Farmers of
Forty Centuries (contents)
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VII
THE FUEL PROBLEM, BUILDING AND TEXTILE MATERIALS
With the vast and ever increasing demands made upon materials which are the
products of cultivated fields, for food, for apparel, for furnishings and for
cordage, better soil management must grow more important as populations
multiply. With the increasing cost and ultimate exhaustion of mineral fuel; with
our timber vanishing rapidly before the ever growing demands for lumber and
paper; with the inevitably slow growth of trees and the very limited areas which
the world can ever afford to devote to forestry, the time must surely come when,
in short period rotations, there will be grown upon the farm materials from
which to manufacture not only paper and the substitutes for lumber, but fuels as
well. The complete utilization of every stream which reaches the sea, reinforced
by the force of the winds and the energy of the waves which may be transformed
along the coast lines, cannot fully meet the demands of the future for power and
heat; hence only in the event of science and engineering skill becoming able to
devise means for transforming the unlimited energy of space through which we are
ever whirled, with an economy approximating that which crops now exhibit, can
good soil management be relieved of the task of meeting a portion of the world's
demand for power and heat.
When these statements were made in 1905 we did not know that for centuries
there had existed in China, Korea and Japan
a density of population such as to require the extensive cultivation of crops
for fuel and building material, as well as for fabrics, by the ordinary methods
of tillage, and hence another of the many surprises we had was the solution
these people had reached of their fuel problem and of how to keep warm. Their
solution has been direct and the simplest possible. Dress to make fuel for
warmth of body unnecessary, and burn the coarser stems of crops, such as cannot
be eaten, fed to animals or otherwise made useful. These people still use what
wood can be grown on the untillable land within transporting distance, and
convert much wood into charcoal, making transportation over longer distances
easier. The general use of mineral fuels, such as coal, coke, oils and gas, had
been impossible to these as to every other people until within the last one
hundred years. Coal, coke, oil and natural gas, however, have been locally used
by the Chinese from very ancient times. For more than two thousand years brine
from many deep wells in Szechwan province has been evaporated with heat
generated by the burning of natural gas from wells, conveyed through bamboo
stems to the pans and burned from iron terminals. In other sections of the same
province much brine is evaporated over coal fires. Alexander Hosie estimates the
production of salt in Szechwan province at more than 600 million pounds
annually.
Coal is here used also to some extent for warming the houses, burned in pits
sunk in the floor, the smoke escaping where it may. The same method of heating
we saw in use in the post office at Yokohama during February. The fires were in
large iron braziers more than two feet across the top, simply set about the
room, three being in operation. Stoves for house warming are not used in
dwellings in these countries.
In both China and Japan we saw coal dust put into the form and size of medium
oranges by mixing it with a thin paste of clay. Charcoal is similarly molded, as
seen in Fig. 72, using a by-product
from the manufacture of rice syrup for cementing. In Nanking we watched with
much interest the manufacture of charcoal briquets by another method. A Chinese
workman was seated upon the earth floor of a shop. By his side was a pile of
powdered charcoal, a dish of rice syrup by-product and a basin of the moistened
charcoal powder. Between his legs was a heavy mass of iron containing a slightly
conical mold two inches deep, two and a half inches across at the top and a
heavy iron hammer weighing several pounds. In his left hand he held a short
heavy ramming tool and with his right placed in the mold a pinch of the
moistened charcoal; then followed three well directed blows from the hammer upon
the ramming tool, compressing the charge of moistened, sticky charcoal into a
very compact layer. Another pinch of charcoal was added and the process repeated
until the mold was filled, when the briquet was forced out.
By this simplest possible mechanism, the man, utilizing but a small part of
his available energy, was subjecting the charcoal to an enormous pressure such
as we attain only with the best hydraulic presses, and he was using the
principle of repeated small charges recently patented and applied in our large
and most efficient cotton and hay presses, which permit much denser bales to be
made than is possible when large charges are added, and the Chinese is here, as
in a thousand other ways, thoroughly sound in his application of mechanical
principles. His output for the day was small but his patience seemed
unlimited. His arms and body, bared to the waist, showed vigor and good feeding,
while his face wore the look of contentment.
