser employed to carry news of the declaration of war was promptly captured. most cases are nearly if not quite double what when he replied "What money? they were 5 years ago is a very heavy faz indeed,
A squadron of craisers was led on to action and a reduction I think should certainly be
with with a more powerful squadron because its advanced vessels, instead of being speedy and made in the above rate for the year 1902, and a
practically unarmed, were armed cruisers which larger reduction in future years if possible.
considered it imperative to fight. In last year's naval mentesvres it occurred more than once that whon & rendevous was changed the ad miral had to leave a valuable ornimar at the first rendezvous to acquaint the ships that had been ordered to be there at a given time of the alteration that had been made. Many other examples might be cited to show that for the tips, Kt all events, of the feeler of a fleet or squadron, and for many other duties, speed rather than armament is required, the removal fight being in itsolf a great of the temptation point in favour of a vessel on scouting, o., duties. When we come to think that in war time such vessels might be manned to a great extent by offers and men-volunteers possibly
I shall be glad, as I am sure many other ratepayers also will be, if the Hon. T. H. Whitelisad will ask some questions on the subject to-morrow by His Excellency the Gor- ernor's leave, as I am afraid that, as the second reading of the Ordinance comes on to-morrow, will also be read a third time then, and passed. So if anything can be done in order to get the 13 per cent. reduced, urgency is needed.- Yours, etc.,
it
RATEPAYER.
POLICE COURT.
Wednesday, 9th October.
BEFORE MR. HASRLAND,
ILLICIT AND NOT ILLICIT OPIUM,
There were two cases of possession of illicit opiuma brought before his Worship.
The first was of having one tael five race of prepared opiam without a valid certificate. The possessor was fined $30, or six weeks.
In the sand case a Chinese was charged with being in possession of a small quantity of prepared opium without the necessary car tideste.
On examination it transpired that defendant. had received theopium from a friend, who again had received it as a present from the opium-
former.
Defendant was accordingly discharged.
· LOTTERY TICKETS.
P. S. 137 charged a Chinees with unlawfully selling Wai Sing " lottery tiokste, contrary to the Colony's Ordinance.
THEFT OF COTTON.
Defendant claimed that he was simply dis tributing letters, which friends asked him to bring down here as he was coming from Amoy, His Worship sentenced him to pay ine of 325, or in default to suffer one month's hard labour.
Three Chinese where charged with the theft of a bag of cotton from the Kowloon Godown Co.'s godown at Connaught Road.
The constable gave evidence to finding the bag in possession of another man, who claimed to have received it from three men employed at the godown.
The receiver testified to having got it from the three defendante, who asked him to have the cotton made into a quilt by another friend, whe had already gone home.
The godown-kamper identified the cotton na belonging to the Company and the defendants as being employees. He claimed the cotton was swoopings.
His Worship here remarked that he could not see where the false pretences came in.
Inspector Collett thought that the fact of defendant promising to obtain a ticket and failing to do so constituted false pretences,
His Worship: No. It must be a prstenes to married man" may existing fact, "I am be a false pretence, but I will marry you next week" is not a false pretence.
Hia Worship decided to adjourn the case for a wook, to enable defendant to hurt up and bring basic Mahomed, who, his Worship thought, released on $25 bail. was really the guilty man.
Defendant was
A HUMAN GINLET.
D. Crus, whose name is well-known at the Magistracy, promised sight Ladians to obtain them passages to Australia, and took their money for the purpose. He failed, however, to procure the tickets, and after the matter had come to the ear of the police, returned the money to five of them. The other three then tock Cru to No. 2 Police Station, where the latter told the Inspector that he was willing to return the money, but it was in possession of another man st West Point, whither the Inspector told him to take the man The other man could not be found, and the the insignificant part played in the manœuvres The remarks that were made last year as to Indians, losing patience, took a few turas by torpedo-boats as such apply' again this year. of a turban around Crus's neck, and each. hold-The time was so short, and the weather so ing an end commenced alternately pulling, foggy, that the torpedo-boats did not get a consing Crus to spin like a Chinese carpenter's good opportunity for attack. On another occ- rimlet Cruz yelled murder." and the police aion the fog might favour the torpedo-boats coming on the scene arrested the two indians. Instead of the ships, and had the manentres Yesterday afternoon Cruz failed to make his lasted longer a vary different tale might have appearance, and the Indians wore discharged. been told. They at once applied for a warrant against Cruz.
with very little knowledge of anything bat Bosmanship, and that in pesos time they would form invaluable schools for tactics, scouting, and-engine-room-and-stokehold instruction, it+ seems incomprehensible that we do not build" some, if only as an experiment.
