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easier for the Concession rolice the com.anding officer of H.M.B."Cockchafer", after consultation with myself, posted
e guard of two sailors at each of the Bund gates with orders that the gates were not to be opened except under his instructions or my own and the gates were, in fact,
opened once to permit the passage of a gun.
Lo soon as I heard that General chang Tsung-chang
had himself arrived, i sent him my caru with the request that he would be good enough to give orders that troops were not to attempt to enter the Concession, the General sent back a courteous reply and the required orders were given, with the result that no further incidents of this
nature occurred.
i have not yet been able to obtain any definite information as to what took place at kaotze. There must have been a certain amount of fighting but the resistance offered by the Chinkiang troops appears to have been very feeble. It is not unlikely that the troops who had come from lower down the line, realizing that they were in danger of being outflanked both by road and river, took an early op ›ortunity of getting together all available loco- -motives and rolling stock and retreated to fanyang; those that remained were either captured or dispersed wirough the hills. No resistance was offered by the forts here; i am told that the men had all been bought over a week before the attack took place. suring the 17th one shot, was fired from the fort op oɛite Eilver island at a launch passing down river, and that was all. The main body of the attack did not halt long in Chinkiang but palaed on towards Tanyang; by the evening of the 18th railway con unication with Zanking had been re-established and on the 15th with Changchow. There ap.ears to have, been fighting at remiu,
between
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