With forty centuries of such inheritance coursing in the veins of four
hundred millions of people, in a country possessed of such marvelous wealth of
coal and water power, of forest and of agricultural possibilities, there should
be a future speedily blossoming and ripening into all that is highest and best
for such a nation. If they will retain their economies and their industry and
use their energies to develop, direct and utilize the power in their streams and
in their coal fields along the lines which science has now made possible to
them, at the same time walking in paths of peace and virtue, there is little
worth while which may not come to such a people.
A Shantung farmer in winter dress, Fig. 18, and the Kiangsu woman portrayed
in Fig. 73, in corresponding costume, are typical illustrations of the manner in
which food for body warmth is minimized and of the way the heat generated in the
body is conserved. Observe his wadded and quilted frock, his trousers of similar
goods tied about the ankle, with his feet clad in multiple socks and cloth shoes
provided with thick felted soles. These types of dress, with the wadding,
quilting, belting and tying, incorporate and confine as part of the effective
material a large volume of air, thus securing without cost, much additional
warmth without increasing the weight of the garments. Beneath these outer
garments several under pieces of different weights are worn which greatly
conserve the warmth during the coldest weather and make possible a wide range of
adjustment to suit varying changes in temperature. It is doubtful if there could
he devised a wardrobe suited to the conditions of these people at a smaller
first cost and maintenance expense. Rev. E. A. Evans, of the China Inland
Mission, for many years residing at Sunking in Szechwan, estimated that a
farmer's wardrobe, once it
was procured, could be maintained with an annual expenditure of $2.25 of our
currency, this sum procuring the materials for both repairs and renewals.
The intense individual economy, extending to the smallest matters, so
universally practiced by these people, has sustained the massive strength of the
Mongolian nations through their long history and this trait is seen in their
handling of the fuel problem, as it is in all other lines. In the home of Mrs.
Wu, owner and manager of a 25-acre rice farm in Chekiang province, there was a
masonry kang seven by seven feet, about twenty-eight inches high, which could be
warmed in winter by building a fire within. The top was fitted for mats to serve
as couch by day and as a place upon which to spread the bed at night. In the
Shantung province we visited the home of a prosperous farmer and
here found two kangs in separate sleeping apartments, both warmed by the waste
heat from the kitchen whose chimney flue passed horizontally under the kangs
before rising through the roof. These kangs were wide enough to spread the beds
upon, about thirty inches high, and had been constructed from brick twelve
inches square and four inches thick, made from the clay subsoil taken from the
fields and worked into a plastic mass, mixed with chaff and short straw, dried
in the sun and then laid in a mortar of the same material. These massive kangs
are thus capable of absorbing large amounts of the waste heat from the kitchen
during the day and of imparting congenial warmth to the couches by day and to
the beds and sleeping apartments during the night. In some Manchurian inns large
compound kangs are so arranged that the guests sleep heads together in double
rows, separated only by low dividing rails, securing the greatest economy of
fuel, providing the guests with places where they may sit upon the moderately
warmed fireplace, and spread their beds when they retire.
The economy of the chimney beds does not end with the warmth conserved. The
earth and straw brick, through the processes of fermentation and through
shrinkage, become open and porous after three or four years of service, so that
the draft is defective, giving annoyance from smoke, which requires their
renewal. But the heat, the fermentation and the absorption of products of
combustion have together transformed the comparatively infertile subsoil into
what they regard as a valuable fertilizer and these discarded brick are used in
the preparation of compost fertilizers for the fields. On account of this value
of the discarded brick the large amount of labor involved in removing and
rebuilding the kangs is not regarded altogether as labor lost.
Our own observations have shown that heating soils to dryness at a
temperature of 110° C. greatly increases the freedom with which plant food may
be recovered from them by the solvent power of
water, and the same heating doubtless improves the physical and biological
conditions of the soil as well. Nitrogen combined as ammonia, and phosphorus,
potash and lime are all carried with the smoke or soot, mechanically in the
draft and arrested upon the inner walls of the kangs or filter into the porous
brick with the smoke, and thus add plant food directly to the soil. Soot from
wood has been found to contain, as an average, 1.36 per cent of nitrogen; .51
per cent of phosphorus and 5.34 per cent of potassium. We practice burning straw
and corn stalks in enormous quantities, to get them easily out of the way, thus
scattering on the winds valuable plant food, thoughtlessly and lazily wasting
where these people laboriously and religiously save. These are gains in addition
to those which result from the formation of nitrates, soluble potash and other
plant foods through fermentation. We saw many instances where these discarded
brick were being used, both in Shantung and Chihli provinces, and it was common
in walking through the streets of country villages to see piles of them,
evidently recently removed.
