the Catter's orders & Pang Jick I refrain from such action in future
44. It will be seen that Mr Mayers blamed for the above unreal offences and for others, which perhaps have had no better foundation in fact, though I have no means of testing his accuracy
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14. to them, admits that he took the occasion of a visit paid him by Pang Ju's to tell the latter that unless he abstained from meddling with Hongkong he would get himself into serious trouble
20. I can well suppose that Pang was not a little bewildered by all these warnings and threats
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71. but I scarcely think Sir Rutherford Alcock justified in reporting him to Lord Clarendon as "unworthy of credence" for I am at a loss to know even now, with all the correspondence before me, what other possible conclusion Pang could have come to than that the influence of the Consulate had been exerted to break up his intercourse with Hongkong, and that he would, as Mr Mayers told him, "get into serious trouble" if he meddled with that place.
21. I think it right, also, to point out that Mr Consul Robertson seems equally unjust in his reference
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