Directory_and_Chronicle_1899 — Page 452

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

16

TOKYO

are also extensive pleasure gardens, such as Asuka-yama, and neat little villages. The part west of the Castle contains fifty temples, and a number of nobles' palaces. The district on the south of the Castle, with an area of about 17 square miles, contains about sixty temples. The most remarkable among them is Yutenji in Meguro.

Several great fires have during the last two decades or so swept Tokyo, and these have led to great improvements and widening of the streets. Rows of good houses in brick and stone, and new bridges, in many cases of iron or stone, have been built and the city has in many portions been thoroughly modernised. Tramways have been laid and the cars are usually crowded with passengers. The main streets and those adjacent to them are lighted by electricity, and the remainder by gas and oil lamps. A race course has been formed close to Uyeno. Lines of telegraph, amounting in all to 200 miles, connect the various parts of the city with one another, and with the country lines. The main streets are broad and well kept, and improvements attend the work of reconstruction after each conflagration. But as the city is in a transition state, it necessarily presents many strange anomalies. Side by side with lofty stone buildings stand rows of rude wooden houses. As with the buildings so with the people; while the mass still wear the native dress, numbers appear in European costume. The soldiers and police are dressed in uniform on the Western model.

The environs of Tokyo are very picturesque and offer a great variety of pleasant walks or rides. Foreigners will find much to interest them in the country round. The finest scenery is at the northern and western sides of the city, where the country is surrounded by beautiful hills, from which there is a distant view of the noble mountains of Hakone, while beyond rises in solitary grandeur the towering peak of Fuji-san, covered with snow the greater part of the year. The population of Tokyo, according to the official census of 1895, was 1,342,153.

The native Press is represented by more than a hundred newspapers, several of which are dailies. There are 1,225 schools of different classes, including one university. A large and handsome hotel designed for foreigners and called the Imperial Hotel, was opened in 1890. There is also a first class hotel called the Metropole, under foreign management.

DIRECTORY

IMPERIAL GOVERNMENT

NAIKAKU (CABINET)

Count Okuma Shigenobu, Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs Admiral Marquis Saigo Tsugumichi, Minister of the Navy

Viscount Katsura Taro, Minister of War

Count Itagaki Taisuke, Minister for Home Affairs

Oishi Masami, Minister of Agriculture and Commerce

Ozaki Yukio, Minister of Education

Matsuda Masahisa, Minister of Finance

Ohigashi Yoshimichi, Minister of Justice Hayashi Yuzo, Minister of Communications

KWAMBO (SECRETARIAT)

Taketomi Tokitoshi, chief secretary Oishi Kumakichi, private secretary to prime

minister

Tada Yoshitoshi, secretary

do.

Yoshida Yosaku,

Hanabusa Naosaburo, do.

Taguchi Kenzo,

do.

Hayakawa Tetsuya,

do.

Shibata Kamion,

do.

Minami Hiroshi,

do.

}

SHOKUN KYOKU (BOARD OF DECORATION) Viscount Ogiu Yuzuru, president

HOSEI KYOKU (Legislative Bureau) Komuchi Tomotsune, president

KWAMPO KYOKU (OFFICIAL Gazette) Kawakami Fusanobu, director

ONKIU KYOKU (Pension Bureau) Komuchi Tomotsune, director

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