The fuel grown on the farms consists of the stems of all agricultural crops
which are to any extent woody, unless they can be put to some better use. Rice
straw, cotton stems pulled by the roots after the seed has been gathered, the
stems of windsor beans, those of rape and the millets, all pulled by the roots,
and many other kinds, are brought to the market tied in bundles in the manner
seen in Figs. 74, 75 and 76. These fuels are used for domestic purposes and for
the burning of lime, brick, roofing tile and earthenware as well as in the
manufacture of oil, tea, bean-curd and many other processes. In the home, when
the meals are cooked with these light bulky fuels, it is the duty of some one,
often one of the children, to sit on the floor and feed the fire with one hand
while with the other a bellows is worked to secure sufficient draft. The manufacture of cotton seed oil
and cotton seed cake is one of the common family industries in China, and in one
of these homes we saw rice hulls and rice straw being used as fuel. In the large
low, one-story, tile-roofed building serving as store, warehouse, factory and
dwelling, a family of four generations were at work, the grandfather supervising
in the mill and the grandmother leading in the home and store where the cotton
seed oil was being. retailed for 22 cents per pound and the cotton seed cake at
33 cents, gold, per hundredweight. Back of the store and living rooms, in the
mill compartment, three blindfolded water buffalo, each working a granite mill,
were crushing and grinding the cotton seed. Three other buffalo, for relay
service, were lying at rest or eating, awaiting their turn at the ten-hour
working day. Two of the mills were horizontal granite burrs more than four feet in diameter, the upper one
revolving once with each circuit made by the cow. The third mill was a pair of
massive granite rollers, each five feet in diameter and two feet thick, joined
on a very short horizontal axle which revolved on a circular stone plate about a
vertical axis once with each circuit of the buffalo. Two men tended the three
mills. After the cotton seed had been twice passed through the mills it was
steamed to render the oil fluid and more readily expressed. The steamer
consisted of two covered wooden hoops not unlike that seen in Fig. 77, provided
with screen bottoms, and in these the meal was placed over openings in the top
of an iron kettle of boiling water from which the steam was forced through the
charge of meal. Each charge was weighed in a scoop balanced on the arm of a
bamboo scale, thus securing a uniform weight for the cakes.
On the ground in front of the furnace sat a boy of twelve years
steadily feeding rice chaff into the fire with his left hand at the rate of
about thirty charges per minute, while with his right hand, and in perfect
rhythm, he drew back and forth the long plunger of a rectangular box bellows,
maintaining a forced draft for the fire. At intervals the man who was bringing
fuel fed into the furnace a bundle of rice straw, thus giving the boy's left arm
a moment's respite. When the steaming has rendered the oil sufficiently fluid
the meal is transferred, hot, to ten-inch hoops two inches deep, made of braided
bamboo strands, and is deftly tramped with the bare feet, while hot, the
operator steadying himself by a pair of hand bars. After a stack of sixteen
hoops, divided by a slight sifting of chaff or short straw to separate the
cakes, had been completed these were taken to one of four pressmen, who were
kept busy in expressing the oil.
The presses consisted of two parallel timbers framed together, long enough to
receive the sixteen hoops on edge above a gap between them. These cheeses of
meal are subjected to an enormous pressure secured by means of three parallel
lines of wedges forced against the follower each by an iron-bound master wedge,
driven home with a heavy beetle weighing some twenty-five or thirty pounds. The
lines of wedges were tightened in succession, the loosened line receiving an
additional wedge to take up the slack after drawing back the master wedge, which
was then driven home. To keep good the supply of wedges which are often crushed
under the pressure a second boy, older than the one at the furnace, was working
on the floor, shaping new ones, the broken wedges and the chips going to the
furnace for fuel.
