Fight of Ocean and River in Hangchow Bay r L KS. !f m wr yT,M oV ' . 4 1 wl H CHINESE FISHERMAN AND HIS CORMORANTS. (Copyright. 1902. by Frank O. Carpenter.) yond the yellow I can see the white caps on AININO. Cheklang, Jan. 23. (Bpe- the Pacific, the realm of old Neptune, but clal Correspondence of The Bee.) at yet there la no sign of hit invasion of I have teen the greatest won- the land. der of China. I might almctt lay I climb to the top of the wall, Bret having' the greatest wonder of the world, my guide draw my camera up with a ttrlng. It it the Oght between the watera of the and alt down and wait for the coming In ocean and those of the land which takes vaalon. I am on a wide dyke shaded by place here at every tide, when the mighty long lines of willows, with the Hangchow Pacific, rearing ttt snow white head to a bay and the ocean in front of me and be helght of many feet, comet galloping up the hind and below me, a mighty garden spotted Bay of Hangchow in a vain attempt to con- with clumps of green trees and covered quer the Tttngtang river, which there meets with a crazy quilt of luxuriant crops. There It and is lost In its waters. are patches of pink peach orchards Just I saw the struggle standing on lis sea bursting forth Into bloom, gray thickets of wall which the Chinese have here built to mulberry trees and clumps of feathery keep back the ocean. This wall is as high bamboos, out of which peep the thatchej as a three-story bouse. It is built of gran- roofs of farm bouses. There are people lte, the stones in places being Bound to- wearing blue gowns and gray hats at work gather with iron, and It runs from here all in the fields, laxy buffaloes dragging the the way along the coast to the mouth of plows through the furrowt, and In the wil the Tangate Klang. It It thirty feet high low above me I hear the tinging of birds, and more than one hundred mllea long, and it It an Ideal country acene, at peaceful It la only one of the mighty creationa of the and quiet at that of any part of the world, Chinese In their struggle with nature. and I almoat dose oft at I look. China Versus HollaaA. Battle of the Waters. We make much ot the light of Holland But what la that tound In the distance? with the waves. 'The fight of the Chinese It makes me think of a railroad train at Is far more wonderful. Tou could drop great speed, but far off. It slowly deepens Holland amongst the vast regions ot the and I look out to sea. It la the mighty lower Tangtse valley and you would have Pacific gathering Itself together for the to hunt to find it. This whole country is a f reat bore at Hangchow. with my glass I system ot dykes and canals. 1 traveled up can see a faint line of white at the toot of the YangUe river for 1,000 mllea and tound blue Islands about ten miles away. It Is enormous embankments - everywhere along now but a streak of sliver cutting the sea. Its course. I walked on the banks of water- As I watch It It broadens and lengthens, ways forty feet above the lands, the tops ot The tound Increases. See! ..There Is a low such embankments forming the roads and wall of foam way out there In the water, paths of the country. The great silk dls- There are great boats behind It whic& are trlct about Halnlng Is ot a similar nature, floating In on the tide, and ships InT front Every farm lies below the level or the canal,, which It must swallow up at it cornel- on and everywhere the people are dredging out ward. Now It is nearer ana higher. With the waterways and building up walls. The the naked eye I can see it throwing IU foam canals are crossed by hundreds ot bridges, into the air. The wall seems to be rolling some of enormous site and of great beauty, over and over, while the bay at my feet is and all representing a vast amount ot ts still as a mill pond. Now the flood has money and work. caught the ships. They ride with It They Take, for Instance, this huge wall of tway this way and that, apparently on Halnlng on which I am atandlng. At Ita their beam enda. Now they are lost and a foot are two terraces about twenty feet little later on I see them rising and tailing wide, held back by piles filled in with with the swell behind It. stones. Above these terraces the wall rites Now the wall ot water la extending far straight up about fifteen feet. It Is regu- out In the bay. It Is dashing Itself against larly built, being made of blocks of stone the embankment some mllea further up and from a foot to eighteen Inches thick, one It Is rolling, seething, foaming, roaring to piled upon another as In building a house, ward me. Thlt wall Is greater than that Upon the terraces, which are high out of whjch engulfed Pharaoh's army. It makes the water, Is a long line of great Junks me think ot Niagara and the thunder of Its filled with cargo for Halnlng. They have oncoming current la almost at great. It come In when the tide was high, and by lta cornea closer and closer, until at last It recession have been laid upon this great dashes almost to my feet and goea roaring shelf. I have erawled down upon the ter- onward. It haa caught the great Junk racea and I sit below the ships as I write on the terrace, swayed their masts to an these notes. They are at least fifteen feet tro, and, passing, haa left them floating, for back from the water, and their tall maata the bay la now filled and the terraces hid tower high above the top of the wall. They den. How the water seethes and bolls! are enormoua vessels which came here by There are a myriad whirlpools In the bay. tea from other ports. Their mighty sails The ships are pulling at the great bamboo are flapping In the breexe, and the great cables with which they are tied to the fish-like eyes, each as big around aa a din- shore, and the whole for a moment It like ner plate, look down upon me as I work the rapids below Niagara falls. The ships are anchored to the wall by A moment later and the contest Is over, cablea of twisted bamboo as big around as The Pacific haa crowded the river far back, your arm, and beyond and back of them I It haa filled the bay and the tide It felt far can tee the pagodas and other buildings ot Into the Interior. The dykes and the Halnlng, with the