+
Intimation.
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1904.
THE ROBINSON PIANO CO., LIMITED.
MANUFACTURERS
OF THE
"SERVICE" ASD “ECONOMIC” PIANOS.
SPECIALISTS in "EVERYTHING MUSICAL."
Hongkong, 6th May, rona.
Entertainment.
THE
HENRY DALLAS
MUSICAL DRAMATIC CO.
RETURN SEASON.
TWO WEEKS ONLY.
GRAND OPENING NIGHT,
MONDAY, 16rn May,
"KITTY GRAY."
TUESDAY, 17th May,
"KITTY GRAY"
PLAN AT THE
ROBINSON PIANO Co., Ld.
Hongkong, 7th May, 1504.
Auction.
GOVERNMENT NOTIFICATION,
[590
PARTICULARS AND CONDITIONS of
the letting by Public Auction Sale, to
be held on MONDAY, the 16th day of May,¦ 1904, at 3 P.M., at the Offices of the Publici Works Department, by Order of His Excellency the Officer Administering the Government, of One Lot of CROWN LÄND, at Jun: Hom
in the Colony of Hongkong, for a term
To Let.
TO LET.
IRST-CLASS FURNISHED ROOMS, FIRS
with or without Board, close to Post
Apply to--
Office and Banks.
N. N.. No. 98, this Office,
Hongkong, 9th May, rood.
TO LET.
[599
O. 1, RIPON TERRACE in FLATS.
No PON TERRACE.
No. 17, WONG NEI CHONG ROAD, facing
Race Course.
FLATS IN MOLETON TEXLACE, facing
Palo (round.
OFFICES in course of erection, CON-
NAUGHT ROAD (near BLAKE PIER). GODOWNS; PRAYA EAST. "ROSENEATH," KOWLOON.
Apply to
THE HONGKONG LAND INVEST MENT & AGENCY CO, LD
виба Hongkong, 6th April, 1904.
TO LET.
HOUSE KNUTSFORD TERRACE.
A Apply to
THE HONGKONG LAND INVEST- MENT & AGENCY CO., LD.
1554 Hongkong. 25th April, tona
TO LET
1, STEWART TERRACE,
NTHE PEAK
of 75 years, with the option of renewal at a CROWN RENT to be fixed by the Surveyor A
Apply to-
THE HONGKONG LAND INVEST-
MENT & AGENCY CO., LD. Hongkong, 26th March, 1994.
TO LET.
[430
ILD DELL WILDINGS. No. 147. WANCHAL ROAD, Cornforble and Flats of 2 or 3 Rooms, framt $25 inclusive
of His Majesty the KING, for une further term of Taxes. of 75 years.
PARTICULARS OF THE LOT.
Reglatry Locality.
No.
Hong Ho
Boundary Measurementa,
$. C.
Ter feet, feet foot
Hongkong, 6th May, 1904.
For Sale.
FOR SALE.
Contents
Square fe
Upset Price.
36,023
1594
ENUINE CARDIFF AND JAPAN
COAL.
Apply to
RITCHIE & Co.,
39. Des Voeux Road. [$37
Hongkong, aznd April, 1904.
FOR SALE.
NCANDESCENT
INCANDE
GASOLINE
LAMPS
OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS,
And others in suni vanous requirements.
S. A. NETH, 1.and and Estate Broke: Dairy Farm Co., Ltd.
Honkong, and May, 1904,
"I"
TO LET.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, FOR 18 MONTHS.
|
CRIME AND RELIGION.
ROAD TO LHASA THE DIRTIEST
PLACE ON EARTH.
Icy winds and suffocating smoke are not conducive to literary style, though they some times inspire a rude eloquence that is quite unfit for publication, says Edmund Chandler, the Daily Mail's Thibetan correspondent.
As I scribble this by the messroom brazier- our youngest optimist would not call it a fire- I catch an occ sional and incisive phrase that exactly expresses the situation. Then I envy the freedom of speech of those who come in from a spell of fatigue duty and can say whai they like for the rest of the evening, while I, who wr to--for an enlightened public, must sacrifice force to euphemism.
