The Korean Repository: Local Edition Vol. 1 No. VIII Thursday March 30, 1899 Published Every Thursday H. G. Appenzeller Geo. Heber Jones Editors George C. Core Business Manager RUSSIA
SECURES WHALING PORTS The
Emperor has leased three ports in eastern Korea to the
Russian Whaling Company, namely Oulsan (울산) and Sungchinpo
(셩진포) in the
province of Kangwon, and Chinpodo (진포도) in the
province of Hamkyeng. The concession is 700 metres in
length and 350 in width. We have not been able to
learn full details but understand this has been
negotiated by Count Keyserling; that the ports may be
entered only by Russian whalers, and only at certain
seasons of the year; that a Korean official will be
detached to look after the interests of his country;
that 450 yen are to be paid annually and the lease is
for a period of twelve years. At the expiration of the
time all improvements made at the ports revert to the
Korean government. This concession is made in the
interest of the whaling company and it is claimed has
nothing to do with the Russian government. The Emperor
ratified the concession on the 23rd inst. The
discussion on this subject in the Privy Council as
reported in one of the native papers is full of
interest and we make a free translation from it: Minister
Kwon Chai hyeng brought the decision of the Cabinet to
the Council and after stating that sickness prevented
his attendance asked for a discussion of the
proposition to grant or refuse the concession. Councillor
You maing: Our country was secured for us by the great
founder of our dynasty and by granting this concession
to the Russians other nations will be after us for
similar grants. We must hold the empire down to the
last foot intact, if we do not where shall the twenty
millions of our people go to live. Minister
Kwon replied: The concession is not absolute but only
for twelve years We receive yearly 450 yen and the
closer relations between us and foreign nations is to
be considered. Councillor
Kang Won-lo said: When has our government given
concessions for money and survived. The government
will not miss at the end of twelve years the 5.000
dollars we are to receive and I therefore cannot vote
to make the grant. Councillor
Won Sei-sung said: We are told by the Minister that it
would be a fault not to make this concession. Others
say it is a fault if we concur. It is our duty to
defend the empire even tho Russia should turn her
cannon upon us and we should die in numbers as in
times of the cholera scourge. Councillor
Cho Han-ou: Russia is greedy for territory. If this
concession is granted she will demand more and the
time to cut her off is at the beginning and not allow
her to have any of our land. Councillor
Hong Chong-who said: I have listened with interest to
the remarks of the members of the Council and no more
need be said. We should not only not grant this demand
to Russia but the concession of timber, railroads,
mines and fisheries made should be cancelled and those
Ministers who made them tried by our courts; this
would prevent a repetition of further demands. On
a vote being taken the decision was against granting
the concession. Secretary
Kim Ik-sung became much excited at the absence of
harmony between the government (which had already
voted to grant he petition) and the Council, brought
his fist down upon the table with such violence and
frequency that the table was broken. Acting
Prime Minister, Sin Kisun, in a memorial to the throne
complained of the utterances and behavior of the
councillors and recommended their dismissal from their
position. His petition was granted and the five
councillors and the secretary were dismissed. The
Commissioner of Customs in Wonsan was the first to
call our attention to the great but undeveloped wealth
of Korean fisheries. The Korean ordinarily is
satisfied with a small catch for home supply. Recently
a great deal of interest has been aroused in
commercial circles over this attempt of count
Keyserling to secure three ports along the eastern
coast of Korea into which whaling boats could enter
and land their prizes. This we understand is not the
first time application has been made for concessions
but the Korean Government has steadfastly refused
heretofore. The
following paragraph from The Japan Times
gives us some idea of the wealth the waters contain as
well as the lively interest Japan is taking in
developing this industry: “According to the Customs
returns about 2,030,912 pounds of whale flesh,
amounting to yen112,940 in value were imported at
Nagasaki last year by Russian whalers operating off
the Korean coast. In addition to the above, more than
1,102,223 pounds (yen 49,200) were also imported
during the last two months by a foreign firm at
Nagasaki. It has long been thought regrettable that
our fishermen were neglecting this profitable business
in Korean waters, where whales are to be found in
great swarms. We learn, however, that Mr. !shin Jono
has lately founded a whaling company and has engaged
an experienced whale gunner from Norway. A steamer
despatched by this company on the 10th of last month
for whaling has come back within a short period loaded
with two full grown whales from Korean seas. The newly
introduced Norwegian system of whaling will
undoubtedly interest our fishermen and will become an
incentive to further development and profitable
industry. MINISTERIAL
CHANGES. The
edict of the 21st which we publish in another column
had its origint in the protest, without previous
consultation with the Emperor, of the Acting Prime
Minister, Shim Sanghun, against the list of
appointment of fifteen magistrates and had received
imperial sanction. The Acting Prime Minister contended
there were irregularities on the part of the Acting
Home Minister in the preparation of the list, which he
could not help but bring to the notice of the Emperor.