By this very simple, readily constructed and inexpensive mechanism enormous
pressures were secured and when the operator had obtained the desired
compression he lighted his pipe and sat down to smoke until the oil ceased
dripping into the pit sunk in the floor beneath the press. In this interval the
next series of cakes went to another press and the work thus kept up during the
day.
Six hundred and forty cakes was the average daily output of this family of
eight men and two boys, with their six water buffalo. The cotton seed cakes were
being sold as feed, and a near-by Chinese dairyman was using them for his herd
of forty water buffalo, seen in Fig. 78, producing milk for the foreign trade in
Shanghai. This herd of forty cows one of which was an albino, was giving an
average of but 200 catty of milk per day, or at the rate of six and two-thirds
pounds per head! The cows have extremely small udders but the milk is very rich,
as indicated by an analysis made in the office of the Shanghai Board of Health
and obtained through the kindness of Dr. Arthur Stanley. The milk showed a
specific gravity of 1.028 and contained 20.1 per cent total solids; 7.5 per cent
fat; 4.2 per cent milk sugar and .8 per cent ash. In the family of Rev. W. H.
Hudson, of the Southern Presbyterian Mission, Kashing, whose very
gracious hospitality we enjoyed on two different occasions, the butter made from
the milk of two of these cows, one of which, with her calf, is seen in Fig. 79,
was used on the family table. It was as white as lard or cottolene but the
texture and flavor were normal and far better than the Danish and New Zealand
products served at the hotels.
The milk produced at the Chinese dairy in Shanghai was being sold in bottles
holding two pounds, at the rate of one dollar a bottle, or 43 cents, gold. This
seems high and there may have been misunderstanding on the part of my
interpreter but his answer to my question was that the milk was being sold at
one Shanghai dollar per bottle holding one and a half catty, which, interpreted,
is the value given above.
But fuel from the stems of cultivated plants which are in part otherwise
useful, is not sufficient to meet the needs of country and village,
notwithstanding the intense economies practiced. Large areas of hill and
mountain land are made to contribute their share, as we have seen in the south
of China, where pine boughs were being used for firing the lime and cement kilns. At
Tsingtao we saw the pine bough fuel on the backs of mules, Fig. 80, coming from
the hills in Shantung province. Similar fuels were being used in Korea and we
have photographs of large pine bough fuel stacks, taken in Japan at Funabashi,
east from Tokyo.
The hill and mountain lands, wherever accessible to the densely peopled
plains, have long been cut over and as regularly has afforestation been
encouraged and deliberately secured even through the transplanting of nursery
stock grown expressly for that purpose. We had read so much regarding the
reckless destruction of forests in China and Japan and had seen so few old
forest trees except where these had been protected about temples, graves or
houses, that when Rev. R. A. Haden, of the Elizabeth Blake hospital, near
Soochow insisted that the Chinese were deliberate foresters and that they
regularly
grow trees
for fuel, transplanting them when necessary to secure a close and early stand,
after the area had been cleared, we were so much surprised that he generously
volunteered to accompany us westward on a two days journey into the hill country
where the practice could be seen.
A family owning a houseboat and living upon it was engaged for the journey.
This family consisted of a recently widowed father, his two sons, newly married,
and a helper. They were to transport us and provide sleeping quarters for
myself, Mr. Haden and a cook for the consideration of $3.00, Mexican, per day
and to continue the journey through the night, leaving the day for observation
in the hills.
The recent funeral had cost the father $100 and the wedding of the two sons
$50 each, while the remodeling of the houseboat to meet the needs of the new
family relations cost still another $100. To meet these expenses it had been
necessary to borrow the full amount, $300. On $100 the father was paying 20 per
cent interest; on $50 he was compelled to pay 50 per cent interest. The balance
he had borrowed from friends without interest but with the understanding that he
would return the favor should occasion be required.
Rev. A. E. Evans informed us that it is a common practice in China for
neighbors to help one another in times of great financial stress. This is one of
the methods:
A neighbor may need 8000 cash. He prepares a feast and sends invitations to a
hundred friends. They know there has been no death in his family and that there
is no wedding, still it is understood that he is in need of money. The feast is
prepared at a small expense. The invited guests come, each bringing eighty cash
as a present. The recipient is expected to keep a careful record of contributing
friends and to repay the sum. Another method is like this: For some reason a man
needs to borrow 20,000 cash. He proposes to twenty of his friends that they
organize a club to raise this sum. If the friends agree each pays 1000 cash to the
organizing member. The balance of the club draw lots as to which member shall be
number two, three, four, five, etc., designating the order in which payments
shall be made. The man borrowing the money is then under obligation to see that
these payments are met in full at the times agreed upon. Not infrequently a
small rate of interest is charged.
