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BLACK DEATH IN CHINA.

The great epidemic of pneumonic plague is raging at fiercely as ever in North China, writes a correspondent in aryThe present conditions at Harbin beggar description. Efforts are being made to dispose of the accumulation of corpses, and the Russian fire brigades are cremating them a hundred at a time. 'There were 110 deaths one day in the Chinese quarter and four in the European tow i. The Government have ordered the stoppage of traffic on the Pekin-Hankow Railway to prevent the disease from spreading to the south. ■The disease first made its appearance in Manchuria early in November. It differs considerably from the bubonic plague common in India, and is more deadly. There was an outbreak at Shanghai in November, and the precautions ordered by the European authorities there led to riots among the ignorant Chinese. Whereas bubonic plague is propagated by rat fleas, pneumonic plague is attributed to the parasites of the bartagan, a species of large marmot which is hunted for its fur in North Manchuria and Siberia. The epidemic of pneumonic plague ("Black Death”) which reached England in 1665 is said to have originated in Mongolia, possibly from the same animal. The extreme cold of the aMnchurian winter—the temperature is often about 40 deg Fahr. below zero—has favoured the spread of the disease. Disinfecting apparatus is rendered almost useless. The Inngs, which the bacillus attacks, arc weakened by the low temperature, and are thus less prepared for resistance. And on account of the great cold the infected furs and clothing of the victims are commonly stolen as soon as life is extinct. The corpses in the stricken towns are left naked in the streets and are eaten by dogs and birds. Harbin and Mukden are the chief hotbeds of the epidemic. For some weeks ef forts were made by the Chinese traders to minimise the reports of its extent, lest trade should be injured, but early in January alarm was felt in Pekin. The death-rate at Harbin then exceeded TOO - a day, and the mortality was practically 100 per cent. Railway traffic between Manchuria and the south was restricted; an “Anti-plagne Board” was formed at Pekin, and the Chinese Government appealed t ft. the European Powers for aid. Many English and other doctors volunteered to work in the stricken towns. Dr. Jackson, of Liverpool, Dr. Mesny, a Frenchman, and a number of Russian medical students have succumbed.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WH19110328.2.88

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Herald, Volume XXXXVI, Issue 13337, 28 March 1911, Page 8

Word Count
405

BLACK DEATH IN CHINA. Wanganui Herald, Volume XXXXVI, Issue 13337, 28 March 1911, Page 8

BLACK DEATH IN CHINA. Wanganui Herald, Volume XXXXVI, Issue 13337, 28 March 1911, Page 8