A week at Phari dispels all illusions; only a bargee could adequately describe the place. Ym the clen ents are trusty councillors, who feelingly persuade me what I am and they may perhaps inspire me with some of the eloquence of discomfort.
PHARI JONG.
In my inst letter I described the sylvan valley of Gauisa, where the air is scented with the fragrance of warm pine trees, and there is no indication of winter save the ice on the Amma Chu. The torrent roars boisterously beneath its frozen surface, and throws up little tentacles of frozen spray, which glisten fantastically in the sun. Three miles further up the stream the woodhelt ends abruptly; then after another three miles one passes the last stunted bush. Aker that there is nothing but brown earth and yellow withered grass. All the plain is under- mined with the warrens of marmots and voles. who sit on their thresholds like a thousand Hittle spies, and curiously watch our approach, then dive down into their burrows do tell their wives of the strange bearded invaders. One envies them their warmth and snugness as one rides against the bitter winds that penetrate to the bone.
Twelve miles from Gautsa, a turn in the valley brings one into view of Phari Jong. Al first sight it may be a huge isulated rock, but as one approaches the bastions and battlements become more distinct. Distances are decep tive in this rarefied air and objects that one imaginės to be quite close are sometimes found to be several miles distant
INSIDE THE FORT.
The fort is built on a natural mound in the plain. It is a huge, rambling building, six stories high, surrounded by a courtyard, where mutes and ponies are stabled. As a military fortification Phari Jong is by no means con- temptible. The walls are of massive stone- work, which would take heavy guns to demolish, The angles are protected 1 om attacking parties by machicoulis galleries, and three enormous bastions project from each flank. These are crumbling in places, and the Pioneers might destroy the bastion and breach the wall with two bags of gun-cotton. On the eastern side there is a square courtyard like an Arab cara- vanserai, where cattle are penned. The fortress would hold the whole Tibetan army with pro- visions for a year. It was evacuated the night before we reconnoitred the valley.
The interior of the Jong, is a warren of stairs, landings, and dark cavernous rooms, which would take a whole day to explore The walls are built of stone and mud and coated with century-old smoke. There are no chimneys or adequate win lows and the filth is indescribable.
|
From which it must not be inferred that one class is more cleanly in its habits than another, for nobody ever thinks of washing. Soap is not included in the list of sundries that pass the Custome House at Yatung. If the Lamas are dirtier than the yak-herds and itinerant merchants, it is because they lead an indoor life, whereas the pastoral, folk continually exposed to the purifying winds of the table- lands, which are the nearest equivalent in Tibet to a cold bath.
1 once read of a Tibetan saint, one of the pupils of Naropa, who was credited with a hundred miraculous gifts, one of which was that he could dive into the water like a fish. Wherein the miracle lay had often puzzled
Entimation.
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH.
1, ICE HOUSE ROAD,
HONGKONG.
CABLE ADDRESS, Telegraph, Hongkong
me, but when I met the Lantas of Phari | "THE leading English Newspaper in China Gompa I understood at once that it was the holy man's contact with the water.
Phari is eloquent of piety, as it is understood in Tibet. The better rooms are frescoed with Buddhistic paintings, and on the third floor is a library, now used as a hospital, where xylo- graph editions of the Lamant Scriptures and lives of the saints are pigeon-holed in lockers in the wall. The books are printed on thin, oblong sheets of Chinese paper, enclosed in boards, and illuminated with quaint coloured tail pieces of holy men in devotional attitudes.
Phari Fort, with its casual blending of East and West, in full of incongruous effects; but the oddest and most pathetic incongruity is the dis. play on the roof, from which, amid praying flags and pious offering of coloured raiment, fluiters the Union Jack.
Insurance.
NORTH GERMAN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF HAMBURG.
