Directory_and_Chronicle_1911 — Page 1441

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

NETHERLANDS-INDIA

1395.

Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, and is seconded by a Lieutenant General, Commander in Chief of the Army and Chief of the War Department and a Vice- Admiral or Rear-Admiral, Commandant of the Navy and Chief of the Marine Depart- ment, and further by the seven Directors of the Departments: of the Home Government Finance; Justice; Education, Public Worship and Industry; Agriculture; Government monoplies and industrial enterprises; and Public Works. The Department of Agriculture, established on 1st January, 1905, is a combination of the gardens (botanical and experimental), laboratories, musea, etc., known until that date as "Lands Plantentuin," with the Bureau of Forestry, the Veterinary Service and the Govern- ment Coffee and Cinchona plantations.

...

Netherlands-India is divided into provinces, under the administration of Governors or Residents and their Assistant Residents, and Controleurs". The direct government of the population is entrusted to natives with the titles of Regent, Wedono, and Assistant-Wedono in Java and other titles in the other islands. In appointing the native officials it is considered a rule that the people in the different islands Residencies or districts must be governed if possible by their own chieftains. In Soerakarta and Djogjakarta (in Java) and in a great many residencies of other islands the native princes have still to a certain degree the rule of the country in their hands, but in fact their power is only nominal and they are dependent on the Government of Netherlands-India.

The Supreme Court is located at Batavia, and Courts of Justice are established at Batavia, Samarang, Soerabaia, Padang, Medan, and Macasser; there are also Residential Courts in all the Residencies, except at Maensser. The Courts of Justice for the natives are in the capitals of Residencies and districts; they have different names, as landraad, rapat, proatin, regentschapsgerecht, districtsgerecht.

CLIMATE

The climate in general is very damp. Under, the equator and at the sea level the maximum temperature may reach upward of 35° Celsius. At a distance from the equator the temperature is but little lower; however, not so high and on some mountains it falls to freezing point. At Batavia the mean daily temperature is 26° Celsius. In the plains and on the lower mountains the monsoons have a great influence on the climate. To the South of the equator from April to October the south-east monsoon and from October to April the north-west monsoon is blowing, while to the north of the equator the West inonsoon blows from April to October and the east monsoon from October to April.

The changes of the monsoons are marked by periods of three to four weeks, during which the wind blows from different directions and thunderstorms and calms prevail. The heat is greatest during the south-east monsoon and is nly occasionally tempered by thunderstorms, but the nights are then pretty cool. The west monsoon is ac- companied by heavy rains continuing for days and sometimes for weeks, swelling the rivers so that the low countries are often inundated. The influence of the monsoons is in many cases modified by high mountains and other local conditions, so that, for instance, it rains nearly every day at Buitenzorg and in some parts of Borneo and in the highlands of Sumatra. The winds are rather weak.

PRODUCTS

The islands of the Indian Archipelago have generally a very fertile soil and are rich in useful products. The most important products of Java are: Rice (in 1908 86,500,000 piculs), principally for local consumption; sugar (23,200,000 piculs), coffee (302,000 piculs), tea (15,100,000 kg), tobacco (30,200,000 kg), Cinchona bark (8,000,000 kg), nutmeg, cocoa, pepper, copra, ground nuts, indigo, kapok, tapioca meal, teak timber; of Sumatra: tobacco (377,00piculs), coffee (12,000 piculs), pepper, caoutchouc, Kums, rattans; of Borneo and Celebes: copra, caoutchoue, gums, rattans.maize, coffee, hides.

The export of the principal articles in 1909 amounted to: Arachides, cleaned

in husk

Arrack...

Bark (Bakaŭ and Tengar wood)

Benzine

Birls' nests

Caoutchoue

Cassia vera... Cassia fistula Cattle, buffaloes Cattle, cows

...

9,155,536 kilo

value Fl. 815,355

909,676

8,153,546 kilo 9,096,762 5,099,955 litre

**

14

་་

*

1,019,991

爷爷

场事

1,373,330

159,667,216 litre

17

>>

J

1,626,932 kilo

884,007 492,525

J+

"

19

**

42

ps

**

*

132

!་

13

4,790,017

631,636

3,253,864

353,602 29,552

2,109

6,600

""

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