tocrat at t table classified minds under tical and algebraical intellects. quot;All economical and practical ; ; is an extension or variation of tical formulaplusequal . Every pion er of t; Noo tegory of minds calls aritical intellects. Joune o Co sell er goods and to make money and on very ood and agreed perfectly upon t Jois to C understand_and not content to sell er goods, s to civilise t, to quot;spread Anglo-Saxon ideals . quot; t is t Jos on very badly is still ead of being a good, , steady customer for Mancer goods neglects o Co celebrate titution, in fact becomes a mad, raving reformer.
I ely, by tnam eales quot;Resquot; and otried to compile a Catecudents. t, so far, is somethis:_
. _ is the chief end of man?
to glorify tish Empire.
. _Do you believe in God? Yes, wo Church.
._ do you believe in s_in w will pay.
. _ is justification by faito believe in everyone for himself.
. _ is justification by money in your pocket.
. _ is heaven?
o be able to live in Bubbling ell Roa * and drive in victorias.
. _ is hell?
o be unsuccessful.
. _ is a state of ibility? Sir Robert s Custom Service in China.
. _ is blasphemy?
to say t Sir Robert is not a great man of genius.
. _ is t o obstruct Britisrade.
. _For e the four hundred million Chinese?
For tiso trade upon.
. _ form of prayer do you use as tal Germans are, o partition China.
. _ Apostle of the Anglo-Saxon Ideals in China.
Dr. Morrison, times Correspondent in Peking. It may be a libel to say t true statement of Anglo-Saxon ideals, but any one rouble to read Mr. Putnam eales book deny t the above is a fair represen-
* t faser in Shanghai.
tation of tnam eale and Jonam eales books.
t curious t tter is t taking effect in Coo is noing to glorify terati -legged essays o t t terati ution, is likely to become an intolerable and dangerous nuisance. In t only find er goods trade ruined, but to t a General Gordon or Lord Kitco s is under t t is neithere.
I to say is a o me t t to C nonsense ten in books about t along at all o deal. take tance, from a big volume, entitled quot;t: its ory and its questions, quot; by Alexis Krausse.
quot;tion affecting tern nations in t lies in tion of true inal mind. An Oriental not only sees t standpoint to (!) tal, but rain of t and mode of reasoning are at variance. tion implanted in tic varies from t h which we are endowed!
After reading t sentence an Engliss a piece of -we paper, if ical Mr.
Krausses advice, o ;Boy, bring me a piece of black paper. quot; It is, I to t of practical men a-mong foreigners in C t a true inal mind ically I believe t t on best successful men in Cick toplusequal , and leave tal ino Jo in te ;Ceristics,quot; tions betaipans of great Britisual affection, passing on to one or more generations; er all, al ino Chinese or foreigners?