ALLEGED ANTI-CHINESE
QUTRAGE IN JALOR,
A correspondent sends to a Straits contem porary the following account of an outrage against Chinese in Jalor, a small state under the Siamese flag in the north of the Malay peninsula :—
MELLOW
H
I
AT THE
PRICE.
$12.00 PER DOZ.
K
Y.
H. PRICE & CO.
12, QUEEN'S ROÅÐ.
Hongkong, 10th October, 1901.
THE
ROBINSON
PIANO CO., LTD.:
"WASHBURN"
MANDOLINES.
GUITARS.
AT
COST
[610
BANJOS
PRICE
TO CLEAR PRESENT STOCK. Hongkong, 3rd October, 1901.
COLD STORAGE.
[2053
THE HONGKONG ION COMPANY, LIMITED is now prepared to receive perishabla pro- visions for Cold Storage at EAST POINT at Moderate Hates.
Wr: PARLANE
Manager. Tab
Hongkong, 17th February, 1899,
UAN WAHA Co.,
·DEALERS IN ITALIAN MARBLE AND GRANITE
MONUMENTS.
DESIGNS & PRICES on APPLICATION
at No. 1, Queen's Road East, Hongkong kat Hongkong, 17th October, 1899.
TSANG FOO & CO. SAM WING? HING-
The inadequacy of the means for coaling slips during manmuvres, and therefort in war time, was strongly insisted on by most of the correspondents, especially by those with B Fleet. This most important point, which is engaging the attention of foreign countries. especially of France, wants most careful look- ing into. The larger the Navy the greater the diffoulties, and arrangement which arð suitable and sufficient for, say, the German navy, in which all this sort of thing is worked Dating the last Chinese New Year's festivi-out in detail, would have, in our case, to be very ties in Jalor the Chinese employed at a certain considerably amplified, if not altered. Chinese tin mine were granted permission by Though preparations were apparently mide the Siamese Commissioner there to gamble for for & better co-operation of the naval and three days at a certain rate of daty or tax to be military services. no real opporturity of testing paid to the Commissioner. The game they them occurred. This is very unfortunate, for, were carrying on was Pol. When the three ad may be remembered, the arrangements last days had elapsed they applied for a license for your proved very unsatisfactory; and as the further period, and the Commissioner, being matter would be one of very great importance pleased with the duty he had received, granted in war time, opportunities should be given, his permission. The towkays of the gambling establishments had notified that, if any person staked a bad coin on the board, they would not pay the prize if the bad coin was on the win ning number, hat if it was on a losing number they would take it. One of the Siamese Com- missionar's men, however, staked a bad dollar and become
coin and it won. In accordance with the rules, the towkay would not pay any prize-money to he on
An the cotton apparently was of the best the Commissioner's mon. The latter there- them,
quality, and appeared to have been pulled from upon called several Siamese policemen, who The disposal of ships that have been ment into The son burne force in the valleys, and the the bags, and the godown-keeper moreover arrested the towkay and took him prisoner to into part during the manoeuvres to await the
snow-fed streams run deep;
seemed anxious to shield the culprits, his the Commissioner's residence. A good many decision of umpires on the results of an action for this The fords of the Kabul river aro watched by Worship said the case was very important Chinamen, wishing to see what would hap. in which they have taken part requires looking
and he would remand it until he had communi- pen to their friend, followed the police into. It is obvious that the crews of thoseLLORS and DRESEM KELS, Under ovin: We harried bis folk last springtide, and hecated with the secretary of the Company, and their captire, but, unfortunately, when ships which are adjudged to be permanently
Later on his Worship sentenced the three thieves and the receiver to two months' hard
Code
Kane would
the Oom
had been
position:
palary than the hilippines
Bout·
I look for a wise man's counsel, and I would
that Afghans were one. From Merv, last home of the free-lance, the
clansmen nes scattering far, And the Turkman horses are harnessed to the
guns of the Russian Tear. So choose then of all my lięgemen, or choose
thơm of all my host, One true mar, loyal-hearted, whomever than
trustest most,
Whom thy tribe has known and lionoured, to
bring thee in safety and peace;
Thou shalt ride uscathed to Kabul, and the
fend of our lives shall cons.”
II.
The Ghilzaie chief wrote answer: "Our paths!
are perrow and steep,
the Afridee;
keeps good memory.
High stands thy Kabul citadel, where many
have room and rest;
The Ameer give welcome entry, but they
speed not a parting guest; So s stranger needs safe escort, and the cath
of a valiant friend.