Rates of interest are very high in China, especially on small sums where
securities are not the best. Mr. Evans informs me that two per cent per month is
low and thirty per cent per annum is very commonly collected. Such obligations
are often never met but they do not outlaw and may descend from father to
son.
The boat cost $292.40 in U. S. currency; the yearly earning was $107.50 to
$120.40. The funeral cost $43 and $43 more was required for the
wedding of the two sons. They were receiving for the services of six people
$1.29 per day. An engagement for two weeks or a month could have been made for
materially lower rates and their average daily earning, on the basis of three
hundred days service in the year, and the $120.40 total earning, would be only
40.13 cents, less than seven cents each, hence their trip with us was two of
their banner days. Foreigners in Shanghai and other cities frequently engage
such houseboat service for two weeks or a month of travel on the canals and
rivers, finding it a very enjoyable as well as inexpensive way of having a
picnic outing.
On reaching the hill lands the next morning there were such scenes as shown
in Fig. 82, where the strips of tree growth, varying from two to ten years,
stretched directly up the slope, often in strong contrast on account of the
straight boundaries and different ages of the timber. Some of these long narrow holdings were
less than two rods wide and on one of these only recently cut, up which we
walked for considerable distance, the young pine were springing up in goodly
numbers. As many as eighteen young trees were counted on a width of six feet
across the strip of thirty feet wide. On this area everything had been recently
cut clean. Even stumps and the large roots were dug and saved for fuel.
In Fig. 83 are seen bundles of fuel from such a strip, just brought into the
village, the boughs retaining the leaves although the fuel had been dried. The
roots, too, are tied in with the limbs so that everything is saved. On our walk
to the hills we passed many people bringing their loads of fuel swinging from
carrying poles on their shoulders. Inquiries regarding the afforestation of
these strips of hillside showed that the extensive digging necessitated by the recovery of the roots usually caused new trees to spring up
quickly as volunteers from scattered seed and from the roots, so that planting
was not generally required. Talking with a group of people as to where we could
see some of the trees used for replanting the hillsides, a lad of seven years
was first to understand and volunteered to conduct us to a planting. This he did
and was overjoyed on receipt of a trifle for his services. One of these little
pine nurseries is seen in Fig. 84, many being planted in suitable places through
the woods. The lad led us to two such locations with whose whereabouts he was
evidently very familiar, although they were considerable distance from the path
and far from home. These small trees are used in filling in places where the
volunteer growth has not been sufficiently close. A strong herbaceous growth
usually springs up quickly on these newly cleared lands and this too is cut for
fuel or for use in making compost or as green manure.
The grass which grows on the grave lands, if not fed off, is also cut and
saved for fuel. We saw several instances of this outside of Shanghai, one where
a mother with her daughter, provided with rake, sickle, basket and bag, were
gathering the dry stubble and grass of the previous season, from the grave lands
where there was less than could be found on our closely mowed meadows. In Fig.
85 may be seen a man who has just returned with such a load, and in his hand is
the typical rake of the Far East, made by simply bending bamboo splints,
claw-shape, and securing them as seen in the engraving.
In the Shantung province, in Chihli and in Manchuria, millet stems,
especially those of the great kaoliang or sorghum, are extensively used for fuel
and for building as well as for screens, fences and matting. At Mukden the kaoliang was selling as fuel at $2.70 to $3.00, Mexican, for a
100-bundle load of stalks, weighing seven catty to the bundle. The yield per
acre of kaoliang fuel amounts to 5600 pounds and the stalks are eight to twelve
feet long, so that when carried on the backs of mules or horses the animals are
nearly hidden by the load. The price paid for plant stem fuel from agricultural
crops, in different parts of China and Japan, ranged from $1.30 to $2.85, U. S.
currency, per ton. The price of anthracite coal at Nanking was $7.76 per ton.
