Directory_and_Chronicle_1924 — Page 974

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

CHUNGKINGHANGCHOW

900

司公船輪淸日

NISSHIN KISEN KAISHA

T. K. Onota, manager

PHILIPPIDI, C. M., Watchmaker. Jeweller

and General Importer Tel. Ad: Philippidi

PHILIPPIDI & Co., C. M., Importers

C. M. Philippidi

Ou Yo Ni, manager

局理管務

川東

Tung Chwan Yu Wu Kuan Li Chu

POST OFFICE (Eastern Szechwan District) -Head Office: Chungking; Tel. Ad: Postos

Commissioner-J. A. Greenfield

Deputy Commissioner-J. C. Parkin

Acting Deputy Comr.-King Che Fu

Postmaster (Wanlısien)-J. Depardon

源聚

REPRESENTATIVE OF BRITISH MANUFAC-

TURES, LTD.

A. C. Burn, manager

來大

ROBERT DOLLAR CO.

A. C. Flemming, foreign manager H. C. Wei,

Chinese do.

STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK

D. E. Kydd, manager

H. G. Denham

W. H. Lees 1 F. G. Green

J. H. Morrison, const. supt.

J. H. Schwer, installation supt.

J. Stamm, assistant

司公德蜀

SZECHUEN HANDELS GESSELLSCHAFT

P. R. Schuchardt

福聚

UNION FRANCO-CHINOISE DE NAVIGATION

M. Charrier, manager

A. Lordereau (absent)

YOUNG BROTHERS TRADING Co., Import and Export Merchants and Commis- sion Agents-Hsin Fêng Kai; Tel. Ad: Yangbrosco

S. C. Yang, managing director A. W. Davidson, secretary J. Lee, sub-manager

HANGCHOW

州杭

ẢN A Háng-chau

Hangchow, the capital of the province of Chekiang, is situated 120 miles south- west of Shanghai, and 110 miles south of Soochow, adjacent to the Chien-tang River (the Green River of Robert Fortune's famous journeys to the neighbouring tea districts), at the apex of a bay which is too shallow for the navigation of steamers. The mouth of the river is, moreover, visited by a bore, or tidal wave, which further endangers navigation. The highest bores occur in autumn during the three days after the middle of the ciglith moon, and Haining is the best place for observing this famous phenomenon, which is formed by the north-east trade wind heaping up the water of the Pacific on the China coast and causing enormous tides. Hangchow Bay is shaped like a funnel, and the mass of water rushing up, more and more concentrated as it advances, is suddenly confronted by the current of the river. The constriction and opposition, acting in concert, bank up the rising water. Gathering momentum and speed with the immense pressure of the ocean behind it, thus forcing its volume into the ever-narrowing waterway, the bore occasionally attains, at a favourable spring- tide, a height of as much as 15 feet as it rushes, with a roar like thunder, along the sea-wall on the northern shore of the Bay, at a rate sometimes reaching 12 miles an hour.

Before the Taiping rebellion Hangchow shared with Soochow the reputation of being one of the finest cities in the Empire on account of its wealth and splendour, but it was almost destroyed by the rebels. Since then it has recovered to a

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