988
MACAO
activity of the place, however, so far as the Portuguese are concerned, is a thing of the past. There is still a fair native trade carried on, the value of which, according to the Chinese Customs returns from Lappa, in 1903 amounted to Tls. 11,723.935; the net total of the year's trade including the junk trade between Macao and Hongkong is given as Tls. 20,078,314. As the harbour is fast silting up, however, most of the native trade will soon desert the place unless efficient dredging operations are inaugurated. Some work has recently been done in this direction, but the operations have been on a small scale. The Home Government have, however, approved of an extensive scheme for the improvement of the harbour, but full details up to the time of public- ation have not been announced Owing to its being open to the south-west breezes and the quietude always prevailing, Macao has become a frequent retreat of invalids and business men from Hongkong and other neighbouring ports. There are three well conducted hotels: the Boa Vista, the Macao Hotel, and the Oriental Hotel. While neighbouring centres of population have in recent years been visited by plague or other epidemics Macao has continued to enjoy absolute immunity.
The Hongkong, Canton, and Macao Steamboat Company runs a daily steamer between Macao and Hongkong, leaving the former port at 8.30 o'clock a.m. and Hongkong at 2 p.m. Another Company runs a regular steamer daily between Hongkong and Macao. Between Macao and Canton there is a daily steam service, Sundays excepted. The distance from Macao to Hongkong is 40 miles, and to Canton 88 miles. Macao is connected with Hongkong by telegraph. The population of Macao, with its dependencies of Taipa and Colouan, according to returns made in 1896, was-Chinese, 74,568; Portuguese, 3,898; other nationalities, 161; or a total of 78,627. Of the Portuguese 3,106 were natives of Macao, 615 natives of Portugal, and 177 natives of other Portuguese possessions. Of the foreigners 80 were natives of Great Britain. In November, 1901, an Envoy Extraordinary arrived from Portugal, his mission being to arrange with the Chinese Government for a delimitation of the boundary of the Colony. The line of demarcation submitted by the Envoy included certain islands which the Chinese Government refused to acknowledge as being part of the Portuguese colony, and the Envoy, while not successful in gaining this point, secured a concession for a railway from Macao to Canton. The convention, however, did not meet with the approval of the Cortes at Lisbon, and Sen- hor Branco came to the East again in 1904. În November a new agreement was con- cluded with the Chinese Government, but as we go to press it is announced that the Government at Lisbon regards the terms as far from satisfactory and refuses ratification. A syndicate of Chinese and Portuguese capitalists has provided a capital of four million dollars for the construction of the line. A New Commercial Treaty, was arranged with China in November 1904. Since the Boxer trouble Macao has been garrisoned with European Portuguese troops.
DIRECTORY
** Ou-mun-toc-ch ́ü 署督門澳
Governador da Provincia-S. Exa. O. Capitão tenente da Armada Real MARTINHO
PINTO DE QUEiroz MontenĽGRO
GOVERNO DE MACAU
署司政輔
K Fu-cheng-sz'-shi
SECRETARIA Geral do GOVERNO
Secretario Geral-Dr. Alfredo Pinto Lello
Go Momo fing Repartição Civil
Primeiro. Official-S. J. 'Encarnação
Segundo do.-C. J. Borges
Amanuenses-—F. A. Vital, J. F. S. da Silva
Porteiro -F. A. da Silva
Continuo-A. S. Torres
Fiel do Palacio-Carlos Gouvêa
Kuan-mu-fống
Secretaria Militar
Capitão d'artilheria –D. M. P. de Menezes,
chefe do Estado Maior
Adjunto--Tenente J. L. Marques
Amanuenses—A. da V. Cardoso, A. Borges Archivista-Alferes A. G. da S. Vidigal
2a. Repartição
Chefe Tenente E. Martins
Amanuenses-E. S. do Rozario, A. J. Santos
REMINGTON TYPEWRITER, 327 Broadway, New York, U. S. A.
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