AFFAIRS IN CHINA.
THE COURT’S RETURN, b By Telegraph. Press Association. Copyright Loudon, -3 an. 9. u The publicity of the Court’s return to Pekin is regarded as revolutionary in the light of Chinese customs. The lho\vage> v repeatedly acknowledged the salutations of foreigners, after burning incense to j her ancestors at tbe Temple of the God dess of Mercy. The British garrison \va; ] kept in the barracks, though the Americai j garrison was allowed to see the spectacle. Two companies of Chinese cavalry, < mounted on Australian horses, participated ; in the procession.
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Gisborne Times, Volume VII, Issue 310, 10 January 1902, Page 2
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92AFFAIRS IN CHINA. Gisborne Times, Volume VII, Issue 310, 10 January 1902, Page 2
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