208
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.Y 400
COPY.
Enclosure 3 in r. Kirke's No. 16 of March 22,
1915.
306
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.bablove nd ‚reverod „hluore
Letter from a Correspondent of a Hongkong news, or.
Canton, March 9, 1915.
Anti-Japonese Demonstrations.
Since the unreasonable demands alleged to have been made on China by Japan were made known to the public, the Canton vernacu -lar press has been publishing every day a large number of letters and articles from correspondents hostile to the Japanese. In today's issues, apart from a few letters promising financial con- -tributions in the event of another war with Japan, a report is published of a meeting of all the girl students in Canton, held at the instigation of a Kiss Tae Kwon 1, of the "ormal School for Ladies. At this meeting it was decided that they should cease to use any of the Japanese threads hitherto in general use for the purpose of knitting, and also that they should absent themselves whenever the time come for a lesson to be given by a Japanese mistress. Another report urges the public to exercise close scrutiny when purchasing what the Chinese have named "patriotic cloth a material which has met with a very considerable sale during the last two years. It is alleged that Japanese manufactura -ers, who, the report has it, are well-known for their dexterity in imitating, have put on the market a clever imitation of this native product, which, save for its tendency to discolour in very short time, is hardly distinguishable from the genuine article. Further, it is alleged that the depreciation in the value of the copper currency, which a little while ago was accepted at par with silver subsidiary coins, is due to the zİZEMİSİƏMEGZ circulation of spurious coins imported into the market in abun- -dant quantities from "a certain country" (apparently alluding to Japan). These are but a few of the numerous anti-Japanese tactice which are now being adopted by the Cantonese.
1..