THE CLOCK TOWER AGAIN. A REJOINDER.
¡Contributed.
A fitful fire of criticism directed against the line of my defence of the Clock Tower reveals the enemy still active, though evidently some what disheartened. A volley or two in response, just to show that the defenders are on the look out, seems justified by the prevention. But first it may be as well to endeavour to pick off the skarpshooters who hav-exposed themselves. The Erst to appear head and shoniders over the opposing ridge and to "exsa (fl,” was "Catis." His shot was cariously deflected by a gust of inconsistency and
went low and
tu
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21st, 1905.
an theas terme, but only on these terms; only ou condition that the sentiment, which “Ontis' way I have wasted, is not wasted, as ho says. He is too quick in saying so. It remains to be seen whether the sentiment kas or has not been thrown away. If the tower wore to be des- Bat I hope troyed in spite of it all, then the waste for better things. I hope to find it-siy would have to be admitted. in twenty years time, when the sands will using low, and I make my final tour of this merrily spinning old world of curs to bid it all goodbye-I hope to find tho Tower corner of a bustling and a thriving and pro- still standing where it is to-day in the quiet
gressive town.
the dimensions of bis enormity unfortunately Į shall be glad to sign a treaty of peace with them : orig. Of course my appeal was based on sentiment. There is no question, about that; Bever could be. Bat to hold it vain for that "enson only in to deny the most obvious truths of human existence. The sentiment must be shown to be bad, just as his argument may be, before it stands condemned. The same writer failed to "soo what really sound object your As regards contributor had in writing." my object I abould have thought it was sufficiently clear. However, I will try to put it even more plainly. It was to prevent if possible the removal of the Clock Tower. Whether that object is sound is the question at issue. I wrote urging that it was sound. I gave my reasons. If "Anti-Sentimental" fails to see thom, that is his fault, not mine.
POLICE COURT.
Friday, 20th October. BEFORE Mu, F. A. HAZELAND (FIEST POLICE MAGISTRATE).
LOTTERY TICKETS.
La Ching, for alling tickete for a Chinese lottery, was fined $27.
BOLDIERS ASCAPADE,
was fined $3, ondered to pay $1.50 for the cushion and 5 curapensation; the second having to p1y Să in all,
wo guin-ra of the R.G.A. hud to appear in
isras beitrean Shankinan and the deput, ond both courts. They tai r-fased to pay tram rau off. To expedite their departure they got got aboad of them and informed the police, whe into a couple of xzioskas, but the ticket inspector
arrived on the scone as the soldiers were learing Yes, in spite of Mr. Anti-Sontinental's fears, the ricshas. They declined to pay the rizsba They were So much for the sharpshootere. Now for the have not got into any particular grooms | faros, and ong of the defentants, pioking up a
I fal qushion, threw it into the res. alle thankful. quile myself, I
to pursued by the police and arrested. For batteries masked by the editorial "we," Only from where I can only look back.
look forward as well. I rejoice to say refusing to pay tram fares they were fined to have opened fire. One of these was Bring blank-blank nousease. At first I read as a joke that I have no stiff neck, making but one view each, and in the second court the first defendant the statement that the Tower was a block to sentilation. I fancied a friend in disguise. But possible either way. And looking forward to I have been assured that this ground was selected Hongkong's promising future, I feel the sonti- mant of local patriștism desposed and increased Not because in all seriousness. Ventilation? The whole Praya, cost of the "South China Morning Fost' by contemplation of its past, office, is built up with houses anything up to 2001 am at war with the present-I am met or feel deep and something like 20 feet wide, and the indifferent to the fatare-it belongs to us all
bat because I am also a part of the past, as ike only ventilation is a narrow shaft descendir half way through. If tho editor is sincerely past is a part of me, I have a sentiment--yes, Mr. Anti-Sentimental, a sentimont-of affec anxious to promote the cause of ventilation. there is a fine field here for his powers of tinnata regard for all that helps us to reconstract persuasion. But to try to persuade anybody that in imagination the lives of those who have gone a tower situated at the T made by two wide befers us "down the long avenue "; in whose roads can be in any way onhealthy is, as was said. foot-steps we tread; in whose room we now If the public has been able to make marry; whose heirs and inheritors on this blank zoosonse. great he freely in the Queen's Road since 1862 once barren rock, for botter or worse, we are. (and the public has never hitherto complained
CANTON. that the Tower actually stack in its threat) it is hard to believe that it is now in sudden danger of suffocation.