As a result the Acting Home Minister was ordered sent
into banishment for ten years. But the irregularity of
the Acting Premier in counseling first with his
colleagues and securing their consent before laying
the matter before the Emperor brought him into trouble
and he was ordered into exile fur a period of fifteen
years. The places in both cases are not mentioned in
the edict and we have not yet learned. THE
PHILIPPINE SITUATION. The
latest news from the Philippines is that on March 4th
there was severe fighting at San Pedro, and the
Bennington had shelled the intrenchments at Malabon
and silenced them. Rear
Admiral Dewey received word of his promotion to the
rank of Admiral, the highest place in the United
States navy. OFFICIAL
GAZETTE. EDICTS. Match
21.--We have given strict injunctions to use care in
the selection of magistrates. If the list of
appointments sent us by the Minister of Home Affairs
was made with due care, why was exception to it taken.
We feel it so detestable that we prefer not to make
mention of it. We therefore, dismiss Min Pyenghan, the
Acting Minister of Home Affairs, and send him into
banishment for ten years. As for the Cabinet Ministers
if there was anything irregular connected with the
preparation of the list, it was their right to state
the error to us. But still accustomed to the old mode,
they paid no regard to the dignity of the rules and
essayed to set aside the list of appointments which we
had approved. The crime is so great that there is no
other law that can save them from condign punishment.
If such a crime is condoned the country cannot be
called country any longer. We therefore dismiss from
office Shim Sang hun, the Acting Premier, and send him
into banishment for fifteen years. The other Ministers
of State who were present at the meeting and connected
with the affair must also be dismissed as fast as they
confess their guilt. And the list that was sent by the
Home Department on the 14th and the list sent by the
Cabinet on the 15th let both be destroyed (melted). Sin
Ki sun was appointed Acting Prime Minister and Min
Chong muk Acting Minister of Home affairs.
The
wife of Yi Sungman during the past week attempted to
lay a memorial before the Emperor in behalf of her
husband whose arrest some three months ago without any
charge of crime attracted considerable attention. She
took her place in front of the palace, but was sent
away by the police after a few days, being told to lay
her petition before the Privy Council. She went to the
office where this body meets only to be told that this
was not the place to present such matters. The woman,
unable to find any one to receive her petition, had no
alternative left but to return to her home. A year ago
the sight of half a dozen or more memorialists at the
Palace Gate with petitions of all sorts was one of the
most common scenes witnessed. CITY
AND COUNTRY Mr.
T. H. Yun entered upon his duties as the magistrate of
Wonsan on the fifth inst. Rev.
D. L Gifford returned last week from an extended
itinerating tour thro the south. The
Korean government has applied to the Russian
government for a loan of $3,000,000. The
Emperor gave a farewell audience on the 24th inst. to
Mrs. Jordan and her children. On the 25 inst. Dr. O.
R. Avison and family were received in audience. State
Senator J. S. Fassett of New York visited Seoul last
week in company with Mr. Townsend of Chemulpo and were
the guests of the United States Minister. Senator
Fassett left the capital on the 28th. Dr.
R. A. Hardie of Songdo was in the city Sunday. He
reports the convalescence of Rev. C. T. Collyer whose
recent severe illness we reported a short time ago.
Mr. Collyer was able to be out for the first time last
week. Mr.
Alex. Kenmure, Agent of the British and Foreign Bible
Society, and Mr A. A. Pieters returned on the 23d from
a five weeks’ trip to the island of Quelpart. They
report having had an interesting trip. Returning they
came in an ordinary Korean sampan trom Quelpart to the
mainland. The stretch of open sea is about forty
miles. As far as we know these gentlemen are the first
missionaries to visit this island and explore it.
EASTER
TIDE SERVICES. Services
in celebration of Good Friday and Easter will be held
in Seoul and Chemulpo as follows: ST.
