746
Agencies
MUKDEN-HARBIN
Y. Kamada,
secretary
S. Mera,
do.
R. Yokoyama,
do.
Y. Gondo,
do.
T. Umehara,
do.
South British Assurance Co. of New
Zealand
Commercial Union Assurance Co., Ld.
POST OFFICE, CHINESE
Headquarters (Mukden)
Postal Commissioner-E. Tollefsen Deputy Commissioner-P. Petersen District Accountant-H. Kirkhope Assistants-M. Rosse
POST OFFICE, IMPERIAL JAPANESE
Director O. Nakamura
Chief of the Telegraph Section-K.
Kashiwada
Chief of the lostal Section
Yamashita
K. Yamasaki, accountant
RIN-TAI STORES, THE, Wholesale and Re-
tail Merchants
RUSSIAN MILITARY AGENCY
Vice Military Agent-Col. R. Blonsky
- J.
SHAW, F. W.,
Import and
Export
Merchant
F. W. Shaw
Ichikawa,
T.
Chief Engineer-J. Kitaoka
Accountant-K. Tokisawa
Chief-clerks
Fukuhara
RAILWAYS
K.
CHINESE GOVERNMENT RAILWAY
(Peking-Mukden Section)
N. Akutsu, engineer-in-charge
H. Elder, traffic inspector
W. A. Shellam, loco. inspector
社會式株道鐵州漏南
Nan-man-chou-t'ie-tao-chu-shi
hueisho
•
SOUTH MANCHURIA RAILWAY COMPANY
Teleph. 67 Japanese, 117 Chinese
Col. Y. Sato, chief superintendent
K. S. Park, accountant
THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE
Thomas C. Fulton, M.A., D.D.
James W. Inglis, M.A.
YAMATO HOTEL
S. Mihara, manager
YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, LTD., THE
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
Pratt
D. Wheldon
HARBIN
Harbin, the junction of the railways from Irkutsk to Vladivostok, and from Harbin to Kwangchengtze, where the latter joins the Japanesc line to Dalny, has been made the seat of a Chinese Maritime Customus House to control the railway traffic by means of sub-Stations at Manchuria Station on the western frontier and Suifenho (Pogranit- chnaia) on the eastern frontier. Its situation on the railway is within comparatively easy land communication with large grain-producing districts as yet but sparsely populated and far from being fully cultivated, though development is increasing. It is on the banks of a river navigable for large, but shallow-draught, steamers, and is in direct and uninterrupted communication for six months during the year with the fertile land about Petuna S. W. and of Sansing N. E.; also with vast districts watered by the Amur River and those on the banks of the less important Ussuri River, near Habarovsk. Possessing advantages such as these, Harbin, important as it is at present, promises to become one of the greatest trading centres of China. The country around is a bean-growing country par excellence. North Manchuria being also essentially a wheat country, it follows that the flour industry at Harbin is a flourishing one, though less than formerly owing to restrictions on import into the Priamur. There is a sugar factory at Asiho on the railway, 26 miles east of Harbin, with a capacity of some 300
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