g
the left. (Was Outis" not a misprint for "Outer") Beginning with a question which gromed to indicato contempt for the whole controversy, he thereupon proceeded to plunge into it. Why all this pother about the Clock Tower?" he indignantly demanded to know, addressing the editor of the Daily Press. What auswer the latter made bay not been revealed, but the true answer is obvious enough. It may be indicated thus: A hits It. bite back. A fight ensues. A then wants to know what the row is about. B naturally says "you know beat, seeing that you began it." Those who seek to move the Tower are solely responsible for the present "pother." Had they kept silent nothing would have been said by those whose only desire is that it should be left alone in peace and quietness to tell the time and the town's story. Cutis" provialms in his opening paragraph that per monally he has "no use for the Tower, and in his second that it is not a thing of beauty and inconceivably, therefore, a joy to anyone. He moreover slates that he fails to see how informa tion is to be gleaned from a "solid ross of masonry." Readers of my articles may recollect
Ventilation? Wind! Mers wound and fury that its nes as a record was only suggested as applying in the case of a reflectivo observer. signifying nothing. No; it does signify some- To no observer incapable of reflection it thing. It signifies the desperate straits to ne than which oar friends the destroyers are put. To would be of no KB--he more
"Cutis advance such a reason is to confess no roaron. falling apples were before Newton. says he has no use for it. Its sermon could It indicatos argumentative bankruptcy.
The other editorial battery has been pound. only bo read by him if printed on a brass plata That being so the reader who had soing away with its now obsolete gùn--the block far followed his argument would naturally gan-obsolete since the transfer of traffic to Der VoBux Road. Its helis fall short and don't expect to find him advocating destruction, but instead of proceeding to its natural conclusion burst. The weapon las been tacitly abandoned his argument suddenly recurves in the oddest by all others. In fact the case for obstruction Roeins now to rest solely on the ipse dixit of maonor and ends ap with a proposal to re-erect. In the small space of half a column "Outis" the young and promising literary lion—or is he
A griffin-who roars in a threatening executes a complete change of character. In a
manner from his editorialcare; without, we hope,
(FROM QUE CORRESPONDENT
19th October. THE CASTON SCANDAL: MORE SEIZURES
GAMBLERS.
Three gaugs of gamblers, totalling about 50, were convicted and surfing fines imposel.
A COOK'S COMPLAINT. Clarles Williams, foroman in the shipyard at Quarry Bay, was summoood by his cook for ssault. Complainant alleged that his master threw
ED
tea bottle of
at him injuring
his leg. Defendant denied the assault and declared the bottle dropped by accident. The saranions was dismissed.
JAPANESE STOWAWAYS. Tea Japanese women and one vian were brought up in custody sharged with being stowaway, on board the German steamer Hohnstein from Moji. They were discovered when the ship reached hero hnded together in a small room underneath the sagine room. Asked if they were prepared to be sent back to Japan, the women all answered "No," but his Worship adjourned the case for a week in order to give them time, when not under the influence of the man, to consider whather they would not be sent back, while the man, whom his Worship said The prostitutios, was entenced to nine months' hard had brought the women down for par poses of
On the 15th iust. Vicereg Shum received information that Chau Tuur-Sang possessed some valuable leasehold properties in a village closs by Fatshon. On the following day His Excellency ordered a deputy to proceed to the town with instructions to work in conjunction with the prefect and the civil and military authorities there to effect the seizure, dopaty proceeded with the sub-prefect, two labour. military officers and thirty soldiers to Long Hang Village, in the Wang-Ting-Sze district, where: hoy sealed up the following properties: (a.) One large ancestral temple called the (1.6. ancestral tom ple Wing-Luk-Tai-Fu
.
A HEAT PENALIT
Manzo Karoki, another Japanese, pleaded guilty o the charge tf going on board the same vessel without permission. Inspector Langley asked that the maximum penalty be imposed,
twinkling, as in a cinematograph, you ve hiss serionely dismaying the Guserament. Youtubelonging to a man lariu of the 2nd degrecy and defendant was fined $50 or two months'
is these of "we-ism," said the late Sir William (h) One large family residence (not occupied). Harcourt. The China Mail" seems to have() A beautiful summer house with a large garden renowed its youth. Auyhow in this argument attached to it called the Yew Shan Shus Sut. it has been displaying some of the charue. teristics of that enviable state; impatience, cooksureness, dogmatic disregard of ancient lights and ancient rights. But not even the youngest of us is always right, as Jowett said, and “wo-ier" in this case is more than a wee bit wrong.
hard labour.
AN INTERRUPTED CRICKET FIGHT..
