SINGAPORE
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been cleared and planted with pineapple for tinning; the whole of this business appears to be in the hands of Chinese. Considerable interest has also been shown in the cultivation of rubber, oil-grasses, lemon-grass and citronella, as well as indigo, vegetables, pepper and ground nuts. Coconut cultivation increased rapidly for a time, but there is some tendency, especially among the Chinese, to substitute rubber for coconut, which has been officially declared to be "not an advisable policy."
Singapore offers but few points of salient interest to visitors, the Botanical Gardens at Tanglin, the Waterworks in Thomson Road, and the Raffles Library and Museum being its only show places. A considerable mileage of electric tramway is now in operation. A railway across the island was sanctioned by a vote of the Legislative Council in 1899, and was opened for traffic on 1st January, 1903. An extension to the Tanjong Pagar Docks and neighbourhood was sanctioned and now runs as far as Pasir Panjang. This line of fourteen miles was the first section of a proojected Malay Peninsula and India Railway, passing through and opening up the countries of Johore, Malacca, the Native Malay States, some Siamese territory and Burma, on to Calcutta. The Railway now runs direct from Singapore to Penang, and has been extended on the West Coast through Kedah and Perlis and is now connected with the Siamese railway system. The railway has also been constructed from a junction at Gemas, near the northern boundary of Johore, through the eastern State o Paliang, and will eventually be extended through Kelantan to form another link with the Siamese railway system on the East Coast. The Singapore Railway was purchased in 1913 for £482,533 by the Federated Malay States Government from the Colonial Government in order to unify the British Malayan railway system under one management. There is a train ferry between the Island of Singapore and the mainland, but plans have been pre- pared for the construction of a causeway across the Straits of Johore to carry a double line of rails and a motor road. The distance from Singapore to Calcutta by sea is just over 2,000 miles.
DIRECTORY
COLONIAL GOVERNMENT
Governor, and Commander-in-Chief-Sir Laurence Nunnes Guillemard, K.C.B.
K.C.M.G., K.B.E.
Aide-de-Camp. (officiating as)-M. E. Sherwood
Private Secretary-M. E. Sherwood Clerk-W. Bachelor
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Hon. Attorney-General Hon. Colonial Treasurer Hon. Colonial Engineer Clerk of Councils, G. L. Ham
His Excellency the Governor, President General Officer Commanding the Troops Hon. Colonial Secretary
Hon. Resident Councillor of Penang
LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
His Excellency the Governor, President General Officer Commanding the Troops Hon. Colonial Secretary
Hon. Resident Councillor of Penang Hon. Attorney-General Hon. Treasurer
Hon. Colonial Engineer
Hon. Mr. C. J. Saunders
Hon. Mr. J. Mitchell Hon. Mr R. J. Addie
Hon. Mr. H. W. Firmistone
Hon. Capt. A. R. Chancellor
Hon. Dr. Lim Boon Keng, 0.B.E.
Hon. Mr. J. W. Campbell Hon. Mr. D. Y. Perkins
Hon. Mr. F. L. Tomlin
Hon. Mr. W. F. Nutt, O.B.E.
Hon. Mr. A. F. Goodrich
Hon. Mr. C. E, Craig
Clerk of Councils-G. L. Ham
Shorthand Reporter-C. Hogarth (acting)
(For Government Departments see under G.)
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