AnnualReport-1914 — Page 164

Administrative Reports 行政報告書 All AI Reviewed

E 6

There has been no improvement in the services from Hoihow, Pakhoi, and the central China stations.

In the month of November, a scheme for the improvement of the service of weather telegram exchanges in the Far East, was submitted to the Cable Companies and approved by the Head Office in London.

The scheme embodies certain of the resolutions passed at the Meteorological Conference held at Tokio in May, 1913. It lightens considerably the burden on the Telegraph Companies, and at the same time provides for increased and uniform information from each reporting station, namely—barometric pressure, wind direction and force, weather, temperature, and humidity, at 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. daily, and the inclusion of 12 representative stations in the Japanese telegrams in place of 10. It also provides for information from more representative stations in the Philippines to be sent to the Hongkong, Macao, Phulien, Taihoku, Tokio, and Zikawei Observatories.

The following is the code which the Observatories have been requested to adopt from 1915 February 15.

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E 6 There has been no improvement in the services from Hoihow, Pakhoi, and the central China stations. In the month of November, a scheme for the improvement of the service of weather telegram exchanges in the Far East, was submitted to the Cable Companies and approved by the Head Office in London. The scheme embodies certain of the resolutions passed at the Meteorological Conference held at Tokio in May, 1913. It lightens considerably the burden on the Telegraph Companies, and at the same time provides for increased and uniform information from each reporting station, namely—barometric pressure, wind direction and force, weather, temperature, and humidity, at 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. daily, and the inclusion of 12 representative stations in the Japanese telegrams in place of 10. It also provides for information from more representative stations in the Philippines to be sent to the Hongkong, Macao, Phulien, Taihoku, Tokio, and Zikawei Observatories. The following is the code which the Observatories have been requested to adopt from 1915 February 15.
Baseline (Original)
- E 6 There has been no improvement in the services from Hoihow, Pakhoi, and the central China stations. In the month of November, a scheme for the improvement of the service of weather telegram exchanges in the Far East, was submitted to the Cable Companies and approved by the Head Office in London. The scheme embodies certain of the resolutions passed at the Meteorological Conference held at Tokio in May, 1913. It lightens considerably the burden on the Telegraph Companies, and at the same time provides for increased and uniform information from each reporting station, namely-barometric pressure, wind direction and force, weather, temperature, and humidity, at 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. daily, and the inclusion of 12 representative stations in the Japanese telegrams in place of 10. It also provides for information from more representative stations in the Philippines to be sent to the Hongkong, Macao, Phulien, Taihoku, Tokio, and Zikawei Obser- vatories. The following is the code which the Observatories have been requested to adopt from 1915 February 15.
2026-05-06 08:18:14 · Baseline
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- E 6

There has been no improvement in the services from Hoihow, Pakhoi, and the central China stations.

In the month of November, a scheme for the improvement of the service of weather telegram exchanges in the Far East, was submitted to the Cable Companies and approved by the Head Office in London.

The scheme embodies certain of the resolutions passed at the Meteorological Conference held at Tokio in May, 1913. It lightens considerably the burden on the Telegraph Companies, and at the same time provides for increased and uniform information from each reporting station, namely-barometric pressure, wind direction and force, weather, temperature, and humidity, at 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. daily, and the inclusion of 12 representative stations in the Japanese telegrams in place of 10. It also provides for information from more representative stations in the Philippines to be sent to the Hongkong, Macao, Phulien, Taihoku, Tokio, and Zikawei Obser-

vatories.

The following is the code which the Observatories have been requested to adopt from 1915 February 15.

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