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presence of the whole army, of Chu-Wan-mei, the officer in command of the garrison.

We now command that Tsêng Kuo-chuan, governor of Hu-peh, be deprived of his official button, and that, in company with Li Huo-nien, governor of Ho-nan, his punishment be before all other adjudged by the Board, that all may know the lightBess of the sentence hereby awarded. We also command Li Hung-chang strictly to inquire into and report to the throne the names of the several officers who by their feeble opposition allowed the rebels to escape them.

With regard to Li Hung-chang himself, the officer specially commissioned to superintend the operations directed against the Nien-fei, inasmuch as over half a year has elapsed without any sensible advan-, tage resulting from his generalship, he has certainly abused the trust reposed in him by his sovereign; we therefore order him, in expiation of his present disgrace, to win renown for himself by at once taking active command of the troops, and leading them into Shan-tung, where, in conjunction with others, he must scour the country and stamp out the smallest spark of rebellion existing there. Any subsequent failure to cope with the manoeuvres of the rebels will draw down on the aforesaid commis. sioner and governor a punishment so heavy that they will find it difficult to bear up against it. Tremble and obey!

On March 12th, the American bark Rover, owned and commanded by Captain W. Hunt, of Port Jefferson, Long Island, was wrecked on the southern coast of the Island of Formosa, and the captain and crew massacred. The Island of Formosa has been partially colonized by Chinese within the last two centuries, and the shores of the bay near the scene of the murder are already settled by a mixed race, who are a cross between the Chinese and the aborigines. This mixed race affects constant hostility toward the natives, but maintains a close connection with them, which is strengthened by marriage ties, and these relatives are known to assist them in their crimes and share their plunder. One Chinaman, belonging to the crew of the Rover, escaped the massacre, and made a detailed statement to the United States consul at Swatoo. He stated that after he reached the Chinese village, on the day following the massacre, he induced a Chinaman belonging to the settlement to go among the savages to persuade them not to kill the officers and crew of the Rover, but allow them to be ransomed. On the return of the man on the following day, he learned that five of the captain's boat were murdered on the afternoon of the attack, and that the other boat had arrived in the night and two of the crew were murdered on the morning of the next day. As soon as the news reached Mr. Legendre, the United States consul at Amoy, he proceeded to Taiwanfoo in the United States steamer Ashuelot, reaching that place on the 28th of April. He wrote to the authorities of the island, stating the circumstances of the massacre, and asking an immediate investigation. Mr. Legendre also asked that the persons implicated in the outrage should be punished according to the Chinese laws, and offered the assistance of the Ashuelot to that end, and the recovery of the prisoners, should there be any in the hands of the

natives. To this the Taotai, general, and prefect-the highest authority in the island--replied on the following day, relating the action taken in the murder of the crew of a British vessel, but which was afterward explained to have reference to the crew of the Rover, the misunderstanding arising from an error of the linguist at the British consulate, when Mr. Carroll represented the affair to the Taotai. The Taotai said that he knew that all of the crew of the Rover had been murdered. He declined any assistance from the American ship-of-war, but at the same time promised to do every thing in his power. As the Chinese authorities made no inquiries about the case, Admiral Bell, commanding the United States squadron in the Chinese waters, sent an expedition, consisting of the Hartford and the Wyoming, against the savages. The crews of these two vessels had a fight with the Formosans on the 13th of June. After four hours' advancing against a deadly and at times invisible foe, the party were compelled by exhaustion and loss from sun-strokes to return to their ships. Lieutenant-Commander Mackenzie was killed, but no other casualties were reported beyond those occasioned by the heat. The savages, it seems, were well armed, although no other evidences of intercourse with civilized nations were discovered. They pursued an admirable plan of retiring slowly before the crews, frequently ambushing them in the deep jungle. In his dispatches to the Navy Department at Washington, Rear-Admiral Bell suggests that the only effectual remedy against barbarous outrages on shipwrecked mariners by these savages will be for the Chinese authorities to occupy the island with a settlement protected by military. In July the American consul at Amoy induced the Chinese authorities to send a force of fully 2,000 men to South Bay, which expedition the consul accompanied. The expedition arrived at the limit of Chinese jurisdiction on July 23d. A deputation of Chinese interceded for the savages, and offered security for their future good behavior. The United States consul had an interview with Toketok (head chief of the southern savages of Formosa) and the chiefs of the eighteen tribes, whom he called to account severely. The chief's pleaded as an excuse former massacres by whites, but promised future good behaviour if generously dealt with. The consul insisted on kind treatment of distressed foreigners, which was also agreed to. A fort was erected for the refuge of shipwrecked mariners, and the Chinese became security for the savages' good faith, and signed an agreement to assist foreigners in dealing with the savages. The consul returned on the 15th of October, bringing the body of Mrs. Hunt and some relics of the Rover.

