How was the bedroom lighted?
C: From a window in the hall. Q: The bedroom was lighted from a window in front of the building. How was the parlor lighted? C: From a window facing the street. Q: From a window in front of the building. How was the parlor furnished? C: One table, two chairs, one mantel clock; that is all. Q: Clock and round table, 4 chairs, American, one cuspidor and looking glass. Did you ever visit your home village after you married this woman? C: Yes. I went home once. Q: Yes. A number of times. I don’t remember how many times. How long did you remain? C: Altogether six days, that is, including the time it took to go back and forth. Q: 10 some odd days—a number of times. Have you any children who you claim as yours? C: My blood brother, Chew Kai Quong, gave one of his sons to me, who I adopted. I now, at this age, will probably have no children and therefore he gave me this boy to look after the ancestral service at home. . . . My brother brought him to Hong Kong to bid me good bye before I left f