SAMSHUI
997
which presents more beautiful scenery than is to be found on any steamer route in China--the Yangtze gorges, perhaps, excepted. The number of steamers entered and. cleared at the Custom House during 1915 totalled 4,967, aggregating 1,558,289 tons, as. compared with 4,537, aggregating 1,422,378 tons, in 1914. Since 1st May, 1905, Samshui has. been made a port of entry for foreign steamers going up the West River. Numerous. steam launches carrying passengers or towing passenger boats ply between Samsliui and neighbouring cities on the West and North Rivers and on the creek leading to Fatshan and Canton. A railway line from Canton to Samshui via Fatshan was. inaugurated on the 26th September, 1904, and five trains run daily each way between Cinton and Samshui. The passengers carried during 1915 numbered 4,008,819. The climate of the port is as healthy as any in the delta. In the summer, frequent squalls. cool the air, and it is seldom that there is not a breeze of some kind; in winter, the air is keen, bracing and clear. The waterways and surrounding country are pictur- esque, and the adjacent heights offer pleasant walks. Excursions of one or two days enable one to climb Mt. Mc. Cleverty, (2,000 ft.) at the mouth of the West River; or Ting Hu Shan (4,000 ft.), behind the celebrated temple known to foreigners as Howlik," near which is to be found the popular bathing pool and fall; or the hills forming the first gorge, from which used to be quarried the famous ink-stone known throughout China as Tuan Yen. Perhaps the most interesting of the sights in the neighbourhood are the Seven Star Hills, which are situated close to the pleasant town of Shin Hing, some 30 miles from the port. These hills, formed of pure white miable rising to a height of about 400 feet from the plain, hold many temples-some apparently clinging to the sides of the cliffs and caves and grottoes. The fine bronze figures of more than life-size in one of these temples are well worthy of attention.
Fair snipe shooting is to be obtained in the winter, and an occasional pheasant, partridge, quail or duck may be added to the bag. The attractions of good sport and pleasing surround- ings have made Samshui a week-end resort for some of the Canton community confined to the small and uninteresting island of Shameen.
The telegraph and postal services have agencies at the port, but there are no Consulates established; the consuls within whose districts Samshui lies reside either in. Canton or Hongkong.
DIRECTORY
CONSULATES
MB Tai-peh-kwok Ling-sz-kun
BELGIUM
隆安福
CHAI WO S. S. Co.
Consul-General-Residing in H'kong.
關水三
官事領國英大
GREAT BRITAIN
Consul-General-
(residing in Canton)
Emil
ITALY
Tai I-tai-li Ling-sã bùn
Consul-General- Commendatore Z.
Volpicelli (residing in Canton)
ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO.
記公司
IL
BANKER & Co.
Yat Kee, agent
BANKER STEAM SHIP Co.
Yat Kee, agent
CUSTOMS, MARITIME
Comm'ner.-J. H. M. Moorhead
Assistant-B. Arata
Tidesurveyor and Harbour
Master M. Hellstrand
Examiner A. Miller
Asst. Examiner E. P. Pretzsch
Tidewaiters-A. Borges,
H. H. P. Kaye, P. M. Thiele
隆福萬
HONGKONG. CANTON AND MACAO STEAM
BOAT CO., WEST RIVER BRITISH S. S. Co..
昌興永
KWONG SHIU & Co.
14
KWONG WING & Co.
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