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A TRAVELLER ARRIVING AT AN INN IN MANCHURIA.

There are various ways of carrying a traveller's baggage. Sometimes it is slung in the centre of bars and carried as the traveller's own chair is carried. More often a package is slung at each end of a bar, which is placed across the shoulders of a coolie. Constant change of shoulder is necessary, and the stopping to make this change becomes a serious matter in a journey of any length. It is trying work, and the shoulders of the coolies generally show it by the callositis produced by the constant carrying of heavy burdens. The illustration shows Mrs. Bishop's baggage arriving after a day's journey.

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