ΤΗ
HE Undersicued 'AGENTS of the those Company are prepared to acre First Class FOREIGN and CHINESE RISKS at CURRENT RATES,
SIEMSSEN & Co.
Hongkonu, 29th May, 1805
A
Intimations.
THE YANGTSZE INSURANCE
ASSOCIATION, LIMITED.
NOTICE TO SHAREHOLDERS.
[52
DIVIDEND at the Rate of Twenty per cant, being Twelve Dollars per Share, on the Paid-up Capital of the above Ass ciation, has been declared payable in Tacis at Exchange 73 at the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China or the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Shanghai, on and after this date to Shareholders of record on the 12th April, 1903.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
W, S. JACKSON, Secretary,
Shanghai, 22nd April, 1904.
[56:
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY
TRADE THERAPION MARK
This succesful and highly popular remedy, used in the Continental Hospitals by Ricord, Rostan, Jobert, Velpeak and others, combines all the desiderata to be sought in a medicing of the kind, and surpasses everything bitherto amplorod
When Phari was first occupied eighty coolies THERAPION NO.1ably
were employed a whole week clearing refuse. Jud. ng by the accretion of dirt a newcomer
might class the building as mediaval but filth
is no criterion of age, for everything left in the same place becomes coated with grime an inch
short time, often a few days only, tomores alldickarges from the urinary organs, effectually superseding injections thous of which does irreparable harm by laying the foundation of stricture and other serious diseases. In dysentery, piles, irritation of the lower bowel, cough, bronchie's, asthma, and some of the more trying complaints of this kind, it will be found astonlibingly eficacious, affording prompt relied whers other well-tried remedica have been poweries
pority of the blood, curvy.mples, spots, blotches, paise and wel- Koga of the joints, secondary symptoms, gout, rheumakam, and sil ditraves for which it lins been too much a fashion to reploy mercury, sarsaparilla, ke,, to the destruction of sufferars beth and ruin of health. This preparation perththebole system through the blood, and thoroughly Aliminates everTY FRUEDAS Matter from the body.
Loa
thick. The dust that invades one's tent at THERAPION NO.2
Chumbi is clean and wholesome compared to the Phari dirt, which is the filth of human 14habitation, the accretion of centuries of foul living. It falls from the roof on one's head, sticks against the wall, and is blown up into one's eyes and throat from the floor.
EIGHTOR, THE PEAK.
Apply 10-
JEBSEN & Co. Hongkong. 17th April, 1904.
15$9
No
TO LET.
O. 6, BARROW TERRACE, KOWLOON.
Available 1st March, Apply to
Intimations.
A STRANGE LITTER.
The fort is most insanitary, but a military
THERAPION NO. 3.
ssbaustion, impaired vitality, sleepieninest, and all the distressing consequences of early error, excess, residence in bot, unbenthy climates, ke it possessos surprising power in restoring strength and sigar in the debilitated.
by
occupation is necessary. The hacking coughs THERAPION cal tenint and
which are p eva'ent among officers and men are due to impurities of the air, which affect the lungs. Cartloads of dirt are being scraped away every day, but gusts of wind from the lower stories blow up more dust, which pene. trates every nook and cranny of the draughty rooms to that there is a fresh layer by night. fall.
To clean the lower stories and cellars would be a hopeless task; even now rooms are found THE SAM WANG CO., LD.
in unexpected places which emit clouds of dust Hongkong, 5th February, 1904. [218 whenever the wind eddies round the basement. Yesterday I explored the ground floor with a lantern, and was completely lost in the maze of passages and dark chambers. When we occupied the fort two months ago they were filled with straw, gunpowder, and old arms. The danger of fire or explosion at Phari was more serious than the danger of a possible attack. The labyrinth was explored thoroughly; a hundred and forty maunds of interior gap- powder made locally, were destroyed and the arms now litter the courtyard. These the
THE HONGKONG STUDIO,
HIGHER CLASS PHOTOGRAPHER, 41 & 43. QUEEN's Road CentraL TOP FLOOR.