OVERLOADED FERRY BOAT. The master of the Yaumati ferry launch, As a acqual to the proclamation issued by thoJack Lee, was fined $101, or three months' Viceroy of Canton, calling upon the people to imprisonment for carrying 17 passangers in give information with regard to properties excess of the number allowed by his licenco, kuown to belong to Chau Tung-Sang or to others implicated in the Canton scandal, the Chamber of Commerce has now furnished the Canton prefect with a long list containing 26 From the same battery is now also to bohouses located in different towns of the heard the vicious snap of a more modora weapon province and valued at about 100,000 tauls. The
The logic of the new
Viceroy has issued orders to the magistrates of than the blook gu
THE
"NO. 2 FOLDING BROWNIE.” A PERFECT POCKET CAMERA,
FOR...
$12.00'.
LONG, HING & Co.,
No. 17, QUEEN'S ROAD.
THE BURLINGTON.
2, PEDDER STREET. OPPOSITE THE HONGKONG HOTEL.
WINTER MILLINERY & READY-MADE COSTUMES
OF THE
LATEST FASHIONS (JUST ARRIVED).
A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF AMERICAN & FRENCH SHOES;
SMARTEST SHAPES.
A VARIED SELECTION OF TRIMMINGS & RUCHINGS HATS & DRESSES MADE TO ORDER WITH PROMPTITUDE & DEFICIENCY. BEST VALUE IN THE COLONY.
Hongkong, 17th October, 1905. Dr. Ho Kai suggested that in a gambling over horses, the animals could net
be put in.
CRSB f
Mr. Goldring thonghat cock fighting afforded! a better comparison.
Ultimately his Worship suld they would have to debate that point later.
The caso wus adjourned till to-day. BFORE NR. C. D. MELROUP SE (ACTING
SECOND POLICE MAGISTRATE).
ALL ABOUT A HOG.
Sergeant Bollock, of the West Kent Regi- ment, was summoned for keeping a dangerous dog. The complainant wasa chair coolie, who wa bitten on the leg while carrying a gentlemana to the Tramway Station. An Indian constablə The defence was that it was another dog which bit the coolie. Ultimately the matter was co- confirmed the coolie's necount of the occurrence.
promised by defendant agreeing to pay $2 com- pausation, and the summons was withdrawO.
ALLEGED ABHÁULT.
F. Simcock, chief engineer at the Hunghom Cement Works, was charged at the instanon of! Sergeant O'Sullivan with assaulting a ceolie engaged at the works, named Young Tutiy Heing, on the 26th June Inst.
This otse has been adjourned from time to time owing to the coolie being muable to leave hospital.
Mr. R. Hardling (of Messrs. Evens, Hurston and Harding appeared for the defendant, whe pleaded not guilty.
flick through two whoin" parts." One minute ho appears nourishing the pick and shovel of the destroyer and advancing in a wonacing wor dance upon the apparently doomed edifice; the nxi ho is seen reformed and disarmed, no longer destroyer bat saviour, picking up with gentle solicitude the astonished structure-picking it up bodily in his arms and conveying it with tender car to a new and a, better place. In spite of bis declaration to the contrary "Outis" hte, after all, a use for it. He would have it Fot up on the Praya. Imagine the joy of the poor oldthing- its very stones crying out in gladness erer the unexpected apo from sudden argument, adrenosi essuils every monumout the different districts interested to effect the Gough Street, and the remaining 62wery charged ready to shovel into the milix, which were!
death and disintegration, and the damp and historical relic in existence. It is this: and cold of a watery grave! Friends of the Tower are grateful for this relief, but still hold to the opinion that it will be muck In return more useful as a record where it is.
Because there are very few residents hero to. "day who sair the Tower in the haleyen days "of its youth and fiecause "so rapidly does "the European population change that man
Feizures af once.
THE BOYCOTT.
The interesting case in whisk 65 natives were summoned for participating in gambling over a cricket Eght came on for further bearing. Lak Hong Lum, of no occupation, Lin Shaung, silversmith, and Chak Ming Sun, shroff, were charged with keeping gambling honse at 30
The complainaut, having given his version of cross-oramind by Mr. the assault, was Harding. He said he was working pear four trucks full of clinker" when the defendant exrived; he had clinker on the platforın
three and
2
half feet higher than the platform; The defendant said something le! him which he did not understand, and then rar ungry and assaulted him. At the time band. Two men were within soving distance. Defendant kicked with his right foot, and caught witness on the buttock; he fell down immediately.
for his tonguanimity, however, they wont with oven experience of a decule would bulk the arrest of Mia Poon und Ha oo accoaul of (instructed by Mr. Otto Kong Sing) attended i defondant kicked him be ind a chovel in hisi
I am surNO,
be prepared to accept his suggestion and conesdo a brass plate for the benefit of those who cannot otherwise read the story which the "solid mass of ninsonry" meires subtly tells.
very særall alongside the rest of the European "community"; therefore to the majority of those now living in the Colony the Tower na it stands means nothing at all."