MICHEAL'S, CHEMULPO. GOOD
FRIDAY, MARCH 31. Morning
service at 11 a. m.; evening service at 6:30 p. m. EASTER
DAY, APRIL 2. Holy
Communion at 8:30 a m.; morning prayer and sermon at
11 a. m.; evening prayer at 6:30. CHURCH
OF ADVENT, SEOUL. GOOD
FRIDAY. Morning prayer at 7:30; Litany and
ante-communion service at 11 a. m.; three hours
service with addresses on Our Lord's last words spoken
from the cross, 12 a. m. to 3 p. m ; evening prayer
with address at 6 p. m. EASTER
DAY Holy Communion at 8 a. m.; morning prayer and
sermon at 11 a. m.: evening prayer at 6 p m. UNION
CHURCH, SEOUL. Easter services will be held in the
chapel of Pai Chai School next Sunday afternoon at
3:30 o'clock. Preaching by the pastor. Special Easter
music. All are cordially invited to attend. FROM
PYENG YANG. There
is no special news from the mines in northern
Pyeng-yang province. Dr. Wells was up there
professionally a few weeks ago rendering what services
were necessary to the various Americans and Koreans.
Among the foreigners there are the well known Mr. and
Mrs. D. A. Bunker who find something of the same
situation as to the general outlay as they witnessed
in Seoul some ten or twelve years ago. The smiling
features of Mr. Van Ess, formerly of the customs, now
shine in and around Chitababy. Mr. H. F. Meserve, the
auditor of the company, a graduate of Harvard '88,
gave. Korea a good advertisement in the class book
published last year. Capt, E.-D. Barstow, formerly and
popularly of the Nippon Yusen Kaisha, is in command of
the transportation department of the mines and holds
forth from the quarter deck of a Studebaker or a
Kermit cart with the same "sang froid" as from the
bridge of a trans-Pacific liner. Mr. Albert Taylor is
Assistant General Superintendent and assayer. Mr. J R.
Dual is superintendent at Kok Sang Deng. Mr. G. A.
Taylor is General Superintendent, while Messers.
Krumm, Will Taylor, Buckley, Salmon, Tallier,
MacCollough, and others have permanent places. Besides
these experts there are several master millwrights
among whom are Messers. Henderson, Crowe, Cogswell,
Ford, Beattie and Tompkins. The
customs or the government or somebody ought to see
that the steamers plying beween Chemulpo and
Pyeng-yang are supplied with life presevers and at
least two small boats each. The writer has been up and
down the coast many times on the little coffee pot
called the "Kyengchae." Preparations for such an
accident as a break in machinery or a run on a rock
are unknown. One little leaky boat is all it carries
and in case of emergency the strongest Japanese would
crowd it down and leave the rest to shift. I hope this
calling attention to a dangerous and pitiful condition
of affairs may result in having life preservers and
two new boats for the company. About
two months ago a man was killed in a drunken brawl in
Pyeng-yang. The murderer escaped. The dead man
couldn't be buried according to Korean "law" or custom
until three magistrates had viewed the body. The third
magistrate has not appeared yet and so the man still
lies in its house in town where he died. Poor old Kija
died over 3,000 years ago, but if he was alive to-day
he would weep to hear of such things happening 3,000
years before he was born much less that time after! SHIPPING
NEWS. ARRIVALS.
On
the 24th, the Chita
Maru from Pyeng Yang; the 25th, the Changriong
from Kyengsung; the 28th, the Fushiki Maru
from Shimonoseki; the Yamagawa Maru from Osaka and Kobe. DEPARTURES. The
24th, the Riyo
Maru for Chinampo; the Chikugogawa
for Kobe and Osaka; the Vostock for
Port Arthur; the 25th, the Chita for
Kunsan; the 27th, the Hyenik for
Chinampo. A
NEW DANGER TO THE EMPIRE. The
latest story going the rounds to the city is to the
effect that the French missionaries applied for
permission to quarry stones of suitable size for the
steps leading up to the cathedral. After due
consideration by the Korean authorities the request
was declined on the specious plea, that if this
concession were granted all the other nations would
make similar demands and after a little there would be
no stones left for the Koreans themselves. Our
sympathies are in this matter wholly with the Koreans.
So much so that only a few days ago when we found an
enterprising coolie picking up the loose stones in a
by-lane near our house in order to sell them to the
builder of the Ewa School building, we had him dump
his load in our own yard. It grieves us to see all the
fine loose stone in front of the Palace gate, where
the Independents made their speeches last fall while
moons waxed and waned: picked up to the very last one.
It gives us a new and strange feeling not to be able
to stub our toes against these impediments in our
streets. Then again stones are convenient in the time
of political excitement and there is no reason why the
one weapon for both offensive and defensive purposes
in which the Korean thoroughly believes should be
taken from him. We join with our fellow residents of
this goodly city and say, hang on to your stones, you
may need them before the next vernal stone fight. British
revenue returns for the year ending March 31st show a
net increase of £1,841,039. |