GROUPS and ENLAR
from the best makers. PORTRAITS COPYING in all sizes.
INCANDESCENT,
MANTLES,
CHIMNEYS,
GLOBES,
SHADES, &c..
for GASOLINE AND GAS LAMPS
at the most moderats prices.
Lamps fired up for Buyers free of charge,
Naphtha of the bes kind kept in stock.
TẠI KHONG động
36, Lyndhurst Terrace,
Hongkong, and May, 1904.
[3:
LARGE SELECTION OF VIEWS ALWAYS ON HAND.
PRICE VERY MODERATE. Hongkong, 15th September, 1903.
MEE CHEUNG,
PHOTOGRAPHER,
TOP FLOOR OF ICE HOUSE, IN
Lis-House Rondi.
(1
IS now in a position, in his New and Com
modious Premises, to eclipse, as heretofore, SIL PHOTOGRAPHIC ART PRACTICED in the Colony or in say part of the Far East,
GROUPS AND VIEWS
a speciality,
Won kong, 170d Septembr, 1898,
Tibetans themselves abandoned as rubbish, The rusty helme, shields, and breastplates are made of the thinnest Iron plates, interlaced with leathern thongs, and would not stop an arrow. The old ball-mouthed matchlocks, with their wooden ground-rests, would be more dan. gerous to the Tibetan marksmen than the The slings and bows and arrows arp enemy, reckoned obsolets even by these primitive warriors.
Ferhaps they attribute more efficacy to the praying wheels which one sacountera at every corner of the fort. The largest are in niches in the wall to left and right of ther gateway, rows of smaller ones are attached to the balus. tors, on the landings, and the battlements of
Mohants throughout the wald. Price in England 1/9 & In ordering, state which of the three number la re spired, and cheers above Tal- Mark, which it a far- simile of word" Tropspoor" aris womenza on the British Cavernment Mayn me why letters in a red groundh ched so every image by under of it. Maisy's Hon- Commoners, and without whilst it is a futgers. Sold by A. S. WATSON & Co., Limited, Hongkong, China and Manila,
SEE THAT YOU GET GOOD BREAD
ON YOUR TABLE,
MR DELIVER BREAD in HONGKONG and KOWLOON. The Sanitary arrangements ate a nearly perfect as possible, and the work is under constant foreign supervision only.
R. 9. RUTTONJEE is prepared to
THE BEST FLOUR IN VSER. BROWN BREAD made from the well- known Graham flour. A speciality.
Special hates to Hotels, Messes, Clubs, Boarding Houses, and large consumers.
H. RUTTONJEE, No. 5, D'Aguilar Street,
AF
34 to 38, Elgin Road, Kowloon, Hongkong, 10th May, 1904.
[72
DRUGS, CHEMICALS, PERFU. MERY, PATENT MEDICINES, ETC.
AND
DISPENSING CHEMISTS,
APPRISE:
FLET CHER & Co.,
THE PHARMACY,
Also widely circulated in Japan, Cochin China, Ceylon, India and the Far East generally.
A daily newspaper with weekly edition published for despatch by the homeward mail The daily is recommended as more generally suitable, except for subscribers in Europe of
America.
A special featura is made of full and accur ate reports of local occurrences, and of niai- ters of general interest.
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT.
The Hongkong Telegraph is the best medium for advertising in China. It circulates largely among all classes of the community, is the largest daily newspaper and has a wider circulation than any journal in the Far
East.
Special attention given to effectively display. ing advertisements.
The type used as a standard for setting
advertisements is similar to this, unless we are instructed to display the advertisement, when any effective style of type will be adopted This standard runs exactly eight lines to the inch, and about eight words to the line.
ADVERTISEMENT RATES.
{per inch.)
One week............................................
One month
Two months
Three
Six
Twelve.
P
No charge less than one dollar.
Discount allowed on-
HONGKONG METEOROLOGICAL
SIGNALS.
A NEW CODE.