Yesterday afternoon the Kwong chai hospital received a telegram from the boycott committee in San Francisco making enquiries regarding boycotting American gods. They wish to know if the men have been released or not. The Kwongchai Hospital has also received a further contribution of 85,09 to assist the boycott
SNAKES.
A shop Bamed Po-Hou-Lam in Wai-O street, wear the Kwong-show profect's yamen
Here you hare the spirit of tho randal with a The next sharpshooter who exposed himself vengeance! The same argument would lead did so in a clumsy manner. He quite evidently to the demolition of Westminster Abbey. To imagined that be disposed of my appeal for the majority of those now living in Leudon the dons a profi:able business in snake-touis, Abbey means nothing at all. It only means any preservation by alleging that it was based upon rentiment. Apologising to the general ram of thing to anybody when thinking about it, and readers for a digression into elementary truths, the majority of London residents are too busy I am compelled by this eritie to point out that to think about it. The same may be said of in all human affairs sentiment in a xatber more any architectural relic thus cannot be turned to important matter than be seams to reslice. so-called practical use. May. I suggest, without "Hongkong, according to this authority, impropriety, that not only a majority of those who were present at the Great Fire of London, "is a progressive colony and, as such, kas no "time for sentimout." It is clear from this but all, are dend. They have joined the great Yet the fact has so far not been that sentiment is majority. astonishing statersent regarded by him as a aprt of "extra" to be used as an argument in favour of removing indulged in only by unprogressive people and the Monument! Bat the majority argument places whose lime hangs heavy on hand. It does not seem to hate dawned on him that the whole world-wide view of those matters.
of the pust sentiment is the sustaining force acting in Jast because the opposition to elemental gravitation and alone dead do we cherish their works. making upward progress possible. Unsustained very helplessness that makes their append to le by it, progress is a mere "going E,"and, where remembered a powerful. The Raman Empire the lie of the band is downhill, a mere going is rather far away in line from our contentions,sible for the accident, would have to pay the down. Sentiment givos progress wings. Only the men who built it up and maintained i with these can it scer soar. Without them it through many centuries are a long time dead", drops down to the earth and becomes oorthy. but for that very reason the walls of Chester are Without it be preserved. For that very roanon! And for the same reason, though of course ever so mildly applied, the Clock Tower should be preserved
Sentiment is the sail of man.
is a mere animal. Without it he will know
hunger and thirst, the sensual pleasures and nothing more. Sentiment determines the course of every meritorious human nation from the rising to the setting of the auu, Instead of being a something that smeants te nothing, it is the something without which everything is nothing. It is the basis of government; the breath of patriotism; the
foo absurd 19
to
pursue.
It inverts
arc
It is their
where it stands. That at least is my view, and
the urgeboy of it in the reason of my putting pen to paper in the original instance, and now for the second time.
In conclusion let me sum up the questions raised in this controversy with the correot answers (as they appear to me) appended
with playing in a common gambling house. Two of the defendants failed to appear and their laily were estrent d. Mr. F. B. L. Bowly conducted the case for the prosecution, and the Hon. Dr Ho Kai in the interests of the third defendant and Goldring appeared for the second defendlaut, the majority of the others, while Mr. P. W. The application of Mr. Goldring for the adjournment of the summonses against the 11th 18th, 33rd sad 6±ud defendant, and that of Dr. Ho Kai for the adjournment of the case against the 58th defendant were granted.
P. C. 13), cross-examined by Dr. Ho Kai,
Mr. Harding-If you were doing your work and fell where you were kiekad, you must! have fallen on the platfrom.
Witness-Whan kicked I fell backwards and went over the platfrom.
Mr. Harding-I put it to you that you tried to ran down the ladder to escape from the defendant.
Wituces--I did not.
Continuing witness said he became uncon acinus when he fell down, and his relatives reported the occurrence to the police.