Whom shall I choose of those I know? Whom
ask the Ameer to send ?
bold heart is dust,
ith devo Wilt then send the Varis, Noor Ahmed, the
iman whom tho Ghilzaies trust P multipli He has long lain lost in a dangeon, his true, aforence
Wilt thousand the Jamaheedlee Age, who was except to
called from the western plain F in this lino He left the black tents of his horsemen, and will by judged ho led them novor again.
the side Shall I wk for the Mollah, in Chazai, to
Do whom all Allgħáus rise?" 810008205 Of He was bid last year to thy banqueting--bis
soni fa in Paradise. Where is the chief Faizullah, to pledge mé
o
who
the word of his clan?
He le far from his pine-old highlands, und
the vineyards of Kehistan :' the He is gone with the rest-all vanished; he passed through thy citadel gate. Will they come now, these I have chosen? I
watch for their faces, and wait For the night-shade falls over Kabul, and dark
so is the downward track,
And the guardian bills ring an echo of voices To that warn me back;
Lat the Ghilzaie bids on his mountain, and
depart, as thy message has said When but one eure friend the Ameer shall eend when the tombs give up their dead."
}
labour each.
LEAVING EMPLOY (WITHOUT NOTICE. HA
without waiting for general manoeuvres, for combined exercises to be carried out at the different parts in succession. Either our Channel or Reserve Flost would be quite sufficient in itself to supply both the attacking and the naval part of the defensive force. It is the co-operation of the latter with our military forces at our ports which requires testing.
they were near enough to the Commissioner's put ont of action, and even of thees that are house, the Siamess armed police fired at them temporarily debarred from rejoining their and killed three. The rest filed in terror, with squadrons, lose a considerable portion of the Mr. T. K. Dealy, sasistant master, Queen's captured by the Siamese, many of the China The following suggestion seems worthy of police in pursuit of them. Being afraid of being instruction to be derived from the manoeuvres. Collage, charged his house-coolie with leaving did not dare to return to their homes, bat filed consideration. An equal number of rensels of his employ without reasonable notice.
from the country. Some went to Perak and each clase which had been pronounced by the From the evidence it appeared that defen- some to Kedah. Only a few of them were umpires to be out of action should be sent dant worked as a substitute in place of another caught by the police. All property belonging back to the respective fleets as reinforcements, coolie who was sick, and wanted to leave before to the Chiness was seized by the Siamese and if the number from one fleet was greater the other man came back, and then refused Commissioner's mon, and these latter also than from the other, the surplus should be divid to work on the plea that he was sick. Com outraged the wives of the Chinamen. This ed equally between the two feets. Thus suppose plainant wanted to take him to the Alice done, the Siamese took all the women's jewellery Floob X lost, or bad parauently disabled, two Memorial Hospital, but the coolie disappeared.
they could find. Those Chinese who had been battleships and fear craisers, and B Fleet four Defondant claimed that he had been, and captured by the police were taken to agora, battleships and six cruisers, all, X's ships should complainant kicked him twice and told him to where the High Commissioner for the Siamese be sent back to it, plus one. go away. Defendant then loft. Complainant Malay States resides, and are imprisoned, there. cruisers should The case of ships
Valle three beship and fold him to come back for his wages, When If they were formally tried in British Court cruisers
His Worship decided that there was no believe that the reason that the High Commis- but could be arranged for without much diffi the prisoners would not be found guilty. I only temporarily disabled, or captured by over- whelming numbers, would be more complicated, privity of contract between complainant and goner would not let them go is because he defendant, as the latter only acted for another feared that, if he did so, they might go to Bang-culty. As in actual war reinforcemonts would man. Consequently he would have to dischargo kok or Singapore to make their complaints. most probably be sent to each belligerent, as ships could be got ready, this would, to a great defendant. ↑
extent, represent what would take place in real
he did so he was arrested.
THE HEITISH DESERTER AGAIN.
of B's.
Albert Hind's case of desertion from the LATEST STEAMER MOVEMENTS. warfare.-C. D. in To-Day. West Riding Regiment was postponed" for another week.
HOMELESS AND 'FRIENDLESS. Joseph Hall was charged with being a vagrant without visible means of support.
Defendant admitted being homeless, friend. lees, and moneyless, and was sent to the House of Detention.
WHOLESALE BURGLAR.
The O. & O. steamer Doric, with wails, &c... from San Francisco to the 20th ult., via Hono. Julu, has arrived at Yokohama, and will leave for this port this morning, via Inland Sea, Kobe, Nagasaki and Bhanghai.
The "Glen" Láno ateamer Glenahtel, from Antwerp and London, left Bingapore on the 8th inst., p., and is due here on the 14th inst., Fong Sang, a Chinese lad of about sixteen,
Tho N.P. steamer Duke of Fife arrived at was charged with three barglaries. First, he Tacoma from Japan and Hongkong on the 7th entered Loose No. 433, Praya East, 2nd floor inst and stole a hammer and two locks valued at
EXPORT CARGOS.
