JAPAN: FORMOSA.
181
and Bonded Warehouses, Nagasaki,” herewith transmitted. 0 For
scale of charges for storage, I refer to pages 14 to 34, inclusive, in
the same inclosure.
The receipts from service for the four years last past were as
follows:
Receipts from customs warehouses.
Bonded
ware
house.
Tempo
rary ware
house.
Total.
S;8
1,171
850
$2,718
6,109
1,822
2,078
4,522
12,727
$3,753
7,575
2,993
2,928
17,249
Year.
1900.
1901.
1902.
1903-
Total.
I am unable to report the cost of operating the warehouses, as such
expenses, I am informed, are included in the current expenses of the
customs service. The classes of goods chiefly stored in the bonded
warehouses are flour, comestibles, spirituous liquors, shirtings, iron
nails, rod steel, etc., and in the temporary warehouses rice, Italian
millet, nails, rod steel, sheet and plate iron, galvanized iron, spirit
uous liquors, marine products, etc. I am informed that the average
length of time goods remain in bonded warehouses is five months,
and in temporary warehouses two months. I am unable to state to
what extent Americans make use of the warehouses without a minute
inspection of the custom-house records, but it is a fact that they
patronize them quite freely.
All nationalities are treated exactly alike. No complaints of dis
crimination on account of nationality have come to my notice, and I
believe there has been none.
Transfer of cargo between ship and landing is by lighter, the shift
ing of heavy and bulky cargo from lighter to landing is by crane,
and goods are conveyed from the landing to the warehouses by coolies,
or in carts or jinrikishas pulled by coolies. For cost of landing and
shipping I refer to the detailed statements herewith inclosed.“
The warehouses under consideration are mostly in the customs yard
and a short distance from the landing place. Every precaution pos
sible is taken by the customs officials that cargo be handled carefully
and with dispatch. Damages to packing in landing are minutely
investigated, and those causing the damage are punished either by
reprimand, fine, or discharge. No person is admitted to the customs
warehouses or to the yards in which the warehouses are located unless
accompanied by a customs official.
Charles B. Harris, Consul.
Nagasaki, Japan, September 15, 1,904-
FORMOSA.
(From United States Consul Fisher, Tamsui, Formosa.)
In order that foreign goods arriving at any of the ports in this
consular district may be transshipped to a foreign port without the
a On file in tiie Bureau of Statistics, Department of Commerce and Labor.