a medicine wuch appreciated by Chinese.stated that when he entered the room there were Peasants bring regular supplies of live snakes about 40 people present, Hn saw the third to this shop. On the 16th instant several defendant take money but it was possible there were others taking mener witbont his seeing it baskets of a very-venomous variety wore
Inspectar Gourlay deposed to visiting the brought. Somehow or other two of the baskets
After other wituusses had been called for the had been carelessly closed and the captives premises on the night in question. Leaving esesped and soon found a comfortable hiding Sergeant Watt to guard the door ka entered this place under the street slabs. Consternation frst flect. There, in the accountant's room, le prosecution, Mr. Harding called J. Douglas, reigned for a time in the neighbourhood and noticed a table, behind which the first defendant assistant engineer at the Cement Works, for people were greatly alarmed at the prospect of was standing Witness walked into the front the defence. The witness said that on the being bitton by one of these dangerous reptiles part of the house, where he saw from 10 to 1 morning in question, when the complainant got While he was sweeping, the Nobody dared to cross the street at night. On men. Some were on benches and six were seated on the platform, he picked up a broom and the night of the 17th inst, however, a stranger in a corner ronad two earthenware jore contain- began to sweep. happening to pass there was bitten. Having ing erickets. There were two tables in the midde defendant approached, and just as he was learnt that snakes had escaped from the of the room under the pankals. Around the tilting his foot over the combing or guard Po-Hou-Lam shop, he called for a meeting at wall were shelves with 30 earthenware dishes plate running round the platform, the com- a cricket.
On his entrance plainant, who was right or ten feet away, an adjoining temple, and it was there decided each containing
some of the men attempted to rm out. but he jumped over. The defendant then walked to by the neighbours that the shop, being respon-
seized two and told the others to sit down. the part where the complainant jumped over. medical expenses of the injured man to have bis Then he went to the rear of the house. Hore The complainant did not kick the defendant. It was agreed that the shop bo raw & number of pedo around a tablo in There was a little ill-feeling toward Mr. wound cared. would be notified that no live suakes would be one room, while the verandah and projecting Bimcock at the works.
part were full of people. Ou the table be saw a wooden bucket, which was empty when he allowed to be brought there in future.
got there. All the people found in the house
NANNING NOT OPEN.
It is rumoured that Viceroy Sham bas given
orders to the Commissioner of Customa at
Wuchow to stop all foreign owned steam launches that love hitherto boon trading batwest Wuchow and Nanuing from going to the latter port.
ANOTHER BAILWAY ACCIDENT. In the afternoon of the 17th instant #
were taken to the Police Station-78 in all. He
To biz Worship-It was not possible for the defendant to have kicked the complainant with out his seeing it.
An Indian watchmot bore corroborative:
!
testimony.
His Worship did not think there was sufficient evidence to prove that the defendant assaulted the complainant, and dismissed the case.
duwers, dishes, tables, etc. In addition to the arched the house and found 3133.7 in money, 30 crickets, he discoveral other 10 jare, cach containing a cricket, in the room downstairs At the entrance were picked up tira notices-- one announcing the name of the club and the At the breakdown occurred on the engine of a train other stating, "Crickets for sale." vital essence of religion; the secret of ability: What harm does the Tower do, standing where that had left Shek-Wgi-Torg for Fatsbau Paliee Station defendants were searched, a honesty derives from it; all the virtues depensoul? Not one. Does it scriously obstract flis / The breakdown occurred near the Five-eyed number of switchers" being found in their and left again at midnight same day for upon it-truth, honour, courtesy, charity, all have their roots in it; it is the source of chivalry; trafia? No. Is it really so very ugly By Bridge station. The up train from Fatshan
the spirit of lova and the soul of war. It is, in a word, the ruling force in life. Even to contem- plate this gigantic traism as a questionable matter is irritating, but when a writer in the public press actually seeks to disparage an argument by discovering its roots in sentiment, the necessity for pointing out rather forcibly
it ia! None. Does it inconvenience a single
possession.
LATEST STEAMER MOVE MENTS. The C.P.R, str, Empress of India arrived at Kobe at 9am. on Wednesday, the. 18th inst., Bhangbai, where she is due to arrive at 4 a.m. Mr. Bowly asked if his Wership would ad. on Sunday, the 22nd inst
The Silk ex C.P.R. str. Empress of Japan, was requested to carry the news to Shek-Wai-
which left Hongkong on the 20th Sept. and And answering these questions Torg end ask for assistance. A train contain-it the crickets as productions.
His Worship said he had never heard of Yokohama on the 20th Sept., arrived in New thus, there s rises naturally the further question, ing the necessary implemonts for repairs was
animals being admitted.
York on Wednesday, the 18th Oct., thus making -Why not let it alone?
If only those who have power of life and death despatched from that statico but, failing to Mr. Goldring remarked that he was afraid a transit of 28 days from Hongkong and 19 days
slacken spoed in time, could not stop and ran
no means.
in these matters will let it alone there will bo into the stationary train. Many people are
no more "pother" and "Outis " and his friends, said to have been injured, though fortunately will have no occasion to complain. I, for one
none mortally,
they would die if putin under covers.
from Yokohama...
N, GAINS,
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[1886
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1370
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