ODO and five
COAL MERCHANTS, No. 48, DES VIEUX ROAD CENTRAL Telephone No. 329, Hongkong, 23rd September, 1901. [2411 AUTOMATIC MAUSER
PISTOLS.
CALIBRE 7,68 m.m. With CHAMBER for 10 CARTRIDGES, FIRING 10 SHOTS in 2 SECONDS. SIEMSSEN & CO Hongkong 3rd October, 1900.
AU BON MARCHE.
ADIES' and CHILDREN'S TAI-
take also Gentlemen's Underwear and House- hold Needlework at Moderate Price
No. 9, CAINE ROAD. Hongkong, 7th October, 1901. [2556 FROM FORTSMITH TO PEKING VIL LADYSMITH WITH A NAVAL BRIGADE. ILLUSTRATED WITH FOUR MAPE.
On Sale at "DAILY PRESS " ÜFFICE, LOCAL - BOOK- SELIERS, BOLDIERS' CLUB, SOLDIERS' and SAILORS' HOME, ROTAL NAVAL CANTERN. Price $1 per Copy Paper Cover; $1.50 im Boards.
Hongkong. 18th March, 1901
[762
FOR SALE.
AFINE PROPERT A DE LUFE DE CAMORS, Nos. 5 and 7, with GARDEN. Apply to-
MR. LOURENCO MARQUES,
Nos. 3 & 4, Prags de Luiz de Camoen.
[2554 Macao, 7th October, 1901.
AT THE SEAT OF WAR.
BEING an Account of the Doings of the
2ND BATT. ROYAL WELSH Per steamer Stenfor, sailed on the 4th Septem-
FUSILTERS bar. For Loudon:-504 3-chosts tea from
in the Amoy (particulars unknown), 485 boxes ten
NORTH CHINA CAMPAIGN. 1900. from Macao (particulars unknown), 1109 boxes lea from Canton (particulars unknown), 6,581
Reprinted from the Hongkong Daily Press. bores scented capor 188,201 lbs., 337 boxes
Price-10 cents per copy cash congon 6,667 lbs., 2,241 bales hemp. 200 bales waste sitä, 200 Uales bumboowaru, 20 balos caues,
Copier can be obtained" at the Soldiers' Ofat or of Booksellers
Hongkong, 6th December, 1900, cases Ching-
[3031
opt.
FOR SALE
We gladly pablish our correspondent's letter and Bir Alfred Lyall's poem, but we would $5, the property of Mr. Jose Jiminez, an point out that we were considering the late engineer, then on the 3rd inst, he entered A little girl was just finishing hor evening 240 carka ginger, 1,750 cases preserves. 203 Amour from the standpoint of his political No. 48, same street, and walked off with unprayer when she abruptly asked her mother to esses shell, 150 masse p. 1. fans. 64 value for the maintenance of the peace of Cen- eight day clock, a pair of binoculars, and please leave the room. Her mother wanted to wars, 5 cases oigars, 1 case plants, 190 pkgs.
bulbs, 49 pkgs. sundries. For London Il Auta. Oriental and Occidental methods of keeping the peace often differ, us do the ideas ondry other small articles valued at $80, the know why; but the child zaade her understand Manchester:-50 bales warto silk. For London": property of Mr. Geo. Hardons, commission that the rest of the prayor was of too personal the virtues of Princes. Not even all Westeragout again on the 4th be re entered the and private a ustare for eren a mother to hear opt. Goole-135 bales pierced eccoons. For MAP OF THE SIKIANG or WEST
boat Mecchiavelli's adviep to his latter house and stole s metal alarm clock and Her mother accordingly withdrew; but the next London opt. Glasgow-60 casks ginger. For f merit of the Amoer is that he is needle-oase, valued at $
ülebilent kingdom so long without Defendant, who admitted his guilt, was tight, when the same request was aunde, she in Glasgow opt. London:-150 casks ginger.
sisted span knowing just what it meant Glasgow 99 casks ginger For Liverpool... Teralized on terms willi two power gayon, two months hard labour and twelve "Well," said the little girl, after much persun-6 pkgs sundries For London ept. Hamburg: This entitles him to the title strokes with birch on such count, the so-son, I just wanted to give fanks for bein200 balee galangal, 279 bales ones, 100 boles
Towed to steal some sogar th' other day!" Chinaroot For Hamburg :~8 cases shell,
tences to be soncurrent.
For
RIVER
From HONGKONG to, WUCHOWTU, Showing the Forts and Calling Places Opened to Foreign Trade, 1897. Pablished at Daily Press Office, Price 25 Cents, Cash Hougkong, 1st April 1897