The Copyright Question: A Letter to the Toronto Board of Trade
on to suspect that the wreck had not been merely an accident. There was a good deal of unrest in that part of the country. Various cases of piracy had been reported both up and do
he journey offered an opportunity of testing it over a longer distance and in deeper water than hitherto, so Burroughs was nothing loath to accept his friend's invitation to accomp
been purely accidental. He arranged for the salvage of the goods, and the forwarding
only concern was the stability of it when flying. Opening out the planes, which lay folded close to the vessel, like the wings of a dragonfly, when not required for aerial use, they fixed the collapsible stays and switched their motor on to the air tractor at the bows. The vessel
hine dropped with a rapidity that took them both by surprise, for as yet they were not very expert airmen. It plunged heavily into the water. They had provided themselves with air-bags, so that t
n by night so far from home, they set to work energetically to overhaul the engine. It was a long time before they could make it work again. Meanwhile dusk was drawing on, and they were at least
e more light on the water than over the surrounding country. Suddenly their attention was attracted by a continuous whistling, evidently from the siren of a steamer some distance down stream. They felt some curiosity as to
lf, I suppose," said Errington. "They seem t
teered somewhat nearer to the bank, to take a short cut round a bend, they suddenly came in sight of a small steamer a
ces--cries and shouts in the high tones that Chinamen invariably employ. And as they drew swiftly nearer, they perceived that the vessel was s
of the kind in these high reaches of the Yang-tse-kiang, and they h
vessel," sa
ing attacked. Burroughs, at the wheel, steered straight for it. Errington snatched up his revolver, but an un
in behalf of Mr. Ting. Each seized a heavy spanner from their tool chest, and Burroughs, telling the engineer to tie the machine
the narrow gangways to the bridge, where there or four men were striving desperately to force the assailants back. At a glance Errington saw that the men on the bridge were
surprise. Both Errington and Burroughs were very "fit" through much exercise, and three or four of the crowd at each gangway had gone down under their vigorous blows before those in front became aware of their danger. When they turned and found that their new oppon
on the bridge had been husbanding their ammunition. Shots fell thick among the pirates huddled on the gangways and the deck adjacent. One slightly built Chinaman, his pigtail streaming behind him, flung himself down from the bridge towards the spot where Burr
o, though they were still three to one, sprang overboard on both sides of t
wiping his knives and raising Burro
head that made me see stars. Jolly glad you came to the
. Without you and Pierce, where sh
d Errington coming up. "No: hang it! they've cut me, I see; we
back after doing a little business--plomised myself I
WITH RIV
gangway. A lamp was lighted, and one of the prisoners, whose head bore plain marks of contact with Err
. Suppose we take him to the yamen and accuse him befo' the mandalin, he would be aflaid to pass sentence upon him. Why? Because he would be killed dead by the assassins of the seclet society. No: we will take him to the Consular Court at Sui-Fu; there we shall have justice. Of course his pun
stoms
he result was as Mr. Ting had foreseen. The evidence was so clear that it was impossible, even for a Chinese magistrate, to decide in favour of the pirates. He condemned them all to be beaten on the cheeks with the leather, and then to stand tiptoe in the cage, with their heads held up at the top so that they could get no ease from the intolerable pain. B
n in disgust. "We'll take care in futur