....
, r
انان
COJOUTUI 2EGMEŢULA,® CILTOG*
•
7900
.0[BI\966
Condosure.
4.
393
Extract from the Kinutes of Meeting of the Executive
Council of the 15.2.17.
SJAI »EJ To mubnamome¥ "uoy at yinen aI
neštajnogenend to susal wit te dɔatdua add ne tnajani
9.
Brīd man hadroaza ad a‡ tisa aaonido nɔt andanttit180
add daid way motat et betoarih ma I parkdə ət ynolo
badantmon drain a 63 jostde ten IIbw dromertavad Istno[#0
quoy ni beoniq anted anodynawƐ to manotaalumaɔ slaɛ add yo
nožjajraqanand Danstalvona to avant arið staðl[tost að soitto
Jantjath arid ma ved berretər onudan əḍt te asisoftISTEO
hva qine vraneamoj al Jnəmənnanta odd Jarið anźbaatanabeus
fætnoloo @dd yď ambt yna da nekdankmejab at Jostdum
Tornado odd mot mɔsser gatoglasa duoftlw inaMTISVS)
05 mm I
‚nzaveż busiɔ (.ba)
OGJOLENI PROLOLEZA
His Excellency informed the Council of
further steps taken in the matter of the Customs Agreement.
Sir Richard Dane, who had recently been in the Colony, bad
pointed out that salt must be allowed to pass through in
transit, and, in order to free the salt fer China a
transportation certificate from the Salt Authorities was
neosssary. This in normal circumstances would be issued
in Canten, but Mr. Harris had emphasized the inconvenience
of such an arrangement, and the possibility that, swing
to the delay involved, salt which might have come through
the Colony would go round it.
His Excellency had accordingly decided to
allow Mr. Harris and Sir Richard Dane te make their own
arrangements for the attaching to the Customs Office in
Hongkong of a clerk from the Salt Commissioner's office.
ake arrangement would be purely provisional and would be
revocable at any time. The man would receive ne official
recognition.
ÇamədovƆ anınido to zanetaatma Ɔ
Catbitwa 110Y
J