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51 Fortune-tellers usually looked weary. Has he had his face read?
 
52 A simple palm-reading and fortune telling stall.
 
53 A palm reader diagnosed the lines on the palm and elaborated accordingly. There was certainly some supporting theory.
 
54 Divination was one of the alternatives people turn to when they encountered problems that they could solve.
 
55 A fortune-teller reading the face of a customer.
 
56 A fortune-teller reading the face of a customer.
 
57 A scene from a long time ago, which has now disappeared; wearing a raincoat made from palm leaves to avoid getting wet,
 
58 The only protection the rickshaw man got on a rainy day was from a bamboo hat and a primitive raincoat made from palm leaves.
 
59 A rickshaw man pulling his cart.
 
60 Rickshaws were also used to transport luggage.
 
61 Playing cards as a break from the hard life.
 
62 Waiting for customers at the clean and tidy Rickshaw station.
 
63 Going shopping with a nicely matched costume. The Chinese cap goes perfectly well with the mandarin jacket.
 
64 People busy shopping for the New Year.
 
65 A new face for a new year. Many of the family accessories were replaced with new ones. Stalls selling pottery and porcelain ware were never short of customers and supplies at the New Year Eve Fair.
 
66 A variety of fragrant flower blossoms for selection.
 
67 A variety of fragrant flower blossoms for selection.
 
68 Colourful gold fish were just what the children loved.
 
69 Flower blossoms complemented the joyful atmosphere of the Chinese New Year.
 
70 A favorable present for the children: a piggy bank.
 
71 The refreshing fragrance of the daffodils magnetized the ladies.
 
72 Children definitely love gold fish, Grandpa.
 
73 Children deeply attracted by gold fish.
 
74 Sweetened flour rings were a popular New Year snack for guests or for one's own consumption.
 
75 New Year paintings attract a group of customers.
 
76 Snack stalls did a lot of business at the New Year's Eve Fair.
 
77 Take a break to refuel some energy, OK?
 
78 Let's hold hands and visit the Flower market. We won't want to get lost, will we?
 
79 A facade of A-Ma Temple.
 
80 A pavilion (front) and a prayer hall (midway up the hill) of the A-ma Temple. The prayer hall is believed to be the oldest one in Macau as there was already a description of the hall in the early reports of Mathew Ricci's travels.
 
81 A pavilion (right) and the stone arch of the A-ma Temple.
 
82 The "Sailing Junk Rock" of the A-ma Temple. On it, the figure of a fishing junk was engraved.
 
83 The prayer hall of the Lin Fung Temple where two great figures of the ancient China are commemorated.
 
84 Worshipping Tin Hou at the Tin Hou Temple on of Taipa Island.
 
85 A worshipping ceremony in the San Kio areas.
 
86 A worshipping ceremony in front of Sam Gai House.
 
87 A worshipping ceremony in front of Sam Gai House.
 
88 Lin Fung Hall in the Lin Fung Temple.
 
89 Women and children performing a worshipping ceremony at the mid-levels of the A-ma Temple.
 
90 A blind woman singing and playing the Yue Qin for a living in the street.
 
91 A blind man carrying a zither and singing in the street to get some pennies from the passers by.
 
92 A sing-song girl performing at Rua da Felicidade to amuse her customers.
 
93 Sing-song girls performing at Rua da Felicidade. One is singing while the other is playing the dulcimer.
 
94 This pretty young sing-song girl is amusing customers with her brilliant skill with the dulcimer.
 
95 The owner of the Cho Kee mahjong stall shows his preference for a Bamboo Pipe.
 
96 Taking a leisurely smoke on the doorstep of a mansion.
 
97 Tobacco pipes were popular among the older generation in the forties.
 
98 Enjoying a pipe on a boat.
 
99 This letter writing man was killing time with a pipe.
 
100 A tobacco pipe keeps Grandpa company.
 

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