Taking the weight of dry oak wood at 3500 pounds per cord, the plant stem fuel,
for equal weight, was selling at $2.28 to $5.00.
Large amounts of wood are converted into charcoal in these countries and sent
to market baled in rough matting or in basketwork cases woven
from small brush and holding two to two and a half bushels. When such wood is
not converted into charcoal it is sawed into one or two-foot lengths, split and
marketed tied in bundles, as seen in Fig. 77.
Along the Mukden-Antung railway in Manchuria fuel was also being shipped in
four-foot lengths, in the form of cordwood. In Korea cattle were provided with a
peculiar saddle for carrying wood in four-foot sticks laid blanket-fashion over
the animal, extending far down on their sides. Thus was it brought from the
hills to the railway station. This wood, as in Manchuria, was cut from small
trees. In Korea, as in most parts of China where we visited, the tree growth
over the hills was generally scattering and thin on the ground wherever there
was not individual ownership in small holdings. Under and among the scattering
pine there were oak in many cases, but these were always small, evidently not
more than two or three years standing, and appearing to have been repeatedly cut
back. It was in Korea that we saw so many instances of young leafy oak boughs
brought to the rice fields and used as green manure.
There was abundant evidence of periodic cutting between Mukden and Antung in
Manchuria; between Wiju and Fusan in Korea; and throughout most of our journey
in Japan; from Nagasaki to Moji and from Shimonoseki to Yokohama. In all of
these countries afforestation takes place quickly and the cuttings on private
holdings are made once in ten, twenty or twenty-five years. When the wood is
sold to those coming for it the takers pay at the rate of 40 sen per one horse
load of forty kan, or 330 pounds, such as is seen in Fig. 87. Director Ono, of
the Akashi Experiment station, informed us that such fuel loads in that
prefecture, where the wood is cut once in ten years, bring returns amounting to
about $40 per acre for the ten-year crop. This land was worth $40 per acre but
when they are suitable for orange groves they sell for $600 per acre. Mushroom
culture is extensively practiced under the shade of some of these
wooded areas, yielding under favorable conditions at the rate of $100 per
acre.
The forest covered area in Japan exclusive of Formosa and Karafuto, amounts
to a total of 54,196,728 acres, less than twenty millions of which are in
private holdings, the balance belonging to the state and to the Imperial
Crown.
In all of these countries there has been an extensive general use of
materials other than wood for building purposes and very many of the substitutes
for lumber are products grown on the cultivated fields. The use of rice straw
for roofing, as seen in the Hakone village, Fig. 8, is very general throughout
the rice growing districts, and even the sides of houses may be similarly
thatched, as was observed in the Canton delta region, such a construction being
warm for winter and cool for summer. The life of these thatched roofs, however,
is short and they must be renewed as often as every three to five years but the old straw is highly prized as
fertilizer for the fields on which it is grown, or it may serve as fuel, the
ashes only going to the fields.
Burned clay tile, especially for the cities and public buildings, are very
extensively used for roofing, clay being abundant and near at hand. In Chihli
and in Manchuria millet and sorghum stems, used alone or plastered, as in Fig.
88, with a mud mortar, sometimes mixed with lime, cover the roofs of vast
numbers of the dwellings outside the larger cities.
At Chiao Tou in Manchuria we saw the building of the thatched millet roofs
and the use of kaoliang stems as lumber. Rafters were set in the usual way and
covered with a layer about two inches thick of the long kaoliang stems stripped
of their leaves and tops. These were tied together and to the rafters with
twine, thus forming a sort of matting. A layer of thin clay mortar was then
spread over the surface and well trowelled until it began to show on the under
side. Over this was applied a thatch of small millet stems bound in bundles
eight inches thick, cut square across the butts to eighteen inches
in length. They were dipped in water and laid in courses after the manner of
shingles but the butts of the stems are driven forward to a slope which
obliterates the shoulder, making the courses invisible. In the better houses
this thatching may be plastered with earth mortar or with an earth-lime mortar,
which is less liable to wash in heavy rain.