We have received from the Hongkong Observatory a now codej of meteorological signals which comes into, farce at Hongkong on New Year's Day. They are the same as those at present in use at Shanghai, and will be hoisted on the mast beside the time-ball at Kowloon Point for the information of masters of vessels leaving the port. They do not neces sarily imply that bad weather is expected. The signals are as follows:-
A coon point upwards indicates a typhoon to the North of the Colony.
A cone point upwards and drum below in. dicates 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 Coloay.
A cone point downwards and ball below indicates a typhoon to the South-West of the Colony.
A ball indicates 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 signals will, as heretofore, be hoisted only when typhoons exist in such posi- tions or are moving in such directions that in- formation regarding them is considered to be of importance to the Colony or to shipping leay- ing the barbour.
NIGHT SIGNALS.
..5 2.85
7.20
13.00
Two lanterns hoisted vertically indicate bad weather in the Colony and that the wind is
20.00
expected to veer,
37.50
............ 73,00
3 Months Contracts......
; per cert.
A
12
10
25
ין
DOMESTIC OCCURRENCES.
Notices of Births, Deaths, and Marriages $1 each insertion in the Daily and Weekly
CONTRACT ADVERTISEMENTS,
Special Rates for standing advertisements can be ascertained from the Manager.
Advertisements for the Daily should reach the Hongkong Telegraph Office not later than noon of the day they are intended to appear,
Unless otherwise specified all advertisements will be repeated and charged for until counter manded.
JOBBING DEPARTMENT.
Job Printing of all descriptions undertaken.
PROGRAMMES,
PAMPHLETS,
CARDS,
CIRCULARS,
EXPRESSES.
All job prating is dons under European supervision, well turned out, free from errors, and remarkably cheap at
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
OFFICE
Estimates given for all classes of work on
the roof. The wheels are covered with grime, 14 QUEENS ROAD CENTRAL application to
the grime of Lamas' hands.
FIETY AT PEARL
Dirt and religion are inseparable in Tibet. The Lamas themselves are the most filthy and
fr3 malodorous folk i have met in the country,
Hongkong,
A. STEVENSON,
Chemist.
Hongkong, 25th April, 1904,
[384
THE MANAGER, HONGKONG TELEGRAPH Co, La.
1,Ice House Road,
Hongkong,
Two lanterns hoisted horizontally indicate bad weather in the Colony and that the wind is expected to back.
The signals are repeated on the flagstaff of the Godown Company at Kowloon, and alsó, by day only, at the Barbour Office and on H M's Receiving Ship.
LOCAL STORM-WARNINGS.
The Colony itself is warned of approaching typhoons by means of the Typhoon Gud placed at the food of the mast, which is fired whenever a strong gale of wind is expected to blow "here,
NOTICE BOARDI,
Notice boards are placed at:-
Joint Cable Companies' Office.", Ferry Company's Pier, Ice House Street; ¿ Blake Pier,
Post Office,
Harbour Ofce.
Ferry Company's Pier, Kowloon.
WEATHER FORECASTS and STORM. WARNINGS are exhibited on the above boards daily about 11 am, and also at other hours, day or night, whenever necessary. Informa tion of importance is also issued by "Express."
THE CHINA COAST METEOROLOGICAL REGISTER is exhibited at the same places daily about noon. It contains observations made at Hongkong and at a number of stations in the Far East, together with Remarks, Weather. forecasts, and information regarding the exisi- ance and movements of typhoons based thurson.
SPECIAL INQUIRIES.
Masters of vessels or their agents may, whenever necessary, call at the Telegraph Company's Office in Connaught Road and send relegrams to the Observatory asking for special information without charge. Such inquiries may also be sent from the Police Station at Kowloon Point which is connected with the Observatory by telephone.
THE LAW OF STORMS.
Further Information concerning the weather: to be expected while signals are holsted, and
sailing directions, are given in "The Law of | Btorms in the Eastern Seal”
F. G. F100,
Acting Director, Hongkong, Observatory, sad January, ipak,