blue mountains rising be walls, however, have protected the (arms floodgates and locks leading Into the Grand canal, and In some places these are man aged by soldiers. It Is said a river was once conducted Into It at a place above the Tangtse Klang and that It took 800,000 men seven months to turn the waters of that stream. A great part of the Grand canal Is in bad repair, but south of the YangUe It la a mighty trade route, filled with all kinds of vessels. Laad of Mass- Brldsea. The labor upon the canal has been enor mous and a vast amount of work is being done upon it today. At every few miles stone bridges have been built across it an ny of these bridges have wide stone arches high enough for the boats tc pass through. From the boat these arches are exceedingly picturesque. They form a frame for the long waterway covered with boats ot all klnda. I counted thirty bridges In sight at one time and this not including the little stone bridges which cross the side canals at every few hundred feet. The bankt of all the canala have foot paths, worn smooth by the tread of thou sands of bare feet. Many of the boats are hauled along by trekers, men, women and children, who are narneseed up like horses and who pull the boats onward by ropes at tached to the masts. The women work as nard as the meu, a thrifty boatman having several wives, each extra wife being an extra slave to the husband. All the canals are filled with fish and there are fishermen everywhere. There are fish traps built at Intervals across the waterway, through which your boat goea with a scraping, grating sound. There are wicker fences, so fixed Into the bed of the canal that they will bend down when the boat presses against them. They are meant to stop the fish from coming down or up stream and to turn them Into the sinuous pens ot bamboo at the sides, where once In they cannot get out. Such pens are fre quently near great stone brldgee. There are also fishermen using hooks and lines and fishing partlea with nett and also many men fishing -wi ...- .-?-... The cc fberman -i.o aiong in a cano , upon the aides of which alt from twenty to thirty birds, which look much like ducks. They are on the rim of the boat, fastened there by strings tied to their legs. At a word from their master they will dive down for fish and bring them up In their mouths. Each cormorant has a ring about ita neck which prevents It from swallowing the fish It catches. The ,.Vil llVF r t i . .-.ri',- 7Cts '.. V WALL AND SHIPS AT HAINUNQ THE WALL IS ONE HUNDRED MILES LONG AND KEEPS BACK THE SEA. fisherman alts In the stern ot the boat and paddles It along. Scenes ia Soockow. One of the most Important cities on ths Grand canal Is Soochow. It Is bigger than St. Louis and was founded about 600 B. C. It la the capital of Kinagau province and la in the heart of a district as thickly pop ulated perhaps aa any part of China. It Is a very rich city and a great manufac turing center. It makes silks, linens, cot tons and all sorts of things of Iron, Ivory and glass. In the new China It will be one of the great cities of the empire and one of the chief railroad centers. Railroads have already been surveyed to connect it with Shanghai and before many years it will be known all over the world. It Is only five years now since It was opened to foreign trade This was at the close of the Chinese-Japanese war. At present (Continued on Seventh Page.) fSBSaB Ulli Uiti I.M.ntiMriai If w Hi l V V I III hind them. To Keen Ola Neptaao Back. Stand beside me and let your eye follow the wall. Notice how it winds along with ths stnuoua curves of a snake, the atonet and the people are working In the fields Just as peacefully as before the great "White Terror" came galloping In. Oa the Graad Caaal. I have been traveling tor some days upon aa closely laid aa though they were dove- the Grand canal, going off now and then tailed. Those curves lessen the force of Into the smaller canals which cover this the mighty bore and aid in keeping the part of China like a net. The Grand canal ccean out of the land. la a wonderful waterway. It Is longer than Notice that great fasclns or fortification from New York to Cleveland and !t aaaea of rushes and twigs which extends tar out through a region which contains more pec- from the wall In the shape ot a bow. It Is pie than the whole United States. I taw It twenty feet high and sixty teet In diameter first at Tier Tsln, which city It taps on lta and It made ot ttlckt filled In with mud, way noria to Pekln. I have traveled on It the endt of the ttlckt facing outward. That near Pek'n and also seen It at Chlnklang, wall Is to protect these ships from ths dally where It iroeses the Yangtse, and am now inroad of the Pacific which might otherwise , near Us lower end, where It terminates at dash them to pieces against the stones. the great city of Hangchow. Now look down at the bay. We are ap- Traveling upon it you pass walled towns proachlog low tide and the water Is still at every few hours and now and then come flowing out The goddess ot ths Talngtang to walled clUes so large that you are half Is supreme. The bay Is filled with the silt a day In getting through them. For bun- brought down by it from the mountains, dreds of miles there are no locks and north It It slimy and muddy, a great eheet of of the YangUe the water la carried over bright yellow ten miles In width bordered the country on great stone embankments, at each end with navy blue mountains. The twenty or more feet high, the stream sky Is bright blue and filled with waves of within the embankments twlng several hun- fleecy clouds just above me. Far out be- dred feet wlda, The amallar canala have SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT We are now showing advance styles' for Spring, 1901, In ' Ladies' Ready-to-Wear Garments Ladies' Tailoring Department. Spring Style Now Ready. We are now prepared to take orders for ladles' tailored garments, made to measure. The deslKners of th. .nrin, and summer. 1902 style. In ladles' suits, skirts, coats, etc.. have unquestionably ecl.p.TaU fo ha. the ."ortment bees , so replete with "thing, be.utlfu!. 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