局務工英大
KEWKIANG-HANKOW
*I* Ta Ying Kung-wu-kok
POLICE STATION
Health Officer-A. S. Tenney, M.D.
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
Inspector of Police-H. Pritchard
NISSHIN KISEN KAISHA
Ball, W. C. Mrs.
Carrell, L. R. Mrs.
Charleton, G.H., Mrs.
Lyons, F. W., Mrs.
McGuffog, Mrs.
Martzinkevich, P. P., Mrs.
759
H. Pritchard, inspector of police
STANDARD OIL Co. OF N. Y.-Tel. Ad:
Socony
TENNEY, A. S. (M.D. HARVARD), Port
Physician and Health Officer
LADIES' DIRECTORY
Molley, E., Mrs.
Robertson, J., Mrs.
Moore, J., Mrs.
Taylor, L. K., Mrs.
Osborne, J. M. H., Mrs.
Tenner, P. de, Mrs.
Price, H., Mrs.
Pritchard, Mrs.
Tenney, A. S., Mrs. Tull, Mrs.
HANKOW
口溪 Han-kau
Hankow is situated on the river Han at the point where it enters the Yangtze, and is in lat. 30 deg. 32 min. 51 sec. N., and long. 114 deg. 19 min. 55 sec. E. It was formerly regarded as only a suburb of Hanyang, which it immediately adjoins, and which is a district city of the province of Hupeh, but Hankow has outstripped the older city in wealth and importance. These two towns lie immediately facing the city of Wuchang-fu, the capital of the province, which is built upon the south bank of the Yangtze. Hankow is distant from Shanghai about 600 miles.
Attention was first drawn to Hankow as a place of trade by Huc, the French missionary. Captain Blakiston, in his work "The Yangtsze," gives the following correct description of the place and its surroundings:-" Hankow is situated just where an irregular range of semi-detached low hills crosses a particularly level country on both sides of the main river in an east and west direction. Stationed on Pagoda Hill, Hanyang, a spectator looks down on almost as much water as land even when the rivers are low. At his feet sweeps the magnificent Yangtze, nearly a mile in width; from the west and skirting the northern edge of the range of hills already mentioned, comes the river Han, narrow and canal-like, to add its quota, and serving as one of the highways of the country; and to the north-west and north is an extensive treeless flat, so little elevated above the river that the scattered hamlets which dot its surface are without exception raised on mounds, probably artificial works of a now distant age. A stream or two traverse its farther part and flow into the main river. Carrying his eye to the right bank of the Yangtze one sees enormous lakes and lagoons both to the north-west and south-east sides of the hills beyond the provincial city.
""
The port was opened to foreign trade in 1861. The British Settlement is located at the east end of the city. It is well laid out, the roads being broad and all lined with well-grown trees. The Bund affords a very fine and pleasant promenade, and has an imposing appearance from the river. There are a large Roman Catholic and small Protestant and Greck churches, the latter a rather handsome structure built by the Russian residents. Several brick-tea factories owned by Russians are located in the Settlement. France, Russia, and Japan have since 1895 acquired
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