Among the most memorable events in the history of China during the year belongs the establishment of a college at Pekin for the study of foreign languages and foreign knowledge in general. The proposition for the

establishment of such an office emanated from the "Foreign Board" at Pekin, which addressed a memorial to the Imperial Government, of which the two important passages are: It has occurred to your servants that the appliances of foreigners, their machinery and fire-arms, their vessels and carriages, are one and all derived from a knowledge of astronomy and mathematics. Attention is now being directed at Shanghai and in Chekiang to the construction and management of steamers of different classes; but, without a bona fide study of the principles on which they are built and managed from the very foundation, what is learned will be merely superficial, and as such of no real utility. Your servants, accordingly, having. deliberated together, propose to establish another school in addition to that for languages, and to in

vite all Mantchoos and Chinese who have taken their degree of licentiate, together with those who have obtained the same degree by act of grace, or as twelveyear men, or as senior bachelors, or as licentiates of the supplementary list, or as bachelors of merit, being men possessing a thorough knowledge of Chinese literature, and not under twenty years of age, to present themselves for examination at the Yamen with the guarantee (of settlement, pedigree, etc.) duly sealed by an official, native of the same province as the candidate, and employed in the capital, or (if the candidate be a banner-man), with the usual certificate of his banner corps; also to authorize all officials, whether Mantchoo or Chinese, of the fifth grade or above it, in the capital or the provinces, being men of the literary degrees above particular ized, and young and able, if they wish to study in the school, to hand in the necessary particulars and to present their banner certificate or the sealed guarantee of an official from the same province as them selves, in which case they will be admitted with the rest of the preliminary examination. When the names of those accepted as students shall have been entered by your servants, teachers from the West will be engaged to instruct them in the school; thus it is confidently expected they will become thoroughly grounded in astronomy and mathematics; theory being made perfect in the beginning, it follows that its appliance (lit. the art, handicraft it will teach) will be equally perfect in the end, and in the course of a few years a successful result will be certain. The three schools already established will be carried on as heretofore, and now, without doubt, the entrance to a career being thus widened, men ingenious and capable above the common cannot fail to be produced. The Chinese are not inferior in cleverness (or ingenuity) and intelligence to the men of the West, and if in astronomy and mathematics (lit. forecasting, as of eclipses, etc., and calculation), in the examination of cause and effects (8. c. in natural history, manufactures, etc.,) in mechanical appliances (lit. the construction of articles and successful imitation of models), and prediction of the future, students will so earnestly apply themselves as to possess themselves of all secrets, China will then be strong of her own strength.

The native party made to the project a violent opposition, and even one of the censors" raised his powerful voice against the innovation, but without avail. An imperial decree established the college. Triennial ex aminations are to be held, and prizes and appointments conferred upon the best students. The candidates for public offices will hence forth be required to show their proficiency not only in the philosophy of Confucius, but in modern physics and mathematics, the laws of steam, and the construction of machinery. The appointment of Pin-ta-jen to be president of the

college was regarded by the foreigners in Pekin as a very fortunate selection. One hundred and ten scholars were reported to have presented themselves for admission immediately upon the establishment of the college. With regard to another question, this same Board showed, however, less liberal sentiments. Annoyed at attacks upon their officials in a Chinese paper published under foreign editorship at Canton, it procured an imperial decree forbidding the printing of Chinese newspapers by foreigners. This document is as follows:

Dispatch of the Board for foreign affairs concerning the foreign commerce in all the open ports. Foreigners are printing newspapers in which they are repeatedly reviling officials of the middle kingdom, whereas the English ambassador Peh (Sir H. Parkes) in consultations with us agreed to forbid such (as reviling of officials). Now all the treaties concluded with foreign countries contain an article on the reviling of officials, making it a heavy crime for Chinese as well as for foreigners, wherefore it is at once strictly to be forbidden. In accordance with this, every court has to issue a prohibition, and therefore we declare to those whom it concerns and may they know it: henceforth let every one attend to his own business, and try to earn money in his proper sphere, and dare not henceforth print any newspaper in Chinese characters; moreover, every block which has already been used for printing newspapers is to be destroyed. Disobey not; respect this manifest. TUNG-CH’I VI., 3, 21.

The results of the census of Hong Kong taken in 1866 show a population of 115,098, of whom 2,113 are Europeans and Americans, the rest Chinese. The number of Europeans and Americans in Hong Kong is steadily increasing, while that of the Chinese decreases, as the following table shows:

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An imperial decree, dated November 21, 1867, announces that the government has selected the United States minister to Pekin, Mr. Anson Burlingame, as its special ambassador to the treaty powers, and the acceptance by the latter of the appointment. The purpose of the embassy is to revise the treaties between the great powers and the empire of China, and to settle the many complicated and delicate questions which have arisen under the treaties. Mr. Burlingame left Pekin in December, intending to visit first the United States.

Both the Roman Catholic and the Protestant missionaries report considerable progress of their missions and bright prospects for the future. The Roman Catholic missionaries estimate the Chinese population connected with their church at about 700,000. According to the "Directory of Protestant Missions in China," issued in June, 1866, from the press of the American Methodist Episcopal Mission at Fuh-chau, the statistics of Protestantism in China in 1866 were as follows:

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