The walls of the house we saw building were also sided with the long, large
kaoliang stems. An ordinary frame with posts and girts about three feet apart
had been erected, on sills and with plates carrying the roof. Standing
vertically against the girts and tied to them, forming a close layer, were the
kaoliang stems. These were plastered outside and in with a layer of thin earth
mortar. A similar layer of stems, set up on the inside of the girts and
similarly plastered, formed the inner face of the wall of the house, leaving
dead air spaces between the girts.
Brick made from earth are very extensively used for house building, chaff and
short straw being used as a binding material, the brick being simply dried in
the sun, as seen in Fig. 89. A house in the process of building, where the brick
were being used, is seen in Fig. 90. The foundation of the dwelling, it will be
observed, was laid with well-formed hard-burned brick, these being necessary to
prevent capillary moisture from the ground being drawn up and soften the earth
brick, making the wall unsafe.
Several kilns for burning brick, built of clay and earth, were passed in our
journey up the Pei ho, and stacked about them, covering an area of more than
eight hundred feet back from the river were bundles of the kaoliang stems to
serve as fuel in the kilns.
The extensive use of the unburned brick is necessitated by the difficulty of
obtaining fuel, and various methods are adopted to reduce the number of burned
brick required in construction. One of these devices is shown in Fig. 79, where
the city wall surrounding Kashing is constructed of alternate courses of four
layers of burned brick separated by layers of simple earth concrete.
In addition to the multiple-function, farm-gown crops used for food, fuel and
building material, there is a large acreage devoted to the growing of textile
and fiber products and enormous quantities of these are produced annually. In
Japan, where some fifty millions of people are chiefly fed on the produce of
little more than 21,000 square miles of cultivated land, there was grown in 1906
more than 75,500,000 pounds of cotton, hemp, flax and China grass textile stock,
occupying 76,700 acres of the cultivated land. On 141,000 other acres there grew
115,000,000 pounds of paper mulberry and Mitsumata, materials used in the
manufacture of paper. From still another 14,000 acres were taken 92,000,000
pounds of matting stuff, while more than 957,000 acres were occupied by mulberry
trees for the feeding of silkworms, yielding to Japan 22,389,798 pounds of silk.
Here are more than 300,000,000 pounds of fiber and textile stuff taken from 1860
square miles of the cultivated land, cutting down the food producing area to 19,263 square miles and this area
is made still smaller by devoting 123,000 acres to tea, these producing in 1906
58,900,000 pounds, worth nearly five million dollars. Nor do these statements
express the full measure of the producing power of the 21,321 square miles of
cultivated land, for, in addition to the food and other materials named, there
were also made $2,365,000 worth of braid from straw and wood shavings;
$6,000,000 worth of rice straw bags, packing cases and matting; and $1,085,000
worth of wares from bamboo, willow and vine. As illustrating the intense home
industry of these people we may consider the fact that the 5,453,309 households
of farmers in Japan produced in 1906, in their homes as subsidiary work,
$20,527,000 worth of manufactured articles. If correspondingly exact statistical
data were available from China and Korea a similarity full utilization of
cultural possibilities would be revealed there.
This marvelous heritage of economy, industry and thrift, bred of the stress
of centuries, must not be permitted to lose virility through contact with
western wasteful practices, now exalted to seeming virtues through the dazzling
brilliancy of mechanical achievements. More and more must labor be dignified in
all homes alike, and economy, industry and thrift become inherited impulses
compelling and satisfying.
Cheap, rapid, long distance transportation, already well started in these
countries, will bring with it a fuller utilization of the large stores of coal
and mineral wealth and of the enormous available water power, and as a result
there will come some temporary lessening of the stress for fuel and with better
forest management some relief along the lines of building materials. But the
time is not a century distant when, throughout the world, a fuller, better
development must take place along the lines of these most far-reaching and
fundamental practices so long and so effectively followed by the Mongolian races
in China, Korea and Japan. When the enormous water-power of these countries has
been harnessed and brought into the foot-hills and down upon the
margins of the valleys and plains in the form of electric current, let it, if
possible, be in a large measure so distributed as to become available in the
country village homes to lighten the burden and lessen the human drudgery and
yet increase the efficiency of the human effort now so well bestowed upon
subsidiary manufactures under the guidance and initiative of the home, where
there may be room to breathe and for children to come up to manhood and
womanhood in the best conditions possible, rather than in enormous congested
factories.
Farmers of
Forty Centuries (contents)
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