8.

23

which would deal with passengers arriving from all South Ching

ports, there might be some excuse for medical examinat deng bat as conditions are at present there is absolutely none.

The chief idea appears to be

Harbour Department.

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to create as large a department as possible and run it on the

most expensive lines. Beckwith ran the Hong Kong Harbour

on decidedly economic lines. He worked with a migimon staff

and was at all times ready to render the Mercantile Farine and

the shipowners all the assistance and help he could. under

conditions as they are to-day the foreign personnel of the

Harbour Department is steadily increasing and all sorts of

expensive craft some of them quite unnecessary

for use

of that Department are being constructed. No better example

could be given than the action taken over the rescue tng just

after the "Hsin-wah" (China Merchants S.N. Co.) foundered off

Waglan. Someone wrote to the press and said that they could

not understand why having a rescue tug in Hong Kong it was left

to the shipyards to despatch their tugs in the rescue of

passengers on board the "Hsin-wah". The Department then wrote

to the Government to the effect that the rescue tug was totally

ansuited for the requirements of the Colony, that instead of

having reciprocating engines she should be an internal

combustion boat, and advised the Government either to scrap the Vessel (which incidentally was constructed at a cost of

Something like $280,000) or at least replace the reciprocating

engines with internal combustion ones. As a matter of fact,

the Hong Kong rescue tug for the work she was originally

designed leaves little or nothing to be desired. A Committee,

at the request of the Hong Kong Government, consisting of the

Managers in the two shipyards, I think Mr.James, our Superintendent

and the then Government Marine Surveyor, and several other

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